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Full text of "Motion pictures in history teaching; a study of the Chronicles of America photoplays, as an aid in seventh grade instruction"

Motion Pictures in 
History Teaching 

A Study of the Chronicles of America Photoplays 

as an Aid in Seventh Grade 

Instruction 

By 

Daniel C. Knowlton 

and 

J. Warren Tilton 




Published for the 

Department of Education, Yale University 
YALE UNIVERSITY PRESS 

NEW HAVEN CONNECTICUT 



From the collection of the 



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Motion Pictures in History Teaching 




An ox-drawn tumbril passes through the gates of the stockade, 
on its way to the nearby fields. 

(From "Jamestown," one of The Chronicles of America Photoplays} 



Motion Pictures in 
History Teaching 

A Study of the 

Chronicles of America Photoplays as an Aid in 
Seventh Grade Instruction 



by 

Daniel C. Knowlton, Ph.D. 

and 

J. Warren Tilton, Ph.D. 




Published for the 

Department of Education, Yale University 
by the 

Yale University Press 
1929 



Copyright 1929 by Yale University Press 
Printed in the United States of America 



Acknowledgment. 



i 



^HANKS are due to Dr. William H. Martin, Principal of 
the Troup Junior High School of New Haven and to the 
six teachers of the social studies for the effective coopera- 
tion which made possible an experiment of this character; to the au- 
thorities of Yale University Press for their generous support of the 
undertaking; and to Professor Frank E. Spaulding, Chairman of 
the Department of Education, Yale University, for friendly criti- 
cism and counsel as the work progressed. Whatever success has at- 
tended these efforts to evaluate the historical motion picture is due 
in no small measure to their keen interest in the project and to their 
painstaking efforts. 

D. C. K. 
J. W. T. 



Contents. 

List of Illustrations xi 

Part I. Description of the Experiment. 

Section 

I. Description of the Photoplays Used I 

II. Plan of the Experiment Outlined 7 

III. Measurement of Enrichment: the Knowlton Tests 10 

IV. Measurement of Standardized Progress: the Van 
Wagenen Scale 21 

V. Measurement of Interest 23 

VI. Calendar 29 

VII. Experimental Control 31 

Part II. Results. 

VIII. Comparison of the Gains Made by Experimental and 

Control Groups on the Knowlton Tests 41 

IX. Evaluation of the Excess Experimental Group Gain 
on the Knowlton Tests in Terms of the Intellect It 
Would Have Required To Achieve It 48 

X. Gains Made by Experimental and Control Groups on 

the Van Wagenen Scale 52 

XI. The Effect of the Photoplays upon Retention 57 

XII. Comparison of Experimental and Control Groups as 
to 

(a) Participation in Classroom Discussion 

(b) Expression of Interest 

(c) Voluntary Reading 65 

XIII. Analysis of the Contribution of the Photoplays 74 

XIV. Summary Statement of Results and Conclusions 87 

APPENDIX 
I. Knowlton Tests 94 



viii Contents 

II. Readings Used in Measuring the Effect of the Photo- 
plays upon the Amount of Voluntary Reading of His- 
tory 117 

III. Books Used in Preparing the Set of Readings 167 

IV. Information Supplied in the Control Classes Because 

It Was in the Photoplays, but Not in the Textbooks 169 

BIBLIOGRAPHY OF REFERENCES 183 



Tables. 

I. Concepts Which the Various Sections of the Knowl- 

ton Tests Were Designed To Measure 15 

II. Percentages of Test Items 

(a) Checked as Not Worth Teaching 

(b) Failed by Five or More of Ten Teachers 

(c) Both Checked and Failed 18 

III. Reliability Coefficients for Some of the Measures 
Obtained with the Knowlton Tests 19 

IV. Gains Made by Each Section on Each of the Five 
Knowlton Tests 42 

V. Comparison of Gains on the Separate Knowlton 

Tests 43 

VI. Comparison of Combined Knowlton Test Gains 44 

VII. The Effect of Reductions of Differences in Men- 
tal Age, Educational Age, Intelligence Quotient, 
and Educational Quotient upon Differences in 
Gains 45 

VIII. Comparison of Gains on the Knowlton Tests for 

Individually Matched Groups 46 

IX. Initial Scores and Gains Made by the Experimental 

Group and the Higher- Ability Control Group 49 

X. The M.A., E.A., I.Q., and E.Q. Handicaps Over- 
come by the Experimental Group in Equaling the 
Gain Made by the Control Group on the Five 
Knowlton Tests Combined 50 

XI. Gains Made by Each Section on the Van Wagenen 

American History Scales, Information Scale C-2 53 
XII. Comparison of Experimental Group f-i-j-1 and 
Control Group B-E-K-N and of the Gains Made 
by These Groups on the Van Wagenen Scale C 2 53 

XIII. Dates of Testing 58 

XIV. Comparison of Points Gained, Lost, and Retained 

on the Separate Tests 58 



x Tables 

XV. Per Cent of Gain Retained for Each Test, and 

Related Factors 60 

XVI. Per Cent of Gain Retained According to the Kind 

of Knowledge 6 1 

XVII. Comparison of Experimental and Control Groups 
as to the Number of Pupil Participations per Sec- 
tion per Period, for Each Instructional Unit and 
for the Five Units Combined 66 

XVIII. Comparison of Experimental and Control Groups 
in Number of Voluntary Readings in the Class- 
room under Controlled Conditions 73 
XIX. Comparison of Gains and Retentions on the Knowl- 
ton Tests Regrouped as Tests of Time, Place, Per- 
son, and Relation 75 
XX. Ranking (within Each Teacher's Influence) of the 
Contribution of the Photoplays to the Teaching of 
Time, Place, Person, and Relation 75 
XXI. Ranking (within Each Knowlton Test) of the 
Contribution of the Photoplays to the Teaching of 
Time, Place, Person, and Relation 76 
XXII. Data for the Determination of the Extent to 
Which the Contribution of the Photoplays Depends 
upon 

(a) Nature of Knowledge Measured 

(b) Extent to Which the Knowledge Is Worth 
Teaching 

(c) Extent to Which Teachers Have This 
Knowledge 7 8 

XXIII. The Relation of the Contribution of the Photo- 
plays to 

(a) Nature of Knowledge Measured 

(b) Extent to Which the Knowledge Is Worth 
Teaching 

(c) Extent to Which Teachers Have This 
Knowledge 8 1 



Illustrations. 

An ox-drawn tumbril passes through the gates of the stock- 
ade frontispiece 
French traders offer gifts to the Indians, 1753 2 
General Wolfe gives instruction to his aide Captain Her- 

vey Smith 4 

The surrender of Cornwallis at Yorktown 6 

Captain Miles Standish and Captain Jones of the May- 
flower 34 
Thomas Morton, appearing before Archbishop Laud and 

the Commission, prefers charges against the Puritans 36 

Pocahontas and John Rolfe, after their wedding in the 

Jamestown church 102 

Messengers from England arrive with orders from Sir 

Ferdinando Gorges 1 1 6 

The Pilgrims assemble in the cabin of the "Mayflower" in 

November, 1620 120 

Director-General Peter Stuyvesant in New Amsterdam 136 

George Washington in command of Virginia troops 

marching against the French 148 

The British and the French on the Plains of Abraham 152 

The Minute Men of Lexington 158 

Congress assembled in Independence Hall, June 7, 1776 168 

Washington and his generals hold a council of war at New 

Windsor headquarters 180 

Governor Hamilton and his men salute George Rogers 

Clark at Fort Sackville 182 



PART I 

Description of the Experiment. 

SECTION I 

Description of the Photoplays Used. 

THE photoplays used are known as the Yale Chroni- 
cles of America Photoplays. They are historical 
dramas setting forth a number of important de- 
velopments in American History very much as the play- 
wright unfolds his plot by dialogue, change of scene, and 
action. The length of the photoplays, three reels, is fixed by 
school practice which makes it almost imperative that the 
story be unfolded, if it is to be presented in its entirety, 
within a period of from forty to forty-five minutes. Accu- 
racy of portrayal is vouched for by specialists in the phases 
of history portrayed. The dramatic structure of the photo- 
plays has been carefully supervised by Prof. George Pierce 
Baker of the Drama Department of Yale University. Of the 
fifteen photoplays already produced, ten were used in the 
experiment. These ten may be briefly described, as follows: 
JAMESTOWN: A faithful impression of the Jamestown 
settlement in 1612 under the stern rule of Sir Thomas Dale. 
The daily life of the colonists. The ever present menace of 
the Indians whose hostility is aggravated in part by Spanish 
intrigue. The capture of Pocahontas, her marriage to John 
Rolfe and the end of Powhatan's war of extermination, fac- 
tors contributing to the successful establishment of the first 
permanent English settlement in America. 

THE PILGRIMS: The struggle for religious freedom 



2 Description of Experiment 

as typified by the story of the Pilgrims. Starting with the 
experiences of the Separatists at Scrooby, England, their 
migration to Holland during 1607-8. Twelve years later, 
the departure of the devoted band for America. The voyage 
of the Mayflower. The landing on Plymouth Rock. Hard- 
ships and suffering during the first winter. The refusal of 
the Pilgrims to return to England and other incidents re- 
vealing their faith and devotion to the ideal of freedom in 
religious thought and expression. 

THE PURITANS: The economic background of the 
Massachusetts Bay Colony. Life in early New England, 
1630, contrasted with the court of Charles I. The political 
moves behind Thomas Morton's effort to discredit the Puri- 
tans in England and to bring about the revocation of their 
Charter. The rise of political dissension at home, including 
the departure of Roger Williams. The capable leadership 
of Governor Winthrop successfully bringing the colony 
through this dual crisis in its affairs. 

PETER STUYVESANT: A summary of the outstand- 
ing events from 1653 to 1664 which reveals how Dutch 
New Amsterdam became English New York. Life in the 
picturesque Dutch colony under the stern rule of Stuyvesant. 
The attitude of England toward Dutch colonial ambitions 
on the Hudson. The decision, strengthened by reports of 
Englishmen on Long Island, to send a fleet against New 
Amsterdam. The growing restlessness of Stuyvesant's citi- 
zens under his autocratic administration. The arrival of the 
English fleet. Preparations for battle. The bloodless surren- 
der of New Amsterdam by Stuyvesant after standing out 
against his counselors and citizens to the last moment. 

THE GATEWAY TO THE WEST: Suggesting the 
beginning in 1753 of the bitter conflict for the vast wilder- 




In 1753 French traders on a tributary of the Ohio River offer 

gifts to the Indians to keep their good will during the 

inevitable conflict with the English. 

(From "The Gateway to the West," one of The Chronicles of America Photoplays} 



Photoplays Used 3 

ness west of the Alleghanies, between France, working 
south from Canada, and England, pressing westward from 
her seaboard colonies. Presenting, also, a charming picture 
of life in Old Virginia. In detail, the experiences of young 
Col. George Washington, sent by Governor Dinwiddie to 
protest the French occupation of the Ohio Valley. Washing- 
ton receives a curt refusal. A successful skirmish brings down 
upon his small force a large body of French reinforcements. 
He retreats but is forced to stand at "Fort Necessity." To 
save his command, he surrenders j a significant defeat since 
it opened the eyes of England's ministers to the seriousness 
of the French menace in America. 

WOLFE AND MONTCALM: The bitter struggle be- 
tween France and England in America, culminating in the 
battle of the Plains of Abraham and the fall of Quebec in 
1759. The acute situation in world politics which prompted 
William Pitt to send an army overseas under command of 
Gen. James Wolfe. The situation in New France with Gen- 
eral Montcalm hampered by the jealousy of Vaudreuil, Gov- 
ernor-General. The military strategy of Wolfe. His attack 
on Quebec. Montcalm's desperate defense. The clash on the 
Plains of Abraham. The occupation of Quebec and the arri- 
val of the English fleet the following spring. 

THE EVE OF THE REVOLUTION: Depicting the 
most significant incidents of the decade 1765-75 and 
through these interpreting the state of mind of the people 
as the movement for independence gained impetus. In de- 
tail, re-creating scenes incident to the Stamp Act and the 
stand against "Taxation without Representation." Also re- 
creating the "Boston Massacre," the "Boston Tea Party," 
the Salem Assembly, the rides of Paul Revere and William 
Dawes, Jr., the sharp military clashes at Lexington Green 



4 Description of Experiment 

and Concord Bridge, and the retreat of the British. In short, 
the most notable events preceding the actual outbreak of the 
War of Independence. 

THE DECLARATION OF INDEPENDENCE: An 
account of the efforts of a small group of patriots to bring 
about a unanimous vote in favor of independence which re- 
veals the three outstanding attitudes of public opinion in 
1776, as represented by Tories, Conservatives, and those in 
favor of absolute independence. The influence of pamphlet- 
eers, typified by Thomas Paine and his "Common Sense," 
the unofficial gatherings of delegates, the concern of John 
Adams, Franklin, and others as to the attitude of France, 
the proceedings of the Second Continental Congress culmi- 
nating in the famous session of July 2, 1776, when a unani- 
mous resolution for independence was secured. The formal 
adoption of the Declaration on July 4, and the subsequent 
excitement. 

YORKTOWN: The progress of the War of Independ- 
ence between January and October, 1781. The hardships 
and sufferings of the American troops. The problems facing 
General Washington due to discouragement and mutiny. 
The international aspects of the campaign of 1781 and the 
aid rendered by French leaders. Washington's march south. 
The arrival of the French fleet in the Chesapeake. The suc- 
cessful outwitting of Clinton and Cornwallis. The battle of 
Yorktown and the subsequent surrender of Cornwallis. 

VINCENNES: The struggle for supremacy along the 
frontier when the American colonies were fighting for inde- 
pendence in the east. Hamilton, British Governor-General 
of the Northwest, occupies Vincennes to curb the influence of 
westward-spreading pioneers. George Rogers Clark, to rid 
the country both of Hamilton and of his Indian allies, 




General Wolfe, commander of the British forces, gives instructions 

to his aide Captain Hervey Smith, on the eve of the 

attack on Quebec. 

(From "Wolfe and Montcalm," one of The Chronicles of America Photoplays} 



Photoplays Used 5 

strikes out from Kentucky and reaches Kaskaskia before cold 
weather in 1779. Hamilton, protected by a seemingly im- 
penetrable wilderness, feels secure until spring. Grasping his 
opportunity, Clark presses on across the "Drowned Lands" 
in the face of tremendous hardships and captures Vincennes, 
breaking the influence of the British over the Indians and 
winning for the Republic the vast territory from which later 
were formed the states of Ohio, Indiana, Illinois, Michigan, 
and Wisconsin. 

Photoplays of this type have not heretofore been experi- 
mentally evaluated. Of the films used in the study directed 
by Freeman, 1 only five could be classified as historical mo- 
tion pictures, and four of these were in the field of economic 
history. All of them were quite different from the photo- 
plays used in this experiment. The most comprehensive mo- 
tion picture in the experiment described by Freeman was 
"French Explorations in North America," produced by the 
Society for Visual Education. The footage was 734 feet, less 
than one reel. Only 13 per cent of this included motion pic- 
tures. Fifty-six per cent consisted of animated cartoons and 
maps. The story element was entirely lacking. 

The contributions to history teaching which have been 
predicted for the Yale Chronicles of America Photoplays 
are, in descending order of frequency of mention in sixty- 
eight sources: 

1. The creation of interest, 

2. The production of a more vivid imagery and more lasting im- 
pressions, 

3. The modification or creation of attitudes and ideals, 

4. The enrichment of history teaching. 

1 F. N. Freeman, editor, Visual Education: A Comparative Study of Mo- 
tion Pictures and Other Methods of Instruction (Chicago, Illinois: University 
of Chicago Press, 1924). 



6 Description of Experiment 

Probably this order is not so much an indication of relative 
educational importance as it is of the effect which the photo- 
plays had upon the makers of these predictions. This is 
borne out by the fact that in the same sources the qualities of 
the photoplays most frequently mentioned are: first, dra- 
matic interest 5 second, reality j third, historical fidelity; and 
fourth, beauty. 



The surrender of Cornwallis at Yorktown. General Washington 

indicates that Cornwallis' sword, presented by General O'Hara, 

shall be received by General Lincoln, an officer of equal rank. 

(From "Yorktown," on? of The Chronicles of America Photo-plays} 



SECTION II 

Plan of Experiment. 

THE purpose of this experiment was to measure the con- 
tribution of the photoplays to enrichment, retention, and the 
creation of interest. These are the first, second, and fourth 
kinds of predicted contributions mentioned in the preceding 
paragraph. The third, effect upon attitudes, is included only 
in so far as it is covered in manifestations of interest. 
Briefly stated, the plan of procedure was as follows: 

1. To measure the extent to which the photoplays con- 
tributed enrichment by 

(A) Devising tests 1 with which to measure in a full and 
worth-while way the results achieved in those instructional 
units in which the photoplays were used. 

(B) Giving these tests before and after instruction. 

2. To determine whether the enrichment, if found, was 
secured at the expense of normal progress in the prescribed 
course of study by 

(A) Giving a standardized test at the beginning and end 
of the experiment. 

3. To analyze the enrichment contributed, if found, by 
(A) Separating the Knowlton Tests into four parts as fol- 
lows: 

(a) Questions calling for knowledge of time, 

(b) Questions calling for knowledge of historical geography, 

(c) Questions calling for knowledge of persons, 

(d) Questions calling for knowledge of the interaction of 
events, or causal relationships, or interrelationships other 
than time. 

1 These tests were devised by D. C. Knowlton, and will be referred to as the 
Knowlton Tests. 



8 Description of Experiment 

(B) Comparing the four kinds of contributions. 

4. To measure the contribution of the photoplays to re- 
tention by 

(A) Giving the Knowlton Tests a third time. 

5. To measure the contribution of the photoplays to the 
creation of interest by 

(A) Having observers keep detailed records of pupil par- 
ticipation in classroom discussion. 

(B) Having the pupils rank history among their other 
subjects of study. 

(C) Getting records of history read outside the classroom. 

(D) Measuring the amount of voluntary reading under 
controlled classroom conditions. 

This plan was carried out in the seventh grade of the 
Troup Junior High School of New Haven, Connecticut. 
The grade was composed of 521 pupils, divided into fifteen 
sections of approximately thirty-five pupils each. The pupils 
had been sectioned, within the limitations of administrative 
necessity, on the basis of Otis Classification Test quotients 
and teachers' judgments. The fifteen sections were desig- 
nated by letters in alphabetical order from A, the highest, 
to O, the lowest. The fifteen sections were taught by six 
teachers, A, F, and K by one, B and L by another, C and 
H by a third, D, I, and N by a fourth, E, J, and O by a 
fifth, and G and M by a sixth. For the whole grade the 
median mental age was twelve years and eleven months, and 
the median intelligence quotient was 105. For reasons stated 
later, sections f-h-i-j-1-m were chosen to constitute the ex- 
perimental group and B-C-G-K-N-O were chosen to consti- 
tute the control group. Small letters will be used in referring 
to experimental sections, and capital letters in referring to 
control sections. 



Plan Outlined 9 

All photoplays were projected in the regular social studies 
classrooms. They were projected from the rear upon a 
Trans-lux or Daylo screen by a portable machine carrying 
standard width non-inflammable film. A lens of short focal 
length was used with the throw varying from four and a 
half to six feet, and producing an image of approximately 
sixteen by twenty-four inches. The machine was operated by 
an experienced operator. As the pictures were projected, the 
titles were read by the teacher. 

The plan of the experiment, and the method of proce- 
dure, are described in more detail in the following five sec- 
tions. 



SECTION III 

The Measurement of Enrichment the Knowlton 

Tests. 

IT is of far more importance to measure the power of the 
photoplays to enrich teaching which is already good than it 
is to measure their contribution to poor teaching. It is also 
more difficult. The latter is entirely a problem of measure- 
ment 5 the former involves a definition of good history 
teaching, and the securing of such teaching in addition to the 
problem of measuring results. 

In an attempt to define more precisely the goals of effec- 
tive teaching, cognizance was taken of the demand for a type 
of instruction in history which carries with it the impress of 
reality. 

The essential task of the teacher of history was therefore 
defined as that of conveying an impression of reality that the 
men and women of the past actually existed, and that they 
were very much like the people of our own day, but that 
they moved about in a different environment and were af- 
fected by different conditions. 

There are at least three aspects of this vivid contact with 
the subject which measure the reality impressed upon the 
child. There is first of all a time sense to be inculcated, a 
feeling for and appreciation of time, as all these human 
situations are conditioned by it. Time relationships must be 
taught, and various methods must be employed to impart 
this feeling or appreciation. Learning lists of dates may be 
absolutely meaningless in this connection. On the other hand 
such lists of dates may be of value when the whole of which 



Measuring Enrichment 1 1 

they are a part begins to be apprehended. Again, environ- 
mental or spatial relationships, so far as they concern human- 
kind, constitute another important aspect of the instruction. 
These are often referred to as historical geography but 
under this designation they are often confused with human 
geography. We may speak of spatial relationships separately, 
but the time element is always present. It is more important 
to teach the changing influence upon mankind of changing 
environmental conditions through the centuries than it is to 
teach the influence of conditions at a given time. This is 
something more than a matter of locational geography. Fi- 
nally, there is the human element itself, the interaction of 
personalities, in both a time and a place setting. To state it 
somewhat differently, there are series of changes taking 
place in which the human factor is constantly being involved. 
To appreciate this interaction the pupil must sense the dra- 
matic character of the past, and the play of human passions 
and human emotions, which is the essentially human, living 
aspect of this interplay of personalities. 

An attempt was made to develop teaching which would 
accomplish the objectives defined above. During the year 
preceding the experiment procedures were tried out and the 
results closely observed, in order that the new instrument 
might be used in a more or less approved teaching situation. 
Stenographic reports of the lessons were made by competent 
secretaries so that the type of reaction was recorded and the 
apparent success or failure of that particular method was a 
matter of record as well as of observation. 

From November i, 1927, to the end of the school year in 
June, 1928, D. C. Knowlton planned and directed the his- 
tory teaching of the seventh grade. At the outset, a series of 
conferences was held with the six history teachers, and a 



1 2 Description of Experiment 

schedule of lessons was planned which was faithfully fol- 
lowed throughout the remainder of the school year. 

The following five instructional units indicate the nature 
of the history taught during the experiment from February 
to June, inclusive: 

Unit I: Settlement, 1600-1660; the English move westward (15 
lessons). 

Lesson I. The incentives for moving: trade and religion. (A 
series of pictures of happenings, 16001660.) 

Lesson II. The religious incentive versus the trade. 

Lessons III-IV. The first religious colony. (Film, The Pil- 
grims.) 

Lesson V. More religious migrations and the reasons; the 
Puritans move. England in 162960. 

Lesson VI. The Puritans in England, 1629-60. 

Lesson VII. The Puritans in America: their first ten years. 
(Film, The Puritans.) 

Lessons VIII-IX. Later years in America; making New Eng- 
land Puritan. 

Lessons X-XV. Other colonies established within the period. 

Unit II: Life in Europe versus life in America (d lessons). 

Lessons I II. Problems recognized: the Indians, nature, living 

together. 
Lessons III-IV. Jamestown as a concrete illustration of the 

nature of the problems and how they were met. (Film, 

Jamestown. ) 
Lessons V-VI. Experiences in other colonies. 

Unit III : England extends her domains and ousts the Dutch (6 

lessons). 
Lesson I. Rival European nations elbowing each other, 1660- 

1760. 

Lesson II. Happenings in England responsible, 1660-89. 
Lesson III. One result: the new southern colonies. 
Lesson IV. Another result: the Quaker colony. 



Measuring Enrichment 1 3 

Lesson V. The undesirable Dutch neighbor. 
Lesson VI. The entire seaboard from Maine to Florida be- 
comes English. (Film, Peter Stuyvesant.) 

Unit IV: Ambitious kings and conflict (73 lessons). 

Lessons I II. A great king. 

Lessons III IV. Extension of the great king's dominions. 

Lessons V VII. Renewal of struggle : Frederick the Great and 
European and colonial conditions responsible. 

Lesson VIII. The conflict in America, 1756-63. Its begin- 
nings. (Film, Gateway to West.) 

Lessons IX XI. World-wide character of conflict and its con- 
tinuation in America. 

Lesson XII. Getting a decision. (Film, Wolfe and Mont- 
calm.) 

Lesson XIII: The outcome. 

Unit V : The American Revolution (16 lessons). . 
Lesson I. Added territory and the consequences. 
Lesson II. An approaching storm. 
Lessons III V. A divided England and a divided America. 

(Film, Eve of Revolution.) 
Lessons VI VIII. Separation and war. (Film, Declaration of 

Independence.) 
Lessons IX-XII. The war game and how it was won. (Film, 

Yorktown.) 
Lessons XIII-XVI. A tale of daring and adventure, and the 

gains of the war. (Film, Vincennes.) 

Although the teaching was supervised, the teachers were 
not restricted. They were at liberty to make such use of pic- 
tures and maps as might commend themselves, provided 
they used such materials in control and experimental sec- 
tions alike. Two textbooks had normally been used in these 
classes: Gordy, History of the United States, and Beard and 
Bagley, History of the American People. These were sup- 
plemented for both groups by a manuscript textbook in 



14 Description of Experiment 

mimeographed form and without illustrations, covering the 
period which was being studied. The principal of the school, 
who knew the manuscript was in preparation, had expressed 
a desire to use it because of its larger emphasis upon the 
European background, and also because of the contacts which 
it made with the geography. The course planned for the 
seventh grade represented a combination of history and 
geography. No special textbook was used for the geography. 
One social studies period a week was used for the considera- 
tion of current events, leaving four to be divided between 
the history and the geography. The history received the 
greater emphasis. 

An approach to the problem of measurement was made 
during the year preceding the experiment. The written work 
and the stenographic records of the oral work of the history 
classes were carefully studied as an aid in determining the 
form and content of suitable tests. 

Five objective tests 1 were constructed, one for each of the 
instructional units listed above. The first test covered nine 
of the fifteen lessons of Unit I and the fourth covered nine 
of the thirteen lessons of Unit IV. The other three covered 
all of the lessons of their respective units. Taking them in 
order, the tests measured the results of 9, 6, 6, 9, and 16 
lessons. The number of photoplays used in the five units 
were 2, i, i, 2, and 4. The fractional parts of the experi- 
mental teaching which were spent in the showing of the 
photoplays were therefore in the five units, 2/9, 1/6, 1/6, 
2/9, and 4/16. The average is one-fifth, but this is high 
since the showing of a photoplay occupied but forty-five of 
the fifty-five minutes in a period. The corrected average is 
approximately one-sixth. In other words, the five tests were 

1 See Appendix I for copies of the tests, and the testing instructions used. 



Measuring Enrichment 1 5 

designed to show how much a period of instruction was en- 
riched by using photoplays one-sixth or 17 per cent of the 
time. 

These five tests were designed to measure the ability of 
the pupil to deal intelligently with certain concepts, namely: 
(a) of time, (b) of place, (c) of person, and (d) of the in- 
teraction of events and of the interplay of forces. For the 
sake of economy this last has been designated as knowledge 
of relations other than time, or briefly as relational. The dis- 
tribution of emphasis may be readily seen in Table I. 

Table I 

Concepts Which the Various Sections of the Knowlton Tests Were 
Designed To Measure. 

Instruc- Sections of the 

tional tests designed to measure concepts of 

Test Unit Time Place Person Relation 

Pilgrims and Puritans I I, II IV, V, VI VIII, IX III, VII 

Life in the Colonies II II I, III, V IV 

Peter Stuyvesant III III VI I, II IV, V 

French and English IV I II III, V IV 

Revolution V I, II, III IV VI V, VII 

Total number of sections 89 78 

Many history teachers may think that no objective test is 
adequate to measure history teaching in a worth-while way. 
For instance, Krey, 2 describing the use of objective tests in 
the University of Minnesota, writes as follows: 

We have an uneasy feeling that in using these objective tests, most 
of the thinking has been done by the instructors, leaving to the stu- 
dent merely the task of supplying a few bits of information involved 

2 A. C. Krey, "What Does the New-Type Examination Measure in His- 
tory?" The Historical Outlook, XIX (April, 1928), No. 4, pp. 159-162. 



1 6 Description of Experiment 

in that thinking. Most of our staff are old fashioned enough to be- 
lieve that they have discharged their responsibility for the thinking in 
guiding the daily work of the course and that at examination time it 
is the student's turn to show how well he can think with the mate- 
rials of the course. In other words, they feel that they want to test 
the student's ability to "think," whatever that may mean. 

But Thorndike 3 found that he could tell which individuals 
possessed this "ability to think" about as well by finding out 
how much they had to think with as he could by requiring 
them to think while taking a test. We are not unaware of 
the uses of tests as teaching devices and would agree with 
Krey that the instructor should have done his thinking be- 
fore the time of testing, but we would maintain that the stu- 
dents as well as the instructor should have done most of 
their thinking before that time. If a test reliably furnishes 
true information of pupils' ability to think (and this may be 
answered statistically), then for strictly measuring purposes 
it is good, whether thinking is done while taking the test or 
not. 

However, even though our present purpose in testing is 
strictly to measure and not to teach while testing, the tests 
do require thinking on the part of the pupils tested, while 
they are taking the tests. 

Assuming that the tests are not inadequate because of their 
objective form, is the content of such a nature as to measure 
enrichment of a worth-while sort, or are the tests made up 
of questions of petty detail such as can only be answered by 
seeing the photoplays? It has already been stated that each 
test was designed to measure a full unit of instruction, and 
the knowledge called for was thought to be worth acquiring. 

3 E. L. Thorndike, The Measurement of Intelligence (New York : Teachers 
College Bureau of Publications, 1926). 



Measuring Enrichment 1 7 

The extent to which the knowledge called for was worth 
acquiring was checked as follows: Five competent judges 4 
were asked to read through the tests and to check those ques- 
tions calling for knowledge which in their judgment was not 
worth acquiring in the junior high school. There were 395 
questions 5 in the five tests. The number of these questions 
checked varied for the five judges from seven to thirty-one. 
Altogether, sixty-one different questions were checked. One 
was checked by all five judges ; nine were checked by three j 
four by two; and forty-seven by one only. In the opinion of 
three of the judges, 385, or 96 per cent, of the 395 ques- 
tions, call for worth-while knowledge. 

As a check on the extent to which the questions asked for 
a knowledge peculiar to the pictures, ten history teachers 
were given the tests. They were grade, junior, and senior 
high school teachers, selected entirely upon the basis of 
their willingness to take the tests and their not having seen 
the photoplays. Seventy-four per cent of the questions were 
answered correctly by six or more of the teachers. 

Only four questions, i per cent of the total number, 
called for a knowledge not possessed by a majority of the 
teachers tested, and were pronounced not worth acquiring by 
a majority of the judges. In other words, the criteria used 
revealed only a small percentage of "poor" test questions. 
They are distributed among the tests as shown in Table 
II. Results will be based upon the use of all of the 395 ques- 

4 i. Miss Mary Hardin, Social Studies Department, New Haven State Nor- 

mal School. 

2. Mr. Tyler Kepner, Supervisor of Social Studies, Brookline, Mass., 
Public Schools. 

3. Prof. Bessie L. Pierce, Department of History, University of Iowa. 

4. Mr. E. B. Smith, State Department of Education, Albany, N. Y. 

5. Prof. Fremont Worth, Peabody Teachers College, Nashville, Tenn. 

5 Each scorable item is called a question. 



1 8 Description of Experiment 

tions. They are only slightly affected by the presence of the 
"poor" questions, and that in a way to minimize the con- 
tribution of the photoplays, not to enhance it. That is, it will 
be shown in Section XIII that when the contribution of the 
photoplays is computed from the use of only the most fre- 
quently known and most worth-while questions, the con- 
tribution is higher than with all questions included. In view 
of this fact, the tests are to be criticized, if at all, for not 
measuring the full contribution of the photoplays to worth- 
while teaching. 

Table II 

Percentages of Test Items 

(a) Checked by One or More of the Judges as Not Worth Teach- 
ing* 

(b) Failed by Five or More of Ten Teachers, 

(c) Both Checked and Failed. 

Failed Both 

Checked as not by five or more checked 

Tests worth teaching of ten teachers and failed 

Pilgrims and Puritans 24 29 8 

Life in the Colonies 6 18 2 

Peter Stuyvesant 19 31 5 

French and English 7 30 6 

Revolution 20 23 9 

The reliability of the judgments was not computed be- 
cause so few items were checked by the five judges, but it 
was computed for the percentages of teachers answering an 
item correctly. The ten teachers were divided into two 
groups of five each. The number of one group answering an 
item correctly was correlated with the number in the other 
group answering the same item correctly. The correlation 
was .83. This means a reliability of .91 for the measures ob- 



Measuring Enrichment 1 9 

tained from all ten teachers, and establishes confidence in 
the criterion used. 

Table III 

Reliability Coefficients for Some of the Measures Obtained with the 
Knowlton Tests. 

Half <with half For the whole test 

Initial score on 

Pilgrims and Puritans .32 .49 

Life in the Colonies .42 .59 

Peter Stuyvesant .26 .41 

French and English .16 .28 

Revolution .32 .49 

All tests combined .85 .92 



Gain on 






Pilgrims and Puritans 


.20 


33 


Life in the Colonies 


.18 


.31 


Peter Stuyvesant 


.19 


.32 


French and English 


.22 


.36 


Revolution 


30 


.46 



All tests combined .57 .73 



Retention of 






Time knowledge 


.18 


31 


Place knowledge 


.48 


.65 


Person knowledge 


.06 


.11 


Relation knowledge 


.22 


.36 



All tests combined .63 .77 

Reliability coefficients for some of the measures obtained 
by the use of the tests are given in Table III. The reliabili- 
ties of the second and third testing were probably higher. 



2O Description of Experiment 

The pupils knew more and guesswork played a smaller part 
in their answering. The tests had to be given without pre- 
liminary use and improvement, but they proved to be well 
adapted to the seventh grade, as shown by the fact that 
there were no undistributed scores on either testing. They 
gave total measures of learning and of retention which were 
more than sufficiently reliable for group comparison. 

Testing was done before and after each instructional unit, 
instead of before and after the whole experimental period, 
for two reasons: first, to permit an evaluation of the result in 
terms of the consistency in the five measurements in case the 
difference was not statistically reliable j and second, which 
was more important, to measure learning apart from for- 
getting. 

The effect of the photoplays upon forgetting or retention 
was measured by repeating all five of the Knowlton Tests 
during the first few days of school in September, 1928. 

The same tests were used for all three testings. Practice 
effect was not determined, because all uses of the test scores 
involved comparisons of gains or retentions to which prac- 
tice effect may be assumed to have contributed equally. 
Teachers were not shown the tests until after they were used 
for the second testing, in order to prevent the teachers from 
teaching for the tests. 



SECTION IV 

The Measurement of Standardized Progress the 

Van Wagenen American History Information 

Scale C-2. 

FOR two reasons, it seemed advisable to measure the prog- 
ress made during the experiment with a standardized test: 
first, to determine whether or not "normal" progress was 
made during the experimental period j and, second, to deter- 
mine whether or not the photoplays' contribution, if found, 
was made at the expense of "normal" progress. 

A Van Wagenen Scale was used because of its high rat- 
ing 1 and reliability. The P.E. of a scale score, according to 
the manual of directions, is 2.1 points or about one-third of 
a normal year's progress. 

