According to former president Faye Girsh, the Hemlock Society was founded in 1980 and was named in reference to Socrates' decision to end his life by drinking hemlock rather than succumbing to an existence he found intolerable. In the fifth century B.C., Socrates was convicted of corrupting the youth of Athens by encouraging ideas seen as contrary to the Athenian regime. Though he was sentenced to death, Socrates could have chosen exile, but chose death, an act seen as dignified and noble by many supporters of assisted suicide.
History
Earlier right-to-die advocacy organizations, such as the Euthanasia Educational Council, predated the Hemlock Society. The Hemlock Society was started in 1980 after the success of Derek Humphry's book Jean's Way, which recounted how Humphry assisted his wife in committing suicide on 29 March 1975 after a long battle with cancer. Due to the success of Jean's Way, Humphry had received many letters from people asking for information about assisted suicide. He decided to start the Hemlock Society in an effort to campaign for a change in law and educate the terminally ill on assisted suicide and its methods. Initially started in Humphry's garage in Santa Monica, California, the group eventually moved to Eugene, Oregon and had many other homes. Let Me Die Before I Wake, Humphry's book on the methods of assisted suicide, was originally published for members of the Hemlock Society. Due to library and trade demand, the book was published for the market in 1982 and became part of the foundation for the Hemlock Society's reputation and income. In 1991, Humphry published Final Exit, subtitled "The Practicalities of Self-Deliverance and Assisted Suicide for the Dying". The book was a bestseller, though there were calls for it to be banned. After the success of Final Exit, Humphry left the Hemlock Society and started Euthanasia Research and Guidance Organization in 1992. The Society was a founding charter member of the World Federation of Right to Die Societies, which began in 1980 in Oxford, England and was led by Sidney D. Rosoff and Humphry. The Society's national membership grew to include 40,000 individuals and eighty chapters. The Society backed legislative efforts in California, Washington, Michigan, and Maine without success until the Oregon Death with Dignity Act was passed on October 27, 1997. Past Hemlock Society USA presidents included Gerald A. Larue, Derek Humphry, Sidney D. Rosoff, Wiley Morrison, Arthur Metcalfe, John Westover, Faye J. Girsh. Past executive directors included Derek Humphry, Cheryl K. Smith, John A. Pridonoff, Helen Voorhis, and Faye J. Girsh.
In the media
In the 2010 televisionfilmYou Don’t Know Jack, which dramatizes the activism of former Oakland County, Michiganpathologist Dr. Jack Kevorkian, fellow activist Janet Good meets Kevorkian during a meeting of the eastern Michigan chapter of the Hemlock Society which Good has organized. Good later offers to let Kevorkian use her home as the location of the assisted suicide of his first patient, Janet Adkins, but later withdraws the offer because her husband Ray, a former member of the Detroit Police Department, questions the legality of assisted suicide in the state. It forces Kevorkian to use his Volkswagencamper van instead. Good is later stricken with pancreaticcancer and, on August 26, 1997, becomes Kevorkian’s 82nd patient. Oakland County deputy medical examiner Kanu Virani, however, later said Good did not have cancer.