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In 1925, a high school teacher in Dayton, Tennessee became the center of America's most famous trial—not for a crime of violence, but for teaching evolution. John Scopes was prosecuted under the Butler Act, which made it illegal to teach anything contradicting the Biblical creation story. What began as a publicity stunt to revive a struggling town's economy exploded into a national showdown between fundamentalism and modernism.
The trial pitted legendary attorneys against each other: Clarence Darrow for the defense and William Jennings Bryan for the prosecution. For eight days, the nation watched as two visions of America clashed in a small-town courthouse—one rooted in Biblical literalism, the other in scientific progress. The courtroom drama was electric, with Darrow famously putting Bryan himself on the stand to defend his literal interpretation of scripture.
Scopes was convicted and fined $100, but the conviction was later overturned on a technicality. Yet the larger question remained unresolved: Should schools teach Darwin's theory of evolution or the Genesis creation account? The debate sparked by this trial continues nearly a century later, with 34% of Americans still rejecting evolution in 2015. Discover the trial that divided America—and why we're still arguing about it today.
New episodes every Tuesday.
Episode SummaryThe Scopes Monkey Trial of 1925 wasn't just about one teacher—it was about America's soul. When John Scopes, a high school biology teacher in Dayton, Tennessee, was prosecuted for teaching evolution, the case became a lightning rod for the conflict between religious tradition and scientific progress. The trial drew national media attention, legendary attorneys, and exposed deep fractures in American society that persist to this day.
What makes this story particularly fascinating: the entire trial was orchestrated as a publicity stunt. Town leaders deliberately sought to challenge the Butler Act (Tennessee's anti-evolution law) to bring attention and economic revival to Dayton. They found their willing defendant in John Scopes, who encouraged his own students to testify against him. The strategy worked beyond their wildest dreams—but the consequences reached far beyond Dayton's economy.
Key LocationPrimary Setting: Dayton, Tennessee (Rhea County)
Courthouse: Rhea County Courthouse, Market Street, Dayton, TN
Modern Status: The courthouse still stands and houses a museum dedicated to the trial
Population (1925): Approximately 1,800 residents
Economic Context: Small coal and iron mining town in Eastern Tennessee experiencing economic decline
Timeline of Key EventsMarch 21, 1925: Tennessee Governor Austin Peay signs the Butler Act into law, making it illegal to teach human evolution in state-funded schools
May 1925: American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) offers to defend anyone accused of violating the Butler Act
Early May 1925: George Rappleye, local manager for Cumberland Coal and Iron Company, convinces school superintendent Walter White that a trial would bring publicity to Dayton
May 5, 1925: Rappleye, White, and lawyer Sue Hicks recruit John Scopes to be the test case. Scopes, a substitute biology teacher and football coach, agrees after being called away from a tennis game
May 25, 1925: John Scopes officially indicted for violating the Butler Act
May 1925: William Jennings Bryan (three-time presidential candidate and fundamentalist leader) joins prosecution team
May 1925: Clarence Darrow (America's most famous defense attorney) joins the defense team upon learning Bryan is prosecuting
July 10-21, 1925: The trial takes place in Dayton, drawing massive crowds and national media coverage. H.L. Mencken covers the trial for the Baltimore Sun
July 20, 1925: In the trial's dramatic climax, Darrow calls Bryan to the stand as an expert on the Bible. The two-hour confrontation exposes Bryan's gaps in scientific knowledge and leads to Bryan admitting the Bible shouldn't be interpreted entirely literally
July 21, 1925: After eight days of proceedings, the jury deliberates for nine minutes and finds Scopes guilty. Judge Ralston fines him $100
July 26, 1925: William Jennings Bryan dies in his sleep in Dayton, five days after the trial concludes
January 1927: Tennessee Supreme Court upholds the Butler Act's constitutionality but overturns Scopes' conviction on a technicality—Tennessee law didn't allow judges to impose fines over $50; only juries could set fines exceeding that amount
1967: Tennessee repeals the Butler Act after 42 years
1968: U.S. Supreme Court rules in Epperson v. Arkansas that bans on teaching evolution violate the First Amendment's Establishment Clause
Key FiguresJohn Thomas Scopes (1900-1970):
Clarence Darrow (1857-1938):
William Jennings Bryan (1860-1925):
John T. Ralston (1888-1956):
George Rappleye (1894-1966):
John Washington Butler (1875-1952):
Official Name: House Bill 185
Signed: March 21, 1925 by Governor Austin Peay
Text: Made it unlawful for public school teachers "to teach any theory that denies the story of the Divine Creation of man as taught in the Bible, and to teach instead that man has descended from a lower order of animals"
Penalty: Misdemeanor punishable by $100-$500 fine for each offense
Enforcement: Rarely enforced until Scopes case; some schools continued teaching evolution
Repeal: May 18, 1967 (42 years after passage)
Cultural Impact and LegacyImmediate Effects:
Long-term Educational Impact:
Legal Precedents:
Cultural Representations:
Modern Relevance (2024 Statistics):
By Shane Waters4.5
136136 ratings
In 1925, a high school teacher in Dayton, Tennessee became the center of America's most famous trial—not for a crime of violence, but for teaching evolution. John Scopes was prosecuted under the Butler Act, which made it illegal to teach anything contradicting the Biblical creation story. What began as a publicity stunt to revive a struggling town's economy exploded into a national showdown between fundamentalism and modernism.