Progress was determined by using the same scale before 
the experimental teaching began and again at the end of the 
year. Practice effect was determined by giving the test on 
successive days to a class of thirty-five pupils. On the second 
day, the following announcement was made: 

"This is the same test you took yesterday. You did well 
yesterday, but pupils can nearly always make higher scores 
by taking a test the second time, so we are giving the test 
again to see how much better you do today than you did 
yesterday. Try to answer each question." 

The average scores were as follows: on the first day, 79.4, 
on the second day, 80.3. The practice effect for this group 
was therefore approximately one point. 

1 T. L. Kelley, The Interpretation of Educational Measurements (Yonkers, 
N. Y.: World Book Co., 1927), p. 266. 



22 Description of Experiment 

The correlation between scores on the successive days was 
+.88. 

It was originally planned to start the experiment earlier 
with a smaller number of sections. When in December it was 
found possible to include the whole grade, some testing had 
been done in such a way as to render some of the sections 
useless so far as comparisons with the Van Wagenen Scale 
were concerned. Consequently but nine of the fifteen sections 
were tested in addition to the section in which practice effect 
was determined. B, E, f, j, K, and 1 were tested on Decem- 
ber 5, 1927, D, i, and N on January 26, 1928, and all nine 
again on June 18, 1928. 



SECTION V 

The Measurement of Interest. 

To discover any evidences of interest in the form of pupil 
participations attributable to the use of the photoplays, eight 
classes were selected for close observation over the period 
covered by the experiment. These were A, f, and K, taught 
by Teacher No. 15 B and 1, by Teacher No. 25 and E, j, 
and O, by Teacher No. 5. It will be noted that f, j, and 1 are 
film divisions. These eight were selected to fit the conven- 
ience of the observers. 

Three trained observers, including one of the writers, 
made a series of records of pupil participation in these 
classes. The seating plan of the class was used as a record 
blank as shown in Fig. I. In the left margin the observer re- 
corded the number of hands raised in answer to the questions 
asked by the teacher, and in the right margin he recorded the 
number raised when the showing of hands indicated a desire 
on the part of the pupils to follow up still further the line 
taken by the questioning. These records were designated, 
respectively, on the form as "Direct Question" and "Fur- 
ther Interest." Every time a pupil answered a question an R 
was placed in the square corresponding to his seat. Careful 
note was also made of the questions asked by individual 
pupils and these were indicated in the squares by A's. Re- 
marks voluntarily contributed, whether pertinent to the par- 
ticular topic under consideration or resulting from an interest 
in what was being done in the group, were indicated by 
either V or a C. C was used if the remark represented a con- 
tribution from outside the classroom, as a clipping, or some 
reference to a book in history which the pupil had read and 



Description of Experiment 



Figure I. 



Direct 
Question 

8 

7 
8 

4 
9 

12 

3 
5 
8 

5 
8 

9 

7 

7 

4 
10 
10 

2 

3 

10 

9 
6 

8 

6 

8 

3 

7 

9 

No. = 28 

Tot. = 195 

Av. = 7.0 



Date 




. Observe] 


f 




Teacher 




















RR 


R 


R 


R 


RR 


V 




CCC 




W 


CC 










AA 










RR 


Absent 




R 


R 


VV 






W 


W 


AA 








A 




V 


RR 

V 


R 
V 


RRR 
VVW 










CCC 




R 
VVV 


R 
f^ 
\~f 


RR 




R 
V 




C 


R 
V 


R 
V 


RR 


R 


V 


C 


R 




VW 










C 










A 








R 


R 


R 




R 






C 




V 






AA 







Further 

Interest 

3 

2 

5 

4 
8 

5 
4 
4 
5 

2 

4 

2 

3 
3 
3 
4 
3 

2 
I 
2 
2 
6 
2 

4 
3 

2 

4 

2 

4 
4 

3 

No. = 31 
Tot. = 105 
Av. = 3.4 



V=2 7 

C=i 3 

A= 8 



P. P. = 



Measuring Interest 25 

which he wished to mention, or some experience which he 
had had, as visiting some historic site, or the recounting of 
something which a member of his family had told him. 
Other voluntary remarks, i.e., those not reflecting outside 
interest, were recorded with a V. Every pupil remark was 
called an R, V, C, or A so that the sum of the R's, V's, C's, 
and A's equaled the number of pupil participations. 

In getting measures of pupil participation in classroom 
discussion, the observers counted the number of pupils rais- 
ing their hands to answer the teacher's question until the 
rank of eight sections in this respect by half of their records 
agreed with the rank by the other half except for a reversal 
in the seventh and eighth positions. This means a coefficient 
of reliability (by the rank difference method) of .99 for 
their total measures. By the same method, the reliability of 
class measures of hand showings which were not directly 
teacher-initiated was .94. These measures being adequate for 
the comparison of single sections are still more so for several 
sections combined. 

Pupil scores for number of participations, (a) when called 
on, (b) when permitted to take part, (c) to contribute from 
outside sources, and (d) to ask questions, were obtained with 
reliabilities on the whole measures of .85, .95, .63, and .80, 
respectively. The lowest of these coefficients is quite high 
enough for the purposes of group comparison. 

To see whether the pupils who were shown the photo- 
plays enjoyed history more than the other pupils did, all 
were asked to rank their subjects of study in the order of 
their preference. The principal secured the ranking in June. 
In September the home-room teachers asked for the same 
information as a check on reliability. The form used is shown 
in Fig. II. 



26 Description of Experiment 

The reliability or consistency with which history was 
ranked among the other subjects was found by plotting the 
rank assigned history by a given pupil in June against the 
rank assigned history by the same pupil in September. The 
correlation between ranks is +.57, and the predicted relia- 
bility coefficient for the combined ranks is +.73. 

Figure II. 

Name. . . Division. . 



These are seven of the subjects you are studying. 
ENGLISH 

CURRENT EVENTS 
MATHEMATICS 
HISTORY 
MUSIC 

PENMANSHIP 
PHYSICAL TRAINING 

Pick out the one you like best and write it below on line I. Then pick 
out the one you like next best and write it on line 2, and so on down the 
list. No. 7 will be the one you like least, and No. 6 next to the least. 



The school librarian was asked to keep a record of the 
reading of history by the seventh grade pupils during their 
library periods (books were not taken out). The record was 
kept conscientiously, but there were not enough entries to 
permit a computation of reliability. 

When it was found that a reliable measure was not forth- 



Measuring Interest 27 

coming from the librarian's record, the English teachers 
were asked to get from all seventh grade sections a list of 
reading done during the half year of the experiment. The 
length of these lists reflected the different influences of the 
English teachers and unfortunately these unequal influences 
affected the control and experimental groups unequally. 

However, a measure of voluntary reading was obtained in 
the classrooms under carefully controlled conditions. Each 
of the five units of instruction was followed by a twenty-five- 
minute reading period. Eight readings of from 350 to 400 
words each, were prepared in mimeographed form for each 
unit. These were brought together from a variety of sources. 1 
They either represented information which was not con- 
veyed by the film or by the textbook or which set forth the 
facts in a somewhat different fashion from that with which 
the pupils were already familiar. Every effort was made not 
to duplicate ground already covered and to select passages 
which could be organized as distinct reading units more or 
less complete in themselves. In some cases the extracts were 
carefully edited to avoid some of the language difficulties 
involved. Each reading selection was followed by four ques- 
tions which could be answered by a word or two, and which 
would serve to reveal more or less clearly the fact that the 
selection had, or had not, been carefully read. 

The teacher casually announced that some supplementary 
history reading material had been provided, but that it would 
not count toward school marks and that there was no reason 
for reading it unless pupils wanted to. Pupils had been told 
the day before that if they wished to bring in any work to do 
or any books to read they were free to do so. In other words, 

1 See Appendix II for the complete set of readings used, and the list of 
sources from which they were taken. 



2 8 Description of Experiment 

the attempt was made to create a situation in which the selec- 
tion of these readings would be on a strictly voluntary basis. 
Every effort was made to remove the exercise from the cate- 
gory of something done to please the teacher. Pupils read a 
paper, signed their names, with the material before them 
answered four easy questions on what they had read, re- 
turned the paper, and took another if they wished. They 
were credited with reading those papers on which two or 
more of the answers were correct. This method of scoring 
need not have been used, however, for there were very few 
papers with less than two correct answers on them. 

The incentive was not strong enough to give a normal dis- 
tribution of scores. There was a disproportionate number of 
low scores. The material was ample, however, for no pupil 
read all that was provided. The scores therefore afforded a 
satisfactory comparison of groups, for each group read with- 
out limitation of material ; the only limitation was that of 
inclination. That inclination was subject, of course, to the 
varying demands of other school subjects. The comparison, 
however, of six sections with six sections on five occasions 
tends to minimize such uncontrollable factors. 

Altogether the readings represented about sixteen thou- 
sand words or the equivalent of a book of forty pages. The 
reliability coefficient for the number of pages read per pupil 
is .73. 



SECTION VI 

Calendar. 

THE character and order of the principal teaching and test- 
ing events in the period of the experiment were as follows: 

Mon., Dec. 5. Van Wagenen Information Scale C 2 to sections 
B, E, f, j, K, and 1. 

Thurs., Jan. 26. Van Wagenen Information Scale C 2 to sec- 
tions D, i, and N. 

Unit I: Settlement 16001660; the English move westward. 
Tues., Jan. 31. Test One 1 (two lessons). 2 
Mon., Feb. 6. Film, The Pilgrims (three lessons). 
Tues., Feb. 14. Film, The Puritans (two lessons). 
Mon., Feb. 20. Test One repeated. 
Tues., Feb. 21. Voluntary reading. 

Unit II: Life in Europe vs. life in America. 
Tues., Mar. 6. Test Two (two lessons). 
Mon., Mar. 12. Film, Jamestown (three lessons). 
Mon., Mar. 19. Test Two repeated. 
Tues., Mar. 20. Voluntary reading. 

Unit III : England extends her domain and ousts the Dutch. 
Wed., Mar. 21. Test Three (five lessons). 
Mon., Apr. 2. Film, Peter Stuyvesant. 
Tues., Apr. 3. Test Three repeated. 
Wed., Apr. 4. Voluntary reading. 

1 Test One covered all of the content of Unit I, Test Two covered all of 
the content of Unit II, etc. 

2 The parentheses should be read as follows : Between the giving of Test 
One on Tues., Jan. 31, and the showing of the Pilgrims on Mon., Feb. 6, two 
days were devoted to the teaching of Unit I; between the showing of the 
Pilgrims and the showing of the Puritans three days were devoted to further 
teaching of Unit I, etc. Days not accounted for were Fridays, devoted to a 
discussion of Current Events, or holidays. 



30 Description of Experiment 

Unit IV: Ambitious kings and conflict. 
Mon., Apr. 23. Test Four (three lessons). 
Mon., Apr. 30. Film, The Gateway to the West (three les- 
sons). 

Mon., May 7. Film, Wolfe and Montcalm (one lesson). 
Wed., May 9. Test Four repeated. 
Thurs., May 10. Voluntary reading. 

Unit V : The American Revolution. 

Mon., May 14. Test Five (three lessons). 

Mon., May 21. Film, The Eve of the Revolution (three les- 
sons). 

Tues., May 29. Film, The Declaration of Independence (two 
lessons). 

Mon., June 4. Film, Yorktown (three lessons). 

Mon., June n. Film, Vincennes (one lesson). 

Wed., June 13. Test Five repeated. 

Thurs., June 14. Voluntary reading. 

Mon., June 18. Van Wagenen Information Scale C 2 to the nine 

sections listed above. 

Fri., Sept. 7. Tests One and Two repeated for retention. 
Mon., Sept. 10. Tests Three to Five repeated for retention. 



SECTION VII 

Experimental Control. 

THE experiment was conducted under unusually good ex- 
perimental conditions. Since all study was directed and su- 
pervised in the classroom, the time spent in study was within 
the teacher's control. The principal of the school was more 
than cooperative. He contributed to the direction of the ex- 
periment in an interested and intelligent manner. His atti- 
tude was reflected in that of his staff, both teaching and cleri- 
cal. Experimental work had been conducted in the school 
before and the teachers knew the necessity for control. They 
exercised it carefully and conscientiously. 

In the case of two teachers, the extent to which they were 
consistent in their teaching from section to section was meas- 
ured. Alongside of each of the 395 questions in the test, 
record was made of the number of pupils who learned to 
answer it correctly in the course of the experimental instruc- 
tion. This is a good measure of the extent to which the same 
things were taught in different sections. Control sections D 
and N were taught by one teacher, and control sections E 
and O were taught by another teacher. The measures for D 
and O and for E and N were combined. The coefficient 
of correlation between the combined measures is .76 and for 
all six teachers it may be estimated to be .91. If many pupils 
learned to answer a certain question in one section, then 
many learned it in the other control section taught by the 
same teacher. From the number of pupils in one section who 
learned to answer a certain question there could be predicted, 
with a probable error of two pupils, the number who would 



3 2 Description of Experiment 

learn to answer the same question in another section taught 
by the same teacher. 

Care was exercised to control all factors so that only the 
experimental factor should differentiate the work in the ex- 
perimental from that in the control group. With the excep- 
tion of the exercises involved in that factor, whatever was 
done in one section was done in all sections taught by the 
same teacher. One observer, for instance, did all the observ- 
ing in the sections taught by the same teacher, and if an ob- 
server was present in one of a teacher's sections he was pres- 
ent in the others also. On those occasions when history time 
was lost in one section, as an offset, an equal amount of time 
was used for other purposes in the other sections taught by 
that teacher. No particular effort was made to keep condi- 
tions constant from one teacher to another, for all compari- 
sons involve control and experimental groups upon which 
each teacher had an equal influence. The course of study pur- 
sued by the experimental pupils differed from that of the 
control pupils in only one respect, viz., that it included the 
use of the photoplay in addition to the textbooks and such 
other classroom equipment as was common to all seventh 
grade social studies classes. 

On the day the experimental pupils saw a photoplay the 
control pupils were supplied with supplementary pages em- 
bodying the information which was found in the photoplay, 
but which was not to be found in either Gordy or Beard and 
Bagley. These pages followed rather closely the organiza- 
tion of the material as found in Gordy and page references 
were made to the same topics in that text. These supplemen- 
tary pages were not left in the hands of the pupils from one 
period to the next, which was in accord with the practice of 



Control 3 3 

the school, the teacher acting as custodian of the textbooks 
and distributing them as they were needed. All the work was 
done in the classroom. There were no home assignments, 
and books were not taken from the room. 

The following selections were used in connection with the 
teaching of the Pilgrims and the Puritans. 1 The control 
group used this information in addition to the information 
to be found in their textbooks, while the experimental group 
was seeing the two films. 

The Pilgrims and Puritans in Massachusetts and 
Connecticut. 

GORDY, page 53 2 

James I Tries To Make the Puritans and Separatists Conform to 
the Church of England , page 54. 

WILLIAM BREWSTER, the able leader of the pious little flock 
of Scrooby Separatists, said, "Pomp and ritual and earthly 
show are not needed to worship him who was born in a stable the 
simple book of His Word is the only test of religious truth." 

The Separatists used to hold their meetings in Brewster's home 
but, inspired by the action of Church and State, their neighbors tried 
to break up these meetings. One of the Separatists was an impetuous 
youth named William Bradford who resented this treatment. The 
action of the neighbors enraged him, and on one occasion when the 
disturbance was so great that the High Sheriff of Nottingham was 
drawn to the scene, Bradford said to him, "Why do you shake the 
stave of the law in the face of peaceable folk? It is the graceless 
blasphemers who interfere with us that you should rebuke." The 
Sheriff warned the Separatists that they must conform to the rules 
of the Church or suffer the consequences, and in the bitter year that 

1 For supplementary material used in connection with the other units see 
Appendix III. 

2 Page references are in each case to Gordy's discussion of the topics which 
this material supplements. 



34 Description of Experiment 

followed, persecution by both Church and State bore heavily upon 
the little group at Scrooby. 

The Pilgrims Sail to America Where They Can Have a Free Gov- 
ernment and Their Own Religion, page 54. 

A meeting was held in the Manor House at Scrooby, and plans 
were made for escaping to Holland. The dangers and difficulties 
that lay ahead of them proved too much for a few of their number 
and, at Brewster's suggestion, they withdrew from the meeting. 

During 1607-8 the Scrooby Separatists escaped to Holland, 
where at last were gathered more than one hundred men, women, 
and children. 

The Hardship of the Voyage and Winter Test Their Endurance, 
page 55- 

The May flower y only eighty-six feet long, carried 102 passengers 
besides its crew. 

During the first winter, it was necessary to level all the graves 
immediately, so that the watchful Indians might not learn how pes- 
tilence was weakening the colony. 

By spring only six boys and twenty men were left who were able 
to bear arms. 

The crew of the Mayflower, who at first had laughed and jeered 
at the Pilgrims, were stricken with pestilence, and were so im- 
pressed with the kind care given them that they did not want to 
leave the Pilgrims behind in such a bleak country. In spite of the 
pleadings of Captain Christopher Jones and the crew, none of the 
Pilgrims went back when the Mayflower sailed in the spring. 

Friendly Relations Are Established with the Indians, page 57. 

Samoset, an Indian who had met Englishmen before, visited the 
colony asking for food and clothing. The kindly Pilgrims fed him 
and gave him a cloak. Miles Standish showed him the cannon on 
the hill and told him to tell his people about it, but the Pilgrims 
thought he would remember the lesson of love longer than he would 
remember the lesson of fear. 




Captain Miles Standish informs Captain Jones of the Mayflower 

that the Pilgrims intend to remain in Plymouth, despite the 

harrowing experiences of the first winter. 

(From "The Pilgrims," one of The Chronicles of America Phot-onlays) 



Control 3 5 

The Pilgrims and Puritans in Massachusetts and 
Connecticut. 

GORDY, page 53 
About i y ooo Puritans y Led by Winthroj>y Sail for America, page 59. 

Ar Merrymount, near Charlestown, a lawless trading post flour- 
ished. Thomas Morton was the master of Merrymount. The 
Puritans decided to abolish the settlement because they did not ap- 
prove of Morton's methods of getting the Indians drunk and cheat- 
ing them in trade. Morton was captured and banished to England. 

The Puritans feared that Morton might make trouble for them 
in England. Sir Richard Saltonstall, Governor Winthrop's best 
friend, returned to England and promised to do what he could for 
the Puritan cause. 

In England, the King appointed a Commission to investigate the 
Puritan Charter. The Puritans had many bitter enemies in England. 
One of them was Sir Ferdinando Gorges, the founder of Maine. 
The Charter of the Puritans was the only thing that kept him from 
becoming governor-general of all New England, and he tried to 
prove that his claim to the land preceded that of the Puritans. Arch- 
bishop Laud/ who presided over the Commission, was also a bitter 
enemy of the Puritans. He decided that the Puritans had violated 
the conditions of their Charter, and demanded its immediate sur- 
render. The Puritans refused to give it up and expected that Eng- 
land would use force to secure it but before this could be done, con- 
ditions at home grew so serious that England was not able to send 
money, ships, or soldiers to America to secure the Charter. 

Harry Vane, the son of a powerful nobleman in England, came 
over to the colony and so won the respect of the people that they 
elected him governor to succeed Winthrop. However, the people 
were not satisfied with his rule, principally because he became in- 
terested in the religious teachings of Anne Hutchinson, one of the 
dissenters in the colony. Consequently, at the next election, Win- 
throp was again elected governor. Soon after this, Vane returned to 
England. 



36 Description of Experiment 

Roger Williams, Driven from Massachusetts, Establishes Religious 
Freedom in Rhode Island, page 63. 

The Puritan magistrates decided to drive Williams from the 
colony. Governor Winthrop was a good friend of Roger Williams, 
and when he heard of this plan, he sent a letter to Williams, warn- 
ing him. 

The first of these selections, it will be noted, contains two 
bits of quoted conversation. 

Brewster comments: "Pomp and ritual and earthly show 
are not needed to worship him who was born in a stable 
the simple book of His Word is the only test of religious 
truth." Young Bradford retorts to the Sheriff, "Why do you 
shake the stave of the law in the face of peaceable folk? It is 
the graceless blasphemers who interfere with us that you 
should rebuke." The quotations are taken from the photo- 
play. On account of their form, quite foreign to the usual 
historical text, such dramatic statements may be assumed to 
give to the control group a certain element of the photoplay. 
On this account it might be thought that they should not be 
included. In all such cases of doubt, however, as to what 
ought to be included and placed in the hands of the control 
group, the decision was in favor of including the doubtful 
material. 

A copy of the following statement was given to each of 
the cooperating teachers: 

To the Teachers Who are Taking Part in the Photoplay 
Experiment: 

THE aim of the experiment is to get precise knowledge as to 
the value of the films as a teaching device. Our success de- 
pends in a large measure upon the extent to which your sections get 
the same treatment from now to the end of the experiment. Prob- 




Thomas Morton, appearing before Archbishop Laud and the 
Commission, prefers charges against the Puritans. 

(From "The Puritans," one of The CJironicles of America Photoplays} 



Control 37 

ably it will be better for you not to know what our tests cover so 
that you will not unconsciously shape your teaching to meet the 
tests. You can't help the fact that the same plan never works out in 
two sections in exactly the same way, but you can present the same 
facts with the same emphasis and use the same methods with the ex- 
ception that in one section you use the films and in the other you do 
not. We hope you will plan to use the films as intelligently as you 
use the texts and other teaching devices. We will gladly show the 
films to you before you use them in the class, so that you may be pre- 
pared to use them to greater advantage. You will be supplied for 
each film with a list of the facts contained therein so that you may 
be sure to teach the same facts in both sections. 

We shall undertake to compare your sections also as to the interest 
which they show. One way in which we shall attempt to do this is 
by providing mimeographed reading selections to be read or not by 
pupils just as they please, during twenty-five minutes set aside for 
the purpose. The day before this is done you should make this an- 
nouncement: "We shall use only twenty-five minutes of tomorrow's 
period for our history lesson so bring with you some work you want 
to do or a book to read for the rest of the period." 

The next day, when the time comes, announce in a casual man- 
ner, "Professor Knowlton has provided you with several copies of 

articles on , , etc. (Read the eight titles.) He is 

willing that you should read as many as you care to during the next 
twenty-five minutes, provided you take the test which comes at the 
end of each one. This isn't a part of your history lesson and gives 
no extra credit. There is no reason for reading them unless you 
want to." 

This attempt to compare sections will prove worthless if every 
pupil makes use of this supplementary reading material, so you can 
see why it is advisable to make this announcement in a casual man- 
ner. We are hoping that the pupils will not read them because they 
think you or anyone else wants them to. 

Reading material will be provided in like manner after each 
teaching unit. Many pupils will read them at first for the novelty, 
but as the experiment gets under way we shall probably find that the 
plan will furnish a worth-while basis of comparison. It is important 



3 8 Description of Experiment 

to make the announcement in the same way in both or all three of 
your classes. 

The grouping of the pupils into homogeneous ability sec- 
tions, all different, afforded a good opportunity to evaluate 
the photoplays in terms of the ability handicaps which they 
enabled the experimental group to overcome. On the other 
hand, this plan of homogeneous grouping made it necessary 
to match control and experimental groups as a whole, with- 
out matching within each teacher's influence. This method is 
inferior to matching by individuals, other things being equal. 

The objection to the method of matching used lies in the 
possibility of a teacher being a better bright section teacher 
than she is a dull section teacher, or vice versa. The mental 
ages of four control sections taught by two of the teachers are 
such as to permit a determination of the extent to which that 
factor invalidates comparison in the case of these two teachers. 
D and N are bright and dull sections taught by one teacher j 
E and O are bright and dull sections taught by another 
teacher. The average of 300 measures of gain for sections D 
and O is 1 1.8 .5. The average of 297 measures for sections 
E and N is 11.2^.5. The difference is .6.J. Being less 
than its probable error, the difference is a statistically insig- 
nificant one. But suppose it does reflect a tendency, say, for 
the teacher of D and N to do relatively better work in the 
brighter section. There seems to be no reason for doubting 
that such differences in gains between groups supposedly 
alike would be minimized in a comparison of groups taught 
by six teachers instead of two. Even if there were a prepon- 
derant tendency for the six teachers to be better teachers of 
high-ability sections than of low, or a reverse tendency, the 
difference shown above would still be less in our compari- 
sons of the whole group, for the experimental sections were 



Control 39 

selected so as to permit the control group to be made up in 
three cases of higher-ability sections and in three cases of 
lower-ability sections. 

A still more convincing test was made of the method of 
group matching used. Seventy-four pupils in the experimen- 
tal group were paired with seventy-four pupils in the con- 
trol group. In the case of each pair the mental age was equal 
and both pupils were taught by the same teacher. The com- 
parison showed a slightly larger experimental group excess 
than was found in the main comparison. 

For all comparisons the experimental group was so se- 
lected as to be slightly less able than the control group. In 
the experimental group selected, the average mental age was 
lower and the group included a smaller percentage of boys. 
This makes for some error in the results but gives greater 
certainty as to their nature. It was considered necessary to 
consider the proportionality of sexes because Vostrovsky, 3 
Eaton, 4 and others have found evidence of boys reading 
more history than is read by girls, and Van Wagenen 5 re- 
ports higher norms for boys. In view of these facts, boys may 
be expected to learn more history, other things being equal. 
In the groups used for our comparisons, the percentages of 
boys were in the three major comparisons: of control group, 

48 per cent boys, of experimental group, 465 of control 
group, 48, and of experimental group, 475 of control group, 

49 and of experimental group, 40. 

3 Clara Vostrovsky, "A Study of Children's Tastes in Reading," Pedagogical 
Seminary, VI, 523-535. 

4 H. Eaton, "What High School Pupils Like To Read," Education, XLIII, 
204209. 

6 M. J. Van Wagenen, "Van Wagenen American History Scales" (revised 
edition), Manual of Directions. Teachers College Bulletin, i5th series, No. 4, 
Oct. 20, 1923. Teachers College, New York City. 



40 Description of Experiment 

The slight inequality between control and experimental 
groups secured on the basis of mental age and sex was con- 
firmed by the yearly school marks in English and mathe- 
matics. These marks were two-thirds class marks and one- 
third test, and based upon the work done during the year of 
the experiment. The passing mark was 60. The experimental 
group average was 71 and the control group average was 75. 



PART II 

Results. 

SECTION VIII 

Comparison of the Gains Made by Experimental and 
Control Groups on the Knowlton Tests. 

THE gains made by each section on each of the five 
tests are shown in Table IV. Under teachers I and 
5 the experimental sections made outstanding 
gains, gaining consistently more than did the higher-ability 
control sections taught by the same teachers. In the other ex- 
perimental sections, the contribution of the photoplay was 
clearly not of this magnitude. 

A comparison of the sum of the gains for all the experi- 
mental sections, f, h, i, j, 1, and m, and the sum of such gains 
for all of the control sections, A, B, C, D, E, G, K, N, and 
O, favors the experimental group for three tests out of five, 
and by a very small difference, on the five tests together. 
There are, however, three objections to this comparison. The 
first objection is, that for teachers I, 4, and 5 there are two 
control sections to one experimental section, while for teach- 
ers 2, 3, and 6 this is not the case. This condition does not 
keep the teacher element constant. The second objection is, 
that the groups are not equal in ability. The control group 
median Mental Age exceeds the experimental group median 
by i year and 8 months. The groups need to be more nearly 
equal to permit precise determination of the experimental 
factor. The third is, that the initial score of the experimental 
group is in each case lower than that for the control group. 



42 Results of Experiment 

This fact discounts the excess gain of the experimental group 
because of the correlations 1 of -.22, -.29, -.28, -.26, and 
.36 between the initial scores and the gains made on the 
different tests. 

Table IV 

Gains Made by Each Section on Each of the Five Knowlton Tests. 







Pilgrims 
and 


Life 
in the 


Peter 
Stuy- 


French 
and 
English 






Teacher 


Section 


Puritans 


Colonies 


vesant 


Struggle Revolution Totals 


I 


A 


10.8 


3-i 


18.1 


17.0 


22.2 


71.2 


2 


B 


16.1 


3-7 


6-5 


8.2 


144 


48.9 


3 


C 


16.6 


5-6 


6.1 


10.3 


14.4 


53.0 


4 


D 


I 8.2 


5-5 


12.5 


14.3 


21.8 


72-3 


5 


E 


14.4 


2.8 


II. 2 


14.7 


20.O 


63.1 


i 


f 


13-3 


7.2 


I8. 4 


17.3 


22.9 


79.1 


6 


G 


14.0 


5.8 


II.O 


9.8 


17-3 


57-9 


3 


h 


II.O 


2.1 


9 .6 


4.5 


7.0 


34-2 


4 


i 


13.5 


3-9 


8.0 


8.7 


I 7 .6 


5L7 


5 


j 


24.6 


16.6 


23.6 


16.3 


34-2 


H5.3 


i 


K 


II. I 


6.4 


H.3 


12.8 


1 8.0 


62.6 


2 


1 


10.7 


5-9 


4.9 


5.3 


n.8 


38.6 


6 


m 


7.9 


3-9 


3-o 


4.6 


10.9 


30.3 


4 


N 


14.2 


2.1 


9-3 


8.1 


13.6 


47.3 


5 


O 


11.5 


3-0 


8.2 


9.1 


11.5 


43-3 



Leaving sections A, D, and E out of the control group 
meets the first objection and partially reduces the differences 
in Mental Age and in initial score. In the resulting control 
group three sections are of higher ability than the corres- 
ponding experimental section and three are lower. But the 
B-C-G-K-N-O combination still exceeds the f-h-i-j-1-m 
group in ability. Leaving out B and 1 (the pair taught by the 
same teacher and differing most in Mental Age) meets the 
three objections fairly well. The facts for the resulting con- 

1 Computed on the nine control sections only, to free the result from the ex- 
perimental factor. 



Enrichment 43 

trol and experimental groups, C-G-K-N-O and f-h-i-j-m 
are shown in Table V. Even though the differences in the 
groups on the separate tests handicap the experimental group 
more than they favor it, the gains are all in its favor. On the 
whole, a small difference in Mental Age handicapped the ex- 
perimental group and a small difference in initial score fa- 
vored it. 

Table V 

Comparison of Gams on the Separate Knowlton Tests. 

(In the column "Differences in the group" differences are called when 
they handicap the experimental group, and -f- when they favor it.) 

Differences 
C-G-K-N-O f-h-i-j-m in grou-p in gain 



Mental Age 


Md. in mos. 


137 


134 3 




N. 


176 


170 


"Pilgrims 


Av. initial 


32.8 


33-6 -.8 


and Puri- 


Av. gain 


13-5 


13-9 + -4 


tans" Test 


N. 


H7 


H5 


"Life in the 


Av. initial 


56.0 


55-9 +! 


Colonies" 


Av. gain 


4-7 


6.7 +2.0 


Test 


N, 


155 


147 


"Peter 


Av. initial 


26.9 


26.7 .2 


Stuyvesant" 


Av. gain 


9-7 


12.7 +3.0 


Test 


N. 


159 


159 


"French and 


Av. initial 


23.1 


23-3 .2 


English Strug- 


Av. gain 


I O.I 


10.5 + .4 


gle" Test 


N. 


159 


152 


"Revolution" 


Av. initial 


23-5 


22.9 +.6 


Test 


Av. gain 


15.1 


18.9 +3.8 




N. 


159 


158 


All Tests 


Av. initial 


32.3 


32.2 +.1 




Av. gain 


IO.6.2 


12.6:+:. 3 +2.o-3 




No. of 








measurements 


77Q 


761 



(Md. = median 
Av. "= average 
N. = number of cases) 



44 Results of Experiment 

As a check on the comparisons of Table V a comparison 
was made of the gains on the five tests combined. In this 
comparison it was not necessary to consider initial score, as 
the correlation between combined initial scores and combined 
gains is +.02 .05. Sections B and 1 were left in their re- 
spective groups in this comparison so that the result would be 
more fully representative, and the groups were made more 
nearly equal in mental age as described below. 

The smallest number of pupils in any section to take all 
tests was 17, so all sections were reduced to 17 in order to 
equalize the groups and each teacher's contribution (in pu- 
pils) to the whole group. The cases omitted were those which 
contributed most toward a reduction of the ability differences 
between the experimental and control groups, namely those 
with highest Mental and Educational Ages in the control 
sections and those with the lowest ones in the experimental 
sections. The groups are now composed of 6 sections of 17 
pupils each. Each of the 6 teachers taught 17 of the 102 
control pupils and 17 of the 102 experimental pupils. 

The average intelligence test scores and average gains are 
shown in Table VI. 

Table VI 

Comparison of Combined Knowlton Test Gains. 

M.A. E.A. 
Nature of group in mos. in mos. I.Q. E.Q. Gain 

Control 1 7 pupils from 

each of sections 

B-C-G-K-N-O 139.3 H54 99-3 101.8 52.5=1=1.6 
Experi- 1 7 pupils from 
mental each of sections 

f-h-i-j-1-m 133-5 142.2 96.3 101.8 6o.8=t2.5 



Differences 5.8 3.2 3.0 O +8.33.l 



Enrichment 



45 



The 8.3 difference in gain, a 16 per cent excess over the con- 
trol gain, is a minimum statement of the result of the experi- 
ment, for it should be noted that the experimental group 
made this greater gain in spite of a handicap of 5.8 months 
of Mental Age, 3.2 months of Educational Age, and 3 points 
of Intelligence Quotient. 

Table VII 

The Effect of Reductions of Differences In Mental Age y Educa- 
tional Age, Intelligence Quotient, and Educational 
Quotient upon Differences in Gains. 



Experimental Group Handicaps 

Diff. Diff. 

inM.A. inE.A. Diff. Diff. 

Groups compared in mos. in mos. in I.Q. in E.Q. 

Control of 132 pupils 

Experimental of 1 29 pupils 11.9 9.1 8.3 6.3 

Control of 102 pupils 

Experimental of 1 02 pupils 5.8 3.2 3.0 O 



Excess 

experimental 
group gain 

4.9 

8.3 



Reductions of handicaps 6.1 5.9 5.3 



6-3 34 

Increase effected 



If the 5.8 months mental age handicap were reduced to 
o, the other three differences would favor the experimental 
group. This may be taken as a condition for a maximum rep- 
resentation of the excess gain of the experimental group, 
corresponding to the facts of Table VI as a minimum. As a- 
basis for estimating this maximum it has been shown in Table 
VII to what extent reductions in handicaps increased the ex- 
cess gain made by the experimental group. Assuming that 
further reduction would affect the differences in gain in pro- 
portion to the reduction shown in Table VII, the elimination 
of the remaining handicap of 5.8 months of Mental Age 
would increase the experimental group's excess by 5.8/6.1 of 



46 Results of Experiment 

3.4 or by 3.2. This amount added to 8.3 gives 11.5, an ex- 
cess of 22 per cent. The average of these minimum and maxi- 
mum interpretations of Table VI is a difference in gain of 
9.9 points or a difference of 19 per cent. 

This result is in very close agreement with the 2.0 excess 
shown in Table V, because this 2.0 excess was the average 
difference for the tests taken separately, and needs to be 
multiplied by 5, the number of tests, to permit comparison 
with the difference in total gains. One shows an excess gain 
on the part of the experimental group of 9.9, the other 
shows one of 10.0. Both comparisons show that the experi- 
mental group made a 1 9 per cent greater gain. 

