Home
1830
1839-05-11: Ontario passes “An Act to Authorise the Erection of an Asylum within this Province for the Reception of Insane and Lunatic Person.”
1860
1865: First proto-eugenics articles by Francis Galton in MacMillan's Magazine
1866-02-20: Gregor Mendel publishes his paper, “Versuche über Pflanzenhybriden”
1867: Ugly Laws
1867: Canadian Constitution Act gives federal parliament legislative authority over "Indians, and Lands reserved for Indians"
1869: Galton publishes Hereditary Genius
1870
1870: Canadian Residential Schools in operation
1871: Charles Darwin publishes The Descent of Man

Washington becomes the second state to enact a sexual sterilization law.

Washington becomes the second state to enact a sexual sterilization law.

March 22, 1909. The Washington Legislature passes "An act for the prevention of procreation".

Introduced as part of changes to the criminal code, this legislation aimed at allowing the legal sterilization of undesirable persons; although very few sterilizations took place under this legislation (Kaelber, 2011). This legislation laid out rather restricted conditions for when sterilization operations could take place. Only people convicted of sexually abusing young girls, and thought to be habitual criminals, were candidates for sterilization procedures under this legislation (Laughlin, 15). This legislation was repealed only two months after it was passed. It was replaced by a broader sterilization law in 1921.

This legislation was the second piece of sterilization legislation in the United States. It is noteworthy because it was aimed, unlike other legislation around the time, exclusively at criminals and not mentally or physically disabled persons.

For more info visit: here.

-Luke Kersten

  • Kaelber, L. (2011). Eugenics: Compulsory Sterilization in 50 American States. Retrieved from http://www.uvm.edu/~lkaelber/eugenics/WA/WA.html.

  • Laughlin, H. (1914). The Legal, Legislative, and Administrative Aspects of Sterilization. National Information Resource on Ethics and Human Genetics website. Retrieved from http://dnapatents.georgetown.edu/resources/Bulletin10B.pdf.

Washington becomes the second state to enact a sexual sterilization law.

Washington becomes the second state to enact a sexual sterilization law.

March 22, 1909. The Washington Legislature passes "An act for the prevention of procreation".

Introduced as part of changes to the criminal code, this legislation aimed at allowing the legal sterilization of undesirable persons; although very few sterilizations took place under this legislation (Kaelber, 2011). This legislation laid out rather restricted conditions for when sterilization operations could take place. Only people convicted of sexually abusing young girls, and thought to be habitual criminals, were candidates for sterilization procedures under this legislation (Laughlin, 15). This legislation was repealed only two months after it was passed. It was replaced by a broader sterilization law in 1921.

This legislation was the second piece of sterilization legislation in the United States. It is noteworthy because it was aimed, unlike other legislation around the time, exclusively at criminals and not mentally or physically disabled persons.

For more info visit: here.

-Luke Kersten

  • Kaelber, L. (2011). Eugenics: Compulsory Sterilization in 50 American States. Retrieved from http://www.uvm.edu/~lkaelber/eugenics/WA/WA.html.

  • Laughlin, H. (1914). The Legal, Legislative, and Administrative Aspects of Sterilization. National Information Resource on Ethics and Human Genetics website. Retrieved from http://dnapatents.georgetown.edu/resources/Bulletin10B.pdf.