(Source: Public domain from defenseimagery.mil) |
She fought for years to have her idea accepted by law
enforcement and the courts, to have sexual assault treated as a crime and not,
as author Pagan Kennedy writes, a feminine delusion.
Goddard was sometimes encouraged, sometimes funded, but
often ignored and belittled. She herself
was raped by someone pretending to be a supporter.
She died an exhausted, penniless alcoholic. Her heartbreaking story is told
beautifully by Kennedy in the New York Times Sunday Review. But Goddard’s idea would, as Steve Jobs encouraged,
go on to dent the universe.
I invite you to read Kennedy’s compelling article. I hope that, one day, it becomes a book. It will make you angry and frustrated and
maybe want to cry.
Based on my own reading of innovation, I have a short
postscript to add. But first, the basics:
While working at a crisis hotline for teens in Chicago in 1972, Goddard came to realize that many girls ran away from home to escape sexual abuse. That’s when she envisioned the first standardized rape kit. She wasn’t trying to dent the universe; she simply wanted girls and women to have the opportunity to present their stories in a legal world that judged what they wore and where they happened to be as evidence exonerating the men who assaulted them.
When Goddard offered a written description of her idea to
Louis Vitullo, a Chicago police sergeant and chief microanalyst in the city's
crime lab, “he screamed at her. He told
her she had no business getting involved with this and what she was talking
about was crazy.”
Not long after that meeting, Sgt. Vitullo invited Goddard to
return, presenting her with a prototype of the kit she had described and taking
ownership of the idea. The trademark for
the Vitullo Evidence Collection Kit was filed in 1978. The sergeant’s obituary in 2006 was titled
“Man Who Invented the Rape Kit.”
A Postscript: The Matilda Effect
This kind of theft is so common, so usual for a man to take
credit for the intellectual capital of a woman, that it has a name: the Matilda
Effect.
I first encountered this issue when researching Eli Whitney
and his cotton gin for Innovation on Tap.
Whitney’s story involves Catharine Greene, widow of General Nathanael Greene and proprietor of
Mulberry Grove, a plantation in Georgia which hosted Whitney as a guest
in 1793.
Greene would prove to
be a remarkable entrepreneur. It was her personal network that first
introduced Whitney to the problems of cotton processing, her encouragement that
set him working on the cotton gin project, and the equity in her plantation and
willingness to play angel investor that provided financing for his startup
expenses.
Nonetheless, when
Whitney filed his patent for the cotton gin in 1794, he listed himself as the sole inventor.
Matilda Joslyn Gage, c. 1871 (Source: Schlesinger Library on the History of Women in America) The mother-in-law of L. Frank Baum (author of "The Wonderful Wizard of Oz"), Matilda has an incredible story of her own. |
On at least one occasion, Gage concluded, Whitney had been stumped and
intended to give up until Greene provided him both encouragement and a
practical, mechanical solution.[1]
In 1993, science historian Margaret W. Rossiter coined the term
"Matilda Effect" in Gage’s honor to describe the systemic denial of
contributions by women scientists in research.
She found Matilda Gage especially appropriate because Gage herself had been largely forgotten
despite her seminal role in women’s suffrage.
Rossiter lists examples of the Matilda Effect, including the case of LiseMeitner, who labored for decades with Otto Hahn in Germany on nuclear fission,
only to be stunned in 1944 when “he alone had been awarded the Nobel Prize for
one of the biggest collaborative discoveries of the century.”[2] Likewise, Rossiter notes, it took from 1906
to 1971 and twelve editions before the series American Men of Science was finally renamed American Men and Women of Science.
Pamela Bauer
Mueller’s novel, Lady Unveiled: Catharine
Greene Miller, 1755–1814, brings the Matilda Effect to life
by providing a version of the invention of the cotton gin that assigns Greene
the role of primary collaborator. In
Mueller’s story, Whitney has solved the problem of separating seeds from cotton
staple but is stumped because the staple remains stuck on the wire teeth,
jamming his machine.
“I have reached
the end of my road,” Whitney says, and “I am prepared to abandon this machine
altogether.” That’s when Catharine Greene
picks up a hearth brush from the fireplace, waves it over Whitney’s failed
model like a magic wand, and says, “Perhaps this brush’s stiff bristles would
help you remove the lint from the teeth!”[3] Then she quickly flicked the cotton fibers
off the wires and onto the table.
Whitney stands amazed at Greene’s elegant solution.
More than good
storytelling, this is a real possibility.
In an 1832 sketch of Whitney, author William Scarborough described Catharine’s suggestion of a hearth brush,
prompting the inventor to add a second cylinder for cleaning the lint and seed
from the teeth of the primary cylinder.[4] This sketch was written just seven years
after Whitney’s death, and has as its source Dr. Lemuel Kollock (1766–1823), a close friend and confidant of Greene’s. Kollock served as executor of Catharine’s
estate, and supported Whitney at his final patent trial in Georgia. If Catharine had confided the truth of the
invention of the cotton gin to any one person, it would have been Dr. Kollock.
