The Underground History
Of American Education.
by John Taylor Gatto
Chapter Six
The Lure of Utopia
Every morning when you picked up your newspaper you would read of some new scheme
for saving the world...soon all the zealots, all the Come-Outers, all the transcendentalists
of Boston gathered at the Chardon Street Chapel and harangued each other for three
mortal days. They talked on nonresistance and the Sabbath reform, of the Church and the
Ministry, and they arrived at no conclusions. "It was the most singular collection of
strange specimens of humanity that was ever assembled," wrote Edmund Quincy, and
Emerson was even more specific: "Madmen, madwomen, men with beards, Dunkers,
Muggletonians, Come-Outers, Groaners, Agrarians, Seventh-day Baptists, Quakers,
Abolitionists, Calvinists, Unitarians, and Philosophers, all came successively to the top
and seized their moment, if not their hour, wherein to chide, or pray, or preach or
protest....There was something artificial about the Chardon Street debates, there was a
hothouse atmosphere in the chapel. There was too much suffering fools gladly, there was
too much talk, too much display of learning and of wit, and there was, for all the talk of
tolerance, an unchristian spirit.
— Henry Steele Commager, Theodore Parker
So Fervently Do We Believe
The cries of true believers are all around the history of schooling, thick as gulls at a
garbage dump.
School principal Debbie Reeves of the upscale Barnwell Elementary School in an Atlanta
suburb was quoted recently by the USA Today newspaper as the author of this amazing
testimonial of true belief, "I’m not sure you ever get to the point you have enough
technology. We just believe so fervently in it."
It’s that panting excitement you want to keep an eye out for, that exaggerated belief in
human perfectibility that Tocqueville noticed in Americans 170 years ago. The same
newspaper article wanders through the San Juan Elementary School in the very heart of
Silicon Valley. There, obsolete computers sit idle in neat rows at the back of a spacious
media center where years ago a highly touted "open classroom" with a sunken common
area drew similar enthusiasm. The school lacks resources for the frequent updates needed
to boast state-of-the-art equipment. A district employee said: "One dying technology on
top of a former dying technology, sort of like layers of an archaeological dig."
America has always been a land congenial to utopian thought. The Mayflower Compact
is a testimonial to this. Although its signers were trapped in history, they were ahistorical,
too, capable of acts and conceptions beyond the imagination of their parents. The very
thinness of constituted authority, the high percentage of males as colonists—homeless,
orphaned, discarded, marginally attached, uprooted males—encouraged dreams of a
better time to come. Here was soil for a better world where kindly strangers take charge
of children, loving and rearing them more skillfully than their ignorant parents had ever
done.
Religion flourished in the same medium, too, particularly the Independent and Dissenting
religious traditions of England. The extreme rationalism of the Socinian heresy and
deism, twin roots of America’s passionate romance with science and technology to come,
flourished too. Most American sects were built on a Christian base, but the absence of
effective state or church monopoly authority in early America allowed 250 years of
exploration into a transcendental dimension no other Western nation ever experienced in
modern history, leaving a wake of sects and private pilgrimages which made America the
heir of ancient Israel—a place where everyone, even free thinkers, actively trusted in a
god of some sort.
Without Pope or Patriarch, without an Archbishop of Canterbury, the episcopal principle
behind state and corporate churches lacked teeth, allowing people here to find their own
way in the region of soul and spirit. This turned out to be fortunate, a precondition for our
laboratory policy of national utopianism which required that every sort of visionary be
given scope to make a case. It was a matter of degree, of course. Most Americans, most
of the time, were much like people back in England, Scotland, Scandinavia, Germany,
and Ireland, from which domains they had originally derived. After all, the Revolution
itself was prosecuted by less than a quarter of our population. But enough of the other
sort existed as social yeast that nobody could long escape some plan, scheme,
exhortation, or tract designed to lead the faithful into one or another Promised Land. For
the most part, Old Testament principles reigned, not New, and the Prophets had a good
part of the national ear.
From 1830 to 1900, over one thousand utopian colonies flourished around the country,
colonies which mixed the races, like Fanny Wright’s Neshoba in Tennessee, colonies
built around intensive schooling like New Harmony in Indiana, colonies which
encouraged free love and commonly shared sexual partners as did the Perfectionists at
Oneida in upstate New York. In the wonderful tapestry of American utopian thought and
practice, one unifying thread stands out clearly. Long before the notion of forced
schooling became household reality, utopian architects universally recognized that
schooling was the key to breaking with the past. The young had to be isolated, and drilled
in the correct way of looking at things or all would fall apart when they grew up. Only
the tiniest number of these intentional communities ever did solve that problem, and so
almost all vanished after a brief moment. But the idea itself lingered on.
In this chapter I want to push a bit into the lure of utopia, because this strain in human
nature crisscrosses the growth curve of compulsion schooling at many junctures. Think of
it as a search for the formula to change human nature in order to build paradise on earth.
Such an idea is in flagrant opposition to the dominant religion of the Western world,
whose theology teaches that human nature is permanently flawed, that all human
salvation must be individually undertaken.
Even if you aren’t used to considering school this way, it isn’t hard to see that a
curriculum to reach the first end would have to be different from that necessary to reach
the second, and the purpose of the educator is all important. It is simply impossible to
evaluate what you see in a school without knowing its purpose, but if local administrators
have no real idea why they do what they do—why they administer standardized tests, for
instance, then any statement of purpose made by the local school can only confuse the
investigator. To pursue the elusive purpose or purposes of American schooling as they
were conceived about a century ago requires that we wander afield from the classroom
into some flower beds of utopian aspiration which reared their head in an earlier
America.
The Necessity Of Detachment
Hertzler’s History of Utopian Thought traces the influence of Francis Bacon’s New
Atlantis, a book you need to know something about if you are ever to adequately
understand the roots of modern schooling. Hertzler makes a good case from the testimony
of its founders that the Royal Society itself 1
arose from the book’s prophetic scheme of
"Salomon’s House," a world university assembling the best of universal mankind under
its protection. One of its functions: to oversee management of everything.
1 It is useful to remember that Britain’s Royal Society was founded not in the pursuit of pure knowledge and not by university dons but by practical businessmen and noblemen concerned with increased profits and lower wages.
New Atlantis had immense influence in England, Germany, Italy, and France. In France it
was considered the principal inspiration of the Encyclopedia whose connection to the
American Revolution is a close one. That story has been told too many times to bear
repeating here. Suffice it to say that the very same triangle-encased eye that appears on
the back of the American dollar appears as the center of Solomon’s Temple in early
eighteenth-century French artistic representations.
One consistent requirement of utopian procedure is the detachment of its subjects from
ordinary human affairs. Acting with detached intelligence is what utopians are all about,
but a biological puzzle intrudes: detaching intelligence from emotional life isn’t actually
possible. The feat has never been performed, although imaginative writers are endlessly
intrigued by the challenge it presents. Sherlock Holmes or Mr. Spock of Star Trek fame
come to mind.
Utopian thinking is intolerant of variety or competition, so the tendency of modern
utopians to enlarge their canvas to include the whole planet through multinational
organizations becomes disturbing. Utopians regard national sovereignty as irrational and
democracy as a disease unjustified by biological reality. We need one world, they say,
and that one world should (reasonably) be under direction of the best utopians.
Democracy degrades the hierarchy necessary to operate a rational polity. A feature of
nearly all utopias has been addiction to elaborate social machinery like schooling and to
what we can call marvelous machinery. Excessive human affection between parents,
children, husbands, wives, et al., is suppressed to allow enthusiasm for machine magic to
stand out in bold relief.
Enlarging The Nervous System
There is a legend that in lost Atlantis once stood a great university in the form of an
immense flat-topped pyramid from which star observations were made. In this university,
most of the arts and sciences of the present world were contained. Putting aside that
pleasant fancy which we can find clearly reflected on the obverse of our American Great
Seal, almost any early utopia holds a profusion of inside information about things to
come. In 1641 Bishop John Wilkins, a founder of the Royal Society, wrote his own
utopia, Mercury: or the Secret and Swift Messenger. Every single invention Wilkins
imagined has come about: "a flying chariot," "a trunk or hollow pipe that shall preserve
the voice entirely," a code for communicating by means of noise-makers, etc. Giphantia,
by de la Roche, unmistakably envisions the telephone, the radio, television, and
dehydrated foods and drinks. Even the mechanisms suggested to make these things work
are very like the actual ones eventually employed.
Marshall McLuhan once called on us to notice that all machines are merely extensions of
the human nervous system, artifices which improve on natural apparatus, each a
utopianization of some physical function. Once you understand the trick, utopian
prophecy isn’t so impressive. Equally important, says McLuhan, the use of machinery
causes its natural flesh and blood counterpart to atrophy, hence the lifeless quality of the
utopias. Machines dehumanize, according to McLuhan, wherever they are used and
however sensible their use appears. In a correctly conceived demonology, the Devil
would be perceived as a machine, I think. Yet the powerful, pervasive influence of
utopian reform thinking on the design of modern states has brought utopian
mechanization of all human functions into the councils of statecraft and into the
curriculum of state schooling.
An important part of the virulent, sustained attack launched against family life in the
United States, starting about 150 years ago, arose from the impulse to escape fleshly
reality. Interestingly enough, the overwhelming number of prominent social reformers
since Plato have been childless, usually childless men, in a dramatic illustration of
escape-discipline employed in a living tableau.
Producing Artificial Wants
Beginning about 1840, a group calling itself the Massachusetts School Committee held a
series of secret discussions involving many segments of New England political and
business leadership.1
Stimulus for these discussions, often led by the politician Horace
Mann, was the deterioration of family life that the decline of agriculture was leaving in its
wake.2
1 Much light on these developments is shed by Michael Katz’s The Irony of Early School Reform and by Joel Spring’s historical writings. Both writers are recommended for a dense mine of information; both strike a good balance between the perspective supplied by their personal philosophies and reportage without allegiance to any particular dogma.
2 The decline of American agriculture was part of a movement to replicate the centralized pattern found in Britain, which had deliberately destroyed its own small farm holdings by 1800. Agriculture had been conducted on a capitalist basis in Britain since the notorious enclosure movement prompted by the growth of farming. In its first stage, peasants were displaced to make room for large-scale pasture farming. The second displacement transformed the small farmer into the "farm hand" or the factory worker.
