142.
Industrial Efficiency: The Underground History of American Education by John
Taylor Gatto from archive.org
Industrial
Efficiency
After the Civil War, the guaranteed
customer was not a thing prudent businessmen were willing to surrender. Could there be some different way to
bring about uniformity again
without another conflict? Vast fortunes awaited
those who would hasten
such a jubilee. Consolidation.
Specialization. These were the magical principles President Harper was to preach forty years later at the
University of Chicago. Whatever sustained national unity was good, including war, whatever
retarded it was bad. School was an answer, but it seemed hopelessly far away in 1865.
Things were moving slowly on these
appointed tracks when a gigantic mass of Latin, and then Slavic, immigrants was summoned to the United States to
labor, in the 1870s and
afterwards. It came colorfully dressed, swilling wine, hugging and
kissing children, eyes full of
hope. Latin immigration would seem to represent a major setback for the realization of any systematic Utopia
and its schools. But a president had been shot dead in 1865. Soon another was shot dead by a
presumed (though not actual) immigrant barely fifteen years later. Rioting followed, bloody strikes,
national dissension. It was a time
tailor-made for schoolmen, an opportunity to manage history.
The Americanization movement, which
guaranteed forced schooling to its first mass clientele, was managed from several bases; three important
ones were social settlement
houses, newly minted patriotic hereditary societies, and elite private
schools (which sprang up in
profusion after 1880). Madison Grant was a charter member of one of the patriotic groups, "The Society of
Colonial Wars." All compartments of the Americanization machine cooperated to rack the immigrant
family to its breaking point. But
some, like settlement houses, were relatively subtle in their effects. Here,
the home culture was inadvertently
denigrated through automatic daily comparison with the settlement culture, a genteel world
constructed by society ladies dedicated to serving the poor.
Hereditary societies worked a different
way: Through educational channels, lectures, rallies, literature they broadcast a code of attitudes
directed at the top of society. Mainline
Protestant churches were next to climb on the Americanization bandwagon,
and the "home-missions"
program became a principal gathering station for adoptable foreign children. By 1907 the YMCA was heavily
into this work, but the still embryonic
undertaking of leveling the masses lacked leadership and direction.
Such would eventually
be supplied by Frances Kellor, a muckraker and a tremendous force for conformity in government schooling.
Kellor, the official presiding genius of the American-ization movement, came out of an unlikely quarter,
yet in retrospect an entirely
natural one. She was the daughter of a washerwoman, informally adopted
out of poverty
by two wealthy local spinsters, who eventually sent her to Cornell where
she took a law degree through
their generosity. After a turn toward sociology at the University of Chicago, Kellor mastered Harper's twin
lessons of specialization and consolidation and set out boldly to reform America's immigrant families.
Her first muckraking
book, Out of Work, was published in 1904. For the next two years she drafted remedial legislation and
earned her spurs lobbying. By 1906, she had Teddy Roosevelt's personal ear. Six years later, she was head of
the Progressive Party's publicity
department and research arm. Kellor, under William Rainey Harper's inspiration, became an advocate of
industrial efficiency. She despised waste and disorder, urging that "opportunity" be
rationalized and put under control — the first hint of School- to-Work legislation to follow in the
waning decades of the century. Work and licenses should be used as incentives to build national unity.
Discipline was the ticket, and for
discipline, carrots were required as well as sticks.
Charles Evans Hughes,
then governor, made Kellor the first woman ever to head a state agency, appointing her director of the
Bureau of Industries and Immigration in New York. By 1909, supported by prominent allies, she organized
a New York branch of the North
American Civic League, a Boston-based, business-rostered outfit intended
to protect the national status quo
from various foreign menaces. Under her direction, the New York branch developed its own program.
It isn't clear how much of the Boston
agenda they carried on — it had mainly involved sending agents into
immigrant communities to act as
industrial spies and to lead anti-strike movements — but in any case, by 1914 Kellor' s group was writing its
own menu.
It opened by
demanding centralized federal action: Americanization was failing
"without a national
goal." Her new "Committee for Immigrants in America" thereafter
proclaimed itself the central
clearinghouse to unify all public and private agencies in a national spearhead to "make all these
people one nation." When government failed to come up with money for a bureau, Miss Kellor's
own backers — who included Mrs. Averill
Harriman and Felix Warburg, the Rothschild banker — did just that, and
this private entity was duly
incorporated into the government of the United States! "The Division
of Immigrant Education,"
while officially federal, was in fact the subsidized creation of Frances Kellor's private lobby.
Immigrant education meant public school education, for it was to compulsion schooling the
children of immigration were consigned, and immigrant children, in a reversal of traditional roles, became the
teachers of their immigrant parents,
thus ruining their families by trivializing them.
When WWI began, Americanization took
over as the great national popular crusade. A drive for national conformity pushed itself dramatically to
the forefront of the public
agenda. Kellor and her colleagues swiftly enlisted cooperation from
mayors, school authorities,
churches, and civic groups; prepared data for speakers; distributed
suggested agenda and programs,
buttons, and posters; and lectured in schools. When Fourth of July 1915 arrived, 107 cities celebrated it
as "Americanization Day," and the country resounded with the committee's slogan "Many Peoples,
but One Nation."
Now Kellor's organization transmuted
itself into "The National Americanization Committee," shifting its emphasis from education to the
breaking of immigrant ties to the
Old World. Its former slogan, "Many Peoples, But One Nation,"
was replaced with a blunt
"America First." In this transformation, children became the sharpest
weapon directed at their parents'
home culture. Kellor called Americanization "the civilian side of national defense." She appeared
before a group of industrialists and bankers calling itself the National Security League to warn of
coming peril from subversion on the part of immigrants. One of the most distressing anomalies confronting
Kellor and the NSL was an almost
total lack of publicizable sabotage incidents on the domestic front in
WWI, which made it difficult to
maintain the desired national mood of fear and anger.
9.
There is some evidence American social engineering was being studied abroad.
Zamiatin's We, the horrifying scientific dystopia of a world government bearing the name "The
United State," was published in Russia a few years later as if in
anticipation of an American future for
everyone.
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