My undergraduate history papers were not just regurgitating facts. My professors were actually pretty tough. And we had to write a lot of papers. Generally all of the history majors were good writers because you just couldn't get through the courses otherwise. It's ALL writing. In the last year there was a larger focus on primary document research. We had to take a Senior Thesis class in which we had to do original research. Maybe my school just had a really good History department.
That's the way it works in my department as well.
Most of the regurgitation takes place on exams, in which students are basically expected to demonstrate that they have been paying attention in class, and have mastered the basics of the topic.
In their written assignments, for which they receive the bulk of their credit, the emphasis is on analysis and argument, right from the start.
Students are gradually introduced to primary sources over the course of their program.
For example: I teach a second-year course on "Approaches to European History" in which students have to write assignments based first on a tertiary source (an historical novel), then a secondary source (a work of historical theory), and finally primary sources (short published works by Enlightenment writers).
I also make them write drills--a model bibliography and a set of model footnotes. If they make even a single mistake, they fail--but they are allowed to revise and re-submit as many times as they can stand it. About a quarter of them regularly fail to complete the bibliography drill, and about a third of them regularly fail to complete the footnote drill.
The most recent version of my fourth-year seminar is an in-depth examination of George Dangerfield's "Strange Death of Liberal England" thesis. My students read Dangerfield's classic, and more recent books on the same period, for discussion in class. Their research papers are based entirely on primary sources--in this case, debates over legislation like the Parliament Act, 1911. Their assignment is to explain the arguments being advanced either for or against these bills, and to discuss the values and assumptions underlying these arguments. This generally requires a bit of additional research, to help them understand hundred-year-old British political discourse.
And
JoeZhang--I don't know where you work, but every professor in my department has a PhD. And I work at a pretty small university.