Why Study History?
The best way to know where the country is going is to know where we’ve been – BY DAVID MCULLOUGH
From: Reader’s Digest, December 2002
On a winter morning on the campus of one of our finest colleges, in a
lovely Ivy League setting with snow falling outside, I sat with a seminar of
25 students, all seniors majoring in history, all honors students –
supposedly the best of the best. How many of you
know who George Marshall was?” I asked.
No one knew. Not one.
At a large university in the Midwest, a young undergraduate told me
how glad she was to have attended my lecture, because until then, she said,
she never realized that the original 13 Colonies were all on the Eastern
Seaboard. This was said, in all seriousness, by
a university student.
The truth is that we
are raising a generation that is to an alarming degree historically
illiterate.
Who are we, we Americans? How did we get
where we are? What is our story and what can it
teach us? Our story is our history, and if ever
we should be taking steps to see that we have the best prepared, most aware
citizens ever, that time is now.
Yet the truth is that we are raising a generation that is to an
alarming degree historically illiterate. The
problem has been coming on for a long time, like a disease, eating away at
the national memory. While the popular culture races loudly on, the American
past is slipping away. We are losing our story, forgetting who we are and
what it’s taken to come this far.
Warnings of this development have been sounded again and again.
In 1995, the Department of Education reported that more than half of
all high school seniors hadn’t even the most basic understanding of American
history.
Two years ago, a study by the American Council of Trustees and Alumni
showed that four out of five seniors from leading colleges and universities
were unable to pass a basic high school history test.
To the question “Who was the American general at Yorktown?”
More of these students answered Ulysses S. Grant than George
Washington.
And there’s been no improvement. This
year the American Council of Trustees and Alumni reported that none of the
nation’s top 50 colleges and universities now require American history as
part of the curriculum. In fact, one can go
forth into the world today as the proud product of all but a handful of our
50 top institutions of higher learning without ever having taken a single
course in history of any kind.
But why bother about history anyway? “That’s history” – that’s done
with, junk for the trash heap. Why history?
Because it shows us how to behave. History teaches and reinforces
what we believe in, what we stand for, and what we ought to be willing to
stand up for. History is about life – human
nature and the human condition and all its trials and failings and noblest
achievements. History is about cause and effect,
about the simplest of everyday things – and the mysteries of change and
genius.
History shows us what choices there are.
History teaches with specific examples the evils of injustice, ignorance or
demagoguery, just as it shows how potent is plain courage, or one simple
illuminating idea. History is – or should be –
the bedrock of patriotism, not the chest-pounding kind of patriotism but the
real thing, love of country.
At their core, the lessons of history are lessons of appreciation.
Everything we have, all our great institutions, our laws, our music,
art and poetry, our freedoms, everything is because somebody went before us
and did the hard work, provided the creative energy, faced the storms, made
the sacrifices, kept the faith.
This country was founded on change.
It’s during times of tumult that we learn the most as a people.
Indifference to history isn’t just ignorant; it’s a form of
ingratitude. And the scale of our ignorance
seems especially shameful in the face of our unprecedented good fortune.
What’s so worrisome about the college student who doesn’t know that
George Washington was the commanding American general at Yorktown is that he
also, therefore, has no idea that it was Washington who commanded the
Continental Army through eight long years in the struggle for independence.
I’m convinced that history encourages, as nothing else does, a sense
of proportion about life, gives us a sense of how brief is our time on earth
and thus how valuable that time is.
We live in an era of momentous change, creating great pressure and
tensions. But history shows that times of tumult
are times when we are most likely to learn. This
nation was founded on change. We should embrace
the possibilities inherent in such times and hold to a steady course,
because we have a sense of navigation, a sense of what we’ve been through
and who we are.
In the aftermath of September 11, 2001, history can be a source of
strength and of renewed commitment to the ideals upon which the nation was
founded. As unsettling as events may be, others
before us have known worse. Think of what our
predecessors endured and accomplished. Think of
the dangerous times they knew! Churchill, in the
darkest hours of World War II, reminded us that “we have not journeyed all
this way because we are made of sugar candy.”
I passionately believe that history isn’t just good for you in a
civic way. History, really, is an extension of
life. It intensifies the experience of being
alive, like poetry and art or music. And there’s
no great secret to making history come alive.
Historian Barbara Tuchman said it perfectly in two words, “Tell stories.”
Part of what that means is that history is ours to enjoy.
If we deny our children that enjoyment, that adventure in the larger
time among the greater part of the human experience, then we’re cheating
them out of a full life.
David McCullough is the Pulitzer Prize-winning author of John Adams
and Truman. This article is based on his
1995 acceptance speech for the National Book Foundation Medal for Distinguished
Contribution to American Letters.