{"id":3952,"date":"1977-03-01T01:00:00","date_gmt":"1977-03-01T01:00:00","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.rbc.com\/en\/about-us\/history\/letter\/vol-58-no-3-march-1977-what-use-is-history\/"},"modified":"2022-11-28T00:13:12","modified_gmt":"2022-11-28T00:13:12","slug":"vol-58-no-3-march-1977-what-use-is-history","status":"publish","type":"rbc_letter","link":"https:\/\/www.rbc.com\/en\/about-us\/history\/letter\/vol-58-no-3-march-1977-what-use-is-history\/","title":{"rendered":"VOL. 58, No. 3 &#8211; MARCH 1977 &#8211; What Use is History?"},"content":{"rendered":"<div id=\"layout-column-main\">\n<p class=\"boldtext\">Not all of us agree about the benefit to                     be had from studying the past. People who believe its experiences                     should be used today and passed along in trust to their successors                     rub elbows with those who think that tradition and precedent                     are a ball and chain hindering progress.<\/p>\n<p> What a pity it is that this should be so! The vital beliefs                     and good practices of our western world rest on the fulcrum                     of historic knowledge. There is no basis for our society save                     its past. There is no guide to business decisions except that                     given by experience. There is no personal maturity that is                     not built upon reflection on events of yesterday.<\/p>\n<p>The record of things to be recalled is contained in books,                     in the minds of parents, in universities, and in business                     files. What are books but the thoughts of people of their                     time put down in type? What has a university to proffer except                     what it has absorbed of the past, to be communicated to every                     new generation with interpretation and adaptation? What has                     any mother to pass on to her children except the accumulated                     wisdom of mothers of the past and the lessons of her own experience&nbsp;?                     What is the purpose of all our office work from the clay tablets                     of Babylon to the punched tape of today&#8217;s electronic machines                     except to provide the history of transactions?<\/p>\n<p>There is one qualification to be made: we must use only                     what is true, significant, and applicable. We must, as Jean                     Jaures, French statesman, philosopher and orator said: &#8220;take                     from the altars of the past the fire &#8212; not the ashes.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>For some reason there has been a tendency since World War                     II to turn again to history.<\/p>\n<p>It may be that we are returning to the ancient conception                     of history as philosophy teaching by experience. We want to                     know how human beings have behaved under circumstances similar                     to our own. Different though the crises of today may appear,                     there are at the centre of men&#8217;s experiences simplicity of                     cause and certain basic principles.<\/p>\n<p>We may have decided that there is no need for us to go through                     suffering so long as we can draw upon and profit by the experiences                     of others.<\/p>\n<p>Economic history tells us how our forefathers produced their                     livelihood; social history tells the progress they made in                     developing a better life.<\/p>\n<h3>Our debt to the past<\/h3>\n<p>We may be disappointed by the apparently small social progress                     we have made. We may think that the advancement has not lived                     up to our opportunities. Dr. W. F. Collier&#8217;s <em>Outlines                     of General History&#8217;<\/em>, published at Edinburgh in 1868,                     has as its first chapter heading: &#8220;Adam to Babel&#8221;. We may                     comment cynically that no further chapters are needed because                     we have not yet progressed past the age of confused talk.<\/p>\n<p>But the extent of our success or failure does not affect                     the necessity we are under to use any possible means to keep                     our balance in these slippery days. We are always coming up                     against the emphatic facts of history in our private, business                     and national experience. When we can pluck an example from                     the past and use it to help us today that is a very practical                     use of history.<\/p>\n<p>Even fables and stories have their uses. One after another                     we come face to face in our life&#8217;s adventures with every fable                     of Aesop, of Homer, of Chaucer, of Scott, and verify them                     with our own heads and hands.<\/p>\n<p>All the fictions of the Middle Ages, that seeming pause                     between about 500 A.D. and the revival of learning toward                     the end of the 15th century, reveal themselves as masked expressions                     of what the minds of people toiled to achieve. Their magic                     stories may appear childish to us, fit only for juvenile story                     books, but only because our science has made their fantasies                     come true: the shoes of swiftness, the power of subduing the                     elements, of using the secret virtues of minerals, of speaking                     across continents, of sailing over mountains and seas on magic                     carpets.<\/p>\n<p>We are forever indebted to the past. It is the source of                     our very identity. In the present moment, which changes as                     we live it, the past is all we know.