The Office of Education was created to meet the need to gather statistical information on the fast-growing educational institutions of the United States, along with histories and descriptive articles, pamphlets, reports and books, often in coordination with state universities. Reformers, especially
Radical Republicans and
Progressive and liberal Democrats, hoped that the Office would become a powerful federal agency, but were frustrated at every turn by Congress, which did not or want to impose on states and local jurisdictions in the cities, towns and counties to control educational policy. In the aftermath of the
Civil War, "states' rights" was still in full sway, and it would take several other domestic and foreign crises in the coming decades to bring a sense of a more centralized and national policy. The Bureau, and later Office, of Education was a unit of the
U.S. Department of the Interior, therefore it was under the aegis of the
Secretary of the Interior. It had no power to control the actions of educational institutions. At times during its first decades of its existence, attempts were made to change its name. These names (Board, Department, Office, and Bureau) were considered. In 1873, a bill (H. R. 3782) was introduced which would change its name to the Bureau of Education and Statistics. The
Commissioner of Education was required to prepare a Report annually, which was printed and given to members of Congress (
U.S. Senators and
Representatives), other governmental officials and certain other persons. In 1875, 20,000 copies of the Report for 1874 were printed; 5,000 copies for the use of members of the
Senate, 10,000 copies for the use of members of the
House of Representatives, and 5,000 copies for the use of the Commissioner of Education and their Office. The Office gathered information on diverse educational facilities such as those being built (i.e. the famous
Carlisle Indian Industrial School at
Carlisle, Pennsylvania in the east and near western
reservations) to bring an education and vocational/agricultural training to
American Indians in which there had already been historically established a direct and prominent national Federal role and obligation towards the treatment and education of Indians as well as all of the facilities in all of the other places. ==Dissolution and legacy==