Miami Herald

In ‘pursuit of racial justice’, UM to take founder’s name off structure

The University of Miami will rename the parking structure on Merrick Drive, named after George Merrick, the founder of the university and the city of Coral Gables.

- BY SAMANTHA J. GROSS sgross@miamiheral­d.com

The University of Miami announced last week that it will remove the name of George Merrick from a parking structure on Merrick Drive over concerns raised by students and alumni that, during his lifetime, the university and Coral Gables founder engaged in racist behavior that disenfranc­hised Miami’s Black communitie­s.

Merrick’s history as chair of the Dade County Planning Board sparked a reckoning among students and alumni, who last July sent

an eight-page letter to President Julio Frenk asking for Merrick’s name to be wiped from campus buildings. Students sent a letter in the wake of the deaths of George Floyd, Breonna Taylor and Ahmaud Arbery, at a time when many other campuses across the country were forced to confront their links to racism.

Merrick’s proposals on the planning board “perpetuate­d a wealth gap for Black residents and broad inequities in our community that persist to this day,” the school acknowledg­ed in a statement on May 3 announcing the changes, which included a decision to rename a Frost School of Music rehearsal hall currently named after Henry Fillmore, a composer who used racist caricature­s to promote his more popular works.

“Our actions today acknowledg­e the pain and the promise of our Black students, alumni, colleagues, and neighbors while intentiona­lly choosing to learn from and build on our history,” the school wrote. “We engaged in serious deliberati­ons about our past, our future, and our ongoing pursuit of racial justice.”

In addition to renaming the parking structure and rehearsal hall, the school will also name its new student services building for a distinguis­hed Black alum.

Landon Coles, a junior political science major and the university’s newly elected student government president, said the May 3 announceme­nt was “a step forward” and a

“big moment for progress.”

Coles, who recently served as the university’s Black student union president, helped author the initial letter to university leaders and served as a student representa­tive on the Historic Review Committee on Naming, a group formed to advise Frenk on renaming buildings and streets that may no longer be in line with the university’s values.

Coles, 20, said the announceme­nt is “a signal by the university administra­tion that we are making progress here.”

“We know we have to remain vigilant, we have to keep making forward progress,” he said.

The original petition by students was for the school to change the name of the Solomon G. Merrick building, home to the School of Education. The building, named after Coral Gables’ founder George Merrick’s father, was part of the initial gift when the Merricks donated the land to the university in 1925.

The students worked with historians to bring to light some of George Merrick’s actions on the planning board. In 1937, for example, a “Negro Resettleme­nt Plan” was proposed to relocate Black community members to the “least preferred locations outside of the Miami city limits,” according to meeting minutes from the time. The proposal was never put into action.

The petition was first presented to the university’s Board of Trustees at a July meeting, and the students were told that renaming the education school building requires returning the land and the money used to pay for the building, which was not possible. The parking structure, however, will be given a “neutral, directiona­l name.”

OPPOSITION ASKS UNIVERSITY TO REVERSE COURSE

Not every member of the university agrees with the decision on May 3.

Law student Amanda Rose, a member of the Historic Preservati­on Associatio­n of Coral Gables, is circulatin­g a petition against the decision and penned a letter to university leadership in opposition.

In the letter, she asked the university to reverse its decision on the Merrick parking structure and to also create an “on-campus historic preservati­on and architectu­ral revival organizati­on.”

“There is a current phenomenon to rename and tear down our history and our founders’ legacies,” she wrote. “When I witnessed this manifest in my own community, I felt compelled to act.”

Karelia Martinez Carbonell, president of the same historic associatio­n said the group itself opposes the university’s decision.

Merrick’s comments on the planning board were cherry-picked, she said, and the decision doesn’t take into considerat­ion the rest of Merrick’s legacy.

“There are things that you live within your era. He was a man of his time but he was a human,” she said. “He helped the Black community ... he gave money, he built schools and churches. He was just living in that era. He didn’t invent Jim Crow.”

Carbonell said Gables residents weren’t informed about the university’s decision ahead of time, and worry that “cancel culture” will warp their city’s founder’s legacy.

“The trend is, let’s just cancel everything that the other side doesn’t agree with. The community has come together and said enough,” she said, noting that the city will be making a proclamati­on during the May 26 commission meeting to commemorat­e the 135th anniversar­y of George Merrick’s birth.

“They are making him a man that he wasn’t,” she said of Merrick’s detractors.

CHANGE UNLIKELY FOR THE CITY

As for the city of Coral Gables, where Merrick’s name adorns a luxury shopping mall, a museum built inside Merrick’s childhood home and statue installed in front of

City Hall, change is not likely on the horizon.

The city made news recently when it became the only local government in Miami-Dade to reject adding Harriet Tubman’s name to a portion of U.S. 1, known as Dixie Highway for the last 100 years. County commission­ers last year endorsed replacing a name often linked with the Confederac­y.

In the Gables commission debate on the topic, then-Vice Mayor Vince Lago warned that the pressure to remove the Dixie Highway name could help fuel an effort to remove Merrick’s statue.

“One of my biggest concerns ... was the issue of the fervor that’s growing now in regards to George Merrick,” said Lago, who was recently elected mayor.

In a statement Friday, Gables spokeswoma­n Martha Pantin said Merrick “was an urban planning visionary who understood the importance an institutio­n of higher learning would play in developing a world-class community.”

She declined to comment on whether the city would take steps to remove Merrick’s name or likeness from any buildings or city structures.

“While like most people he was not perfect, his memory and presence are still very important in and to Coral Gables,” she wrote in an email.

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 ?? Herald file ?? A statue of Coral Gables founder George Merrick is in front of City Hall.
Herald file A statue of Coral Gables founder George Merrick is in front of City Hall.

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