<\/p>\n<h3>Our forefathers<\/h3>\n<p>By telling us what our forefathers did, history inspires                     us in two directions: to respect their achievements, great                     in their day, and to strive to equal their resourcefulness                     and courage.<\/p>\n<p>Children take many things for granted. They do not marvel                     over automobiles, airplanes, radio, television, the telephone.                     Many things seem to us very simple because someone ages ago                     or a half century ago was clever enough to think of them.<\/p>\n<p>It would be a healthy custom to pause, every once in a while,                     to pay a memory tribute to the explorers and inventors, the                     enterprisers and the artisans and the farmers, who laid the                     foundation of our prosperity. They blazed trails through the                     forest and over mountains, trails which we have widened into                     highways and along which we have laid railway tracks. They                     paddled their canoes along unknown rivers and lakes where                     we have developed a seaway. Their deeds inspire us not to                     allow the active bravery of the first rough age of Canada                     to change into a passive acceptance of benefits.<\/p>\n<p>Beyond our ancestors of the past two or three centuries                     stretches a line of people who were already old as nations,                     who were already wealthy and civilized, when Canada was a                     handful of tepees inhabited by stone-age hunters.<\/p>\n<p>We have all those past ages open to us. Everything is in                     our history to tell us how we arrived at today&#8217;s comforts                     and sorrows: the efforts, actions and sufferings which wrung                     our civilization and culture out of chaos.<\/p>\n<p>That is one use of history. It is the record of societies                     of men and women, of the changes which those societies passed                     through, of the ideas which determined their actions, and                     of the material conditions and forces that helped or hindered                     their development. Arnold J. Toynbee, one of the foremost                     historians, has chosen selections which demonstrate his theory                     that all civilizations pass through similar transitions and                     that we can better understand our own times through a study                     of the past.<\/p>\n<p>We can use history to give us binocular or stereoscopic                     vision, so that we see all around today&#8217;s problems. Life in                     the present takes on a deeper meaning in the larger context                     of time. When you put a picture of history into the viewer                     alongside one of a similar event of today, you get a roundness.                     The picture enables you to judge the necessity and importance                     of proposals for action today. It even provides examples of                     the results that may be hoped for, and warnings about the                     failures.<\/p>\n<p>Therein lies the secret of a rewarding use of history. We                     are not seeking to put history under a microscope, to cut                     it into slices for critical examination. What we do want is                     to apply the experiences of the past to events today. A spark                     from another age may illuminate our problem, and help us to                     plot our course.<\/p>\n<h3>Open-mindedness<\/h3>\n<p>Nothing can be more precious and useful to anyone than open-mindedness.                     The hide-bound politician cannot become a statesman; the one-idea                     business man cannot become a great captain of industry; the                     bigoted man or woman cannot enjoy the fullness of satisfaction                     that life proffers.<\/p>\n<p>History contributes to open-mindedness. It shows that people                     holding widely different views of social, political and religious                     matters have lived worthily and contributed their share to                     achievement in the arts, letters and sciences.<\/p>\n<p>Mature thinking is aided by history. The student of history                     is less likely than others to believe that any opinion is                     altogether right, that any purpose is altogether altruistic,                     that any calamity is altogether deplorable. He is less likely                     than people ignorant of history to pin derogatory labels on                     people; to emphasize differences so as to stir angry emotions;                     to allow prejudice of race, creed or caste to dictate his                     association with people around him.<\/p>\n<p>A knowledge of history begets prudence. Throughout the years                     there have been people trumpeting the end of the world. We                     are constantly under the feeling of crisis. Sometimes we become                     exasperated, but a better way would be to look back over the                     record.<\/p>\n<p>Such an examination will show us how some peoples mastered                     their difficulties by making well-directed efforts in a united                     way, while others were defeated by difficulties because they                     refused to recognize them or depended upon someone else to                     resolve them.<\/p>\n<h3>Culture and maturity<\/h3>\n<p>History is essential to the thinking of a cultured person.                     It is a necessary ingredient of maturity.<\/p>\n<p>To prove these statements it is necessary only to think                     back upon the difficulty of making conversation with a person                     who has nothing in the past with which to compare or to which                     to relate a matter of immediate significance. There is nothing                     more exasperating for educated people in the society of the                     uneducated than this restriction of conversation by the limitation                     of their mental world.