Capitalist farming was established in Britain side by side with a growing manufacturing industry which made it possible to rely on the import of foodstuffs from abroad. Freely imported food meant cheap food. Cheap food meant cheap labor. The development of factory farming in America (and Australia) provided an outlet for the investment of surplus capital at good rates of interest; hence the decline of small farming in America was hastened considerably by direct inducements from its former motherland. Although as late as 1934, 33 percent of American employment was still in agriculture (versus 7 percent in Great Britain), the curriculum of small farm, which encouraged resourcefulness, independence, and self-reliance, was fast giving way to the curriculum of government education which called for quite a different character.
A peculiar sort of dependency and weakness caused by mass urbanization was
acknowledged by all with alarm. The once idyllic American family situation was giving
way to widespread industrial serfdom. Novel forms of degradation and vice were
appearing.
And yet at the same time, a great opportunity was presented. Plato, Augustine, Erasmus,
Luther, Calvin, Hobbes, Rousseau, and a host of other insightful thinkers, sometimes
referred to at the Boston Athenaeum as "The Order of the Quest," all taught that without
compulsory universal schooling the idiosyncratic family would never surrender its central
hold on society to allow utopia to become reality. Family had to be discouraged from its
function as a sentimental haven, pressed into the service of loftier ideals—those of the
perfected State. [a bad pipe dream that will never happen DC]
Mann saw that society’s "guards and securities" had to increase because an unsuspected
pathological phenomenon was following the introduction of mass production into life. It
was producing "artificial wants." It was multiplying the temptation to accumulate things.
But the barbarous life of the machine laborer made family ideals a hollow mockery.
Morality could no longer be taught by such families. Crime and vice were certain to
explode unless children could be pried away from their degraded custodians and civilized
according to formulas laid down by the best minds.
Barnas Sears, Mann’s Calvinist colleague, saw the rapid growth of commercial mass
entertainment catering to dense urban settlements as "a current of sensuality sweeping
everything before it." Former bucolics, who once looked to nature for entertainment,
were now pawns in the hands of worldly wise men vending commercial amusement.
Urban confinement robbed men and women of their ability to find satisfaction outside the
titillation of mechanical excitation. Whoever provided excitement became the master.
Mann’s other colleague, George Boutwell, who would inherit the leadership of New
England education from Sears, argued that a course must be selected from which there
could be no turning back. Urbanization spelled the collapse of worker families; there was
no remedy for it. Fathers were grossly diverted by nonagricultural labor from training
their own children. Claims of a right to society and fashion led to neglect by mothers, too.
"As in some languages there is no word which expresses the true idea of home," said
Boutwell, "so in our manufacturing towns there are many persons who know nothing of
its reality."
Mann proclaimed the State must assert itself as primary parent of children. If an infant’s
natural parents were removed—or if parental ability failed (as was increasingly
certain)—it was the duty of government to step in and fill the parent’s place. Mann noted
that Massachusetts had a long tradition of being "parental in government." His friend
Sears described the State as "a nourishing mother, as wise as she is beneficent. Yet,
should difficulties arise, the State might become stern—as befits a ruling patriarch."
(emphasis added)
The Parens Patriae Powers
The 1852 compulsory schooling legislation of Massachusetts represents a fundamental
change in the jurisprudence of parental authority, as had the adoption act passed by the
nearly identically constituted legislature just four years prior, the first formal adoption
legislation anywhere on earth since the days of the Roman Empire. Acts so radical could
not have passed silently into practice if fundamental changes in the status of husbands
and wives, parents and children, had not already gravely damaged the prestige of the
family unit.
There are clear signs as far back as 1796 that elements in the new American state
intended to interpose themselves in corners of the family where no European state had
ever gone before. In that year, the Connecticut Superior Court, representing the purest
Puritan lineage of original New England, introduced "judicial discretion" into the
common law of child custody and a new conception of youthful welfare hardly seen
before outside the pages of philosophy books—the notion that each child had an
individual destiny, a private "welfare" independent of what happened to the rest of its
family.
A concept called "psychological parenthood" began to take shape, a radical notion
without legal precedent that would be used down the road to support drastic forcible
intervention into family life. It became one of the basic justifications offered during the
period of mass immigration for a compulsion law intended to put children under the thrall
of so-called scientific parenting in schools.
Judicial discretion in custody cases was the first salvo in a barrage of poorly understood
court rulings in which American courts made law rather than interpreted it. These rulings
were formalized later by elected legislatures. Rubber-stamping the fait accompli, they
marked a restructuring of the framework of the family ordered by a judicial body without
any public debate or consent. No precedent for such aggressive court action existed in
English law. The concept lived only in the dreams and speculations of utopian writers
and philosophers.
The 1840 case Mercein v. People produced a stunning opinion by Connecticut’s Justice
Paige—a strain of radical strong-state faith straight out of Hegel:
The moment a child is born it owes allegiance to the government of the country of its
birth, and is entitled to the protection of the government.
As the opinion unrolled, Paige further explained "with the coming of civil society the
father’s sovereign power passed to the chief or government of the nation." A part of this
power was then transferred back to both parents for the convenience of the State. But
their guardianship was limited to the legal duty of maintenance and education, while
absolute sovereignty remained with the State.
Not since John Cotton, teacher of the Boston church in the early Puritan period, had such
a position been publicly asserted. Cotton, in renouncing Roger Williams, insisted on the
absolute authority of magistrates in civil and religious affairs, the quintessential Anglican
position. In later life he even came to uphold the power of judges over conscience and
was willing to grant powers of life and death to authorities to bring about conformity.
Thus did the Puritan rebellion rot from within.
A few years after the Paige ruling, American courts received a second radical
authorization to intervene in family matters, "the best interest of the child" test. In 1847,
Judge Oakley of New York City Superior Court staked a claim that such power "is not
unregulated or arbitrary" but is "governed, as far as the case will admit, by fixed rules and
principles." When such fixed rules and principles were not to be found, it caused no
problem either, for it was only another matter subject to court discretion.
In the fifty-four-year period separating the Massachusetts compulsion school
law/adoption law and the founding of Children’s Court at the beginning of the twentieth
century in Chicago, the meaning of these decisions became increasingly clear. With
opposition from the family-centered societies of the tidewater and hill-country South
diminished by civil war, the American state assumed the parens patriae powers of oldtime absolute kings, the notion of the political state as the primary father. And there were
signs it intended to use those powers to synthesize the type of scientific family it wanted,
for the society it wanted. To usher in the future it wanted.
The Plan Advances
In the space of one lifetime, the United States was converted from a place where human
variety had ample room to display itself into a laboratory of virtual orthodoxy—a process
concealed by dogged survival of the mythology of independence. The cowboy and
frontiersman continued as film icons until 1970, living ghosts of some collective national
inspiration. But both died, in fact, shortly after Italian immigration began in earnest in the
1880s.
The crucial years for the hardening of our national arteries were those between 1845 and
1920, the immigration years. Something subtler than Anglo-Saxon revulsion against Celt,
Latin, and Slav was at work in that period. A utopian ideal of society as an orderly social
hive had been transmitting itself continuously through small elite bodies of men since the
time of classical Egypt. New England had been the New World proving ground of this
idea. Now New England was to take advantage of the chaotic period of heavy
immigration and the opportunity of mass regimentation afforded by civil war to establish
this form of total State.
The plan advanced in barely perceptible stages, each new increment making it more
difficult for individual families to follow an independent plan. Ultimately, in the second
and third decades of the twentieth century—decades which gave us Adolf Hitler,
Prohibition, mass IQ-testing of an entire student population, junior high schools, raccoon
coats, Rudy Vallee, and worldwide depression—room to breathe in a personal, peculiar,
idiosyncratic way just ran out. It was the end of Thomas Jefferson’s dream, the final
betrayal of democratic promise in the last new world on the planet.
When you consider how bizarre and implausible much of the conformist machinery put
in place during this critical period really was—and especially how long and successfully
all sorts of people resisted this kind of encroachment on fundamental liberty—it becomes
clear that to understand things like universal medical policing, income tax, national
banking systems, secret police, standing armies and navies which demand constant
tribute, universal military training, standardized national examinations, the cult of
intelligence tests, compulsory education, the organization of colleges around a scheme
called "research" (which makes teaching an unpleasant inconvenience), the secularization
of religion, the rise of specialist professional monopolies sanctioned by their state, and all
the rest of the "progress" made in these seventy-five years, you have to find reasons to
explain them. Why then? Who made it happen? What was the point?
Children’s Court
The very clear connection between all the zones of the emerging American hive-world
are a sign of some organized intelligence at work, with some organized end in mind.1
For
those who can read the language of conventional symbolism, the philosophical way being
followed represents the extraordinary vision of the learned company of deists who
created the country coupled to the Puritan vision as it had been derived from Anglo-Normans—descendants of the Scandinavian/French conquerors of England—those
families who became the principal settlers of New England. It is careless to say that bad
luck, accident, or blind historical forces caused the trap to spring shut on us. 1 The paradox that a teenage female in the year 2000 requires parental permission to be given Tylenol or have ears pierced but not, in some states, to have an abortion suggests the magnitude of the control imposed and at least a portion of its purpose.
Of the various ways an ancient ideal of perfected society can be given life through
institutions under control of the State, one is so startling and has been realized so closely
it bears some scrutiny. As the hive-world was being hammered out in the United States
after 1850, the notion of unique, irreplaceable natural families came increasingly to be
seen as the major roadblock in the path of social progress toward the extraordinary vision
of a machine-driven, utopian paradise. To realize such a theory in practice, families must
be on trial with each other constantly and with their neighbors, just as a politician is ever
on trial. Families should be conditional entities, not categories absolute. This had been
the operational standard of the Puritan settlement in America, though hardly of any other
region (unless the Quaker/Pietist sections of the middle colonies who "shunned" outcasts,
even if family). If, after testing, an original mother and father did not suit, then children
should be removed and transferred to parent-surrogates. This is the basis of foster care
and adoption.
By 1900, through the agency of the radical new Denver/Chicago "Children’s Court," one
important machine to perform this transfer function was in place. Children need not be
wasted building blocks for the State’s purpose just because their natural parents had been.
The lesson the new machine-economy was teaching reinforced the spiritual vision of
utopians: perfect interchangeability, perfect subordination. People could learn to emulate
machines; and by progressive approximations they might ultimately become as reliable as
machinery. In a similar vein, men and women were encouraged through easy divorce
laws and ever-increasing accessibility to sexually explicit imagery, to delay choosing
marriage mates. With the mystery removed, the pressure to mate went with it, it was
supposed. The new system encouraged "trials," trying on different people until a good fit
was found.
