Horace Mann

Horace Mann (May 4, 1796  August 2, 1859) was an American educational reformer and Whig politician known for his commitment to promoting public education. In 1848, after public service as Secretary of the Massachusetts State Board of Education, Mann was elected to the United States House of Representatives (1848–1853). From September 1852 to his death, he served as President of Antioch College.

Horace Mann
Member of the U.S. House of Representatives
from Massachusetts's 8th district
In office
April 3, 1848  March 3, 1853
Preceded byJohn Quincy Adams
Succeeded byTappan Wentworth
Personal details
Born(1796-05-04)May 4, 1796
Franklin, Massachusetts, US
DiedAugust 2, 1859(1859-08-02) (aged 63)
Yellow Springs, Ohio, US
Resting placeNorth Burial Ground,
Providence, Rhode Island
Political partyWhig
Free Soil
Spouse(s)Charlotte Messer Mann (d. 1832)
Mary Peabody Mann
Children3
Alma materBrown University
Litchfield Law School
OccupationLawyer
Educator
College president
Signature

About Mann's intellectual progressivism, the historian Ellwood P. Cubberley said:

No one did more than he to establish in the minds of the American people the conception that education should be universal, non-sectarian, free, and that its aims should be social efficiency, civic virtue, and character, rather than mere learning or the advancement of sectarian ends.[1]

Arguing that universal public education was the best way to turn unruly American children into disciplined, judicious republican citizens, Mann won widespread approval from modernizers, especially in the Whig Party, for building public schools. Most U.S. states adopted a version of the system Mann established in Massachusetts, especially the program for normal schools to train professional teachers.[2] Educational historians credit Horace Mann, along with Henry Barnard and Catherine Beecher as one of the major advocates of the Common School Movement.[3]

Early career

Education

Horace Mann was born on May 4, 1796 in Franklin, Massachusetts.[4] His father was a farmer without much money. From ten years of age to twenty, he had no more than six weeks' schooling during any year,[5] but he made use of the Franklin Public Library, the first public library in America. At the age of twenty, he enrolled at Brown University and graduated in three years[6] as valedictorian (1819). The theme of his oration was "The Progressive Character of the Human Race."[5] He learned Greek and Latin from Samuel Barrett,[7] who later became a famous Unitarian minister.[8] He then studied law for a short time in Wrentham, Massachusetts and was a tutor of Latin and Greek (1820–1822) and a librarian (1821–1823) at Brown. During 1822, he also studied at Litchfield Law School and, in 1823, was admitted to the bar in Dedham, Massachusetts.[9]

Massachusetts legislature

Mann was elected to the Massachusetts legislature in 1827, and in that role was active in the interests of education, public charities, and laws for the suppression of intemperance and lotteries. He established an asylum in Worcester, and in 1833 was chairman of its board of trustees. Mann continued to be returned to the legislature as representative from Dedham until his removal to Boston in 1833. While in the legislature he was a member and part of the time chairman of the committee for the revision of the state statutes, and a large number of salutary provisions were incorporated into the code at his suggestion. After their enactment he was appointed one of the editors of the work, and prepared its marginal notes and its references to judicial decisions. He was elected to the Massachusetts State Senate from Boston in 1835, and was its president in 1836–1837. As a member of the Senate, he spent time as the majority leader, and aimed his focus at infrastructure, funding the construction of railroads and canals.[4][10]

Marriages

In 1830, Mann married Charlotte Messer, who was the daughter of the president of Brown University. She died two years later on August 1, 1832, and he never fully recovered from the intense grief and shock that accompanied her death.[11]

In 1843, he married Mary Tyler Peabody. Afterward, the couple accompanied Samuel Gridley Howe and Julia Ward Howe on a dual honeymoon to Europe. They then purchased a home in West Newton, Massachusetts at the corner of Chestnut and Highland Streets.[12][13] Horace and Mary had three sons: Horace Mann Jr., George Combe Mann, and Benjamin Pickman Mann.

Education reform

It was not until he was appointed Secretary in 1837 of the newly created Massachusetts Board of Education that he began the work which was to place him in the foremost rank of American educators. On entering on his duties, he withdrew from all other professional or business engagements and from politics.

