In Harvard’s pledge to atone for its ties to slavery, it identified dozens of people who were enslaved by the university’s first leaders and faculty members.
Roberta Wolff, a descendant of Tony, Cuba and Darby Vassall who were enslaved by Harvard benefactors in the institution's first decades, poses on the front porch of her family home, April 27, 2022, in Bellingham, Mass.
Among the most startling revelations in Harvard's report was the list of more than 70 people kept as slaves by Harvard leaders and supporters, often on or near the campus in Cambridge, Massachusetts. Their living descendants are estimated to number in the tens of thousands, including some who lived and worked in the Boston area without knowing their family connection to the Ivy League school.
A headstone marks the grave of "Cicely", a 15-year-old "Negro Servant" of Rev. William Brattle, a treasurer at Harvard College, at the Old Burying Ground just outside Harvard Yard, April 27, 2022, in Cambridge, Mass. The Lloyd family learned that it descends from Darby Vassall, the son of Tony and Cuba, an enslaved couple kept by a wealthy family that helped found Harvard's law school.
Harvard researchers have been studying the topic for years and so far have identified a few dozen living descendants. They estimate there could be more than 50,000 scattered across the United States.Lloyd’s family learned of its ancestry in 2019 through Carissa Chen, then an undergraduate at Harvard researching the school’s role in slavery with the guidance of a history professor.
A sign on a gate leading to the Old Burying Ground lists the resting place of Harvard community leaders, and some of the people they enslaved, just outside Harvard Yard, April 27, 2022, in Cambridge, Mass.
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