The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Memorial to honor slave site remains

Discovery on UGA campus in 2015 set off contentiou­s debate.

- By Brad Schrade brad.schrade@ajc.com and Eric Stirgus estirgus@ajc.com

The University of Georgia on Tuesday unveiled plans to erect a memorial to honor more than 100 individual­s whose remains were found in a slave burial site during a campus constructi­on project nearly three years ago.

The discovery of the remains near the Old Athens Cemetery in November 2015 during an expansion project of Baldwin Hall set off contentiou­s debate on campus and in Athens about the role slaves played at the university and the proper way to acknowledg­e this history. The struggle pitted students, faculty and members of the African American community in Athens against President Jere Morehead and members of his administra­tion, who they criticized for the way the university responded to the discovery.

The university on Tuesday released an architect’s rendering of a granite memorial to be erected on the front lawn of Baldwin Hall. The memorial will include a circular plaza and a granite marker, along with an elevated fountain visible from S. Jackson Street on North Campus. The memorial is the work of a task force Morehead appointed

in June.

“The memorial they have helped to develop not only will further honor the lives of the individual­s whose remains were discovered, but it also will serve as a source of contemplat­ion and inspiratio­n for generation­s to come,” Morehead said in a statement.

The release says that most of the individual­s found at the burial site “likely were slaves or former slaves.”

The memorial is likely to fall short for those seeking a more full-throated public acknowledg­ment by the university of its links to slavery and the contributi­ons slaves made to the campus. Since the Baldwin Hall discovery, academics interested in this history and community activists in Athens have pushed for a more open exploratio­n of UGA’s ties to slavery. But Morehead and university leaders have been reluctant to go down that path.

An initial news release in 2015 suggested the remains were of white Athenians, not those of black individual­s. More than a year later the university acknowledg­ed the remains were of mostly those of black individual­s.

Fred Smith, a UGA alumnus and a leader in Athens’ black community who has been pressuring the university to address this history, said the memorial is a significan­t step forward. But he said he still wants to see what is written on the stone to see if it fully acknowledg­es that the area where Baldwin Hall sits was a slave burial ground.

“We’re pleased with the image as we see it,” Smith said of the rendering. “The University of Georgia has come a long way on this issue.”

 ?? UNIVERSITY OF GEORGIA ?? This architect’srendering shows the memorial to be installed this fall outside Baldwin Hall at the University of Georgia. Baldwin Hall was builtin 1938 ona former burial ground for slaves.
UNIVERSITY OF GEORGIA This architect’srendering shows the memorial to be installed this fall outside Baldwin Hall at the University of Georgia. Baldwin Hall was builtin 1938 ona former burial ground for slaves.
 ?? HYOSUB SHIN / HSHIN@AJC.COM ?? Fred Smith, co-chair of Athens Black History Bowl Committee, stands in Oconee Hill Cemetery on the University of Georgia campus where the remains were re-interred.
HYOSUB SHIN / HSHIN@AJC.COM Fred Smith, co-chair of Athens Black History Bowl Committee, stands in Oconee Hill Cemetery on the University of Georgia campus where the remains were re-interred.

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