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Tom Hyland
Tom Hyland
1 month ago

Horatio Bunce is the type of American that the illiteracy article was referencing in regards to a once-upon-a-time eloquence the common man possessed, but no more. However, this speech recalled by Crockett has left me wondering WTF?? Did Crockett write out Bunce’s entire dissertation minutes upon departing? Who heard all of this? Ol’ Davy’s brain must have been extra-absorbent. Edward Ellis wrote Crockett’s biography but this sounds a lot like a movie script. But I like the idea of someone drawing attention to Congressional behavior of spending other’s money.

ghostsniper
ghostsniper
1 month ago
Reply to  Tom Hyland

I don’t have a proper answer to your question (WTF?), Tom but you must remember that back in the day not only were average people avid readers but writers, and conversers too. And “penmanship”. It was very common for people back then to keep diaries and journals and this might be an instance where Crockett put his conversation with Bunce to paper when he got back home. Note that the book was written long after Crockett died at the Alamo. But how could such detail be possible otherwise?

Note that the entire way that people lived in the old days, and even up through when I was in elementary school (we had penmanship classes) the quality of everything was of a much higher caliber. I’ve read that the public schools don’t even teach reading or writing any more and cursive hasn’t been taught for more than 20 years.

“Any entity built and continuously nourished on the notion of theft is doomed to fail, sooner or later.”

–the Raging Patriot, 2099