Statement By Commissioner Of Education Earl McGrath, Greeting to British Teachers
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OCR Page 1 of 3Greeting to British Teachers
by
Earl J.
U. S. Commissioner of Education
Federal Security Agency
August 22, 1949
You are a part of one of the most significant programs for
develeping understanding between your country and mine. We have
discovered during the past three years of this interchange of
teachers that your colleagues in 215 cities of 40 States have
spoken to more than 10,000 audiences, telling them the story of
the Uhited Kingiom. Fertunately most of these commonities were
small cities, such as Manhattan, Kansas; Manitowac, Wisconsin;
San Angelo, Texas; Provo, Utah; Jackson, Michigan; and White River
Junction, Vermont. There your forermners came to know America
intimately by sharing in the life of the communti, by teaching
the children of the lavyer and dostor as well as of the electrician
and the plumber. There also they participated in Parent Teacher
Associations, church societies, and civic groups, bringing to these
people the firsthand accounts of life and conditions in Ingland,
Scotland and mles.
One of your responsibilities during the caming year will be
to assist in breaking up the prototypes which have grom up about
the English, the Scots and the welsh. You know the famous story
about them: the Scoteman who throws his bread on the waters, but
makes sure the tide. is coming in; the Welshman who prays on his
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