[image_credit]From the collection of Ryan T. Hurt[/image_credit][image_caption]
Charles Malchow
Description
Charles Malchow around the time of his graduation from Minneapolis College of Physicians and Surgeons, in 1894.[/image_caption]
The seventh of eight children of German immigrants, Charles Malchow left the University of Minnesota’s prep school at age fifteen to help support his widowed and disabled mother. At age twenty-seven he began medical studies at the Minneapolis College of Physicians and Surgeons; he graduated first in his class of twelve in 1894. He practiced medicine briefly in Shakopee and twice did further medical studies in Germany and England. There he encountered the work of Havelock Ellis, who began publishing the six-volume series Studies in the Psychology of Sex in 1897.
After returning from Europe, Malchow set up a proctology practice in downtown Minneapolis and started teaching at the Hamline University School of Medicine. In his practice, Malchow observed that many people, especially women, suffered in their lives and marriages from a lack of reliable information about sex. Around the year 1902 Malchow decided to do something about this state of ignorance: write and publish a book about human sexuality. Olly Burton, a medical textbook company representative then based in Minneapolis, agreed to serve as the book’s publisher.
The Sexual Life (dedicated to Malchow’s mother, Marie), appeared in 1904, the same year Maclhow married Lydia Gluek, a daughter of the Minneapolis Gluek Brewing enterprise. The Sexual Life, over 300 pages, described in straightforward language a wide range of sex practices and problems—contraception, youthful experimentation, same-sex attraction, the physiology and psychology of sexual excitement, sexual pleasure, and sexual frustration. The book took particular aim at encouraging equality of knowledge and enjoyment for women and men.
In 1873 Congress had enacted the Comstock Act, which made using the US mail to distribute obscenity (including specifically any information about abortion) a felony. Malchow and Burton knew about the law and inquired of Minneapolis post office officials whether their advertising pamphlet—which described the book in detail—could be sent through the mail. The unhelpful answer merely referred them to the Comstock Act. They took a chance, and mailed 25,000 copies of the pamphlet to doctors, ministers, and lawyers around the country. The book quickly sold 3,000 copies.
In August 1904, just two months after Malchow’s marriage, a Minneapolis federal grand jury indicted Malchow and Burton for violating the Comstock Act. Trial began in October before Judge William Lochren, an Irish immigrant, a Civil War hero (he survived the famous charge of the First Minnesota at Gettysburg), and Minnesota’s second federal district judge. Lochren disapproved of The Sexual Life and made his views known to the jury, who quickly convicted both men. The First Amendment played no part in Malchow’s defense—it had not occurred to anyone at the time that the Constitution might protect the publication of explicit sexuality. And under the law of the time, Malchow and Burton were guilty of the crime.
Lochren gave both Malchow and Burton eighteen months in prison, later reduced to twelve. While their appeal made its way to the Eighth Circuit Court of Appeals, Malchow’s supporters appealed to President Theodore Roosevelt for a pardon. They failed: Roosevelt wrote that he found The Sexual Life “a hideous and loathsome book.” The Court of Appeals affirmed the conviction in April 1906; Roosevelt declined the pardon in April; Malchow and Burton reported to Stillwater State Prison in May. They were released in March 1907.
After his release, Malchow returned briefly to the practice of medicine, but he had nothing more to do with the book, which eventually sold some 100,000 copies. In 1913 he and Lydia moved to Santa Monica, California. Dr. Malchow never practiced medicine again, and died from complications of diabetes in 1917.
In 1953 Dr. Alfred Kinsey published Sexual Behavior in the Human Female. That book cited The Sexual Life seven times. The Comstock Act remained the law of the land; but instead of going to prison, Dr. Kinsey appeared on the cover of Time magazine.
For more information on this topic, check out the original entry on MNopedia.
“In 1953 Dr. Alfred Kinsey published Sexual Behavior in the Human Female. That book cited The Sexual Life seven times. The Comstock Act remained the law of the land; but instead of going to prison, Dr. Kinsey appeared on the cover of Time magazine.”
Timing is everything…
No kidding. What a crying shame it ended up that way. Americans can be such childish and repressed creatures. Even presidents. Even before TFG.
I look for copies of the book. My source said that there are no e-books available. As for libraries, I found a copy in Huntington Library and three copies in libraries in Australia. Apparently the censors did a really good job of removing it from circulation.
I looked for a copy, too. I’m curious as to how it would hold up under a contemporary reading.
I have a copy of the second edition, and if you go to the original article (rchs.com) you can find a link to the full text of a later edition. It’s still remarkably explicit. The great thing is that thejudge made the prosecutor read long stretches of it aloud for the jury.
If you go to the original article in Ramsey County History magazine (it’s availalbe on-line at rchs.com) you can find a link to the full text of the book. It’s out there, though not the first edition.
It’s been the same with pioneers of at-the-time uncomfortable subjects for millennia.
Not many of my “Judeo-Christian” brothers and sisters realize that the prophets we know from the Old Testament were the ones who were excoriated (and sometimes murdered) by the Kings and Priests of their own time because they challenged the status quo and everyone’s comfortable world view. Those Kings and Priests favored, instead, the Royal and Temple prophets who said how wonderful things were and how amazing each king was.
The Old Testament makes mention of an entire Bible-sized volume filled with the writings of those favored Prophets and stories of the glories of those Kings, but no such book survived after Judea was conquered by the Babylonians in 586 BC. because later leaders and prophets blamed those earlier Kings and Prophets whose unfaithfulness must have made God so angry that God allowed the Babylonians to triumph over the Judeans.
Time will undoubtedly show the same effect in the subjects covered so well (and so amazingly early) by Dr. Malchow.