Article contents
The Politics of Educational Retrenchment in Detroit, 1929–1935
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 24 February 2017
Extract
In recent years it has become commonplace to speak of the declining support for public schools as an unprecedented break in nearly 150 years of educational expansion. Acutally, public backing for the schools has waned and the educational enterprise itself has been called into question at various times in American history. The political controversies surrounding several of the nineteenth century challenges to the public schools have, in fact, been well researched. However, the politics of educational retrenchment in this century, particularly the struggles during the Great Depression, have received little attention. Such studies as Sol Cohen's Progressive and Urban School Reform and Julia Wrigley's Class Politics and Public Schools have described the retrenchment battles in New York City and Chicago respectively but merely as secondary events highlighting more significant trends. Cohen's study of the Public Education Association, for example, sees the budget battles of the early thirties as the last flurry of excitement before the decline of the organization. Wrigley uses her comprehensive discussion of Chicago's school crisis to illuminate the power of the newly emerging political machine. Unlike those studies, this paper will focus on the retrenchment controversies specifically as they influenced school policy and as they related to changes in educational politics in Detroit.
- Type
- Articles
- Information
- Copyright
- Copyright © 1984 by History of Education Society
References
Notes
Mr. Mirel would like to thank a number of friends and colleagues for their criticism of earlier versions of this article. They include Virginia Brereton, Frederick Goodman, Diane Ravitch, David Tyack, and Maris Vinovskis. Special thanks go to David Angus and Sidney Fine who worked with him on the penultimate draft, and Paul Mattingly whose editing improved the final copy. Mr. Mirel is responsible for all errors and inaccuracies.
1. Carlton, Frank Tracey, Economic Influences Upon Educational Progress in the United States (New York, [1908] 1965), pp. 99–100; Cremin, Lawrence, The American Common School: An Historic Conception (New York, 1951), pp. 99–103; Katz, Michael, The Irony of Early School Reform (Boston, 1968), pp. 19–62; Kaestle, Carl and Vinovskis, Maris, Education and Social Change in 19th Century Massachusetts (New York, 1980), pp. 208–232; Vinovskis, Maris, “The Politics of Educational Reform in Nineteenth-Century Massachusetts: The Controversy over Beverly HS in 1860,” ERIC Document 200 495. For an example of voters in the early twentieth century rejecting educational expansion, see Angus, David, “The Politics of Progressive School Reform: Rapids, Grand, 1900–1910,” Michigan Academician 14 (Winter, 1982):239–258.Google Scholar
2. Cohen, Sol, The Progressives and Urban School Reform (New York, 1964), pp. 145–173; Wrigley, Julia, Class Politics and Public Schools: Chicago 1900–1950 (New Brunswick, N.J., 1982), pp. 200–260. This article was written before the publication of David Tyack, Elisabeth Hanet, and Robert Lowe's Public Schools in Hard Times (Cambridge, Mass., 1984) the most comprehensive discussion of education in the Great Depression to date.Google Scholar
3. U.S. Department of Commerce, Bureau of the Census, Fifteenth Census of the United States, 1930: Population, v. 1, p. 18.Google Scholar
4. Glazer, Sidney, Detroit: A Study in Urban Development (New York, 1965), p. 91; Pound, Arthur, Detroit: Dynamic City (New York, 1940), pp. 244–247; Conot, Robert, American Odyssey: A Unique History of America Told Through the Life of a Great City (New York, 1974), p. 260. Zynz, Olivier, The Changing Face of Inequality: (Chicago, 1982).Google Scholar
5. Fine, Sidney, Frank Murphy: The Detroit Years (Ann Arbor, 1975), pp. 97.Google Scholar
