One Lesson from Life of Local Man: History Matters

November 24th, 2007 by MARK DANIELS

[This piece was cross-posted at my personal blog.]

This past week, the community to which my family and I recently moved, buried one of its most beloved citizens. Leland Conner was killed after a thirteen year old boy stole a vehicle from a rental agency and proceeded to cause a five-car crash that involved Mr. Conner’s car.

Conner’s death is one of those freakish tragedies that sometimes happen in this world, ample reason for the community’s grief. Although seventy-seven years old, he remained an active person. On top of this, everybody who knew him with whom I spoke this week described him as a good man, a nice person. His death is rightly viewed as horrible in and of itself.

But there was an added dimension to the community’s grief this past week. Simply, Leland Conner was a keeper of the past. He knew the rich history of this part of Ohio. And not just the history that has unfolded since whites first came here as settlers. He also was apparently a font of information on the area’s Native American history. He played a vital role in preserving and passing on that history, helping give tours to some of the many visitors who come to Hocking County each year and giving presentations to local students.

Fortunately, Conner committed some of his knowledge to several booklets, which are sold by the local historical society. (And for which he received no royalties.)

But his mind was a repository of more important information which, it may be, no other resident of the area possesses. His friends feel that loss keenly. “I’ve lost my main source. Now who are we going to ask?” one grief-stricken man told the Logan Daily News this past week.

Near the end of the Daily News article profile of Conner, reporter Gretchen Roberts writes:

Conner’s research into the region of Hocking Hills has helped provide a firmer foundation for the people of the region to learn about their past.

It makes me feel good to be living now in a community that values its past and that can mourn one of its local historians.

Sadly, we live in ahistorical times. By that mean, we live in an era with little regard for history. A “regard for history” has nothing to do with wanting to engage in some romantic nostalgia trip into the “good old days.” I would rather be alive today than to have lived in the frontier times or earlier about which Leland Conner spoke and wrote.

I admit that I have my prejudices when it comes to the question of whether we should pay heed to history or not. As a boy, I was a nerd who loved hiding under a blanket with a flashlight and a volume of my Funk and Wagnall’s encyclopedia or one from the American Heritage illustrated history of the United States, after my parents had tucked me in for the night.

To this day, reading history and biography is among my favorite leisure-time pursuits. (I’m currently reading Michael Korda’s fine biography of Dwight Eisenhower, Ike.) I was a Social Studies major at Ohio State, focusing mostly on history. My favorite vacations involve going to historical sites.

Much of my interest in things historical can be attributed to my parents and grandparents who saw to it that we understood history to be the story of the human drama and not just dreary facts and dates.

Because I assumed history to be an essential area of knowledge — akin to knowing to fasten your seatbelt when you get into a car or avoiding puddles of water when using electric devices, I was shocked when an Ohio State Political Science professor I admired once told me, “History is worthless subject.” For me, it was one of those, “Come again?” moments. “Wait a minute,” I said to him. “Your own discipline depends on history of a sort: polls about voters’ attitudes over time, accounts of the work of what you call ‘administrative decision-makers.’ That’s all history. How can you say that history is worthless?” On this topic, this professor was as unmoved as any member of the Flat Earth Society would be by evidence that the planet is round.

But that professor was simply wrong. The past has its lessons and we ignore them at our peril.

Historical knowledge is an especially important possession for voters in a democracy like ours. We can’t make good decisions about who to support in the upcoming presidential election, for example, if we don’t have an appreciation for our constitutional system, why we do things the way we do, what has worked in the past and what hasn’t.

John Kennedy wrote a preface to that multi-volume American Heritage illustrated history of the United States that I read by flashlight as a boy. The books were given to Goodwill long ago. But one phrase from the preface which I memorized at the time has stuck with me for forty-five years:

A knowledge of the past prepares us for the crisis of the present and the challenge of the future.

History, the human story, is entertaining. But it’s also essential. Failure to learn its lessons will make us no better than cavemen. Knowing it will contribute to our wisdom and our capacity to live and thrive.

This entry was posted on Saturday, November 24th, 2007 at 4:42 am and is filed under Life, Our Hometown, Social Commentary, 2008 Elections, Miscellaneous, History. Both comments and pings are currently closed.

2 responses about “One Lesson from Life of Local Man: History Matters”

  1. domajot said:

    History matters for reasons beyond the lessons it may teach as to how we should conduct ourselves.

    Hstory enriches our vey experience of living.
    Whenever an individual or a people cease to be, that part of their ixperience which they couldn’t impart to others dies with them. We are all the poorer for it.

  2. Mark Daniels said:

    I totally agree that history should be read for its own sake, in the same way we listen to music, read novels, see a play, or watch a movie. But even these things have their utility, giving us rest and insights into ourselves. It’s no accident that in many colleges, the History department is associated with the College of Arts. And all arts, their detractors notwithstanding, are useful and practical.

    Mark

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