|   The family histories of the first 
              dozen of our cases, taken alphabetically, are reproduced herewith:— 
            1. Father a drunkard and abusive to family. Mother died. May, 1915, 
              T.B. She had 12 children, 10 of whom died in infancy. The other 
              living child is 15 years of age. Works in a factory. Diagnosis made 
              in Boston by New England Home for Little Wanderers is as follows: 
              Chronological age 11, mental age, Binet 8.8, Yerkes, 7.8, Coef. 
              I.Q., 61. (I.Q. of patient, 82 Stanford revision) Prognosis–very 
              poor. 
            2. Father died of T.B. Mother at present is patient in Wallingford 
              T. B. Sanitarium. Both parents come from stock superior to that 
              of average immigrant. Paternal grandfather is a druggist and known 
              to be a man of intelligence and some education. (I.Q. of patient, 
              90). 
            3. Mother and father were heavy drinkers. Family fell below average 
              social status before father’s death in 1914. Siblings: 1. 
              Female, 20 years, St. Vincent’s Training School for Nurses. 
              2. Female, 16 years. Has illegitimate child. 3. Female, 15 years. 
              4. Pt., male, 14 years. 5. Male, 12 years. (I.Q. of patient, 81). 
            4. Mother is dead. Father was a drunkard and abusive to his children 
              who lived in constant fear of him. (I.Q. of patient, 90). 
            5. Parents have separated for the 6th time. Their life together 
              has always been unhappy. Father is jealous of mother who is 13 years 
              younger than he. Mother in turn accuses him of mistreating her. 
              (I.Q. of patient, 93). 
            6. Father a heavy drinker. Mother reported immoral. Family lived 
              in constant state of destitution. One brother; considered feeble-minded 
              by teachers. Recently released from Meriden Industrial School. Sister 
              was considered very backward by teachers when in school. (I.Q. of 
              patient, 83). 
            7. Father was a drunkard and 22 years older than his wife who is 
              an extremely nervous, frail woman, considered by all who know her 
              to be mentally deficient. Upon autopsy, it was found that one-fourth 
              of father’s brain was destroyed. Brother, 16 years, emotionally 
              unstable, possibly psychopathic. I.Q. of patient 59. Sister, 11 
              years, I.Q., 53. Brother, 11 years, I.Q., 95, emotionally unstable. 
            8. Mother is dead. She and one sister were syphilitic. Father deserted 
              children after mother’s death. He was considered a smart man 
              and a capable worker but refused to keep any job steadily. (I.Q. 
              of patient 96). 
            9. Both parents were immoral. Father who was probably subnormal 
              was involved in a “White Slave” affair with his son 
              and was reported as an undesirable alien. Mother is said to be syphilitic, 
              is emotionally unstable, and thoroughly unreliable. (I.Q., 93). 
            10. Mother, a woman of the vampire type, was immoral with a number 
              of men. The father a laborer, physically and mentally her inferior, 
              was frequently jailed by her for drunkenness and abuse. In 1916 
              she eloped with another man, taking the youngest child with her. 
              (I.Q. of patient, 58). 
            11. Father comes from a family in which nervous troubles are common 
              and has been a patient in Middletown since 1914. He has dementia 
              praecox, and also T.B. Mother had two illegitimate children before 
              she met him, and lived with him for some years before marriage. 
              She is now living with another man. (I.Q. of patient, 94). 
            12. Mother died from tuberculosis after a long illness. Family 
              self-respecting. (I.Q. of patient, 95). 
             
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