6. Ibid., p. 97.Google Scholar
7. Ibid., p. 97.Google Scholar
8. Ibid., p. 96.Google Scholar
9. Ibid., pp. 92–93.Google Scholar
10. Ibid., p. 96. The Detroit Bureau of Governmental Research was supported by the Community Fund. Detroit Times 2/18/31.Google Scholar
11. Detroit Bureau of Governmental Research, Accumulated Social and Economic Statistics for Detroit (Detroit, 1937), p. 15.Google Scholar
12. Coffey, W. L., “Detroit Has Five Municipal Colleges,” Michigan Education Journal 8 (February, 1931):316; the colleges (City College, Teachers College, Law School, Medical School and Pharmacy School) were eventually merged into Wayne University.Google Scholar
13. Hoover Commission Report on Recent Educational Change quoted in Detroit Labor News 7/11/30. Schools accounted for approximately $63 millions; streets and roads, $47 millions; sewers, $44 millions; water supply, $17 millions; and hospitals, $15 millions.Google Scholar
14. Detroit Teachers Association Executive Council Bulletin (1940?), Detroit Council on Public Education Papers, Wallet #1, Miscellaneous Papers Folder, Burton Historical Collection, Detroit, Michigan, pp. 14–15.Google Scholar
15. Ibid., p. 14.Google Scholar
16. The vote was 61,806 to 11,342. See Disbrow, Donald, Schools for an Urban Society (Lansing, Mich.), p. 228.Google Scholar
17. Detroit Board of Education Proceedings , 1916–17; Polk, R.L., Detroit City Directory, 1917 (Detroit, 1917); Dau's Blue Book for Detroit and Suburban Towns, 1917 (New York, 1917); Mervin, Ruby (Ed.), The Social Secretary of Detroit, 1930 (Detroit, 1930).Google Scholar
18. Dau's, 1917; Mervin, , Social (1930), pp. 33, 35, 41, 82, 122, 126, 149.Google Scholar
19. Ibid., Laura Osborn Papers, Burton Historical Collection, Detroit, Michigan, Box 1, WDET Folder.Google Scholar
20. Of the eight people who served on the Detroit Board of Education from 1929 to 1939, five were listed in the social register.Google Scholar
21. Detroit Public School Staff, Frank Cody: A Realist in Education (New York, 1943), pp. 210–215.Google Scholar
22. Detroit Free Press hereafter DFP 6/22/42 in the Frank Cody Clipping File in the Burton Historical Collection, Detroit, Michigan.Google Scholar
23. Moehlman, , Public, pp. 205–208.Google Scholar
24. Ibid., pp. 195–208.Google Scholar
25. McAndrew, William, “A Word Portrait of Frank Cody,” Michigan Education Journal 7 (January 1930):293 Google Scholar
26. Schlesinger, Arthur M. Jr. The Crisis of the Old Order (Boston, 1947), pp. 161–176.Google Scholar
27. Fine, , Detroit Years, p. 201.Google Scholar
28. Ibid., p. 246.Google Scholar
29. Ibid., 245.Google Scholar
30. Ibid., pp. 97, 246–47; Conot, , American, p. 260.Google Scholar
31. U. S. Department of Commerce, Statistical Abstract of the United States, 1933 (Washington, D.C., 1933), p. 755; U. S. Department of Commerce, Statistical Abstract of the United States, 1935 (Washington, D.C., 1935), p. 781.Google Scholar
32. U. S. Department of Commerce, Statistical Abstract of the United States, 1931 (Washington, D.C., 1931), p. 871; U. S. Department of Commerce, Statistical, 1935, p. 789.Google Scholar
33. Fine, , Detroit Years, pp. 298–299.Google Scholar
34. “School Finances, 1929–1933,” Detroit Mayor's Papers, 1933, Board of Education Folder. Burton Historical Collection, Detroit, Michigan. Detroit Teachers Associatons Executive Council Bulletin, pp. 8, 10.Google Scholar
35. Detroit Teachers Associations Exectuive Council Bulletin, p. 10.Google Scholar
36. Fine, , Detroit Years, p. 283.Google Scholar
37. The slogan was used on Laura Osborn's campaign literature in 1917. Laura Osborn Papers, Box 19, Folder 1.Google Scholar
38. Disbrow, , Schools, p. 225; Detroit, News 12/28/28 in Detroit News morgue.Google Scholar
39. Fine, , Detroit Years, pp. 202–203, 325.Google Scholar
40. Detroit Teachers Associations Executive Council Bulletin, p. 14.Google Scholar
