That could be heightened with various drugs, eventually was replaced by positive messages, and the so-called "psychic driving" would continue. [25], Cameron had been hoping to correct schizophrenia by "erasing" existing memories and "reprogramming" the psyche. (Beyond Nuremburg, ABA Journal March 1997; News accounts of five legal cases at: The Law and Mind Control Mind Control Through Five Cases). Did it work? [15], Before his arrival in Nuremberg, Cameron had written The Social Reorganization of Germany, in which he argued that German culture and its individual citizens would have to be transformed and reorganized. Alison said that when her mother returned, it was no longer her mother. According to The Guardian, it started with playing tapes designed to tap into the reason the patient sought help in the first place. Duncan: No, he had some peculiar hobb-- he loved science fiction. Research genealogy for donald ewen Cameron of Melbourne, Victoria, as well as other members of the Cameron family, on Ancestry. [5], Cameron was involved in administering electroconvulsive therapy and experimental drugs, including poisons such as curare and hallucinogens such as lysergic acid diethylamide, to patients and prisoners without their knowledge or informed consent. There is no incontinence, there is no mutism, and we are continuing this intense treatment of her until we get complete depatterning.". According to "Brainwashing's Avatar: The Curious Career of Dr. Ewen Cameron,"he left his position at Allan and his patients in 1964. Cameron further argued that "the weak" must not influence children. In 1938 he moved to Albany, New York, where he received his diplomate in psychiatry and thus was certified in psychiatry. The Guardian talked to Alison Steel, Jean's daughter and one of the many family members trying to shine a light on what was done to their loved ones without their consent. And, until theres true accountability for what happened and what is still happening, it never will be. By that time, information on Cameron's sleep room projects was coming out, and there were all kinds of people who were very quick to distance themselves from it. He spoke about Germans, but also to the larger portion of the society that resembled or associated with such traits. Cameron placed the psychiatric treatment unit inside of the hospital and inspected its success. Duncan: Thats my recollection, that any documents that related to patients were destroyed. Hes in his mid-80s now. Amory: The answer might be in the idea of brainwashing itself. For Cameron, the traits were contagions and anyone affected by the societal, cultural or personality forms would themselves be infected. Cameron quickly found patients didn't want to listen to the messages. The mentally ill were thus labelled as not only sick, but also weak. It's hardwired into the brain. She was left with permanent impairments: She was unable to recognize faces, had impaired spatial recognition, and lost a good portion of her memory. [17] Cameron argued that it was necessary for behavioral scientists to act as the social planners of society, and that the United Nations could provide a conduit for implementing his ideas for applying psychiatric elements to global governance and politics. He recruited psychoanalysts, social psychiatrists and biologists globally to develop the psychiatry program at McGill[12] From its beginning in 1943, the Allan Memorial Institute was run on an "open door" basis, allowing patients to leave if they wished, as opposed to the "closed door" policy of other hospitals in Canada in the early 1940s. Cameron started to distinguish populations between "the weak" and "the strong". [7], Donald Ewen Cameron was born in Bridge of Allan, Scotland, the oldest son of a Presbyterian minister. Jean Steel was another one of Cameron's patients, and like the others she didn't sign up to be a part of MKUltra, depatterning, or psychic driving at all. When then-CIA director Stansfield Turner testified about the program in 1977, he said (via the Smithsonian) that the bottom line was to develop "the use of biological and chemical materials in altering human behavior." Some of this work took place in the context of the Project MKUltra program for the developing of mind control and torture techniques, psychoactive poisons, and behavior modification systems. I'm sure part of him very much wanted to be the person who cures mental illness. Their diagnosis was amnesia and hysteria, per a short commentary in the Journal of the American Medical Association. Amory: But even on their long drives from Montreal to upstate New York, Duncan says his dad never really talked about work. John Marks: The Allan Memorial Institute under Cleghorn commissioned a study of his work, which is absolutely or almost absolutely unprecedented in the psychiatric field. In compliance with the National Archives and Records Administration (NARA) requirements, some of these records are no longer in the physical possession of the FBI, eliminating the FBI's capability to re-review and/or re-process this material. (Rubenstein LS. He died of a heart attack while climbing a mountain in the Adirondacks in 1967. Ewen Donald Cameron. Another