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TH-008 Scientific racism 1851

Drapetomania — the 1851 ‘Diagnosis’ That Called Wanting Freedom a Disease Cured by Whipping

Years dominant
1851–1865 (~14 yrs of live citation)
Reach
Read to the Medical Assoc. of Louisiana; reprinted in De Bow's Review (Vol. XI, 1851) and the New Orleans Medical & Surgical Journal
Reversal anchor
No association; never replicated; mocked from 1855; carried no clinical basis from the outset
Status
Debunked

Summary

In March 1851, in a report read before the Medical Association of Louisiana, the Natchez- and New Orleans-trained physician Samuel A. Cartwright (1793–1863) announced the discovery of a disease he called drapetomania — from the Greek drapetēs, "runaway," and mania, "madness" — whose sole symptom was an enslaved person's attempt to escape bondage. The promise was a medical one: a diagnosis, a prognosis, and a cure. The reality was that the "disease" had no pathology, no lesion, no measurable sign, and no existence outside Cartwright's premise — namely that slavery was so benevolent a condition that only the deranged would flee it. The gap between the form of medicine and the function it served was total from the first sentence: this was not a study that later proved wrong, but an ideology issued in the grammar of a clinical finding.

Cartwright's report, titled "Report on the Diseases and Physical Peculiarities of the Negro Race," was reprinted in De Bow's Review (Vol. XI, 1851) and the New Orleans Medical and Surgical Journal (May 1851), where it reached planters and physicians across the slaveholding South. Alongside drapetomania it offered a companion invention, dysaesthesia aethiopica — a supposed disease of "rascality" producing laziness and insensitivity, conveniently explaining any enslaved person who worked slowly. Both rested on fabricated anatomy that Cartwright asserted as settled science: that Black people possessed smaller brains, deficient lung capacity, and "defective" oxygenation of the blood, rendering them naturally suited to subordination and field labor.

The prescribed treatment was the report's most damning feature. To prevent drapetomania, Cartwright advised keeping the enslaved in a state of submission, and when "sulky and dissatisfied without cause," to apply "whipping the devil out of them" as a preventive measure — torture entered into the medical record as therapy. There was never a moment of scientific acceptance to reverse: Northern physicians ridiculed the concept almost immediately, and the abolitionist landscape designer Frederick Law Olmsted satirized it in print. The terminology lingered in some medical dictionaries as late as 1914, but it never functioned as medicine — only as a license.

This dossier files "Overturned" entry TH-008 as the family's purest specimen of a different kind of withdrawal: not a wonder-drug that failed a trial, but a diagnosis that was never anything but a political instrument, "retracted" by history's verdict that it was scientific racism in its most naked form — medicine bent fully to the service of an atrocity it was built to protect.

Timeline

1793
Cartwright born
Samuel Adolphus Cartwright is born 3 November 1793 in Fairfax County, Virginia.
c. 1810s
Trained under Benjamin Rush
He studies medicine at the University of Pennsylvania under Benjamin Rush, a founder of American psychiatry — lending the later "diagnosis" the borrowed authority of an elite lineage.
1825 onward
Practice in the slaveholding South
Cartwright marries and settles in Natchez, Mississippi, building a reputation in cholera and "Negro medicine" before relocating to New Orleans.
1850
The census frame
Pro-slavery readings of the 1850 U.S. Census circulate claims that free Black populations showed higher rates of insanity than the enslaved — a statistical fiction Cartwright's work absorbed as proof that bondage protected sanity.
12 Mar 1851
The report is read
Cartwright delivers "Report on the Diseases and Physical Peculiarities of the Negro Race" to the Medical Association of Louisiana, naming drapetomania and dysaesthesia aethiopica.
1851
Reprint in De Bow's Review
The report's most notorious passages are reprinted in De Bow's Review (Vol. XI), the leading commercial-political journal of the South, and in the New Orleans Medical and Surgical Journal (May 1851).
1851
The "cure" published
The report prescribes submission and, for the discontented, "whipping the devil out of them" — entering corporal punishment into the literature as preventive treatment.
1855
Northern ridicule
Northern medical and abolitionist commentary mocks the concept; landscape architect and journalist Frederick Law Olmsted satirizes drapetomania in his Southern travel writing.
1857
Polygenist platform
Cartwright contributes to Types of Mankind-adjacent pro-slavery race "science," embedding his anatomy claims in the American School of ethnology.
1861–1863
Confederate service
Cartwright serves as a surgeon for the Confederate States Army near Vicksburg and Port Hudson, charged with camp sanitation.
2 May 1863
Cartwright dies
He dies in Jackson, Mississippi, two months before Gettysburg; the diagnosis dies with the institution it defended.
to c. 1914
The word lingers
"Drapetomania" survives as a curiosity in some medical dictionaries into the early twentieth century before disappearing entirely from clinical use.

A Cure Reverse-Engineered From a Crime

Cartwright did not observe a pattern and seek its cause; he began with a conclusion the slave economy required — that flight from bondage was irrational — and worked backward to a disease that would make it so. The method was inverted from the start. A genuine nosology asks what produces a symptom; Cartwright asked what symptom would vindicate an institution, then named it. Drapetomania's only diagnostic criterion was the act of running away, which meant the "disease" was indistinguishable from the rational pursuit of freedom it was invented to pathologize. The structural lesson is that a diagnosis built to serve a predetermined verdict will always "confirm" that verdict, because the evidence and the conclusion are the same event. Cartwright's training under Benjamin Rush supplied the prestige; De Bow's Review supplied the distribution; the slaveholding readership supplied the demand. What none of them supplied was a patient, a control, or a fact.

