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Is this a joke. Who do they think would believe that they gave a Black man a gun to fight against ending slavery?
Friday, October 22nd 2010 at 6:16PM
Helen Lofton
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The Virginia Department of Education is warning teachers about a Virginia history textbook that contains a controversial passage about the Civil War. It's a book that could be in your child's classroom. The controversy has to do with a fourth and fifth grade history textbook titled 'Our Virginia, Past and Present' written by Joy Masoff. The textbook is used in some, but not all, of Virginia's elementary schools including a few in Central Virginia and the valley. The book makes a bold claim about black Confederate soldiers, a claim the state says is inaccurate. On page 122 is a quote that makes Virginia teachers and school administrators uneasy. The passage reads: "Thousands of Southern blacks fought in the Confederate ranks, including two black battalions under the command of Stonewall Jackson." A number of groups maintain that the passage is historically accurate, disputing whether blacks fought as enlisted soldiers for the Confederacy. Charles Pyle, a spokesman for the Virginia Department of Education said, "This assertion is not a part of Virginia's history standards for grade four Virginia studies." Despite the fact that historians believe the claim in the book is false, the text managed to make it through an exhaustive review process and onto the state's approved reading list. Pyle said, "It's very unusual to have something this provocative to make it through the review process undetected." The publisher, Five Ponds Press, is mailing schools a sticker to place over the controversial passage. Fourth grade classes have yet to reach the Civil War in their studies so teachers still have plenty of time to work out exactly how they'll handle the section. The state approved the book earlier in the year so many schools have yet to adopt it, but some divisions have. Charlottesville, Nelson, Orange and Waynesboro schools use the book. Staunton schools have a few copies but it's not the primary text there. Augusta, Albemarle, Greene, Louisa and Madison schools do not use the textbook. The state hopes everyone will learn from the issue. Pyle stated, "It's a teachable moment for us too and we're certainly going to be looking at our review process".
Friday, October 22nd 2010 at 6:53PM
DAVID JOHNSON
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College of William and Mary professor Carol Sheriff has gained national attention for discovering a disputed passage in her daughter’s fourth grade history textbook. “Thousands of Southern blacks fought in the Confederate ranks,” reads the passage from Our Virginia: Past and Present, “including two black battalions under the command of Stonewall Jackson.” Such claims are generally rejected by American historians, but espoused by pro-Confederate groups attempting to downplay the role of slavery in the Civil War. Most historians agree that African Americans did not fight in any organized way for the Confederacy, and certainly their numbers were not in the thousands. “While it is true that there were isolated instances of African Americans taking up arms for the Confederacy,” Sheriff said, “they were usually body servants who had accompanied their masters to the front and who, in the heat of battle, picked up arms to protect their masters and themselves.” According to Sheriff, the Confederates did not even allow black soldiers in their ranks until 1865 — a full two years after Jackson’s death. “It is simply not true that Stonewall Jackson commanded two black battalions,” Sheriff said. The textbook’s author, Joy Mastoff, says she based her information about black Confederate soldiers on Internet research. Mastoff, although a successfully published author, is not a trained historian. “It’s disconcerting that the next generation is being taught history based on an unfounded claim instead of accepted scholarship,” Sheriff told the Washington Post. “It concerns me, not just as a professional historian but as a parent.” Despite the backlash, Mastoff defends her writing. “As controversial as it is, I stand by what I write,” she told the Post. “I am a fairly respected writer.” The Acting Superintendent of the Williamsburg-James City County Schools has invited Sheriff to work with the school board to turn the incident into a “teachable moment.” “I hope they will learn, among other things, to approach what they read with a critical eye and, crucially, to be very discerning about how they do research on the Internet,” Sheriff said. On Wednesday, the Washington Post published an article about the textbook discovery. Since then, Sheriff has been featured on MSNBC’s “Countdown With Keith Olbermann,” quoted on NPR and written about in the Richmond Times-Dispatch and the Virginian-Pilot. Sheriff specializes in nineteenth century history, with an emphasis on the period between 1815 and 1865. She received her Ph.D. from Yale University in 1993, and has authored or co-authored several books, including the Dixon Ryan Fox Prize-winning The Artificial River, The Erie Canal and the Paradoxes of Progress, 1817-1862.
Friday, October 22nd 2010 at 6:59PM
DAVID JOHNSON
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When it comes to history, the best thing to do is go to the original sources. And even those you need to read between the lines sometimes. We can't even be sure what our own politicians are up to right this very moment, yet we will claim we know why the Civil War started 140 years after the fact.
Friday, October 22nd 2010 at 7:15PM
Adam Fate
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