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174 lines
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174 lines
9.0 KiB
Plaintext
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The Strange Origin of the Pledge of Allegiance
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==============================================
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Every class day over 60 million public and parochial school teachers
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and students in the US recite the Pledge of Allegiance along with
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thousands of Americans at official meetings of the Boy Scouts, Girl
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Scouts, Elks, Masons, American Legion, and others. During the
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televised bicentennial celebration of the US Constitution for the
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school children on September 17, 1987, the children as a group did
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not recite any part of the Constitution. However, President Reagan did
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lead the nation's school children in reciting the Pledge. Yet probably
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not one of them knows the history or original meaning of the Pledge.
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In the presidential campaign of 1988, George Bush successfully used
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the Pledge in his campaign against Mike Dukakis. Ironically, Bush did
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not seem to know the words of the Pledge until his campaign manager
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told him to memorize it. The teachers and students in the New England
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private schools he attended, Greenwich Country Day School and Phillips
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Andover Academy, did not recite the pledge. By contrast, Dukakis and
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his mother, a public school teacher, recited the Pledge in the public
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schools. Yet Bush criticized Dukakis for vetoing a bill in
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Massachusetts requiring public school teachers but not private school
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teachers to recite the Pledge. Dukakis vetoed the bill on grounds
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that it violated the constitutional right of free speech.
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[Actually, the case Dukakis *cited* when vetoing (and was subsequently
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attacked by Bush for it) was a religious freedom (!) case; see my
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upcoming post "The Pledge, part II" a speech by ACLU director Ira
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Glassner which contains a lot more information you've probably
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not heard. It also happens to be among the best speeches I've ever
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heard, and demonstrates devastatingly what many of us already knew;
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what a bad job Dukakis did responding to Bush's attacks about being
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"liberal" and (God forbid) and being a member of the ACLU.]
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How did this Pledge of Allegiance to a flag replace the US
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Constitution and Bill of Rights in the affections of many Americans?
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Among the nations in the world, only the USA and the Philippines,
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imitating the USA, have a pledge to their flag. Who institutionalized
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the Pledge as the cornerstone of American patriotic programs and
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indoctrination in the public and parochial schools?
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In 1892, a socialist named Francis Bellamy created the Pledge of
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Allegiance for *Youth's* *Companion*, a national family magazine for
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youth published in Boston. The magazine had the largest national
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circulation of its day with a circulation around 500 thousand. Two
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liberal businessmen, Daniel Ford and James Upham, his nephew, owned
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*Youth's* *Companion*.
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One hundred years ago the American Flag was rarely seen in the
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classroom or in front of the school. Upham changed that. In 1888, the
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magazine began a campaign to sell American flags to the public
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schools. By 1892, his magazine had sold American flags to about 26
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thousand schools(1).
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In 1891, Upham had the idea of using the celebration of the 400th
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anniversary of Christopher Columbus' discovery of America to promote
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the use of the flag in the public schools. The same year, the magazine
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hired Daniel Ford's radical young friend, Baptist minister,
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Nationalist, and Christian Socialist leader, Francis Bellamy, to help
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Upham in his public relations work. Bellamy was the first cousin of
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the famous American socialist, Edward Bellamy. Edward Bellamy's
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futuristic novel, *Looking* *Backward*, published in 1888, described a
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utopian Boston in the year 2000. The book spawned an elitist socialist
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movement in Boston known as "Nationalism," whose members wanted the
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federal government to nationalize most of the American economy. Francis
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Bellamy was a member of this movement and a vice president of its
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auxiliary group, the Society of Christian Socialists(2). He was a
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baptist minister and he lectured and preached on the virtues of
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socialism and the evils of capitalism. He gave a speech on "Jesus the
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Socialist" and a series of sermons on "The Socialism of the Primitive
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Church." In 1891, he was forced to resign from his Boston church, the
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Bethany Baptist church, because of his socialist activities. He then
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joined the staff of the *Youth's* *Companion*(3).
