Harvard sued by descendant of U.S. slave
photographed in 19th century
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[March 21, 2019]
By Gabriella Borter
(Reuters) - A descendant of an American
slave on Wednesday sued Harvard University to gain possession of photos
of her great-great-great grandfather that the school commissioned in
1850 on behalf of a professor trying to prove the inferiority of black
people.
The photos, depicting a black man named Renty and his daughter Delia,
were taken as part of a study by Harvard Professor Louis Agassiz and are
among the earliest known photos of American slaves. They are currently
kept at the Peabody Museum of Archeology and Ethnography at Harvard's
Cambridge, Massachusetts campus.
A representative for Harvard declined to comment and said the university
had not yet been served with the complaint.
Tamara Lanier of Norwich, Connecticut, who claims to be the
great-great-great-granddaughter of Renty, accused Harvard of celebrating
its former professor who studied "racist pseudoscience" and profiting
from photos that were taken without Renty and his daughter's consent.
"What I hope we're able to accomplish is to show the world who Renty
is," Lanier said at a news conference in New York. "I think this case is
important because it will test the moral climate of this country and
force this country to reckon with its long history of racism."
Agassiz encountered Renty and Delia when he was touring plantations in
South Carolina for a research project sanctioned by Harvard that sought
to support his view that black people were a different species,
according to the lawsuit.
Lanier, who filed the lawsuit in Middlesex County Superior Court in
Massachusetts, established her relationship to the photographed slaves
with family oral history and genealogical information, her lawyers said.
She previously asked the university to give her the photos, but Harvard
refused, she said.
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Tamara Lanier listens as her lawyer speaks to the media about a
lawsuit accusing Harvard University of the monetization of
photographic images of her great-great-great grandfather, an
enslaved African man named Renty, and his daughter Delia, outside of
the Harvard Club in New York, U.S., March 20, 2019. REUTERS/Lucas
Jackson
"By denying Ms. Lanier's superior claim to the daguerreotypes,
Harvard is perpetuating the systematic subversion of black property
rights that began during slavery and continued for a century
thereafter," the complaint said, referring to an early form of
photography.
In addition to gaining possession of the photos, Lanier is seeking
compensation for emotional distress and Harvard's acknowledgement
that it was "complicit in perpetuating and justifying the
institution of slavery."
Harvard is the latest elite academic institution criticized for its
failure to reckon with a racist past. In 2016, a member of Yale
University's kitchen staff shattered a stained glass window
depicting slaves in a field, drawing national attention and
overwhelming support from students who took up his protest against
what they said was Yale's implicit endorsement of a racist history.
(Reporting by Gabriella Borter; Editing by Frank McGurty and Cynthia
Osterman)
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