41. Fine, , Detroit Years, p. 206. Probably the most famous of those was the Committee on Public Expenditures (headed by Fred W. Sargent, president of the Northwestern Railroad) in Chicago. See Burbank, Lyman, “Chicago Public Schools and the Depression Years: 1928–1937,” Journal of the Illinois State Historical Society 64 (Winter, 1971):365–381.Google Scholar
42. Fine, , Detroit Years, pp. 219–220; 299–300; 305, 314; Glazer, , Detroit, p. 99.Google Scholar
43. Mervin, Ruby (Ed.), The Social Secretary of Detroit, 1932s (Detroit, 1932), pp. 92, 109, 123, 138. Frank cody was also listed, Iblid., p. 56. Frank Gorman was a member of two exclusive clubs listed in the register as well, Ibid., pp. 197, 216; Cody, Frank, “Detroit's Board of Education,” American Schools Board Journal, 82 (February, 1931), p. 57.Google Scholar
44. Detroit Labor News 3/2025; 4/10/25.Google Scholar
45. Detroit Labor News 3/1/29; 2/29/29; 4/5/29; Waskiewicz, Leon S., “Organized Labor and Public Education in Michigan, 1888–1938” (Ph.D. dissertation, University of Michigan, 1939), pp. 325–326.Google Scholar
46. Brooks, Ruby (Ed.), The Social Secretary of Detroit, 1936 (Detroit, 1936), p. 91.Google Scholar
47. McLean, Angus died in April 1929. He was replaced by Dr. Clark Brooks in June 1929. Detroit Board of Education Proceedings, 1938–39, pp. 336–439.Google Scholar
48. Nearing, Scott, “Who's Who in Our Boards of Education?” School and Society 5 (January, 1917):89–90; Counts, George, The Social Composition of Boards of Education (Chicago, 1927), pp. 82–97; Bowles, Samuel and Gintis, Herbert, Schooling in Capitalist America (New York, 1976), pp. 186–191.Google Scholar
49. Detroit News 2/20/30.Google Scholar
50. Mervin, , Social, 1930, p. 82; Fine, , Detroit Years, pp. 344–345.Google Scholar
51. Detroit News 2/22/30; 3/12/30; 3/13/30; 3/14/30; 3/25/30; 3/23/30; 3/24/30; Detroit Free Press 3/25/30; 4/4/30; Detroit Times 4/14/30; 4/13/30.Google Scholar
52. Detroit News 2/1/30; 2/20/30; 2/26/30; 3/13/30.Google Scholar
53. Detroit News 2/26/30; 3/11/30; 3/15/30; 3/25/30; Detroit Free Press 3/1/30 in Laura Osborn Papers, Box 5, Folder 4; Detroit Labor News 1/24/30; 2/21/30.Google Scholar
54. Detroit News 9/30/30 in Ralph Stone Scrapbooks #16. Interestingly, it was Williams, Edward who introduced the motion, Detroit Board of Education Proceedings 1930–31, p. 192.Google Scholar
55. Detroit Board of Education Proceedings 1930–31; Detroit News 11/13/30; Detroit Free Press 11/13/30.Google Scholar
56. Detroit Free Press 2/22/31.Google Scholar
57. Detroit News 2/15/31; Detroit Times 2/20/31.Google Scholar
58. Detroit News 2/1/30; 2/20/30; 2/26/30.Google Scholar
59. Detroit Journal of Common Council 1930, v. 1, p. 425.Google Scholar
60. Detroit News 2/1/30; 2/20/30; 2/26/30; Detroit News 11/14/30 in Ralph Stone Scrapbook #16 in Ralph Stone Papers, Bentley Historical Library, Ann Arbor, Michigan.Google Scholar
61. Detroit News 11/14/30; Detroit Free Press 2/4/31. The two men did propose very different alternatives. Lovett, John wanted the Board to be brought directly under council's control. William Lovett sought to have all Board members elected simultaneously rather than staggered terms. He believed that this would make the Board more responsive to the public's wishes.Google Scholar
62. Detroit Free Press 2/20/31.Google Scholar
63. Ibid. Lovett, John L. and Oliver Frick, G. had urged that the Board be placed under the Mayor and Council's control in their section of the Detroit Board of Commerce Governmental Committee Report on the City Budget, “Education Subcommittee Report,” February 3, 1931, in Detroit Mayors Papers, Box 1, Board of Commerce folder.Google Scholar
64. Detroit Journal of Common Council 1931, p. 196.Google Scholar
65. Detroit Board of Education Proceedings 1930–31, pp. 642, 665. The Board continued its attempts at autonomy for at least another year. Detroit Board of Education Proceedings 1931–32, pp. 427, 483; Detroit Times 4/27/32.Google Scholar
