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These Out-Of-Print Children’s Biographies Repudiate The Bitter Lies Of Today’s Uneducated Anti-Americans
The Federalist ^ | 10/22/2020 | Casey Chalk

Posted on 10/22/2020 8:10:37 AM PDT by SeekAndFind



This month marks 143 years since Chief Joseph, leader of the Pacific Northwest Indian tribe the Nez Percé, surrendered to a U.S. Army detachment in northern Montana. There the warrior famously declared, “From where the sun now stands I will fight no more forever.”

Others, however, are still eager to keep up the fight in the name of indigenous people. Demonstrators affiliated with the Miwok Tribe in San Rafael, California, on Oct. 13 vandalized and tore down yet another statue of Franciscan missionary Junipero Serra. Other ersatz torch-bearers of the cause include those municipalities, such as Baltimore and the District of Columbia, that have recently changed Columbus Day to Indigenous Peoples’ Day.

The first place I read of Chief Joseph’s famous speech was in a children’s biography of him, published more than 40 years ago by Troll Associates. It was one of many titles Troll released in the 1970s and 1980s honoring Native Americans such as Black Hawk, Osceola, Pocahontas, Pontiac, Sacagawea, Squanto, and Sitting Bull. II was fascinated by all things American Indian. These titles were part of my childhood library as an elementary student in the early 1990s. I still own them and have read them to my own grade-school children.

Troll’s canon of American biographies for kids extended far beyond Native American heroes. There were biographies honoring the best of baseball, such as Babe Ruth, Lou Gehrig, and Jackie Robinson. Other books memorialized our nation’s first leaders: George Washington, John Adams, John Paul Jones, Thomas Jefferson, and James Monroe. Still, others paid tribute to later great Americans: Abraham Lincoln, Clara Barton, Harriet Tubman, Martin Luther King, Thurgood Marshall, Rosa Parks, and even actress and singer Pearl Bailey. No one could accuse Troll of not being inclusive of women or minorities.

Many Older Books Don’t Whitewash the Past

Also among Troll’s biographies of historical American figures was one of Christopher Columbus. “Of all the explorers in history, none made a greater contribution to the world than Christopher Columbus. He was more than an extraordinary navigator and sailor. Columbus was a man of vision and determination,” reads the introduction by author Rae Bains.

Bains also notes many of those who followed Columbus in colonizing the New World for Spain were greedy and “became angry and disillusioned.” And Columbus ultimately fell out of favor at the Spanish royal court and “died a deeply disappointed man.” The author might not indulge the reader in the brutal details of Spanish colonization, but this portrayal is far from saccharine.

Bains’s biography of Columbus certainly doesn’t employ the absurd and erroneous assertions we find in contemporary portrayals of the explorer. “Native Hawaiian advocate” Lopaka Purdy in a recent Washington Post article claims, “Columbus should be considered the progenitor of white supremacy. Let us remember him for that. … Columbus is famous because he was a thief. That was his impact.”

Purdy should also consider Columbus’s purposes and contributions. As for the anachronistic charge that Columbus is the “progenitor of white supremacy,” one might as well charge Alexander the Great with inventing imperialism or Genghis Khan with toxic masculinity.

The difference between Troll’s and today’s portrayals of American history is that the former actually tried to tell a coherent, inclusive narrative about our nation, one that sought to find unifying themes among a diverse and disparate set of characters. Native American heroes such as Osceola and Sitting Bull are rightly lauded for their love of their people and their homes, and for courageously resisting what was often unjust, unsympathetic, and racist attacks on their way of life.

We celebrate Washington and Jefferson because they made unparalleled contributions to American politics and history. We honor Thurgood Marshall and Rosa Parks because they represent our nation’s continued struggle to right past wrongs and fully realize the unprecedented vision of our founding political documents.

Sympathy unites all of these children’s biographies. The biography of Robert E. Lee, also by Bains, largely focuses on his childhood, which was marked by great familial upheaval. His father, Henry “Light-Horse Harry” Lee, despite being a Revolutionary War hero and a Virginia politician, was incompetent and negligent, spent time in debtors’ prison, and for a time lived in the West Indies. He died on the return journey to Virginia when Robert was 11. “Robert had a difficult childhood,” observed Bains, who devoted far more attention to Lee’s resilience and virtue at West Point and in the U.S. military than his role as the Confederacy’s greatest general.

Kids Need to Learn the Complexities of History

Eliciting empathy in the child reader is an essential educational objective because it is required for both civic and family responsibility. As this year proves, our political climate is in sore need of more of it. Learning of the struggles, failures, hopes, and achievements of historical Americans engenders that virtue. Limiting Columbus and Lee or Washington and Jefferson to a simplistic, binary narrative of white, patriarchal oppression not only doesn’t do their stories justice, but it also short-circuits the maturation process via reductionist tropes.