Torture Written as Therapy

The report's turn from absurdity to atrocity is the prescription. Having defined the desire for freedom as a treatable madness, Cartwright moved to treatment, advising that the enslaved be kept submissive and that those showing early signs — sulkiness, dissatisfaction "without cause" — be subjected to "whipping the devil out of them." This is the mechanism by which medical language launders violence: the whip is reframed as a clinical intervention, the overseer as a physician's agent, and the wound as a side effect of care. The companion invention, dysaesthesia aethiopica, extended the same logic to labor, recasting slow or resistant work as a nervous disease whose cure was, again, the lash. The anatomy was fabricated to match — smaller brains, deficient lungs, "imperfectly oxygenated" blood — assertions Cartwright presented as measurement but never derived from any. The crisis here is not that the science was weak; it is that the science was a costume worn over a system of torture, and the costume made the torture sound like treatment.

Ridicule, Then Reckoning

There was no dramatic retraction, because there was never an honest finding to retract. The reversal came in two stages. The first was contemporary ridicule: Northern physicians and journals treated drapetomania as a joke or a scandal within a few years, and Frederick Law Olmsted lampooned it by 1855, noting acidly that the same logic could "diagnose" any oppressed people who resisted. The second stage was historical and total. With emancipation and the collapse of the Confederacy in 1865 the institution drapetomania existed to defend was abolished, and the "disease" lost the only thing that had sustained it. The word survived as a dictionary curiosity into the early 1900s, but its clinical authority was always nil. The modern verdict is unanimous and unsparing: drapetomania is the canonical example of scientific racism — medicine deliberately bent to ideology — taught in ethics curricula not as a science that erred but as a warning about what credentials and journals will carry when an economic order demands it.

Contributing Factors

01
Conclusion-first nosology
Cartwright began with the answer the slave economy needed — that the desire for freedom was irrational — and constructed a disease to fit it. When the diagnostic criterion (running away) is identical to the conclusion (madness), the finding is circular by design and cannot fail to "confirm" itself. The format guarantees the verdict because the evidence and the verdict are one.
02
Fabricated anatomy asserted as measurement
The claims of smaller brains, deficient lungs, and poorly oxygenated blood were stated with the cadence of data but rested on no measurement, dissection series, or comparison. Pseudoscience borrows the syntax of empiricism — numbers, organs, mechanisms — while skipping the act of observation that gives those words meaning.
03
Prestige and platform substituting for evidence
A lineage from Benjamin Rush, a reading before a state medical association, and reprinting in De Bow's Review conferred the institutional markers of legitimacy. Authority and distribution are not validation; a claim carried by elite credentials and prominent journals can be entirely empty, and the markers make the emptiness harder to see.
04
Language laundering violence into care
Reframing the whip as "treatment" and resistance as "disease" converted an atrocity into a clinical procedure. The mechanism is general: when coercion is described in the vocabulary of therapy, the moral character of the act is hidden behind the neutrality of the medical register, and torture acquires the alibi of healing.
05
Ideology demanding a science to serve it
Drapetomania existed because the slave economy required a justification dressed as objective fact. Where a powerful institution needs its conduct legitimized, a market for confirming "science" appears, and credentialed practitioners arise to supply it. The disease was never about the enslaved; it was about absolving the enslaver.

Aftermath

The material consequence in Cartwright's lifetime was the legitimation of cruelty: his framework gave planters and overseers a medical vocabulary for punishment and a pseudo-scientific answer to abolitionist arguments that the enslaved longed for freedom. The institution it defended fell in 1865, and "drapetomania" decayed into a dictionary curiosity that vanished by the early twentieth century. But the durable ripple is conceptual and still active. The case became the standard reference point for "scientific racism" — the deliberate enlistment of medical authority to rationalize oppression — cited across bioethics, the history of medicine, and disparities research, where scholars now invert the term as "neo-drapetomania" to describe how systemic racism, not resistance to it, is the pathology worth diagnosing. What remains is a permanent specimen: proof that a journal, a professional society, and a trained physician can together certify a "disease" that is purely an instrument of power. "Overturned" files it as TH-008 because it marks the family's outer boundary — the point at which a withdrawn idea is revealed never to have been a scientific claim at all, only an atrocity in a white coat. Its name is now a byword for the moment medicine forgets that the patient, not the institution, is the thing it serves.

Lessons

  1. Distrust any diagnosis whose only symptom is disobedience to power: when the criterion for illness is resistance to an authority, you are looking at a control mechanism wearing the costume of medicine, not a clinical entity.
  2. Demand the measurement, never the assertion of one: claims about brains, lungs, or "physiology" stated in confident anatomical language but unaccompanied by data are rhetoric, and the borrowed vocabulary of science is precisely how empty claims travel.
  3. Refuse the laundering of coercion into care — when a punishment is renamed a "treatment," strip the medical word away and judge the act on what it physically does to the patient.
  4. Treat prestige, journals, and professional societies as distribution, not validation: the same credentials that lend authority also lend cover, so ask who benefits from a finding before you ask who endorsed it.
  5. When a powerful institution needs a science that confirms its conduct, expect that science to be manufactured — and read any "discovery" that conveniently absolves the powerful as a product of that demand until proven otherwise.

References