EUGENICS RECORD OFFICE. 123 



BULLETINS. 



1. Heredity of feeble-mindedness. Henry H. Goddard. April 1911, 140 p., 15 pedigree charts. 



2. The study of human heredity. C. B. Davenport, H. H. Laughlin, D. F. Weeks, H. H. 



Goddard, E. R. Johnstone. May 1911, 17 pp., 6 plates. 



3. Preliminary report of a study of heredity in insanity in the light of the Mendelian laws. 



Gertrude L. Cannon and A. J. RosanofF. May 1911, 11 pp., 12 charts. 



4. A first study of inheritance in epilepsy. Charles B. Davenport and David F. Weeks. Nov. 



1911, 30 pp., 33 charts, 11 tables. 



5. A study of heredity of insanity in the light of the Mendelian theory. A. J. Rosanoff and 



Florence I. Orr. Oct. 1911, 43 pp., 73 charts, 2 tables. 



6. The trait book. Charles B. Davenport. Feb. 1912, 52 pp., 1 colored plate, 1 figure. 



7. The family-history book. Charles B. Davenport and others. Sept. 1912, 101 pp., 16 figures, 



and 5 plates. 



8. Some problems in the study of heredity in mental diseases. Henry A. Cotton. Aug. 1913, 



59 pp., 9 figures, 5 folded charts. 



9. State laws limiting marriage selection examined in the light of eugenics. Charles B. Daven- 



port. June 1913. 66 pp., 2 charts, and 3 tables. 



10. Studies of the committee on sterilization, Harry H. Laughlin, secretary. 



(a) The scope of the committee's work. 64 pp., charts and tables. 



(b) The legal, legislative, and administrative aspects of sterilization. 150 pp., 4 charts, 13 



tables, 1 map. 



11. Reply to criticism of recent American work by Dr. Heron, of the Galton laboratory. C. B. 



Davenport and A. J. Rosanoff. Feb. 1914, 43 pp. 



12. The feebly inhibited: Violent temper and its inheritance. Charles B. Davenport. Sept. 



1915, 36 pp., 11 charts, and 8 tables. 



13. How to make a eugenical family study. Charles B. Davenport and Harry H. Laughlin. 



June 1915, 35 pp., 4 charts, and 2 tables. 



14. Hereditary fragility of bone (Jragilitas osseus, osteopsathyrosis). H. S. Conrad and C. B. 



Davenport. Nov. 1915, 31 pp., 35 figures, 8 pp. bibliography. 



15. Dack family. Mrs. Anna Wendt Finlayson. May 1916, 42 pp., 1 chart. 



16. The hereditary factor of pellagra. C. B. Davenport. A study of the heredity of pellagra 



in Spartanburg County, South Carolina, Dr. E. B. Muncey. July 1916, 75 pp., 

 28 figures, and 8 tables. 



17. Huntington's chorea in relation to heredity and eugenics. C. B. Davenport, based on field- 



notes made by Dr. E. B. Muncey. Oct. 1916, 29 pp., 3 tables, and 1 map. 



18. Inheritance of stature. C. B. Davenport. July 1917, 77 pp., 19 text figures, and 33 tables, 



19. Report of the first twenty-seven months' work of the eugenics record office. Harry H. 



Laughlin. July 1913, 32 pp., 9 figures, 1 map, and 1 chart. 



MEMOIRS. 



1. The Hill folk. Report on a rural community of hereditary defectives. Florence H. Danielson 



and C. B. Davenport. Aug. 1913, 3 folded charts and 4 text figures, 56 pp. quarto. 



2. The Nam family. A study in cacogenics. Arthur H. Estabrook and Charles B. Davenport. 



Aug. 1912, 4 charts, 4 text figures, 85 pp. quarto. 



Besides the above, the following books published elsewhere were 

 based largely upon data furnished by the Eugenics Record Office: 



1. Eugenics. Charles B. Davenport. 35 pp., 4 plates. Pub. by Y. M. C. A. Health League. 



2. Heredity in relation to eugenics. Charles B. Davenport. Octavo, 298 pp., 175 illustrations 



and diagrams and plates. Pub. by Henry Holt & Company. 



3. Heredity of skin-color in negro-white crosses. Charles B. Davenport. Octavo, 106 pp., 4 



plates. Carnegie Inst. Wash. Pub. No. 188. 



4. The feebly inhibited: II. Nomadism, or the wandering impulse with special reference to 



heredity. III. Inheritance of temperament. Charles B. Davenport. Octavo, 

 158 pp., 89 figs. Carnegie Inst. Wash. Pub. No. 236. 



5. The Jukes in 1915. Arthur H. Estabrook. Quarto, 85 pp., 28 charts, 18 tables. Carnegie 



Inst. Wash. Pub. No. 240. 



6. Naval officers: Heredity and development, Charles B. Davenport and Mary T. Scudder. 



Octavo. Carnegie Inst. Wash. Pub. No. 259. 



WAR SERVICE. 



From a period antedating our declaration of war with Germany 

 imtil the present time, Dr. H. H. LaughUn, superintendent, who had 