66. Board members stated that they would not seek to gain control over their funds until after the economic emergency was over. Detroit, News 1/11/33.Google Scholar
67. Detroit Times 2/17/31; Detroit News 2/21/31; 4/17/31; Detroit Free Press 2/21/31; 3/20/31. Harvey Campbell, vice-president of the Board of Commerce, and Dr. Lent Upson, director of the Bureau of Government Research, particularly opposed the legislation, raising the fear that a “Tammany Hall” arrangement might emerge between the Council members and the 10,000 Board employees. The idea also drew fire from the Detroit Times and the Detroit News. On April 19, 1931 the News ran an editorial and cartoon that strongly defended the independence of the school board and warned that “the politicans must keep their hands off education, or they will feel the wrath of the people.” Google Scholar
68. Williams, Edward was the only Board member to break ranks vocally in the controversy regarding the wage freeze. He quickly switched sides after a harsh editorial attack from his otherwise main supporter, the Detroit Labor News. Detroit Board of Education Proceedings, 1930–31, p. 192; Waskiewicz, , “Organized,” p. 337.Google Scholar
69. Detroit Teachers Associations Executive Council Bulletin, pp. 6–7.Google Scholar
70. Detroit Board of Education, “Cost of Special Subjects—Salaries, 1932–33” (mimeo), Detroit Council on Public Education Papers, Wallet #1, Miscellaneous Papers Folder.Google Scholar
71. Detroit Teachers Associations-Executive Council Bulletin, p. 6.Google Scholar
72. There were some protests, particularly over the raising of fees, but they never became an important political issue. Detroit Free Press 3/1931.Google Scholar
73. Alexander Rippa, S., “Retrenchment in a Period of Defensive-Opposition to the new Deal: The Business Community and the Public Schools, 1932–34,” History of Education Quarterly 2 (June, 1962):75–78.Google Scholar
74. Quoted in Cutler, Marilyn, “How the Schools Lived Through that Dread Depression of the Thirties,” American School Board Journal (May, 1975):37.Google Scholar
75. Sidney Fine characterized Detroit's newspapers in Detroit Years , p. 201. Detroit Free Press 2/21/30. Today the Free Press is Detroit's liberal paper and the News the more conservative.Google Scholar
76. Ibid., p. 201.Google Scholar
77. For examples of the DFL stand, see Detroit, Labor News 7/18/30; 9/26/30; 11/13/30.Google Scholar
78. The teachers' salary controversy was Murphy's first political crisis (he came into office in a special election in September 1930). Murphy's refusal to act as the Stone Committee recommended was the beginning of this three-year battle with Ralph Stone and the city's business leaders.Google Scholar
79. Detroit Free Press 10/1/20; 10/15/30; 10/20/30; 11/20/30.Google Scholar
80. Detroit News 11/18/30; Detroit Times 11/19/30.Google Scholar
81. Detroit Labor News 10/3/30; 11/14/30; 11/21/30.Google Scholar
82. Bernstein, Irving, The Lean Years: A History of the American Worker, 1920–1933 (Baltimore, 1960), p. 255.Google Scholar
83. Detroit Labor News 9/15/30.Google Scholar
84. Fine, , Detroit Years, p. 269.Google Scholar
85. Detroit Board of Education Proceedings, 1030–31, pp. 438–445.Google Scholar
86. The Detroiter 1/5/31.Google Scholar
87. They were Ferry, Hugh J., treasurer of the Packard Motor Company; Hutchinson, B. E., vice-president and treasurer of Chrysler Corporation; and Livingstone, T. W. P., vice-president of the Board of Directors of People's Wayne County Bank. Detroit News 2/2/31.Google Scholar
88. Ibid. The twenty percent figure was obtained by using Cass Technical High School's average per pupil cost of $157 and the average non-technical high school cost of $126 per pupil. Detroit Teachers Associations-Executive Council Bulletin, p. 9.Google Scholar
89. Detroit News 2/2/31.Google Scholar
90. Board of Commerce, “Education Subcommittee Report,” February 3, 1931.Google Scholar
