[17] Everson v. Board of Education, 330 U.S. 1 (1947).

[18] Ibid. 15, 16.

[19] McCollum v. Board of Education, 333 U.S. 203 (1948).

[20] Ibid. 212.

[21] 333 U.S. 203, 213 (1948).

[22] Ibid. 216-218. Justice Frankfurter's principal figure in the fight against sectarianism is Horace Mann, who was secretary of the Massachusetts Board of Education, 1837-1848. Mann, however, strongly resented the charge that he was opposed to religious instruction in the public schools. "It is true that Mr. Mann stood strongly for a 'type of school with instruction adapted to democratic and national ends.' But it is not quite just to him to contrast this type of school with the school adapted to religious ends, without defining terms. Horace Mann was opposed to sectarian doctrinal instruction in the schools, but he repeatedly urged the teaching of the elements of religion common to all of the Christian sects. He took a firm stand against the idea of a purely secular education, and on one occasion said he was in favor of religious instruction 'to the extremest verge to which it can be carried without invading those rights of conscience which are established by the laws of God, and guaranteed to us by the Constitution of the State.' At another time he said that he regarded hostility to religion in the schools as the greatest crime he could commit. Lest his name should go down in history as that of one who had attempted to drive religious instruction from the schools, he devoted several pages in his final Report—the twelfth—to a statement in which he denied the charges of his enemies." Raymond B. Culver, Horace Mann on Religion in the Massachusetts Public Schools, 235 (1929).

[23] 333 U.S. 203, 222 ff. (1948).

[24] Ibid. 213.

[25] Ibid. 225-226.

[26] Ibid. 231.