Howard Dully was born on November 30, 1948, in
Oakland, California, the eldest son of Rodney and June Louise Pierce Dully. Following the death of his mother from
cancer in 1954, Dully's father married single mother Shirley Lucille Hardin in 1955.
Neurologist Walter Freeman had diagnosed Dully as suffering from childhood
schizophrenia since age four, although numerous other medical and psychiatric professionals who had seen Dully did not detect a psychiatric disorder and instead blamed poor parenting by his stepmother. Freeman's notes stated that Dully's stepmother feared him, and that "He doesn't react either to love or to punishment... He objects to going to bed but then sleeps well. He does a good deal of daydreaming and when asked about it he says 'I don't know.' He turns the room's lights on when there is broad sunlight outside." In 1960, at 12 years of age, Dully was submitted by his father and stepmother for a trans-orbital lobotomy, performed by Freeman for $200 (). During the procedure, a long, sharp instrument called an
orbitoclast was inserted through each of Dully's eye sockets into his brain. Dully was institutionalized for years as a juvenile (in Agnews State Hospital as a minor); transferred to Rancho Linda School in San Jose, California, a school for children with behavior-related problems;
incarcerated; and was eventually
homeless and an
alcoholic. After becoming
sober and getting a college degree in
computer information systems, he became a California state certified behind-the-wheel instructor for a
school bus company in
San Jose, California. In his 50s, with the assistance of
National Public Radio producer
David Isay, Dully started to research what had happened to him as a child. By this time, both his stepmother and Freeman were dead, and due to the aftereffects of the surgery, he was unable to rely on his own memories. He travelled the country with Isay and Piya Kochhar, speaking with members of his family, relatives of other lobotomy patients, and relatives of Freeman, and also gaining access to Freeman's archives. Dully first relayed his story on a
National Public Radio broadcast in 2005, prior to co-authoring a memoir published in 2007. == National Public Radio ==