Telling kids that their history is full of racist patriarchs fosters cynicism and a Manichean, self-destructive understanding of the past in which some people, namely oppressors, are evil and to be censured; others, namely the oppressed, are good and to be praised. It is this kind of blinkered, perverse thinking that provokes the continued desecration and destruction of our national heritage. Unable to see ourselves in our collective past, we tear it down with impunity.

What Troll sought to accomplish with its American biography series was far more inclusive than what today’s social studies curricula seek to sell children. The publisher, which filed for bankruptcy in 2003, believed there was enough room in the telling of American history for both Christopher Columbus and Pontiac, Robert E. Lee, and Rosa Parks. Certainly, all four possessed manifestations of courage, leadership, brilliance, and conscience. That their stories represented different and even conflicting visions of America reveals the complex, sometimes morally nebulous nature of our national narrative, rather than obscures it, as do the 1619 Project and the Southern Poverty Law Center’s “Teaching Hard History.”

Forty years ago, as my children’s book collection proves, grade-school history pedagogy offered a diverse and inclusive narrative about our national past. It integrated biographies of men and women from a remarkable variety of backgrounds, be they rich or poor, black, white, or indigenous.

As I became older, I sensed the tension between their stories. James Monroe was a brave soldier and great statesman, but his hostile, expansionist policies ultimately incited a bloody, desperate revolt by Osceola to protect his people. That we are capable of deeming both men worthy of America’s honor evinces what is best about our national history, not what is worst.


Casey Chalk is a Senior Contributor at The Federalist, columnist for The American Conservative, Crisis Magazine, and The New Oxford Review. He has a bachelors in history and masters in teaching from the University of Virginia, and masters in theology from Christendom College.


TOPICS: Education; History; Society
KEYWORDS: antiamerican; biographies; childrensbooks; godsgravesglyphs; history

1 posted on 10/22/2020 8:10:37 AM PDT by SeekAndFind
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To: SeekAndFind

I remember checking out school library books like Davy Crockett, Daniel Boone, Wyatt Earp, Jeremiah Johnson . . . . And there were others, not all boy books.

Maybe the heroes were sugar-coated, but I got to know their names, locations, general accomplishments, and time in history.

The ‘evil’ side of their life was not needed. I wouldn’t have understood it anyway. And the culture at the time did not denigrate people publicly as a matter of course.

As I matured and learned of the ‘evil’ in us all, I could accept their foibles and incorporate them into their life history.

Things are so much different today.


2 posted on 10/22/2020 8:26:44 AM PDT by Scrambler Bob (This is not /s. It is just as viable as any MSM 'information', maybe more so!)
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To: Scrambler Bob

Part of it is also just good storytelling. Many of those details flat aren’t relevant depending on the story being told.


3 posted on 10/22/2020 8:52:03 AM PDT by ferret_airlift
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To: SeekAndFind

OT:
Chief Joseph, when he surrendered, had his medicine pouch taken. Inside it was a small clay tablet which was handed down from his ancestors. The tablet was inscribed in Sumerian cuneiform writing.

Once again another proof that many peoples have come and gone from the North American continent throughout history perhaps starting with the Solutrean at 17,000BC and the Clovis Peoples at 11,500 BC and later the Red Paint Peoples around 3,000BC.

Columbus was just the last in s long line of explorers traders and hunters to come to the New World. And still older, there are sites in California and Mexico that go back 160,000 300,000 years. A very long line, indeed.


4 posted on 10/22/2020 8:57:47 AM PDT by PIF (They came for me and mine ... now its your turn)
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To: SeekAndFind

There was an attempt in the 1960s, to rehabilitate the American Indian into a form of early “Hippie”. Didn’t scalp or torture, made no wars till warred upon. Just did the “Happy Dance” all the time, till the Evil White Man showed up.

This thought made it’s way into movies such as Soldier Blue and Little Big Man, and some horrid Made-For-TV Movies becoming the “norm” for the 1970s.

Those of us who studied early history knew better.

On OETA TV(PBS in Oklahoma), a program called Images Of Indians, while showing the fabrications of early 1940s and 1950s Western movies also spewed about Indians not scalping or torturing, and all reports of such being white man’s “Lies”.

Then around 1980 or so, National Geographic had an article on Jamestown, showing, on the cover, two Indians scalping a white woman. BOOM! Talk about hot letters to the Editor!

it was then mentioned what some of us already knew, that early explorers, both Spanish and English found Indians scalping and butchering slain enemies all along the East Coast, before the whites began to settle there.