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By February 1892, Francis Bellamy and Upham had lined up the National
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Education Association to support the *Youth's* *Companion* as a
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sponsor of the national public schools' observance of Columbus Day
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along with the use of the American flag. By June 29, Bellamy and Upham
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had arranged for Congress and President Benjamin Harrison to announce
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a national proclamation making the public school ceremony the
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center of the national Columbus Day celebrations for 1892(4).
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Bellamy, under the supervision of Upham, wrote the program for this
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celebration, including its flag salute, the Pledge of Allegiance. His
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version was,
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"I pledge allegiance to my flag and to the Republic for which
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it stands -- one nation indivisible -- with liberty and
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justice for all."
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This program and its pledge appeared in the September 8 issue of
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*Youth's* *Companion*(5). He considered putting the words "fraternity"
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and "equality" in the Pledge but decided they were too radical and
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controversial for public schools(6).
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The original Pledge was recited while giving a stiff, uplifted right
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hand salute, criticized and discontinued during WWII. The words "my
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flag" were changed to "the flag of the United States of America"
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because it was feared that the children of immigrants might confuse
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"my flag" for the flag of their homeland. The phrase "Under God," was
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added by Congress and President Eisenhower in 1954 at the urging of
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the Knights of Columbus(7).
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The American Legion's constitution includes the following goal: "To
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foster and perpetuate a one hundred percent Americanism." One of its
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major standing committees was the "Americanism Commission" and its
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subsidiary, the "Counter Subversive Activities Committee." To the
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fear of immigrants, it added the fear of communism(8).
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Over the years the Legion has worked closely with the NEA and with the US
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Office of Education. The Legion insisted on "one hundred percent"
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Americanism in public school courses in American history, civics,
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Geography and English. The Pledge was a part of this Americanism
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campaign(9) and, in 1950, the Legion adopted the Pledge as an official
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part of its own ritual(10).
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In 1922, the Ku Klux Klan, which also had adopted the "one hundred
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percent Americanism" theme along with the flag ceremonies and the
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Pledge, became a political power in the state of Oregon and arranged
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for legislation to be passed requiring all Catholic children to
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attend public schools. The US Supreme Court later overturned this
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legislation(11).
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Perhaps a team of social scientists and historians could explain why
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over the last century the Pledge of Allegiance has become a major
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centerpiece in American patriotism programs. A pledge or loyalty oath
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for children was not built around the Declaration of Independence --
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"We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created
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equal..." Or the Gettysburg address -- "a new nation conceived in
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liberty and dedicated to the proposition that all men are created
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equal..."
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Apparently, over the last century, Americans have been uncomfortable
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with the word "equality" as a patriotic theme. In 1992 the nation will
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begin its second century with the Pledge of Allegiance. Perhaps the
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time has come to see that this allegiance should be to the US
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constitution and not to a piece of cloth.
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<><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><>
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John W. Baer is a professor of economics at Anne Arundel Community
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College in Arnold, Maryland.
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<><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><>
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Notes:
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-----
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1. Louise Harris, *The Flag Over the Schoolhouse,* C. A. Stephens
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Collection, Brown University, Providence, R.I., 1971, p. 69.
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2. Margarette S. Miller, *Twenty-three Words,* Printcraft Press,
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Portsmouth, VA, 1976, pp 63-65.
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3. Ibid, pp. 55-65.
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4. Ibid, pp. 105-111.
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5. Ibid, p. 123.
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6. Ibid, p. 122.
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7. Christopher J. Kaufmann, *Knights of Columbus*, Harper & Row, NY,
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1982, pp. 385-386.
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8. Raymond Moley, *The American Legion Story*, Duell, Sloan, and
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Pearce, NY, 1966, p. 7.
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9. Ibid, p. 371.
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10. Miller, p. 344.
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11. *New Catholic Encyclopedia,* Washington, D.C., Catholic University
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of America, 1967, Vol. 10, p. 738-740.
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------------------------------------------------------------------
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The above article is being sent to the Activists Mailing List.
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<><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><>
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###################################################################
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# Copyright (C) 1990, Harel Barzilai for Activists Mailing-list #
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# You may copy freely so long as you do not charge #
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# others for it, and include this copyright notice #
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###################################################################
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[We're obviously not copyrighting Baer's article reproduced here!]
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harelb@zaphod. UChicago.EDU
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<><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><>
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