
A History of Fingerprints
Fingerprints offer an infallible means of personal identification. That is the essential explanation for their having supplanted other methods of establishing the identities of criminals reluctant to admit previous arrests. Other personal characteristics change - fingerprints do not.
In earlier civilizations, branding and even maiming were used to
mark the criminal for what he was. The thief was deprived of the hand which
committed the thievery. The Romans employed the tattoo needle to identify and
prevent desertion of mercenary soldiers.
More recently, law enforcement officers with extraordinary visual memories,
so-called "camera eyes," identified old offenders by sight. Photography lessened
the burden on memory but was not the answer to the criminal identification
problem. Personal appearances change.
Around 1870 a French anthropologist devised a system to measure and record the
dimensions of certain bony parts of the body. These measurements were reduced to
a formula which, theoretically, would apply only to one person and would not
change during his/her adult life.
This Bertillon System, named after its inventor, Alphonse Bertillon, was
generally accepted for thirty years. But it never recovered from the events of
1903, when a man named Will West was sentenced to the U.S. Penitentiary at
Leavenworth, Kansas. You see, there was already a prisoner at the penitentiary
at the time, whose Bertillon measurements were nearly exact, and his name was
William West.
Upon an investigation, there were indeed two men. They looked exactly alike, but
were allegedly not related. Their names were Will and William West respectively.
Their Bertillon measurements were close enough to identify them as the same
person. However, a fingerprint comparison quickly and correctly identified them
as two different people. The West men were apparently identical twin brothers
per indications in later discovered prison records citing correspondence from
the same immediate family relatives.
Prehistoric Phase
Picture writing of a hand with ridge patterns was discovered in Nova Scotia. In
ancient Babylon, fingerprints were used on clay tablets for business
transactions. In ancient China, thumb prints were found on clay seals.
In 14th century Persia, various official government papers had fingerprints
(impressions), and one government official, a doctor, observed that no two
fingerprints were exactly alike.
Marcello Malpighi - 1686
In 1686, Marcello Malpighi, a professor of anatomy at the University of Bologna,
noted in his treatise; ridges, spirals and loops in fingerprints. He made no
mention of their value as a tool for individual identification. A layer of skin
was named after him; "Malpighi" layer, which is approximately 1.8mm thick.
John Evangelist Purkinji - 1823
In 1823, John Evangelist Purkinji, a professor of anatomy at the University of
Breslau, published his thesis discussing 9 fingerprint patterns, but he too made
no mention of the value of fingerprints for personal identification.
Sir William Hershel - 1856
The English first began using fingerprints in July of 1858, when Sir William
Herschel, Chief Magistrate of the Hooghly district in Jungipoor, India, first
used fingerprints on native contracts. On a whim, and with no thought toward
personal identification, Herschel had Rajyadhar Konai, a local businessman,
impress his hand print on the back of a contract.
The idea was merely ". . . to frighten [him] out of all thought
of repudiating his signature." The native was suitably impressed, and Herschel
made a habit of requiring palm prints--and later, simply the prints of the right
Index and Middle fingers--on every contract made with the locals. Personal
contact with the document, they believed, made the contract more binding than if
they simply signed it. Thus, the first wide-scale, modern-day use of
fingerprints was predicated, not upon scientific evidence, but upon
superstitious beliefs.
As his fingerprint collection grew, however, Herschel began to note that the
inked impressions could, indeed, prove or disprove identity. While his
experience with fingerprinting was admittedly limited, Sir Herschel's private
conviction that all fingerprints were unique to the individual, as well as
permanent throughout that individual's life, inspired him to expand their use.
Dr. Henry Faulds - 1880
During the 1870's, Dr. Henry Faulds, the British Surgeon-Superintendent of
Tsukiji Hospital in Tokyo, Japan, took up the study of "skin-furrows" after
noticing finger marks on specimens of "prehistoric" pottery. A learned and
industrious man, Dr. Faulds not only recognized the importance of fingerprints
as a means of identification, but devised a method of classification as well.
In 1880, Faulds forwarded an explanation of his classification
system and a sample of the forms he had designed for recording inked
impressions, to Sir Charles Darwin. Darwin, in advanced age and ill health,
informed Dr. Faulds that he could be of no assistance to him, but promised to
pass the materials on to his cousin, Francis Galton.
Also in 1880, Dr. Faulds published an article in the Scientific Journal, "Nautre"
(nature). He discussed fingerprints as a means of personal identification, and
the use of printers ink as a method for obtaining such fingerprints. He is also
credited with the first fingerprint identification of a greasy fingerprint left
on an alcohol bottle.
Gilbert Thompson - 1882
In 1882, Gilbert Thompson of the U.S. Geological Survey in New Mexico, used his
own fingerprints on a document to prevent forgery. This is the first known use
of fingerprints in the United States.
Mark Twain (Samuel L. Clemens) - 1883
In Mark Twain's book, "Life on the Mississippi", a murderer was identified by
the use of fingerprint identification. In a later book by Mark Twain, "Pudd'n
Head Wilson", there was a dramatic court trial on fingerprint identification. A
more recent movie was made from this book.