The trial pitted legendary attorneys against each other: Clarence Darrow for the defense and William Jennings Bryan for the prosecution. For eight days, the nation watched as two visions of America clashed in a small-town courthouse—one rooted in Biblical literalism, the other in scientific progress. The courtroom drama was electric, with Darrow famously putting Bryan himself on the stand to defend his literal interpretation of scripture.
Scopes was convicted and fined $100, but the conviction was later overturned on a technicality. Yet the larger question remained unresolved: Should schools teach Darwin's theory of evolution or the Genesis creation account? The debate sparked by this trial continues nearly a century later, with 34% of Americans still rejecting evolution in 2015. Discover the trial that divided America—and why we're still arguing about it today.
New episodes every Tuesday.
Episode SummaryThe Scopes Monkey Trial of 1925 wasn't just about one teacher—it was about America's soul. When John Scopes, a high school biology teacher in Dayton, Tennessee, was prosecuted for teaching evolution, the case became a lightning rod for the conflict between religious tradition and scientific progress. The trial drew national media attention, legendary attorneys, and exposed deep fractures in American society that persist to this day.
What makes this story particularly fascinating: the entire trial was orchestrated as a publicity stunt. Town leaders deliberately sought to challenge the Butler Act (Tennessee's anti-evolution law) to bring attention and economic revival to Dayton. They found their willing defendant in John Scopes, who encouraged his own students to testify against him. The strategy worked beyond their wildest dreams—but the consequences reached far beyond Dayton's economy.
Key LocationPrimary Setting: Dayton, Tennessee (Rhea County)
Courthouse: Rhea County Courthouse, Market Street, Dayton, TN
Modern Status: The courthouse still stands and houses a museum dedicated to the trial
Population (1925): Approximately 1,800 residents
Economic Context: Small coal and iron mining town in Eastern Tennessee experiencing economic decline
Timeline of Key EventsMarch 21, 1925: Tennessee Governor Austin Peay signs the Butler Act into law, making it illegal to teach human evolution in state-funded schools
May 1925: American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) offers to defend anyone accused of violating the Butler Act
Early May 1925: George Rappleye, local manager for Cumberland Coal and Iron Company, convinces school superintendent Walter White that a trial would bring publicity to Dayton
May 5, 1925: Rappleye, White, and lawyer Sue Hicks recruit John Scopes to be the test case. Scopes, a substitute biology teacher and football coach, agrees after being called away from a tennis game
May 25, 1925: John Scopes officially indicted for violating the Butler Act
May 1925: William Jennings Bryan (three-time presidential candidate and fundamentalist leader) joins prosecution team
May 1925: Clarence Darrow (America's most famous defense attorney) joins the defense team upon learning Bryan is prosecuting
July 10-21, 1925: The trial takes place in Dayton, drawing massive crowds and national media coverage. H.L. Mencken covers the trial for the Baltimore Sun
July 20, 1925: In the trial's dramatic climax, Darrow calls Bryan to the stand as an expert on the Bible. The two-hour confrontation exposes Bryan's gaps in scientific knowledge and leads to Bryan admitting the Bible shouldn't be interpreted entirely literally
July 21, 1925: After eight days of proceedings, the jury deliberates for nine minutes and finds Scopes guilty. Judge Ralston fines him $100
July 26, 1925: William Jennings Bryan dies in his sleep in Dayton, five days after the trial concludes
January 1927: Tennessee Supreme Court upholds the Butler Act's constitutionality but overturns Scopes' conviction on a technicality—Tennessee law didn't allow judges to impose fines over $50; only juries could set fines exceeding that amount
1967: Tennessee repeals the Butler Act after 42 years
1968: U.S. Supreme Court rules in Epperson v. Arkansas that bans on teaching evolution violate the First Amendment's Establishment Clause
Key FiguresJohn Thomas Scopes (1900-1970):
Clarence Darrow (1857-1938):
William Jennings Bryan (1860-1925):
John T. Ralston (1888-1956):
George Rappleye (1894-1966):
John Washington Butler (1875-1952):
Official Name: House Bill 185
Signed: March 21, 1925 by Governor Austin Peay
Text: Made it unlawful for public school teachers "to teach any theory that denies the story of the Divine Creation of man as taught in the Bible, and to teach instead that man has descended from a lower order of animals"
Penalty: Misdemeanor punishable by $100-$500 fine for each offense
Enforcement: Rarely enforced until Scopes case; some schools continued teaching evolution
Repeal: May 18, 1967 (42 years after passage)
Cultural Impact and LegacyImmediate Effects:
Long-term Educational Impact:
Legal Precedents:
Cultural Representations:
Modern Relevance (2024 Statistics):

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