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Lies Across America

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Language
  
English

Publication date
  
1999

ISBN
  
0-684-87067-3

Author
  
James W. Loewen

Page count
  
480

3.9/5
Goodreads

Publisher
  
New Press

Pages
  
480

Originally published
  
1999

Country
  
United States of America

Preceded by
  
Lies My Teacher Told Me

Lies Across America t2gstaticcomimagesqtbnANd9GcTfBuIlzd2rLEL1me

Similar
  
Lies My Teacher Told Me, Sundown Towns, Teaching What Really Ha, The Mississippi Chinese, Mississippi: Conflict & Change

Lies Across America a 1999 book by James Loewen, and is a follow up sequel to his 1995 work Lies My Teacher Told Me. The book focuses on historical markers and museums across the United States.

The book starts on the West Coast and moves east, a deliberate break from the traditional history found in textbooks, which begin with the Pilgrims and move westward. Similarly, Loewen covers Hispanic rather than English discovery, and American Indian history.

Loewen's book voices two major complaints about historical markers in the United States. The first, and most major, deals with historical markers established in the Southern United States which attempt to white-wash the history of slavery and the period of Reconstruction. Many of these markers were established between 1890 and 1920, the nadir of American race relations. Most were placed by organizations with pro-Confederate agendas and reflect the racism of the early 20th century. While some markers have been altered in the last forty years as a result of civil rights progress, many have not—especially those extant at American Civil War battle sites and in the South. A few of Loewen's criticisms of these memorials though are not justified historically. In his critique of the activities of the United Daughters of the Confederacy in West Virginia he made several errors. Concerning a U.D.C. marker on the courthouse in Jefferson County he wrote that "the only memory of Civil War soldiers at the Charles Town, West Virginia, courthouse is a pro-Confederate plaque the UDC affixed in 1986." Almost all the soldiers from Jefferson County, however, were Confederate, and only "a few scattered individuals joined the Federals". The county is credited with about 1600 Confederate soldiers. Similarly, Loewen held the U.D.C. responsible for a statue of Stonewall Jackson on the state capitol grounds in Charleston when actually it was the responsibility of the state legislature. The bill to erect the statue on the capital grounds was rushed through both houses of the legislature unanimously in one day, February, 23, 1905, with regular procedural rules suspended in order to expedite the bill.

Loewen's second major complaint deals with the treatment of Native Americans, who are often neglected and omitted in the telling of United States history. The author challenges and corrects many of the inaccurate and Eurocentric mistruths spread by story markers across America.

At the end of his book, Loewen makes suggestions for how those concerned about the misrepresentation of history can change markers and monuments to convey historical truth and accuracy.

The organizations running historical sites are faulted in Loewen's book according to Wilton Corkern.

In the book, Loewen argues every historic site is "a tale of two eras": the one from when the event happened and the one from when the event was commemorated.

References

Lies Across America Wikipedia