Texarkana Gazette

Protests increase over universiti­es’ slavery ties

- By Jonathan Drew

CHAPEL HILL, N.C.—The national debate over removing Confederat­e symbols from U.S. college campuses is spurring wider questions about university benefactor­s whose ties to slavery or white supremacy flew under the radar in decades past.

Students and alumni are no longer simply opposing overt Confederat­e memorials but also lesser-known founders and donors with troubling racial legacies. And the discussion­s have intensifie­d after deadly white nationalis­t protests in August in Charlottes­ville, Virginia.

The problem is apparent at the University of North Carolina, where opposition to a Confederat­e statue has dredged up racist statements by a former trustee. Tobacco magnate Julian S. Carr, himself a Confederat­e veteran, gave the dedication speech in 1913 for the campus statue depicting an anonymous rebel soldier. His remarks included a reference to the “pleasing duty” of whipping a black woman in public.

UNC’s chancellor has said a state historic monument law prevents the university from removing the statue, nicknamed “Silent Sam.” But the fresh attention to Carr has spurred wider conversati­ons about his legacy at UNC and nearby Duke University, where part of campus was built on land donated by Carr. Both schools are home to a “Carr Building” and have convened panels on how to handle controvers­ial building names.

It’s not the first such dilemma for either school. In 2014, Duke removed the name of a former governor—Charles Aycock— from a dorm, citing his legacy of black disenfranc­hisement. And UNC chose “Carolina Hall” to replace the name of a former Ku Klux Klan leader before putting a freeze on renaming other historic buildings for 16 years.

The issue resonates beyond the South. Yale University announced this year it would rename a residentia­l college honoring former Vice President John C. Calhoun, an ardent supporter of slavery. Georgetown and Harvard have acknowledg­ed or apologized for slavery ties.

And in mid-September, protesters at the University of Virginia draped a black shroud over a statue of university founder Thomas Jefferson, a slave owner they accused of racism.

About 30 mostly Southern universiti­es will gather this October for a symposium on higher education’s ties to slavery. One of them, Washington and Lee University, is keeping Confederat­e Gen. Robert E. Lee in its name while pledging further study of the school’s history. University president Will Dudley urged “a critical analysis that goes beyond the caricature­s of one-dimensiona­l heroes and villains.”

In Nashville, Tennessee, Vanderbilt University took final steps in 2016 to rename Confederat­e Memorial Hall, but a black graduate subsequent­ly wrote a newspaper column saying other names should come down. Lee Hall-Perkins decried one dorm named for school founder Holland McTyeire, a Methodist bishop who once wrote an essay on the duties of Christian slave owners, including physical punishment in “moderation.”

“When I was an undergradu­ate student, these names were benign to me but when I dug deeper, it infuriated me that these names were on campus,” Hall-Perkins said by phone.

Responding to a reporter, Vanderbilt said it’s holding a spring conference on slavery’s impacts.

Adam Domby, assistant professor of history at College of Charleston in South Carolina, said many Southern political figures from a century ago espoused racism.

“A lot of the leading political figures of the early 20th century are going to be tainted with white supremacy,” Domby said, adding that Carr unsuccessf­ully ran for U.S. Senate in 1900 on a white supremacis­t platform.

Scholars note that Carr—not unlike Lee or Jefferson—has a complicate­d legacy. He also donated to African-American institutio­ns and served as treasurer for the group that started what became historical­ly black North Carolina Central University, said university archivist Andre Vann.

Recently, Johnson stood before several hundred demonstrat­ors at “Silent Sam” and read parts of Carr’s 1913 speech through a bullhorn, emphasizin­g the words: “I horse-whipped a negro wench until her skirts hung in shreds.”

Turning toward the statue, she exclaimed: “Silent Sam does not represent history … He represents racism!”

 ?? Associated Press ?? In this photo taken Aug. 31, University of North Carolina students gather during a protest of a Confederat­e monument on campus in Chapel Hill, N.C. The debate over removing Confederat­e symbols from college campuses has prompted fresh questions about...
Associated Press In this photo taken Aug. 31, University of North Carolina students gather during a protest of a Confederat­e monument on campus in Chapel Hill, N.C. The debate over removing Confederat­e symbols from college campuses has prompted fresh questions about...

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