patient was suffering from leg pains that no one had been able to diagnose. Being compared to the Nazi's most notorious doctor probably isn't the life goal of most medical professionals, so let's look at what he did to deserve this dubious title. And that kind of explains why, when they were ordered to stop their depatterning and psychic driving of patients, they just sort of didn't. These became the basis of a new social and behavioural science that he would later institute through his presidencies of the Canadian, American and World Psychiatric Associations, the American Psychopathological Association and the Society of Biological Psychiatry. Esther Schrier who was a nurse at Montreal's Jewish General Hospital tragically lost her first child at just three weeks of age. Cameron focused primarily on biological descriptive psychiatry and applied the British and European schools and models of the practice. Through his instruction of nurses and psychiatrists he became an authority in his areas of concentration. Amory: Theres a reason that all the photos of Ewen Cameron are from more than 50 years ago. Ben: Would you have anything that you would want to say to Dr. Cameron or his family? He clearly had his mind set on doing unorthodox research long before the Agency front started to fund him. And one of these risks was the treatment that he was using. Duncan: Not really, I certainly don't know anything about the treatments he was using, I didnt know anything about that. [citation needed] He furthermore wanted to understand the problems of memory caused by aging, believing that the aged brain experienced psychosis. I mean, he was that much of a scientist. Birthdate: June 04, 1906. The title is The Understanding Man. Lake Placid in particular, and the northern Adirondacks in general, have lost suddenly, tragically, but in a sense, beautifully, probably their most distinguished citizen. He died three years later. They had four children; a daughter and three sons. Theres no clear approach to the summit only overgrown pathways. [citation needed]. The described types were the enemies of society and life. Everyone who makes a monthly donation will get access to upcoming bonus content from the making of our series. Amory: You're welcome to pull it out now. Cameron viewed German society throughout history as continually giving rise to fearsome aggression. Duncan Cameron: This is a picture of the whole family. Donald Ewen Cameron was born in Bridge of Allan, Scotland, the oldest son of a Presbyterian minister. You can see other fellow humans. Research genealogy for Donald Ewen Cameron of lambeth, as well as other members of the Cameron family, on Ancestry. And he didn't achieve that either. [29], Sid Taylor stated that Cameron used curare to immobilise his patients during his research. On March 12, her records show she was considered "depatterned": She could no longer stand, speak, could barely swallow, was incontinent, and required treatment by an obstetrician for severe bleeding. Ben: After Marians mom left the Allan, she struggled for the rest of her life to regain her sense of self and mental clarity. The lawsuits were dismissed, even though it was later shown . In other words, they really must have seen that there was something wrong and crazy. Like in Nicaragua, where he was The New York Times Bureau Chief. And I think it affected a lot more people than anybody even realizes today. in psychological medicine from the University of Glasgow in 1924, a D.P.M. In the late 1940s, Cameron presented his ideas in a lecture entitled Dangerous Men and Women. Ewen Cameron made the hike with Duncans younger brother, James. . Those who are privileged to know him, even briefly, will not soon forget the warmth and kindliness of this understanding man.. Harvey: Here he is trying to reach the peak, trying to climb the mountain, reach this goal. Josh Crane Twitter Producer, Podcasts & New ProgramsJosh is a producer for podcasts and new programs at WBUR. Amory: Nearly everyone who experienced Camerons treatments first-hand has since died. With a grant from the Rockefeller Foundation, money from John Wilson McConnell of the Montreal Star, and a gift of Sir Hugh Allan's mansion on Mount Royal, the Allan Memorial Institute for psychiatry was founded. Ewen passed away on month day 1915, at age 84 at death place. Duncan: It's really a very moving editorial. The guilt of her baby's deadly staph infection stayed with her, and when she became pregnant with her second, and the CBC says she went into Cameron's care in February of 1960. He argued that people with mental illnesses could spread and transmit their diseases. He demanded that political systems be watched, and that German people needed to be monitored due to their "personality type", which he claimed results in the conditions that give rise to the dictatorial power of an authoritarian overlord. I think he wanted to be famous. Amory: What was your father like as a dad? He actually has a smile. It is true. As time has worn on, its become the families of those victims who shoulder the burden. Rauh: A question that Mr. Turner wanted me to ask was what happened to the papers identifying the patients? Ben: Street Mountain