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Monday, August 28, 2006
Early American Textbooks Filled With Christian References
Today's Wall Street Journal Online carries an article on the religious content of textbooks used in schools in the United States in the 18th and early 19th centuries. Christian references were embedded in all sorts of subject matter. In spelling, "A was for Adam, B was for the Bible and C was for Christ." In arithmetic, books asked, "How many days is it since the birth of Our Savior?" Science books said, "All parts of the solar system are framed and adjusted to answer exactly the purpose intended by the Creator." As the country became more diverse in the 19th century, explicit Christian references were dropped, but textbook material still attempted to teach values like virtue and obedience to the law.