Data from 2,089 laboratory rats utilized in selection experiments were used to estimate maternal influence on growth from weaning (21 d) to 16 wk of age. Adjustment factors were calculated for the effects of sex, generation, litter size, inbreeding of the dam and inbreeding of the offspring on the body weights. The effect of line of sire was included in the analysis of variance models. Covariances among paternal half-sibs, full-sibs, offspring-dam, and individuals with the same maternal grandsire were equated to theoretical causal components of variance in a series of simultaneous equations. From these, estimates of heritability, maternal influence and other environmental influences on the weights of the animals were calculated. Estimates of additive genetic effects were negative at weaning and increased to positive intermediate values during postweaning growth. Maternal influence due to additive genetic effects was of primary importance at weaning and tended to diminish at later stages of growth. An antagonism was indicated between maternal environment and genes affecting the offspring's growth. Maternal influence is an important factor at weaning and during the postweaning growth of a litter-bearing species such as the laboratory rat.