is a strange choice for a bucket list. [22], During the 1950s and 1960s, Cameron became involved in what has later become known as the MKUltra mind control program, which was covertly sponsored by the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA)[6] and which eventually led to the publication of the KUBARK Counterintelligence Interrogation manual. I mean his father was a very prominent psychiatrist, so destroying rather than preserving personal papers of someone of that prominence is a very unusual thing, especially for a family member to have done. Cameron Cemetery. Amory: Ben and I are in an apartment in Washington D.C. thats bursting with morning light and books, and were flipping through some of our hosts old family photos. Duncan: And I've said Im unable to do that. It petered out in the early 60s as the programs director, Sidney Gottlieb, came to a realization. Amory: With the information we do have about Cameron, we know this: his so-called treatment didnt cure mental illness, and it didnt control peoples minds. In 1926, he served as assistant medical officer there[9] and was introduced to psychiatrist Sir David Henderson, a student of Swiss-born US psychiatrist Adolf Meyer. In 1938 he received his diploma in psychiatry and became professor of neurology, psychiatry at University at . Toby Ziegler:In the '50s, it was the CIA mind control research program begun in response to the Chinese attempt on U.S. prisoners. memorial page for Donald Ewen Cameron (1852-5 Feb 1892), Find a Grave Memorial ID 170055188, citing Cameron Cemetery, Indian River . In 1929 he moved to Canada where he worked in the Brandon Mental Hospital in Manitoba as the physician in charge. Once it was down to an exact science the precise number of hours in a coma, the number and duration of electroshock treatments, the exact dosages of drugs he believed that curing mental illness could be as simple as admitting a patient, putting them through the program, and spitting out a brand new, problem-free person on the other side. Amory: Duncan, one of the two lawyer sons, admits hes familiar with those 12 boxes of papers, and then explains what happened to them. We love making Endless Thread, and we want to be able to keep making it far into the future. ", And what about the CIA, who had approved and funded the research in the first place? She never did get her children back. Deze informatie is onderdeel van Families Klein, Ree, de Breed en de Vries van Terschelling van Marthan Klein op Genealogie Online. It's not clear how many patients Dr. Ewen Cameron's treatments destroyed, but some families have come forward with stories of what was done to their loved ones. Montreal's CTV says that by the time she died in 2011, she had spent the last 20 years of her life as an "infant," unable to allow anyone near her head without a terrible reaction. Marian believes all of this was a result of her mother going into the Allan. If I put you through this program, within 24 hours to 48 hours you'll be in a diagnosable psychotic state. [citation needed] Characteristics were thus diagnosed as syndromes emerging from the brain. Canada's McGill University has owned up to the part it played in MKUltra's Sub-project 68, and they say that it really started before Dr. Ewen Cameron even got involved. Duncan: He probably did, but I dont think I could remember the specifics of it. A stronger personality would be able to maintain itself in heavy industrial situations, he theorised, while the weaker would not be able to cope with industrial conditions. Who hasnt talked about this in a long time. Like Freud, Cameron maintained that the family was the nucleus of social behavior and anxieties later in life were spawned during childhood. Though he did visit the Allan Memorial on occasion. Instead of being considered for the fellowship, the neurologist was admitted to his Allan Memorial Institute, diagnosed with schizophrenia, and given such a heavy dose of barbiturates that it triggered an allergic reaction and she suffered from a prolonged loss of oxygen to the brain. Cleghorn immediately ended Camerons program. Duncan: I'm Duncan Cameron. Shes also signed on to the class-action lawsuit against McGill University, the Canadian government, and the CIA. After his mother confirmed that yes, there were 12 boxes of papers that her sons both lawyers said she probably shouldn't share, Duncan revealed that he had gone through and taken out "several papers" that identified "a particular patient." Ben Brock Johnson: So what do you have in front of you here? Cleghorn immediately went and took a long, hard look at what Cameron had actually been doing in his little corner of the university, and he was pretty shocked. with distinction from the University of Glasgow in 1936. Because it would seem to me, or I was concerned as a lawyer, that it might be a breach of the patient-doctor privilege. music, sound effects, tone) are harder to translate to text. With the results of the Manhattan project, Cameron feared that without proper re-organization of society, atomic weapons could fall into the hands of new, fearsome aggressors. My recollection was that I wasn't able to provide him with much information that he