Keywords: smithsonian institution archives smithsonianinstitutionarchives smithsonian institution smithsonianinstitution heroes blackandwhite monochrome black and white Local number: SIA Acc. 97-020 [SIA2007-0119] Summary: Standing at left: John R. Neal. Standing at right: W.E. Wheelock. In back row (left to right): E. Haldeman-Julius, George Washington Rappleyea, Frank Thone, and Watson Davis. Middle row (left to right): Maynard Mayo Metcalf, Charles Francis Potter, Mr. McCleskey, William Allison Kepner, and Arthur Garfield Hays. Front row (left to right): Wilbur Armstrong Nelson, Fay-Cooper Cole, Winterton Conway Curtis, Horatio Hackett Newman, and Jacob Goodale Lipman. Lawyers, scientists, and supporters of John T. Scopes, assembled on the steps of “Defense Mansion” outside Dayton, Tennessee, July 1925. Standing at left is Judge John R. Neal, the Knoxville, Tennessee, attorney who represented Scopes; standing at right is Neal's brother-in-law, W.E. Wheelock, superintendent of the Southern Pacific Railroad Terminal in Chattanooga. In back row are Kansas publisher E. Haldeman-Julius, Dayton businessman George Washington Rappleyea, and Science Service journalists Frank Thone and Watson Davis. In the middle row are biologist Maynard Mayo Metcalf, theologian Charles Francis Potter, defense court stenographer Mr. McCleskey, biologist William Allison Kepner, and Scopes defense attorney Arthur Garfield Hays. In the front row are Wilbur Armstrong Nelson, anthropologist Fay-Cooper Cole, biologist Winterton Conway Curtis, Horatio Hackett Newman, and Jacob Goodale Lipman. Repository:Smithsonian Institution Archives View more collections from the Smithsonian Institution. Local number: SIA Acc. 97-020 [SIA2007-0119] Summary: Standing at left: John R. Neal. Standing at right: W.E. Wheelock. In back row (left to right): E. Haldeman-Julius, George Washington Rappleyea, Frank Thone, and Watson Davis. Middle row (left to right): Maynard Mayo Metcalf, Charles Francis Potter, Mr. McCleskey, William Allison Kepner, and Arthur Garfield Hays. Front row (left to right): Wilbur Armstrong Nelson, Fay-Cooper Cole, Winterton Conway Curtis, Horatio Hackett Newman, and Jacob Goodale Lipman. Lawyers, scientists, and supporters of John T. Scopes, assembled on the steps of “Defense Mansion” outside Dayton, Tennessee, July 1925. Standing at left is Judge John R. Neal, the Knoxville, Tennessee, attorney who represented Scopes; standing at right is Neal's brother-in-law, W.E. Wheelock, superintendent of the Southern Pacific Railroad Terminal in Chattanooga. In back row are Kansas publisher E. Haldeman-Julius, Dayton businessman George Washington Rappleyea, and Science Service journalists Frank Thone and Watson Davis. In the middle row are biologist Maynard Mayo Metcalf, theologian Charles Francis Potter, defense court stenographer Mr. McCleskey, biologist William Allison Kepner, and Scopes defense attorney Arthur Garfield Hays. In the front row are Wilbur Armstrong Nelson, anthropologist Fay-Cooper Cole, biologist Winterton Conway Curtis, Horatio Hackett Newman, and Jacob Goodale Lipman. Repository:Smithsonian Institution Archives View more collections from the Smithsonian Institution. |