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Final dissertation May 19 PDF

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Compelled to Volunteer: American Conscientious Objectors to World War II as Subjects of Medical Research Alison S. Bateman-House Submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy under the Executive Committee of the Graduate School of Arts and Sciences COLUMBIA UNIVERSITY 2014 © 2014 Alison Bateman-House All rights reserved ABSTRACT Compelled to Volunteer: American Conscientious Objectors to World War II as Subjects of Medical Research Alison S. Bateman-House This dissertation is a history of the use of World War II-era American conscientious objectors as the subjects of medical research. Under the Selective Training and Service Act of 1940, conscientious objectors had two choices: provide noncombatant service within the military or provide “work of national importance under civilian direction” under the auspices of a program called Civilian Public Service (CPS). Conscientious objectors who chose assignment to CPS were placed in “camps” in which the men labored on a work project authorized by the U.S. Selective Service System, the government entity that administered the draft. At the outset of the CPS program, the camps were modeled after the work camps of the Civilian Conservation Corps, a New Deal jobs program. Over time, and largely due to protests that such Civilian Conservation Corps-type forestry and soil conservation work assignments were not the promised “work of national importance,” other types of CPS camps were developed, with work projects dealing with public health, custodial care for the mentally disabled, or scientific research. In the later, which became commonly known as the guinea pig units, over five hundred conscientious objectors voluntarily participated as research subjects for a diverse assortment of scientific studies, including projects that dealt with infectious diseases, diet, frostbite, psycho-acoustics, and the impacts of temperature extremes and of altitude. In addition to describing the creation and operation of the guinea pig units, this dissertation examines the use of American World War II conscientious objectors as research subjects in light of two specific questions: first, why did these men volunteer to be guinea pigs? And second, was the use of World War II-era conscientious objectors as research subjects in keeping with the ethical standards of the time? This dissertation draws upon a diverse array of sources to answer the question of motivation from the volunteers’ perspectives. Likewise, this dissertation relies upon a wide array of sources to piece together what researchers of the day, both military and civilian, would have considered acceptable and unacceptable uses of people in the name of research. Table of Contents Abbreviations Used iv Acknowledgements v Preface: Another Story of the “Bad Old Days?” xi Introduction 1 Chapter 1: “We are opposed to the military system and all forms of service under 6 such a system”: American Conscientious Objection in World War I and the Desire for Alternative Service Chapter 2: The Decision to Lobby for Alternative Service 27 Chapter 3: American Conscientious Objection in World War II: Civilian Public Service 74 and “Work of National Importance” Chapter 4: Between Deviance and Acceptance 119 Chapter 5: Men of Peace and the Search for the Perfect Pesticide: COs, the Rockefeller 173 Foundation, and Typhus Control Research Chapter 6: CO Guinea Pigs 219 Chapter 7: One CO’s Path to a Guinea Pig Unit 271 Chapter 8: The University of Rochester “Guinea Pigs for Peace” 290 Chapter 9: Risk and Information 352 Chapter 10: The Ethics of Nontherapeutic Research in America 377 Conclusion 444 Appendixes A. i sing of Olaf glad and big 470 B. The Bloody Theater or Martyrs Mirror 472 C. A Statement of Our Position on Peace, War and Military Service 473 D. Public Opinion Polls about Compulsory Military Service 478 E. Almanac Singers lyrics 480 i F. Appeal of the Historic Peace Churches to President Roosevelt regarding 482 provisions for c.o.’s in the event of conscription G. Form 47- Special Form for Conscientious Objectors 484 H. Department of Justice Classifications of COs 490 I. Administration for Conscientious Objectors in the United States, 1940-1947 492 J. List of Civilian Public Service Units 493 K. Denominational Affiliations of CPS Participants, From Most to Least Common 497 L. Administrative Directive No. 18 502 M. Distribution of CPS Assignees 504 N. Map of CPS Units 505 O. “The Four Freedoms” posters (1943) 506 P. “A Careless Word-- A Needless Sinking” 507 Q. National Distillers Products Corporation, “Our town is in the war zone… 508 and fights that way!” R. “WE-ALL” 509 S. “Peace Jumpers” 510 T. “Letter to the President, received by General Hershey” 512 U. “He won’t let them hurt us…” 513 V. “Jap Murder and Rape” 514 W. “Typhus Is Spread By Lice…” 515 X. “Lice on clothing from a hobo” 516 Y. “Feeding lice on the legs; note rash” 517 Z. “Camp in the White Mountains” 518 AA. “Counting lice on the underwear of the volunteers” 519 ii AB. Table 1 520 AC. Identified Participants in the Anti-louse Trials; Biographies and Demographics 521 AD. No Skunks Allowed! 