didn't already have. Amory: Were bringing you the last installment of our special series: Madness The secret mission for mind control and the people who paid the price. Cameron began to explore how industrial conditions could satisfy the population through work and what kind of person or worker is best suited to industrial conditions. What Hebb and Cameron both have in common is their contribution in establishing the scientific foundation for CIAs two-stage psychological torture method. There must have been names of patients. They fear the stranger, they fear the new idea; they are afraid to live, and scared to die." He received an M.B., Ch.B. In some cases, the same phrases reappear all through these. Amory: This is from The Adirondack Daily Enterprise, is the name of the paper. Her family sued, first based on the treatment alone, then again, after discovering she was a part of the MKUltra program. Cameron also hoped to generate families capable of using authority and techniques to take measures against mental illness, which would later be apparent in Cameron's MKULTRA and MKDELTA experiments. And you can see this manual that's been found all around the world, from hellholes to modern democracies. So why havent they? [13], In 1945, Cameron, Nolan D. C. Lewis and Dr Paul L. Schroeder, colonel and psychiatrist, University College of Illinois, were invited to the Nuremberg trials for a psychiatric evaluation of Rudolf Hess. It is at this juncture that he became interested with how he could effectively manipulate the brain to control and understand the processes of memory. Case of Gail Kastner: The shock treatment turned the then 19 year old honours student into a woman who sucked her thumb, talked like a baby, demanded to be fed from a bottle and urinated on the floor. At that point her affluent family abandoned her and she lived in poverty. [citation needed]. So we reached out to one of the most comprehensive archives in the world: The Library of Congress. And the funeral was yet another opportunity for Marian and her siblings to learn more about the mother who had been absent for so much of their childhoods. Cameron was born on December 24, 1901, in Scotland and graduated from the University of Glasgow in 1924. Heres journalist John Marks. And here I am looking much younger than I am now. Ex-husband of Enid Agnes Maud Watson. He did and he got it. She wasn't able to joke and laugh She would blurt out something like: 'We must do the right thing!'" She was not staying in this little town. (laughter). [16], Cameron next published Nuremberg and Its Significance. Donald Cameron of Lochiel (c.1700 - October 1748), was an influential Highland Clan Chief known for his magnanimous and gallant nature. And you see this actual physical manual on how to break down the human mind. Thank you! And they are still being asked to by victims and their families, 60 years later. It was a heart attack and was very sudden. As soon as his family found out about his death, they burned all the files that this man kept in his possession. Lloyd Schrier, son of Cameron patient Esther Schrier, told the CBC, "Oh, 'He was God-like,' they would say." He began his career as resident surgeon at Glasgow Infirmary, but in 1929 moved to Canada to work in the Brandon Mental Hospital. The National Post reports that in 1992, 77 of Cameron's patients were awarded an ex gratia settlement of $100,000, and that's all well and good, but claims made by more than 250 other people were rejected for various reasons. A Canadian government dismissed the CIAs role as a side issue or red herring; Ottawas Justice Department denied legal responsibility, offering each victim a nugatory $20,000 nuisance payment. So we don't have. Some would bang their heads against the walls relentlessly, trying to get the helmets off and that's when he realized he could just put them back into a medically-induced coma and play the tapes for as long as he wanted. His focus on children included the rights to protection against outmoded, doctrinaire tactics, and the necessity for the implantation of taboos and inhibitions from their parents. Ben: But Duncan is still, in some ways, trying to defend his dads honor. Other similar psychiatric diagnoses of Germany were published during this time. And I think my father would have too. He had a Mercedes. Ben: So its fitting that, today, most of what people hear about the CIAs search for mind control also seems to come from fantasy and popular fiction. Cameron wanted to build an inventive psychiatric institution to determine rapid ways for societal control while demanding a psychological economy that did not center itself around guilt and guilt complexes. Joseph Rauh Jr. was one of the attorneys that represented the group who filed lawsuits in the mid-1980s. Cameron became the first director of the Allan Memorial Institute as well as the first chairman of the Department of Psychiatry at McGill. In his 1946 paper entitled "Frontiers of Social Psychiatry", he used the case of World War II Germany as an example where society poisoned the minds of citizens by creating a general anxiety or neurosis.