From Classroom to White House: Chalkboard Politicians

9780786464869_p0_v1_s260x420[1][2]I was fascinated by this little book that tells anecdotes about our nation’s presidents and first ladies as students and as teachers. In addition, the book describes the educational issues the presidents addressed during their White House years, the complications  in education at their time in history, and an overview of American schooling over time. I was amazed to learn that John F. Kennedy’s teacher said he could “seldom locate his possessions,” and that the teacher of George H.W. Bush described the young student as “somewhat eccentric,” and that Bill Clinton’s sixth-grade teacher called him a “motormouth.” If you’re  a teacher as intrigued by presidential history as I am, you’ve got to read  From Classroom to White House, which can easily be found on amazon.com.

Laura Bush: Spoken From the Heart

cvr9781439155202_9781439155202_lg[1][1]Anyone fascinated by presidential history, libraries, and teachers, whether Republican or Democrat, is bound to be interested in the recent opening of the George W. Bush Presidential Museum and Library last week in Dallas, Texas. It is times like this when I like to  remember that former First Lady Laura Bush was once a teacher and a librarian.

Laura Bush gives readers a wealth of detail about her experiences in her Texas classrooms, the libraries where she worked, and the annual National Book Festival she inaugurated in her 2011 autobiography, Spoken from the Heart. The book covers the other details of her life you would expect to find in an autobiography: her childhood and education, how she met and married George Bush, her difficulty conceiving and the eventual birth of her twins, her husband’s gubernatorial and presidential elections, and her role as First Lady.

If you want to get to know Laura Bush better, be sure to read this book. You can find Spoken from the Heart on amazon.com.

Annie Webb Blanton: The Foremost Woman Educator in Texas

books[1][1]I picked up this volume of biographical sketches, Women in Texas by Anne Fears Crawford and Crystal Sasse Ragsdale, when I was vacationing in Texas last summer. When I bought the book, I was primarily intrigued by the chapter about Annie Webb Blanton, which the authors described as the foremost woman educator in Texas.
This amazing teacher, president of the Texas State Teachers’ Association, was encouraged and financed by the State Suffrage Association in her 1918 bid to become the first woman elected to the state superintendent’s office. Texans gathered in droves across the Lone Star State to hear this remarkable teacher speak, and to witness the novelty of a woman campaigning in Texas’s male-dominated political arena. The campaign was a dirty one, with opponents charging that Blanton was divorced (yikes!) and that she was an atheist (yeesh!).
You don’t have to go to Texas to find this book, which reveals the engrossing results of that 1918 election. You can purchase Women in Texas on amazon.

They’ll Cut Off Your Project: A Mingo County Chronicle

thumb[1][1]When President Lyndon B. Johnson launched his war on poverty in the 1960’s, Huey Perry, a young local history teacher, was selected to be the director of the program in Mingo County in southern West Virginia.  Mingo County was known for its violent labor movements, corrupt government, and the infamous Hatfield-McCoy rivalry. Huey encouraged his poverty-stricken neighbors to challenge these conditions by promoting self-sufficiency, demanding improvements in school programs, establishing a grocery store to bypass inflated prices, and exposing election fraud. Local authority responded to Huey’s revolution with a hostile backlash that eventually led to an investigation by the FBI. Huey’s book, They’ll Cut Off Your Project: A Mingo County Chronicle, tells a tale of the triumphs and failures of Johnson’s war on poverty, describing in detail why and how a local government that is supposed to work for the public’s welfare cuts off a project intended to achieve social reform. You can find this fascinating read on amazon.com at the following link: They’ll Cut Off Your Project.