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HEDGE SCHOOLS
The Tennessee League of the South sponsors Hedge Schools throughout the State on a periodic basis. The Hedge School seminar program is to Southern education what the Hedge Schools were to Irish education three centuries ago. The Penal Laws of 1695 were designed by English officials in London and Dublin to expunge the native Celtic language and culture of Ireland. From the 1690s to the 1840s generations of young Irishmen received their education in little gatherings that spontaneously emerged throughout the country. Lessons were taught in dilapidated barns, sod huts, and often in the open air on the sunny side of a quick-set thorn hedge. Although the schools were outlawed and severe penalties imposed on those who associated with them, they flourished for a century and a half, preserving the native language and religion as well as countering the effects of English historical revisionism. The national sentiments nourished in these schools came to fruition two centuries later in the formation of the Irish Republic. We have conducted Hedge Schools on "The Real Lincoln," "Reconstruction," and "Agrarianism: Past, Present & Future." No dates are currently set for a Hedge School in Tennessee.
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