Mr. Young’s Head Was Pounded To Jelly
The most surprising thing about the start-up of mass public education in mid-nineteenth century Massachusetts is how overwhelmingly parents of all classes soon complained
about it. Reports of school committees around 1850 show the greatest single theme of
discussion was conflict between the State and the general public on this matter.
Resistance was led by the old yeoman class—those families accustomed to taking care of
themselves and providing meaning for their own lives. The little town of Barnstable on
Cape Cod is exemplary. Its school committee lamented, according to Katz’s Irony of
Early School Reform, that "the great defect of our day is the absence of governing or
controlling power on the part of parents and the consequent insubordination of children.
Our schools are rendered inefficient by the apathy of parents."
Years ago I was in possession of an old newspaper account which related the use of
militia to march recalcitrant children to school there, but I’ve been unable to locate it
again. Nevertheless, even a cursory look for evidence of state violence in bending public
will to accept compulsion schooling will be rewarded: Bruce Curtis’ book Building the
Education State 1836-1871 documents the intense aversion to schooling which arose
across North America, in Anglican Canada where leadership was uniform, as well as in
the United States where leadership was more divided. Many schools were burned to the
ground and teachers run out of town by angry mobs. When students were kept after
school, parents often broke into school to free them.
At Saltfleet Township in 1859 a teacher was locked in the schoolhouse by students who
"threw mud and mire into his face and over his clothes," according to school records—
while parents egged them on. At Brantford, Ontario, in 1863 the teacher William Young
was assaulted (according to his replacement) to the point that "Mr. Young’s head, face
and body was, if I understand rightly, pounded literally to jelly." Curtis argues that parent
resistance was motivated by a radical transformation in the intentions of schools—a
change from teaching basic literacy to molding social identity.
The first effective American compulsory schooling in the modern era was a reform
school movement which Know-Nothing legislatures of the 1850s put into the hopper
along with their radical new adoption law. Objects of reformation were announced as
follows: Respect for authority; Self-control; Self-discipline. The properly reformed boy
"acquires a fixed character," one that can be planned for in advance by authority in
keeping with the efficiency needs of business and industry. Reform meant the total
transformation of character, behavior modification, a complete makeover. By 1857, a few
years after stranger-adoption was kicked off as a new policy of the State, Boutwell could
consider foster parenting (the old designation for adoption) "one of the major strategies
for the reform of youth."1
The first step in the strategy of reform was for the State to
become de facto parent of the child. That, according to another Massachusetts educator,
Emory Washburn, "presents the State in her true relation of a parent seeking out her
erring children." 1 The reader will recall such a strategy was considered for Hester Prynne’s child, Pearl, in Hawthorne’s Scarlet Letter. That Hawthorne, writing at mid-century, chose this as a hinge for his characterization of the fallen woman Hester is surely no coincidence.
The 1850s in Massachusetts marked the beginning of a new epoch in schooling.
Washburn triumphantly crowed that these years produced the first occasion in history
"whereby a state in the character of a common parent has undertaken the high and sacred
duty of rescuing and restoring her lost children...by the influence of the school." John
Philbrick, Boston school superintendent, said of his growing empire in 1863, "Here is
real home!" (emphasis added) All schooling, including the reform variety, was to be in
imitation of the best "family system of organization"; this squared with the prevalent
belief that delinquency was not caused by external conditions—thus letting industrialists
and slumlords off the hook—but by deficient homes.
Between 1840 and 1860, male school teachers were cleansed from the Massachusetts
system and replaced by women. A variety of methods was used, including the novel one
of paying women slightly more than men in order to bring shame into play in chasing men
out of the business. Again, the move was part of a well-conceived strategy: "Experience
teaches that these boys, many of whom never had a mother’s affection...need the
softening and refining influence which woman alone can give, and we have, wherever
practicable, substituted female officers and teachers for those of the other sex."
A state report noted the frequency with which parents coming to retrieve their own
children from reform school were met by news their children had been given away to
others, through the state’s parens patriae power. "We have felt it to be our duty generally
to decline giving them up to their parents and have placed as many of them as we could
with farmers and mechanics," reads a portion of Public Document 20 for the state of
Massachusetts, written in 1864. (emphasis added) To recreate the feelings of parents on
hearing this news is beyond my power.
William Rainey Harper
Three decades later at the University of Chicago, William Rainey Harper, former
Chautauqua wizard, began a revolution that would change the face of American
university education. Harper imported the university system of Germany into the United
States, lock, stock, and barrel. Undergraduate teaching was to be relegated to a form of
Chautauqua show business, while research at the graduate level was where prestige
academic careers would locate, just as Bacon’s New Atlantis had predicted. Harper,
following the blueprint suggested by Andrew Carnegie in his powerful "Gospel of
Wealth" essays, said the United States should work toward a unified scheme of
education, organized vertically from kindergarten through university, horizontally
through voluntary association of colleges, all supplemented by university extension
courses available to everyone. Harper wrote in 1902:
The field of education is at the present time in an extremely disorganized condition. But
the forces are already in existence [to change that]. Order will be secured and a great new
system established, which may be designated "The American System." The important
steps to be taken in working out such a system are coordination, specialization and
association.
Harper and his backers regarded education purely as a commodity. Thorstein Veblen
describes Harper’s revolution this way:
The underlying business-like presumption accordingly appears to be that learning is a
merchantable commodity, to be produced on a piece-rate plan, rated, bought and sold by
standard units, measured, counted, and reduced to staple equivalence by impersonal,
mechanical tests.
Harper believed modern business enterprise represented the highest and best type of
human productive activity. He believed business had discovered two cosmic principles—
techniques implicit in the larger concept of survival of the fittest: consolidation and
specialization. Whatever will not consolidate and specialize must perish, he believed. The
conversion of American universities into a system characterized by institutional gigantism and specialization was not finished in Harper’s lifetime, but went far enough that in the
judgment of the New York Sun, "Hell is open and the lid is off!"
Harper’s other main contribution to the corporatization of U.S. scholarly life was just as
profound. He destroyed the lonely vocation of great teacher by trivializing its importance.
Research alone, objectively weighed and measured, subject to the surveillance of one’s
colleagues would, after Harper, be the sine qua non of university teaching:
Promotion of younger men in the departments will depend more largely upon the results
of their work as investigators than upon the efficiency of their teaching.... In other words,
it is proposed to make the work of investigation primary, the work of giving instruction
secondary.
Harper was the middleman who introduced the organization and ethics of business into
the world of pedagogy. Harper-inspired university experience is now virtually the only
ritual of passage into prosperous adulthood in the United States, just as the Carnegie
Foundation and Rockefeller’s General Education Board willed it to be. Few young men
or women are strong enough to survive this passage with their humanity wholly intact.
Death Dies
In 1932, John Dewey, now elevated to a position as America’s most prominent
educational voice, heralded the end of what he called "the old individualism." Time had
come, he said, for a new individualism that recognized the radical transformation that had
come in American society:
Associations, tightly or loosely organized, more and more define opportunities, choices,
and actions of individuals.
Death, a staple topic of children’s books for hundreds of years because it poses a central
puzzle for all children, nearly vanished as theme or event after 1916. Children were
instructed indirectly that there was no grief; indeed, an examination of hundreds of those
books from the transitional period between 1900 and 1916 reveals that Evil no longer had
any reality either. There was no Evil, only bad attitudes, and those were correctable by
training and adjustment therapies.
To see how goals of utopian procedure are realized, consider further the sudden change
that fell upon the children’s book industry between 1890 and 1920. Without explanations
or warning, timeless subjects disappeared from the texts, to be replaced by what is best
regarded as a political agenda. The suddenness of this change was signaled by many
other indications of powerful social forces at work: the phenomenal overnight growth of
"research" hospitals where professional hospitality replaced home-style sick care, was
one of these, the equally phenomenal sudden enforcement of compulsory schooling
another.
Through children’s books, older generations announce their values, declare their
aspirations, and make bids to socialize the young. Any sudden change in the content of
such books must necessarily reflect changes in publisher consciousness, not in the
general class of book-buyer whose market preferences evolve slowly. What is prized as
human achievement can usually be measured by examining children’s texts; what is
valued in human relationships can be, too.
In the thirty-year period from 1890 to 1920, the children’s book industry became a
creator, not a reflector, of values. In any freely competitive situation this could hardly
have happened because the newly aggressive texts would have risked missing the market.
The only way such a gamble could be safe was for total change to occur simultaneously
among publishers. The insularity and collegiality of children’s book publishing allowed it
this luxury.
One aspect of children’s publishing that has remained consistent all the way back to 1721
is the zone where it is produced; today, as nearly three hundred years ago, the Northeast
is where children’s literature happens—inside the cities of Boston, New York, and
Philadelphia. No industry shift has ever disturbed this cozy arrangement: over time,
concentration became even more intense. Philadelphia’s role diminished in the twentieth
century, leaving Boston and New York co-regents at its end. In 1975, 87 percent of all
titles available came from those two former colonial capitals, while in 1876 it had been
"only" 84 percent, a marvelous durability. For the past one hundred years these two cities
have decided what books American children will read.
Until 1875, about 75 percent of all children’s titles dealt with some aspect of the future—
usually salvation. Over the next forty years this idea vanished completely. As Comte and
Saint-Simon had strongly advised, the child was to be relieved of concerning itself with
the future. The future would be arranged for children and for householders by a new
expert class, and the need to do God’s will was now considered dangerous superstition by
men in charge.
Another dramatic switch in children’s books had to do with a character’s dependence on
community to solve problems and to give life meaning. Across the eighteenth and
nineteenth centuries, strength, afforded by stable community life, was an important part
of narrative action, but toward the end of the nineteenth century a totally new note of
"self" was sounded. Now protagonists became more competent, more in control; their
need for family and communal affirmation disappeared, to be replaced by a new
imperative—the quest for certification by legitimate authority. Needs now suddenly
dominant among literary characters were so-called "expressive needs": exploring,
playing, joy, loving, self-actualizing, intriguing against one’s own parents. By the early
twentieth century, a solid majority of all children’s books focus on the individual child
free from the web of family and community.
This model had been established by the Horatio Alger books in the second half of the
nineteenth century; now with some savage modern flourishes (like encouraging active
indifference to family) it came to totally dominate the children’s book business. Children
were invited to divide their interests from those of their families and to concentrate on
private concerns. A few alarmed critical voices saw this as a strategy of "divide and
conquer," a means to separate children from family so they could be more easily molded
into new social designs. In the words of Mary Lystad, the biographer of children’s
literary history from whom I have drawn heavily in this analysis:
As the twentieth century continued, book characters were provided more and more
opportunities to pay attention to themselves. More and more characters were allowed to
look inward to their own needs and desires.
