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Knowing History and Knowing Who We Are

David McCullough
Historian
David McCullough was born in 1933 in Pittsburgh,
Pennsylvania, and was educated there and at Yale. Author of John
Adams, Truman, Brave Companions, The Path Between the Seas,
Mornings on Horseback, The Great Bridge and The Johnstown Flood,
he has twice received the Pulitzer Prize and twice the National
Book Award, as well as the Francis Parkman Prize and the Los
Angeles Times Book Award. His next book, 1776, will be published
in May 2005.
The following is an abridged transcript of remarks delivered
on February 15, 2005, in Phoenix, Arizona, at a Hillsdale
College National Leadership Seminar on the topic, “American
History and America’s Future.”
Harry Truman once said the only new thing in the world is the
history you don’t know. Lord Bolingbroke, who was an 18th
century political philosopher, said that history is philosophy
taught with examples. An old friend, the late Daniel Boorstin,
who was a very good historian and Librarian of Congress, said
that trying to plan for the future without a sense of the past
is like trying to plant cut flowers. We’re raising a lot of
cut flowers and trying to plant them, and that’s much of what
I want to talk about tonight.
The task of teaching and writing history is infinitely complex
and infinitely seductive and rewarding. And it seems to me that
one of the truths about history that needs to be portrayed –
needs to be made clear to a student or to a reader – is that
nothing ever had to happen the way it happened. History could
have gone off in any number of different directions in any
number of different ways at any point along the way, just as
your own life can. You never know. One thing leads to another.
Nothing happens in a vacuum. Actions have consequences. These
all sound self-evident. But they’re not self-evident –
particularly to a young person trying to understand life.
Nor was there ever anything like the past. Nobody lived in the
past, if you stop to think about it. Jefferson, Adams,
Washington – they didn’t walk around saying, “Isn’t this
fascinating, living in the past?” They lived in the present
just as we do. The difference was it was their present, not
ours. And just as we don’t know how things are going to turn
out for us, they didn’t either. It’s very easy to stand on
the mountaintop as an historian or biographer and find fault
with people for why they did this or didn’t do that, because
we’re not involved in it, we’re not inside it, we’re not
confronting what we don’t know – as everyone who preceded us
always was.
Nor is there any such creature as a self-made man or woman. We
love that expression, we Americans. But every one who’s ever
lived has been affected, changed, shaped, helped, hindered by
other people. We all know, in our own lives, who those people
are who’ve opened a window, given us an idea, given us
encouragement, given us a sense of direction, self-approval,
self-worth, or who have straightened us out when we were on the
wrong path. Most often they have been parents. Almost as often
they have been teachers. Stop and think about those teachers who
changed your life, maybe with one sentence, maybe with one
lecture, maybe by just taking an interest in your struggle.
Family, teachers, friends, rivals, competitors – they’ve all
shaped us. And so too have people we’ve never met, never
known, because they lived long before us. They have shaped us
too – the people who composed the symphonies that move us, the
painters, the poets, those who have written the great literature
in our language. We walk around everyday, everyone of us,
quoting Shakespeare, Cervantes, Pope. We don’t know it, but we
are, all the time. We think this is our way of speaking. It
isn’t our way of speaking – it’s what we have been given.
The laws we live by, the freedoms we enjoy, the institutions
that we take for granted – as we should never take for granted
– are all the work of other people who went before us. And to
be indifferent to that isn’t just to be ignorant, it’s to be
rude. And ingratitude is a shabby failing. How can we not want
to know about the people who have made it possible for us to
live as we live, to have the freedoms we have, to be citizens of
this greatest of countries in all time? It’s not just a
birthright, it is something that others struggled for, strived
for, often suffered for, often were defeated for and died for,
for us, for the next generation.
Character And Destiny
Now those who wrote the Declaration of Independence in
Philadelphia that fateful summer of 1776 were not superhuman by
any means. Every single one had his flaws, his failings, his
weaknesses. Some of them ardently disliked others of them. Every
one of them did things in his life he regretted. But the fact
that they could rise to the occasion as they did, these
imperfect human beings, and do what they did is also, of course,
a testimony to their humanity. We are not just known by our
failings, by our weaknesses, by our sins. We are known by being
capable of rising to the occasion and exhibiting not just a
sense of direction, but strength.