91. Detroit News 2/13/31; 2/14/31; 2/18/31; Detroit Free Press 2/17/31; 2/18/31; 2/22/31; Detroit Times 2/17/31; Detroit Labor News 2/20/31.Google Scholar
92. Cody's estimate was more accurate; prices between December 1929 and December 1930, had fallen nine percent. U.S. Department of Labor, “Changes in the Cost of Living in Large Cities in the United States, 1913–41,” Department of Labor Bulletin #1699 (Washington, D.C., 1941), p. 56; Detroit News 2/16/31; Detroit News 2/18/31; Detroit Free Press 2/17/31; 2/18/31; Detroit Times 2/18/31.Google Scholar
93. “The Report of the Salary Schedule Committee, February 17, 1931, Detroit Mayors' Papers, 1931, Box 1, Board of Education Folder #1; Detroit Free Press 2/24/31; Detroit Times 2/20/31. Even though Detroit's teachers were poorly paid when compared to teachers in other U.S. cities, those who reached the top of Detroit's salary schedule ranked among the upper third of all U.S. incomes received in 1929. Bernstein, , Lean Years, p. 63.Google Scholar
94. The other opponent was Moross, Joseph A., a realtor. Detroit Free Press 2/24/31.Google Scholar
95. Detroit Free Press 4/3/31.Google Scholar
96. Detroit News 4/15/31; Detroit Labor News 3/20/31; 3/22/31; 4/3/31.Google Scholar
97. Detroit News 4/5/31; Detroit Free Press 4/6/31; Detroit Labor News 4/10/31.Google Scholar
98. Gorman received 92,581 votes; Webster 75,930; Krohn 45,371. Detroit Times 4/7/31.Google Scholar
99. Detroit News 4/19/31; Detroit Labor News 4/10/31.Google Scholar
100. Fine, , Detroit Years, pp. 301–302; Detroit Board of Education Proceedings 1930–31, p. 702.Google Scholar
101. Bernstein, , Lean Years, p. 255.Google Scholar
102. Wilson, Edmund, “Detroit Motors,” The New Republic (March 25, 1931):149.Google Scholar
103. Wilson, Edmund, “The Despot of Dearborn,” Scribner's Magazine (July, 1931):25.Google Scholar
104. Stone, to Murphy, , July 7, 1931, Detroit Mayors' Papers, 1931, Box 3, Finance Committee Folder.Google Scholar
105. Detroit Board of Education Proceedings 1931–32, p. 58; Detroit Times 7/29/31.Google Scholar
106. Detroit News 7/22/31; Detroit Free Press 7/29/31; Detroit Times 7/22/31.Google Scholar
107. Detroit Board of Education Proceedings, 1931–32, p. 77.Google Scholar
108. Ibid., p. 77.Google Scholar
109. Ibid., p. 78. Jamieson's figures were essentially accurate. Prices from June 1930 to June 1931 had fallen 13.5 percent. U.S. Department of Labor, “Changes,” p. 56.Google Scholar
110. Detroit Board of Education Proceedings, 1931–32, p. 178.Google Scholar
111. Ibid., p. 79.Google Scholar
112. Osborn, Laura, the only woman elected to city office, voted for the resolutions but immediately afterward protested the section that called for married women teachers to take leaves of absence. Ibid., p. 79. Detroit never forced its married women teachers to take the leaves, and very few did so voluntarily.Google Scholar
113. McLean, Angus called the speech the most important he had heard in eight years on the Board. Detroit Free Press 8/12/31; Detroit News 8/12/31; 8/25/31; the Detroit Free Press praised the cuts 8/13/31.Google Scholar
114. Detroit, News 8/28/31 in Detroit News morgue.Google Scholar
115. Fine, , Detroit Years, pp. 313–314.Google Scholar
116. Detroit Times 12/2/31.Google Scholar
117. Fine, , Detroit Years, p. 206.Google Scholar
118. Ibid., p. 314.Google Scholar
119. Ibid., p. 315.Google Scholar
120. Detroit Board of Education Proceedings, 1931–32, p. 283; Detroit News 12/30/31 in Detroit News morgue; Detroit News 1/13/32; Detroit Times 1/13/32.Google Scholar
121. Stone, to Murphy, , February 9, 1932, Detroit Mayors' Papers, 1932, Box 4, Finance Committee Folder.Google Scholar
122. Detroit Board of Education Proceedings, 1931–32, p. 319.Google Scholar
123. Fine, , Detroit Years, pp. 317–319.Google Scholar
124. Stone, to Murphy, , February 23, 1932, Detroit Mayors' Papers, 1932, Box 4, Finance Committee Folder.Google Scholar