Table VIII 

Comparison of Gains on the Knowlton Tests for Individually 
Matched Groups. 







Control 


Experimental 


Per cent 


Teacher 


No. of 


Group 


Grovp 


E Gain 


Group 


Measurements 


Av. Gain 


A<v. Gain 


C Gain 


I 


7 6 


14.2 


I 5 .2 


107 


2 


16 


3.8 


7.0 


184 


3 


30 


7.2 


9-3 


129 


4 


68 


10.5 


II.O 


105 


5 


62 


1 0.0 


21.2 


212 


6 


22 


II.O 


8.2 


75 



Averages with equal weighting 9.5 12.0 126 

To check the method of matching used, a third compari- 
son was made using individual matching. Seventy-four 
pupils in the experimental group were matched with seventy- 
four in the control group. The matching was as close as the 
reliability of a mental age will permit. The mental ages of 
the experimental pupils were more like the mental ages of 



Enrichment 47 

the control pupils with whom they were matched than they 
would be like their own on another test. 

For these pairs of pupils, only complete pairs of measure- 
ments were used. That is, if an experimental pupil was ab- 
sent from a test, then the record from that test made by his 
mate in the control group was discarded. The results are as 
in Table VIII for the six teacher groups. The number of 
measurements is not adequate for precise determination, i.e., 
the sampling error is large for each teacher group. But judg- 
ing from Tables IV and VIII, the net contribution of the 
photoplays varied widely from teacher to teacher. 

This comparison of individually matched groups indicates 
that 19 per cent is a conservative measure of the photoplay's 
contribution. The 19 per cent is based upon a difference 
which in Table V is 6.7 times its probable error and in Table 
VI is at least 2.7 times its probable error. 2 This means that 
the chances are not more than 3 in 100 that it is not a true 
difference. 

2 P.E. of a difference between two means has been computed as equal to 



SECTION IX 

Evaluation of the Excess Experimental Group Gain 

on the Knowlton Tests in Terms of the Intellect It 

Would Have Required To Achieve It. 

IN the previous section, the experimental group was com- 
pared with a control group like it in all respects except the 
experimental factor. In this section the experimental group 
will be compared with a control group of greater ability. If, 
among the control sections a group may be found making the 
same gain as that made by the experimental group, then it 
may be inferred that the contribution of the photoplays was 
equivalent to the difference in ability between the control 
and experimental groups. It seems quite as permissible to in- 
fer this as to conclude in the previous section that the greater 
gain made by the experimental group is a measure of the 
contribution of the photoplay. The only new question in- 
volved is whether the intelligence test scores are valid meas- 
ures of ability to learn. The correlations of +.62 between 
mental ages and the total initial scores and of +.26 between 
mental ages and total gains answer that question. They show 
that the pupils learned or made gains in a somewhat direct 
proportion to their mental ages. 

The problem is then to find an experimental group, and a 
control group of greater ability taught by the same teachers 
and making the same gain. Sections A-B-C-D-E-G form a 
satisfactory control group in so far as teachers and ability of 
pupils are concerned. It would be a fortunate accident if the 
gains were equal. The facts are as in Table IX. 



Importance 49 

Table IX 

Initial Scores and Gains Made by the Experimental Group and the 
Higher- Ability Control Group. 

Experimental Group Higher-Control Group 
A-B-C-D-E-G 

A<v. Gain 
15.0 
4.4 
10.8 
12.3 
18.3 



f-h-i-j-l-m 


A-. 


A<v, Initial 


A<u. Initi 


Tests 


Score 


Av. Gain 


Score 


Pilgrims and Puritans 


32.8 


13-3 


37-7 


Life in the Colonies 


55-3 


6.6 


60.3 


Peter Stuyvesant 


26.3 


11.4 


3L8 


French and English Struggle 


22.6 


9-6 


25.5 


Revolution 


22.8 


17.8 


25-3 



Averages for all tests 32.0 11.7 36.1 12.2 

The gains of the experimental group are not on the aver- 
age equal to those of the control group. If they were, as in 
the case of the "Life in the Colonies" and "Peter Stuyve- 
sant" tests, differences in initial scores would complicate com- 
parison. Total scores and total gains will therefore be used 
as in the previous section to facilitate comparison. 

Because the A-B-C-D-E-G gains shown in Table IX 
were larger than the f-h-i-j-l-m gains, A was replaced by K, 
the less intelligent control section taught by the same teacher. 
The gain of the resulting group, B-C-D-E-G-K was found 
to be near enough equal to the gain of the experimental 
group. The control sections were then all reduced in size to 
17 pupils each, to correspond to the experimental group of 
1 02, described in the previous section. When a pupil needed 
to be omitted from a section, that one was omitted whose 
Mental and Educational Ages were highest. The 102 re- 
maining pupils made an average total gain of 60.8. This 
gain equals, to the nearest tenth, the gain of the experimen- 
tal group of 1 02. The average intelligence test scores of the 



50 Results of Experiment 

two groups are compared in Table X to show the differences 
or handicaps which the experimental group overcame, pre- 
sumably through the use of the photoplays. 



Table X 

The Mental Age y Educational Age y Intelligence Quotient and 
Educational Quotient Handicaps Overcome by the Experi- 
mental Group in Equaling the Gain Made by the Con- 
trol Group on the Five Knowlton Tests Combined. 

Control Experimental 

Group Group Differences or 

Averages Averages Handicaps 

Scores compared N=io2 N=io2 Overcome 

Total Gain 60.8 60.8 

M.A. (in mos.) 149.1 + 1.2 133.5 + 1.0 15.6 + 1.6 

E.A. (in mos.) 156.6 + 1.3 142.2+ .9 14.4+1.6 

I.Q. 108.4+1.1 96.3 + 1.0 12.1 + 1.5 

E.Q. 113.1 + 1.1 101.8 + .8 11.3 + 1.4 

The size of these handicaps gives more meaning to the 
greater experimental group gain which was shown in the pre- 
ceding section. Instead of saying merely that the experimen- 
tal group made a 1 9 per cent greater gain, it may now be said 
that in doing so, they learned as if they were 1 6 months more 
mentally mature, or 14 months more advanced in school 5 or 
that they learned as if they were brighter by 12 points of In- 
telligence Quotient, or by 1 1 points of Educational Quotient. 
This comparison of quotients is in either case equivalent to 
saying that the experimental group, with a degree of bright- 
ness which places them in the middle third of a group of un- 
selected children, nevertheless learned as much as if they 
were in the upper third. Comparison of the averages of the 
intelligence and educational quotients is equivalent to saying 



Importance 5 1 

that with second quartile ability, the experimental group 
gained as if they had had fourth quartile ability. The amount 
by which the experimental group exceeded the gain of the 
control group is therefore an appreciable one. 



SECTION X 

Gains Made by the Experimental and Control Groups 
on the Van Wagenen Scale. 

MAY the reported enrichment be interpreted as an enrich- 
ment of good teaching as it is usually measured? The Van 
Wagenen Information Scale C-2 was given at the beginning 
and end of the experiment to nine of the fifteen sections. 
The nine were fairly representative of the whole grade in 
that, of the six omitted sections, two were bright, two aver- 
age, and two dull. The nine sections made an average gain 
of 14.4 points as shown in Table XI. Allowing for the ex- 
perimental factor and for the practice effect of one point, 
this improvement made in six months is equal to the im- 
provement normally made in both the sixth and seventh 
grades in the Minnesota cities from which the norms were 
obtained. The period covered by the experiment was there- 
fore one of unusual progress as measured by this standard- 
ized scale. 

Another question which the use of the Van Wagenen 
Scale was designed to answer is not so easily answered, "Was 
the enrichment made at the expense of progress as measured 
on this scale?" 

The section j gain exceeds that of section E as it did in all 
Knowlton test gains. Lacking a measure of the A section 
gain, we cannot tell whether section f would have exceeded 
A or not. 

In Table XII, f-i-j-1 as a group is compared with B-E- 
K-N, the control group nearest like it in ability. Since the 
experimental group is handicapped by 9 months of Mental 



Progress 53 

Age and favored in initial score by only .9 of a point, the 
comparison indicates a greater gain on the part of the ex- 
perimental group. 

Table XI 

Gains Made by Each Section on the Van Wagenen American 

History Scales y Information Scale (72. 
Teacher Section Gain 

2 B 

4 D 

5 E 

i f 

4 i 

5 j 

1 K 

2 1 

4 N 

Average 



13.8 
12.6 
1 8.0 
16.1 

9-3 
25.4 
15.4 

8.3 
10.9 
14.4 



Table XII 



Comparison of Experimental Group f-i-j-l and Control Group 

B-E-K-N and of the Gains Made by These Groups on the 

Van Wagenen Scale C2. 

Differences 

in group in gain 

( is a handicap y 

+ is an advantage) 

Md.M.A. in mos. 141 132 9.0 

Initial score 55.1 54.2 +0.9 

Gain 14.5 14.8 +-3 

At its face value the excess gain of the experimental 
group is one of 2 per cent. It might be much higher with 
equated groups. But the exact relation for these groups of 
four sections each, if found, would not be comparable to the 
19 per cent found for all experimental sections. The only 



Control 
Group 
B-E-K-N 

N= n 9 


Experimental 
Group 
f-i-j-l 

N= 12! 


141 


132 


55-1 


54.2 


14.5 


14.8 



54 Results of Experiment 

way in which a per cent comparable to the 19 per cent 
Knowlton tests excess can be obtained is by proportion. It is 
necessary therefore to compare Van Wagenen scale and 
Knowlton test results for small groups and to assume that 
the relation found would be true of the whole groups. 

For comparison with the 2 per cent shown above, the cor- 
responding per cent on the total Knowlton test gains was de- 
termined from the data in Table IV. The f-i-j-1 gain is 71.2 
and the B-E-K-N gain is 55.4. The excess is one of 29 per 
cent. Judging from a comparison of these percentages, the 
fact that they had seen the photoplays helped the pupils to 
gain on the Van Wagenen scale about 2/29 of the extent to 
which it helped them to learn what was measured by the 
Knowlton tests. 

Omitting sections B and 1 leaves an experimental group, 
f-i-j, with an average Mental Age only three months higher 
than that of the control group, E-K-N. Their gains are re- 
spectively 16.9 and 14.8. The excess in this case is 12 per 
cent. The corresponding Knowlton test excess is 42 per cent j 
the relation between the two percentages is 2/7. 

A more exact comparison was made using experimental 
and control groups of 44 pupils each. These 44 are all of the 
experimental pupils who could be matched closely with con- 
trol pupils in initial Van Wagenen scores, and who took both 
initial and final of all the Knowlton tests. The matching was 
done to insure equality of initial scores. It was necessary be- 
cause of a negative correlation of -.33 between initial score 
and gain. Matching initial scores was not necessary in com- 
paring total Knowlton test gains. 

On the Knowlton tests, the average experimental gain is 
65.7 to the control's 56.6. The excess of 9.1 points is 16 per 
cent. On the Van Wagenen scale the average experimental 



Progress 55 

gain is 15.8 to the control's 15.4. The excess of .4 is 3 per 
cent. In this case the experimental group's excess Van Wage- 
nen scale gain is 3/16 of its excess on the Knowlton tests. 

The smallness of these ratios of excess gain to control 
group gain cannot be attributed to the smallness of the gain 
made on the Van Wagenen scale. The gain made by the nine 
sections tested was a large one, as already pointed out in this 
section. To take 3/16 as a fair determination of the relation 
between the contributions of the photoplays as measured by 
the two tests, is to assume the proportionality of gains on 
different kinds of tests. Probably this is a safe assumption. 
The ratio of excess gain to control-group gain is probably 
to a very large extent independent of the size of the gains. 
But without making this assumption, it may be shown that 
the advantage afforded by the photoplays toward learning 
the Van Wagenen test material was less than it was toward 
learning the Knowlton test material. Of the 44 pairs of 
pupils last compared, 10 were from sections F and K. Of 
these 10 pairs, the experimental pupils in section F were the 
more intelligent. Omitting these cases from the comparison, 
leaves groups of 34 each with an increased Mental Age 
handicap for the experimental group. This handicap was 
overcome in making Knowlton test gains but not overcome 
as measured by the Van Wagenen scale. The gains were: on 
the Knowlton tests, Experimental, 64.15 Control, 55.45 
and on the Van Wagenen scale, Experimental, 14.95 an d 
Control, 1 6. 2. 

Three-sixteenths is in close agreement with the average of 
the first two determinations of this ratio, i.e., of 2/7 and of 
2/29. In lieu of a Probable Error, 2/7 and 2/29 may be 
taken as limiting values, and all these ratios used in esti- 
mating the advantage of the photoplays to the six experi- 



56 Results of Experiment 

mental sections for whom the 19 per cent advantage was 
representative. Two twenty-ninths, 3/16, and 2/7 of 19 per 
cent are respectively i, 4, and 5 per cent. Taking 4 as the 
best estimate j thinking of the Knowlton tests as measuring 
progress in an enriched course of study j and thinking of the 
Van Wagenen scale as measuring progress in the learning of 
the bare facts of history, it may be said that the photoplays 
contributed five times as much to the former as to the latter 
form of progress. 

In itself, an excess of 4 per cent is not of great impor- 
tance. It means that while the control group does a year's 
work of 40 weeks, the experimental group does 41.6 weeks' 
work. Or it means that with the aid of the photoplays, a 
year's work of 40 weeks is done in 38.5 weeks. 

It is of importance to note, however, that the enrichment 
reported in Section VIII and evaluated in Section IX was 
not achieved at the expense of "normal" progress. On the 
contrary, it was accompanied by a slight increase in "normal" 
progress, and this increase was effected in spite of the fact 
that the progress of the control group which served as a basis 
of comparison was itself far above "normal." 



SECTION XI 

The Effect of the Photoplays upon Retention. 

RETENTION was measured over intervals varying from ap- 
proximately three to seven months as may be seen from the 
dates of testing shown in Table XIII. 

Corresponding to the comparison of gains in Table V, 
Table XIV shows the number of points gained, lost, and re- 
tained by groups C-G-K-N-O and f-h-i-j-m. The groups 
compared in Table XIV are the same as those compared in 
Table V, subject only to a 13 per cent loss due to the changes 
in a group from one year to the next. 

The experimental group learned more, forgot more, and 
remembered more. It is the usual finding for those who 
learn more to remember more even though they forget 
more. De Weerdt, 1 for instance, found this to be true of the 
gains, losses, and retentions in seven functions. Brooks and 
Bassett, 2 measuring retention of American History in the 
Junior High School, found that "the pupils who know most 
at the end of the semester tend to forget a little more than 
those who know less, but they still know the most." 

Differences in overlearning probably explain this. The 
things that both the bright and the dull learn are those 
which are much talked about or drilled on. Some of the 

1 E. H. de Weerdt, "The Permanence of Improvement of Fifth-Grade 
School Children in Certain Mental Functions," Journal of Educational Re- 
search, XVI (Sept., 1927), 127-131. 

2 F. D. Brooks and S. J. Bassett, "The Retention of American History in the 
Junior High School," Journal of Educational Research, XVIII (Oct., 1928), 
195202. 



58 Results of Experiment 

things which only the bright learn are learned from occa- 
sional remarks, casual explanations, etc., which are adequate 
to produce their effect upon immediate recall, but not after 
a long interval. Overlearning is necessary for retention. 

In the same way, the experimental group may have 
learned some things from seeing the photoplays which 
lasted only long enough to register on the tests taken im- 
mediately after the period of instruction. There was no 
re-view of the photoplays, either in toto or with still pictures. 
The advantages of overlearning and of review were there- 
fore in favor of retention by the control group. 

Table XIII 

Dates of Testing. 

Before After Fall 

Test Instruction Instruction Retest 

Pilgrims and Puritans Jan. 3 1 Feb. 20 Sept. 7 

Life in the Colonies Mar. 6 Mar. 1 9 Sept. 7 

Peter Stuyvesant Mar. 21 Apr. 3 Sept. 10 

French and English Apr. 16 May 9 Sept. 10 

Revolution May 14 June 13 Sept. 10 

Table XIV 

Comparison of Points Gained, Lost, and Retained on the 
Separate Tests. 

Tests Gained Lost Retained 

C group E group C group E group C group E group 

Pilgrims and Puritans 13.5 14.1 3.8 5.2 9.7 8.9 

Life in the Colonies 4.6 7.0 2.5 4.9 2.1 2.1 

Peter Stuyvesant 10.1 12.6 4.9 6.7 5.2 5.9 

French and English 10.1 10.6 6.3 6.4 3.8 4.2 

Revolution 15.3 19.1 9.8 12.1 5.5 7.0 



Total 53.6 63.4 27.3 35.3 26.3 28.1 



Retention 59 

The Revolution unit is the only unit which permits a fair 
comparison of the two methods as to their value for retention 
(amount retained divided by amount learned). Following 
this unit of teaching, the element of review was held con- 
stant, for this unit was followed immediately by the summer 
vacation, and the retest was given before teaching began in 
the fall. 

For this unit the amount retained by the experimental 
group was in absolute units greater than the amount retained 
by the control group, and in per cent of learning retained, 
either equal to or greater than the per cent of learning re- 
tained by the control group. The difference in retained gain 
on this test is 1.5=^.9. The chances are 87 in 100 that the dif- 
ference is a true difference. On this test the experimental 
group learned 25 per cent more than the control group did 
and retained 27 per cent more than the control group 
retained. 

Such statements cannot be made of each of the units 
measured nor of the combined results. Of the total learning 
the control group retained 49 per cent, the experimental 

E gain C gain 

group but 44. And where - = 1 8 per cent, 

C gain 

the corresponding per cent for retention is 7. However, con- 
clusions as to the contribution of the photoplays to retention 
should not be based upon these figures without further analy- 
sis, for reasons stated in the following paragraphs. 

For the first half of the experiment the control and experi- 
mental group gains were 28.2 and 33.7, and for the second 
half, the gains were 25.4 and 29.7, respectively. The corre- 
sponding retentions were 17.0 and 16.9 for the first half, and 
9.3 and 1 1. 2 for the second half. This means that of what 



60 Results of Experiment 

they learned early, the control group remembered 60 per 
cent, and the experimental group remembered 50 per cent, 
but of what they learned late in the term the control group 
remembered 37 per cent, and the experimental group 38 per 
cent. In other words, both experimental and control groups 
remembered more from the early teaching than from the 
late. 

This result in no sense contradicts, nor is it contradicted 
by, the usual curve of forgetting. To be sure, it sounds con- 
tradictory to say that more is remembered over the longer 
interval. But the intervals differ in other respects than in 
time. They differ in opportunity for review, planned and 
incidental. The situation should be described as follows: of 
two measurements of retention, one over a period of seven 
months with opportunity for review during the first four 
months, and one over a period of three months with no op- 
portunity for review, the first is the greater. In fact, the re- 
sults secured in this experiment are almost in exact order 
for the five units, as shown in columns i and 2 of Table XV. 

Table XV 

Per Cent of Gain Retained fctr Each Test y and Related Factors. 

Per cent 
of ques- 

Control Experimental tions which Per cent 
Group Group are time E gain-C gain 

Tests per cent R/ G per cent R/ G questions g a } n 

Pilgrims and Puritans 72 63 17 8 

Life in the Colonies 46 30 30 48 

Peter Stuyvesant 51 47 9 28 

French and English 38 40 7 5 

Revolution 36 37 35 25 



Retention 6 1 

Table XVI 

Per Cent of Gain Retained According to the Kind of Knowledge. 
Taken from Data in Table XIX in the Section on Analysis. 

Control Group Experimental Group 

Time 46 40 

Place 38 37 

Person 67 66 

Relation 68 72 

Combined 50 49 

Worcester 8 found results like this when he measured the 
permanence of learning in algebra. He used Forms A-I, 
A-II, and B-I of the Douglas algebra tests, on February 9, 
March 29, and May 17 respectively, and retested with the 
same tests on December 20 and 21 of the same year. A-I 
and A-II measure command of the processes taught early in 
the term and B-I measures command of those taught late in 
the term. Scores from his first testing are measures of gain 
and scores from his December testing are measures of reten- 
tion, since zero scores, or practically zero scores, might have 
been expected at the beginning of the teaching of algebra. 

The amount retained was over 80 per cent of the amount 
learned in the case of the A tests, and was but 35 per cent on 
the B test. "It seems, then, that the amount of forgetting on 
this test was immensely more than on the others, even 
though the time between the tests was less." 

Promising extensive investigation along the same line, 
Worcester notes "that other studies in algebra, as well as 
those in plane geometry, home economics, and biology are 
showing the same trends as the one here reported." 

Differences in overlearning and differences in oppor- 
tunity for review may well explain the differences in per 

8 D. A. Worcester, "The Permanence of Learning in High School Subjects 
Algebra," Journal Educational Psychology, XIX (May, 1928), 343-345. 



6 2 Results of Experiment 

cent remembered of the early and late teaching. They may 
also explain the fact that the experimental group remem- 
bered as much of the late teaching as the control group did, 
but less of the early teaching. 

There is, however, another factor to be considered. When 
the tests were regrouped into four tests, one of time knowl- 
edge, one of place, one of persons, and one of interrelation- 
ship, the per cent of learning which is retained is for the con- 
trol group on the time test, 46 per cent, for the experimental 
group, 40 per cent 5 on the other three tests combined, it is 
for the control group 50 per cent, for the experimental 
group, 51 per cent. The per cents for the four kinds of 
knowledge are shown in Table XVI. 

It has been indicated how a decreased opportunity for re- 
view could explain the gradually better showing of the ex- 
perimental group. But when comparison is made of the per 
cent of each test which is composed of time questions with 
the per cent R/G for the control and experimental group as 
listed in Table XV, it can be readily seen that variation in 
the per cent of time questions may be responsible for the 
variation in the showing made by the experimental group. 
The experimental group made an especially poor showing on 
the retention of "Life in the Colonies" material, and it will 
be noted that a larger per cent of this material was time 
material. 

On the other hand, this especially poor showing is ex- 
plainable on the basis of possible-differences in overlearning. 
In the fourth column of the same table (Table XV) are the 
per cents which indicate the contribution of the photoplay. 
Alongside of the especially poor showing in retention is the 
largest contribution. In other words, from that unit the 
greatest relative loss might be expected. 



Retention 63 

One of these explanations need not be accepted to the ex- 
clusion of the other. Both may be responsible for the results 
found. In any event, what was true of a part of the test mate- 
rial has been unduly reflected in the per cent which the Ex- 
perimental minus the Control Retention is of the Control 
Retention. For tests 2 to 5, the per cent computed in the 
same fashion is 1 6 per cent instead of the 7 per cent obtained 
for tests i to 5. A determination for another purpose (de- 
scribed in the section on analysis) shows a 17 per cent 

E C gain E C Retention 

- and a 1 6 per cent . Twelve per 

C gain C Retention 

cent, an average of the two determinations, is a more repre- 
sentative measure of the contribution of the photoplays to 
retention in general. 

It is from this second determination, to be described later, 
that the per cents of gain retained which are listed in Table 
XVI were computed. The experimental group per cent R/G 
is seen to be less than, equal to, or greater than the control 
group per cent R/G, according to the kind of knowledge 
being measured. The forgetting of when conditions existed, 
or when events happened, or in what order they happened, 
was evidently the chief cause of the inferior showing of the 
experimental group. 

Summarizing j retention was measured in two ways, first 
as gain minus loss, and second, as the per cent which that 
value is of the gain. By the first method, the experimental 
group retained more, though they also lost more. The ex- 
perimental group retained approximately 12 per cent more 
knowledge than was retained by the control group. By the 
second method, of the amount learned during the first half 
of the experiment, the percentage retained by the experi- 



64 Results of Experiment 

mental group was less, of that learned during the second half 
of the experiment it was as much as or more than that of the 
control group. Of the learning during the first half of the 
experiment, the control group retained 60 per cent, the ex- 
perimental group 50 per cent; of the learning of the second 
half of the experiment, the control group retained 36 per 
cent, the experimental group 37 per cent. Therefore, it may 
be said of the experimental and control groups, that of what 
they learned, they remembered practically the same frac- 
tional part, when opportunity for review was equal. In the 
experimental group there was no provision for re-view either 
of a whole photoplay or of any part of one. When, in the 
control group, the normal amount of review took place, the 
experimental group retained a smaller fractional part of 
what it learned. From the more restricted groups used for 
the analysis of the gain described in a later section, meas- 
ures of retention indicate that this smaller fractional part was 
probably due almost solely to the forgetting of knowledge of 
time. 

It should be noted here, that no evidence has been pre- 
sented which would justify one in thinking that the out- 
standing value of the photoplay lies in its contribution to re- 
tention. Teachers need to realize that pupils do not see 
everything in a picture, and that single impressions will not 
last. The net result, for a given pupil, is of necessity, frag- 
mentary, as is the case in all teaching, and needs to be com- 
pleted and reviewed and re-viewed. There is no magic in 
pictures transcending the laws of learning. 



SECTION XII 

Comparison of Experimental and Control Groups as 
to Participation in Classroom Discussion, Expres- 
sion of Interest, and Voluntary Reading. 

THESE measures of pupil participation were obtained in only 
three of the six experimental sections, f, j, and 1. The control 
group with which this experimental group is compared is 
composed of sections B, K, and O taught by the same teach- 
ers. The average mental age of the control group is six 
months higher than that of the experimental group. 

The results are shown in Table XVII. Pupil participa- 
tions which followed a teacher's question, stated or implied, 
were designated by "R"s. Those which were not so initiated 
were recorded as "V"s since they were more voluntary and 
probably showed more interest. When the participation con- 
sisted of asking a question it was recorded as an "A," and if 
it contributed to the discussion, some information obtained 
outside the classroom from reading or other sources, it was 
recorded as a "C." 

The number of pupil participations averaged 77.4 per sec- 
tion per period for the control group and 85.4 for the experi- 
mental group. This difference, 8.o2.2, being 3.6 times its 
probable error, is 99 chances out of 100, a true difference. 
The differences in the case of the R's, V's, C's, and A's have 
larger errors, but more dependence may be placed in the 
"R" and "V" combined differences than the probable error 
justifies because of the fact that they are found in the same 
direction in four of the five instructional units. 



66 



Results of Experiment 
Table XVII 



Comparison of Experimental and Control Groups as to the Number 
of Pupil Participations per Section per Period, for Each Instruc- 
tional Unit and for the Five Units Combined. 



Instructional Units. 



C group 





I 


II 


III 


IV 


V 


Combined 


R 


48 


50 


33 


44 


42 


43-9 


V 


19 


3i 


39 


29 


28 


28.3 


A 


6 


3 


4 


4 


2 


4.0 


C 


i 


2 


2 


i 


I 


1.2 



Totals 




74 


86 


78 


78 


73 


774 


E group 


R 


53 


50 


39 


4 6 


46 


47.2 




V 


22 


36 


38 


32 


37 


33-o 




A 


7 


3 


2 


3 


5 


4-3 




C 


i 


i 


1 


2 


i 


9 



Totals 83 

Group Differences 



90 

R 
V 
A 
C 



80 

3.32.o 

4-72.o 

3 -5 



83 



854 



Totals 8.0 2. 2 

A greater total number of pupil participations may mean 
either more participations per pupil, or more pupils partici- 
pating, or both. In the present case it is both. In the control 
group 62 per cent were responsible for the "R"s but in the 
experimental group 65 per cent recited. The difference ex- 
pressed in the percentages is 2^4 times its probable error, 
and is found 5 times out of 5. For those pupils actually re- 
citing as defined for "R," the average number of "R"s per 
pupil per day is 2.0 for the control group and 2.1 for the 
experimental group. It is safe to say that the difference 
would not be significant in terms of its probable error but the 



Interest 67 

experimental group average exceeded the control group 
average in four of the five units in which it was compared. 

The volunteered participations were made by 37 per cent 
of the control group and 41 per cent of the experimental 
group. The difference expressed in these percentages is 2.6 
times its probable error. The "V"s per pupil per day average 
2.2 for the control group and 2.3 for the experimental 
group, and the difference favored the experimental group in 
four of the five comparisons. 

Sixty-six per cent of the control group asked questions, 
and 69 per cent of the experimental group. For the whole 
period of observation (40 days) the average number of 
questions asked, among those asking them, was for the con- 
trol group 6.9 and for the experimental 7.1. 

Thirty-four per cent of the control group contributed as 
defined for "C," and 39 per cent of the experimental group. 
In the comparison of average number of "C"s per pupil for 
the whole period, for those pupils actually contributing, we 
find the only comparison of totals favoring the control 
group. The average for the control group is 4.0 and the 
average for the experimental group is 2.6. 

On those occasions when hands were raised as a result of a 
teacher's question, the number of hands raised in the control 
group was on the average 8.4. In the experimental group the 
average was 9.1. The difference .J.i though small is seven 
times its probable error. When hands were raised on other 
occasions, i.e., not directly as a result of a teacher's question, 
the control group average was 5.3 and the experimental 
group average was 6.1. The difference is eight times its 
probable error. For both of these measurements the differ- 
ence favored the experimental group in all five of the units 
of the experiment. 



68 Results of Experiment 

For each of the measures reported, the precaution was 
taken of finding out what effect a difference in ability had 
upon it. Without an exception it was found that of two con- 
trol groups taught by the same teachers the more able or 
brighter group made the higher score. This finding is sup- 
ported by McCullough 1 in that he found that bright children 
recite more often. The excess scores made by the experimen- 
tal group were therefore made not because of a six months 
lower mental age but in spite of it. 

The comparisons reported do not include records of the 
extent of pupil participation on the days the photoplays were 
shown. The ten or fifteen minutes following the showing 
was, however, a period of keen interest and active question- 
ing. On the other hand, the records were by no means con- 
fined to days immediately following showings. To have so 
confined them would have made quite a different report, for 
there was a sharp lowering of the extent to which the photo- 
plays contributed to pupil participation as the interval in- 
creased. The contribution dropped from 25 per cent on the 
first day following a showing to 16 per cent on the second 
day, but even during the fourth week after a showing there 
was still some evidence of the influence of the photoplays. 
During the eight days of observation from one to two weeks 
after a showing, the experimental group participations were 
1 06 per cent of those of the control group. During the five 
days of observation from two to four weeks after a showing 
the number of experimental group participations was 105 
per cent of the number of control group participations. 

It should not be lost sight of that some of the differences 
reported are of little significance in the classroom. To have 

1 A. N. McCullough, "The Opportunities of Pupils to Participate in the 
Teacher's Time," Elementary School Journal, XXVIII (Mar., 1928), 538- 
543- 



Interest 69 

nine pupils ready to answer instead of eight is the least no- 
ticeable difference a teacher could have, and the same may 
be said of having six pupils wanting to say something instead 
of having five. 

On the other hand, the differences are appreciable when 
combined ; that is, if all four kinds of pupil participation are 
combined and the differences for a 4O-week school year are 
computed, the average number of participations per pupil in 
the experimental sections is 484, while in the control sec- 
tions it is only 438. This comparison shows for a 35-pupil 
experimental section 1,610 more pupil participations per 
year than for a control section. This is a 10 per cent excess 
and is equivalent to adding twenty extra days to a school year 
in so far as pupil participation is concerned. 

The volunteered participations which were recorded sepa- 
rately as evidence of more interest than the rest, constituted 
only about one-third of the total number of participations. 
But for a year, the averages indicate 940 more of these vol- 
unteered remarks in an experimental section than in a control 
section. This is a 1 7 per cent excess and is equivalent to add- 
ing thirty-four extra days to a school year so far as voluntary 
pupil participation in classroom discussion is concerned. 

Some of the differences found are of very little signifi- 
cance, but so far as their direction is concerned they warrant 
the following statements. In the experimental group, 

(a) more recitations were made at the request of the 
teacher 5 

(b) a larger percentage of the class recited; 

(c) those reciting, did so more of ten j 

(d) on these occasions more hands were raised; 

(e) more remarks were volunteered by the pupils not 
directly as a result of a teacher's question, i.e., upon 



yo Results of Experiment 

those occasions when their own desire to participate 
more evidently prompted them; 

(f) a larger percentage of the group so volunteered ; 

(g) those volunteering did so more often; 

(h) on these occasions more hands were raised for per- 
mission to participate j 

(i) more questions were asked j 

(j) a larger percentage of the group asked questions ; 

(k) those who asked questions did so more of ten j 

(1) fewer contributions came in from outside j 

(m) a larger percentage of the group made such contribu- 
tions $ 

(n) those contributing, did so less often. 

As indicated, some of these differences are appreciable and 
some are insignificant. Together, they constitute an appre- 
ciable and statistically significant difference between the ex- 
perimental and control groups in the amount of pupil par- 
ticipation in classroom discussion. 

The average ranking of history among six other subjects 
which the pupils were studying was approximately equal for 
the experimental and control groups. The difference in group 
averages of rankings showed a greater liking for history on 
the part of the experimental group by a slight difference 
(.46=^.23), but it was due to a tendency on the part of the 
duller pupils to rank history higher among the six other sub- 
jects ranked. The difference in average rank between control 
and experimental groups was reversed in the case of an ex- 
perimental group superior to the control group in ability. 

To one who has observed these classes, this result is not so 
surprising as it might seem. The photoplays were shown in 
the classroom, in a school rather than in a "movie" atmos- 
phere. There was no more exuberance among the pupils see- 



Interest 7 1 

ing the pictures than among control pupils during an en- 
thusiastic recitation period. In fact, it is doubtful that the 
pupils enjoyed seeing the photoplays any more than they 
enjoyed intensive periods of class discussion. And there were 
many such periods, probably more enthusiastically partici- 
pated in because of the presence of an observer. Perhaps 
photoplays can cause pupils to enjoy their history more, only 
when it is otherwise not enjoyable. Certainly that was not 
the case in this experiment. The pupils in the control sec- 
tions expressed themselves in their rankings as liking history 
almost as much as they liked physical training, which was 
the best liked subject. At any rate, there is no evidence in 
the rankings that the photoplays caused pupils to like history 
better. 

The measures of voluntary reading are of three kinds: 
the school librarian's record of the reading of history during 
library periods, lists of the term's readings made by the pu- 
pils for their English teachers, and the number of supple- 
mentary readings read in a section of a class period in which 
pupils were free to read or to do something else according 
to their preferences. 

The records of school library reading of history were 
scattered. What there were, favored the control group, there 
being a record of approximately 27 hours for the six control 
sections and 23 hours for the six experimental sections. The 
entries were not extensive enough to permit a computation 
of reliability. 

The pupils' lists of history they had read were not ob- 
tained in a sufficiently standardized way to make the totals 
comparable. Lists in some sections were evidently much more 
complete than in others. The English teacher's influence was 
not constant in the experimental and control groups as was 



72 Results of Experiment 

the history teacher's influence, for two sections taught by the 
same history teacher were not invariably taught by the same 
English teacher. The control group total was 514 compared 
to the experimental group total of 199. The truest compari- 
son with this data is probably a comparison of the percentage 
of the total list which is history. This comparison favors the 
control group. The listed readings of the control group were 
12 per cent history and those of the experimental group 
were 10 per cent history. The probable error of the differ- 
ence is i per cent. If the photoplays were responsible for 
any additional outside reading they were not responsible, 
according to the results stated in this and the preceding para- 
graph, for enough to offset the slightly greater ability of the 
control group. 