Sir Francis Galton - 1888
Sir Francis Galton, a British anthropologist and a cousin of Charles Darwin,
began his observations of fingerprints as a means of identification in the
1880's. In 1892, he published his book, "Fingerprints", establishing the
individuality and permanence of fingerprints. The book included the first
classification system for fingerprints.
Galton's primary interest in fingerprints was as an aid in determining heredity
and racial background. While he soon discovered that fingerprints offered no
firm clues to an individual's intelligence or genetic history, he was able to
scientifically prove what Herschel and Faulds already suspected: that
fingerprints do not change over the course of an individual's lifetime, and that
no two fingerprints are exactly the same. According to his calculations, the
odds of two individual fingerprints being the same were 1 in 64 billion.
Galton identified the characteristics by which fingerprints can be identified.
These same characteristics (minutia) are basically still in use today, and are
often referred to as Galton's Details.
Juan Vucetich
In 1891, Juan Vucetich, an Argentine Police Official, began the first
fingerprint files based on Galton pattern types. At first, Vucetich included the
Bertillon System with the files.
In 1892, Juan Vucetich made the first criminal fingerprint identification. He
was able to identify a woman by the name of Rojas, who had murdered her two
sons, and cut her own throat in an attempt to place blame on another.
Her bloody print was left on a door post, proving her identity as the murderer.

Timeline of Modern Fingerprint Identification
1901
Introduction of fingerprints for criminal identification in England and Wales,
using Galton's observations and revised by Sir Edward Richard Henry. Thus began
the Henry Classification System, used even today in all English speaking
countries.
1902
First systematic use of fingerprints in the U.S. by the New York Civil Service
Commission for testing. Dr. Henry P. DeForrest pioneers U.S. fingerprinting.
1903
The New York State Prison system began the first systematic use of fingerprints
in U.S. for criminals.
1904
The use of fingerprints began in Leavenworth Federal Penitentiary in Kansas, and
the St. Louis Police Department. They were assisted by a Sergeant from Scotland
Yard who had been on duty at the St. Louis Exposition guarding the British
Display.
1905
Saw the use of fingerprints for the U.S. Army. Two years later the U.S. Navy
started, and was joined the next year by the Marine Corp. During the next 25
years more and more law enforcement agencies join in the use of fingerprints as
a means of personal identification. Many of these agencies began sending copies
of their fingerprint cards to the National Bureau of Criminal Identification,
which was established by the International Association of Police Chiefs.
It was in 1918 when Edmond Locard wrote that if 12 points (Galton's Details)
were the same between two fingerprints, it would suffice as a positive
identification. This is where the often quoted (12 points) originated. Be aware
though, there is "NO" required number of points necessary for an identification.
Some countries have set their own standards which do include a minimum number of
points, but not in the United States.
1924
In 1924, an act of congress established the Identification Division of the F.B.I..
The National Bureau and Leavenworth consolidated to form the nucleus of the
F.B.I. fingerprint files.
1946
By 1946, the F.B.I. had processed 100 million fingerprint cards in manually
maintained files; and by 1971, 200 million cards.
With the introduction of AFIS technology, the files were split into computerized
criminal files and manually maintained civil files. Many of the manual files
were duplicates though, the records actually represented somewhere in the
neighborhood of 25 to 30 million criminals, and an unknown number of individuals
in the civil files.
In the not-too-distant future, the FBI hopes to stop using paper fingerprint cards completely inside their new Integrated AFIS (IAFIS) site at Clarksburg, WV. IAFIS will initially have individual computerized fingerprint records for approximately 33 million criminals. Old paper fingerprint cards for the civil files are still manually maintained in a warehouse facility (rented shopping center space) in Fairmont, WV. Since the Gulf War, most military fingerprint enlistment cards received have been filed only alphabetically by name... the FBI hopes to someday classify and file these cards so they can be of value for unknown casualty (or amnesiac) identification (when no passenger/victim list from a flight, etc., is known).

Removing Fingerprints?
A preoccupation among criminals in the past has been to eradicate their own fingerprint impressions. The use of gloves and wiping objects they had touched at the crime scene were obvious precautions, but in two famous cases more drastic measures were taken. The American gangster John Dillinger had his fingertips treated with acid in the 1930s to remove the ridge patterns, and Robert Phillips, another American criminal, had the skin on the fingertips removed by plastic surgery and replaced with skin grafts taken from his chest. Both attempts failed miserably. Dillinger's ridge patterns reappeared, and Phillips was identified by impressions taken from the undoctored second phalanges of his fingers. Such painful methods of eliminating fingerprints quickly went out of fashion, and criminals resorted to the use of gloves, although glove prints, especially of leather or woven gloves, opened up new vistas for the detective with prints from gloves and now DNA samples from inside gloves.
Contact/Submit
theNSAisWATCHIN
News Monster
Images Archive
News Monster Archive
The Frances Farmers Revenge Web
Portal