THE DATA 19 



Three were criminal. 



Eight kept houses of ill fame. 



These people have married into other families, gen- 

 erally of about the same type, so that we now have on 

 record and charted eleven hundred and forty-six in- 

 dividuals. 



Of this large group, we have discovered that two 

 hundred and sixty-two were feeble-minded, while one 

 hundred and ninety-seven are considered normal, the 

 remaining five hundred and eighty-one being still un- 

 determined. ("Undetermined," as here employed, 

 often means not that we knew nothing about the person, 

 but that we could not decide. They are people we can 

 scarcely recognize as normal ; frequently they are not 

 what we could call good members of society. But it 

 is very difficult to decide without more facts whether 

 the condition that we find or that we learn about, as in 

 the case of older generations, is or was really one of 

 true feeble-mindedness.) 



In 1803, Martin Kallikak Jr., otherwise known as 

 the "Old Horror," married Rhoda Zabeth, a normal 

 woman. (See Chart II.) They had ten children, of 

 whom one died in infancy and another died at birth 

 with the mother. Of those who lived, the oldest was 

 Millard, the direct ancestor of our Deborah. He 