<\/p>\n<p>Our Canadian culture has its roots in many lands. When we                     follow those roots back we find that what we are today is                     part and parcel of all humanity. It is only through our history                     that we can become completely conscious of ourselves.<\/p>\n<p>But in order to benefit fully we need to read history across                     the frontiers instead of reading our history as ours and foreign                     history as something external. We need to accept the fact                     that other ways of behaving exist as well as our own and that                     they serve the needs of other human beings. Many Canadian                     problems can only be understood when placed in a general world                     setting.<\/p>\n<p>The facts of history are connected by skeins of consequences                     in every direction. We are part of a civilization, as well                     as being a nation, and that civilization grew out of and exists                     alongside other civilizations. Realizing this, we are warned                     against rash, unjust, narrow and selfishly one-sided action.<\/p>\n<p>Official international policy, expressed through the United                     Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization,                     favours the improvement of history teaching in schools so                     that it will more effectively contribute to international                     understanding. A UNESCO handbook seeks realization of the                     fact that human beings are everywhere sufficiently alike to                     be thought of as virtually members of one family; that they                     have everywhere the same sort of problems, for example to                     feed and protect themselves, to bring up a family, and so                     on; and that everywhere they admire beautiful things and aspire                     toward fine and noble things, even though their standards                     of beauty and nobility may differ.<\/p>\n<p>It is not sought to exclude the teaching of national history,                     but to explain it in the light of general world history. National                     history gains added significance by being placed in a large                     setting.<\/p>\n<h3>Truth in history<\/h3>\n<p>History is made up of the living issues of the day in which                     it is made. Its laboratory is the world we move about in.                     It is added to daily by trivial happenings. The problem is                     to decide between the relevant ifs and might-be&#8217;s of history.<\/p>\n<p>Like all the sciences, history seeks truth. It must be as                     true to facts as human fallibility will allow. It is not history                     if it is written by gossip-mongers and propagandists. If the                     actions it records are honourable actions, they demand nothing                     more than truth. Where embellishment shows itself, suspect                     the report.<\/p>\n<p>Some chapters that masquerade as history were written in                     defence of a special cause or in support of particular beliefs.                     The writers wanted &#8220;history&#8221; to support their passionate politics                     as a weapon in party strife.<\/p>\n<p>We should be glad today if our young people could be given                     the story of the past in such a way as to convey the facts.                     This is no time for maintaining ancient hatreds. They cloud                     our understanding and befog our judgment.<\/p>\n<p>To tell the truth in history does not necessitate being                     dull. Great historians are interested in reporting events                     as they see them.<\/p>\n<p>We can become quite excited by the story-telling skill of                     Herodotus, the dramatic flourish of Thucydides, the seductive                     phrases of Macaulay, and the colour of Carlyle. None of these                     writers had a commonplace style such as you would expect to                     find in the diary of a soldier.<\/p>\n<p>Man is something more than a doer of deeds. The story of                     his life need not be a dreary chronicle of unrelated events,                     but should be a marvellous drama of thought, feeling and action.                     Marc Antony and Cleopatra found making history a most exciting                     business: it would be an injustice to tell their adventures                     dispassionately.<\/p>\n<p>Sir Winston Churchill&#8217;s history writing, as the <em>New                     York Times <\/em>reviewer describes it, is &#8220;Personal and proud,                     judicious and illuminated by a long historical perspective,                     rich with the grandest and most stately prose written in our                     time.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>There is still a great field for good and able popularization                     on the elementary levels. Sir Walter Scott in his novels,                     and Jane Porter in <em>The Scottish Chiefs <\/em>have used                     fragments of the truth which pedantic historians scornfully                     threw behind them.<\/p>\n<p>Does it matter whether or not King Alfred let the cakes                     burn; that Sir Francis Drake finished his game of bowls before                     going out to scatter the Spanish Armada; that Wolfe recited                     Gray&#8217;s <em>Elegy <\/em>as he approached the Citadel? These                     stories serve to illustrate the character of the men. History                     does not consist only of the great events that mark the years                     and centuries but of the thoughts that guided and inspired                     people.