![]() ![]() Nor are students the only people misled by “settle.” One recent Thanksgiving weekend, I listened as a guide at the Statue of Liberty told about European immigrants “populating a wild East Coast.” As we shall see, however, if Indians had not already settled New England, Europeans would have had a much tougher job of it. Part of the problem is the word “settle.” “Settlers” were white. I had hoped that students would suggest 30,000 BC, or some other pre-Columbian date. ![]() Surely “we now know as” implies that the original settlement happened before the United States. That is a generous way of putting the question. ![]() Over the last few years, I have asked hundreds of college students, “When was the country we now know as the United States first settled?” This version appeared earlier in the Radical Historians Newsletter. (Note: minor updates have been made to the original introduction of this article as it first appeared in the November 1992 issue of Monthly Review, vol. Loewen’s analysis of American history as presented for high school students in Lies My Teacher Told Me (New York: The New Press, 1995). by Susan Loewen Dear friends and colleagues of James Loewen: Stephen Berrey, a professor at the University of Michigan who is continuing Jim’s work on sundown towns, is collecting reflections for Jim’s website . Loewen earned his bachelors degree at Carleton College in 1964, and his masters (1967) and doctorate (1968) degrees from Harvard University. Loewen’s (1942–2021) from his comrades at Monthly Review. ![]()
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