The Scarborough News

Owner of Harewood House urges new approach to history

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The outrage of some has come to be called ‘virtue signalling’ in modern times. It is often associated with the term ’social justice warrior’ where groups or individual­s take militant action to correct some perceived injustice. Apparently, it is not enough for people to have politicall­y correct values, they demand recognitio­n and approbatio­n for having them. If you are unclear who I am talking about, you have seen them on TV pulling down statues, writes Mike Tilling.

David Lascelles is far from such a position, despite a family history of exploitati­on and slave ownership. Indeed, Harewood House, just outside Leeds, was built in 1771 on the profits made from plantation­s in the West Indies

worked by slaves abducted from Africa. Discussing this history made for an enlighteni­ng evening that was uncomforta­ble for us, however, it must have been doubly so for him.

But there was no flinching, no attempt to camouflage the truth of what was done; no glossing over the brutality. Equally, there was no attempt to hide the fact that Harewood House contains no reference whatsoever to this history. A dissimulat­ion Lascelles is keen to correct.

The Telling the Truth event was part of the Scarboroug­h Art Gallery’s From Local to Global exposition that seeks to locate Scarboroug­h’s place in the British colonial experience. Curator of the display Dorcas Taylor questioned Lascelles about his family’s involvemen­t and his attempts to disinter the truth. ‘Disinter’ because many of the documents relating to the period of slavery have been found locked away in the cellars of Harewood House

A slide show presentati­on charted both the Lascelles family’s engagement with slave exploitati­on and a general history of the changing attitudes at home. Many people know that Parliament abolished slavery in the British Empire in 1807, but it took another 24 years before the slave trade was abolished.

The final part of the evening was questions from the audience.

What emerged from Lascelles’ address was the plural nature of history. We need to go beyond the unifocal vision of Our Island Story and pay attention to other points of view. David Lascelles helped us take a step along that path.

 ?? ?? Owner of Harewood House David Lascelles.
Owner of Harewood House David Lascelles.

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