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Salem will recognize the 100th Anniversary of the Scopes Monkey Trial on Saturday, July 12th.

The Salem Area Historical Museum is sponsoring the event that will be held at the stage in Bryan Memorial Park beginning at ten am.

Chair Jim Koehler says all activities are free including two live re-enactments of the trial at 11 am and 1:30 pm.

“It’ll be the trial that was going on in Dayton Tennessee in 1925 in late July,” Koehler said. “We have a host of characters that will be played. William Jennings Bryan will be Matt Donoho, and Clarence Darrow will be Matt Wilzbach. Those are the two main characters, and they have really been rehearsing to get their roles done. Jim Husk will be the judge, Brad Crow will be one of the other attorneys along with Rich Sinclair, who will be with the Darrow team.”

The re-enactments are directed by Michelle Barbee.

The trial is significant to Salem because both William Jennings Bryan and John T. Scopes, the teacher who was accused of teaching the scientific theory of evolution at Dayton High School in Tennessee, are Salem High School graduates.

Upon learning that Bryan would be appearing, the famous defense attorney Clarence Darrow offered his legal services to Scopes and the ACLU. When the two men met in the courtroom Darrow put Bryan on the witness stand, and the men battled for hours over the place of the Bible in public education.

The trial occurred when Bryan was nearing retirement after serving as the U.S. Secretary of State and a member of the U.S. House of Representatives, as well as running for President three times.

Just a few days after the trial ended, with Scopes being found guilty of teaching evolution in violation of the Tennessee law, Bryan died in Dayton.  His body was transported, by train, to Washington D.C. and he was buried at Arlington Cemetery.

In addition to the trial, Koehler says there will be other activities.

“We’ll have some vendors there,” Koehler said. “The Genealogical Society will have a booth, and I believe there are a couple more. We will be selling T-shirts, and we’ll have stuff from the museum as well. Luke Purcell is going to be singing in-between. We’ll have general information about Bryan that people may not know that they’ll be able to find out. We will have some antique cars there that they can look at. We don’t really have a car show, but we talked to some guys, and they’re bringing cars from around the time of when the trial was held in 1925.”

Volunteers will be needed on the day of the event for set up, as stagehands, and general crowd guidance. Anyone wishing to help can contact Koehler or Barbee.