Posted March 27, 2010
Interesting. In my grade school education, we covered Amerigo Vespucci and Leif Ericson as well as Christopher Columbus. One year of my high school history was devoted solely to European History and one was dedicated to World History (which was essentially just European History, until wars brought other countries into the dialogue. I learned extensively about the Civil War in both Junior High School as well as in High School in my US History class. I believe we spent two weeks on the Civil War alone, which was probably primarily because my teacher really loved teaching about the Civil War.
I'd say it wasn't too hard to fit ol' TJ into History, especially since he was the third president of the United States and was one of the primary motivators of the Louisiana Purchase, which doubled the size of the United States.
So, yeah, I'd say he's important. Also, when they replace Thomas Jefferson with other material, they're not replacing them with content that expands our knowledge of history outside of the United States, they're filling it with religious and conservative propaganda.
I'd say it wasn't too hard to fit ol' TJ into History, especially since he was the third president of the United States and was one of the primary motivators of the Louisiana Purchase, which doubled the size of the United States.
So, yeah, I'd say he's important. Also, when they replace Thomas Jefferson with other material, they're not replacing them with content that expands our knowledge of history outside of the United States, they're filling it with religious and conservative propaganda.