<\/p>\n<p>History may be learned in a most congenial way by reading                     biographies, the actual drama of men and women. Sometimes                     people pressed their way to the front of events, but more                     often they just happened to be there at the right time, like                     the little Dutch boy who saved the dyke by plugging a hole                     with his finger. The story of how they came to be there, what                     they did, what impelled them, and what the results were: that                     story is history.<\/p>\n<h3>Stories in stones<\/h3>\n<p>We are altogether too likely to overlook history that lies                     outside history books, history that is written in our buildings,                     our art, our handicrafts, our folk-songs. Look at the diversity                     of their history left us by the Greeks: civil history, epic                     and lyric poems, drama, philosophy, architecture, sculpture.                     All these&#8211;an ode of Pindar, a marble centaur, the stately                     columns of the Parthenon&#8211;tell the spirit and life of a people.                     Every brass tablet in Westminster Abbey, every bust in the                     French Academy, signifies something that influenced the preparation                     of today&#8217;s environment.<\/p>\n<p>The history of Canada has been written in wampum-belts,                     earth-mounds, stone-heaps and totem-poles; in Chambly Fort                     and Fort Garry; in poetry, folk-songs and legends; on forest                     trails and river portages; in churches, town halls and houses.<\/p>\n<p>We need imaginative eyes to see it all. Toynbee tells us                     that toward the end of the 18th century &#8220;the living generation                     in the Middle East were squatting among the amazing ruins                     of extinct civilizations without being moved to inquire what                     these monuments were.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>It would be well for Canada if we were to make sure that                     no ancient building can be torn down, no ancient map or record                     destroyed, until competent people have examined its worth                     as part of our history.<\/p>\n<h3>Canadian history<\/h3>\n<p>It is time that Canada became actively interested in her                     history. We cannot be politically mature without an intelligent                     awareness of our past. Yet, said Dr. Hilda Neatby in a paper                     prepared for the Royal Commission on National Development                     in the Arts, Letters and Sciences: &#8220;We have as yet no national                     history, and no genuine consciousness of the past.&#8221; Even our                     political biography is sparse, because &#8220;Canadian statesmen                     have succeeded in shrouding themselves in obscurity.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>The work so far done by scholars is of a high order, but                     it is fragmentary and local. Two things are needed: to bring                     our history together on the scholarly level, so that we shall                     have our past in a connected story, and to bridge the gap                     between that scholarly history and the man-in-the-street.<\/p>\n<p>Professor W. L. Morton summarized our need in his essay                     for the Royal Commission: &#8220;What is needed is positive direction                     by national agencies in all fields of historical work, archives,                     libraries, publication, exhibition and commemoration.&#8221; This                     can be brought about by legislation, grants and national associations.<\/p>\n<p>Textbooks should be free of biased interpretations, and                     should present what all Canadians have in common. The Hon.                     Ernest Rinfret said in an address some years ago that it is                     inconceivable that different Canadian histories are taught                     in French- and English- speaking schools. &#8220;We are simply raising                     our children with prejudices&#8230; No wonder Canadians are not                     united as they should be.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>The basic factual content in Canadian history textbooks                     should be the same in all provinces, in the opinion of the                     Committee for the Study of Canadian History Textbooks, a committee                     that reported to the Canadian Education Association in 1944.                     The genius of the author of such a history would lie in preserving                     the book from becoming a pale and featureless mass of facts.<\/p>\n<p>Provincial and local achievements should be given their                     deserved place, but every textbook should tell about the great                     swells in history that affect all Canadians. There is nothing                     in the stories of Wolfe and Montcalm, of Champlain and Cartier                     and Mackenzie, of Dollard and Cornwallis, that does not belong                     to all of us. We should benefit by including in all textbooks                     the exploits of the English explorers, the United Empire Loyalists,                     the Hudson&#8217;s Bay Company, as well as those of Madeleine de                     Vercheres, d&#8217;lberville, and the French fur traders.