He held this position, and worked with a remarkable intensity, holding teachers' conventions, delivering numerous lectures and addresses, carrying on an extensive correspondence, and introducing numerous reforms. Mann persuaded his fellow modernizers, especially those in the Whig Party, to legislate tax-supported elementary public education in their states and to feminize the teaching force. Most northern states adopted one version or another of the system he established in Massachusetts, especially the program for "normal schools" to train professional teachers.[2]

Mann traveled to every school in the state so he could physically examine each school ground. He planned and inaugurated the Massachusetts normal school system in Lexington (which shortly thereafter moved to Framingham), Barre (which shortly thereafter moved to Westfield) and Bridgewater, and began preparing a series of annual reports, which had a wide circulation and were considered as being "among the best expositions, if, indeed, they are not the very best ones, of the practical benefits of a common school education both to the individual and to the state".[14] By his advocacy of the disuse of corporal punishment in school discipline, he was involved in a controversy with some of the Boston teachers that resulted in the adoption of his views.[15]

In 1838, he founded and edited The Common School Journal. In this journal, Mann targeted the public school and its problems. His six main principles were:

  1. the public should no longer remain ignorant;
  2. that such education should be paid for, controlled, and sustained by an interested public;
  3. that this education will be best provided in schools that embrace children from a variety of backgrounds;
  4. that this education must be non-sectarian;
  5. that this education must be taught using the tenets of a free society; and
  6. that education should be provided by well-trained, professional teachers.

Under the auspices of the board, but at his own expense, he went to Europe in 1843 to visit schools, especially in Prussia, and his seventh annual report, published after his return, embodied the results of his tour. Many editions of this report were printed, not only in Massachusetts but in other states, in some cases by private individuals and in others by legislatures; several editions were issued in England.

Mann hoped that by bringing all children of all classes together, they could have a common learning experience. This would also give an opportunity to the less fortunate to advance in the social scale and education would "equalize the conditions of men." Moreover, it was viewed also as a road to social advancement by the early labor movement and as a goal of having common schools. Mann also suggested that by having schools it would help those students who did not have appropriate discipline in the home. Building a person's character was just as important as reading, writing and arithmetic. Instilling values such as obedience to authority, promptness in attendance, and organizing the time according to bell ringing helped students prepare for future employment.

Mann faced some resistance from parents who did not want to give up the moral education to teachers and bureaucrats. The normal schools trained mostly women, giving them new career opportunities as teachers.[16] Mann believed that women were better suited for teaching, regardless of their status as a mother, and used his position to push for a feminization of the profession.[17]

The practical result of Mann's work was a revolution in the approach used in the common school system of Massachusetts, which in turn influenced the direction of other states. In carrying out his work, Mann met with bitter opposition by some Boston schoolmasters who strongly disapproved of his innovative pedagogical ideas,[18] and by various religious sectarians, who contended against the exclusion of all sectarian instruction from the schools.

Secular nature

As the Old Deluder Satan Act and other Massachusetts School Laws attest, early education in Massachusetts had a clear religious intent. However, by the time of Mann's leadership in education, various developments (including a vibrant populist Protestant faith and increased religious diversity) fostered a secular school system with a religiously passive stance.[19]

While Mann affirmed that "our Public Schools are not Theological Seminaries" and that they were "debarred by law from inculcating the peculiar and distinctive doctrines of any one religious denomination amongst us ... or all that is essential to religion or to salvation," he assured those who objected to this secular nature that "our system earnestly inculcates all Christian morals; it founds its morals on the basis of religion; it welcomes the religion of the Bible; and, in receiving the Bible, it allows it to do what it is allowed to do in no other system—to speak for itself. But here it stops, not because it claims to have compassed all truth; but because it disclaims to act as an umpire between hostile religious opinions."

Mann stated that this position resulted in a near-universal use of the Bible in the schools of Massachusetts and that this served as an argument against the assertion by some that Christianity was excluded from his schools, or that they were anti-Christian.[20] A devotee of phrenology, Mann believed education could eliminate or reduce human failings and compensate for any biological flaws.[21]

Mann also once stated that "it may not be easy theoretically, to draw the line between those views of religious truth and of Christian faith which is common to all, and may, therefore, with propriety be inculcated in schools, and those which, being peculiar to individual sects, are therefore by law excluded; still it is believed that no practical difficulty occurs in the conduct of our schools in this regard."