125. Detroit Board of Education Proceedings, 1931–32, pp. 405–413; DW 5/4/32; 5/5/32; 5/6/32; Detroit Free Press 5/4/32; 5/5/32; 5/6/32; Detroit Times 5/4/32; 5/5/32; 5/6/32.Google Scholar
126. Detroit Board of Education Proceedings, 1931–32, p. 412–413. Osborn and Williams both voted “no” on the final resolution. The teachers eventually did get those wage losses restored in 1950 after a lengthy court battle initiated by the Detroit Federation of Teachers. Muffoletto, Anna May, “Detroit Public School Teachers' Unions: Organization, Operation, and Activites” (Master's Thesis, University of Detroit, 1958), pp. 73,99–105.Google Scholar
127. Fine, , Detroit Years, p. 354.Google Scholar
128. Ibid., pp. 355–359.Google Scholar
129. Ibid., p. 354.Google Scholar
130. Hallgren, Mauritz, “Grave Danger in Detroit,” The Nation (August 3, 1932), p. 100.Google Scholar
131. Detroit Board of Education Proceedings, 1932–33, p. 21; Detroit News 7/27/32.Google Scholar
132. The $61 million campaign was led by a “front” organization of the Detroit Real Estate Board. Several of its major backers were developers who owed the city large amounts in delinquent taxes. Virtually every major newspaper and civic organization opposed the proposal. It was defeated 126,578 to 40,050. For a full description see Fine, , Detroit Years, pp. 355–359.Google Scholar
133. The phrase appeared in Detroit Labor News 5/27/32.Google Scholar
134. Detroit Free Press 4/30/32; 6/18/32; 6/19/32.Google Scholar
135. Detroit Free Press 7/2/32.Google Scholar
136. Detroit Labor News 5/6/32.Google Scholar
137. Detroit Teachers Associations-Executive Council Bulletin, pp. 8–10.Google Scholar
138. Schwarz, Jordan, The Interregnum of Despair: Hoover, Congress, and the Depression (Urbana, IL., 1970).Google Scholar
139. Fine, , Detroit Years, pp. 373–375; Conot, , American, p. 306.Google Scholar
140. Fine, , Detroit Years, p. 376.Google Scholar
141. Ibid., p. 376.Google Scholar
142. The Board eventually got that money back. Detroit journal of Common Council , 1934, pp. 640–641.Google Scholar
143. Detroit Board of Education Proceedings, 1932–33, p. 216.Google Scholar
144. Fine, , Detroit Years, p. 377. The scrip became another form of salary reduction as merchants around the city accepted it often at 20–30 percent discounts. Detroit Saturday Night 5/20/33.Google Scholar
145. Detroit Board of Education Proceedings, 1932–33, pp. 217, 226, 229, 235–36; Fine, , Detroit Years, p. 377; Detroit News 3/30/33; Detroit Times 3/30/33.Google Scholar
146. Michigan Educational Journal 10 (September, 1932), p. 2.Google Scholar
147. Detroit News 12/7/32; 12/14/32; Detroit Times 12/7/32.Google Scholar
148. Stone, Ralph to Upson, Lent, January 18, 1933; Stone, Ralph Papers, Box 1; Detroit Free Press 1/11/33; Detroit Times 1/16/33 in Laura Osborn Papers, Box 7.Google Scholar
149. Detroit News 1/24/33.Google Scholar
150. Detroit Board of Education Proceedings, 1932–33, p. 319; Detroit News 7/22/31; Laura Osborn Radio Speech, January 20, 1933, Laura Osborn Papers, Box 15, Manuscripts folder.Google Scholar
151. Detroit News 7/22/31.Google Scholar
152. Sinclair, Upton, The Goslings (Pasedena, CA., 1924), pp. 100–102, 186.Google Scholar
153. Detroit Labor News 3/1/29.Google Scholar
154. Detroit Board of Education Proceedings, 1931–32, p. 284.Google Scholar
155. Detroit Board of Education Proceedings, 1931–32, p. 123; Detroit Board of Education Proceedings, 1932–33, pp. 29, 284; Detroit News 8/28/31; 7/10/32.Google Scholar
156. Detroit News 1/24/33; 1/25/33; Detroit Times 1/24/32; 1/31/33.Google Scholar
157. Carlson, Avis, “Deflating the Schools,” Harper's (November, 1933):713–714. At the time, the most noted example of “fads and frills” retrenchment occurred in Chicago. In July 1933, the school board abolished all junior highs, the city's junior college, and all coaching and music positions. It reduced the number of physical education teachers, reduced kindergarten classes by 50 percent, and discontinued manual training and home economics in elementary schools. Burbank, , “Chicago,” pp. 373–374.Google Scholar