The Greeks said that character is destiny, and the more I read
and understand of history, the more convinced I am that they
were right. You look at the great paintings by John Trumbull or
Charles Willson Peale or Copley or Gilbert Stuart of those
remarkable people who were present at the creation of our
nation, the Founders as we call them. Those aren’t just
likenesses. They are delineations of character and were intended
to be. And we need to understand them, and we need to understand
that they knew that what they had created was no more perfect
than they were. And that has been to our advantage. It has been
good for us that it wasn’t all just handed to us in perfect
condition, all ready to run in perpetuity – that it needed to
be worked at and improved and made to work better. There’s a
wonderful incident that took place at the Cambria Iron Company
in Johnstown, Pennsylvania, in the 19th century, when they were
building the first Bessemer steel machinery, adapted from what
had been seen of the Bessemer process in Britain. There was a
German engineer named John Fritz, and after working for months
to get this machinery finished, he came into the plant one
morning, and he said, “Alright boys, let’s start her up and
see why she doesn’t work.” That’s very American. We will
find out what’s not working right and we will fix it, and then
maybe it will work right. That’s been our star, that’s what
we’ve guided on.
I have just returned from a cruise through the Panama Canal. I
think often about why the French failed at Panama and why we
succeeded. One of the reasons we succeeded is that we were
gifted, we were attuned to adaptation, to doing what works,
whereas they were trained to do everything in a certain way. We
have a gift for improvisation. We improvise in jazz; we
improvise in much of our architectural breakthroughs.
Improvisation is one of our traits as a nation, as a people,
because it was essential, it was necessary, because we were
doing again and again and again what hadn’t been done before.
Keep in mind that when we were founded by those people in the
late 18th century, none of them had had any prior experience in
either revolutions or nation-making. They were, as we would say,
winging it. And they were idealistic and they were young. We see
their faces in the old paintings done later in their lives or
looking at us from the money in our wallets, and we see the
awkward teeth and the powdered hair, and we think of them as
elder statesmen. But George Washington, when he took command of
the continental army at Cambridge in 1775, was 43 years old, and
he was the oldest of them. Jefferson was 33 when he wrote the
Declaration of Independence. John Adams was 40. Benjamin Rush
– one of the most interesting of them all and one of the
founders of the antislavery movement in Philadelphia – was 30
years old when he signed the Declaration. They were young
people. They were feeling their way, improvising, trying to do
what would work. They had no money, no navy, no real army. There
wasn’t a bank in the entire country. There wasn’t but one
bridge between New York and Boston. It was a little country of
2,500,000 people, 500,000 of whom were held in slavery, a little
fringe of settlement along the east coast. What a story. What a
noble beginning. And think of this: almost no nations in the
world know when they were born. We know exactly when we began
and why we began and who did it.
In the rotunda of the Capitol in Washington hangs John
Trumbull’s great painting, “The Declaration of Independence,
Fourth of July, 1776.” It’s been seen by more people than
any other American painting. It’s our best known scene from
our past. And almost nothing about it is accurate. The
Declaration of Independence wasn’t signed on July 4th. They
didn’t start to sign the Declaration until August 2nd, and
only a part of the Congress was then present. They kept coming
back in the months that followed from their distant states to
take their turn signing the document. The chairs are wrong, the
doors are in the wrong place, there were no heavy draperies at
the windows, and the display of military flags and banners on
the back wall is strictly a figment of Trumbull’s imagination.
But what is accurate about it are the faces. Every single one of
the 47 men in that painting is an identifiable, and thus
accountable, individual. We know what they look like. We know
who they were. And that’s what Trumbull wanted. He wanted us
to know them and, by God, not to forget them. Because this
momentous step wasn’t a paper being handed down by a potentate
or a king or a czar, it was the decision of a Congress acting
freely.
Our Failure, Our Duty
We are raising a generation of young Americans who are
by-and-large historically illiterate. And it’s not their
fault. There have been innumerable studies, and there’s no
denying it. I’ve experienced it myself again and again. I had
a young woman come up to me after a talk one morning at the
University of Missouri to tell me that she was glad she came to
hear me speak, and I said I was pleased she had shown up. She
said, “Yes, I’m very pleased, because until now I never
understood that all of the 13 colonies – the original 13
colonies – were on the east coast.” Now you hear that and
you think: What in the world have we done? How could this young
lady, this wonderful young American, become a student at a fine
university and not know that? I taught a seminar at Dartmouth of
seniors majoring in history, honor students, 25 of them. The
first morning we sat down and I said, “How many of you know
who George Marshall was?” Not one. There was a long silence
and finally one young man asked, “Did he have, maybe,
something to do with the Marshall Plan?” And I said yes, he
certainly did, and that’s a good place to begin talking about
George Marshall.
