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Reading Room · Historical scholarship, pre-1950

Twelfth Annual Report of the Secretary of the Board of Education

Horace Mann, 1848.

Twelfth Annual Report of the Secretary of the Board of Education (1848)

Why this matters

This is the canonical statement of the American common-school ideal. By 1848 Mann had spent eleven years as Secretary of the Massachusetts Board of Education arguing for a publicly funded, universally available, professionally taught school system. The Twelfth Report is his valedictory: a synthesis written at the moment he resigned the Secretaryship to take John Quincy Adams’s seat in Congress. It is the document the trust drafters of 1859, 1864, and after had in mind when they wrote “the maintenance of common schools” into state admission acts and constitutions. To understand what those drafters meant by “schools,” read this.

What’s in it

The Report’s argument is organized around the social functions Mann claims the common school can perform. The order matters; each section builds on the previous one.

Most-quoted passages

On education and inequality:

“Education, then, beyond all other devices of human origin, is the great equalizer of the conditions of men, — the balance-wheel of the social machinery.”

This is the sentence the entire common-school movement is remembered by. Its claim is structural, not sentimental: the school as the mechanism that prevents a free society from sorting itself into permanent classes.

On the alternative to common schooling:

“If one class possesses all the wealth and the education, while the residue of society is ignorant and poor, it matters not by what name the relation between them may be called: in the matter of fact and in truth, the former will be the servile dependants and subjects of the latter.”

Mann is explicit that the absence of common schools produces a class society, not a republic. The trust-land mechanism funds the school precisely to keep this from happening.

On the citizen:

“It may be an easy thing to make a Republic; but it is a very laborious thing to make Republicans; and woe to the republic that rests upon no better foundations than ignorance, selfishness, and passion.”

The school’s political function — producing the citizen the Republic depends on — is not incidental to Mann’s argument. It is foundational.

How it connects to the Library’s argument

The drift-of-purpose frame the Library advances depends on a clear answer to the question: what kind of school did the trust drafters intend their lands to fund? The answer is in this Report. They intended the Mann-Pierce-Barnard common school: universal, publicly funded, locally controlled, morally serious, and explicitly designed to prevent the polarization of wealth and political power.

In 2026 the school the trust funds underwrite is, on Mann’s own metric, doing the opposite of what its architects designed it for. American educational outcomes track family income more tightly than they did in 1848; the school amplifies rather than corrects the polarization Mann said it would prevent. The Library’s case is not that the modern school is a betrayal of Mann’s vision — institutions evolve, and the constitutional framework around moral and religious instruction has shifted — but that the trust-land funding mechanism remains tethered to a purpose its current institutional vehicle no longer serves. That is what drift means. Mann’s Report is the baseline against which drift is measured.

How to engage

Curated by

Library editorial team, 2026-05-07. This editorial summary is the Library’s contribution and is open to community revision.

How to engage

Read it at Internet Archive →

Fallback: https://www.hathitrust.org/

A representative passage from the work is excerpted inline above; the full text lives at the source.


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