529 AE. Anti-louse Trial Participants’ Later Placements in Social Service-oriented CPS Units 530 AF. Anti-louse Trial Participants’ Post-CPS Activities 531 AG. Carl Somdal, editorial cartoon 535 AH. “Prison Malaria” 536 AI. “Man-days Spent in Work of National Importance, by Registrants in 537 Civilian Public Service, May 15,1941 – Mar. 31, 1947” AJ. “Nutrition Experiment” announcement 538 AK. Letter to Dr. Moore 539 AL. Causes of Death of CPS Assignees 540 AM. Rules for a Good Experiment 541 AN. Unconsciousness and Recovery under the Influence of G-Forces 543 AO: Rochester CPS Assignees and Their Research Participation 544 AP. Certificate of Service 545 AQ. Photographs of Skin Lesions on Leg 546 AR. Andresen Release 547 AS. Resolution of the American Humane Association 548 AT. Justifiable Experimentation Upon Man and Unjustifiable Experimentation 549 Upon Human Beings AU. A Bill for the Regulation of Scientific Experiments upon Human Beings in 551 the District of Columbia AV. Yellow Fever Board Subject Contract 553 iii Abbreviations Used 4E Selective Service classification for a conscientious objector willing to work in alternative service (variant form of the official designation, IV-E) ACCO Association of Catholic COs ACHRE Advisory Committee on Human Radiation Experiments AFSC American Friends Service Committee AMA American Medical Association BSC Brethren Service Committee BEPQ Bureau of Entomology and Plant Quarantine, U.S. Department of Agriculture CCC Civilian Conservation Corps CO Conscientious objector CPI Committee on Public Information CPS Civilian Public Service CMR Committee on Medical Research FS Forest Service FOR Fellowship of Reconciliation HPCs Historic Peace Churches IHD International Health Division, Rockefeller Foundation IOM Institute of Medicine I-A-O Selective Service classification for a conscientious objector willing to work in noncombatant assignments IV-E Selective Service classification for a conscientious objector willing to work in alternative service MCC Mennonite Central Committee NAS National Academy of Sciences NACA National Advisory Committee for Aeronautics NDRC National Defense Research Committee NRC National Research Council NSBRO National Service Board for Religious Objectors OSG Office of the Surgeon General OSRD Office of Scientific Research and Development SCS Soil Conservation Service WRL War Resisters League iv Acknowledgements This project began in the late 1990s, when I was enrolled in a Masters of bioethics program at the University of Virginia. Michael Schrock, my future brother-in-law and an all- around exemplary person, was, to my knowledge, the first Mennonite with whom I had conversed, and I was intrigued to learn about his church’s position on some of the issues I was studying. Accordingly, I went to the library, where I knocked over a book while browsing the stacks. Sharon Hartin Iorio’s, Faith’s Harvest: Mennonite Identity in Northwest Oklahoma, fell open to the following account: “we were escorted to an isolated place in the woods where several white tents were set up. We went into a tent one at time with an attendant who took us to a doctor or nurse who exposed us to the ‘germs’… We were exposed by a mixture of the germs and gaseous nitrogen that was blown into our throats…this was done probably eight or ten times.”1 In this account, a Mennonite man recalled his experience as a research subject in a study of atypical pneumonia, describing how healthy World War II-era conscientious objectors (COs) were used as the subjects of the experiment. As both an undergraduate and graduate student at the University of Virginia (UVA), I had studied bioethics under Drs. John Fletcher, Paul Lombardo, Jim Childress, and John Arras and thus was familiar with notorious instances of research conducted on prisoners, institutionalized children, patients, soldiers, and the geographically and socially marginalized (e.g. Tuskegee). I had never heard of research being conducted on conscientious objectors, and – with the narrator of this account offering no hint that he had been coerced to participate or that he was uninformed about the intent of the research or 1 Sharon Hartin Iorio, Faith’s Harvest: Mennonite Identity in Northwest Oklahoma (Norman, OK: University of Oklahoma Press, 1999) 218. v its risks - I was intrigued about why he risked his life to participate in this study. I wanted to know more. I turned to two of my professors at UVA, Dr. Jonathan Moreno and Dr. Paul Lombardo, both of whom were excited about the idea of my investigating the use of World War II COs as research subjects. Unbeknownst to me, Paul Lombardo had been a CO, and he loaned me a book called The Turning Point: How Persons of Conscience Brought about Major Change in the Care of America's Mentally Ill about World War II COs’ alternative service in mental institutions through the United States. This book, which mentioned the human subjects research conducted on COs, provided my first few bibliographic leads. In addition to this valuable assistance at the outset of this project, Paul Lombardo gave me pointers when I soon returned to him in frustration, announcing that I had exhausted all the secondary literature and that, having never studied history, I did not know how to conduct research involving primary sources. He has remained a valuable teacher, a supporter and ally, and a friend over many years and, more than anyone, is interested in seeing this story finally come to light. It was only once I presented this project to him that I learned that Jonathan Moreno been a senior staff member of the Advisory Committee on Human Radiation Experiments (ACHRE) commission created by President Clinton to investigate allegations of government-sponsored radiation research on unknowing American citizens during the Cold War. (This commission was created in 1994, when I was an undergraduate student, and I had known nothing of it.) Furthermore, Jonathan Moreno was in the process of publishing Undue Risk: Secret State Experiments on Humans, his valuable history of the use of human subjects in atomic, biological, and chemical warfare experiments from World War II to the twenty-first century. Serendipity vi

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(having passed their draft physical) who participated in nontherapeutic research activities from .. when. For instance, while the Amish and the Mennonites are commonly perceived as different groups, they have As such, during World War II, the Selective Service classified Amish COs as Mennonites.
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