Where Matilda
Gage credited outright the invention of the cotton gin to Greene, other
historians take a more nuanced position.[5]
Scholar Autumn Stanley may have come closest to the bullseye when she
wrote, in her 1993 Mothers and Daughters
of Invention: Notes for a Revised History of Technology, that “Catherine
Greene almost surely did not invent the cotton gin ‘instead’ of Eli Whitney,
but" without her help, Stanley concludes, “Whitney might have failed.”[6]
Catharine Littlefield Greene c. 1809 (Source: Telfair Museums) attributed to Jame Frothingham |
Still, against
all odds, some prevailed. The first
American patent awarded to a woman was granted in 1809 to Mary Kies of
Connecticut who invented a way of weaving straw and silk to make hats. Six years later, Mary Brush received a patent
for improvements to the corset. The
third went to Sophie Usher in 1819 for a process that turned violet water and
cream of tartar into toilet lotion.
Ten women received patent awards by 1828, but it was the eighth and ninth
who continued to break especially important ground.[7] In 1826, Phoebe Collier received a patent for
sawing wheel rims, and two years later Elizabeth Buckley patented the sheet
iron shovel. Both inventions were
clearly outside the domestic sphere, further proof that contributions by women
should not and could not be limited to household goods and dress.
By 1876, women accounted for 859 American
patents, about one-half percent of all those granted.[8] Eight
years later Judy W. Reed of Washington, D.C., became the first black
woman to receive an American patent, for a mechanical dough kneader.[9]
The fact that women were not admitted
to schools that taught sciences or higher mathematics and were generally
excluded from mechanical trades in the 18th and 19th
centuries made these early patent awards all the more remarkable.
Goddard and Her Innocuous Box
Goddard continued fighting to have the rape kit accepted,
finally convincing the giant New York City police department to adopt her
innovation in 1982.
As its use grew, the rape kit overwhelmed a system
unprepared and often unwilling to adapt. By 2000, New York City had 16,000 untested
kits. In 2009, investigators found an
abandoned parking garage in Detroit where police had stored 11,000 untested
kits from as far back as 1980. In 2015, before the Justice Department finally
intervened to help break the logjam, the US had a backlog of 400,000 kits.
A central theme of Innovation on Tap is that the most
influential innovations in history often have little to do with technology or the latest whizz-bang breakthrough. They
don’t even involve new stuff—only a combination of the old, combined in a new
way. They arise the way Lin-Manuel
Miranda’s combination of Thomas Jefferson (b. 1743) with rap (circa 1980) turned Broadway and the US on its head.
The power of these kinds of low-tech novel combinations comes
in binding people and information together in new, more powerful ways.
The rape kit that Goddard conceived included test tubes,
slides and protective packaging, a comb, sterile nail clippers, and a bag for
the victim’s clothing. It also had a
card with information about counseling and medical services. It cost all of $2.50.
This “innocuous looking” box could not have been any simpler. But, it:
- Replaced a system designed to destroy evidence with one designed to preserve it. It taught nurses, for example, how to collect evidence suitable for lab work and (in an intended kindness to the victim) not discard bloody clothing.
- Connected medical professionals with law enforcement and both with lawyers, judges and juries. It assembled--sometimes unknowingly and even reluctantly--a support team for the victim.
- Encouraged the report of assault.
- Created a chain of custody.
- Impressed, relieved and swayed jurors by introducing science in support of emotional, conflicting testimony.
Most of all, it worked, helping convict its first rapist in 1979.
The rape kit was a collection of everyday material brought
together with simple instructions, but, Kennedy writes, it was really “a new way of
thinking about prosecuting rape.”
Goddard died in 2015. “Writing this,” Kennedy concludes, “I dreamed of one day seeing one of
the original kits displayed in the Smithsonian, among the parade of great
American inventions.”
With a picture beside it of Martha Marty Goddard, of course, an innovator whose innocuous looking box dented the universe.
[1] Matilda E. Joslyn Gage, Woman as Inventor, New York State Woman
Suffrage Association, pamphlet, No. II, Vol. III, February 1870, 32 pages.
[2] Margaret W. Rossiter, “The Matthew
Matilda Effect in Science,” Social
Studies of Science, Vol. 23, No. 2, May 1993, pp. 329.
[3] Pamela Bauer Miller, Lady Unveiled: Catharine Greene Miller,
1755-1814, Jekyll Island, GA: Piñata Publishing, 2014, Kindle edition, Loc
148.
[4] William Scarborough, “Sketch of Eli
Whitney,” Southern Agriculturist,
August 1832.
[5] See Denise E. Pilato, The Retrieval of a Legacy:
Nineteenth-Century American Women Inventors, Westport, CT: Praeger, 2000,
11.
[6] Autumn Stanley, Mothers and Daughters of Invention: Notes for a Revised History of
Technology, Metuchen, N.J.: The Scarecrow Press, Inc., 1993, 48.
[7] C.H. Claudy, “Women as Inventors,” Scientific American, New York, Vol. CVI,
No. 15, April 13, 1912.
[8] Warner, Deborah J., “Women Inventors at
the Centennial,” Dynamos and Virgins
Revisited: Women and Technological Change in History, Marth Moore Trescott,
ed., Metuchen, NJ: The Scarecrow Press, 1979, 104.
[9] B. Zorina Khan, The Democratization of Invention: Patents and Copyrights in American
Economic Development, 1790-1920, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press,
2005, 134.
No comments:
Post a Comment