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Meet Our Teachers

Ethan Brownell

High School American History and Humanities Teacher
Maine Central Institute, Pittsfield
Ethan Brownell, 2023 Maine History Teacher of the Year

Ethan Brownell has been named the 2023 Maine History Teacher of the Year by the Gilder Lehrman Institute of American History. Brownell teaches humanities at a 鈥渢own academy鈥 in Pittsfield, Maine, the Maine Central Institute (MCI). In his 12 years at MCI, Brownell has covered a wide range of courses, including AP US History, AP US Government and Politics, Sociology, 11th grade American History & Government, and the Model UN course for students who choose that extracurricular. A TAH multiday seminar on the Founders’ political philosophy helped Brownell renew his content knowledge, he told TAH staff. He also told us about his school and teaching practice.

As a 鈥渢own academy,鈥  MCI is the local high school for several towns in rural central Maine鈥擯ittsfield, Detroit, Burnham, and a couple of others; but 30% of our students are private boarding and day students. The students who board come from around the world. For students from the local area, the school gives them a great opportunity to mix it up with students they would never otherwise meet.

A Thematic and Interdisciplinary Approach to History

Our curriculum is interdisciplinary. I鈥檓 part of a humanities department that covers both social studies and language arts. This past year, we completely revised our humanities curriculum. Some of our history courses were just not connecting with students; students didn鈥檛 understand the cultural, intellectual and political context in which events occurred. This year we鈥檙e making more time for that context by taking a more thematic approach to history. I am teaching juniors, and teaching almost entirely early American history and government. We鈥檒l talk about the founding era, study the US Constitution in detail, and then we鈥檒l examine the ways the Constitution has been tested and challenged during our history. We鈥檒l look at the era of Jackson and the controversies over the balance of power between the states and the federal government. We鈥檒l study the sectional crisis, examining Constitutional provisions that led to that crisis; we鈥檒l study the Civil War and constitutional questions regarding the status of the seceded states; we鈥檒l study the Constitutional amendments passed at the end of the war and during Reconstruction. Then we鈥檒l talk about civil rights movements from the mid twentieth century until today.

I鈥檓 also teaching a new elective on Death and Dying. We鈥檒l first consider how different cultures have dealt with death throughout history; then we will study the practical issues we鈥檒l all have to deal with, like how to care for those who are dying; how we process grief; how to deal with the material things left behind; and so on.

It鈥檚 a good thing that I love to learn, because just as soon as I鈥檓 confident that I鈥檝e got a good grasp of my content area, I learn that I鈥檝e got to teach something different! One year, I had a senior European History class and had to teach the French Revolution. I had never studied it, but I had the skills to teach myself and knew how to locate good histories of it. Teaching that course confirmed that I love teaching political history and political philosophy鈥攖he backbones of our current political institutions, the source of our political ideas and how they have changed over time.

TAH Seminars Are Opportunities to Learn, Think, and Connect with Other Professionals

Anytime I can be a student, without paying thousands of dollars for it, I鈥檓 going to do it. When I received an email inviting applications to Teaching American History鈥檚 multiday seminars, I jumped at it. The email came just as things were opening up again after the pandemic. I was invited to a seminar at the Coolidge Library in Northampton. It was led by Professor Jason Stevens of Ashland University and it focused on the political philosophy that informed the thinking of the American founders, and finally on Lincoln鈥檚 interpretation of those ideas.

It was great. We sat together trying to unpack the primary documents we鈥檇 read in preparation for the seminar, asking each other questions and bouncing ideas off each other. Stevens did a great job of directing the discussion and helping all the teachers interact. I always love meeting others who are doing the same work I do, hearing their teaching ideas and their stories about their classrooms.

Understanding the Leaders of the Past鈥擝y Demystifying Them

What I find most interesting in history鈥攖he development of political thought and political systems鈥攃an lead to a focus on the major figures of history, the 鈥済reat men,鈥 at the expense of lesser-known actors. I try to add additional voices to the history I teach, when primary sources are available. Still, you can鈥檛 ignore the great leaders鈥攖hey were major forces in their time. But you can demystify them in some ways.


Washington, George. George Washington Papers, Series 2, Letterbooks -1799: Letterbook 2, March 2 – Dec. 6, 1755. March 2, – December 6, 1755. Library of Congress, <www.loc.gov/item/mgw2.002/>.

One of my favorite primary sources in American history is I present to students without revealing the author. I tell them it was written to Virginia鈥檚 colonial governor, Robert Dinwiddie, after the Battle of Monongahela. But I don鈥檛 tell them it was written by 33-year-old Colonel George Washington, commander of the Virginia regiment. Washington reports a debacle: most of the officers are dead; the troops retreated under fire; he had two horses shot out from under him. (It鈥檚 amazing that he did not die himself.) I ask students to unpack that document. It鈥檚 written in Washington鈥檚 own kind of shorthand, and the version we read is directly transliterated from the original鈥攜ou  can see his edits, where he struck out phrases and then wrote something else. Sometimes students say, 鈥淭his guy can鈥檛 spell!鈥

A close-up view of the letter shows Washington’s edits.

Then I ask them to guess the identity of the author. They are amazed when I tell them it鈥檚 George Washington, a man who lucked himself out of dying in battle an unbelievable number of times. It鈥檚 fun to demystify this American hero, so celebrated for his dignity and self-control, who at first reacts to a traumatic event in the emotional way most of us would. At first, he excoriates the 鈥渄astardly behavior of the English soldiers,鈥 then he crosses through 鈥淓nglish soldiers鈥 and replaces that with the more euphemistic 鈥渞egulars.鈥

When we study great Americans, we need to remember their humanity. They felt the same emotions we do. They had their own flaws and eccentricities. But neither were they just like us, except in funny clothes; they lived in different times and faced a different set of pressures. Abraham Lincoln is a good example. Before concluding, during his presidency, that emancipation was a military necessity, did he really want to abolish slavery? We can look at various vignettes in his life for evidence, but we also have to consider his historical context. During the Lincoln鈥揇ouglas debates, he talked about limiting the spread of slavery, but not about abolition. Could he have said, 鈥淪lavery should be abolished鈥? No, he could not鈥攖hat just was not a politically viable position in Illinois at the time. Could he have thought that? Could he have wanted emancipation to come as soon as possible?  Absolutely. But politics being the theater of the real, you get what you can get.