According to historian of economics Thomas C. Leonard: "Prominent American eugenicists, including movement leaders
Charles Davenport and Madison Grant, were conservatives. They identified fitness with social and economic position, and they also were hard hereditarians, dubious of the
Lamarckian inheritance clung to by progressives. But as eugenicists, these conservatives were not classical liberals. Like all eugenicists, they were illiberal. Conservatives do not object to state coercion so long as it is used for what they regard as the right purposes, and these men were happy to trample on individual rights to obtain the greater good of improved hereditary health.... Historians invariably style Madison Grant a conservative, because he was a blueblood clubman from a patrician family, and his best- known work,
The Passing of the Great Race, is a museum piece of scientific racism. But Grant's eugenic ideas originated from a corner of the conservative impulse intimately connected to Progressivism: conservation." Leonard wrote that Grant also opposed war, had doubts about imperialism, and supported
birth control. Leonard's view that eugenicists such as Grant were conservatives is an outlier, however. Writer Jonah Goldberg has noted that "eugenics lay at the heart of the progressive enterprise" and was embraced by almost all early progressives, from Margaret Sanger to H.G. Wells and John Maynard Keynes. Likewise, Thomas Sowell has noted that most leading eugenicists were firmly ensconced within progressive intellectual circles, where the desire for the government to take strong action to protect the gene pool went hand-in-hand with other statist views, including opposition to free-market capitalism. Similarly, historian Edwin Black has stated that the eugenic crusade was "created in the publications and academic research rooms of the Carnegie Institution, verified by the research grants of the Rockefeller Foundation, validated by leading scholars from the best Ivy League universities, and financed by the special efforts of the Harriman railroad fortune." Grant became a part of popular culture in 1920s America, especially in New York. Grant's conservationism and fascination with zoological natural history made him influential among the New York elite, who agreed with his cause, most notably
Theodore Roosevelt. Author
F. Scott Fitzgerald featured a reference to Grant in
The Great Gatsby. Tom Buchanan, a fatuous Long Island aristocrat married to Daisy, was reading a book called
The Rise of the Colored Empires by "this man Goddard", blending Grant's
Passing of the Great Race and his colleague
Lothrop Stoddard's
The Rising Tide of Color Against White World Supremacy. Grant left no offspring when he died in 1937 of
nephritis. Several hundred people attended Grant's funeral, and he was buried in
Sleepy Hollow Cemetery in
Tarrytown, New York. He left a bequest of $25,000 to the
New York Zoological Society to create "The Grant Endowment Fund for the Protection of Wild Life", $5,000 to the
American Museum of Natural History, and another $5,000 to the
Boone and Crockett Club. Relatives destroyed his personal papers and correspondence after his death. At the postwar
Nuremberg Trials, three pages of excerpts from Grant's
Passing of the Great Race were introduced into evidence by the defense of
Karl Brandt, Hitler's personal physician and head of the Nazi
euthanasia program, in order to justify the
population policies of the Third Reich, or at least indicate that they were not ideologically unique to
Nazi Germany. Grant's works of
scientific racism have been cited to demonstrate that many of the genocidal and eugenic ideas associated with the Third Reich did not arise specifically in Germany, and in fact that many of them had origins in other countries, including the United States. As such, because of Grant's well-connected and influential friends, he is often used to illustrate the strain of race-based eugenic thinking in the United States, which had some influence until the Second World War. Because of the use made of Grant's eugenics work by the policy-makers of Nazi Germany, his work as a conservationist has been somewhat ignored and obscured, as many organizations with which he was once associated (such as the
Sierra Club) wanted to minimize their association with him. His racial theories, which were popularized in the 1920s, are today seen as discredited. The work of
Franz Boas and his students,
Ruth Benedict and
Margaret Mead, demonstrated that there were no inferior or superior races. ==Works==