Rather than sanctioning a particular church as was often the norm in many states, the Legislature proscribed books "calculated to favor the tenets of any particular set of Christians."[22]

Reading instruction

Like many nineteenth century reformers, Horace Mann believed that "children would find it far more interesting and pleasurable to memorize words and read short sentences and stories without having to bother to learn the names of the letters"[23]. According to Diane Ravitch, he condemned the alphabet method, claiming that it was "repulsive and soul-deadening to children"[23]. He described the letters of the alphabet as "skeleton-shaped, bloodless, ghostly apparitions"[23]. To him, teaching the alphabet was entirely illogical: "When we wish to give a child the idea of a new animal, we do not present successively the different parts of it,—an eye, an ear, the nose, the mouth, the body, or a leg: but we present a whole animal, as one object"[24].

Mann believed that "children's earliest books should teach whole words, skipping the alphabet and the sounds of the letters"[23], though he may have been confused between "the alphabet method of learning letters through words and a word method, now called the look-and-say method, or learning to read through saying the word as a whole"[25].

U.S. Congress

In the spring of 1848 he was elected to the United States Congress as a Whig to fill the vacancy caused by the death of John Quincy Adams. His first speech in that role was in advocacy of its right and duty to exclude slavery from the territories, and in a letter in December of that year he said: "I think the country is to experience serious times. Interference with slavery will excite civil commotion in the South. But it is best to interfere. Now is the time to see whether the Union is a rope of sand or a band of steel."[26] Again he said: "I really think if we insist upon passing the Wilmot proviso for the territories that the south—a part of them—will revel; but I would pass it, rebellion or not. I consider no evil so great as the extension of slavery."[27]

During the first session, he volunteered as counsel for Drayton and Sayres, who were indicted for stealing 76 slaves in the District of Columbia, and at the trial was engaged for 21 successive days in their defense. In 1850, he was engaged in a controversy with Daniel Webster in regard to the extension of slavery and the Fugitive Slave Law, calling Webster's support for the Compromise of 1850 a "vile catastrophe", and comparing him to "Lucifer descending from Heaven".[28][29] Mann was defeated by a single vote at the ensuing nominating convention by Webster's supporters; but, on appealing to the people as an independent anti-slavery candidate, he was re-elected, serving from April 1848 until March 1853.

Leadership of Antioch College and last years

Original daguerreotype of Rep. Mann (Mass.) from Mathew Brady's studio, c. 1849.

In September 1852, he was nominated for governor of Massachusetts by the Free Soil Party, and the same day was chosen president of the newly established Antioch College at Yellow Springs, Ohio. Failing in the election for governor, he accepted the presidency of the college, in which he continued until his death. There he taught economics, philosophy, and theology; he was popular with students and with lay audiences across the Midwest who attended his lectures promoting public schools. Mann also employed the first female faculty member to be paid on an equal basis with her male colleagues, Rebecca Pennell, his niece. His commencement message to the class of 1859 was to "be ashamed to die until you have won some victory for humanity".[30]

Antioch College was founded by the Christian Connexion, which later withdrew its financial support causing the college to struggle for many years with meager financial resources due to sectarian infighting. Mann himself was charged with nonadherence to sectarianism because, previously a Congregationalist by upbringing, he joined the Unitarian Church.

He collapsed shortly after the 1859 commencement and died that summer. Antioch historian Robert Straker wrote that Mann had been "crucified by crusading sectarians." Ralph Waldo Emerson lamented "what seems the fatal waste of labor and life at Antioch." Mann's wife, who wrote in anguish that "the blood of martyrdom waters the spot," later disinterred his body from Yellow Springs.[31] He is buried in the North Burial Ground in Providence, Rhode Island,[32] next to his first wife, Charlotte Messer Mann. (Charlotte Messer Mann was the daughter of Asa Messer, an early president of Brown University.)

Legacy

Many historians treat Mann as one of the most important leaders of education reform in the antebellum period.[2][33][34][35]

Reading instruction

Mann's endorsement of "word method" for reading instruction made a lasting impression on other reformers of the period, and "by 1890 the alphabet method had virtually died out"[23]. Francis Parker and John Dewey used the "word method" as one of the features of the "Progressive" system of education. As Nancy Millichap notes, "Despite the enthusiasm of educators for their new methods of teaching, the illiteracy rate remained high. Among American soldiers enlisted in World War I, 24.9 per cent proved unable to read or write, and during World War II approximately the same percentage of British servicemen [who were taught using the same method] were found to be similarly handicapped. In 1940, one third of high school students were incapable of mastering reading and writing well enough to profit from textbook instruction, and one half of the adult population in the United States was functionally illiterate"[25].

