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Related: About this forumWilliam & Mary renames three buildings, history department that honored Confederate supporters
WILLIAMSBURG The College of William & Mary has renamed three buildings and a department that currently honor supporters of the Confederacy, the schools latest move in a yearslong process to shed references to men who supported the Confederacy, enslavement and racism.
Instead, the university will honor the schools first Black student, a man who studied LGBTQ traditions and a descendant of a U.S. president.
The past is the past, but how we know it and how we tell it evolves as we learn more and as our community changes, President Katherine Rowe said at Fridays board of visitors meeting. William & Mary must pursue truth-telling.
But one member of the board and the universitys student government president criticized the university for not removing every name that honors an enslaver and not moving fast enough.
Read more: https://richmond.com/news/local/education/william-mary-renames-three-buildings-history-department-that-honored-confederate-supporters/article_7f81121e-8b13-5ec1-bcf4-e6829141892b.html
appalachiablue
(41,131 posts)William & Mary will rename dormitory Taliaferro Hall for Hulon L. Willis Sr., who was the first Black student to enroll at William & Mary, graduating in 1956. William Booth Taliaferro was rector of the university and a general in the Confederate Army. The academic building known as Morton Hall, named for a former chair of the history department who defended segregation, will now be called John E. Boswell Hall. A gay man, Boswell studied LGBTQ people and traditions during the medieval period. He graduated from William & Mary in 1969.
Another academic building, Tyler Hall, will be called Chancellors Hall, its former name, which honors the schools chancellors, a ceremonial position. The eponyms for Tyler Hall were John Tyler, the 10th U.S. president who was named to the Confederate States Congress shortly before his death, and Lyon Gardiner Tyler, the presidents son, who defended the Confederacy.
William Tyler, the great-grandson of the president, said his family wasnt involved when the building was named for his ancestors, and he doesnt object to the renaming. These three new building names come after William & Marys move last year to rename Maury Hall and Trinkle Hall, which were named for a Confederate naval officer and a Virginia governor who signed Jim Crow legislation.
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The board also voted to rename the Lyon Gardiner Tyler Department of History. Lyon Tyler, who was a president of William & Mary, wrote in 1929 A Confederate Catechism, which defended the Souths position in the Civil War...