LizzieMaine
Bartender
- Messages
- 33,755
- Location
- Where The Tourists Meet The Sea
Myth: During the Golden Era, schoolchildren everywhere started their day by saluting the flag, and nobody questioned or criticized the practice.
The Facts: Compulsory flag-saluting in American schoolrooms has been embroiled in controversy from the very beginning of the practice. Francis Bellamy created the Pledge of Allegiance -- not in the Constitution or as any Federal statute -- but as a piece in "The Youth's Companion" magazine in 1898, and it only very gradually found its way into classrooms. Most people who were adults in the 1930s did not salute the flag as schoolchildren, and it was only in the 1930s that the practice began to be written into local school regulations and state laws. The kickback against compulsory saluting began almost immediately, coming to a head in 1935 when a Massachusetts schoolboy named Carleton Nichols Jr. was suspended from school for refusing to salute. The boy was a member of Jehovah's Witnesses, a religious sect which taught that saluting any object was a form of idolatry, and the leader of the group, a lawyer named J. F. Rutherford, determined to, literally, make a Federal case of it, taking the matter all the way to the Supreme Court.
Controversy raged all thru the late 1930s over the issue, with many opponents of the practice likening it to the compulsory Nazi salute to Hitler, declaring that true Americans don't salute anything under compulsion. Others took the opposite view, declaring that in view of the rising threat of Fascism it was essential to inculcate children with patriotic principles of loyalty to the flag. The controversy reached a head in 1940, when Witnesses in several states were mobbed and beaten by gangs of self-proclaimed patriots. The American Civil Liberties Union, U. S. Attorney General Francis Biddle, and First Lady Eleanor Roosevelt came to the defense of the sect, attacking the mobs for using Fascist methods themselves.
At first, the Court ruled that states did have a right to require flag saluting -- but that decision was reversed in the case of Gobitis vs. Minersville School District in 1943. Since that time, it has been illegal for any school district or any state to *compel* any child to participate in a flag salute. Schools may conduct such ceremonies as they wish, but they cannot require anyone to salute, and there have always been those who, usually for religious reasons, declined to participate.
Myth exploded.
The Facts: Compulsory flag-saluting in American schoolrooms has been embroiled in controversy from the very beginning of the practice. Francis Bellamy created the Pledge of Allegiance -- not in the Constitution or as any Federal statute -- but as a piece in "The Youth's Companion" magazine in 1898, and it only very gradually found its way into classrooms. Most people who were adults in the 1930s did not salute the flag as schoolchildren, and it was only in the 1930s that the practice began to be written into local school regulations and state laws. The kickback against compulsory saluting began almost immediately, coming to a head in 1935 when a Massachusetts schoolboy named Carleton Nichols Jr. was suspended from school for refusing to salute. The boy was a member of Jehovah's Witnesses, a religious sect which taught that saluting any object was a form of idolatry, and the leader of the group, a lawyer named J. F. Rutherford, determined to, literally, make a Federal case of it, taking the matter all the way to the Supreme Court.
Controversy raged all thru the late 1930s over the issue, with many opponents of the practice likening it to the compulsory Nazi salute to Hitler, declaring that true Americans don't salute anything under compulsion. Others took the opposite view, declaring that in view of the rising threat of Fascism it was essential to inculcate children with patriotic principles of loyalty to the flag. The controversy reached a head in 1940, when Witnesses in several states were mobbed and beaten by gangs of self-proclaimed patriots. The American Civil Liberties Union, U. S. Attorney General Francis Biddle, and First Lady Eleanor Roosevelt came to the defense of the sect, attacking the mobs for using Fascist methods themselves.
At first, the Court ruled that states did have a right to require flag saluting -- but that decision was reversed in the case of Gobitis vs. Minersville School District in 1943. Since that time, it has been illegal for any school district or any state to *compel* any child to participate in a flag salute. Schools may conduct such ceremonies as they wish, but they cannot require anyone to salute, and there have always been those who, usually for religious reasons, declined to participate.
Myth exploded.