Five Myths about America’s Origins

As students of American history, most children learn about the heroes of the Revolutionary War, the discovery of the American continent, and other stories that illuminate the courageous people who contributed to the formation of the United States. In learning about Christopher Columbus, Benjamin Franklin, and George Washington, we’re regaled with stories of their personal valor—how Washington chopped down his cherry tree, how Columbus proved the flat-earthers wrong, and how Franklin discovered electricity in a lightning storm. 

We learn all these quaint and quixotic stories, despite the fact that not one of them is true. George Washington never chopped down a cherry tree; geological evidence from his boyhood home shows that no cherry trees have ever grown there. A preacher looking to sell books propagated the story. As we prepare for our country’s 233rd birthday, we should think about the fact that many of the stories sold as historical fact would be better categorized as sheer fiction. 

The Ride of Paul Revere
This Boston silversmith was virtually unknown until Henry Wadsworth Longfellow immortalized him in his 1863 poem “Paul Revere’s Ride.” Actually, Revere didn’t make that trip alone. He rode from Boston to Lexington and then Concord, MA with two other men, William Dawes and Samuel Prescott, to warn Samuel Adams and John Hancock of the British army’s impending arrival. They never would have shouted, “The British are coming!” because it would have alerted the king’s patrols. Besides, most of the colonists at the time still considered themselves British, too. The poem turned Revere into a hero when in reality, he was arrested along the way and forced to walk home horseless. Prescott was the only man who actually completed the journey. 

Columbus Proved the Earth Was Round
Contrary to the popular wisdom, no one in 1492 thought that the earth was flat. Navigators knew that the earth had a curvature since at least the fourth century B.C. Washington Irving, writing 450 years later, started the myth when he misrepresented the truth in his book On the Cosmographical Ideas of the Church Fathers. Columbus only wanted to prove that Asia was closer than previously thought. He did run into land, all right, but it wasn’t Asia or America. Columbus made landfall in the Bahamas, and never actually set foot on the North American continent. Furthermore, Columbus can hardly be credited with discovering a continent that Europeans had been exploring and trading on ever since the Vikings landed circa 1,000 A.D. 

Molly Pitcher on the Battlefield
The heroic story of Mary Hays McCauley, who supposedly brought water to thirsty and dying men during the Battle of Monmouth in 1778, endures as a tale of how women contributed to the Revolutionary cause. Too bad that most historians now regard the story as mere folklore. There are tales of female water-bearers during many battles of the war, and the military gave many of them pensions for their service, but the water was more likely used for cleaning cannons, and not refreshing exhausted soldiers. The Molly Pitcher story is likely to be a composite of all these helpful women. 

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07.08.2009
Mony Muppet
That's true... Legends are more exciting than actual history. That's why people accept them as the real stories. But I like it very much when the real history is unveiled. I'm from Mexico and we have a lot of heroic characters that now we know were not as the "history" told us, and so many stories that didn't happen like that or at all. By the way, we don't celebrate the Battle of Puebla (May 5th) in Mexico. It's just a date to remember, we don't have "5 de mayo fiestas". That's just what people from the U.S. think. We celebrate our Independence day from the night on September 15th till the next day. In fact that was the beginning of the war for independence, not the date when the Independence Treaty was singed, that happened eleven years later. And the other war we celebrate is the beginning of the Mexican Revolution on November 20th.
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