We have to do several things. First of all we have to get across
the idea that we have to know who we were if we’re to know who
we are and where we’re headed. This is essential. We have to
value what our forebears – and not just in the 18th century,
but our own parents and grandparents – did for us, or we’re
not going to take it very seriously, and it can slip away. If
you don’t care about it – if you’ve inherited some great
work of art that is worth a fortune and you don’t know that
it’s worth a fortune, you don’t even know that it’s a
great work of art and you’re not interested in it – you’re
going to lose it.
We have to do a far better job of teaching our teachers. We have
too many teachers who are graduating with degrees in education.
They go to schools of education or they major in education, and
they graduate knowing something called education, but they
don’t know a subject. They’re assigned to teach botany or
English literature or history, and of course they can’t
perform as they should. Knowing a subject is important because
you want to know what you’re talking about when you’re
teaching. But beyond that, you can’t love what you don’t
know. And the great teachers – the teachers who influence you,
who change your lives – almost always, I’m sure, are the
teachers that love what they are teaching. It is that wonderful
teacher who says “Come over here and look in this microscope,
you’re really going to get a kick out of this.”
There was a wonderful professor of child psychology at the
University of Pittsburgh named Margaret McFarland who was so
wise that I wish her teachings and her ideas and her themes were
much better known. She said that attitudes aren’t taught,
they’re caught. If the teacher has an attitude of enthusiasm
for the subject, the student catches that whether the student is
in second grade or is in graduate school. She said that if you
show them what you love, they’ll get it and they’ll want to
get it. Also if the teachers know what they are teaching, they
are much less dependent on textbooks. And I don’t know when
the last time you picked up a textbook in American history might
have been. And there are, to be sure, some very good ones still
in print. But most of them, it appears to me, have been
published in order to kill any interest that anyone might have
in history. I think that students would be better served by
cutting out all the pages, clipping up all the page numbers,
mixing them all up and then asking students to put the pages
back together in the right order. The textbooks are dreary,
they’re done by committee, they’re often hilariously
politically correct and they’re not doing any good. Students
should not have to read anything that we, you and I, wouldn’t
want to read ourselves. And there are wonderful books, past and
present. There is literature in history. Let’s begin with
Longfellow, for example. Let’s begin with Lincoln’s Second
Inaugural Address, for example. These are literature. They can
read that too.
History isn’t just something that ought to be taught or ought
to be read or ought to be encouraged because it’s going to
make us a better citizen. It will make us a better citizen; or
because it will make us a more thoughtful and understanding
human being, which it will; or because it will cause us to
behave better, which it will. It should be taught for pleasure:
The pleasure of history, like art or music or literature,
consists of an expansion of the experience of being alive, which
is what education is largely about.
And we need not leave the whole job of teaching history to the
teachers. If I could have you come away from what I have to say
tonight remembering one thing, it would be this: The teaching of
history, the emphasis on the importance of history, the
enjoyment of history, should begin at home. We who are parents
or grandparents should be taking our children to historic
sights. We should be talking about those books in biography or
history that we have particularly enjoyed, or that character or
those characters in history that have meant something to us. We
should be talking about what it was like when we were growing up
in the olden days. Children, particularly little children, love
this. And in my view, the real focus should be at the grade
school level. We all know that those little guys can learn
languages so fast it takes your breath away. They can learn
anything so fast it takes your breath away. And the other very
important truth is that they want to learn. They can be taught
to dissect a cow’s eye. They can be taught anything. And
there’s no secret to teaching history or to making history
interesting. Barbara Tuchman said it in two words, “Tell
stories.” That’s what history is: a story. And what’s a
story? E.M. Forster gave a wonderful definition to it: If I say
to you the king died and then the queen died, that’s a
sequence of events. If I say the king died and the queen died of
grief, that’s a story. That’s human. That calls for empathy
on the part of the teller of the story and of the reader or
listener to the story. And we ought to be growing, encouraging,
developing historians who have heart and empathy to put students
in that place of those people before us who were just as human,
just as real – and maybe in some ways more real than we are.
We’ve got to teach history and nurture history and encourage
history because it’s an antidote to the hubris of the present
– the idea that everything we have and everything we do and
everything we think is the ultimate, the best.
