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Pilgrim's Progress: Toward a Social History of the School Superintendence 1860–1960

“The deaths of great men in national and political history are commemorated by song, story and memorial days,” Aaron Gove told his fellow school superintendents in 1900. “Only in secluded family circles, and midst the personal friends, are the works and lives of heroic schoolmasters recorded and rem...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:History of education quarterly 1976, Vol.16 (3), p.257-300
Main Author: Tyack, David B.
Format: Article
Language:English
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Summary:“The deaths of great men in national and political history are commemorated by song, story and memorial days,” Aaron Gove told his fellow school superintendents in 1900. “Only in secluded family circles, and midst the personal friends, are the works and lives of heroic schoolmasters recorded and remembered.” To this day, historians have largely neglected those who probably did more than any other individuals to shape the day-to-day operation of American public education—the superintendents of school districts. Not entirely neglected, of course: we have Raymond Callahan's important, path-breaking work; several scholars have enlightened us about changing metaphors of leadership and the ideologies of administrators; early historians have traced the administrative duties of school chiefs; and we have a number of narratives about individual superintendents. But we are still just beginning to understand the character of educational leadership in the past. We need to focus especially on superintendents in the local districts, where the chief decision-making power resided for most of American history rather than at the state or federal level (a statistic illustrates this point: in 1890 the median size of state departments of education was two persons, including the superintendent.)
ISSN:0018-2680
1748-5959
DOI:10.2307/368111