The comparison of voluntary reading in the classroom 
under controlled conditions is shown in Table XVIII. The 
difference, which favors the experimental group, is highly 
significant statistically. It seems a small matter, but the dif- 
ference is a 40 per cent difference and must be multiplied by 
35, the average number of pupils per section, to show what 
it means for a section. Fifty-four per cent of experimental 
group pupils did the reading for their group, and 41 per 
cent of the control group pupils did the reading for that 
group. For just those pupils who did the reading the aver- 
ages are, for the control group 18.7 and for the experimen- 
tal group 19.5. Probable errors have not been computed for 
these last two comparisons, but they are supported by all 
five, and three out of five comparisons respectively. 

The amount of voluntary reading and the average for 
those reading may be expected to be higher for a brighter 
group, judging from comparisons in all five of the instruc- 
tional units. The percentage of the group reading may also 



Interest 73 

be expected to be larger in the brighter group judging from 
four of the five units. The excess scores of the experimental 
group, where found, are therefore in spite of, and not be- 
cause of, the inequality of groups in ability. 

Table XVIII 

Comparison of Experimental and Control Groups in Number of 

Voluntary Readings in the Classroom under Controlled 

Conditions. 

Control Group Experimental Group 

Instructional Units Av. per pupil A<v. per pupil 

I Pilgrims and Puritans 1.3 1.8 

II Life in the Colonies 1.6 2.6 

III Peter Stuyvesant 1.9 2.6 

IV French and English 1.8 1.8 
V Revolution i.i 2.0 



Totals 7.7 10.8 

Difference 3.1 .6 



SECTION XIII 

Analysis of the Contribution of the Photoplays. 

IN order to determine to some extent how the photoplays 
made the contribution described in previous sections, the 
Knowlton tests were regrouped into four tests: one of time 
knowledge, when conditions existed, or when events hap- 
pened, or in what order they happened j one of place or 
geography ; one testing knowledge of historical persons j and 
the fourth a test of knowledge of causal relations or of the 
interaction of events. This meant discarding the record of 
each pupil who was absent on the occasion of any one of the 
ten testings. In order to compare retention with learning it 
meant a further reduction in number of cases due to the 
summer's loss. The resulting groups of pupils for whom all 
eleven testings were available proved to be less equal in 
ability than the original groups. It was necessary to work 
with experimental sections f-i-j-m and control sections 
G-K-N-O to get groups closely equal in Mental Age. This 
left 6 1 in the control group and 72 in the experimental 
group. The teacher factor was kept constant as in all other 
comparisons. 

The results obtained are presented in Table XIX. The 
contribution toward the teaching of time is a negative one, 
i.e., the experimental group learned less than the control 
group by 10 per cent. The former group, however, learned 
19 per cent more geography, 23 per cent more about histori- 
cal persons, and 35 per cent more about the interaction of 
events. 



Analysis 



75 



Table XIX 

Comparison of Gains and Retentions on the Knowlton Tests Regrouped 
as Tests of Time, Place, Person, and Relation. 

E-C 



Gains 


Retentions 


Per cent 
C 




C 


E 


Diff. 




C 


E 




Diff. 


Gain Retention 


Time 


10.2 


9.2 


I.0 


9 


4-7 


3-7 


I 


.o 


.8 


10 


21 


Place 


29.6 


35-1 


5.5 + 2 


.2 


ii. 3 


12.9 


I 


.6i 


4 


19 


H 


Person 


8.6 


10.6 


2.O=fc 


.8 


5.8 


7.0 


I 


.2 


9 


23 


21 


Relation 


II. 2 


15.1 


3-9i 


.1 


7.6 


10.9 


3 


3 


9 


35 


43 



Average 14.9 17.5 2.6zti.i 7.4 8.6 i.2 



16 



Table XX 

Ranking of Time, Place, Person, and Relation, within Each 
Teacher's Influence, According to the Size of the Photo- 
play's Contribution within These Fields of Historical 
Knowledge. 

Rank of i represents the greatest contribution. 

Pairs of sections taught by the same teacher 
(Experimental section\ 



Time 
Place 
Person 
Relation 



\ Control section / 


I 


h 


m 


^_ 


i 


/ 


B 


~C 


G 


# 


7T 


~0 


3 


4 


3 


4 


4 


2 


2 


3 


2 


3 


2 


3 


4 


2 


I 


2 


3 


4 


i 


I 


4 


I 


i 


i 



I p. p. 


// L.C. 


/// P.S. 


77 *-.. 


7/fcv. 


2 


3 


4 


4 


4 


4 


2 


3 


2 


3 


3 


*1 


2 


I 


2 


i 


I 


I 


3 


I 



76 Results of Experiment 

Table XXI 

Ranking, within Each Knowlton Test, of Time, Place y Person, and 

Relation y According to the Size of the Photoplay's Contribution 

within These Fields. 

Rank of i represents the greatest contribution. 

Knowlton Tests. 
I 

Time 
Place 
Person 
Relation 

The contributions of the photoplays to the retention of 
time, place, person, and relation knowledge are approxi- 
mately in direct proportion and approximately equal to the 
contributions to learning these concepts. Whatever deter- 
mines the relative size of the contributions to acquiring these 
kinds of knowledge may be expected to contribute to their 
retention in the same way. 

The rank order of the contributions to the teaching of 
time, place, person, and relation is in sufficient agreement 
among the six teachers and five Knowlton tests (shown in 
Tables XX and XXI) to suggest the statistical significance 
of the order found in Table XIX. 

Assuming that it is statistically significant in this experi- 
ment, of what general significance are these findings? Would 
other investigations using these photoplays show similar re- 
sults? Or are the obtained results peculiar to the tests used? 
Might it not be that the author in making his tests, has chosen 
samplings of time, place, person, and relation questions 
which in the order named are decreasingly representative of 
the whole unit of instruction and increasingly favorable 

1 No questions about persons included in this test. 



Analysis 77 

toward allowing the photoplays to register a contribution? 

These same questions may be raised concerning the whole 
contribution. In an earlier section the question was raised as 
to the validity of the tests for measuring the contribution of 
the photoplays, and it was stated that in the opinion of three 
of five judges 96 per cent of the questions called for knowl- 
edge worth acquiring in the junior high school, and that 74 
per cent of these questions were answered by six or more of 
the ten teachers who took the tests. 

These criteria have been used as a basis on which to divide 
the regrouped tests into worth while and not worth while, 
and into parts according to teachers' knowledge. 

The time, place, person, and relation questions were each 
divided into eight subtests, composed as follows: 

1. worth teaching and known by 10 of 10 teachers, 

2. worth teaching and known by 9 of 10, 

3. worth teaching and known by 8 of 10, 

4. worth teaching and known by 7 of 10, 

5. worth teaching and known by 6 of 10, 

6. worth teaching and known by less than 6 of 10, 

7. not worth teaching and known by 6 or more of 10, 

8. not worth teaching and known by less than 6 of 10. 

Some of these subtests were later combined, but the data 
for each of the 32 subtests are reported in Table XXII. 
These data were secured from the entire experimental group 
consisting of sections f-h-i-j-1-m, and from B-C-G-K-N-O 
of the control sections. The gains are expressed in terms of 
the number of pupils learning to answer a given group of 
questions, out of six sections averaging 3 1 pupils each. There 
were normally 35 pupils per section, but on the average but 
3 1 were present for both first and second testing. 







OO **"> 

s NO 

10 OO 



ON 
CO 



OO *^ 
10 ON 

VO 00 



ON 



NO 
O 



00 
CO 



ON ^ 
2 






! 



NO 



N O 

"tj- 10 



ON \O I W 
C^ \O M 



O ON 



CO ON 



~ 






8 2 



8 
o *8 

5 5 



bo oo t> 



10 NO 



\o 



f-x. OO IO * 

Qs I-H M ON 



JS OyQ ^ f* 



? 



O HH 



ON 10 

l^ vo "H* 

l^ 00 I s * -* 



HH O 



ON _ 
00 to 
NO OO ON 



O oo 



^ *g v . 

^ 1 II 


S 00 

O NO 

* 


O co oo 

vONO cot^oo HI ioO co 
\O ^-^ NO c^ \O O oo ^^ co 


NO O W 

oo t-^ N co NO 

1 


"** c 

M O 





^ 



B B~ 



<u a, 



w o 







\ 




> 



00 


o 

HH 


vO 
pQ 


o 

<-M 



J 



10 


u 

1 

!_, 

NO 
.&" 

c 
o 


1 

VO 

^ 






^ 


'^ 


^ 


^ 


g 


^ 


U4 


-^ 




% 


G 


| 


g 


$3 



G 


T3 


TJ 




J4 


A 




4 


>b4 


M 


ra 


n 




1 


a 


TJ 


g 


T3 
G 


Td 
c 


oo 


oo 




oo 


cj 
60 


g) 


PB 

00 


CTj 


00 


1 


^ 






.S 




.s 


^ 


,g 


CS 


s 


CO 

I 


"u 

ctf 


-| 


"i 


n 


1 


'rt 


2 


s 

rfS 





(U 


5 


^ 


s 


<u 


" 


g 


1 


3 


^ 


r c-j 


^ 


rfS 


J4 


^ 


Sj 




cr 

< 


1 


1 


i 


s 


i 


| 


s 


% 



Analysis 79 

Table XXII should be read as follows: Of the 81 Time 
Questions, twenty of those calling for knowledge worth 
teaching were answered correctly by all of the ten teachers. 
There were 356 more correct answers to these twenty ques- 
tions in the experimental group after the instruction than 
before. In the control group there were 363 more correct 
answers on the second test than on the first. Five lines down, 
we find that 10 of the 81 time questions called for knowl- 
edge worth teaching which was possessed by 5 or fewer of 
the 10 teachers. In the experimental group there were fewer 
correct answers to these ten questions than before, by 24. In 
the control group there were 34 more correct answers than 
on the initial test. 

With these data it is possible to determine the extent to 
which the contribution of the photoplays to the learning of 
the experimental group was independent of the worth- 
whileness of the knowledge taught and was also independent 
of the extent to which history teachers have that knowledge. 

If the photoplays made their total contribution of 19 per 

E gain C gain 

cent, - - , very largely in teaching material 

C gain 

which the judges checked as not worth teaching, then the 
value of the result of the experiment must be minimized to 
that extent. But if the photoplays made their contribution 
very largely in teaching material of which teachers are igno- 
rant, the contribution of the photoplays need not necessarily 
be minimized. It is quite conceivable that the photoplays can 
teach some worth-while things which teachers do not know. 
The groups B-C-G-K-N-O and f-h-i-j-1-m were used in 
their entirety in spite of a ten months mental age handicap 
on the part of the experimental group, since for our pres- 
ent purpose reliability is more important than absolute 



80 Results of Experiment 

E gain C gain 

value. But because the combined for these 

Cgain 

groups is 7 per cent instead of 19 per cent, this large differ- 
ence in mental age has been corrected by increasing all per- 
centages computed from the data in Table XXII by 12 per 
cent, to prevent confusion in reading the results. This rough 
correction cannot invalidate any comparison of results among 
the subtests. 

The resulting percentages are shown in Table XXIII. 
Comparisons for material "worth teaching" and "not worth 
teaching" may be made between the second and third row. 
They may also be made separately within the categories 
"known" or "not known" in rows 6 and 8 or in rows 7 and 9. 
Likewise, "known" and "not known" may be compared as a 
whole in rows 4 and 5 or separately within the categories 
"worth teaching" or "not worth teaching" in rows 6 and 7 
or rows 8 and 9. The last three rows differentiate the worth 
teaching items according to the extent to which the questions 
were correctly answered by the ten teachers. The "most fre- 
quently known" questions are those failed by i or none, the 
"less frequently known" questions were failed by either 2 or 
3 of the iOj and the "least frequently known" were an- 
swered incorrectly by 4 or more of the 10 teachers tested. 

The per cents in the last column justify the following 
answers to the questions which have been raised, subject only 
to the limitations of the criteria employed. The 19 per cent 
reported in section VIII is not a padded result due to the in- 
clusion of questions which one would have to see the photo- 
plays to answer, nor was it due to the inclusion of questions 
on history not worth teaching. If the questions of this sort 
which were in the tests had been omitted, the percentage ad- 
vantage afforded the experimental group by the photoplays 
would have been greater than the 1 9 per cent reported. 



Analysis 



81 



X 
X 



^ 

CJ 

H 



^ 

i ^ o 






^ s 



., <u 

^ ^^ oo 

^ .V4 2 

^ S 



OJ 5* 

I S 



* -5 



3 

d <4H 
J2 ' o 

-5 o e 

3 CU_Q 

n3 6 
<u t a 

% C5 c 



JH 






.% B 



1 


to ^O O^ O 
O ^O s OO 

f-4 >_< HH 1-4 


\O oo oo to 


to 
to 


uo so 

s O 

**h to 


1 


O^ oo t^ O 

oo ' \o to 

-^- H- tO HH 


to t^. -rh to 

tO HH tO OO 


to 

to 
to 


^ O 
M to 

LO OO 





? $ 5 


tO I-H ^ ^ ^~^ 


vO 


"2 2 


? 


vo "<*r OO O 


t^- vo O^ O 

^ N 


- 


^ 





H- oo TJ- oo 


QS ^ ^ P-H 


vO 


to ^t- 


^ 


Ts *-> 


:r*sr* 


00 


r^ to 


< 


O ^ s - N 


s O O N 

l/~, _ |_4 V.^ 


to 
to 


O ^O 





_ -H tO l-l 

T 


^- ON I-H tO 

UO HH 

T ' 


* 


to O 

1 T 



li 



C 



o +j 

js i 



o 

C G 
^ - 1 * 1 
O +-> 

c o 



^ oo oo 

ill 



o o 



1 1 1 

c o c 



C +13 G 

t) G w 

J3 QJ 3 

cr 3 cr- 



w cr .> 

^ 8 *a S 

c S "" Ji 



8 2 Results of Experiment 

Within the columns for "time," "place," "person," and 
"relation," the table shows the effect of "knownness" quite 
consistently (6 times out of 6 comparisons in 3 cases, and 5 
out of 6 in the other), but the effect of "worth-whileness" is 
not consistent. It looks as if its effect were so slight apart 
from "knownness" that the errors and uncontrolled differ- 
ences in "knownness" have outweighed it. 

After making the table, it was found that the "worth 
teaching and known" were more commonly known than the 
"not worth teaching and known" and that a similar but not 
so large a difference existed between the "worth teaching 
and unknown" and the "not worth teaching and unknown." 
These differences resulted from the fact that there were 
more teachers who knew what was worth teaching than there 
were who knew what was not worth teaching. In other 
words, there was a somewhat symmetrical distribution of 
"knownness" among questions on knowledge "not worth 
teaching" and a highly skewed distribution among the 
"worth teaching" items. 

But all cases of inconsistency involved results for such a 
small number of questions that it seemed inadvisable to make 
a more precise comparison. Without having done so, it seems 
safe to conclude that apart from the extent to which knowl- 
edge is common among history teachers, "worth-whileness" 
had very little effect upon the size of the contribution of the 
photoplays to the teaching of time, place, person, relation, or 
to all combined. 

The situation is quite different for "knownness." The size 
of the contribution varies appreciably with the extent to 
which teachers commonly possess the knowledge in ques- 
tion. The photoplays taught some worth-while information 
about persons and places of which teachers are commonly 



Analysis 8 3 

ignorant. They made a greater contribution to teaching such 
knowledge as is frequently possessed by teachers, and their 
contribution was greatest to the teaching of those things 
about persons and places which teachers most frequently 
know. This may be the result of either of two situations or of 
both. The most commonly known persons and places may be 
the ones best or most fully presented in the photoplays, or 
they may be the persons and places which teachers fit into 
their teaching. For place information, the variation in con- 
tribution was slight, ranging in the table from 3 to 18 per 
cent. For person information, the variation is greater, rising 
from 9 per cent to the teaching of material not commonly 
known by teachers, up to a contribution of 72 per cent to the 
teaching of knowledge possessed by 90 to 100 per cent of 
the teachers tested. 

The contribution to the teaching of time knowledge was 
similar to the contributions to place and person teaching in 
that the contribution varied directly with the extent to which 
the knowledge is commonly possessed by teachers. But where 
the photoplays were of some use in teaching some things 
about places and persons of which teachers are commonly 
ignorant, they placed the experimental group at a disadvan- 
tage in learning that worth-while knowledge of "When?" 
or "in what order?" which teachers do not commonly pos- 
sess. Only in the case of the most commonly known time 
knowledge did this disadvantage disappear. 

This is not equivalent to saying that the photoplays taught 
no knowledge of time. The contrary is probably true. Prob- 
ably many questions could have been asked about historical 
sequence to which the experimental group would have 
learned the answers from the photoplays. But they would be 
the smaller or more local, and in the seventh grade, less sig- 
nificant time relationships. 



84 Results of Experiment 

The inferior showing made by the experimental group on 
time questions may mean that only the most commonly 
known time knowledge is well portrayed in the photoplays, 
or it may mean that the photoplays cannot teach worth- 
while time knowledge to seventh grade pupils unless the 
teacher fits the events of the photoplays and the photoplays 
as wholes into the proper time perspective. It might seem 
that the experimental group's disadvantage could also be 
attributed to its missing some effective drill given the con- 
trol group. But the disadvantage is greatest when the knowl- 
edge being measured is least frequently possessed by history 
teachers. And further, what is least frequently known, is 
probably least likely to have been taught in the control 
group. In other words, the disadvantage to the experimental 
group was greatest on the material least likely to have been 
taught to the control group. This suggests that the photo- 
plays produced confusion. To the extent that there was little 
or no teaching in the control group, the photoplays could 
put the experimental group to a disadvantage only in this 
way. Whatever the explanation, teachers using the photo- 
plays will do well not to take for granted the teaching of 
time by the photoplays. For that matter, the same may be 
said with regard to any aspect of their contribution. However 
great a contribution the photoplays can make, good teaching 
can and should increase it. 

The one division of historical knowledge, of the four 
studied, to the teaching of which the photoplays made the 
largest contribution, independent of the extent of the teach- 
ers' knowledge, is that of organization, or causal relation- 
ship, or the interaction of events. At the bottom of Table 
XXIII, going from the most frequently known to the least 
frequently known, it may be noted that the contribution to 



Analysis 85 

the teaching of "relation" increases, while the contributions 
to the teaching of "time," "place," and "person" decrease. 
In other words, the photoplays were able to teach worth- 
while relationships which are not commonly known by his- 
tory teachers. But in the teaching of the most commonly 
possessed knowledge "relation" yields first place to "per- 



son." 



The irregularity of change in the combined contribution, 
from 23 up to 24, and then down to 13, is attributable to the 
inverse relation, noted above, between the trend in the "rela- 
tion" column and that in the "time," "place," and "person" 
columns. 

In view of this inverse relationship it is quite possible that 
some of the differences between the rank orders in Tables 
XX and XXI, and that in Table XIX, are significant. It is 
only reasonable to suppose that the nature of the photo- 
plays' contribution varied with the teacher, according to her 
interest and the relative emphasis placed by her upon time, 
place, person, and relation. Probably the nature of the con- 
tribution varied somewhat with the photoplay, and would 
vary with the same photoplay according to the teaching 
situation. 

Reasons have been presented for thinking that the ob- 
tained results are independent of the tests used. The experi- 
ment was so conducted as to involve no special methods. The 
teachers were free to use their own methods, subject only to 
the experimental control. It is therefore safe to suppose that 
the results of the use of these ten photoplays are of general 
significance in the seventh grade. 

If it had been found that the experimental group's excess 
gain had been distributed equally among the time, place, 
person, and relation portions of the tests, there would have 



86 Results of Experiment 

been little basis for deciding whether the group's greater in- 
terest was a result or a cause of the greater gain. But since 
the greater gain was of such a nature as to make it hard to 
ascribe it to greater interest, the greater interest shown by 
more reading and pupil participation may be attributed to 
seeing the photoplays and having more to talk about. This 
would in turn make for better learning and retention. 

The material supplied for voluntary reading was so se- 
lected that with a very few exceptions it could not have con- 
tributed to the greater gain. Whatever the experimental 
group learned, because of its reading more than was read by 
the control group, was an indirect contribution to knowledge 
which was not measured. 



SECTION XIV 

Summary Statement of Results and Conclusions. 

ON the Knowlton tests, designed to measure enrichment of 
a worth-while sort, the experimental group gain exceeded 
the control group gain by 19 per cent. The difference is 6.7 
times its probable error, when N equals the number of meas- 
urements, and 2.7 times the probable error when N equals 
the number of pupils measured. 

In order to show what it means for the experimental 
group to have learned 19 per cent more than the control 
group, another control group was used of sufficiently greater 
ability to permit it to make the same amount of gain as was 
made by the experimental group. This control group was 
found to be, on the average, over a year more mentally ma- 
ture, more than one grade further advanced so far as their 
knowledge is concerned, and brighter than the experimental 
group by an amount which would rank them 20 in 100 as 
compared to a rank of about 60 for the experimental group. 

The greater gain of the experimental group consisted of 
learning about, in descending order, causal relationships, 
persons, and places. The experimental group gained less of 
worth-while time knowledge, but learned twice as many 
worth-while causal relationships not frequently known by 
history teachers. 

This enrichment did not take place at the expense of 
standardized progress as measured by the Van Wagenen 
History Scale, Information C-2. In fact, the progress of the 
experimental group, as measured by this scale, was slightly 
greater than that made by the control group. 

Experimenters in visual education have been criticized, 



8 8 Results of Experiment 

sometimes justly and sometimes unjustly, for using tests 
which magnify the contributions of the aids being measured. 
In order to check the tests used in this experiment in this 
respect, they were appraised by expert judges and by history 
teachers who had not seen the photoplays. Against these 
criteria it was found that in so far as results above reported 
are in error because the tests used asked for knowledge not 
worth acquiring or not commonly possessed by history teach- 
ers, they are in error by minimizing the contribution of the 
photoplays. 

Retention, over periods varying from three to seven 
months, was measured in two ways which may be called rela- 
tive and absolute, relative being the per cent retained of what 
was gained, and absolute being the retained gain or net gain 
after forgetting. 

The experimental group retained more, relatively, of 
knowledge of relationships, to the learning of which the 
photoplays also contributed most. Of person and place 
knowledge, the experimental group retained relatively about 
the same or a little less. Of time knowledge the experimen- 
tal group clearly retained relatively less. Of all combined 
they also retained relatively less. 

In the so-called absolute units, even though the experi- 
mental group forgot more, they retained more of relation, 
person, and place knowledge. Of time knowledge they re- 
tained less. Of all combined they retained more. Compared 
with the 1 9 per cent contribution on full gains, the contribu- 
tion based on net gains is about 1 2 per cent. The loss was due 
chiefly to the forgetting of time knowledge. 

There was no review of the teaching of the last experi- 
mental unit because it was followed by the summer vacation. 
This is the only unit for which the factor of review is con- 



Summary and Conclusions 89 

stant. For this unit the experimental group learned 25 per 
cent more than the control group and retained 27 per cent 
more than the control group retained. The difference in re- 
tained gains in this case is 1.7 times its probable error. 

The control and experimental groups were compared as to 
the reading of history in the school library and outside of 
school, as to their liking for history as compared with their 
liking for six other subjects studied, and as to information 
contributed in class and obtained outside. In none of these 
measures did the experimental group average exceed the 
control group average. 

However, as evidence of interest, more weight should be 
attached to the findings in the classroom, since they were 
obtained under controlled conditions. In the classroom dis- 
cussion, the experimental group participated more to the 
extent of about 10 per cent and showed more desire to par- 
ticipate. This was especially true of the more voluntary 
participations. The difference upon which the 10 per cent is 
based is 3.6 times its probable error. The experimental group 
also voluntarily read more supplementary history material, 
their excess being about 40 per cent of the reading of the 
control group. A larger per cent of the experimental group 
contributed to the measures of both participation and read- 
ing j and for those contributing, the averages for the experi- 
mental group were higher. The difference upon which the 40 
per cent is based is 5.2 times its probable error. 

When one group voluntarily reads more history, and vol- 
untarily takes part in classroom discussion of history more 
extensively than does another group, there is a real sense in 
which the first group is more interested in history than the 
second, even though this greater interest is not expressed in 
the ranking of subjects. In this sense the experimental group 



90 Results of Experiment 

showed a greater interest in history than was shown by the 
control group. 

The conclusions of varying significance which may be 
drawn respecting the contributions of the photoplays are as 
follows: 

1. The ten photoplays made a large contribution to the 
teaching of an enriched course of study, increasing the pu- 
pils' learning by about 1 9 per cent. 

2. This contribution was of such a magnitude that average 
children with the aid of the photoplays learned as much as 
bright children did without them. 

3. The photoplays, while providing this enrichment, 
made a small contribution to completing the minimum es- 
sentials in less time. The estimated saving in a forty- week 
year was one and one-half weeks. 

4. The photoplays were most effective in teaching a 
knowledge of interrelationships involving the interaction of 
events and of forces. They increased the pupils' learning of 
this sort 35 per cent, or about twice as much as they increased 
the gaining of all kinds of historic knowledge. 

5. The next largest contribution was to the teaching of 
historical personages. The increase of learning of this sort 
attributable to the photoplays was 23 per cent. 

6. The contribution to the teaching of historical geogra- 
phy was 19 per cent. 

7. The photoplays interfered with the teaching of time 
relationships. They decreased by 10 per cent the learning of 
such relationships. 

8. The photoplays effectively taught a worth-while 
knowledge of the interaction of events which is not fre- 
quently possessed by history teachers. 

9. In the part of the experiment in which there was no 



Summary and Conclusions 9 1 

review between teaching and retest for retention, the con- 
tribution to retention was greater than, or at least equal to, 
the contribution to learning. This was the contribution of 
four photoplays to the teaching of the Revolution. The pu- 
pils learned 25 per cent more by the use of the photoplays 
and remembered 27 per cent more after three months. 

10. In general, the contribution of the photoplays was 
not as great to retention as to learning. The pupils learned 
about 19 per cent more with the aid of the photoplays but 
retained only about 12 per cent more. 

11. This was due chiefly to the fact that the photoplays 
interfered with the retention of time knowledge to about 
twice the extent that they interfered with gaining it. By see- 
ing the photoplays, pupils gained 10 per cent less of time 
knowledge and retained 20 per cent less. 

12. The contribution of the photoplays to the remember- 
ing of historical geography was smaller than their contribu- 
tion to learning it. Pupils learned 19 per cent more and re- 
membered 14 per cent more. 

13. The contribution to the retention of knowledge of 
persons was also less than the contribution to the gaining of 
it. With the aid of the photoplays pupils learned 23 per cent 
more and remembered 21 per cent more. 

14. The contribution to the retention of knowledge of 
historical relationships other than those of time was greater 
than the contribution to gaining this knowledge. Of such re- 
lationships, pupils learned 35 per cent more, and remem- 
bered 43 per cent more. 

15. The effect of the photoplays upon pupil participation 
in classroom discussion was in detail as follows: 

(a) more recitations were made at the request of the 
teacher ; 

(b) a larger percentage of the class recited ; 



92 Results of Experiment 

(c) those reciting did so more of ten 5 

(d) on these occasions more hands were raised; 

(e) more remarks were volunteered by the pupils not 
directly as a result of a teacher's question, i.e., upon 
those occasions when their own desire to participate 
more evidently prompted them; 

(f) a larger percentage of the group so volunteered; 

(g) those volunteering did so more often; 

(h) on these occasions more hands were raised for per- 
mission to participate; 

(i) more questions were asked; 

(j) a larger percentage of the group asked questions; 

(k) those who asked questions did so more often; 

(1) fewer contributions came in as a result of outside in- 
terest; 

(m) a larger percentage of the group made such contribu- 
tions; 

(n) those contributing did so less often. 

1 6. The increase in the total number of pupil participa- 
tions attributable to the use of the photoplays was 10 per 
cent. This increase is equivalent to forty-six more participa- 
tions in a year by each pupil, or about 1,600 more in a 
thirty-five-pupil section. 

1 7. Seeing the photoplays did not cause the pupils to rank 
history appreciably higher among six other subjects studied. 

1 8. It did not cause pupils to read more history in the 
school library during the school library periods, judging 
from the school librarian's record kept during the experi- 
ment. 

19. It did not cause them to read more history outside of 
school, during the experimental period, judging from their 
own lists, made from memory at the end of the experiment. 



Summary and Conclusions 93 

20. It did cause them to read voluntarily more supple- 
mentary history material under controlled classroom condi- 
tions: 

(a) 40 per cent more reading was done; 

(b) a larger percentage of the group chose to read; 

(c) the average amount, for those reading, was larger. 

The evaluation of these conclusions calls for a considera- 
tion of: 

(1) the probabilities of an obtained result having been 
due to errors of sampling and of measurement j 

(2) granting a real difference, the extent to which preci- 
sion of experimental control justifies the interpretation of 
group differences as the influence of the experimental fac- 
tor, and equality of results as lack of such influence 5 and 

(3) assuming a real difference attributable to the experi- 
mental factor, the educational significance of the fact. 

The reader should also remember that the comparison 
was not between poor oral instruction and an equal amount 
of visual instruction, but between good oral instruction on 
the one hand, and on the other, the same amount of instruc- 
tion, five-sixths oral and one-sixth visual. 

The outstanding findings of the experiment are, in the 
opinion of the writers: 

(1) that the photoplays contributed materially to the 
gaining and retention of worth-while knowledge, particu- 
larly of knowledge of interrelationships, other than time 5 

(2) that they produced more pupil participation in class- 
room discussion 5 and 

(3) that they caused the pupils who saw them to read 
voluntarily more supplementary history reading material 
under controlled classroom conditions. 



APPENDIX I 

The Knowlton Tests. 
Pilgrims and Puritans. 

Date 



Name 

Grade . . . Division 



I 

Underscore the correct word or words in the statements below: 

1. The Pilgrims began their wanderings (at the time, before, 
some time after) Jamestown was settled. 

2. (The same, a different) King ruled the land. 

3. The Pilgrims lived among strangers about (two years, ten 
years, twenty years) and then decided to move once more. 

4. The Pilgrims reached America (before, at the same time, 
after) the Puritans did. 

5. The Pilgrims set sail in (spring, summer, autumn) reaching 
the New England coast in (spring, summer, autumn, winter). 

6. The voyage was (as long as, shorter than, longer than) the 
voyage of Columbus. 

7. The Mayflower returned in (1621-1623-1625) leaving the 
Pilgrims alone in the new world. 

II 

Check any of the following events which happened within the 
first ten years of the history of the Massachusetts Bay Colony: 
.... Settlement of Rhode Island by Roger Williams 
.... Persecution of Quakers 
. . . .New England Confederation 
.... Banishment of Anne Hutchinson 

King Philip's War 

.... Settlement of Connecticut 



Knowlton Tests 95 

III 

The colonists had many difficulties to overcome before they could 
feel that their settlements were permanent. Some of these were 
things happening within the colony itself; others came from the 
outside. How would you classify the following difficulties which the 
Pilgrims and Puritans had to overcome? 

Place an I in front of those which you think were inside diffi- 
culties, and an O in front of those which stood for things outside or 
attacks from without: 

. . . .Thomas Morton's trading post 

.... Criticisms of Roger Williams 

.... Archbishop Laud's attempt to secure the Charter 

. . . .Claims of Ferdinando Gorges to territory 

.... Rule of Harry Vane 

. . . .Disease 

.... Divine Right idea of the King of England 

. . . .Indians 

. . . .Teachings of Anne Hutchinson 



IV 





On the outline map above indicate by the number at the right the 
location of the following places or countries connected with the 
movements of the Pilgrims and Puritans. 



96 Appendix 

The country village where the story of the Pilgrims begins ( I ) 
A foreign city where they lived when they started for 

America (2) 

The last town they saw before they reached the new world (3) 

Where they first landed in the new world (4) 

Where they actually settled (5) 

The most important one of the early Puritan settlements (6) 
Where Roger Williams lived before he was driven out of 

the colony (7) 

The bay where he made his settlement (8) 
The rivers named in the Puritan charter which helped to 

mark the northern and southern boundaries of their 

grant (9) 
The part of New England already granted by the King to 

Ferdinando Gorges ( IO ) 

V 

Opposite each of the numbers I to 10, write the name of the city 
or locality which you have shown on the outline map. 

i 6 

2 7 

3 8 

4 9 

5 10 

VI 

One thing which makes the story of the Pilgrims and Puritans so 
interesting is the fact that while some things happen in England and 
others take place in America, these happenings are often closely con- 
nected. 

Indicate by using the numbers in front of each item, just where 
each of the events took place. Place in column headed "America" 
those numbers corresponding to events which took place in America, 
and in column headed "England" those which took place in Eng- 
land. 

(1) Destruction of Merrymount 

(2) Banishment of Thomas Morton 

(3) Signing of the Mayflower Compact 



Knowlton Tests 97 

(4) Sir Ferdinando Gorges appointed Governor-General of 
New England 

(5) Meeting of a Commission to get possession of Puritan 
Charter 

(6) Thomas Morton aids Sir Ferdinando Gorges 

(7) Sir Harry Vane is chosen Governor of Massachusetts Bay 

(8) Roger Williams questions the Massachusetts Bay Charter 

(9) Order for return of Charter 

(10) Anne Hutchinson stirs up trouble 

( 1 1 ) Order issued for banishing Roger Williams 

(12) Religious meetings of Pilgrims broken up by government 
officials 

(13) Meeting of Pilgrims to make plans for leaving their native 
land 

America England 



VII 

Complete the following sentences by placing an (X) before the 
statement which you think is correct: 

1. Thomas Morton aided Sir Ferdinando Gorges because of 

( ) the destruction of Merrymount 

( ) the signing of the Mayflower Compact 

( ) the order issued for banishing Roger Williams 

2. The same authority which appointed Sir Ferdinando Gorges 
Governor-General of New England 

( ) issued the order for banishing Roger Williams 
( ) chose Sir Harry Vane as Governor 
( ) ordered the return of the Charter 



98 Appendix 

3. One reason why the Committee met to get possession of the 
Puritan Charter was because 

( ) Thomas Morton had been banished 
( ) Sir Ferdinando Gorges was appointed Governor- 
General of New England 

( ) Roger Williams questioned the Massachusetts Bay 
Charter 

VIII 

Put T in front of the number if the sentence is true. Put F if 

the sentence is false. 

.... I. The crew of the Mayflower sympathized with the efforts 
of the Pilgrims to form a settlement. 

... .2. The Pilgrims were depending altogether on Miles Stan- 
dish's plans for protecting them against the Indians. 

.... 3. The English neighbors of the Pilgrims were very friendly. 

... .4. The main purpose of the Pilgrims was to find a place of 
refuge where they could keep their faith. 

... .5. The Pilgrims and their leaders were ready to return to 
England after they had gone through their first New Eng- 
land winter. 

... .6. The Puritans had great confidence in their first governor, 
John Winthrop. 

... .7. The Archbishop of Canterbury, the head of the English 
Church, hated the Puritans and tried his best to ruin them. 

.... 8. Roger Williams did not have a single friend in the Massa- 
chusetts Bay Colony. 

.... 9. The Puritans in America were anxious to have friends in 
England who could take their part with the King. 

... 10. Roger Williams did not wish to do anything to harm the 
Massachusetts Bay Colony. 

... II. Winthrop and the Puritan leaders were not worried over 
Roger Williams' attacks on the Charter. 

... 12. The Puritans were ready to surrender their charter when 
asked to do so. 