Going through the Panama Canal, I couldn’t help but think
about all that I had read in my research on that story of what
they endured to build that great path, how much they had to know
and to learn, how many different kinds of talent it took to
achieve that success, and what the Americans did under John
Stevens and George Goethals in the face of unexpected
breakdowns, landslides and floods. They built a canal that cost
less than it was expected to cost, was finished before it was
expected to be finished and is still running today exactly the
same as it was in 1914 when it opened. They didn’t, by present
day standards for example, understand the chemistry of making
concrete. But when we go and drill into those concrete locks
now, we find the deterioration is practically nil and we don’t
know how they did it. That ingenious contrivance by the American
engineers is a perfect expression of what engineering ought to
be at its best – man’s creations working with nature. The
giant gates work because they’re floating, they’re hollow
like airplane wings. The electric motors that open and close the
gates use power which is generated by the spillway from the dam
that creates the lake that bridges the isthmus. It’s an
extraordinary work of civilization. And we couldn’t do it any
better today, and in some ways we probably wouldn’t do it as
well. If you were to take a look, for example, at what’s
happened with the “Big Dig” in Boston, you realize that we
maybe aren’t closer to the angels by any means nearly a
hundred years later.
We should never look down on those people and say that they
should have known better. What do you think they’re going to
be saying about us in the future? They’re going to be saying
we should have known better. Why did we do that? What were we
thinking of? All this second-guessing and the arrogance of it
are unfortunate.
Listening To The Past
Samuel Eliot Morison said we ought to read history because it
will help us to behave better. It does. And we ought to read
history because it helps to break down the dividers between the
disciplines of science, medicine, philosophy, art, music,
whatever. It’s all part of the human story and ought to be
seen as such. You can’t understand it unless you see it that
way. You can’t understand the 18th century, for example,
unless you understand the vocabulary of the 18th century. What
did they mean by those words? They didn’t necessarily mean the
same thing as we do. There’s a line in one of the letters
written by John Adams where he’s telling his wife Abigail at
home, “We can’t guarantee success in this war, but we can do
something better. We can deserve it.” Think how different that
is from the attitude today when all that matters is success,
being number one, getting ahead, getting to the top. However you
betray or gouge or claw or do whatever awful thing is immaterial
if you get to the top.
That line in the Adams letter is saying that how the war turns
out is in the hands of God. We can’t control that, but we can
control how we behave. We can deserve success. When I read that
line when I was doing the research on the book, it practically
lifted me out of my chair. And then about three weeks later I
was reading some correspondence written by George Washington and
there was the same line. I thought, wait a minute, what’s
going on? And I thought, they’re quoting something. So, as we
all often do, I got down good old Bartlett’s Familiar
Quotations, and I started going through the entries from the
18th century and bingo, there it was. It’s a line from the
play Cato. They were quoting something that was in the language
of the time. They were quoting scripture of a kind, a kind of
secular creed if you will. And you can’t understand why they
behaved as they did if you don’t understand that. You can’t
understand why honor was so important to them and why they were
truly ready to put their lives, their fortunes, their sacred
honor on the line. Those weren’t just words.
I want to read to you, in conclusion, a letter that John Quincy
Adams received from his mother. Little John Adams was taken to
Europe by his father when his father sailed out of Massachusetts
in the midst of winter, in the midst of war, to serve our
country in France. Nobody went to sea in the wintertime, on the
North Atlantic, if it could possibly be avoided. And nobody did
it trying to cut through the British barricade outside of Boston
Harbor because the British ships were sitting out there waiting
to capture somebody like John Adams and take him to London and
to the Tower, where he would have been hanged as a traitor. But
they sent this little ten-year-old boy with his father, risking
his life, his mother knowing that she wouldn’t see him for
months, maybe years at best. Why? Because she and his father
wanted John Quincy to be in association with Franklin and the
great political philosophers of France, to learn to speak
French, to travel in Europe, to be able to soak it all up. And
they risked his life for that – for his education. We have no
idea what people were willing to do for education in times past.
It’s the one sustaining theme through our whole country –
that the next generation will be better educated than we are.
John Adams himself is a living example of the transforming
miracle of education. His father was able to write his name, we
know. His mother was almost certainly illiterate. And because he
had a scholarship to Harvard, everything changed for him. He
said, “I discovered books and read forever,” and he did. And
they wanted this for their son.
