Beginning at age 22, Harris taught school and made his career in
St. Louis, Missouri, from 1857 to 1880, a period when the city was growing rapidly. It served both as a gateway to the West and as an industrializing city on the Mississippi River. He served as Superintendent of Schools from 1868 to 1880, and had a strong influence on the system. With
Susan E. Blow in this city, in 1873 he established America's first permanent public kindergarten. While in St. Louis, William Torrey Harris implemented many influential ideas to strengthen both the institution of the public school system and the basic philosophical principles of education. His changes resulted in the expansion of the public school curriculum to include high school. He believed it was essential to growth of an individual and to meet new challenges of the industrial age. The expanded programs included art, music, and scientific and manual studies. He also encouraged all public schools to acquire libraries. Harris's St. Louis schools were considered some of the best in the country. His fellow educators included many local farmers and tradesmen who were immigrants from German provinces after the
revolutions of 1848. They had a strong belief in education. In St. Louis, Harris met mechanic and philosopher
Henry Clay Brockmeyer, a German immigrant whose influence turned him toward
hegelianism. With Brockmeyer and other of the
St. Louis Hegelians, Harris founded and edited the
Journal of Speculative Philosophy (1867); it was the first
philosophical periodical in the United States. He edited it until 1893. Its contributors promoted Hegel's concept of time and events as part of a universal plan, a working out of an eternal historical dialectic. Harris returned to New England, where he was associated with
Amos Bronson Alcott's
Concord School of Philosophy in Massachusetts from 1880 to 1889. In 1889 Harris was appointed as
U.S. Commissioner of Education, serving under presidents
Benjamin Harrison,
Grover Cleveland,
William McKinley and
Theodore Roosevelt, until 1906. Harris worked to organize all phases of education on the principles of philosophical
pedagogy as espoused by
Hegel,
Kant,
Fichte,
Fröbel,
Pestalozzi and many others of
idealist philosophies. As US Commissioner of Education, Harris also strongly supported
indoctrination,
education and
cultural assimilation of Native Americans. He wrote the introduction to the
Bureau of Education Bulletin (No. 1, 1889) on "Indian Education", issued under
Thomas Jefferson Morgan, Commissioner of Indian Affairs. Harris called for mandatory education of American Indians through a partnership with Christianity in order to promote industry. Harris called for the removal of Native children from their families for up to 10 years of training for the "lower form of civilization", as a way of assimilating Indians into "American" civilization. He believed this was necessary to save the race, who he believed had to shift from their traditional cultures. Harris wrote, "We owe it to ourselves and to the enlightened public opinion of the world to save the Indian, and not destroy him. We can not save him and his patriarchal or tribal institution both together. To save him we must take him up into our form of civilization. We must approach him in the missionary spirit and we must supplement missionary action by the aid of the civil arm of the State. We must establish compulsory education for the good of the lower race." Harris died on November 5, 1909, in
Providence, Rhode Island. == Honors ==