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George McFarland: Narrow your focus.

3/29/2014

6 Comments

 
By Paul Lloyd Hemphill
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The battle of Gettysburg was won by a dedicated group of teachers. That was the proud claim made by a school principal, George McFarland, who fought there. "The victory at Gettysburg," he wrote, was "the work of the teacher!" 



McFarland was in charge of some one hundred educators who made up a quarter of what became known as the "Schoolteachers' Regiment." His claim had universal appeal: the attitudes and convictions of the fighting men on both sides were the assumed result of the impact teachers had on their lives, long before they arrived at Gettysburg.

"Who that reflects," he concluded, "upon the costly sacrifices the teachers of our country made both in their own persons and in those of their pupils, can doubt this?"


George Fisher McFarland worked on the family farm as a youth and attended school for several weeks during the winter. After doing occasional work on boats that traveled on Pennsylvania's Susquehanna Canal, he began teaching at the unusually young age of sixteen. At age twenty-one he was elected principal of an academy.

An educational entrepreneur of sorts, he bought and principled his own academy three years later. When Lincoln called for more volunteers for the war effort in 1862, McFarland closed his school and recruited his own teachers and students to form a regiment of volunteers.


After doing guard duty in Virginia, these volunteers marched toward Gettysburg with a mission. "We are approaching the state of our birth," McFarland explained in a letter to his wife, "not to enjoy peace and comfort there, but to drive out the invading foe. But they will pay for their temerity.They will not long pollute the soil of Pennsylvania with impunity."



McFarland could not envision the price he and his men would have to pay for their convictions. His patriotism was shared by his fellow teachers: "I regret the loss of the many gallant patriots who lost their lives or received honorable scars in its ranks; but I rejoice it was in the battle of Gettysburg and in defense of human freedom and republican institutions."  


Like so many other moments in this battle, McFarland found himself in a position of having to purchase one of war's most precious commodities - time. Being outnumbered, bravery alone could not stop the Rebel advance.



McFarland took what may be regarded in modern terms as an entrepreneurial approach to fighting battles: instead of employing the outmoded tactic of bunching his men together to project a huge mass of fire on the enemy, he had them aim and shoot at specific individuals.

His fire, he later wrote, had an "effectiveness which the enemy himself respected and afterward acknowledged..." [The enemy] "suffered very heavily from our deliberate...fire..." Confirming McFarland's assessment, a Southern officer later offered the compliment that "the enemy [was] stubbornly resisting."


His observation about the fate of his beloved schoolteachers and students was sobering: "...my gallant officers and men fell thick and fast." Witnessing the carnage, McFarland never imagined that another Confederate officer would honor the schoolteachers' fighting as "the most destructive fire of musketry I have ever been exposed to."


The battered remnants of his regiment had regrouped behind fences and trees to withstand another Rebel onslaught. McFarland was shot in both legs and would lie in his own blood for two days before receiving medical attention. The wait and crude surgical skills caused the amputation of one leg; the other caused him discomfort for the rest of his life.



McFarland's commander, General Abner Doubleday, had no doubt as to the sacrifice made by the school teachers on this first day: "...they won, under the brave McFarland, an imperishable fame...and enabled me, by their determined resistance, to withdraw...in comparative safety." 



With four hundred and sixty-seven men going into their fight, the Schoolteachers Regiment suffered an astounding casualty rate of more than seventy percent during the battle. The enlistment period for McFarland and his men was to expire in less than thirty days.


                                                Gettysburg Lessons

Teach by example. 
    
Parents are the first teachers and leaders. What they do, suggests McFarland, has such a powerful influence on their children's actions and moral framework that it determines the outcome of battles, not to mention other less dramatic events. What you say or do, be it positive or negative, is the trigger of someone else's thought or action. Whether you realize it or not, you always have an influence,you are always leading.

Narrow your focus.
As McFarland instructed his men to aim carefully at individual targets, they were more effective in achieving their larger objective. In other words, break down your goal into smaller goals. For example, to lose twenty-five pounds in six months, aim to lose sixteen ounces every week; to read an assigned book of two hundred and eighty pages in two weeks, read only twenty pages a day; to watch a ten-part educational video formaximum gain, watch only one part at a time.

Teach and lead at any age.   
You can be certain that McFarland started teaching earlier than at age sixteen. It can be said that a newborn baby exercises the greatest influence because the new mother - now in the role as follower - responds to the infant's every gesture. Similarly a mother complains of the "terrible twos" because the child is demonstrating too much influence in a leadership role.
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Copyright 2013 Paul Lloyd Hemphill
From the book, Gettysburg Lessons in the Digital Age
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6 Comments
eric schultz
3/29/2014 06:12:39 am

Can you imagine teachers in today's military? I cannot. Our school district is rife with liberal teachers. However, it would seem that their only goal is to make sure they keep their cosmetic surgery in their health care in tact. That, together with tenure seems to be the rule now.
Are there teachers that put students first? Sure. But, would they rally to the defense of the United States with military service? Judging by the liberal views of most educators, I highly doubt it. And, more importantly, in my opinion, they would teach their students that military service is not a viable alternative to the defense of this nation. Just say'in.

Reply
Brandon Benner
3/29/2014 08:42:41 am

You clearly know nothing about educators, my friend.

Reply
eric schultz
3/29/2014 09:14:26 am

The majority of educators I've met throughout my life have, by and large, all been liberal to the core. You sir, may be one that does not fall into that bracket. If so, congratulations. To those that I have met, it was easier for them to burn a draft card than to burn shoe leather while slogging through the jungle.

eric schultz
3/29/2014 09:23:41 am

The majority of educators I have met throughout my life were all liberal. Especially college. If you were not one of the them sir, I congratulate you. However, it was easier for them to profess the burning of a draft card as being more American, than to answer the call and burn shoe leather in triple canopy jungle. I know, I was there and experienced it, both on campus and off.

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Paul Bailey
3/31/2014 05:47:38 am

We still have teachers in the military. In fact we just finished doing a train up for a Civil Affairs Army Detachment going to Afghanistan. Mostly in the Reserves and Guard.
There are also educators (PH.Ds) who work at the War College. These lessons still apply.

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Ryan Duran link
1/13/2021 08:08:20 am

Appreciate you bllogging this

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    Author

    Paul Lloyd Hemphill, a life-long marketing specialist, is frustrated with how American history is taught in our schools - through boring textbooks and too many uncommitted teachers.  On his own initiative, he chose the battle of Gettysburg as the vehicle to change how American history is taught. Convinced he needed to entertain students in order for them to be receptive to learning history, he employs the digital media they prefer as a learning tool: video and audio. These stories reveal an unexpected bonus which historians are not obliged to discuss: the ingredients of success that are a proven part of your DNA. This blog complements his digital approach since so many adults still treasure reading the written word.

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