Chicago Sun-Times (Sunday)

JUDGE DISMISSES SUIT OVER SLAVE PORTRAITS AT HARVARD

-

BOSTON — A Massachuse­tts state judge has dismissed a lawsuit from a Connecticu­t woman who said Harvard University illegally owned photos of her enslaved ancestors and refused to turn them over.

The lawsuit dismissed last week centered on a series of 1850 photos thought to be among the earliest images of enslaved people in the United States. The photos depict a South Carolina man identified as Renty and his daughter, Delia. Both were posed shirtless and photograph­ed from several angles.

The photos were commission­ed by Harvard biologist Louis Agassiz, whose theories on racial difference were used to support slavery in the U.S.

In her 2019 lawsuit, Tamara Lanier, of Norwich, Connecticu­t, said Renty and Delia are her ancestors and that the photos were taken against their will. She demanded the photos from Harvard, saying the Ivy League school had exploited the portraits for profit, including by using Renty’s image on the cover of a book.

Lanier’s lawsuit alleged that Agassiz saw Renty and Delia as “nothing more than research specimens” and forced them to participat­e in a “degrading exercise designed to prove their own subhuman status.”

The lawsuit says Lanier verified her genealogic­al ties to Renty, whom she calls “Papa Renty” and says is her great-great-greatgrand­father. But the judge hearing the case sided with Harvard, which argued that Lanier had no legal claim to the photos. In her decision, Middlesex Superior Court Judge Camille Sarrouf said the photos are the property of the photograph­er, not the subject.

“Fully acknowledg­ing the continuing impact slavery has had in the United States, the law, as it currently stands, does not confer a property interest to the subject of a photograph regardless of how objectiona­ble the photograph’s origins may be,” Sarrouf wrote in the decision.

Civil rights attorney Ben Crump, one of Lanier’s lawyers, said he planned to appeal the case.

“We remain convinced of the correctnes­s of Ms. Lanier’s claim to these images of her slave ancestors and that she will be on the right side of history when this case is finally settled,” Crump said in a statement. “It is past time for Harvard to atone for its past ties to slavery and white supremacy research and stop profiting from slave images.”

In a statement, Harvard said it’s exploring how to put the photos in “an appropriat­e home” that “allows them to be more accessible to a broader segment of the public and to tell the stories of the enslaved people that they depict.”

 ?? JOHN SHISHMANIA­N/THE NORWICH BULLETIN VIA AP ?? Tamara Lanier holds an 1850 photograph at her home in Norwich, Connecticu­t, of a South Carolina slave named Renty, who Lanier said is her family’s patriarch.
JOHN SHISHMANIA­N/THE NORWICH BULLETIN VIA AP Tamara Lanier holds an 1850 photograph at her home in Norwich, Connecticu­t, of a South Carolina slave named Renty, who Lanier said is her family’s patriarch.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States