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JPZenger

(6,819 posts)
Fri Feb 24, 2012, 04:29 PM Feb 2012

How Free Public Schools in Pennsylvania Were Almost Eliminated, but then Saved by a Speech

In 1834, a law was passed in Pennsylvania to establish a complete system of tax-payer supported public schools. However, many new legislators were voted into office in 1834 and they arrived at the State Capitol the next year with the votes needed to repeal the new law.

Then Thaddeous Stevens rushed back to the Capitol and rose to give a landmark speech before a combined session of the House and Senate that changed the course of history.

First, he attacked the previous law, which only provided meager education to the very poorest of young people. He said "Hereditary distinctions of rank are sufficiently odious; but that which is founded upon poverty is infinitely more so. Such a law should be entitled ' An Act for
Branding and Marking the Poor.' "

Stevens responded to critics who complained about paying a school tax when they did not have children. He described people who "cheerfully pay the tax which is necessary to support and punish convicts, but loudly complains of that which goes to prevent his fellow being from becoming a criminal, and to obviate the necessity of those humiliating institutions."

He described how Ben Franklin had benefitted from free public schools in New England.

He stressed the need for Pennsylvania to polish the "bright intellectual gems " of her children.

He described how the builders of the Egyptian pyramids did not earn fame or honor and their names are forgotten. "Sir, I trust that when we come to act on this question we shall take lofty ground — look beyond the narrow space which now circumscribes our vision — beyond the passing, fleeting point of time on which we stand — and so cast our votes that the blessing of education shall be conferred on every son of Pennsylvania — shall be carried home to the poorest child of the poorest inhabitant of the meanest hut of your mountains."

The move to repeal free public education was stopped, and a system of free public schools went forward throughout Pennsylvania.
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http://www.portal.state.pa.us/portal/server.pt/community/events/4279/fight_for_free_schools/473347

"Who were the opponents of free public education? The aristocrats felt that education should be only for the "better" people, the "well-born" or the wealthy. The conservatives or "standpatters" opposed it just because it was new. Some taxpayers, rich and poor, thought it meant too great an increase in taxation. Non-English-speaking groups feared that the free schools would cause the loss of their languages and distinctive cultures. There was also an element who had no use for "book-learning," and had great contempt for teachers and schools."
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Thaddeous Stevens went on to become a prominent abolitionist and a powerful US Congressman.

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How Free Public Schools in Pennsylvania Were Almost Eliminated, but then Saved by a Speech (Original Post) JPZenger Feb 2012 OP
Thanks for the history lesson tech3149 Feb 2012 #1
As long as there are regressives who are willing to allow the elite to lead them around toddwv Feb 2012 #2

toddwv

(2,830 posts)
2. As long as there are regressives who are willing to allow the elite to lead them around
Fri Feb 24, 2012, 07:32 PM
Feb 2012

by their noserings, this fight will have to be refought.

Unfortunately, eventually it is a fight that will be lost and the US's vision of the prosperity that were endowed during its most progressive century (1900s) will become a memory of the past.

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