IX 

Below you will find a list of words and phrases which might be 
used to describe a Puritan or a Pilgrim. Will you place in front of 



Knowlton Tests 99 

each of those which seem to you to describe best a Puritan an O and 
in front of those which seem to you to describe best a Pilgrim an X. 

.... Peaceable .... Plain 

.... Influential .... Refined 

. . . .Wealthy . . . .Elegant (in dress or manner) 

.... Poor (little money) .... Courtly 

.... Educated .... With political ambitions 

. . . .Aristocratic 



Life in the Colonies. 

Date 



Name 

Grade. . . Division 



Below you will find a list of some of the things which you might 
have expected to see had you visited one of the early English settle- 
ments in America between 1600 and 1660. 

Go through the list and put a V in front of those you might have 
seen in Virginia. Then go through the list again and put an N in 
front of those you might have seen in New England. 

. . . . ( I ) A meetinghouse ....(13) A schoolhouse 

.... (2) A post office .... (14) Soldiers on guard 

....(3) A gallows ....(15) A mill 

.... (4) A flag and flagpole . . . . (16) Well-kept streets 

....(5) Shops and stores ....(17) Stocks 

....(6) A well ....(18) A common or green 

.... (7) A pillory .... (19) A church 

.... (8) A hospital .... (20) A hotel or tavern 

.... (9) A drill ground .... (21) A market place 

. . . (10) Wagons . . . . (22) Cannon for defense 

. . . ( 1 1 ) A stockade .... (23) A blockhouse or fort 

...(12) A public storehouse ....(24) Sheds for drying tobacco 



i oo Appendix 

II 

What are some of the things you would have expected to see had 
you entered the home of one of the colonists between 1607 and 
1640? 

Put an X in front of each one you would have expected to see. 

.... Upholstered chairs .... Fireplace 

.... Polished tables .... Tables of rough boards 

. . . .Spinning wheel . . . .Carved bedsteads 

.... Beds of boughs and twigs .... Candlesticks 

.... Implements for grinding grain .... Glass windows 

. . . .Chests . . . .Wooden bowls 

.... Metal goblets .... Rough benches 

.... Glassware .... Rocking chairs 

.... Andirons .... Framed pictures 

. . . .Bric-a-brac (vases, ornaments, . . . .Lamps 

etc. ) .... Pine torches 

.... Rugs .... Stools 

.... Board floors .... Farming tools 

. . . .Dried herbs . . . .Window curtains 
. . . .Muskets 

III 

Fill in the missing word wherever there is a blank, or, if there is 
a choice of two words, as in Nos. 4, 8, and 1 1, cross out the wrong 
word or words. 

1. At the time the Jamestown colony was settled the nearest 
people of their own nationality lived in 

2. Their nearest European neighbors in America were the 
who lived in 

3. Their nearest Indian neighbors lived in what is now the 
state of 

4. They had (trouble, no trouble) with the Indians. 

5. At the time Plymouth was settled the nearest English neigh- 
bors of the Pilgrims lived in 

6. Their nearest European neighbors (not English) in America 
were the . . who lived in . 



Knowlton Tests i o i 

7. Their nearest Indian neighbors lived in what is now the 
state of 

8. They had (trouble, no trouble) with the Indians. 

9. At the time the Massachusetts Bay Colony was settled their 
nearest English neighbors lived in 

10. Their nearest Indian neighbors lived in what is now the 
state of 

11. They had (trouble, no trouble) with these Indians. 

IV 

The early colonists brought with them many of their English 
customs and ways of doing things. Others they learned from the 
Indians. Still other occupations and ways of doing things were the 
result largely of the new country, its resources, and the natural con- 
ditions which they faced. 

Before each of the things named below place an E, an I, or a C 
to indicate whether it was their English training (E), the Indians 
(I), or the country (C) which was largely responsible for their do- 
ing each of the things named or for the way they did them. The 
first one is done for you as an illustration. 

. ?. . Dividing the land, because that is the way they divided land in 
England. 

.... Raising corn .... Cultivating tobacco 

.... Building ships .... Spinning and weaving cloth 

. . . .Candle-making . . . .Fur-trading 

. . . .Shoe-making . . . .Fishing 

.... Laying out the settlement .... Lumbering 

.... Building houses 

V 

Underline the correct answers: 

1. The early English settlements were (of medium size, small), 
containing (a few, a large number) of houses. 

2. The number of people in one of these settlements averaged 
(200, 500, 100). 

3. The number of women was (large, small) in comparison 
with the number of men. 



IO2 Appendix 

4. The settlements were about the size of a (country village, 
fair-sized town, small city). 

5. The farms or fields were usually (outside, inside) the settle- 
ment. 

6. They owned (no, large numbers of, small numbers of) 
cows, pigs, sheep, goats, and poultry. 

7. They brought over (many, few) of their English customs. 

8. Their dress (was like, was different from) that worn in 
England. 

9. The settlers (readily, with difficulty) accustomed themselves 
to the new life. 

10. Strict laws with death as a common punishment were in 
force in (New England, Virginia). 

11. The people managed their affairs in town meetings in (New 
England, Virginia). 

12. The colonists usually had short hair and wore broad- 
brimmed, high-crowned hats with only a band for an orna- 
ment in (New England, Virginia). 

13. The colonists usually dressed in rich, gay clothing with 
broad collars in (New England, Virginia). 

14. The colonists were largely under the control of trading com- 
panies and bodies of merchants in (New England, Virginia, 
Maryland). 

15. Charters guaranteed to all the colonists the rights of Eng- 
lishmen in (Massachusetts Bay Colony, Plymouth, Connecti- 
cut, Virginia, Maryland). 

1 6. A colonist wrote that "Our men were destroyed with cruel 
diseases, so they died sometimes two or three of a day." He 
might have been describing conditions in (Jamestown, Plym- 
outh, Massachusetts Bay, Connecticut, Maryland). 

17. "Many were the assaults and ambuscades of the savages" in 
(Jamestown, Plymouth, Massachusetts Bay, Connecticut, 
Maryland). 

1 8. "They came to that misery that some starved and died with 
cold and hunger" in (Jamestown, Plymouth, Massachusetts 
Bay, Connecticut, Maryland). 




Pocahontas and John Rolfe, after their wedding in the Jamestown 
church, surrounded by admiring colonists. 

{From "Jamestown," one of The CJironicles of America Photoplays} 



Knowlton Tests i o 3 

Peter Stuyvesant. 



Date 

Name 

Grade Division 

I 

Below are eight sentences about persons who were more or less 
closely connected with the story of how New Netherland became 
English. Complete the sentences by selecting from the list of adjec- 
tives the one which you thing best describes the attitude of each, and 
write the number corresponding to the adjective in the blank space 
provided. 

1. The King of England was .... 

2. Peter Stuyvesant was .... 

3. The members of the Dutch West India Company were .... 

4. The English settlers of New Amsterdam were .... 

5. The Dutch settlers of New Amsterdam were .... 

6. The London merchants were .... 

7. The members of the court of Charles II were .... 

8. The brother of the English King was .... 

List of Adjectives to choose from 

1. ambitious 9. short-sighted (that is, not looking ahead 

2. obstinate into the future) 

3. easily influenced 10. dissatisfied (or discontented) 

4. tyrannical n. enterprising 

5. liberty-loving 12. far-sighted 

6. peace-loving 13. indifferent 

7. easy-going 14. slightly interested 

8. contented 15. keenly interested 

II 

Below are eight sentences to be completed, and under them are 
ten things these people might have said. Complete the sentences by 
selecting the best saying for each one. You need not copy the saying, 
just write its number in the blank space. 



1 04 Appendix 

1. The King of England .... 

2. Peter Stuyvesant .... 

3. The members of the Dutch West India Company .... 

4. The English settlers of New Amsterdam .... 

5. The Dutch settlers of New Amsterdam .... 

6. The London merchants .... 

7. The members of the court of Charles II .... 

8. The brother of the English King .... 

Sayings 

1. Freedom is not to be found under the flag of the Dutch West 
India Company. 

2. The people manage their own affairs in the English colonies. 

3. The people do not need to know what is going on. 

4. We are simply doing our duty and acting as our conscience 
tells us. 

5. The people are not competent to manage their own affairs. 

6. Business comes first. 

7. Trade follows the flag. 

8. English trade is seriously threatened. 

9. Nothing should be allowed to interfere with our pleasure. 
10. We are ready to do anything within our power. 

Ill 

Underline the correct word or words in each of the statements 
below. 

New Amsterdam was founded (before, about the same time, 
after) the English had made their first permanent settlement. It had 
been founded about (40, 20, 10) years when it was taken by the 
English. (James I, Charles I, Charles II) was then ruling England. 
By this time (3, 6, 8) of the thirteen English colonies had been 
founded. Within the next (25, 50, 70) years after its surrender 
the other colonies were founded. Peter Stuyvesant had been its ruler 
for almost (5, 10, 20) years when it was taken over by the Eng- 
lish. New Sweden was added to New Netherland (before, during 
the time, after) he was governor. 



Knowlton Tests 1 05 

IV 

For the statements (a) to (e) below, some true causes are given 
and some false ones. Mark each one T for true and F for False. 

(a) The English King planned to take New Netherland because 

( ) the Navigation Acts failed to check smuggling 

( ) Holland was at war with England 

( ) the control of the Atlantic seacoast depended upon the 

control of the Hudson 
( ) the Dutch were people belonging to a different 

church 

(b) The settlers of New Amsterdam in 1664 were ready for a 
change of rulers because 

( ) trade was not good enough 

( ) the Stuart kings believed in divine right 

( ) Peter Stuyvesant closely supervised the affairs of the 

colony 
( ) the control of the West India Company was too 

strict 

(c) Peter Stuyvesant finally handed over the colony to the English 
because 

( ) the English fleet defeated the Dutch fleet 

( ) the people of the colony objected to fighting 

( ) the Dutch West India Company ordered him to do so 

( ) the people of the colony spoke so many languages 

(d) The possession of New Netherland was important to the Eng- 
lish because 

( ) they desired the control of the Hudson River 

( ) they desired the control of the fur trade 

( ) they wished to enforce the Navigation Acts 

( ) they feared the attacks of the Indians 

( ) they had an interest in trade 

( ) they had established colonies themselves 

(e) The possession of New Netherland was important to the Dutch 
because 

( ) they desired the control of the Hudson River 
( ) they desired the control of the fur trade 



106 Appendix 

( ) they wished to enforce the Navigation Acts 

( ) they feared the attacks of the Indians 

( ) they had an interest in trade 

( ) they had established colonies themselves 

V 

Some of the things which an English visitor to a Dutch settle- 
ment might have noticed are listed below. Make an X in front of 
those which he would have recognized as decidedly "Dutch." 

.... A blockhouse or fort .... Rooms with sanded floors 

.... Taverns and drinking places .... Rooms with beamed ceilings 

.... Flocks of geese .... Skating parties 

.... Pigs roaming the streets .... Women working on em- 

.... Poultry and chickens broidery frames 

.... Children spinning .... Well-kept yards and flower 

.... Wagons drawn by horses beds 

. . . . Hourglasses in use as clocks .... Fireplaces with andirons 

.... Carts drawn by dogs .... A village common or green 

. . . .Windmills 

VI 

Note that the map shows that part of the Atlantic coast which ex- 
tends from Maine to Florida. 

(a) Draw a solid line (like this ) along that part of the Atlan- 
tic coast already settled by the English when New Netherland 
was attacked. 

(c) 1 Using the numbers below, I to 8, locate on the map 

1. The river which marked the eastern boundary of the land 
claimed by the Dutch. 

2. The river which marked the southern boundary of New 
Netherland when captured by the English. 

3. The river on which the Dutch made the most of their set- 
tlements. 

4. The most important Dutch settlement. 

5. The nearest territory to the New England settlements 
which was held by the Dutch at the time of its capture. 

1 As the test was used, item (b) , because of an error in copying, was an 
exact duplicate of (a), and was therefore omitted. 



io8 Appendix 

6, 7, 8. Three English colonies formed from New Nether- 
land, 
(d) Complete the following sentences: 

1. The river located in No. I was 

2. The river located in No. 2 was 

3. The river located in No. 3 was 

4. The settlement in No. 4 was 

5. The nearest Dutch territory in No. 5 was 

6. The three colonies in Nos. 6,7,8 were , , 



The Struggle Between the French and English for 
North America. 



Date 

Name 

Grade . . . Division . , 



Underline the correct word or words in each of the statements 
below: 

Quebec was settled in 1608. About (fifty years, one hundred 
years, one hundred and fifty years) after this the French by build- 
ing forts were threatening the advance of the English westward 
across the Alleghanies. It was about (ten, five, three) years before 
the final battle that the English government realized how serious the 
situation was and sent help. Braddock's defeat took place (before, 
after) they had been aroused to the danger. It was about (ten, five, 
three) years after Washington's return from his mission warning 
the French, that the treaty of peace was signed settling the question 
of the English mastery of North America. 

II 

Fill in the missing words, one word in a blank: 
When the final struggle opened for the possession of North 
America the French obtained the land bounded on the East by 



Knowlton Tests 1 09 

and on the west by The English had settle- 
ments as far north as the present state of and as far 

south as the present state of The French first entered 

North America by way of the river and gradually made 

their way inland building forts along the river, the 

, and the river. Finally they fol- 
lowed the tributaries of the river to their sources, threat- 
ening the English settlements in what are now the states of 

and Their principal fort here was Fort 

and this was located on land claimed by the colony of 

It was at the junction of the river and the 

river. Their principal strongholds in Canada were 

and The defeat of the French left the Eng- 
lish in possession of North America from the Atlantic Ocean on 

the east to the on the west. When the war 

opened the continent of North America was divided between 

nations and when it closed it was divided between 

nations. 

Ill 

Put a cross before the adjectives which best describe the French 
in America at that time. 

.... I. Protestant ... .8. Self-confident 

... .2. Catholic ... .9. Generous 

... .3. Loyal subjects of the ... 10. Quick of speech and ac- 

King tion 

... .4. Liberty-loving . . . II. Venturesome 

... .5. Slow ... 12. Cautious 

... .6. Friendly with Indians . . . 13. Over-bearing 

... .7. Ready to take orders ... 14. Tolerant 

from their superiors 

IV 

Put T in front of the number of the sentence if the sentence is 
true. Put F if the sentence is false. 

.... I. England would probably not have won had it not been for 
the work of the Navy. 



no Appendix 

... .2. The English Government cooperated with the colonies 
throughout the struggle for North America. 

.... 3. The French Government was not interested in New France 
nor its fate. 

... .4. There was everywhere in New France a fine spirit of co- 
operation shown between people in charge of affairs. 

....5. There were colonists in America who were thoroughly 
alive to the dangers from the French. 

... .6. The final success of England was due primarily to the ac- 
tion of the government and to the aid which it sent. 

... .7. Wolfe was a much finer type of man than Montcalm. 

... .8. After Quebec was taken the situation was still critical. 

.... 9. When the French began to plant forts in their neighbor- 
hood the English colonists sought to avoid war with them. 

. . . IO. Even though he was defeated Washington was commended 
for his part in the campaign against the French. 

V 

Below are some qualities which were shown by the leading men 
in the struggle between France and England. Answer the questions 
by selecting from the list below the qualities which you think best 
describe the men, and write the numbers corresponding to them in 
the blank spaces provided. 

I. What three qualities did Washington best illustrate? .... 



2. What three qualities did Pitt best illustrate? .... 

3. What three qualities did Montcalm best illustrate? 

4. What three qualities did Wolfe best illustrate? . 

5. What two qualities did Dinwiddie best illustrate? 



Knowlton Tests 1 1 1 

6. What two qualities did the Canadian governor, Vaudreuil, 
best illustrate? . 



List of Qualities to choose from 

1. Resourcefulness 7. Sense of responsibility 

2. Energy 8. Strong sense of duty 

3. Anxiety 9. Daring 

4. Self-confidence 10. Consideration for others 

5. Spirit of self-sacrifice n. Lack of cooperation 

6. Vision of future, or foresight 12. Determination 



The Revolution. 

Date 



Name 

Grade . . . Division 



I 

Some of the events which stirred up trouble between England and 
the colonies and finally led to war, took place before General Gage 
was placed in charge of the government of Massachusetts in 1774. 
Others took place afterward. In the column headed A or B below, 
place a B for the events which took place before Gage was placed 
in charge, and an A for those events which took place after he was 
placed in charge. 

Order A or B 

.... I. The Boston Massacre .... 

.... 2. The Stamp Act .... 
.... 3. The Election of Delegates to a Continental 

Congress .... 

... .4. The Boston Tea Party .... 

... .5. The attempt to capture Adams and Hancock .... 
.... 6. Changing the capital and seat of government 

of Massachusetts 



1 1 2 Appendix 

....7. The destruction of supplies gathered by the 

Americans .... 

.... 8. The Quartering Act .... 

II 

The events listed above are not in the right order. Arrange them 
in the order in which they happened by writing, in the column 
headed Order in No. I, number I before the one which happened 
first, number 2 before the one which happened second, etc. 

Ill 

Underline the correct word or words in each of the statements 
below. 

It was about (ten, five, three) years after the first of the griev- 
ances between England and her colonies which followed the con- 
quest of New France, that they actually went to war to settle their 
differences. 

Thomas Paine's pamphlet "Common Sense" was published (be- 
fore, after) Lexington was fought. This was (five years before, 
two years before, the same year that) the Declaration of Inde- 
pendence was signed. 

The following events had already taken place when the Declara- 
tion of Independence was signed: (Bunker Hill, hiring of Hes- 
sians, quartering of soldiers, battle of Trenton, Burgoyne's sur- 
render, Arnold's treason). 

George Rogers Clark's conquest of the Northwest Territory was 
(before, after) the Battle of Saratoga. After Saratoga the scene of 
the principal fighting between the English and Americans was in 
(New England, the Middle colonies, the Southern colonies). 

Benedict Arnold's treason was (some time before, just before, 
just after) the Yorktown campaign had begun. 

IV 

Fill in the missing words, one word in a blank: 

George Rogers Clark was acting for the governor of 

when he set out to drive the English from the Northwest Terri- 
tory. When he set out, the most western settlement which this 
colony had planted was in what is now the state of He 



Knowlton Tests 1 1 3 

set out from He first captured 

He moved from here through a flooded country to The 

British governor of the Northwest Territory had his headquarters 

at The territory which George Rogers Clark won from 

the English included the present five states of , , 



Washington and his army had to cross the colonies of 

, , , and , in order to join 

the other American forces before Yorktown. 

Because of the opposition in Massachusetts the English govern- 
ment removed the capital and seat of government from 

to 

The first battle of the Revolution was fought at The 

last important battle was fought at 

The Declaration of Independence was signed at 

The attempt to capture Hancock and Adams was at 

The French established their headquarters in America at 

in the colony of 

Sir Henry Clinton directed the movements of the British armies 
from his headquarters in 

V 

Put T in front of the number of the sentence if the sentence is 
true. Put F if the sentence is false. 

.... I. The soldiers in Boston were entirely to blame for the Bos- 
ton Massacre. 

.... 2. There was a great deal of opposition in connection with 
the election of delegates to the Continental Congress at 
Philadelphia. 

.... 3. The colonists were united in their desire for a war with 
England. 

... .4. Many of the people of Boston cooperated with Gage and 
his soldiers and helped them all they could. 

... .5. It was the poor people, not the rich nor well-to-do who 
were opposed to England and caused the Revolution. 

... .6. When it came to declaring their independence from Eng- 
land, the American people were united. 



1 1 4 Appendix 

....7. The Declaration of Independence could not have been 
passed if one colony had voted against it. 

.... 8. Soldiers fighting on the American side not only deserted, 
but often refused to obey their officers. 

.... 9. The British army had plenty of money to get what they 
wanted, while the Americans had little. 

. . . 10. The war was practically won fully two years before the 
final struggle at Yorktown. 

... II. The success of Cornwallis depended largely upon the co- 
operation of Sir Henry Clinton. 

. . .12. The French rendered effective aid to the American army 
as soon as the Treaty of Alliance was signed. 

... 13. The war was decided on land without the use of a fleet. 

... 14. Governor Hamilton was too much of a gentleman to have 
been guilty of the charges brought against him that he en- 
couraged his Indian allies to scalp wounded Americans. 

VI 

Below are given the names of six men who were prominent char- 
acters in the Revolutionary War, and under them are six sentences 
which describe them. After each sentence write the name of the 
man who best fits the description. 

1. Samuel Adams 4. Thomas Paine 

2. John Hancock 5. John Dickinson 

3. Benjamin Franklin 6. George Rogers Clark 

I. When the news of the battle of Bunker Hill came, and the 
Continental Congress wanted to draw up a paper justifying 
their rebellion, he was opposed to any strong statement. 



2. A wealthy merchant, apparently fond of dress and willing to 
sacrifice his business for his beliefs. 



3. A man who was writing and talking to persuade his fellows 
that they would be better off if altogether free from England. 



Knowlton Tests 115 

4. A man who was willing to take chances; a natural leader of 
his fellow men. 



5. A man whose chief desire was to be a leader of men; suc- 
cessful in making others do as he wanted them to. 



6. A rather jolly old man who usually was trying to smooth 
things over and to get people to agree with each other. 



VII 

Below are several reasons which a man of 1776 might have given 
for being either a Whig or a Tory. Mark with a W all those which 
he might have given for being a Whig. Mark with a T those which 
he might have given for being a Tory. 

.... I. Because of interference with his trade. 

... .2. Because of his admiration and respect for the British form 
of government. 

... .3. Because of the possibility of being freed from debt. 

.... 4. Because of the possibility of his losing his property. 

... .5. Because of his fear of war and love of peace. 

... .6. Because of the acts of injustice of the English government. 

... .7. Because of the protection offered by the British govern- 
ment. 

.... 8. Because he was an officeholder in the colonies. 

.... 9. Because he belonged to the working class. 



Instructions for Testing. 

PASS papers, and read the following directions: 

"Write your name, grade and section, and the date, on the first 
page, and write your name on each of the other pages." 

(For the first testing) 

"Professor Knowlton made this test to find out what you know 



1 1 6 Appendix 

about (read title), and I want you to read every question 

carefully and answer as many as you can." 

(For the second testing) 

"The test today is to find out how much you have learned about 
(read title), and I want you to read every question care- 
fully and answer as many as you can." 

(For both first and second testing) 

"The test is divided into parts and the directions are on the paper 
for each part. Read the directions carefully and ask no questions, 
unless you can't read the print or don't understand the directions." 

"If you work steadily you'll have time to try every question." 

Collect papers as they are finished. 



Messengers from England arrive in the colony with orders from 

Sir Ferdinando Gorges, the royal Governor General of 

New England. 

(From "The Puritans," one of The Chronicles of America Photoplays} 



APPENDIX II 

Selections for Voluntary Reading. 

Morton's Story of How the Puritans Came To Attack 
His Settlement. 

THE inhabitants of Pasonagessit (old name of the settlement 
which they were having changed to Merrymount) did devise among 
themselves to have it performed in a solemn manner with revels 
and merriment after the old English custom; prepared to set up a 
Maypole upon the festival day of Philip and Jacob; and therefore 
brewed a barrel of excellent beer and provided a case of bottles to 
be spent, with other good cheer, for all comers of that day. And be- 
cause they would have it in a complete form, they had prepared a 
song fitting to the time and the present occasion. And upon Mayday 
they brought the Maypole to the place appointed, with drums, guns, 
and pistols, and other fitting instruments, for that purpose; and 
there erected it with the help of savages, that came thither for that 
purpose to see the manner of our revels. A goodly pine tree of eighty 
feet long was reared up, with a pair of buck's horns nailed on, some- 
what near unto the top of it; where it stood as a fair mark for direc- 
tions; how to find out the way to mine Host of Ma-re Mount. 

And because it should more fully appear to what end it was 
placed there, they had a poem made, which was fixed to the May- 
pole, to show the new name confirmed upon that plantation; which 
although it were made according to the occurrence of the time, it 
puzzled the Separatists most pitifully to explain it. The setting up 
of this Maypole was a lamentable spectacle to the precise Separatists 
that lived at New Plymouth. They termed it an idol; yea, they 
called it the calf of Horeb; and stood at defiance with the place, 
threatening to make a woeful mount and not a merry mount. 

There was likewise a merry song made which was sung with a 
chorus, every man bearing his part; which they performed in a 
dance, hand in hand about the Maypole, while one of the company 



1 1 8 Appendix 

sang and filled out the good liquor. One verse of the song ran like 

this: 

"Make green garlands, bring bottles out; 
And fill sweet nectar, freely about, 
Uncover thy head and fear no harm, 
For here's good liquor to keep it warm." 

This harmless mirth was much disapproved of by the precise 
Separatists . . . and from that time they sought occasion against 
my honest Host of Ma-re Mount to overthrow his undertakings and 
to destroy his plantation quite and clean. 

1. Upon what day did the inhabitants of Pasonagessit plan a 
festival? 

2. What did they put near the top of the pole? 

3. What was the new name of the plantation? 

4. Who disapproved of the merrymaking? 



The Voyage of the Mayflower. 

FINALLY, 102 persons with their belongings crowded into the May- 
flower, and on September 16, 1620, the Pilgrims for the third time 
bade farewell to their friends on the shores, as Captain Jones as- 
sured them that they would not return again. 

During the first half of the journey the vessel only encountered 
the prevailing westerlies. Every day at sea life was about the same. 
In the forward part of the boat were the poultry, goats, and swine 
that had to be fed. The crew and passengers did not have an oppor- 
tunity to cook much food. You can understand that a frying pan, 
held over a bed of charcoal in a box of sand, was inadequate to sup- 
ply the necessary food conducive to good health. Consequently un- 
cooked food, lack of balanced meals and fresh fruit, and insufficient 
exercise produced numerous disorders that could not be corrected 
during the long voyage. 

In midocean the tempestuous waves tossed the vessel in such a 
manner that one of the main beams in the center of the ship 
cracked, and the peerless captain believed at one time that it might 



Voluntary Readings 1 1 9 

be necessary to return again. The crew and the leaders among the 
passengers held a conference at which it was agreed to repair the 
break. Very fortunately one of the band possessed a large iron screw 
that he had brought with him from Holland. The crew managed to 
raise the main beam with jacks and to force the screw in the dislo- 
cated timber. Needless to say there was great rejoicing when the 
fractured timber was repaired. 

One morning the captain peered into the distance and noticed the 
black heads of thunderclouds. Soon a terrific storm broke, the rain 
coming down in torrents accompanied by heavy thunder and light- 
ning. When the storm reached the zenith of its fury, John How- 
land, a sturdy passenger, was washed overboard by the violent waves. 
But just before this accident the coil of the topsail halyards was 
swept over the deck of the vessel and trailed in the water, and very 
fortunately John Howland caught a firm grip on the coil and hung 
on until the storm abated. Then he was brought to the deck with a 
boat hook. As a result of this experience he was quite ill for a long 
time, but according to records he was the last of the Pilgrim com- 
pany to die. 

1. Who was Captain of the Mayflower? 

2. What was the matter with their food? 

3. With what did they repair the broken beam? 

4. What was it that kept John Howland from being lost at sea? 



The First Thanksgiving. 

GOVERNOR BRADFORD was so satisfied with the first harvest that he 
desired to set apart a day for special thanksgiving. To provide addi- 
tional meat for the feast the governor instructed four hunters to kill 
wild fowl for the occasion. These men hunted incessantly until they 
procured enough birds to supply the entire colony for a week. Inas- 
much as the rich harvest was due to the help of the friendly Indians, 
the colonists decided to extend a cordial invitation to Massasoit and 
his braves to take part in the feast attending the first Thanksgiving. 



I2O Appendix 

"Pleasantly rose the sun the next morning over the little village" 
of Plymouth where the first Thanksgiving was to be held. For this 
time of year the November morning was remarkably fresh and 
beautiful. Underneath the oaks and chestnuts stood the long tables, 
loaded with good things in preparation for the celebration of the 
successful harvest. 

In the distance could be seen Massasoit with his ninety compan- 
ions moving slowly among the saplings. Foremost marched the great 
sachem, conducting his men in single file to this remarkable Thanks- 
giving feast. The king wore fur of beaver about his loins, mocca- 
sins of deer skin on his feet, and peacock feathers in his hair. Aside 
from being oiled, his face was painted a bright red, while a string 
of bone beads, which encircled his neck, distinguished him as chief. 
In the rear of the file were Indians who bore venison, wild turkey, 
and corn. 

As the Indians approached, a four-pounder on an adjacent hill- 
top saluted the invited guests and formally opened the festivities of 
the day. Following this salute the Pilgrims formed lines, three 
abreast, and marched solemnly behind Elder Brewster, who wore a 
long camlet coat and carried his Bible. The party proceeded to the 
log meeting house, where the Thanksgiving services were held. 

At the conclusion of the exercises the Pilgrims and Indians took 
their places at the long table that was spread with roast turkey, baked 
clams, broiled fish, boiled squash, pumpkin pie, and roast venison. 
After dinner the Pilgrims, in order to entertain their visitors, played 
numerous games, but the Indians did not seem to enjoy these sports, 
so amused themselves by singing, howling, dancing, and playing 
their own Indian games. 

The Thanksgiving festival continued for three days, and has been 
repeated regularly each year for more than a century. 

1. Why did the colonists invite the Indians? 

2. What three things did the Indians bring with them? 

3. After saluting the Indians, what did the colonists do next? 

4. Did the Indians play games with the Pilgrims? 




In the cabin of the "Mayflower" in November, 1620, the Pilgrims 

assemble and draft the Compact, the basis of government 

in the New World. 



(From "The Pilgrims," one of The Chronicles of America 



Voluntary Readings 1 2 1 

Roger Williams Describes His Flight and the 
Founding of Providence. 

IN 1670 Roger Williams wrote a letter to a friend and told him 
some of his adventures, saying: 

"When I was unkindly and unchristianly, as I believe, driven 
from my house and land and wife and children (in the midst of 
New England winter, about 35 years past) at Salem, that ever hon- 
ored Governor Mr. Winthrop privately wrote to me to steer my 
course to Narragansett Bay and Indians for many high and heavenly 
and public ends, encouraging me from the f reeness of the land from 
any English claims or patents. I took his prudent motion as an hint 
and voice from God and waving all other thoughts and motions, I 
steered my course from Salem (though in winter snow which I feel 
yet) unto these parts, wherein I may say Peniely that is, I have seen 
the face of God." Here he was evidently thinking of the story of 
how Jacob wrestled with the angel, as described in the Old Testa- 
ment. When the struggle was over Jacob called the place Peniel, 
saying, "I have seen the face of God." 

"I first pitched, and began to build and plant at Secunk, now 
Rehoboth" (he is apparently still thinking of the wanderings of the 
Jews and the names of their old cities), "but I received a letter from 
my ancient friend Mr. Winslow, then Governor of Plymouth, pro- 
fessing his own and others' love and respect to me, yet lovingly ad- 
vising me, since I was fallen into the edge of their bounds and they 
were loath to displease the Bay, to remove but to the other side of 
the water, and then he said I had the country free before me and 
might be as free as themselves and we should be loving neighbors 
together. These were the joint understandings of these two emi- 
nently wise and Christian governors and others, in their day, together 
with their counsel and advice as to the freedom and vacancy of this 
place, which in this respect and many other providences of the most 
holy and only wise, I called Providence" 

1. Where did Governor Winthrop advise Roger Williams to go? 

2. What time of year was it when he went? 



122 Appendix 

3. Why didn't he stay at Rehoboth? 



4. How much farther did he have to go from Rehoboth to be on 
free land? . 



How Sir Harry Vane Happened To Come to America. 

HARRY'S father was a very famous man at court. He had been 
knighted by the King when he was only twenty-two. The King had 
so much confidence in him that he had made him treasurer of the 
young Prince Charles. When Charles came to the throne, Harry 
Vane naturally received a great many honors at the King's hand. He 
represented England at the court of the King of Denmark, and also 
at the court of the great King Gustavus Adolphus of Sweden. 

Little Harry might be said to have been born with a golden spoon 
in his mouth. He went to one of the best boys' schools and to Ox- 
ford University. He left college when he was a boy of nineteen and 
was sent by his father to serve the English ambassador at Vienna. 
When he returned his father's friends expected that he would be- 
come a prominent man at the King's court, but his father was 
surprised to find that the young man had already "turned Puritan." 
He did all he could to try to persuade his son to give up his beliefs, 
but all in vain. There is a story that his father left him alone pur- 
posely in a room one day where he was certain to come in close con- 
tact with the King, hoping that the young man would be very much 
taken by the dignity and grace of King Charles I. The young man, 
however, hid himself behind the curtains. The King, entering and 
seeing the curtains move, poked with his cane to see who was there, 
until Harry was forced to make his appearance and left the room in 
considerable confusion. 

Young Harry now took a resolution not at all strange under the 
circumstances. Fixed as he was in his views, there was no career for 
him in England. How irksome life would be in the presence of his 
disappointed father, of the King whom he had avoided, and the 
Church of England officers whom he had defied! Of roaming on 
the continent he had had enough. Why not try New England? It 
was almost like leaving the planet to go there, but he was at the age 



Voluntary Readings 1 2 3 

when distance and difficulty do not appall. Harry Vane set his face 
westward. His father remonstrated, but it is said the King inter- 
fered to remove obstacles. When he was just twenty-three, a corre- 
spondent of Sir Thomas Wentworth writes: "Sir Henry Vane's eld- 
est son hath left his father, his mother, his country and that fortune 
which his father would have left him, and is, for conscience' sake, 
gone into New England, there to lead the rest of his days." 

I. Harry's father represented England at what two courts? 



2. How old was Harry when he left college? 

3. When Harry returned from Vienna what was there about him 
that surprised his father? 

4. Where did Harry go when he was twenty-three years old? 



The Pilgrims' First Meeting with Indians. 

ON Wednesday, December 1 6, the party set out in a westerly di- 
rection and sailed in their shallop along an unknown shore, studded 
with wave-worn and wind-worn bowlders. The spray from the icy 
waters "froze on their clothes and made them many times like coats 
of iron." 

As they approached the irregular shore line, they perceived a 
dozen or more Indians standing around a large fish. When the 
Indians saw the strange craft, they disappeared in the forest. The 
bay was so shallow that it was necessary to wade through the cold 
water in order to reach the shore. At this place, within the shadow 
of a wooded slope, they set up their camp for the night. The chilly 
December blasts, the smoke from the Indian encampments on the 
hillside, and the stormy clouds of a New England winter did not 
dampen their ardor and enthusiasm. Early the next morning they 
searched the rocky shore where they noticed the Indians the day be- 
fore. To their great surprise they discovered a dead grampus which 
the savages had been cutting up for food. The grampus is about one- 
half the size of a Greenland whale, or about 20 to 30 feet in 
length. The Pilgrims named this place "Grampus Bay," now known 
as Eastham. 



124 Appendix 

They spent another night in the open. Upon awaking the next 
morning, little did the Pilgrims think they would have a genuine 
skirmish with the Indians. Breathlessly the sentinels rushed into 
camp, shouting: "Indians! Indians!" Before the men seized their 
guns, a shower of arrows greeted them. It was Captain Miles 
Standish who, with his clumsy flintlock musket, returned the fire. 
Then in unison the others sent bullets from their matchlocks. The 
Indians, afraid of the unaccustomed noises, darted into the ever- 
greens, yelling and howling. 

