Theodore Schroeder
September 17, 2012
On this date in 1864, Theodore Schroeder
was born on a farm near Horicon, Wisconsin. Because his parents
"intermarried" (one was Lutheran, the other Roman Catholic), they were
disowned by their families. His father became an agnostic, and Schroeder
was also influenced by the legacy of the freethinking German immigrants
who came to Wisconsin after the failed 1848 revolution. He took the
injunction to "go west, young man" to heart and traveled for about a
decade, taking odd jobs to support himself. In 1882, Schroeder entered
the University of Wisconsin, studying engineering, then earning a law
degree in 1889. He practiced law for ten years in Salt Lake City, Utah,
making a study of Mormonism. Schroeder worked for statehood for Utah,
but grew alarmed at the Mormon theocratic hold, as well as the practice
of polygamy, which he termed "sanctified lust." In 1900, Schroeder moved
to New York. He formed the Free Speech League (a precursor to the
American Civil Liberties Union) with Lincoln Steffens and other
progressives in 1902. Schroeder worked as League secretary, also
offering legal aid. By 1908, when he moved to Connecticut, Schroeder was
focusing his activism against religionist Anthony Comstock and the
Comstock laws, which suppressed free speech relating to sexual matters,
especially discussion of birth control. An ardent foe of these
antiquated obscenity laws, Schroeder helped defend his friend and
anarchist Emma Goldman
at her Denver trial, as well as many others prosecuted in blasphemy or
obscenity cases, including progressive ministers. Schroeder wrote Constitutional Free Speech Defined and Defended in an Unfinished Argument in a Case of Blasphemy
(1919). He turned his attention to what he called the erotogenetic
theory of religion, which he developed after observing Mormonism.
William James and others discredited the concept, but he found allies in
Havelock Ellis and Chapman Cohen.
He also worked with the National Liberal League, which became the
American Secular Union. Schroeder became the victim of the censorship he
had worked against his entire life, when his will, instructing that his
works be published as a collection, was found invalid by the
Connecticut Supreme Court. The Court called his freethought writing
"obscene," offensive to religion and of no social value. Judge
O'Sullivan wrote, "The law will not declare a trust valid when the
object of the trust, as the finding discloses, is to distribute articles
which reek of the sewer." D. 1953.
“The freethinker has the same right to discredit the beliefs of Christians that the Orthodox Christians enjoy in destroying reverence, respect, and confidence in Mohammedanism, Mormonism, Christian Science, or Atheism.”
— Theodore Schroeder, Constitutional Free Speech Defined and Defended in an Unfinished Argument in a Case of Blasphemy (1919). Main source: The Encyclopedia of Unbelief
Compiled by Annie Laurie Gaylor - www.ffrf.org
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