The backlash against "word method" culminated in a 1955 book Why Johnny Can't Read by Rudolf Flesch, in which he condemned this method for "treating children as if they were dogs" and recommended returning to teaching phonics. Nevertheless, the "ill-informed, ineffective reading instruction" remains the norm in American colleges of education and, accordingly, in American elementary schools[36].

Commemoration

Mann on a 1940 stamp from the Famous Americans series

Many places, including schools, around the world are named after Mann, among them the Horace Mann Auditorium at Bridgewater State University (formerly known as Bridgewater State College and Bridgewater State Normal School), and Horace Mann Elementary School in St Joseph, Missouri.

Horace Mann's statue stands in front of the Massachusetts State House along with that of Daniel Webster.

At Antioch College a monument carries his quote, which has been recently adopted as the college motto: "Be Ashamed to Die Until You Have Won Some Victory for Humanity."

The University of Northern Colorado named the gates to their campus in his dedication, a gift of the Class of 1910.[37]

The Springfield, Illinois-based Illinois Education Association Mutual Insurance Company, was renamed in honor of Mann in 1950 as the Horace Mann Educators Corporation.

Pittsburg State University in Pittsburg, Kansas, has a building named Horace Mann School. It currently houses the Student Welcoming Center.

In Massachusetts, public charter schools that are authorized by local school districts are known as Horace Mann charters.

There are a number of school buildings in the United States named after Mann.

Emulation of the Prussian education system in the United States

American educators were fascinated by German educational trends. In 1818, John Griscom gave a favorable report of Prussian education. Beginning in 1830, English translations were made of French philosopher Victor Cousin's work, "Report on the State of Public Education in Prussia." Calvin E. Stowe, Henry Barnard, Horace Mann, George Bancroft and Joseph Cogswell all had a vigorous interest in German education. In 1843, Mann traveled to Germany to investigate how the educational process worked. Mann focused on two aspects of Prussian education upon his return to the United States: the creation of Normal Schools (although unlike Prussia, Mann advocated for a female-only teaching force) and well-appointed, safe, and well-resourced schoolhouses.