Well, it was a horrendous voyage. Everything that could have
happened to go wrong, went wrong. And when the little boy came
back, he said he didn’t ever want to go across the Atlantic
again as long as he lived. And then his father was called back,
and his mother said you’re going back. And here is what she
wrote to him. Now, keep in mind that this is being written to a
little kid and listen to how different it is from how we talk to
our children in our time. She’s talking as if to a grownup.
She’s talking to someone whom they want to bring along quickly
because there’s work to do and survival is essential:
These are the times in which genius would wish to live. It is
not in the still calm of life or the repose of a pacific station
that great characters are formed. The habits of a vigorous mind
are formed in contending with difficulties. Great necessities
call out great virtues. When a mind is raised and animated by
scenes that engage the heart, then those qualities which would
otherwise lay dormant wake into life and form the character of
the hero and the statesman.
Now, there are several interesting things going on in that
letter. For all the times that she mentions the mind, in the
last sentence she says, “When a mind is raised and animated by
scenes that engage the heart, then those qualities which would
otherwise lay dormant wake into life and form the character of
the hero and the statesman.” In other words, the mind itself
isn’t enough. You have to have the heart.
Well, of course he went and the history of our country is
different because of it. John Quincy Adams, in my view, was the
most superbly educated and maybe the most brilliant human being
who ever occupied the executive office. He was, in my view, the
greatest Secretary of State we’ve ever had. He wrote the
Monroe Doctrine, among other things. And he was a wonderful
human being and a great writer. Told to keep a diary by his
father when he was in Europe, he kept the diary for 65 years.
And those diaries are unbelievable. They are essays on all kinds
of important, heavy subjects. He never tells you who he had
lunch with or what the weather’s like. But if you want to know
that, there’s another sort of little Cliff diary that he kept
about such things.
Well after the war was over, Abigail went to Europe to be with
her husband, particularly when he became our first minister to
the court of Saint James. And John Quincy came home from Europe
to prepare for Harvard. And he had not been home in
Massachusetts very long when Abigail received a letter from her
sister saying that John Quincy was a very impressive young man
– and of course everybody was quite astonished that he could
speak French – but that, alas, he seemed a little overly
enamored with himself and with his own opinions and that this
was not going over very well in town. So Abigail sat down in a
house that still stands on Grosvenor Square in London – it was
our first embassy if you will, a little 18th century house –
and wrote a letter to John Quincy. And here’s what she said:
If you are conscious to yourself that you possess more
knowledge upon some subjects than others of your standing,
reflect that you have had greater opportunities of seeing the
world and obtaining knowledge of mankind than any of your
contemporaries. That you have never wanted a book, but it has
been supplied to you. That your whole time has been spent in the
company of men of literature and science. How unpardonable would
it have been in you to have turned out a blockhead.
How unpardonable it would be for us – with all that we have
been given, all the advantages we have, all the continuing
opportunities we have to enhance and increase our love of
learning – to turn out blockheads or to raise blockheads. What
we do in education, what these wonderful teachers and
administrators and college presidents and college and university
trustees do is the best, most important work there is.
So I salute you all for your interest in education and in the
education of Hillsdale. I salute you for coming out tonight to
be at an event like this. Not just sitting at home being a
spectator. It’s important that we take part. Citizenship
isn’t just voting. We all know that. Let’s all pitch in. And
let’s not lose heart. They talk about what a difficult,
dangerous time we live in. And it is very difficult, very
dangerous and very uncertain. But so it has always been. And
this nation of ours has been through darker times. And if you
don’t know that – as so many who broadcast the news and
subject us to their opinions in the press don’t seem to know
– that’s because we’re failing in our understanding of
history.
The Revolutionary War was as dark a time as we’ve ever been
through. 1776, the year we so consistently and rightly celebrate
every year, was one of the darkest times, if not the darkest
time in the history of the country. Many of us here remember the
first months of 1942 after Pearl Harbor when German submarines
were sinking our oil tankers right off the coasts of Florida and
New Jersey, in sight of the beaches, and there wasn’t a thing
we could do about it. Our recruits were drilling with wooden
rifles, we had no air force, half of our navy had been destroyed
at Pearl Harbor, and there was nothing to say or guarantee that
the Nazi machine could be defeated – nothing. Who was to know?
I like to think of what Churchill said when he crossed the
Atlantic after Pearl Harbor and gave a magnificent speech. He
said we haven’t journeyed this far because we’re made of
sugar candy. It’s as true today as it ever was.
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