American Decades
Farmington
Autobiography
By: Clarence S. Darrow
Date: 1904
Source: Darrow, Clarence S. Farmington. Chicago: A.C. McClurg, 1904. Reprinted in Fuess, Claude M. and Emory S. Basford, eds. Unseen Harvests. New York: Macmillan, 1947, 43–45, 47.
About the Author: Clarence Seward Darrow (1857–1938) was well known for his defense of labor organizations and for his skill as a criminal lawyer. He became famous in the "Scopes Monkey Trial," when he defended high school teacher John T. Scopes, who had violated Tennessee's ban on teaching Darwin's theory of evolution. Darrow was born in Kinsman, Ohio, in 1857 and died in Chicago in 1938.
Introduction
First published in 1904, Farmington is Darrow's autobiography and recounts his youth in Ohio. In "The School Readers," Darrow provides an example of what generations of schoolchildren experienced as they learned to...
[The entire page is 2597 words long]
1900's Education Primary Sources
- "The Forgotten Man"
- "The Little Schoolboy"
- "The Ideal School as Based on Child Study"
- "The Child and the Curriculum"
- The Elective System in Higher Education
- "Industrial Education for the Negro"
- "The True Character of the New York Public Schools"
- Charter and By-Laws
- "The Talented Tenth"
- Farmington
- Letter of Gift to the Trustees of the Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement of Teaching
- "The Certification of Teachers"
- "The Public School and the Immigrant Child"
- Stubborn Fool: A Narrative
- Copyright Page
- Acknowledgments
