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Our American Heritage 

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Authors: Sylvester K. Stevens

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September 1949 | Volume 1, Issue 1

The roots of the American heritage
The roots of the American heritage are deep and wide spreading like the patriarchal tree’s.

By S.K. Stevens, President, AASLH

Our American heritage of freedom, with its emphasis upon tolerance, with its opportunity to achieve the utmost liberty of thought and action consistent with the good of all, with its “government of the people, by the people, for the people” is our most precious possession. 

I believe we are at long last appreciative of the fact that it is worth more to us than all the gold at Fort Knox, or the wealth represented in all our bank deposits and the value of our products of farms, mines, and factories. If our freedom is ever lost, all of these material things would mean little.

The most of us are likewise conscious today that this heritage of freedom could be lost to us in the future. Our way of life is threatened by other concepts of society and government which rest essentially upon the denial of our ideals of individual liberty. We believe in law and in order, as applied to the control of our society, our economy, and our political life. But we cannot accept totalitarianism which strangles the freedom of the individual to achieve and to exercise his basic liberties. That is the real difference between the American way of life and all the “isms” which exist elsewhere.

What is needed in America today is a new appreciation and understanding of our American heritage.

What is needed in America today is a new appreciation and understanding of our American heritage and its advantages over the ways of totalitarianism and dictatorship. This understanding must rest upon a greater diffusion of popular knowledge about the historic roots of our national progress and development. The best place to begin is at home; for local history is truly living history, close to the experience of our people. A deeper loyalty to our institutions and our way of life must rest upon a firm bedrock of love of our home communities, and the translation of our national ideals and aspirations into individual and community experience and history.

AMERICAN HERITAGE is launched at this time by the American Association for State and Local History in the firm hope that it can contribute something to this objective. Within these pages we hope to interpret all of the richness and the fullness of the heritage that is ours. This we shall attempt in terms of historic events, personalities, expressions of our folkways in art, lore, and song, the triumphs of enterprise in business, the genius of our people in science and invention, and other manifestations of the American spirit.

We believe that the American heritage has these local roots — deep and wide spreading like the patriarchal tree’s. It is there we shall find the great stories of achievement in building America which can stir the people to an appreciation of the precious nature of that heritage. We