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An American Affidavit

Sunday, January 6, 2019

11. No Limit To Pain For Those Who Allow It: The Underground History of American Education by John Taylor Gatto from archive.org


11. No Limit To Pain For Those Who Allow It: The Underground History of American Education by John Taylor Gatto from archive.org


No Limit To Pain For Those Who Allow It

    One of the most telling accounts of schooling ever penned comes directly from the lips of  a legendary power broker, Colonel Edward Mandel
House, one of these grand shadowy  figures in American history. House had a great deal to do with America's entry into WWI  as a deliberate project to seize German markets in chemicals, armor plate and shipping,  an aspect of our bellicosity rarely mentioned in scholastic histories. When peace came,  House's behind-the-scenes maneuvering in the League of Nations contributed to  repudiation of the organization. His management of President Wilson led to persistent  stories that Wilson was little more than a puppet of the Colonel. 

      In his memoirs, The Intimate Papers of Colonel House, we get a glimpse of elite  American schooling in the 1870s. House's early years were school-free. He grew up after  the Civil War, near Houston, Texas:  

     My brother James, six years older than I, was the leader.. ..We all had guns and pistols...  there were no childish games excepting those connected with war. [House was nine at the  time.] In the evening around the fireside there were told tales of daring deeds that we  strove to emulate.... I cannot remember the time when I began to ride and to shoot.... I  had many narrow escapes. Twice I came near killing one of my playmates in the reckless  use of firearms. They were our toys and death our playmate.  

     At the age of fourteen House was sent to school in Virginia. The cruelty of the other boys  made an indelible impression on his character, as you can sift from this account: 

      I made up my mind at the second attempt to haze me that I would not permit it. I not only  had a pistol but a large knife, and with these I held the larger, rougher boys at bay. There  was no limit to the lengths they would go in hazing those who would allow it. One form I  recall was that of going through the pretense of hanging. They would tie a boy's hands  behind him and string him up by the neck over a limb until he grew purple in the face.  None of it, however, fell to me. What was done to those who permitted it is almost  beyond belief.     At the Hopkins Grammar School in New Haven at the age of seventeen,

     during the  Hayes-Tilden campaign of 1876, House began to "hang around" political offices instead  of "attending to studies." He came to be recognized and was given small privileges.  When the election had to be ultimately settled by an Electoral Commission he was  allowed to "slip in and out of hearings at will." House again:  

     All this was educational in its way, though not the education I was placed in Hopkins  Grammar School to get, and it is no wonder that I lagged at the end of my class. I had no  interest in desk tasks, but I read much and was learning in a larger and more interesting  school.  

     House's story was written over and over in the short, glorious history of American  education before schooling took over. Young Americans were allowed close to the  mechanism of things. This rough and tumble practice kept social class elastic and  American achievement in every practical field superb.  




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