AP US History: Hall of Fame

  • Home
  • Questions
  • John Rolfe
  • John Winthrop
  • Roger Williams
  • George Whitefield
  • Jonathan Edwards
  • Thomas Paine
  • Benjamin Franklin
  • Samuel Adams
  • Patrick Henry
  • George Washington
  • John Adams
  • Alexander Hamilton
  • Thomas Jefferson
  • Lewis and Clark
  • James Madison
  • John Marshall
  • Henry Clay
  • John C. Calhoun
  • Samuel Morse
  • Eli Whitney
  • Andrew Jackson
  • Horace Mann
  • William Lloyd Garrison
  • Frederick Douglass
  • Elizabeth Cady Stanton
  • Dorothea Dix
  • Harriet Tubman
  • James Polk
  • Harriet Beecher Stowe
  • Abraham Lincoln
  • Ulysses Grant
  • Andrew Carnegie
  • Walt Disney
  • Thomas Edison
  • Jane Addams
  • Booker T. Washington
  • WEB DuBois
  • Margaret Sanger
  • Theodore Roosevelt
  • Upton Sinclair
  • Woodrow Wilson
  • Franklin Roosevelt
  • Harry Truman
  • Dwight D. Eisenhower
  • Martin Luther King, Jr.
  • Malcolm X
  • John F. Kennedy
  • Rachel Carson
  • Lyndon B. Johnson


Horace Mann

 

Horace Mann is best known a being an American education reformer. In 1837, he accepted a position as Secretary of the State of Board of Education in Massachusetts. During his years as secretary, Mann made major accomplishments to help better education, including expanding his influence beyond Massachusetts by creating the Common School Journal. He is also known as the Father of American public school education.

Make a Free Website with Yola.