This change of emphasis "was managed at the expense of others in the family group," she
adds.
From 1796 to 1855, 18 percent of all children’s books were constructed around the idea
of conformity to some adult norm; but by 1896 emphasis on conformity had tripled. This
took place in the thirty years following the Civil War. Did the elimination of the Southern
pole of our national dialectic have anything to do with that? Yes, everything, I think.
With tension between Northern and Southern ways of life and politics resolved
permanently in favor of the North, the way was clear for triumphant American orthodoxy
to seize the entire field. The huge increase in conformist themes rose even more as we
entered the twentieth century and has remained at an elevated level through the decades
since.
What is most deceptive in trying to fix this characteristic conformity is the introduction of
an apparently libertarian note of free choice into the narrative equation. Modern
characters are encouraged to self-start and to proceed on what appears to be an
independent course. But upon closer inspection, that course is always toward a centrally
prescribed social goal, never toward personal solutions to life’s dilemmas. Freedom of
choice in this formulation arises from the feeling that you have freedom, not from its
actual possession. Thus social planners get the best of both worlds: a large measure of
control without any kicking at the traces. In modern business circles, such a style of
oversight is known as management by objectives.
Another aspect of this particular brand of regulation is that book characters are shown
being innovative, but innovative only in the way they arrive at the same destination; their
emotional needs for self-expression are met harmlessly in this way without any risk to
social machinery. Much evidence of centralized tinkering within the factory of children’s
literature exists, pointing in the direction of what might be called Unit-Man—people as
work units partially broken free of human community who can be moved about efficiently
in various social experiments. William Rainey Harper, president of the University of
Chicago, thought of such an end as "laboratory research aimed at designing a rational
utopia."
To mention just a few other radical changes in children’s book content between 1890 and
1920: school credentials replace experience as the goal book characters work toward, and
child labor becomes a label of condemnation in spite of its ancient function as the
quickest, most reliable way to human independence—the way taken in fact by Carnegie,
Rockefeller, and many others who were now apparently quite anxious to put a stop to it.
Children are encouraged not to work at all until their late teen years, sometimes not until
their thirties. A case for the general superiority of youth working instead of idly sitting
around in school confinement is often made prior to 1900, but never heard again in
children’s books after 1916. The universality of this silence is the notable thing,
deafening in fact.
Protagonists’ goals in the new literature, while apparently individualistic, are almost
always found being pursued through social institutions—those ubiquitous "associations"
of John Dewey— never through family efforts. Families are portrayed as good-natured
dormitory arrangements or affectionate manager-employee relationships, but emotional
commitment to family life is noticeably ignored. Significant family undertakings like
starting a farm or teaching each other how to view life from a multi-age perspective are
so rare that the few exceptions stand out like monadnocks above a broad, flat plain.
Three Most Significant Books
The three most influential books ever published in North America, setting aside the Bible
and The New England Primer, were all published in the years of the utopian
transformation of America which gave us government schooling: Uncle Tom’s Cabin, or
Life Among the Lowly (1852), a book which testifies to the ancient obsession of English speaking elites with the salvation of the under- classes; Ben-Hur (1880), a book
illustrating the Christian belief that Jews can eventually be made to see the light of reason
and converted; and the last a pure utopia, Looking Backwards (1888), still in print more
than one hundred years later, translated into thirty languages.1
1 Economist Donald Hodges’ book, America’s New Economic Order, traces the intellectual history of professionalism in management (John Kenneth Galbraith’s corporate "Technostructure" in The New Industrial State) to Looking Backwards which described an emerging public economy similar to what actually happened. Hodges shows how various theorists of the utopian transition like John Dewey and Frederick Taylor shaped the regime of professional managers we live under.
In 1944, three American intellectuals, Charles Beard, John Dewey, and Edward Weeks,
interviewed separately, proclaimed Edward Bellamy’s Looking Backwards second only
to Marx’s Das Kapital as the most influential book of modern times. Within three years
of its publication, 165 "Bellamy Clubs" sprouted up. In the next twelve years, no less
than forty-six other utopian novels became best sellers.
Was it Civil War, chaos, decades of mass immigration, or a frightening series of bloody
national labor strikes shattering our class-free myths that made the public ready for
stories of a better tomorrow? Whatever the cause or causes, the flowering communities of
actual American utopianism took on real shape in the nineteenth century, from famous
ones like Owenite communities and Fourierian phalansteres or Perfectionist sexual stews
like Oneida, right down to little-known oddities, like Mordecai Noah’s "Ararat," city of
refuge for Jews. First they happened, then they were echoed in print, not the reverse.
Nothing in the human social record matches the outburst of purely American longing for
something better in community life, the account recorded in deeds and words in the first
full century of our nationhood.
What Bellamy’s book uncovered in middle-class/upper-middle-class consciousness was
revealing—the society he describes is a totally organized society, all means of production
are in the hands of State parent-surrogates. The conditions of well-behaved, middle-class
childhood are recreated on a corporate scale in these early utopias. Society in Bellamy’s
ideal future has eliminated the reality of democracy, citizens are answerable to
commands of industrial officers, little room remains for self-initiative. The State
regulates all public activities, owns the means of production, individuals are transformed
into a unit directed by bureaucrats.
Erich Fromm thought Bellamy had missed the strong similarities between corporate
socialism and corporate capitalism—that both converge eventually in goals of
industrialization, that both are societies run by a managerial class and professional
politicians, both thoroughly materialistic in outlook; both organize human masses into a
centralized system; into large, hierarchically arranged employment-pods, into mass
political parties. In both, alienated corporate man—well-fed, well-clothed, well entertained—is governed by bureaucrats. Governing has no goals beyond this. At the end
of history men are not slaves, but robots. This is the vision of utopia seen complete.
No Place To Hide
How could the amazing lives of George Washington, Andrew Jackson, the John D.
Rockefeller's, Margaret Fuller, Amy Lowell, my own immigrant McManuses, Gattos,
Zimmers, Hoffmans, and D’Agostinos, have added up to this lifeless utopia? Like a black
hole it grew, although no human being flourishes under such a regime or rests easily
inside the logic of hundreds of systems intermeshing into one master system, all
demanding obedience from their human parts. Here is a materialistic inverse of Ezekiel’s
spiritual vision of wheels within wheels.
In a New York Times description of the first "Edison Project" school in Sherman, Texas—
a system of proprietary schools supplying a home computer for every child, e-mail,
longer school days and years, and "the most high-tech school in America" (as Benno
Schmidt, former president of Yale, put it)—the local superintendent gloated over what he
must have regarded as the final solution to the student-control issue: " Can you imagine
what this means if you’re home sick? The teacher can just put stuff in the student’s email....There’s no place to hide anymore!"
The Irony Of The Safety Lamp
Have I made too much of this? What on earth is wrong with wanting to help people, even
in institutionalizing the helping urge so it becomes more reliable? Just this: the helping
equation is not as simple as utopians imagined. I remember the shock I felt on many
occasions when my well-meant intercession into obvious problems a kid was having were
met with some variation of the angry cry, "Leave me alone!" as if my assistance actually
would have made things worse. It was baffling how often that happened, and I was a
well-liked teacher. Is it possible there are hills that nature or God demands we climb
alone or become forever the less for having been carried over them?
The plans of true believers for our lives may well be better than our own when judged
against some abstract official standard, but to deny people their personal struggles is to
render existence absurd. What are we left with then besides some unspeakable
Chautauqua, a liar’s world which promises that if only the rules are followed, good lives
will ensue? Inconvenience, discomfort, hurt, defeat, and tragedy are inevitable
accompaniments of our time on earth; we learn to manage trouble by managing trouble,
not by turning our burden over to another. Think of the mutilated spirit that victims of
overprotective parents carry long after they are grown and gone from home. What should
make you suspicious about School is its relentless compulsion. Why should this rich,
brawling, utterly successful nation ever have needed to resort to compulsion to push
people into school classes—unless advocates of forced schooling were driven by peculiar
philosophical beliefs not commonly shared?
Another thing should concern you, that the consequences of orthodox mass schooling
have never been fully thought through. To show you what I mean, consider the example
of Sir Humphrey Davy, inventor of the coalmine "safety" lamp after an 1812 explosion in
which ninety-two boys and men were killed. Davy’s assignment to the honor roll of
saintliness came from his assertion that the sole object of his concern was to "serve the
cause of humanity"—a declaration made credible by his refusal to patent the device.
Let nobody deny that the safety lamp decreased the danger of explosion relative to older
methods of illumination, but the brutal fact is that many more miners died because of
Davy’s invention. It allowed the coal industry to grow rapidly, bringing vastly more men
into the mines than before, opening deeper tunnels, exposing miners to mortal dangers of
which fire-damp is only one, dangers for which there is no protection. Davy’s "safety"
lamp brought safety only in the most ironic sense; it was a profit-enhancement lamp most
of all. Its most prominent effect was to allow the growth of industry, a blessing to some, a
curse to others, but far from an unambiguous good because it wasted many more lives
than it saved.
Serving "the cause of humanity" through forced government schooling may also turn out
to be a stranger matter than it appears, another Davy lamp in different costume.
Chapter Seven
The Prussian Connection
Prussian Fire-Discipline
On approaching the enemy, the marching columns of Prussians wheeled in succession to
the right or left, passed along the front of the enemy until the rear company had wheeled.
Then the whole together wheeled into line facing the enemy. These movements brought
the infantry into two long well-closed lines, parade-ground precision obtained thanks to
remorseless drilling. With this movement was bound up a fire-discipline more
extraordinary than any perfection of maneuver. "Pelotonfeuer" was opened at 200 paces
from the enemy and continued up to 30 paces when the line fell on with the bayonet. The
possibility of this combination of fire and movement was the work of Leopold, who by
sheer drill made the soldier a machine capable of delivering (with flintlock muzzleloading muskets) five volleys a minute. The special Prussian fire-discipline gave an
advantage of five shots to two against all opponents. The bayonet attack, if the rolling
volleys had done their work, was merely"presenting the cheque for payment," as a
German writer put it.
— Encyclopedia Britannica, 11th edition, "Prussia"
The Land of Frankenstein
The particular utopia American believers chose to bring to the schoolhouse was Prussian.
