The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

New UGA memorial honors slave ‘legacy’

University dedicates site, takes step toward confrontin­g racist past.

- By Brad Schrade brad.schrade@ajc.com

The University of Georgia on Friday made its most overt acknowledg­ment to date of its historic links to slavery when officials unveiled a granite memorial to honor individual­s whose remains were found in 2015 in a former slave burial site on campus.

The ceremony to dedicate the memorial on the front lawn of Baldwin Hall came after three years of controvers­y and missteps by the university leaders, who were at odds with students, faculty and members of Athens community over the handling of the remains.

President Jere Morehead, in his prepared written remarks Friday, didn’t specifical­ly mention slavery, but he spoke of being “drawn here together by a deep sense of respect for these individual­s and by a strong sense of duty to commemorat­e the lives they lived.”

The inscriptio­n on the granite memorial includes the following acknowledg­ment: “The University of Georgia recognizes the contributi­ons of these and other enslaved individual­s and honors their legacy.”

The saga began in November 2015 when constructi­on crews working on an expansion of Baldwin Hall unearthed more than 100 remains next to the Old Ath-

ens Cemetery in an area on campus known as a former slave burial site.

Initially, the university’s public statements suggested the remains were from individual­s of European descent. It took more than a year for the university to acknowledg­e the vast majority of the remains were most likely those of slaves or former slaves. A decision to secretly rebury the remains in nearby cemetery last year added to the controvers­y and drew criticism.

At times, students and faculty have run into resistance from campus leaders when they’ve tried examine the college’s past ties to slavery and the role slaves played working on campus. The university’s longest-serving president (1829-1859), Alonzo Church, owned slaves.

But across the country, more and more universiti­es have started to study their racist history and ties to slavery. Morehead appointed a task force in June to chart a course for a memorial and Friday’s ceremony was the culminatio­n of that work.

The memorial, while not an apology, is a victory of sorts for those who’d been pressing UGA’s leadership to do more. Its placement in a prominent space on campus holds promise to foster attention and more discussion about UGA’s history.

“The memorial we dedicate this morning will provide for an enduring tribute, as well as a physical space for meaningful reflection,” Morehead said.

 ?? UNIVERSITY OF GEORGIA ?? The University of Georgia dedicated this memorial Friday outside Baldwin Hall honoring the legacy of slaves buried on campus in the 19th century.
UNIVERSITY OF GEORGIA The University of Georgia dedicated this memorial Friday outside Baldwin Hall honoring the legacy of slaves buried on campus in the 19th century.

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