- Secret Court of 1920
The Secret Court of 1920 was a secret tribunal convened in
1920 atHarvard University to rid the university ofhomosexual s.Headed by then president
Abbott Lawrence Lowell , the tribunal included acting Dean Chester N. Greenough, Assistant Dean Edward R. Gay,Professor ofHygiene Robert I. Lee, and Regent Matthew Luce. The "Court" met in secret, and held secret interrogations of students and one assistant professor suspected of being homosexual. Fourteen men were found "guilty": eight students, one Assistant Professor andPhD candidate, one recent graduate, and four men not associated with the university. All the students who were found guilty were expelled from the university, in most cases permanently.Background
On
May 13 ,1920 , student Cyril Wilcox was found dead in his room, apparently ofsuicide , though the newspaper reports called the death accidental. A Harvard undergraduate, Wilcox had been asked to withdraw from the university due to poor academic performance. [http://www.thecrimson.com/article.aspx?ref=255428 The Harvard Crimson: "The Secret Court of 1920"] ]The night before his death, Wilcox had confessed to his older brother, George Wilcox, that he had been having an affair with an older man, Harry Dreyfus, who lived in
Boston . Shortly after his brother's death George intercepted two letters addressed to Cyril, both from homosexual friends, that convinced George that Cyril had been led astray by a group of students at Harvard who were involved in homosexual activities.Furious, George Wilcox located Dreyfus and beat him, extracting several names of homosexual students, and contacted Acting Dean Greenough, demanding that Harvard do something about the situation. A day later, on
May 23 ,1920 , the "Secret Court" was created.Activities of the Court
The Court, which initially remained secret even from the university's Administrative Board, quickly named one student who they saw as the "ringleader": Ernest Weeks Roberts, son of Rep.
Ernest William Roberts , who had representedMassachusetts in theUnited States House of Representatives for eight years and was still an important political figure inWashington, D.C. andBoston . [http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A57942-2002Nov30.html Washington Post.com: "Harvard Secret Court Expelled Gay Students in 1920"] ] The younger Roberts, who had hoped to enterHarvard Medical School , had served duringWorld War I in the Harvard unit of the Students' Army Training Corps (SATC).A list of names of students who were known to be friendly with Roberts was compiled, and the Court proceeded to summon the accused for interviews. Curt notes were delivered to those involved. Roberts' read:
:"I expect you, whatever your engagement may be, to appear at my office tomorrow, Friday, May 28th, at 2:45 P.M."Wright, William. "Harvard's Secret Court: The Savage 1920 Purge of Campus Homosexuals". New York, NY: St. Martin's Press, 2005. ISBN 0312322712 ( [http://books.google.com/books?id=nfFTe43fPmwC Google Print] )]
Students were directed to appear even if appearing meant missing a final examination. On Thursday,
May 27 ,1920 , Kenneth Day became the first accused to appear before the Court. The accused were asked intimate details of their personal and sexual lives, including whether and how often they masturbated. Some were summoned because they had been seen attending parties in Roberts' rooms; some had been accused by others.The accused
Besides the eight undergraduates and one assistant professor expelled, at least four men not affiliated with Harvard were found "guilty" by the Court. In at least two cases, a letter detailing the man's "crimes" was sent to his employer.
Douglas Clark
Douglas Clark, then twenty-four years old, was Assistant Professor of
Philosophy at Harvard, and aPhD . candidate. Fluent in Italian, German and French, during WWI he served as a special agent in theU.S. Department of Justice . He received amaster's degree in Philosophy at Harvard in1918 and was in the third year of his Ph.D. program when he was summoned before the Court. He was summoned after being accused by a student.Clark was expelled from the university, and President Lowell personally crossed Clark's name off all Corporation records. He taught for a while at
Mills College and at theDavid Mannes School of Music , wrote a book ofpoetry , and publishedtranslation s from Italian and German, then worked as alibrarian at theNational Jewish Hospital until his death fromtuberculosis at age forty-seven in 1943.Eugene R. Cummings
Eugene Cummings, then twenty-three, was a
dentistry student. He committedsuicide at Harvard'sStillman Infirmary the day he learned he was being expelled, three weeks before graduation.Kenneth Day
Kenneth Day was expelled from Harvard. Despite being told that he might be considered for readmission, his repeated requests were dismissed, probably on the instructions of President Lowell.
In April 1926, Day married and moved to New York, where he worked as a bank teller. He had two daughters, and would marry two additional times.
Stanley Gilkey
According to a letter sent to his father, Stanley Gilkey was expelled from Harvard because:
:"He has, by reading and conversation found out too much about homosexual matters. Secondly, he has been most indiscreet in saying in a public restaurant that a certain student looked to him like a man guilty of homosexual practices. In the third place, he has been too closely acquainted with the ringleader in these practices, and has visited his room too often."