The seed that became American schooling, twentieth-century style, was planted in 1806
when Napoleon’s amateur soldiers bested the professional soldiers of Prussia at the battle
of Jena. When your business is renting soldiers and employing diplomatic extortion under
threat of your soldiery, losing a battle like that is pretty serious. Something had to be
done.[this should be concerning to any american who knows the history of Prussia DC]
The most important immediate reaction to Jena was an immortal speech, the "Address to
the German Nation" by the philosopher Fichte—one of the influential documents of
modern history leading directly to the first workable compulsion schools in the West.
Other times, other lands talked about schooling, but all failed to deliver. Simple forced
training for brief intervals and for narrow purposes was the best that had ever been
managed. This time would be different.
In no uncertain terms Fichte told Prussia the party was over. Children would have to be
disciplined through a new form of universal conditioning. They could no longer be
trusted to their parents. Look what Napoleon had done by banishing sentiment in the
interests of nationalism. Through forced schooling, everyone would learn that "work
makes free," and working for the State, even laying down one’s life to its commands, was
the greatest freedom of all. Here in the genius of semantic redefinition
1
lay the power to
cloud men’s minds, a power later packaged and sold by public relations pioneers Edward
Bernays and Ivy Lee in the seedtime of American forced schooling.
1 Machiavelli had clearly identified this as a necessary strategy of state in 1532, and even explored its choreography.
Prior to Fichte’s challenge any number of compulsion-school proclamations had rolled
off printing presses here and there, including Martin Luther’s plan to tie church and state
together this way and, of course, the "Old Deluder Satan" law of 1642 in Massachusetts
and its 1645 extension. The problem was these earlier ventures were virtually
unenforceable, roundly ignored by those who smelled mischief lurking behind fancy
promises of free education. People who wanted their kids schooled had them schooled
even then; people who didn’t didn’t. That was more or less true for most of us right into
the twentieth century: as late as 1920, only 32 percent of American kids went past
elementary school. If that sounds impossible, consider the practice in Switzerland today
where only 23 percent of the student population goes to high school, though Switzerland
has the world’s highest per capita income in the world.
Prussia was prepared to use bayonets on its own people as readily as it wielded them
against others, so it’s not all that surprising the human race got its first effective secular
compulsion schooling out of Prussia in 1819, the same year Mary Shelley’s Frankenstein,
set in the darkness of far-off Germany, was published in England. Schule came after more
than a decade of deliberations, commissions, testimony, and debate. For a brief, hopeful
moment, Humboldt’s brilliant arguments for a high-level no-holds-barred, free-swinging,
universal, intellectual course of study for all, full of variety, free debate, rich experience,
and personalized curricula almost won the day. What a different world we would have
today if Humboldt had won the Prussian debate, but the forces backing Baron vom Stein
won instead. And that has made all the difference.
The Prussian mind, which carried the day, held a clear idea of what centralized schooling
should deliver:
1) Obedient soldiers to the army;2
2) Obedient workers for mines,
factories, and farms;
3) Well-subordinated civil servants, trained in their function;
4)
Well-subordinated clerks for industry;
5) Citizens who thought alike on most issues;
6)
National uniformity in thought, word, and deed.
2 For an ironic reflection on the success of Prussian educational ideals, take a look at Martin Van Creveld’s Fighting Power (Greenwood Press, 1982). Creveld, the world’s finest military historian, undertakes to explain why German armies in 1914– 1918 and 1939–1945, although heavily outnumbered in the major battles of both wars, consistently inflicted 30 percent more casualties than they suffered, whether they were winning or losing, on defense or on offense, no matter who they fought. They were better led, we might suspect, but the actual training of those field commanders comes as a shock. While American officer selection was right out of Frederick Taylor, complete with psychological dossiers and standardized tests, German officer training emphasized individual apprenticeships, weeklong field evaluations, extended discursive written evaluations by senior officers who personally knew the candidates. The surprise is, while German state management was rigid and regulated with its common citizens, it was liberal and adventuresome with its elites. After WWII, and particularly after Vietnam, American elite military practice began to follow this German model. Ironically enough, America’s elite private boarding schools like Groton had followed the Prussian lead from their inception as well as the British models of Eton and Harrow.
German elite war doctrine cut straight to the heart of the difference between the truly educated and the merely schooled. For the German High Command war was seen as an art, a creative activity, grounded in science. War made the highest demands on an officer’s entire personality and the role of the individual in Germany was decisive. American emphasis, on the other hand, was doctrinal, fixated on cookbook rules. The U.S. officer’s manual said: "Doctrines of combat operation are neither numerous nor complex. Knowledge of these doctrines provides a firm basis for action in a particular situation." This reliance on automatic procedure rather than on creative individual decisions got a lot of Americans killed by the book. The irony, of course, was that American, British, and French officers got the same lockstep conditioning in dependence that German foot soldiers did. There are some obvious lessons here which can be applied directly to public schooling.
The area of individual volition for commoners was severely foreclosed by Prussian
psychological training procedures drawn from the experience of animal husbandry and
equestrian training, and also taken from past military experience. Much later, in our own
time, the techniques of these assorted crafts and sullen arts became "discoveries" in the
pedagogical pseudoscience of psychological behaviorism.
Prussian schools delivered everything they promised. Every important matter could now
be confidently worked out in advance by leading families and institutional heads because
well-schooled masses would concur with a minimum of opposition. This tightly schooled
consensus in Prussia eventually combined the kaleidoscopic German principalities into a
united Germany, after a thousand years as a nation in fragments. What a surprise the
world would soon get from this successful experiment in national centralization! Under
Prussian state socialism private industry surged, vaulting resource-poor Prussia up among
world leaders. Military success remained Prussia’s touchstone. Even before the school
law went into full effect as an enhancer of state priorities, the army corps under Blücher
was the principal reason for Napoleon’s defeat at Waterloo, its superb discipline allowing
for a surprisingly successful return to combat after what seemed to be a crushing defeat at
the Little Corporal’s hands just days before.3
Unschooled, the Prussians were awesome;
conditioned in the classroom promised to make them even more formidable.
3 Napoleon assumed the Prussians were retreating in the direction of the Rhine after a defeat, but in truth they were only executing a feint. The French were about to overrun Wellington when Blücher’s "Death’s Head Hussars," driven beyond human endurance by their officers, reached the battlefield at a decisive moment. Not pausing to rest, the Prussians immediately went into battle, taking the French in the rear and right wing. Napoleon toppled, and Prussian discipline became the focus of world attention.
The immense prestige earned from this triumph reverberated through an America not so
lucky in its own recent fortunes of war, a country humiliated by a shabby showing against
the British in the War of 1812. Even thirty years after Waterloo, so highly was Prussia
regarded in America and Britain, the English-speaking adversaries selected the Prussian
king to arbitrate our northwest border with Canada. Hence the Pennsylvania town "King
of Prussia." Thirty-three years after Prussia made state schooling work, we borrowed the
structure, style, and intention of those Germans for our own first compulsion schools.
Traditional American school purpose—piety, good manners, basic intellectual tools, selfreliance, etc.—was scrapped to make way for something different. Our historical
destination of personal independence gave way slowly to Prussian-purpose schooling, not
because the American way lost in any competition of ideas, but because for the new
commercial and manufacturing hierarchs, such a course made better economic sense.
This private advance toward nationalized schooling in America was partially organized,
although little has ever been written about it; Orestes Brownson’s journal identifies a
covert national apparatus (to which Brownson briefly belonged) already in place in the
decade after the War of 1812, one whose stated purpose was to "Germanize" America,
beginning in those troubled neighborhoods where the urban poor huddled, and where
disorganized new immigrants made easy targets, according to Brownson. Enmity on the
part of old-stock middle-class and working-class populations toward newer immigrants
gave these unfortunates no appeal against the school sentence to which Massachusetts
assigned them. They were in for a complete makeover, like it or not.
Much of the story, as it was being written by 1844, lies just under the surface of Mann’s
florid prose in his Seventh Annual Report to the Boston School Committee. On a visit to
Prussia the year before, he had been much impressed (so he said) with the ease by which
Prussian calculations could determine precisely how many thinkers, problem-solvers, and
working stiffs the State would require over the coming decade, then how it offered the
precise categories of training required to develop the percentages of human resource
needed. All this was much fairer to Mann than England’s repulsive episcopal system—
schooling based on social class; Prussia, he thought, was republican in the desirable,
manly, Roman sense. Massachusetts must take the same direction.
The Long Reach Of The Teutonic Knights
In 1876, before setting off from America to Germany to study, William H. Welch, an
ambitious young Bostonian, told his sister: "If by absorbing German lore I can get a little
start of a few thousand rivals and thereby reduce my competition to a few hundred more
or less it is a good point to tally." Welch did go off to Germany for the coveted Ph.D., a
degree which at the time had its actual existence in any practical sense only there, and in
due course his ambition was satisfied. Welch became first dean of Johns Hopkins
Medical School and, later, chief advisor to the Rockefeller Foundation on medical
projects. Welch was one of thousands who found the German Ph.D. a blessing without
parallel in late-nineteenth-century America. German Ph.D.’s ruled the academic scene by
then.
Prussia itself was a curious place, not an ordinary country unless you consider ordinary a
land which by 1776 required women to register each onset of their monthly menses with
the police. North America had been interested in Prussian developments since long
before the American Revolution, its social controls being a favorite subject of discussion
among Ben Franklin’s 1
exclusive private discussion group, the Junta.[now that's an interesting name for a secret society which in fact it was DC] When the phony
Prussian baron Von Steuben directed bayonet drills for the colonial army, interest rose
even higher. Prussia was a place to watch, an experimental state totally synthetic like our
own, having been assembled out of lands conquered in the last crusade. For a full century
Prussia acted as our mirror, showing elite America what we might become with
discipline.
In 1839, thirteen years before the first successful school compulsion law was passed in
the United States, a perpetual critic of Boston Whig (Mann’s own party) leadership
charged that proposals to erect German-style teacher seminaries in this country were a
thinly disguised attack on local and popular autonomy. The critic Brownson 2
allowed that
state regulation of teaching licenses was a necessary preliminary only if school were
intended to serve as a psychological control mechanism for the state and as a screen for a
controlled economy. If that was the game truly afoot, said Brownson, it should be
reckoned an act of treason.
