• Email Us: [email protected]
  • Contact Us: +1 718 874 1545
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar

Medical Market Report

  • Home
  • All Reports
  • About Us
  • Contact Us

What Happened To The Children Of The Nobel Sperm Bank?

November 7, 2022 by Deborah Bloomfield

In 1980, an optometrist who invented shatterproof lenses for glasses took the next obvious step in his career and began trying to harvest the jizz of Nobel Prize-winning scientists.

Robert Klark Graham earned his optometrist career, but his real passion lay in collecting semen. The idea, which he turned into the “Repository for Germinal Choice”, was to collect the sperm of Nobel Prize winners and other geniuses, which could then be used by the public to produce “super-kids“. Though the bank produced 215 babies before it closed in 1999 following Graham’s death, the project didn’t quite go to plan.

Advertisement

If all the above sounds a little in the realms of eugenics, we’re not going to help things by pointing out that all of the donors were white. Graham was a eugenicist, who believed that “weak” people, who he termed “retrograde humans”, were no longer killed off before they could reproduce. Of course, as is overwhelmingly the case with eugenicists, there was a large racist element to his solution for this imagined problem. He believed that the best course of action was to conduct “intelligent selection”, and get intelligent white men to have more children. As well as all the donors being white, recipients of the sperm all had to be married, heterosexual, and white too.

Getting your hands on genius sperm, it turns out, is quite difficult, and even more so when you have a reputation for saying a lot of quite sinister stuff about the degradation of the species. Graham was able to attract three Nobel Prize winners to make donations to the bank. However, two of them backed out when Graham went to the press with the idea, and a backlash came quickly against the eugenic nature of it.

The third Nobel Prize-winner did not pull out, but likely only because his views were in step with the racist overtones of the whole project. William Shockley, who won his prize for his work creating the transistor, held a number of racist and bigoted views, including that Black people are intellectually inferior to white people, and that the “genetically disadvantaged” should be offered financial incentives through the welfare state to be sterilized. He continued to donate to the bank, only stopping because he believed he was too old to provide healthy samples.

Advertisement

Despite the controversy, the sperm bank continued, collecting sperm from other “geniuses” and eventually athletes, and babies were born from the donations. David Plotz, a writer and co-founder of Atlas Obscura, tracked down many of the children produced by the project.

“To answer the obvious question: no, they are not all geniuses,” he wrote in The Guardian in 2004. “Some are dazzling. Sam, 14, breezes his way through college maths and is a brilliant athlete. Joy gains straight As, dances the lead in the Nutcracker and plays two difficult instruments. But the kids are spread in a bell curve, slid a bit to the right of average. Some are brilliant. Most are very good students. And some are quite mediocre.”

One, a gifted child called Doron Blake, became a sort of poster boy for the sperm bank. Born to Californian psychologist Dr Afton Blake, and a donor known only as “red 28”, he ended up with a 180 IQ and a flare for reading at a young age. There are so many environmental factors that you can’t really extrapolate from the 30 children that Plotz has come in contact with, let alone the experience of one child. 

Advertisement



However, Blake disagrees with the idea that genetics plays a large part in intelligence.

“I think that there are many other things one has to look at and try and to determine the quality of a person and intelligence is not even hardly worth a look. It matters more what one chooses to do with one’s intelligence, how one applies one’s intelligence in their life,” he told the BBC. “And I think it’s much more important than, sort of, genetic predisposition that Robert Graham seemed to really emphasise.”

The sperm bank never once sold any Nobel Prize-winner sperm, the LA Times reported in 1992, yet Graham continued with his eugenics project until his death in 1997. The project, hopefully the last of such eugenics projects, shut down two years later.

Deborah Bloomfield
Deborah Bloomfield

Related posts:

  1. Exclusive-China’s Miniso to double U.S. stores, add NY ‘flagship’ as pandemic slashes mall rents
  2. European shares turn positive as easing U.S. inflation data offsets luxury drag
  3. Japan’s Aso urges joint monetary, fiscal policies to spur inflation
  4. Soccer-Rashford receives honorary doctorate from University of Manchester

Source Link: What Happened To The Children Of The Nobel Sperm Bank?

Filed Under: News

Primary Sidebar

  • Funky-Nosed “Pinocchio” Chameleons Get A Boost As They Turn Out To Be Multiple Species
  • The Leech Craze: The Medical Fad That Nearly Eradicated A Species
  • Unusual Rock Found By NASA’s Perseverance Rover Likely “Formed Elsewhere In The Solar System”
  • Where Does The “H” In Jesus H. Christ Come From? This Bible Scholar Explains All
  • How Could Woolly Mammoths Sense When A Storm Was Coming? By Listening With Their Feet
  • A Gulf Between Asia And Africa Is Being Torn Apart By 0.5 Millimeters Each Year
  • We Regret To Inform You If You Look Through An Owl’s Ears You Can See Its Eyes
  • Sailfin Dragons Look Like A Mythical Beast From A Prehistoric Age, But They’re Alive And Kicking
  • Mysterious Mantle Structures May Hold The Key To Why Earth Supports Life
  • Leaked Document Shows Elon Musk’s SpaceX Will Miss Moon Landing Deadline. Here’s What To Know
  • Gelada Mothers Fake Fertility To Save Their Babies From Infanticidal Males
  • Newly Discovered Wolf Snake Species Is Slender, Shiny Black, And It’s Named After Steve Irwin
  • First Ever Leopard Bones Found At Provincial Roman Amphitheatre, Suggesting Bloody Gladiatorial Battles
  • The Solar System Might Be Moving Faster Than Expected – Or There’s Something Off With The Universe
  • Why Do People Who Take The “Spirit Molecule” Describe Such Similar Experiences?
  • The Most Devastating Symptom Of Alzheimer’s Finally Has An Explanation – And, Maybe Soon, A Treatment
  • Kissing Has Survived The Path Of Evolution For 21 Million Years – Apes And Human Ancestors Were All At It
  • NASA To Share Its New Comet 3I/ATLAS Images In Livestream This Week – Here’s How To Watch
  • Did People Have Bigger Foreheads In The Past? The Grisly Truth Behind Those Old Paintings
  • After Three Years Of Searching, NASA Realized It Recorded Over The Apollo 11 Moon Landing Footage
  • Business
  • Health
  • News
  • Science
  • Technology
  • +1 718 874 1545
  • +91 78878 22626
  • [email protected]
Office Address
Prudour Pvt. Ltd. 420 Lexington Avenue Suite 300 New York City, NY 10170.

Powered by Prudour Network

Copyrights © 2025 · Medical Market Report. All Rights Reserved.

Go to mobile version