<\/p>\n<p>While we are at it, we might pay attention to the study                     of national history textbooks used in the schools of Canada                     and the United States, prepared by people on both sides of                     the boundary in 1947. This report was published in Canadian                     Education. It probed the quantity and quality of chapters                     devoted in each country to the history of the other. It recommended                     that &#8220;a more determined effort should be made to present a                     clearer picture of recent economic, social, and cultural interrelationships                     between Canada and the United States. Attention should be                     devoted to both similarities and differences in these areas.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>Much material to be used as the basis of books on Canadian                     history will come from the Archives, organized in 1872. Here                     are to be found manuscripts, maps, pictures, and original                     documents telling our story from pre-Confederation days. Constant                     efforts are being made to retrieve from inactive departmental                     files all the documents that are worthy of perpetual care.<\/p>\n<p>The collection of all inactive files of public records in                     one place where they will be under proper care, accessible                     to government officials, scholars and the public, is the ideal                     sought.<\/p>\n<h3>History need not depress<\/h3>\n<p>Some people may avoid reading history because they become                     depressed by the slowness of the upward curve they see in                     the record of human affairs. But if there is much folly in                     the record, there is also much greatness; if there are many                     mistakes revealed, there are also great moments of inspired                     action.<\/p>\n<p>We need to pay attention to the significant things, and                     avoid wrangling over the trifles. Even if we find that we                     were mistaken in setting the creation of the world at so recent                     a date as 4004 B.C., it is at any rate better to look back                     that far than to see no farther back than Confederation. If                     we become confused by the fifty different reasons given in                     various books for the outbreak of the two world wars, yet                     we have a better understanding of the cause than if we assumed                     there was only one reason, or no reason at all except Fate.<\/p>\n<p>When we read the story of mankind we find that there has                     never been a period which has not been regarded by some of                     its contemporaries as critical. History seems to be made up                     of one crisis after another. Ours appears to be more serious                     because we are in it.<\/p>\n<p>Familiar refrains about the &#8220;breakdown&#8221; of Western Civilization                     may obscure, unless we read history, the extraordinary creativeness                     that has made this civilization the richest, most dramatic                     spectacle in history. It has, says Herbert J. Muller in <em>The                     Uses of the Past <\/em>(Mentor, 1952), maintained a high level                     of creative activity over a longer period of time than have                     previous societies. We are inheritors of knowledge, skills,                     arts, ideas and ideals, of enduring things that we should                     not willingly give up, but which we are apt to forget because                     we take them for granted.<\/p>\n<p>A person without history is like a sleep-walker who finds                     before him in the morning what he has done in his sleep. The                     nation that neglects to know its own history is limited to                     the short present of the now living generation. The business                     enterprise without records is bedevilled by the rush to catch                     up with developments that records would have enabled it to                     anticipate.<\/p>\n<p>On the broadest plane, what reason is to the individual,                     history is to the human race. By virtue of reason, man is                     not, like the brute, limited to the narrow present, but also                     has available to him the incomparably more extended past with                     which the present is linked and out of which it has proceeded.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n","protected":false},"author":79,"featured_media":0,"template":"","categories":[1],"rbc_letter_theme":[],"rbc_letter_year":[57],"class_list":["post-3952","rbc_letter","type-rbc_letter","status-publish","hentry","category-uncategorized","rbc_letter_year-57"],"acf":[],"yoast_head":"<!-- This site is optimized with the Yoast SEO Premium plugin v27.2 (Yoast SEO v27.2) - https:\/\/yoast.com\/product\/yoast-seo-premium-wordpress\/ -->\n<title>VOL. 58, No. 3 - MARCH 1977 - What Use is History? - RBC<\/title>\n<meta name=\"robots\" content=\"index, follow, max-snippet:-1, max-image-preview:large, max-video-preview:-1\" \/>\n<link rel=\"canonical\" href=\"https:\/\/www.rbc.com\/en\/about-us\/history\/letter\/vol-58-no-3-march-1977-what-use-is-history\/\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:locale\" content=\"en_US\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:type\" content=\"article\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:title\" content=\"VOL. 58, No. 3 - MARCH 1977 - What Use is History? - RBC\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:description\" content=\"Not all of us agree about the benefit to be had from studying the past. 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People who believe its experiences should be used today and passed along in trust to their successors rub elbows with those who think that tradition and precedent are a ball and chain hindering progress. 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