"Where the whole tendency of education is to create obedience," Brownson said, "all
teachers must be pliant tools of government. Such a system of education is not
inconsistent with the theory of Prussian society but the thing is wholly inadmissible
here." He further argued that "according to our theory the people are wiser than the
government. Here the people do not look to the government for light, for instruction, but
the government looks to the people. The people give law to the government." He
concluded that "to entrust government with the power of determining education which
our children shall receive is entrusting our servant with the power of the master. The
fundamental difference between the United States and Prussia has been overlooked by the
board of education and its supporters."3 [He was 100% correct DC]
This same notion of German influence on American institutions occurred recently to a
historian from Georgetown, Dr. Carroll Quigley. Quigley’s analysis of elements in
German character which were exported to us occurs in his book Tragedy and Hope: A
History of the World in Our Time. Quigley traced what he called "the German thirst for
the coziness of a totalitarian way of life" to the breakup of German tribes in the great
migrations fifteen hundred years ago. When pagan Germany finally transferred its loyalty
to the even better totalitarian system of Diocletian in post-Constantine Rome, that system
was soon shattered, too, a second tragic loss of security for the Germans. According to
Quigley, they refused to accept this loss. For the next one thousand years, Germans made
every effort to reconstruct the universal system, from Charlemagne’s Holy Roman
Empire right up to the aftermath of Jena in 1806. During that thousand-year interval,
other nations of the West developed individual liberty as the ultimate center of society
and its principal philosophical reality. But while Germany was dragged along in the same
process, it was never convinced that individual sovereignty was the right way to organize
society. [well there you have the answer to the nwo riddle of it's source,so they don't want us to be good communists, they want us to be good nazis. DC]
Germans, said Quigley,4 wanted freedom from the need to make decisions, the negative
freedom that comes from a universal totalitarian structure which gives security and
meaning to life. The German is most at home in military, ecclesiastical, or educational
organizations, ill at ease with equality, democracy, individualism, or freedom. This was
the spirit that gave the West forced schooling in the early nineteenth century, so spare a
little patience while I tell you about Prussia and Prussianized Germany whose original
mission was expressly religious but in time became something else.
During the thirteenth century, the Order of Teutonic Knights set about creating a new
state of their own. After fifty turbulent years of combat, the Order successfully
Christianized Prussia by the efficient method of exterminating the entire native
population and replacing it with Germans. By 1281, the Order’s hold on lands once
owned by the heathen Slavs was secure. Then something of vital importance to the future
occurred—the system of administration selected to be set up over these territories was not
one patterned on the customary European model of dispersed authority, but instead was
built on the logic of Saracen centralized administration, an Asiatic form first described by
crusaders returned from the Holy Land. For an example of these modes of administration
in conflict, we have Herodotus’ account of the Persian attempt to force the pass at
Thermopylae— Persia with its huge bureaucratically subordinated army arrayed against
self-directed Leonidas and his three hundred Spartans. This romantic image of personal
initiative, however misleading, in conflict with a highly trained and specialized military
bureaucracy, was passed down to sixty generations of citizens in Western lands as an
inspiration and model. Now Prussia had established an Asiatic beachhead on the northern
fringe of Europe, one guided by a different inspiration.
Between the thirteenth and nineteenth centuries, the Order of Teutonic Knights evolved
by gradual stages into a highly efficient, secular civil service. In 1525, Albert of
Brandenberg declared Prussia a secular kingdom. By the eighteenth century, under
Frederick the Great, Prussia had become a major European power in spite of its striking
material disadvantages. From 1740 onwards, it was feared throughout Europe for its
large, well-equipped, and deadly standing army, comprising a formulaic 1 percent of the
population. After centuries of debate, the 1 percent formula became the lot of the United
States military, too, a gift of Prussian strategist von Clausewitz to America. By 1740, the
mature Prussian state-structure was almost complete. During the reigns of Frederick I and
his son Frederick II, Frederick the Great, the modern absolute state was fashioned there
by means of immense sacrifices imposed on the citizenry to sustain permanent
mobilization.
The historian Thomas Macaulay wrote of Prussia during these years: "The King carried
on warfare as no European power ever had, he governed his own kingdom as he would
govern a besieged town, not caring to what extent private property was destroyed or civil
life suspended. The coin was debased, civil functionaries unpaid, but as long as means for
destroying life remained, Frederick was determined to fight to the last." Goethe said
Frederick "saw Prussia as a concept, the root cause of a process of abstraction consisting
of norms, attitudes and characteristics which acquired a life of their own. It was a unique
process, supra-individual, an attitude depersonalized, motivated only by the individual’s
duty to the State." Today it’s easy for us to recognize Frederick as a systems theorist of
genius, one with a real country to practice upon.
Under Frederick William II, Frederick the Great’s nephew and successor, from the end of
the eighteenth century on into the nineteenth, Prussian citizens were deprived of all rights
and privileges. Every existence was comprehensively subordinated to the purposes of the
State, and in exchange the State agreed to act as a good father, giving food, work, and
wages suited to the people’s capacity, welfare for the poor and elderly, and universal
schooling for children. The early nineteenth century saw Prussian state socialism arrive
full-blown as the most dynamic force in world affairs, a powerful rival to industrial
capitalism, with antagonisms sensed but not yet clearly identified. It was the moment of
schooling, never to surrender its grip on the throat of society once achieved.
1
Franklin’s great-grandson, Alexander Dallas Bache became the leading American proponent of Prussianism in 1839. After a European school
inspection tour lasting several years, his Report on Education in Europe, promoted heavily by Quakers, devoted hundreds of pages to glowing
description of Pestalozzian method and to the German gymnasium.
2 Brownson is the main figure in Christopher Lasch’s bravura study of Progressivism, The True and Only Heaven, being offered there as the
best fruit of American democratic orchards, a man who, having seemingly tried every major scheme of meaning the new nation had to offer,
settled on trusting ordinary people as the best course into the future.
3
In Opposition to Centralization (1839).
4 Quigley holds the distinction of being the only college professor ever to be publicly honored by a major party presidential candidate, Bill
Clinton, in his formal acceptance speech for the presidential nomination.
The Prussian Reform Movement
The devastating defeat by Napoleon at Jena triggered the so-called Prussian Reform
Movement, a transformation which replaced cabinet rule (by appointees of the national
leader) with rule by permanent civil servants and permanent government bureaus. Ask
yourself which form of governance responds better to public opinion and you will realize
what a radical chapter in European affairs was opened. The familiar three-tier system of
education emerged in the Napoleonic era, one private tier, two government ones. At the
top, one-half of 1 percent of the students attended Akademiens Schulen,
1
where, as future
policy makers, they learned to think strategically, contextually, in wholes; they learned
complex processes, and useful knowledge, studied history, wrote copiously, argued often,
read deeply, and mastered tasks of command.
The next level, Realschulen, was intended mostly as a manufacturer for the professional
proletariat of engineers, architects, doctors, lawyers, career civil servants, and such other
assistants as policy thinkers at times would require. From 5 to 7.5 percent of all students
attended these "real schools," learning in a superficial fashion how to think in context, but
mostly learning how to manage materials, men, and situations—to be problem solvers.
This group would also staff the various policing functions of the state, bringing order to
the domain. Finally, at the bottom of the pile, a group between 92 and 94 percent of the
population attended "people’s schools" where they learned obedience, cooperation and
correct attitudes, along with rudiments of literacy and official state myths of history.[sound familiar? it should since the same system was introduced here, and the reason it is breaking down in front of our eyes is because sufficient numbers of Americans are aware of the foreign policy shift in the actions of the United States, that they can no longer sell the myth of America, as OPENED eyes can plainly see it's current reality DC]
This universal system of compulsion schooling was up and running by 1819, and soon
became the eighth wonder of the world, promising for a brief time—in spite of its
exclusionary layered structure—liberal education for all. But this early dream was soon
abandoned. This particular utopia had a different target than human equality; it aimed
instead for frictionless efficiency. From its inception Volksschule, the people’s place,
heavily discounted reading; reading produced dissatisfaction, it was thought. The Bellschool remedy was called for: a standard of virtual illiteracy formally taught under state
church auspices. Reading offered too many windows onto better lives, too much
familiarity with better ways of thinking. It was a gift unwise to share with those
permanently consigned to low station.
Heinrich Pestalozzi, an odd 2
Swiss-German school reformer, was producing at this time a
nonliterary, experience-based pedagogy, strong in music and industrial arts, which was
attracting much favorable attention in Prussia. Here seemed a way to keep the poor happy
without arousing in them hopes of dramatically changing the social order. Pestalozzi
claimed ability to mold the poor "to accept all the efforts peculiar to their class." He
offered them love in place of ambition. By employing psychological means in the
training of the young, class warfare might be avoided.
A curiously prophetic note for the future development of scientific school teaching was
that Pestalozzi himself could barely read. Not that he was a dummy; those talents simply
weren’t important in his work. He reckoned his own semi-literacy an advantage in dealing
with children destined not to find employment requiring much verbal fluency. Seventeen
agents of the Prussian government acted as Pestalozzi’s assistants in Switzerland,
bringing insights about the Swiss style of schooling home to northern Germany.
While Pestalozzi’s raggedy schools lurched clumsily from year to year, a nobleman, von
Fellenberg, refined and systematized the Swiss reformer’s disorderly notes, hammering
the funky ensemble into clarified plans for a worldwide system of industrial education for
the masses. As early as 1808, this nonacademic formulation was introduced into the
United States under Joseph Neef, formerly a teacher at Pestalozzi’s school. Neef, with
important Quaker patronage, became the principal schoolmaster for Robert Owen’s
pioneering work-utopia at New Harmony, Indiana. Neef’s efforts there provided high powered conversational fodder to the fashionable Unitarian drawing rooms of Boston in
the decades before compulsory legislation was passed. And when it did pass, all credit for
the political victory belonged to those Unitarians.
Neef’s influence resonated across the United States after the collapse of New Harmony,
through lectures given by Robert Owen’s son (later a congressman, then referee of J.P.
Morgan’s legal contretemps with the U.S. Army3
), and through speeches and intrigues by
that magnificent nineteenth-century female dynamo Scottish émigré Fanny Wright, who
demanded the end of family life and its replacement by communitarian schooling. The
tapestry of school origins is one of paths crossing and recrossing, and more apparent
coincidences than seem likely.[why? it should have been evident that his influence was not good, otherwise 'New Harmony' would not have collapsed DC]
Together, Owen and Wright created the successful Workingman’s Party of Philadelphia,
which seized political control of that city in 1829. The party incorporated strong
compulsion schooling proposals as part of its political platform. Its idea to place working class children under the philosophical discipline of highly skilled craftsmen—men
comparable socially to the yeomanry of pre-enclosure England—would have attracted
favorable commentary in Philadelphia where banker Nicholas Biddle was locked in
struggle for control of the nation’s currency with working- class hero Andrew Jackson.
