Es ist ein schwarz-weißes Foto. Es hat eine helle Umrandung. Auf dem Foto sitzen Carrie Buck und Ihre Mutter. Carrie sitzt links. Sie hat kinnlange dunkle Haare. Ihre Mutter hat ihre ergrauten Haare hochgesteckt. Beide Frauen tragen helle langärmelige Kleider. Sie sitzen auf einer Parkbank und blicken ernst in die Kamera. Die Mutter hat ihre Hand auf die Schulter ihrer Tochter Carrie gelegt. Im Hintergrund sind Bäume, eine Hecke und eine Straße erkennbar.

Carrie and Emma Buck in the »Virginia Colony for Epileptics and the Feebleminded« before the »Buck v. Bell« trial in Virginia, November 1924. Photographer: Arthur Howard Estabrook.

Archiv University at Albany, State University New York.

CARRIE BUCK (1906 – 1983)

Carrie Buck grew up in poverty with a foster family in Virginia (USA). At the age of 17, she was raped by her foster mother’s nephew and became pregnant as a result. The foster parents then sent her to a home for epileptics and the so-called »Mentally ill«. After the birth, the foster parents adopted Carrie’s daughter Vivian Buck. In the same year, a sterilisation law came into force in Virginia. Carrie’s sterilisation was used to test the legality of the law and to enforce in court that sterilisation could be carried out against the will of the person concerned. The court assumed without evidence that Carrie, her biological mother Emma and her daughter were mentally impaired. Carrie Buck thus became the first victim of forced sterilisation on 19 October 1927. In 1932, she married the widower William Eagle. He brought six children into the marriage and died in 1941. In 1965, she married fruit farmer Charlie Detamore. The marriage lasted until Carrie’s death in 1983 and she was buried next to her daughter in Charlottesville (Virginia, USA). Vivian was only eight years old.