[19]. Amory: Marian was 5 years old when her mom was admitted to the Allan for what she thinks was postpartum depression. Ben: Today we grapple with Dr. Ewen Camerons legacy. Amory: Just not in the way he might have hoped. As for the ongoing lawsuits, some of the plaintiffs have actually contacted Duncan wondering if hed be willing to support their efforts. There's my father and my mother. Ben: In photos, the Cameron family seems happy, a candid shot of Ewen Cameron that looks to be from a garden party shows the psychiatrist in a skinny tie and jacket, horn-rimmed glasses and short cropped white hair. And he was searching for ways of doing something about them. He died of a heart attack while climbing a mountain in the Adirondacks in 1967. Lloyd has continued to fight for recognition, recompense, and an apology. The paper stated that German culture and its people would have offspring bound to become a threat to world peace in 30 years. Traces of some survived, including documentation on Sub-project 42 also known as Operation Midnight Climax and sub-project 68. And in that sense, I think his ambition overrode his skills and his ability to do the research. He never got one. He came up with the idea that if he presented the world and confronted the Germans with the atrocities committed during the war, the world and the Germans would refrain from repeated acts of extreme aggression. Dr. Ewen Cameron wanted to win a Nobel Prize for his work in psychiatry. She had no idea how to boil water, much less care for a child. Duncan Cameron is Ewen Cameron's son, and when he speaks of his father, he talks about a man who loved to hike, read science fiction, and who had an obituary that read, in part: "Those who are privileged to know him, even briefly, will not soon forget the warmth and kindliness of this understanding man." A notoriously tough climb, he did it with his son James, and when he got to the top, he had a heart attack and died almost instantly. He moved to Upstate New York where he studied aging and memory at two hospitals in Albany. In this, he hoped to establish a suitable method to reinstate a form of justice in Germany that could prevent its society from recreating the attitudes that led it from the Great War to World War II. John Marks: There must have been clinical documents. We want to hear from you! Memorials. The second part of the technique was inspired by something called the Cerebrophone, which was essentially a "learn-while-you-sleep" recording device. It was the start of a series of experiments backed by the British, the Americans, and the Canadians, and they wanted to know what prolonged sensory deprivation actually did to a person. Donald Ewen Cameron was born in Scotland in 1901. According to The Washington Post, Cameron was recruited in 1957, and he was a big deal. The only cure for mental illness, he theorized, was to eliminate its "carriers" from society altogether. He promoted a philosophy where chaos could be prevented by removing the weak from society. He did technically, because nothing says "wonders" has to be a good thing. 5, p. 2227) As a result of the lawsuit, the CIA agreed to pay $750,000, the maximum allowed under U.S. law, to settle a case without conceding liability. So I think in a certain way they believed that what fiction writers could come up with, somebody could actually make real. Psychiatry would play a disciplinary role. During those years, Cameron began to expand on his thoughts about the interrelationships of mind and body, developing a reputation as a psychiatrist who could bridge the gap between the organic, structural neurologists, and the psychiatrists whose knowledge of anatomy was limited to maps of the mind as opposed to maps of the brain. And then she came back from Montreal and she was never the same. Jean spent three months under Cameron's care, and spent two periods in a drug-induced coma. Think of all the books and the movies that are about mind control. McGill's then-director of psychology, Dr. Donald Hebb, took the money and set up experiments using his ready-and-waiting pool of test subjects: students. Ben: Hebb did an interview with a film producer in the 1980s, saying, quote, Cameron was irresponsible criminally stupid. Hij is overleden in het jaar 2010 in Near Toulon, France. They stressed how they'd been unwilling participants, and that they'd gone to the institute for other issues. And he was always very fascinated by what the future held for us all. ", "Brainwashing's Avatar: The Curious Career of Dr. Ewen Cameron,". What started as short-term depression before the Allan, morphed into chronic depression, as well as diagnosed schizophrenia and bipolar disorder afterwards. But none of us trained in psychiatry. . Duncan: I started work at the State Department just a day or so before Kennedy was assassinated. 3.99 He warned that government institutions should take measures against such potential liabilities. Cameron used his ideas to implement policies on who should govern and parent in society. Ben: Which brings us back to a question that no one can answer why did Dr. Cameron do what he did? [clarification needed] Those Germans affected by the events that led to World War II were of utmost concern. 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