Biddle’s defeat by Jackson quickly moved abstract discussions of a possible social
technology to control working class children from the airy realms of social hypothesis to
policy discussions about immediate reality. In that instant of maximum tension between
an embryonic financial capitalism and a populist republic struggling to emerge, the
Prussian system of pedagogy came to seem perfectly sensible to men of means and
ambition.
1
I’ve exaggerated the neatness of this tripartite division in order to make clear its functional logic. The system as it actually grew in those days
without an electronic technology of centralization was more whimsical than I’ve indicated, dependent partially on local tradition and resistance,
partially on the ebb and flow of fortunes among different participants in the transformation. In some places, the "academy" portion didn’t occur
in a separate institution, but as a division inside the Realsschulen, something like today’s "gifted and talented honors" programs as compared to
the common garden variety "gifted and talented" pony shows.
2
Pestalozzi’s strangeness comes through in almost all the standard biographical sketches of him, despite universal efforts to emphasize his
saintliness. In a recent study, Anthony Sutton claims Pestalozzi was also director of a secret lodge of "illuminated" Freemasonry—with the
code name "Alfred." If true, the Swiss "educator" was even stranger than I sensed initially.
3 During the Civil War, Morgan sold back to the army its own defective rifles (which had been auctioned as scrap) at a 1,300 percent profit.
After a number of soldiers were killed and maimed, young Morgan found himself temporarily in hot water. Thanks to Owen his penalty was
the return of about half his profit!
Travelers' Reports
Information about Prussian schooling was brought to America by a series of
travelers reports published in the early nineteenth century. First was the report of John
Griscom, whose book A Year in Europe (1819) highly praised the new Prussian schools.
Griscom was read and admired by Thomas Jefferson and leading Americans whose
intellectual patronage drew admirers into the net. Pestalozzi came into the center of focus
at about the same time through the letters of William Woodbridge to The American
Journal of Education, letters which examined this strange man and his "humane"
methods through friendly eyes. Another important chapter in this school buildup came
from Henry Dwight,1
whose Travels in North Germany (1825) praised the new quasi religious teacher seminaries in Prussia where prospective teachers were screened for
correct attitudes toward the State.
The most influential report, however, was French philosopher Victor Cousin’s to the
French government in 1831. This account by Cousin, France’s Minister of Education,
explained the administrative organization of Prussian education in depth, dwelling at
length on the system of people’s schools and its far-reaching implications for the
economy and social order. Cousin’s essay applauded Prussia for discovering ways to
contain the danger of a frightening new social phenomenon, the industrial proletariat. So
convincing was his presentation that within two years of its publication, French national
schooling was drastically reorganized to meet Prussian Volksschule standards. French
children could be stupefied as easily as German ones.
Across the Atlantic, a similar revolution took place in the brand new state of Michigan.
Mimicking Prussian organization, heavily Germanic Michigan established the very first
State Superintendency of Education.2
With a state minister and state control entering all
aspects of schooling, the only missing ingredient was compulsion legislation.
On Cousin’s heels came yet another influential report praising Prussian discipline and
Prussian results, this time by the bearer of a prominent American name, the famous
Calvin Stowe whose wife Harriet Beecher Stowe, conscience of the abolition movement,
was author of its sacred text, Uncle Tom’s Cabin. Stowe’s report to the Ohio legislature
attesting to Prussian superiority was widely distributed across the country, the Ohio
group mailing out ten thousand copies and the legislatures of Massachusetts, Michigan,
Pennsylvania, North Carolina, and Virginia each reprinting and distributing the
document.
The third major testimonial to Prussian schooling came in the form of Horace Mann’s
Seventh Report to the Boston School Committee in 1843. Mann’s Sixth Report, as noted
earlier, had been a paean to phrenology, the science of reading head bumps, which Mann
argued was the only proper basis for curriculum design. The Seventh Report ranked
Prussia first of all nations in schooling, England last. Pestalozzi’s psychologically
grounded form of pedagogy was specifically singled out for praise in each of the three
influential reports I’ve recited, as was the resolutely nonintellectual subject matter of
Prussian Volksschulen. Also praised were mild Pestalozzian discipline, grouping by age,
multiple layers of supervision, and selective training for teachers. Wrote Mann, "There
are many things there which we should do well to imitate."3
Mann’s Report strongly recommended radical changes in reading instruction from the
traditional alphabet system, which had made America literate, to Prussia’s hieroglyphic style technique. In a surprising way, this brought Mann’s Report to general public
attention because a group of Boston schoolmasters attacked his conclusions about the
efficacy of the new reading method and a lively newspaper debate followed. Throughout
nineteenth-century Prussia, its new form of education seemed to make that warlike nation
prosper materially and militarily. While German science, philosophy, and military
success seduced the whole world, thousands of prominent young Americans made the
pilgrimage to Germany to study in its network of research universities, places where
teaching and learning were always subordinate to investigations done on behalf of
business and the state. Returning home with the coveted German Ph.D., those so degreed
became university presidents and department heads, took over private industrial research
bureaus, government offices, and the administrative professions. The men they
subsequently hired for responsibility were those who found it morally agreeable to offer
obeisance to the Prussian outlook, too; in this leveraged fashion the gradual takeover of
American mental life managed itself.
For a century here, Germany seemed at the center of everything civilized; nothing was so
esoteric or commonplace it couldn’t benefit from the application of German scientific
procedure. Hegel, of Berlin University, even proposed historicism—that history was a
scientific subject, displaying a progressive linear movement toward some mysterious end.
Elsewhere, Herbart and Fechner were applying mathematical principles to learning,
Müller and Helmholtz were grafting physiology to behavior in anticipation of the
psychologized classroom, Fritsch and Hitzig were applying electrical stimulation to the
brain to determine the relationship of brain functions to behavior, and Germany itself was
approaching its epiphany of unification under Bismarck.
When the spirit of Prussian peloton feuer crushed France in the lightning war of 1871, the
world’s attention focused intently on this hypnotic, utopian place. What could be seen to
happen there was an impressive demonstration that endless production flowed from a
Baconian liaison between government, the academic mind, and industry. Credit for
Prussian success was widely attributed to its form of schooling. What lay far from casual
view was the religious vision of a completely systematic universe which animated this
Frankensteinian nation.
1 Of the legendary Dwight family which bankrolled Horace Mann’s forced schooling operation. Dwight was a distant ancestor of Dwight D.
Eisenhower.
2
This happened under the direction of William Pierce, a man as strange in his own way as Pestalozzi. Pierce had been a Unitarian minister
around Rochester, New York, until he was forced to flee across the Great Lakes to escape personal harm during the anti-Masonic furor just
before the first Jackson election. Pierce was accused of concealing a lodge of Illuminati behind the facade of his church. When his critics
arrived with the tar and feathers, the great educator-to-be had already flown the coop to Michigan, his tools of illumination safely in his kit and
a sneer of superior virtue on his noble lip. Some say a local lady of easy virtue betrayed the vigilante party to Pierce in exchange for a few
pieces of Socinian silver, but I cannot confirm this reliably. How he came to be welcomed so warmly in Michigan and honored with such a
high position might be worth investigating.
3
The fact is Mann arrived in Prussia after the schools had closed for the summer, so that he never actually saw one in operation. This did
nothing to dampen his enthusiasm, nor did he find it necessary to enlighten his readers to this interesting fact. I’ll mention this again up ahead.
Finding Work For Intellectuals
The little North German state of Prussia had been described as "an army with a country,"
"a perpetual armed camp," "a gigantic penal institution." Even the built environment in
Prussia was closely regimented: streets were made to run straight, town buildings and
traffic were state-approved and regulated. Attempts were made to cleanse society of
irregular elements like beggars, vagrants, and Gypsies, all this intended to turn Prussian
society into "a huge human automaton" in the words of Hans Rosenberg. It was a state
where scientific farming alternated with military drilling and with state-ordered
meaningless tasks intended for no purpose but to subject the entire community to the
experience of collective discipline—like fire drills in a modern junior high school or
enforced silence during the interval between class periods. Prussia had become a
comprehensive administrative utopia. It was Sparta reborn.
Administrative utopias spring out of the psychological emptiness which happens where
firmly established communities are nonexistent and what social cohesion there is is weak
and undependable. Utopias lurch into being when utopia happens best where there is no
other social and political life around which seems attractive or even safe. The dream of
state power refashioning countryside and people is powerful, especially compelling in
times of insecurity where local leadership is inadequate to create a satisfying social order,
as must have seemed the case in the waning decades of the nineteenth century. In
particular, the growing intellectual classes began to resent their bondage to wealthy
patrons, their lack of any truly meaningful function, their seeming overeducation for what
responsibilities were available, their feelings of superfluousness. The larger national
production grew on wheels and belts of steam power. The more it produced
unprecedented surpluses, the greater became the number of intellectuals condemned to a
parasitic role, and the more certain it became that some utopian experiment must come
along to make work for these idle hands.
In such a climate it could not have seemed out of line to the new army of homeless men
whose work was only endless thinking, to reorganize the entire world and to believe such
a thing not impossible to attain. It was only a short step before associations of
intellectuals began to consider it their duty to reorganize the world. It was then the clamor
for universal forced schooling became strong. Such a need coincided with a
corresponding need on the part of business to train the population as consumers rather
than independent producers.
In the last third of the nineteenth century, a loud call for popular education arose from
princes of industry, from comfortable clergy, professional humanists and academic scientists, those who saw schooling as an instrument to achieve state and corporate
purposes. Prior to 1870, the only countries where everybody was literate were Prussia, its
tiny adjacent neighbor states in Nordic Scandinavia, and the United States. Despite all
projects of the Enlightenment, of Napoleon, of the parliaments of England and Belgium
and of revolutionaries like Cavour, the vast majority of Europeans could neither read nor
write. It was not, of course, because they were stupid but because circumstances of their
lives and cultures made literacy a luxury, sometimes even impossible.
Steam and coal provided the necessary funds for establishing and maintaining great
national systems of elementary schooling. Another influence was the progressivism of the
liberal impulse, never more evident than in the presence of truly unprecedented
abundance. Yes, it was true that to create that abundance it became necessary to uproot
millions from their traditional habitats and habits, but one’s conscience could be salved
by saying that popular schooling would offer, in time, compensations for the proletariat.
In any case, no one doubted Francois Guizot’s epigram: "The opening of every
schoolhouse closes a jail."