158. Krug, , Shaping, p. 214.Google Scholar
159. Spain, Charles, The Platoon School (New York, 1924), pp. 43–100; Moehlman, , Public, pp. 195–198; Spain, Charles, “Keep Frills—Save Money,” School Life 18 (March, 1933):122.Google Scholar
160. Spain, , “Keep,” p. 122; Detroit News 4/1/33.Google Scholar
161. That number is based on two or three additional teachers in each of Detroit's approximately 150 elementary schools.Google Scholar
162. Spain, Charles, “Economy and the Modern Curriculum,” Detroit Educational Bulletin 16 (January–February, 1933):1–3, Detroit News 2/6/33; 4/1/33; Detroit Free Press 2/7/33; 3/26/33; Detroit Times 1/26/33; 2/6/33.Google Scholar
163. Fine, , Detroit Years, p. 106.Google Scholar
164. Detroit Free Press 5/5/30.Google Scholar
165. Detroit Free Press 1/29/33. On that same day the Free Press ran a long article that was quite sympathetic to the plight of Detroit's teachers. It also presented the educators' views of the “modern” courses. Donald Disbrow guotes that article and assumes it represents the Free Press' editorial point of view on the issue. He is totally mistaken in that assumption. Disbrow, , Schools, p. 236.Google Scholar
166. Detroit Free Press 3/11/33.Google Scholar 167 Eaton, William, The American Federation of Teachers, 1916–1961 (Carbondale, Ill., 1975), p. 46.Google Scholar
168. Detroit Free Press 12/14/32.Google Scholar
169. Detroit Saturday Night 8/31/33.Google Scholar
170. Detroit Saturday Night 12/16/33; 12/23/33; 1/12/35.Google Scholar
171. For examples of their anti-intellectual attitudes see Detroit Saturday Night 12/2/33; Detroit Free Press 6/18/32.Google Scholar
172. Quoted in Knight, Edgar, Fifty Years of American Education (New York, 1953), p. 361. Knight also mentions several other newspapers that shared the views of the Detroit Free Press on the “fads and frills” issue. They include the Atlanta Constitution, the Chicago Tribune, and the New York Daily News. Ibid., pp. 353–354.Google Scholar
173. See for example Meek, Charles S., Superintendent of Schools, Toledo, Ohio at the NEA Department of Superintendence meeting 1933, quoted in Michigan Education Journal 10 (April, 1933), p. 371.Google Scholar
174. Detriot News 1/20/33 in the Laura Osborn Papers, Box 15, Manuscripts and Notes Folder.Google Scholar
175. Detroit Leader 2/18/33.Google Scholar
176. Detroit Leader 2/11/33.Google Scholar
177. Interview with Walter Bergman, 8/30/32.Google Scholar
178. Detroit Labor News 12/16/32; 12/30/32; 1/13/33; 5/26/33; 11/24/33; 11/15/33.Google Scholar
179. Detroit Labor News 3/3/33; 3/17/33; 3/31/33; 4/7/33.Google Scholar
180. “The 3 R's Not Enough,” quoted in Detroit Educational Bulletin 16 (March–April, 1933):9.Google Scholar
181. “The Schools and the Average Citizen” was given full page coverage in the Michigan Education Journal 10 (February, 1933):267.Google Scholar
182. Detroit News 2/1/33.Google Scholar
183. Detroit News 2/22/33.Google Scholar
184. Detroit News 3/28/33. Kowalczyk had stated those positions as the essence of his platform in Detroit News 2/26/33.Google Scholar
185. Detroit News 4/1/33; Detroit Times 3/29/33.Google Scholar
186. The Free Press endorsement had less to do with the “frills” issue than with the other prominent issue of that election, the unionization and politicization of the school teachers, which Jamieson and Shurly opposed and Lockwood supported. Detroit News 2/26/33; 3/31/33; Detroit Free Press 3/29/33; 3/31/33; 4/1/33.Google Scholar
187. Detroit Labor News 3/31/33.Google Scholar
188. Shurly polled 154,221 votes; Jamieson, , 132,346; Lockwood, , 104,225; and Kowalczyk, , 55,536. Detroit News 4/4/33. The frills issue did not disappear with Williams's departure from the Board. For example, in 1939 Michigan's Governor Dickinson called on Detroit to eliminate such “frills” as art, music, and playgrounds in order to reduce the amount of state school aid. Detroit Times 6/14/39 in Detroit Federation of Teachers 1939 scrapbook. Detroit Federation of Teachers Papers, Walter Rentuer Library, Wayne State University, Detroit, Michigan.Google Scholar
