89. The
Long Reach Of The Teutonic Knights: The Underground History of American
Education by John Taylor Gatto from archive.org
89. 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. 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
pro-posals 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
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.
Germans, said
Quigley, 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 Macauley 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.
4. 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.
5.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.
6. In
Opposition to Centralization (1839).
7. 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.
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