Yale University’s leaders urged a campus conversation on Saturday about whether to change the name of a residential college named for the 19th century alumnus John C. Calhoun, a former vice president and senator from South Carolina who was a supporter of slavery.
Debate over the name started in the summer with a petition circulated after nine black worshippers were killed in a Charleston, South Carolina church. The petition said the Calhoun name, in place since the 1930s, represents “an indifference to centuries of pain and suffering among the black population.”
School President Peter Salovey and Dean Jonathan Holloway said in a letter to alumni that they weren’t taking a position on the question but urging a discussion in welcoming speeches to first-year students, and “we encourage you to take part as well.”
"Any response should engage the entire community in a thoughtful, campus-wide conversation about the university's history, the reasons why we remember or honor individuals, and whether historical narratives should be altered when they are disturbing," the letter said.
Both Salovey and Holloway posted their remarks to the students on the university’s website, along with suggested scholarly readings and an internal comment site.
Salovey told the students Yale needs to confront its complex, 300-year history in a thoughtful way, and "everyone connected to Yale will have something to contribute to the discussion."
Holloway, a scholar of African-American history, said the university's benefactor, 18th century British shipping magnate and philanthropist Elihu Yale, probably didn't own slaves, but undoubtedly profited from the international slave trade.
Holloway told the students the questions of the university's identity, national assumptions about race, and their own identities are big questions that "form part of the education that awaits you."
The Associated Press contributed to this report.