189. Michigan Education Journal 11 (October, 1933), p. 93; Cook, Russell, “The Legion and the Schools,” Journal of the NEA 22 (March, 1934):89–90.Google Scholar
190. Constitution of the Detroit Council on Public Education” and Minutes of the Detroit Council on Public Education, December 5, 1933.” Detroit Council on Public Education Papers, Wallet #1, Folder #1. The Council lasted until 1946.Google Scholar
191. Iversen, Robert, The Communists and the Schools (New York, 1959), pp. 17–20; Frank, Richard, “The Schools and the People's Front,” The Communist 6 (May, 1937):432–445; The Michigan Worker, 5/1/33.Google Scholar
192. Detroit News 3/30/33; Detroit Free Press 3/30/33; Detroit Times 2/28/33; 3/30/33.Google Scholar
193. Detroit Times 4/3/33; Detroit Bureau of Governmental Research, Accumulated, p. 15.Google Scholar
194. Fine, , Detroit Years, p. 375. Murphy had come out in opposition to “any cuts in the fundamental services of the schools” and he never changed that position. Detroit Time 2/5/33.Google Scholar
195. Ibid., p. 386.Google Scholar
196. Detroit did not phase out platoon schools until 1964. Disbrow, , Schools, p. 230.Google Scholar
197. Shepard, E. F. and Wood, William, The Financing of Public Schools in Michigan (Ann Arbor, 1942), p. 26.Google Scholar
198. Detroit Education News 1/9/37.Google Scholar
199. Detroit Teachers Association News 2/6/34; 4/11/34; Detroit Board of Education” Financial Statements, 1936–1940; Detroit Board of Education” Cost Reports, 1937–1941.” Google Scholar
200. Detroit News 2/27/35 in Detroit News morgue; Detroit Labor News 2/14/36.Google Scholar
201. Chicago and Baltimore were below Detroit in a ranking of the ten largest cities in the United States. Detroit Teachers Associations-Executive Council Bulletin, p. 13.Google Scholar
202. Between June 1930 and June 1934 prices in Detroit fell approximately 25 percent. U.S. Department of Labor, “Changes,” p. 56. According to Lester Chandler, the purchasing power of the dollar rose about 33 percent between 1929–1933, and people whose incomes fell by less than 25 percent “actually gained in real income.” Chandler, , America's Greatest Depression 1929–1941 (New York, 1970), p. 33.Google Scholar
203. Alexander, S. Rippa makes a similar point in “Retrenchment,” p. 81.Google Scholar
204. Detroit Board of Education Proceedings, 1934–35, p. 250.Google Scholar
205. For examples of that position see Bowles, and Gintis, , Schooling, pp. 191–195; Katz, Michael, Class, Bureaucracy and Schools (New York, 1971), pp. 120–123; Lazarson, Marvin, Origins of the Urban School (Cambridge, Mass., 1971), pp. x–xvii; Spring, Joel, Education and the Rise of the Corporate State (Boston, 1972), pp. 149–150; Violas, Paul, The Training of the Urban Working Class (Chicago, 1978), pp. 100–109, 124–143, 320–233.Google Scholar
206. Bowles, and Gintis, , Schooling, p. 5.Google Scholar
207. Prickett, James R., “Communists and the Automobile Industry in Detroit Before 1935,” Michigan History 57 (Fall, 1973):193–208.Google Scholar
208. Examples of the business community's stand on school aid can be found in Detroit News 1/26/33; 6/15/33; The Detroiter 6/12/36; 12/18/33; 12/15/33; 1/8/34; 6/4/34; Detroit Saturday Night 12/2/33; 12/16/33; 12/23/22; 11/3/34; 1/12/35; Detroit Free Press 2/4/33; 2/7/33; 4/2/33; 11/4/34; Detroit Free Press 4/16/37 cited in Male, George, “The Michigan Education Association as an Interest Group, 1852–1950” (Ph.D. dissertation, University of Michigan, 1952), p. 468. As late as 1940, Male argues, major Michigan corporations and the Michigan Chamber of Commerce were fighting for reduced state appropriations for education, pp. 476–484.Google Scholar
- 4
- Cited by