If youโre a parent of a certain age, chances are you know the name Dr. Spock. Not to be confused with Mr. Spock of Star Trek fame, Dr. Benjamin Spock grew up in New Haven, attended Yale and became a household name as the preeminent parenting expert of the 20th century.
Born on May 2, 1903, Spock grew up at 165 Cold Spring Street. His father, Benjamin Ives Spock, was an attorney for the New York, New Haven and Hartford Railroad. His mother, Mildred Louise Stoughton Spock, โnever had a momentโs doubtโ about her own parenting of her six children, Spock wrote in his 1985 autobiography, Spock on Spock: A Memoir of Growing Up With the Century. Benjamin Spock was her oldest living child, and he credited his love of babies in part to his experience helping to raise his brother Bob, nine years younger.
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Spockโs education took him from Worthington Hooker School to an experimental โopen-airโ school on Orange Street, which consisted of โa large wooden platform, a tent, twenty desks, and twenty thick felt bags to sit in,โ he recalled in his memoir. From there, the future pediatrician-psychiatrist spent a year at Hopkins Grammar School, to which he sometimes traveled by roller skates, shortcutting through the Woolsey Hall rotunda. But Hopkins and Spock werenโt a great fit. For one thing, he recalled, the older, โrougherโ boys enjoyed spending recess tossing the smaller boys from a blanket which eight of them held around the edges. He was happy to find his way across town to Hamden Hall, where he played soccer and baseball.
After finishing his secondary education at Phillips Academy in Andover, Massachusetts, Spock returned to New Haven for college at Yale, where, at six feet and four inches tall, he found the crew team. By junior year, he was rowing varsity. In 1924, Yaleโs crew team won the Olympic trials, besting another boat by just a few feet, and won a berth at the Paris Olympics. In the final race there, they beat their closest opponentโCanadaโby more than three boat lengths and took home gold medals.
But as impressive as his rowing career may have been, what made โDr. Spockโ a household name was his career in medicine. In 1929, he earned his medical degree, starting at Yale and finishing at Columbia because he and his new wife, Jane Davenport Cheney, wanted to live in New York. At the time, โNew Haven seemed dull, conventional, too full of my familyโs friends,โ he wrote. While doing his pediatric residency in the early 1930s, it occurred to him that he should also train in psychiatry. It was that combination of training that led an editor from Pocket Books to approach him about writing a child care manual.
Published in 1945, the first edition of The Common Sense Book of Baby and Child Care caught the wave of the postwar Baby Boom and sold three-quarters of a million copies. At the time of Spockโs death, in 1998, The New York Times reported the book had sold nearly 50 million copies and been translated into 42 languages. It is still in print today.
Much of the popularity of Baby and Child Care had to do with Spockโs folksy attitude toward parenting. โDonโt take too seriously all that the neighbors say. Donโt be overawed by what the experts say. Donโt be afraid to trust your own common sense,โ he wrote in the bookโs opening pages. That advice was a far cry from the conventional wisdom of the time that put babies on strict sleeping and feeding schedules and discouraged physical affection. Spock believed his book succeeded because โit was cheap, it was complete, and it dealt with both the psychological and the physical sides of child care. But most important by far was that I wrote the book with the resolve not to scare parents, or boss them around, or talk down to them.โ In 1953, the book got a boost from Lucille Ball and Desi Arnaz, who built an I Love Lucy episode around it.
But public opinion wasnโt always so kind. Spock gained a reputation of being โpermissiveโ and coddling. He took exception to that characterization. โIโve always urged parents to ask for cooperation and politeness (and to render it to children as well),โ he wrote. The pediatricianโs reputation was further impacted by his involvement in the Civil Rights movement and Vietnam anti-war and anti-nuclear demonstrations, his multiple arrests for civil disobedience and his 1972 campaign for president on the left-wing Peopleโs Party ticket. To Spock himself those actions were part of his larger mission. โJust as it was unusual but not odd to combine pediatrics with psychiatry, so there was nothing quixotic about a pediatrician engaging in political activism because he believed โwar is not healthy for babies or other living thingsโ
As the decades passed, Spock continued to modify his adviceโin later editions, with the help of Dr. Michael B. Rothenberg and then Dr. Robert Needlmanโas well as his views on women, responding to feminist critiques of the book by making revisions to the 1976 edition โto eliminate the sexist biases of the sort that help to create and perpetuate discrimination against girls and women,โ the Times reported.
Following Spockโs death, in the summer of 1998, Yale Alumni Magazine published several tributes from the Yale community. โIt is easy to underestimate the impact of Spockโs work,โ Dr. Joseph Warshaw of the Yale School of Medicine told the magazine, โbecause so much of his notion of baby and child care has been incorporated into the conventional wisdom of our general approach to child-rearing.โ The magazine noted it was breaking with protocol in publishing tributes to a distinguished alumnus who hadnโt later served the university as a faculty member or administrator. It may have been doing penance for an earlier decision in 1968, when a six-page article on Spock was pulled just before press time at the behest of Yale president Kingman Brewster, because both Spock and Coffin were on trial for โconspiring to encourage draft resistance,โ the Yale Daily News reported at the time. The magazineโs editor resigned in protest. Spock was convicted and sentenced to two years in prison; the conviction was overturned on appeal the following year.
Itโs hard to imagine that a book first published in 1946 could remain relevant today, but a 2011 paperback copy of the 9th edition of Dr. Spockโs Baby and Child Care is on the shelves at Ives Main Library in New Haven. The book, updated to reflect todayโs medical understanding, is sprinkled with pull-quotes labeled โDr. Spock Comments.โ In the chapter titled โWhat Children Need,โ the doctor writes,
Love and enjoy your children for what they are, for what they look like, for what they do, and forget about the qualities that they donโt have. I donโt give you this advice just for sentimental reasons. Thereโs a very important practical point here. The children who are appreciated for what they are, even if they are homely, or clumsy, or slow, will grow up with confidence in themselves and be happy. They will have a spirit that will make the best of all the capacities that they do have, and of all the opportunities that come their way.
The wording may sound a bit old-fashioned. But the advice is as true today as it was back when a little-known doctor from New Haven first wrote it.
Written by Kathy Leonard Czepiel. Image, photographed by Thomas R. Koeniges and sourced from the Manuscripts and Archives collections of the Yale University Library, features Benjamin Spock holding a baby circa 1968.