The Monkey Trial

The Monkey Trial

The Scopes Monkey Trial of 1925 is one of the most misunderstood events in American history. Most people know the version they learned in school or saw in Inherit the Wind — a noble defense attorney humiliates a Bible-thumping prosecutor, science defeats ignorance, and progress marches forward. Almost none of that is accurate.

In this episode, we go back to Dayton, Tennessee to tell the real story. It starts not with a brave teacher defying an unjust law, but with a handful of small-town businessmen hatching a publicity scheme in the back of a drugstore. George Rappleyea, a restless New York transplant managing what was left of the local mining operation, saw an opportunity when the ACLU advertised for a test case to challenge Tennessee's new Butler Act. He recruited a 24-year-old substitute teacher named John Scopes who wasn't even sure he'd taught evolution, and the most elaborately manufactured legal spectacle in American history was born.

We explore who William Jennings Bryan really was — not the cartoon fool of popular memory, but a three-time presidential nominee, former Secretary of State, champion of women's suffrage, and progressive populist who fought for working people his entire career. His opposition to evolution in schools was driven in part by genuine alarm over the eugenics movement and the racial hierarchies baked into the very textbook at the center of the case. We look at Clarence Darrow's real motivations, which had far more to do with a personal vendetta against Bryan than any principled defense of academic freedom.

And we examine how H.L. Mencken's savage, deliberately distorted reporting from Dayton created a narrative framework that the rest of the country adopted wholesale and never questioned.The famous examination scene on the courthouse lawn, the myth of Bryan's humiliation and death, the play that replaced history with fiction, the trial's actual legal outcome that set science education back for decades — all of it gets unpacked. This is a story about performance, media manipulation, and the manufacturing of cultural mythology in real time.

The playbook invented in Dayton, Tennessee in the summer of 1925 is the same one driving every manufactured outrage and tribal media firestorm you see today.

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Disturbing History is a dark history podcast exploring unsolved mysteries, secret societies, historical conspiracies, lost civilizations, and the shadowy stories buried beneath the surface of the past.

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