Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

Scopes trial town wants to add Darrow statue to Bryan’s

- By TRAVIS LOLLER

DAYTON, Tenn. — In 1925, two of America’s most renowned figures faced off in the southeast Tennessee town of Dayton to debate a burning issue — whether man evolved over millions of years or was created by God in his present form.

Today, only one of the two, the Christian orator William Jennings Bryan, is commemorat­ed with a statue on the courthouse lawn. A group of atheists hopes to change that.

Bryan defended the biblical account while trial lawyer and skeptic Clarence Darrow defended evolution in the “Scopes monkey trial” — formally, Tennessee vs. John Thomas Scopes. The case became front-page news nationwide and is memorializ­ed in songs, books, plays and movies.

Nearly a century later, the debate pitting evolution against the biblical account of creation rages on nationally and locally. Nearly all scientists accept evolution, but many Christians see it as incompatib­le with their faith. Just two years ago in Dayton, professors at a Christian college named for Bryan were fired in a dispute over whether Adam and Eve were historical people.

One might expect a town that reveres Bryan to resist efforts to memorializ­e his antagonist, but Reed Johnson, managing editor of The Herald-News in Dayton, said that vocal resistance hasn’t materializ­ed. He doesn’t recall angry letters to the editor.

County Commission­er Bill Hollin said he doesn’t think many people are aware of the effort, but he’s against it and thinks others will join him. “I don’t see where it would help the community at all to put it up there,” he said.

Bryan, on the other hand, represents more than the Scopes trial, Hollin said. His legacy in Dayton includes the college that was founded in 1930 and educates many of the area’s young people.

Still, townspeopl­e are resigned to the idea of a Darrow statue, said Christian writer Rachel Held Evans, a Bryan College alumna.

“I think there is a sense that, ‘Oh, it’s only fair. We have our side, and they have their side. We have our statue, and they have their statue,” she said.

Ed Larson, who wrote a Pulitzer Prize-winning book about the trial called “Summer for the Gods,” said that Dayton has historical­ly been hospitable to both sides, and that outrage over the teaching of evolution in 1925 was manufactur­ed.

The trial is often remembered as the persecutio­n of teacher Scopes for teaching evolution, which Tennessee had outlawed, but it actually began as a publicity stunt for Dayton, Larson said.

Larsen explained that locals had responded to a newspaper advertisem­ent by the American Civil Liberties Union looking for someone to test Tennessee’s anti-evolution law in court. No one had complained about Scopes or his teaching; he was recruited to be the defendant, Larson said. Scopes never spent time in jail and was offered his job back after the trial, Larsen said — and Bryan even offered to pay his fine.

 ?? MARK HUMPHREY/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? A statue of orator William Jennings Bryan stands in front of the Rhea County Courthouse in Dayton, Tenn. An atheist group is raising money to place a statue of attorney Clarence Darrow opposite the statue of Bryan outside the courthouse where the two...
MARK HUMPHREY/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS A statue of orator William Jennings Bryan stands in front of the Rhea County Courthouse in Dayton, Tenn. An atheist group is raising money to place a statue of attorney Clarence Darrow opposite the statue of Bryan outside the courthouse where the two...

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