For the enlightened classes, popular education after Prussia became a sacred cause, one
meriting crusading zeal. In 1868, Hungary announced compulsion schooling; in 1869,
Austria; in 1872, the famous Prussian system was nationalized to all the Germanies;
1874, Switzerland; 1877, Italy; 1878, Holland; 1879, Belgium. Between 1878 and 1882,
it became France’s turn. School was made compulsory for British children in 1880. No
serious voice except Tolstoy’s questioned what was happening, and that Russian
nobleman-novelist-mystic was easily ignored. Best known to the modern reader for War
and Peace, Tolstoy is equally penetrating in The Kingdom of God Is Within You, in
which he viewed such problems through the lens of Christianity.
The school movement was strongest in Western and Northern Europe, the ancient lands
of the Protestant Reformation, much weaker in Catholic Central and Southern Europe,
virtually nonexistent at first in the Orthodox East. Enthusiasm for schooling is closely
correlated with a nation’s intensity in mechanical industry, and that closely correlated
with its natural heritage of coal. One result passed over too quickly in historical accounts
of school beginnings is the provision for a quasi-military noncommissioned officer corps
of teachers, and a staff-grade corps of administrators to oversee the mobilized children.
One consequence unexpected by middle classes (though perhaps not so unexpected to
intellectual elites) was a striking increase in gullibility among well-schooled masses.
Jacques Ellul is the most compelling analyst of this awful phenomenon, in his canonical
essay Propaganda. He fingers schooling as an unparalleled propaganda instrument; if a
schoolbook prints it and a teacher affirms it, who is so bold as to demur?
The Technology Of Subjection
Administrative utopias are a peculiar kind of dreaming by those in power, driven by an
urge to arrange the lives of others, organizing them for production, combat, or detention.
The operating principles of administrative utopia are hierarchy, discipline, regimentation,
strict order, rational planning, a geometrical environment, a production line, a cellblock,
and a form of welfarism. Government schools and some private schools pass such
parameters with flying colors. In one sense, administrative utopias are laboratories for
exploring the technology of subjection and as such belong to a precise subdivision of
pornographic art: total surveillance and total control of the helpless. The aim and mode of
administrative utopia is to bestow order and assistance on an unwilling population: to
provide its clothing and food. To schedule it. In a masterpiece of cosmic misjudgment,
the phrenologist George Combe wrote Horace Mann on November 14, 1843:
The Prussian and Saxon governments by means of their schools and their just laws and
rational public administration are doing a good deal to bring their people into a rational
and moral condition. It is pretty obvious to thinking men that a few years more of this
cultivation will lead to the development of free institutions in Germany.
Earlier that year, on May 21, 1843, Mann had written to Combe: "I want to find out what
are the results, as well as the workings of the famous Prussian system." Just three years
earlier, with the election of Marcus Morton as governor of Massachusetts, a serious
challenge had been presented to Mann and to his Board of Education and the air of
Prussianism surrounding it and its manufacturer/politician friends. A House committee
was directed to look into the new Board of Education and its plan to undertake a teachers
college with $10,000 put up by industrialist Edmund Dwight. Four days after its
assignment, the majority reported out a bill to kill the board! Discontinue the Normal
School experiment, it said, and give Dwight his money back:
If then the Board has any actual power, it is a dangerous power, touching directly upon
the rights and duties of the Legislature; if it has no power, why continue its existence at
an annual expense to the commonwealth?
But the House committee did more; it warned explicitly that this board, dominated by a
Unitarian majority of 7–5 (although Unitarians comprised less than 1 percent of the
state), really wanted to install a Prussian system of education in Massachusetts, to put "a
monopoly of power in a few hands, contrary in every respect to the true spirit of our democratic institutions." The vote of the House on this was the single greatest victory
of Mann’s political career, one for which he and his wealthy friends called in every favor
they were owed. The result was 245 votes to continue, 182 votes to discontinue, and so
the House voted to overturn the recommendations of its own committee. A 32-vote swing
might have given us a much different twentieth century than the one we saw.
Although Mann’s own letters and diaries are replete with attacks on orthodox religionists
as enemies of government schooling, an examination of the positive vote reveals that
from the outset the orthodox churches were among Mann’s staunchest allies. Mann had
general support from Congregational, Presbyterian, and Baptist clergymen. At this early
stage they were completely unaware of the doom secular schooling would spell out for
their denominations. They had been seduced into believing school was a necessary
insurance policy to deal with incoming waves of Catholic immigration from Ireland and
Germany, the cheap labor army which as early as 1830 had been talked about in business
circles and eagerly anticipated as an answer to America’s production problems.
The reason Germany, and not England, provided the original model for America’s essay
into compulsion schooling may be that Mann, while in Britain, had had a shocking
experience in English class snobbery which left him reeling. Boston Common, he wrote,
with its rows of mottled sycamore trees, gravel walks, and frog ponds was downright
embarrassing compared with any number of stately English private grounds furnished
with stag and deer, fine arboretums of botanical specimens from faraway lands, marble
floors better than the table tops at home, portraits, tapestries, giant gold-frame mirrors.
The ballroom in the Bulfinch house in Boston would be a butler’s pantry in England, he
wrote. When Mann visited Stafford House of the Duke of Cumberland, he went into
culture shock:
Convicts on treadmills provide the energy to pump water for fountains. I have seen
equipages, palaces, and the regalia of royalty side by side with beggary, squalidness, and
degradation in which the very features of humanity were almost lost in those of the brute.
For this great distinction between the stratified orders of society, Mann held the Anglican
church to blame. "Give me America with all its rawness and want. We have aristocracy
enough at home and here I trace its foundations." Shocked from his English experience,
Mann virtually willed that Prussian schools would provide him with answers, says his
biographer Jonathan Messerli.
Mann arrived in Prussia when its schools were closed for vacation. He toured empty
classrooms, spoke with authorities, interviewed vacationing schoolmasters, and read piles
of dusty official reports. Yet from this non experience he claimed to come away with a
strong sense of the professional competence of Prussian teachers! All "admirably
qualified and full of animation!" His wife Mary, of the famous Peabody's, wrote home:
"We have not seen a teacher with a book in his hand in all Prussia; no, not one!"
(emphasis added) This wasn't surprising, for they hardly saw teachers at all.
Equally impressive, he wrote, was the wonderful obedience of children; these German
kinder had "innate respect for superior years." The German teacher corps? "The finest
collection of men I have ever seen—full of intelligence, dignity, benevolence, kindness
and bearing...." Never, says Mann, did he witness "an instance of harshness and severity.
All is kind, encouraging, animating, sympathizing." On the basis of imagining this
miraculous vision of exactly the Prussia he wanted to see, Mann made a special plea for
changes in the teaching of reading. He criticized the standard American practice of
beginning with the alphabet and moving to syllables, urging his readers to consider the
superior merit of teaching entire words from the beginning. "I am satisfied," he said, "our
greatest error in teaching lies in beginning with the alphabet."
The heart of Mann’s most famous Report to the Boston School Committee, the legendary
Seventh, rings a familiar theme in American affairs. It seems even then we were falling
behind! This time, behind the Prussians in education. In order to catch up, it was
mandatory to create a professional corps of teachers and a systematic curriculum, just as
the Prussians had. Mann fervently implored the board to accept his prescription...while
there was still time! The note of hysteria is a drum roll sounding throughout Mann’s
entire career; together with the vilification of his opponents, it constitutes much of
Mann’s spiritual signature.
That fall, the Association of Masters of the Boston Public Schools published its 150-page
rebuttal of Mann’s Report. It attacked the normal schools proposal as a vehicle for
propaganda for Mann’s "hot bed theories, in which the projectors have disregarded
experience and observation." It belittled his advocacy of phrenology and charged Mann
with attempting to excite the prejudices of the ignorant. Its second attack was against the
teacher-centered nonbook presentations of Prussian classrooms, insisting the
psychological result of these was to break student potential "for forming the habit of
independent and individual effort." The third attack was against the "word method" in
teaching reading, and in defense of the traditional alphabet method. Lastly, it attacked
Mann’s belief that interest was a better motivator to learning than discipline: "Duty
should come first and pleasure should grow out of the discharge of it." Thus was framed a
profound conflict between the old world of the Puritans and the new psychological
strategy of the Germans.
The German/American Reichsbank
Sixty years later, amid a well-coordinated attempt on the part of industrialists and
financiers to transfer power over money and interest rates from elected representatives of
the American people to a "Federal Reserve" of centralized private banking interests,
George Reynolds, president of the American Bankers Association, rose before an
audience on September 13, 1909, to declare himself flatly in favor of a central bank
modeled after the German Reichsbank. As he spoke, the schools of the United States
were being forcibly rebuilt on Prussian lines.
On September 14, 1909, in Boston, the president of the United States, William Howard
Taft, instructed the country that it should "take up seriously" the problem of establishing
a centralized bank on the German model. As The Wall Street Journal put it, an important
step in the education of Americans would soon be taken to translate the "realm of theory"
into "practical politics," in pedagogy as well as finance.
Dramatic, symbolic evidence of what was working deep in the bowels of the school
institution surfaced in 1935. At the University of Chicago’s experimental high school, the
head of the Social Science department, Howard C. Hill, published an inspirational
textbook, The Life and Work of the Citizen. It is decorated throughout with the fasces,
symbol of the Fascist movement, an emblem binding government and corporation
together as one entity. Mussolini had landed in America.
The fasces are strange hybridized images, one might almost say Americanized. The
bundle of sticks wrapped around a two-headed axe, the classic Italian Fascist image, has
been decisively altered. Now the sticks are wrapped around a sword. They appear on the
spine of this high school text, on the decorative page introducing Part One, again on a
similar page for Part Two, and are repeated on Part Three and Part Four as well. There
are also fierce, military eagles hovering above those pages. 166s
The strangest decoration of all faces the title page, a weird interlock of hands and wrists
which, with only a few slight alterations of its structural members, would be a living
swastika.1
The legend announces it as representing the "united strength" of Law, Order,
Science, and the Trades. Where the strength of America had been traditionally located in
our First Amendment guarantee of argument, now the Prussian connection was shifting
the locus of attention in school to cooperation, with both working and professional
classes sandwiched between the watchful eye of Law and Order. Prussia had entrenched
itself deep into the bowels of American institutional schooling.
1
Interestingly enough, several versions of this book exist—although no indication that this is so appears on the copyright page. In one of these
versions the familiar totalitarian symbols are much more pronounced than in the others.
next
A Coal-Fired Dream World
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