The Scopes Trial happened in 1925, in Dayton, Tennessee. The trial took place over eleven days, July 10-21.
A high school football coach and teacher, John Thomas Scopes, was arrested for allegedly breaking the terms of the Butler Act which prohibited teaching that humans were descended from a "lower form" of creature.
In fact it is unlikely that Scopes ever taught students anything about evolution. Firstly because he wasn't a Biology teacher (though he did stand in for the headmaster, who did teach biology, when the headmaster was on sick leave. More importantly, once the trial was over Scopes admitted that he had never taught anyone about evolution and that he had been recruited by local citizens so they could stage a trial in Dayton which would publicise the town at national level.
At the end of the trial, Scopes was fined $100, decided by the judge. This was later used as an excuse to set the trial result aside, when it went to appeal, because any fine over $50 should have been decided by the jurors, NOT by the judge.
Quite a large number of lawyers took part in the trial - for the defense and for the prosecution - including Clarence Darrow and William Jennings Bryan. The judge presiding over this case was named John T. Raulston.
Contrary to widespread claims, the play, film, and TV movies of Inherit the Wind were only very superficially based on this trial, which was in fact an attack on the McCarthy anti-communist witch hunt that took place during the late 1940s and early 1950s.
The scopes trials main focus point was about a man who was teaching evolution in his class room and he felt it should be taught every were and some people didn't want t to be taught.
The Scopes trial centered around creation vs. evolution. And whether it should be taught.
No
The people who believed in Darwinism and thought it was important for people to know, but it was illegal to teach thus creating the case Scopes trial
fbdfbd
Legally, William Jennings Bryan won the Scopes trial. But the long-term effect of the Scopes trial was the end of the fundamentalist movement and the rise of modernism and urban values such as evolution and science over religion.
Clarence Darrow was the supporter of free speech in the Scopes trial.
In 1925, John Scopes was prosecuted for teaching the theory of evolution in a public school classroom. Which person served as John Scopes' defense lawyer at the famous Scopes trial?
John T. Raulston was the judge in the Scopes trial.
The Scopes Trial, formally known as "The State of Tennessee v. John Thomas Scopes" took place in Dayton, Tennessee.
The nickname of the trial in "Inherit the Wind" is often referred to as the Scopes Monkey Trial.
Because John Scopes was teaching about the evolution of humans from apes (monkeys)
"Inherit the Wind" is a fictionalized account of the Scopes Monkey Trial, where John Scopes was found guilty of teaching evolution. Many believe it was not a fair trial as the judge restricted the defense's arguments and favored the prosecution. The trial was heavily influenced by public opinion and political agendas rather than a pursuit of justice.
The Scopes trial refers to the "Scopes-Monkey" trial in which a high school Science teacher in Tennessee violated the Butler Act that made it unlawful to teach evolution in schools. He was found guilty.
The people who believed in Darwinism and thought it was important for people to know, but it was illegal to teach thus creating the case Scopes trial
John Scopes for teaching Evolution
John Scopes for teaching Evolution
John scopes.
fbdfbd
In 1925 the State of Tennessee accused substitute high school teacher John T. Scopes of violating state law by teaching human evolution in a state-funded school. The trial is known as the Scopes Trial or the Scopes Monkey Trial. Scopes was found guilty and fined $100. The verdict subsequently was overturned.