Joe, I understand what you are saying.
Of course, that might be because you are more interested in things found here than you were in the classroom.
I know that's the way it worked for me. IIRC, American History class pretty much bypassed the 19th Century except for maybe a chapter on the Civil War. That was it, no War of 1812, no Alamo, no Spanish American War, no gold rush material, no fur trade, nothing much of anything much.
It might be kind of interesting to enroll in a college American history class and see what all they include now. Or not. I might not blend in with the current crop of Millennials and protesters.
John (Bigsmoke)
John, I believe you're spot on...
Now I've loved history every since I started learning about it, and if I recall, we touched on a lot of early history, and how America came about, and our westward expansion in school... We also studied more about WWII and the evils that followed that with Communism and the Korean War...
However, growing up and every time we had company or went to a family reunion,,, WWII and Korea were the main topics as (what seemed like at the time) every male adult in our families (all sides) fought in one or the other - but most in WWII... And of course the Great Uncles and Grandpa's weren't going to be out done without their say about WWI...
Now I don't want to leave my ol' Great Uncle Hap Martin out, as his Uncle fought in the Civil War (on the Stars and Bars) side and was killed in a skirmish somewhere's in Tennessee.
So you are right, the Civil War was a big topic as well - not only at home, but also in school.