Gilkey, who was in fact homosexual, was readmitted to the university in 1921 and graduated in 1923. He lived in
Paris for two years, then returned to the U.S., where he produced tenBroadway show s, some of them hits (one of them gave renowned dancerGene Kelly his first speaking role). He remained active in the theatre world, and died in1979 .Joseph Lumbard
Although the court had been unable to prove that Joseph Lumbard had been involved in any homosexual activity (he had been the roommate of Edward Say, who was also found guilty and expelled), he was expelled from the university on the grounds that he had associated too closely with Say and others in the crowd. He was nineteen years old. In a letter to his father after his expulsion, Greenough wrote of Lumbard:
:"His difficulties are, in brief, as follows. A certain group of Harvard students, in connection with a group of older men in Boston, have been guilty of homosexual practices, and one of the men deeply involved is your son's roommate. Your son, though we believe him to be innocent of any homosexual act, is...too closely connected with those who are guilty of those acts."
Lumbard had admitted to dancing with another boy at a party in Roberts' rooms, taking telephone messages for other boys whom he knew to be homosexual, and permitting friends of his roommate Say to stay overnight in their shared rooms.
Lumbard was invited to reapply at Harvard after a year, and was readmitted in 1921. He graduated from
Harvard Law School in 1925 and married in 1929.Despite his readmission, Harvard twice divulged details of Lumbard's expulsion, once in 1931 when he was being considered by the U.S. Attorney's office and once more thirty-three years after his expulsion, in
1953 , when President-electDwight D. Eisenhower was considering him for a seat on theUnited States Court of Appeals .During a long career, Lumbard sat on the
New York Supreme Court , served as the United States Attorney inManhattan , cofounded theOffice of Strategic Services (which later became theCentral Intelligence Agency ), and was a senior judge on theU.S. Court of Appeals . He was also considered to sit on theUnited States Supreme Court . He served on theSpecial Court of Appeals , and turned down the position of judge in theWatergate scandal . In1959 he was appointed, ironically, to the Board of Overseers at Harvard, and served for ten years.Harold Saxton
Harold Winfield Saxton had graduated and was no longer a Harvard student at the time the Court was convened, but was making a living
tutor ing Harvard students. He was banished from the university, which made a point of sending damning letters when asked by prospective employers for a recommendation. Nothing more is known of Saxton after his twenty-ninth year. {A Harold Sexton of Massachusetts died Aug 1972}Edward Say
Edward Say was twenty years old when he was expelled. He insisted he had never engaged in any homosexual activity (though others claimed that he had). After his expulsion he worked as a
securities salesman.Say was killed in a mysterious single-car crash on
July 13 ,1930 .Keith Smerage
Keith Smerage was expelled from Harvard. He later claimed the Court had tricked him into confessing by lying about the evidence they had against him. After being informed that Harvard would report fully on the circumstances surrounding his expulsion from the school if contacted by other universities, Smerage took a job in a tearoom, and then became assistant manager of his mother's inn.
He had some low-level jobs in the theater, followed by a stint as assistant manager at a
Greenwich Village restaurant, where he lived with a man who may have been his lover.He committed
suicide onSeptember 8 ,1930 in the same manner as Cyril Wilcox had ten years previously, by turning on the gas and going to bed.Nathaniel Wollf
Nathaniel Wollf, who was probably homosexual, was expelled at the age of twenty-five, days before earning his
bachelors degree , but the possibility of readmission was left open; his request would be denied. Because of unfavourable reports from Harvard, Wollf's application atMcGill University was also denied.Ultimately, Wollf graduated with a medical degree from
Bellevue Hospital Medical College . After studyingpsychiatry for a further three years, he spent the next ten years pursuing painting and academic interests, and briefly converted toIslam . He opened anightclub inBarcelona in1935 .During
World War II he returned to the United States and he served as apsychiatrist for returning soldiers.He died in
1959 , having never married.Discovery
In 2002 a researcher from student newspaper "The Crimson" came across a box of files labelled "Secret Court." Eventually five hundred documents relating to the Court were released by Harvard, and the story was broken in "The Crimson's" weekly magazine "Fifteen Minutes."
Then-Harvard University President
Lawrence H. Summers said of the incident::"These reports of events long ago are extremely disturbing. They are part of a past that we have rightly left behind. I want to express our deep regret for the way this situation was handled, as well as the anguish the students and their families must have experienced eight decades ago. Whatever attitudes may have been prevalent then, persecuting individuals on the basis of sexual orientation is abhorrent and an affront to the values of our university. We are a better and more just community today because those attitudes have changed as much as they have."
References
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