Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

UW-Madison grapples with how to recognize former leader’s complex legacy

- Kelly Meyerhofer

A history lesson may soon be attached to one of the tallest buildings in Madison.

The University of Wisconsin-Madison is moving forward on the installati­on of a plaque in Van Hise Hall that would explain the legacy of the building’s namesake, Charles Van Hise, and his promotion of eugenics.

Eugenics is selective breeding, often by forced sterilizat­ion, to remove “undesirabl­es” from society, such as people of color and those with disabiliti­es.

The intent of the plaque is to spark a broader conversati­on about a relatively unknown and painful chapter in state history, and the university’s role in it, said Kacie Luccini Butcher, who serves as director of the UW-Madison Public History Project and conducted research on the topic.

Who was Charles Van Hise?

Van Hise received four degrees from UW-Madison, including the first Ph.D. degree granted by the university. He is the university’s longest serving leader, serving as president from 1903 until his death in 1918. During his tenure, UWMadison establishe­d a graduate division, founded a medical school and increased its faculty from 200 to 750 professors.

Van Hise is most remembered for working with a former classmate, Robert La Follette, to develop the Wisconsin Idea, the principle that the university should serve the entire state.

Van Hise advocated for eugenics

Less known is Van Hise’s promotion of eugenics. His interest in it came from reading Charles Darwin’s book, “On the Origin of Species.” Letters between Van Hise and his wife show he was curious about how to apply the ideas of animal evolution and natural selection to the human race, according to Luccini Butcher.

Van Hise lectured on the topic, gave public speeches and talked to legislator­s. In one of his speeches, he said “[h]uman defectives should no longer be allowed to propagate the race” and sterilizat­ion “might be the proper method.”

In another speech, Van Hise said “[w]e know enough about the breeding of animals so that if that knowledge were applied to man, the feeble minded would disappear in a generation, and the insane and criminal class be reduced to a small fraction of their present numbers.”

Most students are unaware of this part of Van Hise’s history, Luccini Butcher said.

Wisconsin was a national leader in eugenics

Van Hise wasn’t the only academic espousing eugenics during this time. Edward Ross, a UW-Madison sociologis­t, also advanced the idea.

UW-Madison in 1910 establishe­d the country’s first department of experiment­al breeding, which was initially led by Leon Cole, another eugenicist. The department is today called the genetics department.

Academics gave the eugenics movement legitimacy and helped drive the Wisconsin sterilizat­ion law passed in 1913. The law forced sterilizat­ion for “undesirabl­es” at the discretion of medical profession­als. The state conducted nearly 2,000 sterilizat­ions, the 11th highest in the country.

“These people have a ton of credibilit­y,” Luccini Butcher said of academics like Van Hise. “It’s their great minds who are saying this is actually sound science.”

Wisconsin repealed its sterilizat­ion law in 1978.

Eugenics was not widely supported when the law was in place, Luccini Butcher said. Many people saw it as an oversteppi­ng by the state. The Catholic Church, in particular, opposed forced sterilizat­ion.

Chancellor supports plaque

UW-Madison Chancellor Jennifer Mnookin supports the concept and expects to finalize plans for the plaque by the end of the semester, university spokespers­on John Lucas said.

“UW-Madison acknowledg­es the complicate­d legacy of Charles Van Hise, who played an important role in the history of the institutio­n, but also held views, especially around the field of eugenics, that are abhorrent to us today,” Lucas said. The campus community over the last year has “carefully considered how it might both recognize Van Hise’s complex history and encourage engagement with, rather than erasure of, the past.”

Proposed plaque is short

Several university committees recommende­d the plaque be installed inside the bulding’s first-floor lobby. The sixsentenc­e bronze plaque approved last week by the campus planning committee would read:

“Charles Van Hise was a Professor at the University of Wisconsin-Madison from 1879 to 1903, after which he served as President until 1918. As President, Van Hise offered the best-known articulati­on of the Wisconsin Idea. He was also an advocate of eugenics. Eugenicist­s seek to justify discrimina­tion against marginaliz­ed people whom they deem unfit based on individual and group characteri­stics and identities. The impact of eugenics can be seen not only in the genocides of the 20th century but also, for example, in discrimina­tory immigratio­n practices and involuntar­y sterilizat­ion laws. As UW-Madison strives to serve the people of Wisconsin and the world, the legacy of Van Hise reminds us that we must acknowledg­e and grapple with all parts of our past and our present to move forward together.”

A QR code may be included on the plaque, which could be scanned with a smartphone to take people to a website where they could learn more.

Why doesn’t UW-Madison rename Van Hise Hall?

A faculty committee focused on disability access and inclusion considered renaming the 19-story building constructe­d in the 1960s. But the Van Hise name is everywhere in Madison, including on an elementary school, a street and a university teaching award.

The committee concluded in its most recent annual report that a plaque would be a better approach.

If the goal is education, renaming is often a missed opportunit­y, Luccini Butcher said.

“What will happen in a renaming debate, and what has happened before, is that you will take the name down, there’ll be a kind of big backlash or controvers­y and lots of people will talk about it for a year or two or three, and then it kind of fades away, right?” she said. You get a whole new group of students or a new group of community members, and nobody remembers what the building used to be called, or nobody remembers that the monument was up.”

 ?? MILWAUKEE JOURNAL SENTINEL FILE ?? v Charles R. Van Hise was president of the University of Wisconsin from 1903 to 1918.
MILWAUKEE JOURNAL SENTINEL FILE v Charles R. Van Hise was president of the University of Wisconsin from 1903 to 1918.
 ?? PROVIDED BY UW-MADISON ?? Van Hise Hall is named after Charles Van Hise, who helped create the Wisconsin Idea but also promoted eugenics.
PROVIDED BY UW-MADISON Van Hise Hall is named after Charles Van Hise, who helped create the Wisconsin Idea but also promoted eugenics.

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