Fortunately, as a result of this attack from the foe, the brave men 
were uninjured. An examination of the arrows strewn about the en- 
campment showed that some were headed with brass, a few with 
harts' horns, and others with eagles' claws. The company remarked 
about the brass and wondered at the absence of flint arrowheads that 
the Indians were supposed to use. It did not take Captain Standish 
and his warriors long to embark from the scene of battle. As they 
climbed into the shallop from the icy water, the Pilgrims glanced 
back at the scene of excitement and named it "The First En- 



1. When the Indians first saw the Pilgrims what did they do? 

2. Why did the Pilgrims have to wade ashore? 

3. Did the Indians attack the Pilgrims in the night? 

4. Did the Pilgrims stay where they had landed another night? 



William Bradford Describes the Difficulties in 
Escaping to Holland. 

THE next spring they made another attempt to get over (to Hol- 
land), with a Dutchman who was by appointment to take them in 
between Grimsby and Hull, where there was a large common a 
good way distant from any town. The women and children, with 
the goods, were sent to the place in a small bark which they had 



Voluntary Readings 125 

hired for that end; and the men were to meet them by land. But it 
so fell out, that they were there a day before the ship came, and the 
sea being rough, and the women very sick, prevailed with the sea- 
men to put into a creek hard by, where they lay on ground at low 
water. The next morning the ship came, but they were fast, and 
could not stir till about noon. In the meantime, the ship master, 
perceiving how the matter was, sent his boat to be getting the men 
aboard whom he saw ready, walking about the shore. But after the 
first boat full was got aboard, and she was ready to go for more, the 
master espied a great company, both horse and foot, with bills and 
guns and other weapons; for the country was raised to take them. 
The Dutchman seeing that, swore his country's oath, "sacremente," 
and having the wind fair, weighed his anchor, hoisted sails, and 
away. But the poor men which were aboard were in great distress 
for their wives and children, which they saw thus to be taken, and 
were left destitute of their help; and themselves also, not having a 
cloth to shift them with, more than they had on their backs, and 
some scarce a penny about them, all they had being aboard the bark. 
It drew tears from their eyes, and anything they had they would 
have given to have been ashore again; but all in vain, there was no 
remedy, they were thus sadly parted. The men on the ship endured 
a fearful storm at sea, but in the end reached their desired haven. 

The men on shore managed to escape. But pitiful it was to see the 
case of the poor women in this distress; what weeping and crying on 
every side, some for their husbands that were carried away; others 
not knowing what should become of them and their little ones. 
. . . After they had been conveyed from one constable to another, 
their captors were glad to be rid of them upon any terms. . . . But 
in the end they all reached Holland. 

I. How were the women and children sent to the place from 
which they were to embark for Holland? 



2. How did the 'men go? 

3. Why did the ship sail before all were on? 



4. Were these men and women finally successful in reaching 
Holland? . 



126 Appendix 

How the Pilgrims Left Their Amsterdam Homes and 
Went to Leyden. 

THE Pilgrims loaded their boats in one of the small waterways of 
the city of Amsterdam. The little flotilla was freighted with house- 
hold goods and crowded with plainly and soberly dressed English 
people, conspicuous among whom was the dignified John Robinson. 
In clerical garb, wearing a cap which looked like a watermelon cut 
in half, with perhaps a little band of lace around the bottom, and 
wearing also a ruff around his neck, he was easily recognized. 
Brewster, a man in middle life, and Bradford, a young man of 
nineteen, were also prominent. The women and children enjoyed 
the outing in the lovely springtime as they passed through the garden 
region of Europe, where even at that early time the tulips were gor- 
geous and the other cultivated flowers magnificent. The country 
looked like a great checkerboard of green and white, for there were 
acres of linen bleaching on the grass, where the skilful bleachers, 
handling their wooden shovels as sprinklers, made Haarlem linen 
famous throughout the world. 

The journey was along the Haarlem Canal until they got into 
the Haarlem Meer or lake. With the fields so green, the mild-eyed 
cows grazing everywhere, the birds in immense numbers flitting 
about, it was an enjoyable trip both to the parents and children. 
Everywhere the great flat landscape was dominated by the church 
spire. In the distance on their left were the shining waters of the 
Zuyder Zee. On the right rose the great sand hills or dunes which 
form Holland's wall of defense against the ocean. After these had 
been left far behind, probably late in the afternoon, they came in 
sight of the turreted gates and walls of Leyden, gay with the 
orange, white, and blue flag of the republic, and they saw the great 
church of St. Peter, under the shadow of which was to be their 
home. 

As they drew nearer Leyden they turned aside from the lake into 
narrower and smaller bits of water until they came to the Rhine 
which flows through and incloses Leyden. At the Canal Gate they 
were challenged by the guard who finding their papers were all 
right, admitted them. They then went on to take up quarters which 



Voluntary Readings 127 

they had probably already selected in the northwestern part of the 
city. Some of their number who had already found employment 
there were present to welcome the newcomers. Leyden was a manu- 
facturing center for all kinds of woven goods; and next to finding 
peace and quiet to serve God, the idea of these Pilgrims on their 
second journey was to get work, that they might have food and the 
comforts of life. 

1. Name three men who were conspicuous among the Pilgrims. 

2. How did they travel from Amsterdam to Leyden? 

3. How did the guard at the gate know that they had a right to 
enter the city of Leyden? 

4. Next to finding peace and quiet to serve God, what did they 
want in Leyden? 



How Indentured Servants Were Treated. 

THE number of bond-servants, even in New England, seems to 
have been large, and the supply was much greater in the wheat and 
tobacco countries. In 1670 Virginia had 6,000 English servants, 
while there were yet but 2,ooo negroes. As the servants were freed 
in four years, this number represented a very large importation. 

The treatment of servants was as various as the character of the 
masters. At first, while the country was new and the population 
sparse, there was a sort of good-fellowship between the faithful 
servant and his master's family, and there were not wanting those 
who granted many indulgences to their bondmen. 

But even in 1629 De Vries, the Dutch traveler, saw English men 
and women staked and lost at cards, and he bluntly told the Vir- 
ginians that he had "never seen such work in Turk or Barbarian." 
And when there had been brought over a multitude of "kids," as 
they were called, the decline in the average character of the serv- 
ants and the incoming of negro slaves rendered the bondman's lot 
less tolerable, especially when the cultivation of a staple required 
large gangs of convicts and other immigrants of desperate fortunes 
and reckless temper. 



128 Appendix 

It was an age of flogging; criminals, soldiers, sailors, pupils, 
children, and now and then even wives, were thought the better for 
a whipping. One ought hardly to be surprised, therefore, at the 
numerous and cruel whippings of English servants, women as well 
as men, who were whipped naked with hickory rods and washed 
with brine; the punishment continuing sometimes at intervals for 
hours, or being renewed day after day. There were also in use, by 
masters and overseers, thumbscrews, sweatings, and other such 
devil's devices. The food allowed was sometimes a scant diet of 
Indian meal. The sick servant was neglected lest the doctor's charge 
should exceed the value of his remaining service; and one thrifty 
master required a servant, sick of a mortal disease, to dig his own 
grave in advance, in order to save the other men's time. 

1. Copy the sentence which means that some servants were 
treated well and some poorly 

2. Did the Dutch traveler, De Vries, praise the Virginians for 
the way they treated their servants? 

3. Who else were whipped besides servants? 

4. Were English servants treated cruelly or just the negroes? 



The Worst Indian Massacre in Virginia. 

THE year 1622 was long remembered in Virginia on account of the 
terrible massacre of settlers by the Indians. An Indian called "Jack 
of the Feather" killed a settler by the name of Morgan as the two 
were on their way to a village to do some trading. The Indian re- 
turned to the settler's house, where he found two of his servants 
who asked for their master. Jack said that he was dead. They sus- 
pected that the Indian had killed him, and so shot him. The chief of 
the tribe made great threats of revenge. As time passed the settlers 
thought he had forgotten all about it, but such was not the case. 
Here is the account of what happened as one of the settlers tells it. 
"On the Friday morning that fatal day, being the two and twen- 
tieth of March, as also in the evening before, as at other times they 



Voluntary Readings 129 

came unarmed into our houses, with deer, turkeys, fish, fruits, and 
other provisions to sell us; yea in some places sat down at breakfast 
with our people, whom immediately with their own tools they slew 
most barbarously, not sparing either age or sex, man, woman, or 
child; so sudden in their execution, that few or none discerned the 
weapon or blow that brought them to destruction. In which manner 
also they slew many of our people at several works in the fields, 
well knowing in what places and quarters each of our men were, in 
regard of their familiarity with us: and by this means fell that fatal 
morning under the bloody and barbarous hands of that perfidious 
and inhumane people, three hundred forty-seven men, women, and 
children; mostly by their own weapons; and not being content with 
their lives, they fell again upon the dead bodies, making as well as 
they could a fresh murder, defraying, dragging, and mangling their 
dead carcasses into many pieces, and carrying some parts away in 
derision, with base and brutish triumph. 

"Neither yet did these beasts spare those amongst the rest well 
known to them, from whom they had daily received many benefits; 
but spitefully also massacred them without any remorse or pity." 

1. What did Morgan's servants suspect Jack of the Feather of 
doing? 

2. What did they do to him? 

3. Did the settlers think that the Indians had forgotten all about 
it? 

4. How many settlers did the Indians kill? 



Personal Possessions of an Early Settler. 

WHEN a man died in those early days it was customary, as it is 
today, to make a list of the things he owned. Those lists, which are 
still to be found in some of the old records, give us a pretty good 
idea of the kind of life these people led. The value which is placed 
upon these things is also interesting, showing how well-to-do they 
really were. A shilling (s) in those days would be worth about 
twenty-five cents, and a pound () about five dollars. 

Christopher Pearson, who died in 1698, left two feather beds, 



130 Appendix 

four blankets, two bolsters, two pillows, a curtain and valance, in 
all worth 7; a pair of sheets, some old table linen, valued at 1 8s; 
plates and other pewter worth i i8s; an old warming pan and 
other brass articles placed at 6s; wooden ware at 4.13.6 compris- 
ing three chairs and one table, a couch, four old chests, a cask, two 
ten-gallon rundlets, a cheese press, a box of drawers, an old table, 
three pails, a spinning wheel with cards, two sifting trays, a corn 
barrel, three bedsteads, four sieves and a funnel; ironware worth 
2.1.0 including three pots, two pot rocks, a pestle, a frying pan, a 
looking glass; three cows appraised at 6.5.0, a yearling at los, a 
colt at 2 sterling. The entire estate was valued at 25.19.6 
(about one hundred and twenty-nine dollars and eighty-one cents). 
John Splitimber, who died in 1677, was possessed of one feather 
bed, one bolster, one red rug, one pillow, two blankets, one turned 
bedstead, one old mattress, eight cows, six calves, one bull, four 
mares, thirty-five hogs, two horses, a long gun and a short gun, 
fifty-six pounds of old pewter, one old flock bed, one old rug, a 
long table and form, three chests, an old couch, two old boxes, two 
iron pots, two small brass kettles, one pair of steelyards, spitfire 
shovel and tongs, two smoothing irons, two old weed hoes, two old 
axes, a few carpenter's tools, one iron pestle, a saddle and bridle, a 
frying pan, a butter pat, a jar, a looking glass, two milk pans, one 
tablecloth, nine spoons, a churnhand, a Bible. 

1. What do the lists of what a man owned give us a good idea 
of? 

2. What was their shilling worth in our money? 

3. What was Christopher Pearson's estate valued at in our 



money ? 



4. What kinds of animals did John Splitimber own? 



Life on a Large, Well-to-do Virginia Plantation. 

CAPTAIN SAMUEL MATTHEWS was a well-to-do planter. One who 
lived at the time described his plantation and the life there as fol- 
lows: 



Voluntary Readings 131 

"He hath a fine house and all things answerable to it; he sows 
yearly store of hemp and flax and causes it to be spun; he keeps 
weavers, and hath a tan-house, causes leather to be dressed, hath 
eight shoemakers employed in their trade, hath forty negro servants, 
brings them up to trades in his house. He yearly sows abundance of 
wheat, barley, and so forth. The wheat he selleth at four shillings 
the bushel, kills store of beeves, and sells them to victual the ships 
when they come thither; hath abundance of kine, a brave dairy, 
swine great store, and poultry." 

His example of trying to carry on some manufacturing on his 
plantation was followed by other planters in later times. One of 
them employed on his farm "two house carpenters, a ship carpenter, 
a glazier, two tailors, a gardener, a blacksmith, two brickmakers and 
two sailors, all indentured servants. Attempts were made to train the 
negro slaves to various trades, but they proved to be 'none of the 
aptest or nicest.' ' 

Thus the large plantation was a little community to itself, bus- 
tling with activity and depending upon its own exertions for many 
of the necessities of life. One might see at work, in addition to the 
field hands, carpenters, coopers, sawyers, blacksmiths, tanners, cur- 
riers, shoemakers, spinners, weavers, and distillers. The woods fur- 
nished plank for the erection of outhouses and charcoal for the 
blacksmith; the cattle supplied skins for the tanners and shoe- 
makers; the sheep gave wool and the fields cotton and flax for the 
weavers; the orchard produced the fruit used by the distillers. The 
coopers made the hogsheads in which the tobacco was shipped, and 
the casks for wine and cider. The blacksmith repaired plows, har- 
rows, chains, and hinges; the shoemaker made shoes for the negro 
slaves, the spinners and weavers the cloth for their clothes. 

1. What two things does it say that Captain Matthews sold? 

2. Did other planters follow Captain Matthews' example? 

3. Did these planters have to go to the store for many things? 



4. Where did the shoemaker get his leather? 



1 3 2 Appendix 

Naming Children in Colonial Days. 

PARENTS searched for names of deep significance, for names ap- 
propriate to conditions, for those of profound influence presum- 
ably on the child's life. Glory to God and zealous ambition for the 
child's future were equally influential in deciding selection. 

Rev. Richard Buck, one of the early parsons in Virginia, in days 
of deep depression named his first child Mara. This text indicates 
the reason for his choice: "Call me Mara for the Almighty hath 
dealt very bitterly with me. I went out full and the Lord hath 
brought me home empty." His second child was christened Ger- 
shom; for Moses' wife "bare him a son and called his name Ger- 
shom, for, he said, I have been in a strange land." Eber, the Hebrew 
Patriarch, called his son Peleg, "for his days were divided." Mr. 
Buck celebrated the Pelegglng y or dividing of Virginia into legis- 
lative districts in connection with the establishment of the House of 
Burgesses, by naming his third child Peleg. Many names have a 
pathos and sadness which can be felt down through the centuries. 
Dame Dinely, widow of a doctor or barber-surgeon who had died 
in the snow while striving to visit a distant patient, named her poor 
babe Fathergone. A little Goodman child, born after the death of 
her father, was sadly but trustingly named Abiel, meaning God is 
my father. 

In the old Ropes Bible in Salem is given the reason for an un- 
usual name which often appears in that family; it is Seeth. One of 
the family was supposed to be dead, having disappeared. On his sud- 
den reappearance a pious Ropes exclaimed in joy, "The Lord seeth 
not as man seeth, and my child shall be named Seeth." 

Abigail, meaning father's joy, was frequently given, and Han- 
nah, meaning grace; the history of these two Hebrew women made 
their names honored of New England Puritans. Zurishaddai, which 
meant The Almighty is my rock, was bestowed on more than one 
boy. Comfort, Deliverance, Temperance, Peace, Hope, Patience, 
Charity, Faith, Love, Submit, Endurance, Silence, Joy, Rejoice, 
Hoped For, and similar names indicative of a trait of character, a 
virtue or an aspiration of goodness, were common. The children of 
Roger Clapp were named Experience, Waitstill, Preserved, Hope- 
still, Wait, Thanks, Desire, Unite, and Supply. 



Voluntary Readings 1 3 3 

With the exception of Puritanical names, double Christian names 
were very rare until after the Revolution. 

1. What did Rev. Richard Buck name his first daughter? 

2. Why did Dame Dinely name her baby Fathergone? 

3. What did the name Hannah mean? 

4. What did the name Zurishaddai mean? 



Attending Church in Colonial Times, as Told by a 
Boston Colonist. 

"EVERY Sabbath or Lord's Day they come together at Boston by 
ringing of a bell, about nine of the clock or before. The Pastor be- 
gins with solemn prayer, continuing about a quarter of an hour. 
The Teacher then readeth and expounded! (or explained) a chap- 
ter. Then a Psalm is sung, whichever one the ruling Elder dictates. 
After that the Pastor preacheth a Sermon, and sometimes extempore 
exhorts (that is, urges them to lead good lives). Then the Teacher 
continues with a prayer and a blessing. 

"About two in the afternoon they repair to the meeting-house 
again; and the Pastor begins, as before noon, and a Psalm being 
sung, the Teacher makes a Sermon. He was wont, when I came 
first, to read and expound a Chapter also before his Sermon in the 
afternoon. After and before his Sermon he prayed. After that fol- 
loweth Baptism, if there be any, which is done by either Pastor or 
Teacher, in the Deacon's seat, the most eminent place in the Church, 
next under the Elder's seat. The Pastor most commonly makes a 
speech or exhortation to the Church and parents concerning Bap- 
tism, and then prayeth before and after. It is done by washing or 
sprinkling. One of the parents being of the church, the child may be 
baptized. 

"Which ended, follows the contribution, one of the Deacons 
saying, 'Brethren, of the congregation, now there is time left for 
contribution, wherefore as God hath prospered you, so freely offer.' 



134 Appendix 

Upon some extraordinary occasions, as building and repairing of 
Churches and meeting-houses or other necessities, the Ministers press 
a liberal contribution, with effectual exhortations out of Scripture. 
The Magistrates and chief gentlemen first, and then the Elders, and 
all the congregation of men, and most of them that are not of the 
Church, all single persons, widows, and women in the absence of 
their husbands come up one after another one way, and bring their 
offerings to the Deacon at his seat, and put it into a box of wood 
for the purpose, if it be money or papers; if it be anything else, they 
set it or lay it down before the deacons, and so pass another way to 
their seats again." 

1. At what time did the church bell ring in the morning? 

2. Did they go to church again in the afternoon? 

3. Who baptized the children? 

4. Who received the offerings and contribution? 



The Arrangement of a New England House. 

THE larger part of the best of the early houses of New England 
were probably much like the first permanent homestead of the Gal- 
lups. The high-placed and deep-seated windows were scant in num- 
ber, heavily barred, and narrow. It was only the wealthy who at this 
time could afford the luxury of glass. Oiled paper was the usual sub- 
stitute. To exclude the cold were heavy and close wooden shutters 
both outside and inside. During the coldest weather it must have 
been necessary to depend for light, even in the daytime, upon open 
fires, pine knots, and candles, for at least the first decade or two in 
each new settlement. 

In the center of the house rose the great stone chimney, with 
wide-throated fireplaces opening into three large rooms on the first 
story and into four upon the second story. The unplastered and 
paintless ceilings were low, but higher than was usual, for John 
Gallup is said to have stood six feet four inches in his gray knit 
hose, and had to bow his stately head to enter any doorway save his 
own. 



Voluntary Readings 1 3 5 

The second story on the two longer sides projected considerably 
beyond the lower. In view of the constant danger from Indians, it 
is probable that this house was intended to be used as a fortress in 
case of necessity, and this projection may have been made for the 
sake of affording a coign of vantage to its inmates if attacked by 
savages. 

The third story was but a big garret with windows in each end. 
Beneath all were deep cellars for the storage of winter supplies, and 
for the manufacture and ripening of home-brewed beer, made after 
recipes brought from the mother country. At first, cider had no place 
in those cellars, but after the orchards had grown, there was found 
room for the barrels of hard cider which were made from them, 
and which finally quite displaced the heavier and perhaps more 
wholesome, certainly less stimulating, beer. In the cellars were also 
kept, even from the first, the casks of metheglin, made from the 
plentiful honey of the wild bee, which in the autumn filled the place 
with the sound of its working like the swarming of armies of bees. 

In the broad and high-peaked garret were set the heavy looms at 
which, during all the long summer days, either men or women, as 
the case might be, were diligently weaving the coarse stuff which 
must serve young and old, master and man, mistress and maid, for 
all the rougher occasions of pioneer life. 

1. What was often used as a substitute for glass windows? 

2. In what part of the house was the stone chimney usually 
located? 

3. What two words tell whether the ceilings were plastered or 
painted? 

4. In what part of the house were the looms? 



How the Housewives Prepared for Winter. 

THE making of a portion of the autumn's crop of apples into dried 
apples, apple sauce, and apple butter for winter was preceded in 



136 Appendix 

many country homes by an apple paring. The cheerful kitchen of a 
farmhouse was set with an array of empty pans, tubs, baskets; of 
sharp knives and heaped-up barrels of apples. A circle of laughing 
faces completed the scene, and the barrels of apples were quickly 
emptied by the many skilful hands. The apples intended for drying 
were strung on linen thread and hung on the kitchen and attic 
rafters. The following day the stout crane in the open fireplace was 
hung with brass kettles which were filled with the pared apples, 
sweet and sour in proper proportions, the sour at the bottom since 
they required more time to cook. If quinces could be had, they were 
added to give flavor, and molasses, or boiled-down pungent "apple 
molasses," was added for sweetening. As there was danger that the 
sauce would burn over the roaring logs, many housewives placed 
clean straw at the bottom of the kettle to keep the apples from the 
fiercest heat. Days were spent in preparing the winter's stock of 
apple sauce, but when done and placed in barrels in the cellar, it was 
always ready for use, and when slightly frozen was a keen relish. 
Apple butter was made of the pared apples boiled down with cider. 

The housewives pickled samphire, fennel, purple cabbage, nas- 
turtium buds, green walnuts, lemons, radish pods, barberries, elder 
buds, parsley, mushrooms, asparagus, and many kinds of fish and 
fruit. They candied fruits and nuts, made many marmalades and 
jellies, and a vast number of fruit wines and cordials. 

Perhaps the busiest month of the year was November, called 
"killing time." When the chosen day arrived, oxen, cows, and swine 
which had been fattened for the winter's stock were slaughtered 
early in the morning, that the meat might be hard and cold before 
being put in the pickle. Sausages, rolliches, and headcheese were 
made, lard tried out, and tallow saved. 

1. In what rooms did they string apples for drying? 

2. Could they prepare the winter's stock of apple sauce in a day? 



3. In what month was "killing time"? . 

4. Why did they kill early in the morning? 




In New Amsterdam Director-General Peter Stuyvesant gives 

way to fury as the Councilors urge him to accept the English 

terms for surrendering the Colony of New Netherlands. 

(From "Peter Stuyvesant," one of T/ie Chronicles of America Photoplays) 



Voluntary Readings 1 37 

A Dutch Home. 

THE houses were built with long sloping roofs, and, if possible, on 
a hillside so that the front stoop was approached by a few steps, but 
the kitchen door at the back of the house was always flush with the 
ground. It was wide and high and was built in this way to allow 
of a horse being driven in every morning hauling, by means of a 
long iron chain, a huge block log, which made the foundation of 
the fire that was never allowed to die out entirely. Everyone went 
in and out of the kitchen door, except on occasions of ceremony. 
The front parlor was a sacred apartment that was kept tightly 
closed except on gala days, and woe to the mouse or the "kacker- 
lack" (cockroach) that entered it. On the opposite side of the hall, 
that always ran from the front to the rear of the house, was the 
family sitting room. The bedrooms were large and filled with pon- 
derous mahogany bureaus and four-post bedstead under which was 
an "een slaapbauck op rollen" or trundle-bed, which was pulled out 
at night and into which was tucked from two to four children. The 
lower classes used great boxes with boarded bottoms for beds, which 
were filled with sacks of hay, corn silk, or dried leaves. A great 
brass warming pan usually hung on the walls. 

The children of the first settlers were well trained in household 
duties, as was needful in a place where there were few servants, and 
each woman undertook much of her own housework. The boys were 
made to carry water from the well or run errands to the wood- 
house, the smokehouse, and the brine barrel in the cellar. The girls 
had their daily "stint" inside the house, and as there was always "a 
stretch" on the loom, an idler was often set to "do a yard" as a 
punishment. Every maiden, whatever her station in life, was thor- 
oughly instructed in the details of housekeeping, and she was not 
considered eligible for matrimony until she could show her "kos" 
full of linen, spun and woven by herself, and daintily marked with 
her initials in cross-stitch. 

1. What was hauled into the kitchen every morning? 

2. Where was the trundle-bed kept during the day? 



1 3 8 Appendix 

3. Did the boys and the girls have to help with the work? 

4. In what way was every maiden thoroughly instructed? 



How the Dutch Told People by Their Dress. 

EACH official had his distinctive costume. Laborers wore a dress 
that did not impede them in their work. They never wore long 
coats those were reserved for the upper classes; but every work- 
man and craftsman donned long leather aprons both in the house 
and on the street. One corner of it was invariably tucked under the 
belt when the wearer was not working, but otherwise it fell nearly 
to his feet. The leather was often dyed red with the bark of chest- 
nut or oak tree. 

The peasantry pushed their hair straight back, and covered it with 
a close-fitting cap. The usual dress was a "short gown and petti- 
coat" and it was the pride of the thrifty housewife to have spun 
and woven the stuff for these skirts herself. They were generally 
of linsey-woolsey of the natural grey color, but were sometimes 
dyed blue with a mixture of red-maple bark and copperas, or the 
stuff was colored red with alder bark. These dyes had been taught to 
the Dutch women by the squaws. By these distinctive dresses each 
class could be distinguished. Even the crafts could be noted, and the 
married women were recognized at a glance from the maidens. 

From the side of the matron always hung a chatelaine, sometimes 
of gold and handsomely ornamented, but more frequently of brass 
with steel chains, from which dangled keys, scissors, pin cushions, 
and a tiny case called a housewife (and pronounced hussuf ) con- 
taining thimble, needles, and bodkin. The church book, with cor- 
ners and clasps of gold and silver, also hung by long chains to match, 
from the chatelaine or girdle. 

When the good people put on their best clothes they could be very 
fine, and the stuffs of which they were made were of the handsom- 
est and richest materials. The coats of the men were of velvet, silk, 
or satin, trimmed with handsome lace, diamond buckles, and some- 
times with rare furs. Around their throats were wrapped yards of 



Voluntary Readings 1 3 9 

fine muslin trimmed with lace, which were called "steinwicks" after 
the gallant soldier of that name; and the ladies were by no means 
behind their husbands in the richness of their apparel. 

1. What classes of people wore long coats? 

2. What kind of an apron did the workmen wear? 

3. Was the dress of the married women different from that of 
the single women? 

4. Did the Dutch wear plain clothes all the time? 



How the Dutch Children Amused Themselves. 

IF ever young people lived happy lives and had especially good times 
on extra occasions, the Dutch boys and girls in both Old and New 
Netherlands certainly did. Holland is the land of Santa Glaus and 
dyed Easter eggs. Besides the patron saint's day of December 6, 
there were Christmas, New Year's Day, Twelfth Night, Easter, 
Pinxter, Thanksgiving Day, Kermis, and school holidays and feast 
days coming pretty steadily along throughout the year. 

Games with ball, bat, stilts, hoop, top, sling, swing, bow and 
arrow, sleds and skates, drums and trumpets; tennis, golf, cricket, 
and forty other ways of having a good time, besides the easy things 
for girls and the more or less athletic sports for boys are pictured as 
part of the young people's life. 

Holland is the land of skates and sleighs. Children and young 
people hardly learn to skate; they begin it naturally and keep it up 
all their lives. Whether for fun and in parties, or to go to the mar- 
ket, to church, to weddings or funerals, they move by rapid transit 
on steel. A pair of skates is a passport to comradeship. No need of 
music or a band! With rhythm in every motion, parties of young 
folks in everyday clothes glide over the ice, motored from within. 
Every habit and each trick known on Holland canals or ponds was 
reproduced on the Mohawk and the Hudson. 

Then there was the ice-yacht or sailboat on runners, sometimes 
reduced for swiftness to a long plank with crosspieces for seats and 
with skate irons. Equipped with mast, canvas, and some cordage it 



1 40 Appendix 

seemed to race with the wind itself. On the ice, lady or lass sat in a 
hand sleigh, while husband or swain pushed as he skated. Newburgh- 
on-the-Hudson and Albany and the hills of Dorp were famous for 
coasting, and the North River for ice-yachts. 

When we look at our vocabulary and read of "sleigh," "sled," 
"skate," "ice-yacht," "stove," we realize how much we owe the 
Dutch in the way of winter fun and comforts. They brought these 
things with them from their old homes, and put them in use at once. 

1. Did the Dutch boys and girls have holidays? 

2. Did they have plenty of games to play? 

3. On what two rivers in New Netherland did the Dutch have 
their ice sports? 

4. Did they coast on the hills as well as on the ice? 



The Fate of Henry Hudson. 

IT was a Sunday morning. The captain and crew of the Discovery 
had spent the winter in Hudson Bay. Very little food was left for 
the homeward voyage, and though each man had his share, it was 
rumored that Hudson was keeping some of it back. All through the 
winter and spring a mutinous spirit had been growing. 

When Hudson went on deck in the morning he was seized from 
behind and his arms were pinioned. "What does this mean?" he 
asked. "You will know when you are in the shallop" was the reply. 

During the night a dastardly plot had been hatched. Pricket says 
that Greene and the other conspirators had come to him while he 
was in his bunk and had told him what was afoot. He protested but 
was told roughly that if he tried to interfere he would share the 
captain's fate. The plot was to seize the ship and turn Hudson adrift 
in the shallop along with his son, the sick men, who would be only 
a burden to the mutineers, and one or two others whom the muti- 
neers disliked and mistrusted. 

Only one of the men whom the mutineers invited to join them 
refused to fall in with their heartless plans. Philip Staffe, the car- 
penter, who despite his quarrel with Hudson at the beginning of the 



Voluntary Readings 141 

winter had been of a cheerful spirit and good courage throughout 
all the dangers and hardships of the voyage, upbraided Greene and 
the other plotters to their faces and said that rather than be a party 
to their scheme he would throw in his lot with the captain. And so 
he did. He got of them a gun and powder and shot, and some pikes, 
an iron pot, with some meal and other things. 

Then the mutineers sailed out of the ice, the shallop being fast 
to the stern of the ship. When about clear of the ice, they cut the 
shallop from the stern of their ship and sailed away. They came to 
an island and anchored. Here they lay that night and the best part 
of the next day, in all of which time they did not see the shallop, 
nor did they ever see it again. 

1. Was the Discovery well provisioned for the homeward voy- 
age? * 

2. Who was captain of the Discovery? 

3. How many men refused to join the mutineers? 

4.. Did the mutineers leave Hudson on shore? . 



The Beginnings of New York City. 

PETER MINUIT, the first civil governor of New Netherland, re- 
ceived his commission six days before Christmas, 1625. He began 
at once to equip himself for his great work of transforming trading 
stations into agricultural communities. He found out all he could 
about the soil and climate of New Netherland. Then he selected 
carefully seeds, live stock, farmers' tools, food plants, and other 
useful vegetables. He sailed from Amsterdam December 19 and 
after many delays from contrary winds and other causes, he sighted 
Sandy Hook on May 4. 

Minuit's first official act was to call together the Indian chiefs 
and purchase of them the island named Manhattan, for what was 
to them the very generous sum of 60 guilders, or 24 dollars. In 
modern values, this would be about 300 dollars. As expressed in 
trinkets, mirrors, hatchets, tools, and clothing stuffs, it must have 
seemed like a mountain of wealth to the Indians. The place of sale 



142 Appendix 

may have been the Bowling Green, then the heart of the hamlet of 
New Amsterdam. 

A fort must be built for defense, as the ships of any nation could 
easily enter the river from the sea, a fact which made New Amster- 
dam from the very first a cosmopolitan place, filled with visitors and 
sailors speaking many languages. One of the Dutch army engineers, 
who then had no superiors in the world, laid out and began building 
an earthwork with four bastions, named Fort Amsterdam after the 
home city. 

If Governor Minuit had been allowed to continue the develop- 
ment of New Netherland according to his own ideas, its story might 
have been one of nearly continuous peace and prosperity. He wisely 
distributed among white men the seeds and grafts which caused gar- 
dens to grow and orchards to spring up. He inaugurated the enter- 
prise of shipbuilding. He launched a magnificent ship, pierced for 
thirty cannon, which was loaded and sent to Holland where it made 
a sensation. His chief concern, next to securing the comfort and 
safety of the colonists, was the fur trade, and many were the ships 
loaded with peltries which he sent to Amsterdam. In 1630 the im- 
ports amounted to 113,000 guilders, while exports, chiefly furs, 
were 130,000 guilders, making a handsome profit to the Company. 

1 . Was Peter Minuit interested in promoting agriculture ? 

2. How much did he pay the Indians for Manhattan? 

3. What was the name of the Fort they built? 

4. What did they send to Amsterdam in ships? 



What the Dutch Learned from the Indians. 

THEY studied the habits of their wild neighbors and were not too 
proud to learn from them their secrets of dyeing, preparing tobacco, 
or planting maize. The time for this, according to the Indians, was 
when the birch-tree leaf was the size of a mouse's ear. The savages 
taught the settlers their fashion of pounding corn into "hominy," 
which was the Indian name for cracked corn. It was done by mak- 



Voluntary Readings 143 

ing a hole in the stump of a tree, or in a rock, into which the kernels 
were thrown and then beaten with a heavy pestle. A round excava- 
tion in a promontory overlooking Fairfield, Conn., is still called 
Samp-Mortar Rock, samp being another name for ground corn ; and 
tradition declares that the spot was always resorted to, in the autumn, 
by the squaws, for the purpose of pounding their corn, which was 
done to a musical croon that kept time to the thud of the pestle. 

The Indians were, at most times, freely admitted in small com- 
panies within the "palisadoes" of the little burgh, and they brought 
many commodities to barter. They were cunning weavers of baskets 
that were waterproof, made of a species of dogbane, and could 
make candles and soap of bayberries, or brushes from a block of 
oak, which they ingeniously split into thousands of bristles. 

The wild people were not pleasant companions, as they followed 
a native custom of rubbing "oil of Fishes, Fat of Eagles, and Grease 
of Rackoons" on their skin to keep it from blistering and repel the 
attacks of gnats and mosquitoes. They seldom washed their bodies 
or even their faces and hands, and in consequence the Dutch house- 
wives, who were neatness personified, thought they were irreclaim- 
able savages, and although invariably kind to them, did not encour- 
age them to take up their abode within the settlement except under 
certain restraints. 

The Indians taught the settlers to look for the great annual 
flights of pigeons, which early in April always flew north to eat the 
wild carrot. This flight invariably took place at dawn and never 
after 10 o'clock in the morning. It was so heavy as to darken the 
sun, and so low that stones, clubs, and like missiles were thrown at 
the birds, which were slaughtered by thousands. 

Almost every household had one or more of the wild men or 
women hanging around the kitchen fire. They never made good 
servants, but would do "chores" for the housewives, such as cutting 
and piling the kindling wood, or lifting heavy kettles on the great 
swinging cranes, in return for food and a lodging in the barn or 
under the back stoop. 



1. What did the Indians call their cracked corn? . 

2. Name three things that the Indians could make. 



1 44 Appendix 

3. Were the Indians encouraged to live within the settlement? 



4. Was it a common thing for the Dutch housewives to have 
Indians do chores for them? . 



Stuyvesant's Doings after the Surrender. 