It was then also mentioned about a massacre at Crow Canyon long before the white man arrived, showing over 400 tribesmen butchered, scalped, tortured.
Then the archaeologists released old suppressed data showing there was cannibalism among the Pueblos in the 4-Corners area, and all hell broke lose.

Their cover had been blown and they didn’t like it.

Here are just a few of my links showing how Indians treated each other before the White Man arrived.

https://frontierpartisans.com/3942/crow-creek-massacre/

http://westerndigs.org/skeletons-in-utah-cave-are-victims-of-prehistoric-war-study-says/

http://westerndigs.org/infamous-mass-grave-of-young-women-in-ancient-city-of-cahokia-also-holds-men-study/

https://www.santafenewmexican.com/news/trail_dust/trail-dust-massacre-at-awatovi-is-little-known-act-of-genocide/article_7231e60b-9897-50bc-992d-8d5344685d4c.html
http://westerndigs.org/mass-grave-of-prodigal-sons-in-california-poses-prehistoric-mystery/

https://www.archaeology.org/news/2269-140630-colorado-torture-evidence

https://ancientstandard.com/2007/07/17/csi-new-mexico-%e2%80%93-possible-genocide-ca-1275-ad/

http://westerndigs.org/mass-grave-found-in-california-reveals-prehistoric-violence-against-outsiders/

https://www.smithsonianmag.com/smart-news/archeologists-find-evidence-torture-1200-year-old-massacre-180951922/

https://archive.archaeology.org/9709/newsbriefs/anasazi.html

https://anthropology.net/2007/07/16/parallel-life-and-death-1275-ad-massacred-gallina-and-vanishing-anasazi/

https://www.ohio.edu/orgs/glass/vol/1/14.htm?fbclid=IwAR2DufWLcDQAVX8kMtinfxuM9Eg2NCroXuDKtSOF7jFZqg7sYvzdRUHX0Ek

And some links to the engravings of Theodore de Bry, based on what he was told...

https://images.fineartamerica.com/images-medium-large/de-bry-native-american-ritual-granger.jpg

https://www.historytoday.com/sites/default/files/cannibals.jpg.

https://i.pinimg.com/originals/93/6c/8b/936c8bfb99918967b8b022534b81bd07.jpg

https://www.alamy.com/stock-photo-thodore-de-bry-engraver-after-the-drawings-by-jacques-le-moyne-de-113153612.html

And to show the opposite side ...

https://www.art-prints-on-demand.com/kunst/theodore_de_bry/the_dogs_of_vasco_nunez_de_bal.jpg


5 posted on 10/22/2020 9:46:50 AM PDT by Ruy Dias de Bivar
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To: SeekAndFind

We used the Robinson Curriculum to home-school our kids. Most books on the reading list were past copyright date and could be downloaded online for free. We also found many old books in thrift stores. Art Robinson recommended autobiographies as much as possible for history because they were written by people who lived it.


6 posted on 10/22/2020 12:15:55 PM PDT by Pollard (You can’t be for “defunding the police” and against “vigilantism” at the same time.)
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To: SeekAndFind
Demonstrators affiliated with the Miwok Tribe in San Rafael, California, on Oct. 13 vandalized and tore down yet another statue of Franciscan missionary Junipero Serra.

Biden rally.

7 posted on 10/22/2020 5:44:07 PM PDT by Libloather (Why do climate change hoax deniers live in mansions on the beach?)
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To: StayAt HomeMother; Ernest_at_the_Beach; 1ofmanyfree; 21twelve; 24Karet; 2ndDivisionVet; 31R1O; ...

8 posted on 10/23/2020 11:58:09 AM PDT by SunkenCiv (Imagine an imaginary menagerie manager imagining managing an imaginary menagerie.)
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To: SeekAndFind

History is always written by those who survived.....................


9 posted on 10/23/2020 12:00:03 PM PDT by Red Badger (Sine Q-Anon.....................very............)
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To: Scrambler Bob

I remember those, al along with Landmark history books and Colby books.


10 posted on 10/23/2020 12:23:08 PM PDT by Little Ray (The Left and Right no longer have anything in common. A House divided against itself cannot stand.)
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To: Little Ray
👏👏👏
11 posted on 10/23/2020 5:28:17 PM PDT by Ciexyz (Prayers for America.)
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To: SeekAndFind

Interesting stuff. Good post.


12 posted on 10/24/2020 9:35:48 AM PDT by ComputerGuy (Heavily-medicated for your protection)
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