For generations, history classes have been bogged down by rote memorization-names, dates, and events drilled into students’ heads with little thought given to why any of it matters. Even today, many history teachers and local historians lean too heavily on disjointed facts instead of using them to build meaningful narratives that explain historical significance.
History isn’t just a giant list of trivia; it’s a web of interconnected stories shaped by social, political, and economic forces. A single event doesn’t exist in isolation—it has context, causes, and consequences. Without these connections, history is reduced to a collection of random tidbits, stripped of its power to help us understand the past, present, and future.
This is where public historians—whether in classrooms or local museums—have a real responsibility. Their job isn’t just to present facts but to interpret them, to connect the dots, and to explain why something matters. Trivia peddling is easy; real historical work is harder. It demands analysis, evaluation, and critical thinking. It also requires acknowledging complexity, contradictions, and uncomfortable truths.
And here’s a tough one: not everything that’s old is historically valuable. Sometimes, old stuff is just junk. Not every weathered building or faded document holds significance. Just because something has been around for a long time doesn’t mean it shaped history in a meaningful way. The real test is simple: So what?
That’s the question local historians should always ask. Why does this story, this place, or this artifact matter? How does it fit into the larger historical picture? If we can’t answer that, we aren’t doing history—we’re just collecting trivia.