In the Kansas State Historical Society, there exists a letter that most researchers overlook, a seemingly ordinary document that holds the weight of history within its pages. Written in October 1901 by Edna Morse, a dedicated school teacher in Osage County, this letter addressed the county superintendent of schools and detailed her decision to continue teaching from her original curriculum, despite being explicitly instructed to stop.
Edna had been teaching for 19 years, and her commitment to her students was unwavering. As I delved into the archives, tracing adoption records of standardized textbooks across the Midwest between 1895 and 1910, I stumbled upon Edna’s letter while searching for something entirely different. My goal was to understand the dramatic shift in economic content in American classrooms during that period, but what I discovered was far more profound.

The letter revealed that what Edna was told to stop teaching was not radical or dangerous; it was the economic history that had been part of American education for decades. She described the mechanics of money creation, the historical ties between land ownership and poverty, and the documented impacts of currency policy changes. These were not mere opinions; they constituted the curriculum that had shaped generations of students. Yet, in 1901, this vital knowledge was quietly disappearing.
The timing of this shift was no coincidence. The year 1901 marked significant changes in American politics and economics. Following the assassination of President William McKinley, Theodore Roosevelt took office, and the consolidation of industrial and financial power reached new heights. The question of what children should learn about this consolidation became a matter of concern for those in power, who had both the motive and means to influence educational content.
To grasp the importance of 1901, one must look back to 1879, when Henry George published “Progress and Poverty.” This groundbreaking book examined the reasons behind economic depressions and persistent poverty amid industrial growth. It sold three million copies in a decade, making it the second-best-selling book in the United States after the Bible. George’s central argument—that the concentration of land ownership allowed wealth to accumulate in the hands of those who produced nothing—resonated with many. His proposed remedy—a single tax on land value—terrified the wealthy elite.
By 1901, however, the landscape had changed. Edna Morse was still teaching the economic principles outlined in George’s work, but new curriculum frameworks were being imposed across the nation. These frameworks, supported by philanthropic foundations, emphasized modernization and efficiency, explicitly omitting the historical context that had once been integral to economic education. The narratives that had empowered students to understand their world were being replaced with simplified lessons that benefited specific interests.
Edna understood this shift and wrote in her letter that she would not protect her students from uncomfortable truths. She believed it was her duty to teach them the documented patterns of cause and effect, to help them recognize who benefited from policy decisions. Her refusal to conform to the new curriculum ultimately led to her dismissal in December 1901.
The implications of Edna’s letter extend far beyond her individual experience. As I continued my research, I discovered that the teachers who taught the old economic history were being systematically replaced. Philanthropic organizations like the General Education Board, founded by John D. Rockefeller, sought to standardize American education along lines deemed appropriate for an industrial economy. This was not a conspiracy but a convergence of interests among the wealthy elite who funded the educational system.
The students who sat in Edna Morse’s classroom would have been in their early twenties during the economic panic of 1907 and witnessed the establishment of the Federal Reserve in 1913. Whether they recognized the patterns their teacher had documented depended on whether they had been taught to ask the right questions before her dismissal.
The letter from Edna Morse is a powerful reminder of the voices of teachers who understood the importance of economic education. It reflects a broader struggle against the erasure of knowledge that challenged the status quo. The archives are filled with similar letters, written by teachers across the Midwest who resisted the imposition of a sanitized curriculum.
In her letter, Edna Morse embodies the spirit of those educators who chose to teach the truth, even when it was inconvenient. She believed in the power of education to empower students, to help them understand the world around them, and to recognize the forces that shaped their lives. Her story, and the stories of countless other teachers like her, remind us that knowledge is a powerful tool, one that can illuminate the path to justice and equality.
As I reflect on Edna’s legacy, I am struck by the resilience of those who continue to seek the truth in education. The letter that lay hidden in the archives for so long now serves as a testament to the importance of teaching history as it was, not as it has been sanitized for comfort. In a world where knowledge can be manipulated, Edna Morse’s refusal to accept a diluted curriculum is a call to action for educators everywhere—to teach with integrity, to question the narratives presented, and to ensure that the lessons of the past are not forgotten.
The last school teacher who taught the original economic history did not lose because she was wrong; she lost because what she was right about was inconvenient for those who had the power to shape education. Her story is a reminder that the fight for truth in education is ongoing, and that the voices of teachers like Edna Morse must be heard and honored. The archives are open, and the documents are there, waiting for someone to look and remember the lessons that must not be forgotten.