Experimenting from Nova Scotia to Nazi Germany

agnes dennis, agnes mc, aid societies, alexander p. reid, american medico, archbishop mc, archibald r. douglas, british columbia, brookside training school, c. mackintosh, c. tory, canada, canadian legal history, charlene whitton, charles archibald, children, dalhousie review, dalhousie university, eastern european, education acts, eliza ritchie, emily murphy, english eugenics society, ernest h. blois, eugenic, eugenics, feebleminded, frank woodbury, full article, h. hattie, h. mac, h. sexton, hamilton asylum, hattie, helen mac, james russell, josef mengele, judge wallace, kings college, maude merrill, medical superintendent, mental, mental hygiene, movement, nazi germany, nellie mc, nova, nova scotia, nova scotia hospital, nova scotia legislature, nova scotia society, nova scotian, nova scotians, poor relief, preventing mental disorder, provincial health officer, psychological association, race, royal albert institution, royal commission, s. schiller, s. woodsworth, samuel h. prince, scotia, sexual sterilization act, shunpiking magazine, sir frederick fraser, social, society, stephen ellis, sterilization, tommy douglas, united states, william h. hattie, ye gods