The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

SCAD removes sign at building named for Clarence Thomas

Online petition calls for it to be renamed in wake of Roe being overturned.

- By Zoe Nicholson Savannah Morning News

While at the dedication of a Savannah College of Art and Design building named after him in 2010, Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas praised his hometown’s hospitalit­y.

“You always long to go back to a place of comfort. The roots are here, and the roots are very, very deep here,” Thomas said in a 2010 Savannah Morning News article about the ceremony, which celebrated the newly christened Clarence Thomas Center for Historic Preservati­on, located in the former convent where Thomas spent his early years attending school.

“I’ve had no bad trips to Savannah. It has always been warm to me.”

That may no longer be the case, especially for a group of SCAD students who wants his name removed from SCAD’S building and any vestige of the justice scrubbed from the city.

The university has also removed the sign from the East Broad Street building but has not responded to the News’ emails asking for the reason why.

As of Thursday morning, an online petition calling for the Clarence Thomas Center for Historic Preservati­on to be renamed had garnered more than 1,400 signatures.

First reported by WTOC, the petition cites Thomas’ comments on the Dobbs vs. Jackson Women’s Health Organizati­on case, which repealed the constituti­onal right to abortion. Thomas indicated he would like to see a repeal of protection­s for gay marriage, access to contracept­ion and privacy in the bedroom, calling the initial rulings that granted those rights “erroneous decisions.”

He also has been accused of sexual harassment by Anita Hill, who testified against him during his 1991 confirmati­on hearings, and, more recently in 2016, by Alaska lawyer Moira Smith, who alleged that Thomas groped her in 1999.

The petition writers do not want such a man honored on SCAD’S campus: “For the tuition of the student body to support the maintenanc­e and upkeep of a building named after a man who actively tries to rob the student body of their fundamenta­l rights is unacceptab­le.”

The petition mirrors one from 2018, which called for the building to be renamed. That petition was started by a SCAD student during the Senate confirmati­on hearings for Brett Kavanaugh, who was accused of sexual assault in public testimony that closely resembled the Hill-thomas interviews.

SCAD has not commented on the petition.

Since at least June 28, the sign proclaimin­g the former Franciscan Convent as the Clarence Thomas Center for Historic Preservati­on has been missing from its post in front of the 1906 red-brick building.

While some on Facebook took it as a sign that SCAD is protesting Thomas’ comments in the wake of Dobbs, the university has issued no statement on the matter.

Spokespeop­le for the university did not respond to multiple emails from the Morning News requesting comment.

No crimes have been reported either at the center, located at 439 E. Broad St., since the Dobbs ruling, according to SCAD’S daily crime log.

The building was named in dedication to Thomas in 2010.

It’s part of the former Catholic school and convent where Thomas spent much of his early life. Thomas’ childhood connection to the building was the reason for the building naming.

Several buildings and public spaces are named for Thomas in Savannah. There is an I-95 interchang­e dedicated to him, and the local wing of the Carnegie Library is named after him. According to a 2011 article from the New York Times, Thomas also had a hand in creating the Pin Point Museum, a former oyster and crab cannery dedicated to the story of the local Gullah-geechee community, where Thomas grew up along the Moon River.

The museum and library were projects of Dallas real estate mogul Harlan Crow, who has a long-establishe­d and ethically questionab­le friendship with Thomas. It is not known whether Crow paid for the SCAD building to be named in his friend’s honor, but the New York Times reported that Crow’s private plane escorted Thomas to and from the 2010 dedication ceremony.

 ?? SAVANNAH MORNING NEWS ?? The Savannah College of Art and Design has removed the sign from the Clarence Thomas Center for Historic Preservati­on on East Broad Street.
SAVANNAH MORNING NEWS The Savannah College of Art and Design has removed the sign from the Clarence Thomas Center for Historic Preservati­on on East Broad Street.

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