AFTER the surrender of New Netherland the government of Hol- 
land summoned Stuyvesant home to give an account of what had 
happened. He arrived there in October, 1665, and presented to them 
a written report. He had left everything, including his beloved wife, 
to tell them "the true state of the case." 

In this report he said that on his arrival many years before he 
had "found the country stripped of inhabitants to such a degree that, 
with the exception of the three English villages, there were not 50 
farms and plantations on it, and the whole province could not mus- 
ter 250, at most 300 men capable of bearing arms. The fortress of 
New Amsterdam resembled a molehill rather than a fortress, with- 
out gates, the walls and bastions trodden under foot by men and 
cattle." 

"Our powerful neighbors and enemies," he said, "found them- 
selves reinforced by four royal ships, crammed full with an extraor- 
dinary amount of men and warlike stores. Our enemies throughout 
the whole of Long Island, both from the east and from the villages 
belonging to us united with them, hemmed us by water and by land, 
and cut off all supplies. Powder and provisions failing, and no relief 
nor reinforcement being expected, we were forced to come to terms 
with the enemy, not through neglect of duty or cowardice, but be- 
cause of an absolute impossibility to defend the fort, much less the 
city of New Amsterdam, and still less the country. On surrendering 
to the enemy, not 90 bushels of breadstuff's, and much less of peas 
and meat were remaining in store. This scarcity was caused by the 
exportation of provisions to the island of Curagao in South America 
about three weeks previous to the arrival of the frigates." 

He went on to say, "A general discontent and unwillingness to 
assist in defending the place had become manifest among the people. 



Voluntary Readings 145 

This was occasioned and caused in no small degree, first among the 
people living out of the city, and next among the burghers, by the 
sending of proclamations and open letters containing promises, in 
the name of the King of England, to burgher and farmer, of free 
and peaceable possession of their property, unobstructed trade and 
navigation, not only to English dominions, but also to the Nether- 
lands with their own ships and people." 

After he had made this report, Stuyvesant did not remain long in 
Holland, but returned to his wife and family. He lived on his farm 
called the Great Bouwery till his death in February, 1672. 

1. Why did Stuyvesant go to Holland in 1665? 

2. What did he say about the fortress of New Amsterdam? 

3. Did he admit any neglect of duty or cowardice? 

4. Were the Dutch people much concerned about defending New 
Amsterdam against the English? 



How the Dutch Made a Treaty with the Indians. 

"TRADE was doing very badly in the colony" so in 1634 four 
Dutchmen set out from Fort Orange for the Iroquois country to 
see what they could do about it. This is the story of what happened 
in one of the villages where they stopped: 

"January 3 Some old men came to us and told us they wanted 
to be our friends and they said we need not be afraid. And I re- 
plied that we were not afraid. In the afternoon the council sat here 
in all, twenty-four men and after considerable consulting for 
a long while an old man approached me and laid his hand upon my 
heart to feel it beat; and then he shouted that we really were not 
afraid at all. 

"After that six more members of the council came and they pre- 
sented me with a coat made of beaver skin and they told me they 
gave it to me because I came here and ought to be very tired, and 
also because I had been marching through the snow. And when I 
took the coat they shouted three times, 'Netho, Netho, NethoP 



1 46 Appendix 

which means, 'That is very well ! ' And directly after that they laid 
five pieces of beaver skins on my feet, at the same time requesting 
me that in the future they should receive four hands of seawan and 
four handbreadths of cloth for every big beaver skin. They said, 
'We have to go so far with our skins; and very often when we 
come to your places we do not find any cloth or seawan or axes or 
kettles, or not enough for all of us, and then we have much trouble 
for nothing, and have to go back over a great distance, carrying our 
goods back again.' 

"After we sat for a considerable time, an old man came to us and 
translated what they had said in the other language and told us that 
we did not answer yet whether or not they were to have four hands 
of seawan for their skins. I told him that we had not the power to 
promise that, but that we should report about it to the chief at the 
Manhatans, who was our commander, and that I would give them a 
definite answer in the spring, and come myself to their land. 

"Then they said to me, 'Welsmachkoo.' You must not lie, and 
must surely come to us in the spring, and report to us about it all. 
And if you will give us four hands of seawan we will not sell our 
skins to anyone but you.' After that they gave me five beaver 
skins, and shouted as hard as they could, 'Netho, Netho, Netho!' 
And then, that everything should be firmly binding they called or 
sang something in Indian language which meant that I could go in 
all the places they mentioned they said the names of all the castles 
freely and everywhere. I should be provided with a house and a 
fire and wood and everything I needed; and if I wanted to go to 
the Frenchmen they would guide me there and back; and they made 
a present of another beaver skin to me. Today we ate bear meat that 
we were invited to." 

1. Did the Indians receive the four Dutchmen in a friendly 
manner? 

2. How many hands of seawan did the Indians want for a big 
beaver skin? 

3. Did the Dutchmen promise to give the Indians what they 
asked? 

4. When did the spokesman for the Dutchmen say he would 



come again? 



Voluntary Readings 147 

What the Exiled Acadians Were Really Like. 

THE Acadians were a simple and very ignorant peasant folk, indus- 
trious and frugal till evil days came to discourage them; living apart 
from the world, with little of that spirit of adventure which an easy 
access to the vast fur-bearing interior had developed in their Cana- 
dian relatives; having few wants, and those of the rudest; fishing a 
little and hunting in the winter, but chiefly employed in cultivating 
the meadows along the River Annapolis, or rich marshes reclaimed 
by dikes from the tides of the Bay of Fundy. 

The British Government left them entirely free of taxation. 
They made clothing of flax and wool of their own raising, hats of 
similar materials, and shoes or moccasins of moose and seal skin. 
They bred cattle, sheep, hogs, and horses in abundance; and the 
valley of the Annapolis, then as now, was known for the profusion 
and excellence of its apples. For drink, they made cider or brewed 
spruce beer. French officials describe their dwellings as wretched 
wooden boxes without ornaments or conveniences, and scarcely sup- 
plied with the most necessary furniture. Two or more families 
often occupied the same house; and their way of life, though simple 
and virtuous, was by no means remarkable for cleanliness. Such as 
it was, contentment reigned among them. 

This humble society had its disturbing elements, for the Acadians, 
like the Canadians, were a quarrelsome race. Neighbors often quar- 
reled about their boundaries. There was a bountiful share of jeal- 
ousy, gossip, and back-biting to relieve the monotony of their lives. 
Every village had its cure, the guide, counselor, and ruler of his 
flock. He was their true government; to him they gave a frank and 
full allegiance, and dared not disobey him if they would. He taught 
them to be true to their wives and constant at confession and mass, 
to stand fast for the Church and King Louis, and to resist heresy 
and King George. 

1. What was the chief occupation of the Acadians? 

2. For what crop was the valley of the Annapolis known? 



3. According to French officials, what were their houses like? 

4. Who was the leader of the village? 



148 Appendix 

Washington's Adventures in the Ohio Country 
in 1753- 

IN the middle of November, Washington struck into the wilderness 
with Christopher Gist as a guide, Van Braam, a Dutchman, as in- 
terpreter, Davison, a trader, and four woodsmen as servants. They 
went to the forks of the Ohio, and then down the river to Logs- 
town. There Washington had various parleys with the Indians; and 
then, after various delays, continued his journey towards Fort Le 
Boeuf, accompanied by the friendly chief called the Half -King and 
by three of his tribesmen. For several days they followed the 
traders' path, pelted with unceasing rain and snow. Through 
marshes and swamps, forests choked with snow, and drenched with 
rain, they toiled on till the wooden walls of Fort Le Boeuf ap- 
peared at last. Here Washington delivered to the French commander 
Dinwiddie's letter. 

The French commander took three days to frame the answer. 
Then Washington set out on his return trip. He found the horses so 
weak that he left them and their drivers in charge of Van Braam 
and pushed forward on foot, accompanied by Gist alone. Each was 
wrapped to the throat in an Indian "matchcoat" with a gun in his 
hand and a pack at his back. Passing an old Indian hamlet called 
Murdering Town, they had an adventure which threatened to make 
good the name. A French Indian, whom they met in the forest, 
fired at them, pretending that his gun had gone off by chance. They 
caught him, and Gist would have killed him; but Washington inter- 
posed and they let him go. Then, to escape pursuit from his tribes- 
men, they walked all night and all the next day. This brought them 
to the banks of the Alleghany. They hoped to have found it dead 
frozen; but it was alive and turbulent, filled with ice sweeping 
down the current. They made a raft, shoved out into the stream, 
and were soon caught helplessly in the drifting ice. Washington, 
pushing hard with his setting pole, was jerked into the freezing 
river; but caught a log of the raft and dragged himself out. By no 
efforts could they reach the farther bank, or regain that which they 
had left; but they were driven against an island, where they landed 
and left the raft to its fate. The night was excessively cold, and 




George Washington, newly commissioned Lieutenant Colonel, in 

command of Virginia troops marching against the French 

on the Ohio, April, 1753. 

(From "The Gateway to the West," one of The Chronicles of America Photoplays} 



Voluntary Readings 149 

Gist's feet and hands were badly frostbitten. In the morning, the ice 
had set and the river was a solid floor. They crossed it, and suc- 
ceeded in reaching the house of the trader Fraser, on the Mononga- 
hela. It was the middle of January when Washington arrived at 
Williamsburg and made his report to Dinwiddie. 

1. Where was the French commander to whom Washington 
wanted to deliver a letter? 

2. Who wrote the letter? 

3. Why was it hard to cross the Alleghany River? 



4. How long did it take Washington to go and return? 



Madeleine at Bay. 

IN 1689 th 6 Iroquois had wiped out the little settlement of Lachine. 
The French therefore in this part of Canada about Montreal were 
constantly fearful of another such tragedy. The little forts and 
settlements along the St. Lawrence and opposite the Iroquois coun- 
try were naturally constantly threatened by an Indian attack. 

One brooding day in October, when Captain de Vercheres was 
on duty at Quebec, and his wife obliged to be in Montreal, his tiny 
fort at Vercheres was garrisoned by three men, two boys, and one 
girl. The eldest man was over eighty. The Vercheres boys were ten 
and twelve; their sister, Madeleine, fourteen. Suddenly from the 
crimson forest came a burst of musketry. Then, through the smoke, 
came fifty yelling Iroquois. Madeleine instantly ran in and barred 
the gate, put on a soldier's hat, took up her musket, armed both her 
brothers, and saw that they and all three men were properly posted 
at once. As quickly, she fired the single cannon both to make the 
Iroquois think the fort well defended and to warn any habitants 
near by. Presently a family appeared at the river landing, between 
which and the fort there was a fire zone of a hundred yards. Made- 
leine ran out and shepherded these people in, the Iroquois not ven- 
turing to break cover under that cannon's mouth. 



150 Appendix 

For a whole week the dauntless Madeleine kept the murderous 
savages at bay. The word "All's well ! " was duly shouted round the 
little fort, just as if it held a real garrison. Half the defenders were 
always on the watch; and no Iroquois could show himself without 
drawing fire. On the sixth day the news reached Montreal; and on 
the seventh Lieutenant de la Monnerie arrived with forty men. 
Madeleine, then not on actual guard, was dozing, with her musket 
on her knees, when her sentry challenged "Qui vive?" "French: 
la Monnerie and forty men." Madeleine was all alert, and ready 
with the regulation word: "Advance one, and give the counter- 
sign ! " When Monnerie complied she at once saluted saying, "Sir, I 
hand over my command to you." Then, after he and she had made 
grand rounds together, and he had found everything in perfect 
order, she again saluted and asked the proper question in the proper 
way: "Sir, can you now relieve the guard? We've been on duty for 
a week." 

I. How old was Madeleine at the time of the attack described? 



2. How many people were in the fort? 

3. How long did they have to wait for help? 

4. What were the Indians afraid of? 



The Attack on Deerfield in the Winter of 1704. 

DEERFIELD kept early hours, and it is likely that by 9 o'clock all 
were in their beds. There was a patrol inside the palisades, but there 
was little discipline among these soldiers; the watchers grew care- 
less as the frosty night went on; and it is said that toward morning 
they, like the villagers, betook themselves to their beds. 

The French commander and his men, savage with hunger, lay 
shivering under the pines till about two hours before dawn; then, 
leaving their packs and their snowshoes behind, they moved cau- 
tiously toward their prey. No alarm was given until they had 
mounted the palisade and dropped silently into the unconscious 
village. Then with one accord they screeched the war whoop, and 



Voluntary Readings 1 5 1 

assailed the doors of the houses with axes and hatchets. The hideous 
din startled the minister, Williams, from his sleep. Half -a wakened, 
he sprang out of bed, and saw a crowd of savages bursting through 
the shattered door. Amid the screams of his terrified children, three 
of the party seized him and bound him fast; for they came well 
provided with cords, since prisoners had a market value. Neverthe- 
less in the first fury of their attack they dragged to a door and mur- 
dered two of the children and a negro woman who was probably 
their nurse. 

Meanwhile the Indians and their allies burst into most of the 
houses, killed such of the men as resisted, butchered some of the 
women and children, and seized and bound the rest. Some of the 
villagers escaped in the confusion. The sun was scarcely an hour 
high when the miserable drove of captives was conducted across 
the river to the foot of a mountain or high hill. Williams and his 
family were soon compelled to follow, and his house was set on 
fire. As they led him off he saw that other houses within the pali- 
sade were burning, and that all were in the power of the enemy ex- 
cept that of his neighbor Stebbins, where the gallant defenders still 
kept their assailants at bay. Having collected all their prisoners, the 
main body of the French and Indians began to withdraw toward 
the pine forest where they had left their packs. Several parties still 
lingered in the village, firing on the Stebbins house, killing cattle, 
hogs, and sheep, and gathering such plunder as the place afforded. 

1. Were the soldiers on guard very watchful? 

2. At what time of day did the French attack? 



3. Were women and children killed? 

4. Were all the men either killed or taken prisoners? 



The Beginning of Wolfe's Career as a Soldier. 

JAMES WOLFE and his brother were delicate, sensitive lads, needing 
and receiving the watchful care of their tall, dark-haired mother, 
left much alone as is the common lot of a soldier's wife. One seems 
to see the slender, alert, eager-faced children scampering through 



152 Appendix 

the house, frolicking in the garden with the dogs, playing hide-and- 
seek in the coach house and stables, fishing for minnows in the brook 
or sailing a miniature fleet of ships upon its waters. Again, seated 
in the hall, they are receiving instruction at their mother's knee; or, 
gathered in the evening about the great fireplace, are listening, open- 
eyed and open-mouthed to the stout, grim Colonel, their father, 
while he tells them stories of his campaigns with Marlborough and 
Prince Eugene. 

To a school in Westerham, kept by a teacher named Lawrence, 
the Wolfe boys were sent, in common with other gentlemen's sons. 
Here James formed one boyish friendship which was to last through 
his life. Together he and his friend roamed the Kentish country- 
side on horseback or with their dogs; fought mimic battles, solved 
problems in strategy and participated in deadly ambushes. 

A few days before James's fifteenth birthday, the school having 
broken up for the Christmas holidays, James had ridden over to 
Westerham for a few days under his friend's roof. One morning 
the sound of the post horn was heard at the gates, and a few mo- 
ments later the squire (the father of his friend) was seen coming 
along the graveled path, in his hand a large official packet addressed 
to "James Wolfe, Esq." The lads ran to meet him, and James 
quickly tore open seal and envelope, disclosing a commission signed 
by King George II and countersigned by Lord Harrington, ap- 
pointing him second lieutenant in his father's regiment of marines. 
It was dated, "St. James's, Nov. 3rd, 1741." One can see the two 
lads locked in an embrace, and the honest squire shaking his guest's 
hand, roundly congratulating him on the commencement of a ca- 
reer. Beneath the tall trees where this incident occurred stands a 
monument on which one may read: 

"Here first was Wolfe with martial ardour fired, 
Here first with glory's brightest flame inspired; 
This spot so sacred will for ever claim 
A proud alliance with its hero's name." 

1. What title had Wolfe's father? 

2. Where did Wolfe go to school? 

3. How old was he when he received a commission? 

4. To whose regiment was he appointed? 




On the Plains of Abraham the British under Wolfe and the French 

under Montcalm come face to face brave men, well matched, 

fighting for their countries' future in a distant land. (It is 

interesting to note the close formation, point-blank 

style of fighting used in those days.) 

{From "Wolfe and Montcalm," one of The Chronicles of America Photoplays} 



Voluntary Readings 1 5 3 

The Boyhood of Montcalm. 

MONTCALM was born in the south of France, at the Chateau of 
Candiac, near Nimes, on the 2Qth of February, 1712. At the age of 
six he was placed in charge of a man named Dumas, who ruled his 
pupil stiffly; and before the age of fifteen, gave him a good knowl- 
edge of Latin, Greek, and history. Young Montcalm had a taste for 
books, continued his reading in such intervals of leisure as camps and 
garrisons afforded, and cherished to the end of his life the ambition 
of becoming a member of the French Academy (a group of learned 
men). Yet, with all his liking for study, he sometimes revolted 
against the sway of his teacher, who wrote letters of complaint to 
his father. 

The main difficulty was to make him write a good hand, a 
point in which he failed to the day of his death. So hard was he to 
get along with at times, that his master despaired. "M. de Mont- 
calm," Dumas informs the father, "has great need of docility, in- 
dustry, and willingness to take advice." 

The pupil wrote to his father his own ideas of what his aims 
should be. "First, to be an honorable man, of good morals, brave, 
and a Christian. Secondly, to read in moderation; to know as much 
Greek and Latin as most men of the world; also the four rules of 
arithmetic, and something of history, geography, and French and 
Latin literature, as well as to have a taste for the arts and sciences. 
Thirdly, and above all, to be obedient, docile, and very submissive 
to your orders and those of my dear mother; and also to defer to 
the advice of M. Dumas. Fourthly, to fence and ride as well as my 
small abilities will permit." 

At fifteen he joined the army as ensign in the regiment of Hai- 
naut. Two years after, his father bought him a captaincy, and he 
was first under fire at the siege of Philipsbourg. His father died in 
1735 (when he was but 23), and left him heir to a considerable 
landed estate, much embarrassed by debt. 

1. Name three things which Montcalm had a good knowledge of 
before he was 15 

2. Was Montcalm ambitious to be a scholar? 

3. How old was Montcalm when he joined the army? 

4. How old was he when he became a captain? 



1 54 Appendix 

How Washington Looked at the Time of the French 
and Indian War. 

THE earliest known description of Washington was written in 
1760 by his companion-in-arms and friend George Mercer, who at- 
tempted a "portraiture" in the following words: "He may be de- 
scribed as being as straight as an Indian, measuring six feet two 
inches in his stockings, and weighing 175 pounds when he took his 
seat in the House of Burgesses in 1759. His frame is padded with 
well-developed muscles, indicating great strength. His bones and 
joints are large, as are his feet and hands. He is wide shouldered, 
but has not a deep or round chest; is neat waisted, but is broad 
across the hips, and has rather long legs and arms. His head is well 
shaped though not large, but is gracefully poised on a superb neck. 
A large and straight rather than prominent nose; blue-gray eyes, 
keen and penetrating, which are widely separated and overhung by a 
heavy brow. His face is long rather than broad, with high round 
cheek bones, and terminates in a good firm chin. He has a clear 
though rather a colorless pale skin, which burns with the sun. A 
pleasing, benevolent though a commanding countenance, dark brown 
hair, which he wears in a cue. His mouth is large and generally 
firmly closed, but which from time to time discloses some defective 
teeth. His features are regular and placid, with all the muscles of 
his face under perfect control, though flexible and expressive of deep 
feeling when moved by emotion. In conversation he looks you full 
in the face, is deliberate, deferential and engaging. His voice is 
agreeable rather than strong. His demeanor at all times composed 
and dignified. His movements and gestures are graceful, his walk 
majestic, and he is a splendid horseman." 

Writing to his London tailor for clothes in 1763, Washington 
directed him to "take measure of a gentleman who wears well- 
made clothes of the following size: to wit, 6 feet high and pro- 
portionably made if anything rather slender than thick, for a per- 
son of that height, with pretty long arms and thighs. You will take 
care to make the breeches longer than those you sent me last, and I 
would have you keep the measure of the clothes you now make, by 
you, and if any alteration is required in my next it shall be pointed 



Voluntary Readings 155 

out." About this time, too, he ordered "6 pairs Man's riding Gloves 
rather large than the middle size" . . . and several dozen pairs 
of stockings, "to be long, and tolerably large." 

I. According to the above description, how tall was Washington? 



2. What did he weigh? 

3. What kind of a horseman did his friend call him? 



4. Where did Washington have his clothes made? 



Champlain's Account of How He and Two Compan- 
ions Helped the Hurons Fight the Iroquois. 

ON the 2Qth of July (1609) we met the Iroquois at 10 o'clock at 
night at the end of a cape that projects into the lake on the west 
side, and they were coming to war. Both parties encamped for the 
night, after agreeing to wait until daybreak to fight. After plenty 
of singing, dancing, and parleying with one another, daylight came. 
After arming ourselves with light armor, my two companions and 
I each took an arquebuse and went ashore. I saw the Iroquois come 
out of their barricade, nearly 200 men, strong and robust to look 
at, coming slowly towards us with a dignity and assurance that 
pleased me very much. 

As soon as we were ashore the Hurons began to run about 200 
paces towards their enemy, who were standing firmly and had not 
yet noticed my companions, who went into the wood with some sav- 
ages. The Hurons began to call me with loud cries; and, to give me 
a passageway, they divided into two parts and put me at their head, 
where I marched about twenty paces in front of them until I was 
thirty paces from the enemy. They at once saw me and halted, look- 
ing at me, and I at them. When I saw them making a move to 
shoot at us, I rested my arquebuse against my cheek and aimed di- 
rectly at one of the three chiefs. With the same shot two of them 
fell to the ground, and one of their companions, who was wounded 
and afterwards died. I put four balls into my arquebuse. When the 



156 Appendix 

Hurons saw this shot so favorable for them, they began to make 
cries so loud that one could not have heard it thunder. Meanwhile 
the arrows did not fail to fly from both sides. The Iroquois were 
much astonished that two men had been so quickly killed, although 
they were provided with armor woven from cotton thread and from 
wood, proof against their arrows. This alarmed them greatly. As I 
was loading again, one of my companions fired a shot from the 
woods, which astonished them again to such a degree that, seeing 
their chiefs dead, they lost courage, took to flight and abandoned 
the field and their fort, fleeing into the depths of the woods. Pur- 
suing them thither I killed some more of them. Our savages also 
killed several of them and took ten or twelve prisoners. The rest 
escaped with the wounded. There were fifteen or sixteen of our 
men wounded by arrow shots, who were soon healed. This place, 
where the charge was made, I named Lake Champlain. 

1. What did Champlain call his gunP 

2. About how many Iroquois Indians were there? 

3. Who fired the first shot? 

4. Where did the fight take place? 



The Condition of the American Army at the Time 
Washington Took Command. 

THE army was, as Washington himself said, "a mixed multitude." 
There was every variety of dress. Old uniforms, treasured from the 
days of the last French wars, had been dug out. A military coat or 
a cocked hat was the only semblance of uniform possessed by some 
officers. Rank was often indicated by ribbons of different colors 
tied on the arm. Lads from the farms had come in their usual dress; 
a good many of these were hunters from the frontier wearing the 
buckskin of the deer they had slain. 

The volunteers varied greatly in age. There were bearded vet- 
erans of sixty and a sprinkling of lads of sixteen. An observer 
laughed at the boys and the "great great grandfathers" who 
marched side by side in the army before Boston. Occasionally a 
black face was seen in the ranks. 



Voluntary Readings 157 

One of Washington's tasks was to reduce the difference in years 
and especially to secure men who could shoot. In the first enthusiasm 
of 1775 so many men volunteered in Virginia that a selection was 
made on the basis of accuracy in shooting. The men fired at a range 
of one hundred and fifty yards at an outline of a man's nose in 
chalk on a board. Each man had a single shot, and the first men shot 
the nose entirely away. 

Undoubtedly there was the finest material among the men loung- 
ing about their quarters at Cambridge in fashion so unmilitary. In 
physique they were larger than the British soldier, a result due to 
abundant food and free life in the open air from childhood. Most 
of the men supplied their own uniform and rifles, and much barter 
went on in the hours after drilling. The men made and sold shoes, 
clothes, and even arms. They were accustomed to farm life and 
good at digging and throwing up entrenchments. The colonial mode 
of waging war was not, however, that of Europe. To the regular 
soldier of the time even earth entrenchments seemed a sign of cow- 
ardice. The brave man would come out in the open to face his foe. 

1. How could you tell officers from privates? 

2. What was the age of the youngest and oldest mentioned? 

3. How did they select men in Virginia? 

4. Who supplied most of the rifles? 



New York's Tea Party. 

ON April 21, 1774, the citizens received the following invita- 
tion: "To the Public: The sense of the city, relative to the landing 
of the East India Company's tea being signified to Captain Lockyer 
by the committee, nevertheless, it is the desire of a number of the 
citizens that at his departure from hence he should see, with his own 
eyes, their detestation of the measures pursued by the Ministry and 
the India Company to enslave this country. This will be declared 



158 Appendix 

by the convention, and the people at his departure from this city 
which will be on next Saturday morning at 9 o'clock, when no doubt 
every friend to this country will attend. The bells will give the 
notice about an hour before he embarks from Murray's Wharf. 

This is what happened, as told by someone who was present: 
"About 4 P.M. the ship came to the wharf when she was boarded 
by a number of the citizens. Captain Chambers was interrogated 
relative to his having the tea on board, but he still denied it. He was 
then told that it was in vain to deny it, for as there was good proof 
of its being on board, it would be found, as there were commit- 
tees appointed to open every package, and that he had better be 
open and candid about it; and demanded the cocket for the tea; 
upon which he confessed it was on board and delivered the cocket. 
The owners and the committee immediately met at Mr. Francis's 
where Captain Chambers was ordered to attend. Upon examining 
him who was the shipper and the owner of the tea, he declared that 
he was the sole owner of it. After the most mature deliberation, it 
was determined to communicate the whole state of the matter to the 
people, who were convened near the ship; which was accordingly 
done. The Mohawks were prepared to do their duty at a proper 
hour; but the body of the people were so impatient that before it 
arrived, a number of them entered the ship about 8 P.M., took out 
the tea, which was at hand, broke the cases, and started their con- 
tents into the river, without doing any damage to the ship or cargo. 
Several persons of reputation were placed below to keep tally, and 
about the companion to prevent ill-disposed persons from going be- 
low the deck. 

"At ten o'clock the people all dispersed in good order, but in great 
wrath against the Captain; and it was not without some risk of his 
life that he escaped." 

1. Who was invited to New York's Tea Party? 

2. What did Captain Chambers deny? 



3. Who owned the tea? 

4. Was the affair conducted in an orderly or disorderly manner? 




The Minute Men of Lexington gather quickly as the drum 
sounds the alarm. 

(From "The Eve of the Revolution," one of The Chronicles of America P/tofoplays) 



Voluntary Readings 159 

Mr. Temple's Buttons and the Declaration of 
Independence. 

THE Tories spread a story of how the Americans came to declare 
their independence from Great Britain. It was about the great coat, 
or overcoat we should call it, of a gentleman who came to America 
from England. 

It tells how a certain Mr. Temple, brother of Mr. John Temple, 
who was introduced as Consul General from Great Britain, landed 
from a British ship on our shores wearing a great coat conspicuously 
adorned with many beautiful brass buttons. Mr. Temple, though he 
came on a British mail packet, was regarded with suspicion by 
British agents in America such as Governor Tryon. He was thor- 
oughly searched upon his arrival for evidences of an intention hos- 
tile to the King. He was allowed to land after the search had re- 
vealed nothing, even though the search was directed by such faithful 
servants of his Majesty as Governor Tryon, "who has as many eyes 
as Argus," Tryon's secretary, and General Skinner, Attorney Gen- 
eral of New Jersey. 

Then, according to the Tories, as soon as Mr. Temple had passed 
this inquisition, he hastened to leading representatives of America, 
winked, pointed to his buttons, called the Americans aside and then 
pried the buttons apart and brought forth a series of letters from 
Englishmen of note saying many nice things about the Americans 
and expressing many earnest wishes for their success in the contest 
with the King and his ministry, and telling them to stick it out a 
while longer until America's friends in England could upset Parlia- 
ment and come to their aid. 

Then, as the story continues, the delegates in Congress and all the 
statesmen became inspired by this promise of help from the old 
country and right away concluded that they should declare their 
freedom from the shackles of an old-world monarch. The strangest 
thing about it was that none of our statesmen knew the first thing 
about Mr. Temple's magic buttons, and that not the least reference 
to them appears in the utterances of our distinguished citizens who 
were proposing a separation from Great Britain. 



160 Appendix 

1. Who is mentioned as a British agent in America? 

2. How many people searched Mr. Temple? 

3. According to the Tories, where did Mr. Temple have letters 
concealed? 

4. Did American statesmen speak of having received these let- 
ters? . 



The Experience of a British Officer's Wife under 
Fire at Saratoga. 

WE were obliged to descend into the cellar, where I laid myself in 
a corner near the door. My children put their heads upon my knees. 
An abominable smell, the cries of the children, and my anguish of 
mind, did not permit me to close my eyes during the whole night. 

Eleven cannon balls passed through the house, and made a tre- 
mendous noise. A poor soldier who was about to have a leg ampu- 
tated, lost the other by one of these balls. All his comrades ran away 
at that moment, and when they returned, they found him in one 
corner of the room in the agonies of death. 

I was myself in deepest distress, not so much on account of my 
own dangers as of those to which my husband was exposed. He 
however frequently sent me messages inquiring after my health. 
Major Harnage's wife, a Mrs. Reyhell, the wife of a Lieutenant, 
the wife of the commissary and myself were the only officers' wives 
at present with the army. 

We sat together, deploring our situation, when somebody entered. 
All my companions exchanged looks of deep sorrow, whispering at 
the same time to one another. I immediately suspected that my hus- 
band had been killed. I shrieked aloud, but was immediately told 
that nothing had happened to my husband. I was given to under- 
stand by a sidelong glance that the Lieutenant had been killed. 

The danger in which my husband was, kept me constantly in the 
most unpleasant state of mind. I was the only one who had not lost 
her husband, or whose husband had not been wounded, and I asked 
myself very often, "Is so much happiness reserved for me alone?" 

This reflection was the more natural, as he was day and night in 



Voluntary Readings 1 6 1 

the very jaws of death. He never passed a whole night in his tent, 
but sat by the watchfires. This alone, considering the coldness and 
dampness of the ground might have been enough to kill him. 

The want of water continued to distress us, and we were very 
glad to find a soldier's wife so courageous as to fetch some water 
from the river. This was an occupation from which the boldest 
might have shrunk, as the Americans shot everyone who approached 
it. They told us afterwards that they spared her on account of her 
sex. At last the capitulation was talked of, and a cessation of hos- 
tilities took place. 

1 . How many officers' wives were there ? 

2. Where did they stay during the fighting? 

3. When someone entered, what did the officer's wife think? 

4. What trouble did they have to get water? 



The Frenchmen and the Frogs. 

WHEN the first French squadron arrived at Boston, the whole town, 
most of whom had never seen a Frenchman, ran to the wharves to 
catch a peep at the gaunt, half -starved crews. How much were my 
good townsmen astonished when they beheld plump, portly officers 
and strong, vigorous sailors! 

Mr. Nathaniel Tracy, who lived in a beautiful villa at Cam- 
bridge, made a feast for the admiral and his officers. Everything was 
furnished that could be had in the country to ornament and give 
variety to the entertainment. Two large tureens of soup were placed 
at the ends of the table. The admiral sat on the right of Tracy and 
Monsieur de L'Etombe on the left. L'Etombe was consul of 
France, resident at Boston. Tracy filled a plate with soup, which 
went to the admiral and the next was handed to the consul. As soon 
as L'Etombe put his spoon into the plate he fished up a large frog, 
just as green and perfect as if he had hopped from the pond into the 
tureen. 

Not knowing at first what it was, he seized it by one of its hind 



162 Appendix 

legs, and, holding it up in view of the whole company, discovered 
that it was a full-grown frog. As soon as he had thoroughly in- 
spected it, and made himself sure of the matter, he exclaimed, 
"Good Heavens! A frog!" then, turning to the gentleman next to 
him, gave him the frog. 

He received it and passed it around the table. Thus the poor 
creature made the tour from hand to hand until it reached the ad- 
miral. The company, convulsed with laughter, examined the soup 
plates as the servants brought them, and in each was to be found a 
frog. The uproar was universal. Meantime Tracy kept his ladle go- 
ing, wondering what his outlandish guests meant by such extrava- 
gant merriment. "What's the matter?" he asked, and raising his 
head, surveyed the frogs dangling by a leg in all directions. "Why 
don't they eat them?" he exclaimed. "If they knew the confounded 
trouble I had to catch them in order to treat them to a dish of their 
own country, they would find that with me, at least, it was no jok- 
ing matter." He had caused all the swamps of Cambridge to be 
searched in order to furnish them with a generous supply of what he 
believed to be in France a standing national dish. 

1. Who entertained the French officers? 

2. Did the Americans know the French people well? 

3. What were the French officers given to eat at the feast? 

4. Why did the American host have this food prepared for 
them? 



Washington's March from New York to Yorktown. 

THE French marched on the right at the rate of about fifteen miles 
a day. The country was beautiful and the roads were good. Autumn 
had come and the air was bracing. The peaches hung on the trees. 
The Dutch farmers who four years earlier had been plaintive about 
the pillage by the Hessians now seemed prosperous enough and 
brought abundance of provisions for the army. They had just gath- 
ered their harvest. The armies passed through Princeton with its fine 



Voluntary Readings 163 

college numbering as many as fifty students; then on to Trenton 
and across the Delaware to Philadelphia which the vanguard reached 
on the 3rd of September. 

There were gala scenes in Philadelphia. Twenty thousand people 
attended a review of the French army. To one of the French offi- 
cers the city seemed "immense" with its seventy-two streets "all in 
a straight line." The shops appeared to be equal to those of Paris and 
there were pretty women well dressed in the French fashion. Lu- 
zerne, the French Minister, gave a great banquet on the evening of 
the 5th of September. Eighty guests took their places at table, and 
as they sat down good news arrived. As yet few knew the destina- 
tion of the army but now Luzerne read momentous tidings and the 
secret was out. Twenty-eight French ships had arrived in Chesa- 
peake Bay; an army of three thousand men had already disem- 
barked and was in touch with the army of Lafayette. Washington 
and Rochambeau were bound for Yorktown to attack Cornwallis. 
Great was the joy; in the streets the soldiers and the people shouted 
and sang, and humorists, mounted on chairs, delivered in advance 
mock funeral orations on Cornwallis. 

Half the Americans and some of the French embarked at Elkton 
at the head of Chesapeake Bay, and the rest continued on foot. 
There was need of haste and the troops marched to Baltimore at the 
rate of twenty miles a day over roads often bad, and across rivers 
sometimes unbridged. At Baltimore further regiments were taken 
on board transports, and most of them made the final stages of the 
journey by water. 

Washington left the army at Elkton and rode with Rochambeau, 
making sixty miles a day. Mount Vernon lay on the way, and here 
Washington paused for two or three days. It was the first time he 
had seen it since he set out on May 4, 1775, to attend the Con- 
tinental Congress. Now he pressed on to join Lafayette. By the end 
of the month an army of sixteen thousand men, of whom about half 
were French, was besieging Cornwallis with seven thousand men at 
Yorktown. 