Works

References

  1. Cubberley, Ellwood P. (1919). Public Education in the United States. p. 167.
  2. Groen, Mark (Spring–Summer 2008). "The Whig Party and the Rise of Common Schools, 1837–1854". American Educational History Journal. 35 (1/2): 251–260.
  3. Good, Thomas L. (2008). 21st century education: a reference handbook. p. 267.
  4. "Horace Mann | American educator". Encyclopedia Britannica. Retrieved May 1, 2017.
  5.  Tarbell, Isa Arlington (1900). "Mann, Horace" . In Wilson, J. G.; Fiske, J. (eds.). Appletons' Cyclopædia of American Biography. New York: D. Appleton.
  6. McFarland, Philip (2004). Hawthorne in Concord. New York: Grove Press. p. 72. ISBN 0-8021-1776-7.
  7. "Horace Mann | Biography & Facts". Encyclopedia Britannica. Retrieved April 26, 2020.
  8. "Samuel Barrett". uudb.org. Retrieved April 26, 2020.
  9. Catalogue of the Litchfield Law School. Hartford, CT: Press of Case, Tiffany and Company. 1849.
  10. Mondale, Sarah (2001). School: The Story of American Public Education. New York: Beacon.
  11. McFarland, Philip (2004). Hawthorne in Concord. New York: Grove Press. p. 73. ISBN 0-8021-1776-7.
  12. "Allen Family Papers 1846-1915".
  13. "Horace Mann Papers". Massachusetts Historical Society.
  14. Hinsdale (1898).
  15. Mintz, S.; McNeil, S. (2016). "The Struggle for Public Schools". Digital History.
  16. Eisenmann, Linda (1988). Historical dictionary of women's education in the United States. p. 259.
  17. S., Sugg, Redding (1978). Motherteacher : the feminization of American education. Charlottesville: University Press of Virginia. ISBN 0813907578. OCLC 3708082.
  18. Glenn, Myra (1984). Campaigns Against Corporal Punishment. pp. 104–6. ISBN 0-87395-813-6.
  19. Monsma, Stephen V.; Soper, J. Christopher (September 5, 2008). "2. The United States". The Challenge of Pluralism: Church and State in Five Democracies. pp. 18–22. ISBN 9780742557406.
  20. Mann, Horace (1849). Twelfth Annual Report for 1848 of the Secretary of the Board of Education of Massachusetts. pp. 116, 177, 121, 122.
  21. Dana., Goldstein (2015). The teacher wars : a history of America's most embattled profession (First Anchor books ed.). New York. ISBN 9780345803627. OCLC 895117195.
  22. Massachusetts Board of Education (1838) [Covering the year 1837]. Annual Report of the Board of Education. pp. 14, 15.
  23. Ravitch, Diane (2000). "Chapter 9: The great meltdown". Left back: a century of failed school reforms. Simon & Shuster. pp. 356–357. ISBN 0-684-84417-6.
  24. Mathews, Mitford (1966). "From a lecture delivered by Mann in 1841". Teaching to Read, Historically Considered. The University of Chicago Press. pp. 76–81. ASIN B000Z58E5S.
  25. Millichap, Nancy (1986). "Dyslexia, theories of causation and methods of management: an historical perspective". Loyola University Chicago.
  26. Mann, Horace (1848). Speech of Horace Mann, on the right of Congress to legislate for the territories of the United States, and its duty to exclude slavery therefrom. Boston: William B. Fowle.
  27. "History of the United States from the Compromise of 1850 to the Mckinley-Bryan Campaign of 1896 - 1, Page 132 by James Ford Rhodes. | Online Research Library: Questia". www.questia.com. Retrieved May 8, 2020.
  28. https://www.senate.gov/artandhistory/history/minute/Speech_Costs_Senator_His_Seat.htm
  29. Kennedy (2004). Profiles in Courage. pp. 69–70.
  30. "Antioch College - Winning Victories Grant". alumni.antiochcollege.edu. Retrieved April 26, 2020.
  31. Clark, Burton R. (1970). The Distinctive College. Adline Publishing Co. p. 16.
  32. Horace Mann
  33. Finkelstein, Barbara (Winter 1990). "Perfecting Childhood: Horace Mann and the Origins of Public Education in the United States". Biography: An Interdisciplinary Quarterly. 13 (1): 6–20. doi:10.1353/bio.2010.0400.
  34. Hunt, Thomas C. (2005). Moral Education in America's Schools. pp. 31–48.
  35. Downs, R. B. (1974). Horace Mann: Champion of the Public Schools.
  36. Emily Hanford (September 10, 2018). "Hard Words: Why aren't kids being taught to read?". APM.
  37. "University History: A Photographic History of UNC". University of Northern Colorado. Archived from the original on March 4, 2016.
  38. "Horace Mann Elementary". Hominy Public Schools. Archived from the original on April 15, 2017. Retrieved April 14, 2017.
  39. "Pages - default". public.rcas.org. Retrieved April 13, 2019.
  40. http://www.wausauschools.org/schools_facilities/middle_schools

Notes

Further reading

  • Cremin, Lawrence A. American Education: The National Experience (1982).
  • Curti, Merle. The Social Ideas of American Educators (1935) pp. 101–38
  • Downs, R. B. Horace Mann: Champion of the Public Schools (1974)
  • Finkelstein, Barbara. "Perfecting Childhood: Horace Mann and the Origins of Public Education in the United States," Biography: An Interdisciplinary Quarterly, Winter 1990, Vol. 13#1 pp. 6–20
  • Hinsdale, Burke A. Horace Mann and the Common School Revival in the United States (New York, 1898), in the Great Educators series online
  • Hubbell, George A. Life of Horace Mann, Educator, Patriot and Reformer (Philadelphia, 1910)
  • Messerli, Jonathan. Horace Mann; a biography (1972)
  • Peterson, Paul E. Saving schools: From Horace Mann to virtual learning (Harvard University Press, 2010)
  • Taylor, Bob Pepperman. Horace Mann's Troubling Legacy: The Education of Democratic Citizens (University Press of Kansas; 2010).
Party political offices
Preceded by
John G. Palfrey
Free Soil nominee for Governor of Massachusetts
1852
Succeeded by
Henry Wilson
U.S. House of Representatives
Preceded by
John Quincy Adams
Member of the U.S. House of Representatives
from Massachusetts's 8th congressional district

April 3, 1848 – March 3, 1853
Succeeded by
Tappan Wentworth
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