1. How many miles a day did they march at first? 

2. After they left Philadelphia how many miles a day did they 
march ? . 



1 64 Appendix 

3. How many miles a day did Washington ride? 

4. What had happened in Chesapeake Bay to give joy to the 
soldiers and people of Philadelphia? 



A Visit of Washington to His Mother after an 
Absence of Seven Years. 

LATE in 1781, on the return of the combined armies from York- 
town, the mother of Washington was permitted again to see and 
embrace her illustrious son, the first time in almost seven years. As 
soon as he had dismounted, in the midst of a numerous and brilliant 
suite, after reaching Fredericksburg, he sent to tell her of his arri- 
val, and to know when it would be her pleasure to receive him. 
Alone and on foot, the general in chief of the combined armies of 
France and America, the deliverer of his country, the hero of the 
age, repaired to pay his humble duty to her whom he venerated as 
the author of his being. 

She was alone, her aged hands employed in the works of domestic 
industry, when the good news was announced, and it was further 
told that the victor-chief was in waiting at the threshold. She bid 
him welcome by a warm embrace and by the well-remembered and 
endearing name of George the familiar name of his childhood; 
she inquired as to his health, remarked the lines which mighty cares 
and many toils had made in his manly countenance, spoke much of 
old times and old friends, but of his glory not one word. 

Meantime, in the village of Fredericksburg, all was joy and 
revelry; the town was crowded with the officers of the French and 
American armies, and with gentlemen for many miles around, who 
hastened to welcome the conquerors of Cornwallis. The citizens got 
up a splendid ball, to which the matron was specially invited. She 
observed, that although her dancing days were pretty well over, she 
should feel happy in contributing to the general festivity, and con- 
sented to attend. 

The foreign officers were anxious to see the mother of their chief. 
They had heard indistinct rumors touching her remarkable life and 



Voluntary Readings 165 

character, but forming their judgments from European examples, 
they were prepared to expect in the mother that glitter and show 
which would have been attached to the parents of the great in the 
countries of the old world. Now were they surprised, when leaning 
on the arm of her son, she entered the room, dressed in the very 
plain, yet becoming garb worn by the Virginia lady of the old time. 
Her address always dignified and imposing, was courteous, though 
reserved. She received the complimentary attentions which were paid 
to her without evincing the slightest elevation, and at an early hour, 
wishing the company much enjoyment of their pleasures, observed 
that it was high time for old folks to be in bed, and retired, leaning 
as before on the arm of her son. 



1. Where did Washington's mother live? 

2. When he visited her, what did she talk most about? 



3. How did the citizens entertain Washington and his officers? 

4. Who are mentioned as being anxious to see Washington's 
mother? , 



The News of Burgoyne's Surrender. 

ON a certain Sunday of late October in 1777 the people of Sharon, 
Connecticut, had gathered in the meeting house for the morning 
service. On this day both prayers and hymns seemed prophetic. 
When the text was announced, "Watchman, what of the night? 
The watchman saith, The morning cometh," its last three words 
rang out with such a clarion tone that all present felt that this was 
to be "a field day with the Parson." Today his flock thought him in- 
spired as with faithful stroke he drew the picture of an oppressed 
people struggling for liberty against fearful odds. Tears ran un- 
restrained down his cheeks, until some of the older members began 
to wonder "what Parson could be thinking of, to discourage the 
people so?" Then suddenly his tone changed. "Our weakness," he 
said, "is the Lord's opportunity. He has permitted our humiliation 
that our sins might be punished and that He might show us that He 



1 66 Appendix 

is mighty to save. He has promised to succor those who look to Him 
for help, and He is faithful who has promised." Then, kindling as 
with prophetic fire, his face glowing, his form dilating and quiver- 
ing with feeling, he triumphantly exclaimed: 

"Behold! the morning now cometh. I see its beams already gild- 
ing the mountain tops. Its brightness is already bursting over the 
land." He closed his Bible and stood with uplifted hand, while a 
silence fell alike upon the preacher and his hearers. Then, during 
the solemn hush which preceded the benediction, could be heard 
from afar the hasty clatter of a horseman dashing into the village 
from the north. Faces turn toward the doors, but not a whisper 
breaks the hush. All know that the sacred stillness of a New Eng- 
land Sabbath would not be thus broken without good reason. The 
eager horseman makes directly for the church. Hope is triumphant 
over fear, but with hope is mingled terror, and anxious eyes blaze 
out from pale faces as the rider, springing from his horse, enters 
the church, his spurs clanking along the uncarpeted floor and up the 
pulpit stairs. 

The parson, his face flushing with the joy of a hope fulfilled, 
read only the three words, "Burgoyne has surrendered," and then 
burst into honorable tears. The next moment, calmed and solemn, 
he said, "Let us thank God for this great mercy." And moved by a 
common impulse, the whole congregation rose to the Puritan pos- 
ture of prayer the erect posture of the Ironsides, who prayed and 
fought and kept their powder dry; and stern and self-contained as 
they were, they thought it no shame to shed tears of thankfulness. 

I. To whom did the horseman give his message to read? 



2. On what date did this news reach Sharon, Conn.? . 

3. Was the parson preaching hope or discouragement? , 

4. Did the rider come from north, south, east, or west? 



APPENDIX III 

Books Used in Preparing the Set of Readings. 

The American Revolution in New York: Its political, social, and 
economic significance. University of the State of New York, 
Division of Archives and History, Albany, 1926. 

Bradford, William. History of Plymouth Plantation, 1606-1646. 
William T. Davis, editor. (In Original Narratives of Early 
American History, J. Franklin Jameson, editor.) New York, 
1923. 

Champlain, Samuel de. Voyages and explorations (16041616) 
narrated by himself. A. N. Bourne, translator. 2 vols. Vol. I 
(The Trail Makers Series). New York, 1906. 

Crawford, Mary C. Social Life in Old New England. Boston, 
1914. 

Earle, Alice M. Child Life in Colonial Days. New York and Lon- 
don, 1922. 

Earle, Alice M. Home Life in Colonial Days. New York and Lon- 
don, 1922. 

Ford, Paul L. The True George Washington. Philadelphia, 1896. 

Forman, S. E., editor. Side Lights on Our Social and Economic His- 
tory. New York and London, 1928. 

Griffis, William E. The Pilgrims in Their Three Homes, England, 
Holland, America. Boston and New York, 1898. 

Griffis, William E. The Story of New Netherland, the Dutch in 
America. Boston and New York, 1909. 

Harrison, James A. George Washington, Patriot, Soldier, States- 
man, First President of the United States. New York, 1906. 

Hart, A. B., editor. American History told by Contemporaries, 
Vol. I. New York and London, 1897-1901. 

Hart, A. B., editor. Camps and Firesides of the Revolution. 
(Source Readers in History) No. 2. New York and London, 
1916. 

Hosmer, James K. The Life of Young Sir Harry Vane, Governor 



1 68 Appendix 

of Massachusetts Bay and Leader of the Long Parliament. Lon- 
don, 1888. 

Keltic, John S., and Gilmour, Samuel C. North America. (Adven- 
tures of Exploration, Book VI.) London. 

Narratives of Early Virginia, 1606-1625. L. G. Tyler, editor. (In 
Original Narratives of Early American History, J. Franklin 
Jameson, editor.) New York, 1907. 

Narratives of New Netherland, 16091664. J. Franklin Jameson, 
editor. (In Original Narratives of Early American History. 
J. Franklin Jameson, editor.) New York, 1909. 

The Pageant of America, Vol. I. Adventurers in the Wilderness. 
Edited by Clark Wissler, Constance L. Skinner and William 
Wood. New Haven, Toronto, London, 1925. 

Parkman, Francis. A Half-Century of Conflict, Vol. I. Boston, 
1905. 

Parkman, Francis. Wolfe and Montcalm, Vol. I. Boston, 1899. 

Rawson, Jonathan. 1776: A Day-by-Day Story. New York, 1927. 

Smith, Helen E. Colonial Days and Ways; as Gathered from 
Family Papers. New York (0.1900). 

Thomson, Jay E. The Land of the Pilgrims, Silent Reading and 
the Poem, The Courtship of Miles Standish. Boston, New York, 
1925. 

Van Rensselaer, May King (Mrs. John King). The Goede Vrouw 
of Mana-ha-ta at Home and in Society. New York (0.1898). 

Wertenbaker, Thomas J. The First Americans, 16071690. (His- 
tory of American Life. A. M. Schlesinger and D. R. Fox, edi- 
tors.) Vol. II. New York, 1927. 

Willson, Beckles. The Life and Letters of James Wolfe. London, 
1909. 

Wrong, George M. Washington and His Comrades in Arms; a 
Chronicle of the War of Independence. (The Chronicles of 
America Series. Allen Johnson, editor), Vol. 12. New Haven, 
Toronto, London, 1921. 




On June 7, 1776, Congress assembled in Independence Hall 
to vote on a resolution for independence. 

(From "The Declaration of Independence," one of The Chronicles of 
America Photo-plays} 



APPENDIX IV 

Information Supplied in the Control Classes 

Because It Was in the Photoplays, but 

Not in the Textbooks. 

The Pilgrims and Puritans in Massachusetts and 
Connecticut. 

(The Pilgrims and the Puritans) 

GORDY, page 53 1 

James I Tries To Make the Puritans and Separatists Conform to the 
Church of England) page 54. 

William Brewster, the able leader of the pious little flock of 
Scrooby Separatists, said, "Pomp and ritual and earthly show are not 
needed to worship him who was born in a stable the simple book of 
His Word is the only test of religious truth." 

The Separatists used to hold their meetings in Brewster's home 
but, inspired by the action of Church and State, their neighbors 
tried to break up these meetings. One of the Separatists was an im- 
petuous youth named William Bradford who resented this treat- 
ment. The action of the neighbors enraged him, and on one occa- 
sion when the disturbance was so great that the High Sheriff of 
Nottingham was drawn to the scene, Bradford said to him, "Why 
do you shake the stave of the law in the face of peaceable folk? It 
is the graceless blasphemers who interfere with us that you should 
rebuke." The Sheriff warned the Separatists that they must con- 
form to the rules of the Church or suffer the consequences, and in 
the bitter years that followed, persecution by both Church and State 
bore heavily upon the little group at Scrooby. 

1 Page references are in each case to Gordy's discussion of the topic which 
this material supplements. 



1 70 Appendix 

The Pilgrims Sail to America Where They Can Have a Free Gov- 
ernment and Their Own Religion, page 54. 

A meeting was held in the Manor House at Scrooby, and plans 
were made for escaping to Holland. The dangers and difficulties 
that lay ahead of them proved too much for a few of their number 
and, at Brewster's suggestion, they withdrew from the meeting. 

During 1607-1608 the Scrooby Separatists escaped to Holland, 
where at last were gathered more than one hundred men, women, 
and children. 

The Hardships of the Voyage and Winter, Test Their Endurance, 
page 55- 

The Mayflower, only 86 feet long, carried 102 passengers beside 
its crew. 

During the first winter, it was necessary to level all the graves 
immediately, so that the watchful Indians might not learn how pes- 
tilence was weakening the colony. 

By spring only six boys and twenty men were left who were able 
to bear arms. 

The crew of the Mayflower, who at first had laughed and jeered 
at the Pilgrims, were stricken with pestilence, and were so im- 
pressed with the kind care given them that they did not want to leave 
the Pilgrims behind in such a bleak country. In spite of the plead- 
ings of Captain Christopher Jones and the crew, none of the Pil- 
grims went back when the Mayflower sailed in the spring. 

Friendly Relations are Established with the Indians, page 57. 

Samoset, an Indian who had met Englishmen before, visited the 
colony asking for food and clothing. The kindly Pilgrims fed him 
and gave him a cloak. Miles Standish showed him the cannon on the 
hill and told him to tell his people about it, but the Pilgrims thought 
he would remember the lesson of love longer than he would remem- 
ber the lesson of fear. 



Control Material 1 7 1 

The Pilgrims and Puritans in Massachusetts and 
Connecticut. 

GORDY, page 53 
About lyOOO Puritans y Led by Winthro-p, Sail for America^ page 59. 

At Merrymount, near Charlestown, a lawless trading post flour- 
ished. Thomas Morton was the master of Merrymount. The Puri- 
tans decided to abolish the settlement because they did not approve 
of Morton's methods of getting the Indians drunk and cheating 
them in trade. Morton was captured and banished to England. 

The Puritans feared that Morton might make trouble for them 
in England. Sir Richard Saltonstall, Governor Winthrop's best 
friend, returned to England and promised to do what he could for 
the Puritan cause. 

In England, the King appointed a Commission to investigate the 
Puritan Charter. The Puritans had many bitter enemies in England. 
One of them was Sir Ferdinando Gorges, the founder of Maine. 
The Charter of the Puritans was the only thing that kept him from 
becoming Governor General of all New England, and he tried to 
prove that his claim to the land preceded that of the Puritans. Arch- 
bishop Laud, who presided over the Commission, was also a bitter 
enemy of the Puritans. He decided that the Puritans had violated 
the conditions of their Charter, and demanded its immediate sur- 
render. The Puritans refused to give it up and expected that Eng- 
land would use force to secure it but before this could be done, con- 
ditions at home grew so serious that England was not able to send 
money, ships, or soldiers to America to secure the Charter. 

Harry Vane, the son of a powerful nobleman in England, came 
over to the colony and so won the respect of the people that they 
elected him Governor to succeed Winthrop. However, the people 
were not satisfied with his rule, principally because he became in- 
terested in the religious teachings of Anne Hutchinson, one of the 
dissenters in the colony. Consequently, at the next election, Win- 
throp was again elected Governor. Soon after this, Vane returned to 
England. 



172 Appendix 

Roger Williams, Driven from Massachusetts) Establishes Religious 
Freedom in Rhode Island, page 63. 

The Puritan magistrates decided to drive Williams from the 
colony. Governor Winthrop was a good friend of Roger Williams, 
and when he heard of this plan, he sent a letter to Williams, warn- 
ing him. 

The English in Virginia and Maryland. 

(Jamestown) 

GORDY, page 40 

Two Large Merchant Companies Receive a Charter to Colonize 
America, page 40. 

The London Company sent its first settlers in three small ships 
the Susan Constant, the G Godspeed, and the Discovery. 

Dale Establishes Individual Ownership, page 43. 

Powhatan, a chieftain of the great Algonquin race, whose do- 
minion extended over many loosely linked tribes, was a dangerous 
neighbor of Jamestown. He sent men as traders to the settlement to 
find out whether it was weak enough to be attacked. The fields of 
the settlers were outside the stockade, and while the men were work- 
ing there the Indians would attack them and kill them. The Indians 
were encouraged to do this by the Spanish people in Florida who 
were anxious to get rid of the English in Virginia. Finally Poca- 
hontas, the daughter of Powhatan, was taken prisoner by the Eng- 
lish. Governor Dale persuaded John Rolfe, one of the colonists, to 
marry Pocahontas. He hoped that this would be a means of keeping 
peace with the Indians. 

Governor Dale's laws were very strict. He realized that the fate 
of the colony hung by a thread. A man who had cheated an Indian 
who traded corn had to stand in the pillory for twenty- four hours. 
A man who killed a chicken without permission was sentenced to 
death. 

Don Diego Molina had allowed himself to be captured so that he 
could report on the strength of Jamestown to his monarch in Spain. 
He used to smuggle messages through to the Spanish in Florida, tell- 
ing them how the strict laws were causing discontent in the colony. 



Control Material 173 

The London Company talked of giving up the colony, but Dale 
persuaded them to keep it up. He wrote in a letter: 

"I have seen the best countries of Europe. Put them all 
together and Virginia will equal them if only it be in- 
habited with good people." 



The Dutch in New York. 

(Peter Stuyvesant) 

GORDY, page 71 

New Netherland Becomes One of the English Colonies y 1664, 
Gordy, p. 75. 

Peter Stuyvesant ruled the people of New Netherland with an 
iron hand. When they protested against his rule he wrote a letter 
saying, "We derive our authority from God and Company, not 
from a few ignorant subjects, and we alone can call them together." 
Mrs. Stuyvesant and the Rev. Johannes Megapolensis, the minister 
of New Amsterdam, tried to persuade Stuyvesant to treat the people 
more gently. 

The people of the Dutch colony were industrious. Even the little 
girls were not idle, but helped with the spinning. Almost all of the 
houses had tulip gardens. There were plenty of games in the colony. 
The boys used to go skating, and the men played a game called 
"kolf" which was somewhat like our golf. 

A great many English colonists lived at Gravesend on Long 
Island under Dutch rule. These Englishmen objected to the tyranny 
of Peter Stuyvesant and wished that the colony might be self-gov- 
erning as was the case of the English colonies in America. Some of 
the Englishmen went back to England and pleaded with King 
Charles to send a fleet to capture the Dutch colony. They took with 
them some samples of furs from the colony in order to show the 
King the wealth of New Amsterdam. 

The palace of King Charles II in England was very beautiful. 
Rare tapestries hung on the walls, and the rooms were filled with 
richly carved furniture. The palace was surrounded by gardens, 
where beds of flowers bloomed beside fountains, and where paths 
lined with high hedges led the way to marble benches reflected in 



1 74 Appendix 

deep pools. In these gardens the members of Charles' court used to 
gather to play battledore and shuttlecock, and to drink the new drink 
from India tea. 

New Amsterdam had ignored Stuyvesant's plea for a better de- 
fense. The men played kolf instead of mending the palisades which 
were supposed to protect the settlement. Stuyvesant had organized a 
"Burgher Corps" an organization of men who were supposed to be 
prepared to defend the colony. However, the men refused to take 
this duty very seriously and did not attend the drills regularly. 
There was scarcely enough powder in the settlement for three can- 
non. New Amsterdam was not, therefore, prepared to offer a 
strong defense when the English fleet appeared. Nevertheless, 
Stuyvesant refused to accept the English terms of surrender, and 
prepared to defend the settlement. Just as he was about to give the 
signal to fire on the English ships a petition was handed to him 
asking him to surrender and not to sacrifice the lives of the people. 
His own son's name headed the list. When Stuyvesant saw this, he 
consented to surrender. 



The French and English in America. 

(The Gateway to the West) 

GORDY, Chapter V 

The Ohio Company Comes in Conflict with the French, page 9 1 . 

^ n *753 England's affairs were in the hands of an indifferent 
Prime Minister the Duke of Newcastle. Governor Dinwiddie of 
Virginia sent him a warning concerning the French invasion of the 
Ohio country. The Duke of Newcastle replied to this warning by 
giving Virginia permission to expel the French. One of his assist- 
ant's an able, energetic young statesman named William Pitt 
realized the danger in America and urged that England send guns 
and men to help the colonists, but this was not done. 

Washington Is Sent on Important Mission to the French Forts, 
page 92. 

When Governor Dinwiddie received permission from England 
to expel the French he looked about for the man to send as mes- 



Control Material 175 

senger. His choice was Major George Washington the young mas- 
ter of Mount Vernon who was leading the life of a typical coun- 
try gentleman of that day. 

When Washington went to Fort Le Boeuf he was accompanied 
by a guide named Christopher Gist, and an interpreter named Van 
Braam. 

Fighting Begins at Great Meadow s y page 93. 

When the French refused to leave and it was certain that force 
would be used, it was suggested that Washington be given the title 
of Colonel and be put in full command of Virginia's expedition 
against the French. Washington refused, on account of his youth 
and inexperience. He went on the expedition as Lieutenant Colonel 
under Colonel Fry. 

Colonel Fry remained at Will's Creek while Washington went 
on with a small advance party. The French at Fort Duquesne 
learned of this and sent troops under Ensign Jumonville. Christo- 
pher Gist brought news to Washington that the French were ap- 
proaching and he advanced to meet them. An Indian named Half- 
King told Washington where the French were hiding. On May 28, 
1754, Washington surprised the French, killing Jumonville and 
wounding many of his men. Washington had difficulty in keeping 
his Indian allies from scalping the wounded French. Jumonville's 
brother DeVilliers at Fort Duquesne promised to punish "this Wash- 
ington, the murderer of my brother, and drive his barbaric English 
from the King's domain." 

Washington learned of the death of Colonel Fry at Will's Creek. 
This meant that he was in command of the expedition. 

Washington returned to Virginia after abandoning the campaign 
against the French. He knew that he had done the right thing but he 
was afraid that the Governor would not understand. He said to Din- 
widdie, "I was forced to abandon the campaign. I am sorry." Din- 
widdie replied, "Sorry? What have you done to be sorry for? Don't 
you see that now war has come? Out of the war will come a peace 
which will give us a wonderful country across the Ohio. Thou- 
sands will go through the 'Gateway to the West.' ' 



176 Appendix 

Wolfe and Montcalm. 

(Photoplay, Wolfe and Montcalm) 
William Pitt Saves the Cause of England, page 96. 

In England, William Pitt and Lord Anson, Chief of the Ad- 
miralty, talked over the necessity of strengthening England's Navy. 
They decided that their first task was to free the American colonies 
from every trace of the French menace. Pitt said, "Britain's sword 
must cut out new boundaries, Admiral ! You are its hilt Saunders, 
with his Canadian fleet, the blade and General Wolfe, the 
point!" 

Wolfe Wins a Brilliant Victory at Quebec y page 96. 

On board the British frigate Sutherland on September 12, 1759, 
the Doctor was worried over Wolfe's condition. Wolfe said he 
knew that the Doctor had done everything possible for him and 
that he would be content with only twenty-four hours more of life. 

Montcalm warned Vaudreuil, the Governor-General of Canada, 
that the English were preparing for a new attack, but Vaudreuil 
refused to believe him and assured him that the English were going 
to retreat. Montcalm warned Vaudreuil that the danger point lay 
where the convoys from Montreal landed the Foulon, at the base 
of the cliffs of Quebec and asked for an entire regiment to guard 
it. Montcalm did not trust Captain Verger who was guarding the 
Foulon, but Vaudreuil refused to remove him or to send reinforce- 
ments. 

Wolfe had the British ships keep up a constant bombardment 
while he made his plans to get his 1,700 picked men up the cliffs. 
He had an idea that he would never return alive, and he left direc- 
tions concerning what should be done with his possessions. He wrote 
a farewell letter to his mother. 

The Commandant at Quebec sent word to Governor Vaudreuil 
that "a handful of mad Englishmen have landed at the Foulon." 
Vaudreuil said, "Don't send for Montcalm. I can handle the mat- 
ter later with my Canadians." Then he went on with his break- 
fast. 

After Quebec was captured it was necessary to withdraw the 
British fleet from the St. Lawrence because of the approach of win- 



Control Material 177 

ter. Pitt realized that the English army was shut in at Quebec and 
that as soon as spring came the French would send troops from 
Montreal and attack them. He knew that victory depended upon 
which side could get the first fleet up the river in the spring. All 
through the winter the English army suffered terribly from disease 
and cold. By spring only half of the 8,000 men could bear arms. 
The French had surrounded Quebec and the English were unable 
to get out. Both sides were waiting for their fleets. The English 
fleet was the first to arrive. The French immediately retreated to 
Montreal where they made their last stand. Vaudreuil was finally 
compelled to surrender to the English. 

The American Revolution. 

(The Eve of the Revolution) 
How the Colonists Resist the Stamf Act, Gordy, page 126. 

August 14, 1765 Effigies of Andrew Oliver, the Stamp Col- 
lector, and Lord Bute, late Prime Minister of England, were 
hanged in Boston. Bute was represented by a large boot. Among 
those present were John Hancock, one of the richest of Boston's 
younger merchants, and Samuel Adams, whom the Royal Governor 
Hutchinson called "The Great Incendiary, in whose hands all other 
men are puppets." As they watched the hanging, Adams said, "It 
will take more than this to teach the King that America will not 
submit to injustice," and Hancock replied, "If they insist on this 
Stamp Act, I will sell my stock in trade and close my warehouse 
doors," 

The British Soldiers, Sent To Enforce Revenue Laws y Fire on Citi- 
zens of Boston-(ijjo) y page 131. 

The small boys of Boston, imitating their elders, taunted the 
British soldiers on guard by calling them "Lobster-backs!" Goaded 
by these taunts one of the soldiers struck one of the boys. Seeing 
this, three other boys ran and rang the bell to arouse the citizens. 
The boy who was struck pointed to one of the soldiers saying, 
"There he is the man who tried to kill me ! " As the crowd pressed 
closer, the calmer members begged the soldiers not to fire. One of 
the soldiers said, "If they touch me, I fire!" 

The meeting of protest was held in the South Meeting House. 

Two of the soldiers were later convicted of manslaughter. 



178 Appendix 

Samuel Adams Presides at a Meeting of Protest Which Ends in the 
<( Boston Tea Party" (1773), page 133. 

Sam Adams, watching the Boston Tea Party, said, "These 
'Indians' are resolved to see how tea mixes with salt water." 

Tea worth eighteen thousand pounds was emptied into the har- 
bor. 

When the "Indians" saw a man trying to fill his own pockets 
with tea, they threw him overboard. 

King George removed the seat of Government from Boston to 
Salem. 

The Colonies Unite in Sympathy with Massachusetts and Call the 

Continental Congress (1774), page 135. 

In 1774 the Assembly met at Salem to consider cooperation with 
other colonies to resist oppression from overseas. John Hancock pre- 
sided over the meeting. The door was locked to prevent the Tories 
from leaving, so that there would be a quorum to do business. 
Adams said to some of his friends that he had been promised the 
last vote necessary for a majority in favor of appointing delegates 
to the proposed Continental Congress. He told the doorkeeper that 
the door was not to be opened until he gave him permission to open 
it. The motion was made that five members of the Assembly be ap- 
pointed as delegates to the Continental Congress to be held in Phila- 
delphia in September. Unable to stop the debate or prevent the elec- 
tion of the delegates, the Tory members resolved to leave the 
meeting. Adams said, "That door will not be opened until the busi- 
ness of the meeting is finished." One of the Tories pretended to be 
ill. Pretending that he needed air, he opened a window, jumped out 
and ran to the Governor's headquarters which had been established 
in Salem for the session of the Assembly. Upon hearing of the meet- 
ing Gage said, "Curse that trickster Adams! He is responsible for 
nine-tenths of the trouble in this province." Gage had an order 
drawn up for dissolving the Assembly. The messenger went to the 
meeting and shouted through the closed door, "Open ! Open, in the 
King's name! I bring orders from General Gage to dissolve this 
assembly. Anything it may do will be illegal." Adams answered, 
"That door will not be opened till all the business of this meeting is 
finished." They elected Sam Adams and four other delegates to the 



Control Material 179 

proposed Congress in Philadelphia and voted relief for the people in 
Boston, and assessed the people for necessary expenses. 

The "Embattled Farmers" Resist the British at Lexington and Con- 
cord and Drive Them Back to Boston y page 138. 

General Gage ordered Colonel Smith, Major Pitcairn, and Earl 
Percy to head the British troops to capture Hancock and Adams and 
destroy stores at Concord. 

Hancock and Adams were staying at the Parson Clark House in 
Lexington. 

Lexington was eleven miles from Boston. The people there had 
sent the following word: "We shall be ready to sacrifice everything 
dear in life, yea, even life itself, in support of the common cause." 

The Minutemen at Lexington were under the command of Cap- 
tain John Parker. General Pitcairn, the English commander, 
shouted, "Lay down your arms and disperse, ye damned rebels." 

The British under Lieutenant Colonel Smith were in Concord 
by seven o'clock, April 19. Detachments marched to the north and 
south bridges in search of military stores. At the north bridge the 
colonial soldiers under Captain Buttrick attacked a British regi- 
ment. The colonial troops advanced steadily. After waiting vainly 
for expected reinforcements, the British wavered and began to 
break. British reinforcements under Percy at last reached Lexington, 
and here the exhausted British troops were received in a hollow 
square and protected by their comrades. 

(The Declaration of Independence) 

The Declaration of Independence y a Remarkable Historical Docu- 
ment, Is Adopted July 4, 1776, Gordy, page 144. 

John Dickinson of Pennsylvania was the leader of those who still 
clung to the hope of a reconciliation with England. 

Rutledge was the leader of the South Carolina delegation. 

In the middle colonies, many favored reconciliation because they 
feared the loss of their property. 

The south had not yet felt the scourge of war. 

See Beard and Bagley, page 149, and Gordy, pages 155-156, for 
France's attitude toward the colonies at this time. 

See also Gordy, page 146, for the Tory situation. 



180 Appendix 

The people were divided into three groups royalists, moderates, 
and rebels. 

On June 8, 1776, Lee offered his Resolutions in Congress, but it 
was impossible to secure the approval of everyone, and voting was 
postponed (textbook gives date as June 7). 

Few delegates slept during the hot night of the first of July. The 
meeting to vote on Independence was held the next day, July 2, 
1776. 

Two of the Pennsylvania delegates who did not feel Independ- 
ence wise Dickinson and Morris stayed away when the voting 
took place in order that Pennsylvania might vote Aye. 

Delaware's third delegate Caesar Rodney, whose vote was nec- 
essary to secure her vote for independence was away at his home. 
A messenger was sent to fetch him and by riding all night he ar- 
rived just in time to cast his vote. 

South Carolina's delegates were instructed to join in such meas- 
ures as would best promote the interests of all. They looked upon 
these instructions as broad enough to allow them to vote for inde- 
pendence. 

The New York delegation was not authorized to vote on Inde- 
pendence, but since all the other colonies voted Aye, the vote was 
considered unanimous. 

There were two Charles Carrolls in Maryland, so Carroll signed 
his name as Charles Carroll of Carrollton, in order that there might 
be no mistake. He was one of the richest men in the country, and 
therefore stood to lose more than most by signing. 

As Hancock signed the Declaration he said, "John Bull won't 
need his spectacles to read that name ! " 

The Declaration of Independence was made known to the people 
on July 8. 

(Yorktown) 
The Surrender of Cornwallis, Gordy, page 170. 

Early in 1781, Washington at New Windsor, New York, consid- 
ered his problems. He realized that the military situation was des- 
perate. The enemy held New York and Charleston, and controlled 
the sea. They could outflank the American forces at will. Washing- 




Washington and his generals hold a council of war at the New 
Windsor headquarters of the American commander in chief. 

(From "Yorktown," one of The Chronicles of America Photoplays) 



Control Material 1 8 1 

ton realized that nothing could be done without the French fleet 
which was at Brest, three thousand miles away. 

At Brest, Count de.Grasse, Chief Admiral of France, impa- 
tiently awaited his sailing orders, realizing that if he could cut the 
British lines of communication the war would end. 

In the spring of 1781, Cornwallis moved north into Virginia. 
He dispatched General Tarleton to capture Governor Jefferson and 
the Assembly of Virginia. John Jouett, who guessed that Tarleton 
meant to capture the Assembly at Charlottesville, rode to spread the 
alarm. His ride saved the Assembly, but the situation had already 
driven Thomas Jefferson to beg Washington for aid. 

Washington realized that everything depended upon the French 
fleet. If he went south before the fleet cut the communication be- 
tween the northern and southern British armies, he would be caught 
between them and crushed. 

Rochambeau joined Washington in New York, bringing the news 
that the French fleet was approaching America. 

Clinton at his headquarters in New York was informed that some 
movement was on foot among the American forces, and that the 
French fleet was approaching. He refused to credit these rumors. 
When he finally awoke to the danger and sent the British fleet to 
combat the French fleet, it was too late. The British fleet, greatly 
outnumbered, was defeated in the battle of the Chesapeake on Sep- 
tember 5, 1781. 

Warfare of the Border. 

(Vincennes) 

The British Continue the War by Aid of the lndlans y Gordy, page 

159. 

Hamilton, the British Governor, held a parley near Detroit with 
friendly Chippewa chiefs. Hamilton was told that if he let loose 
these devils upon the rebels, the whole country would rise to drive 
him out, but his idea was that a great war was being fought against 
King George, and that the British needed the Indian allies to harass 
the enemy. He instructed the Indians that there was to be no war 
against women and children, but the Indians failed to heed these 
instructions. 



1 82 Appendix 

With Less than Two Hundred Men, Clark Wins a Vast Region 
for the Future Nation, Gordy, page 162. 

George Rogers Clark told Patrick Henry, the Governor of Vir- 
ginia, that he could drive the British out of the Northwest if Vir- 
ginia would stand the cost of recruiting. Patrick Henry promised to 
ask the Assembly to grant the necessary money. 

From its base at Fort Pitt, Clark's expedition proceeded to Kas- 
kaskia which it occupied without a fight. There, in an old Jesuit 
Mission House, Clark held a conference with his officers. Francis 
Vigo, a Spanish trader who had been released by the British as a 
non-combatant, told Clark that the trails to Vincennes were deep 
under water. Clark decided to undertake the trip, and overruled the 
objections of his officers that it could not be done. 

Hamilton at Vincennes decided not to attack Kaskaskia until 
spring, and, therefore, permitted his Indians to go home with the 
promise that they would return in the spring. Captain Leonard 
Helm, an American officer captured by the British, joked with 
Hamilton about the possibility of capturing Clark. 

Dawn of February 23, 1779, found Clark and his men facing 
Horseshoe Plain five miles of flooded forest beyond which lay 
Vincennes. They reached Vincennes that evening and decided to 
attack at once. The half-frozen Virginians strode into the village 
so unexpectedly that the French people of the village could not be- 
lieve what they saw. Hamilton and Helm were playing a game of 
cards when they heard the first shots. Hamilton declared it was 
drunken Indians on a spree, but Helm was firmly convinced that it 
was Clark. 

Clark and Hamilton met for a parley in the little church at Vin- 
cennes. Clark insisted that Hamilton was not entitled to the usual 
military courtesies of honorable surrender and that he must sur- 
render without terms. Hamilton asserted that his men would rather 
die fighting than surrender without the honors of war. Terms were 
finally arranged on February 25, 1779. 

From the vast territory from which the British were expelled by 
Clark, came five great states Ohio, Indiana, Illinois, Wisconsin, 
and Michigan. 




Governor Hamilton and his men salute George Rogers Clark 
and his forces at the gates of Fort Sackville. 

(From "Vincennes," one of The Chronicles of America Photoplays) 



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343-345- May, 1928. 



MOTION PICTURES IN 
HISTORY TEACHING 

By 
Daniel C. Knowlton 

and 
J. Warren Til ton 

Visual education, in all its forms, is commanding more and 
more attention from leaders in primary and secondary educa- 
tion. Motion pictures in particular have found a definite place 
in many school systems and are being used with increasing suc- 
cess and effectiveness each year. It therefore seemed wise to 
members of the Department of Education at Yale University 
to make a careful study of the value of motion pictures in teach- 
ing. It was decided to conduct the test in the field of American 
History at the Junior High School level and to use ten of the 
Chronicles of America Photoplays. Each experimental class was 
planned to extend over a period of six months. The purpose of 
the experiment was to determine, if possible, how much added 
interest motion pictures created, how much they contributed to 
the learning of fundamentals, how much they enriched the 
course and to what extent they helped the students to retain 
what they had learned. The progress of each experimental 
group using the motion pictures was compared with a control 
group which did not have the pictures but which was taught by 
the same teachers and with the same methods. To assure accur- 
acy each pupil in each of the experimental and control groups 
was tested five times during the experiment. The results which 
are given in this volume form an interesting and accurate 
contribution to the study of visual education. 

YALE UNIVERSITY PRESS 

NEW HAVEN CONNECTICUT