I havenât read anything more amusing than this story in ages.
From the article
If your name isnât good enough for a college, is your money? Such a question has been raised over a now-deleted donator in Virginia.
The situation dates back to 1846, when a man named Thomas C. Williams attended Richmond College. In the 1880s, he served as a trustee.
More from the Richmond Times-Dispatch:
After his death, his family made a gift to [the college] that helped establish the law school. When Richmond College became the University of Richmond in 1920, it began referring to the law school as the T.C. Williams School of Law. That was then, this is now. In September of 2022, the University of Richmond board voted unanimously to change the name to the University of Richmond School of Law.
At the time, President Kevin Hallock and the board issued a letter:
We recognize that some may be disappointed or disagree with this decision. We also recognize the role the Williams family has played here and respect the full and complete history of the institution. He may have played an important part, but according to tax records, T.C.âs successful tobacco business owned 25 to 40 slaves.
Six months before T.C.âs booting, half a dozen campus buildings were re-labeled. Gone were references to those whoâd possessed slaves â including Robert Ryland, the schoolâs first president in 1840.
On March 26th, a new policy was instated:
No building, program, professorship, or other entity at the University should be named for a person who directly engaged in the trafficking and/or enslavement of others or openly advocated for the enslavement of people.
Out with the old, in with the new. But T.C.âs family wants their manâs old money back: If heâs unworthy of recognition for his efforts, they figure, his cash should be no good as well.
T.C.âs great-great-grandson explained in a letter to the president.
âIf suddenly his name is not good enough for the University, then isnât the proper ethical and, indeed, virtuous action to return the benefactorâs money with interest? ⌠[I]s it not a form of fraud to induce money from a benefactor, and then discredit the benefactor after he is long dead? Surely the Williams family would not have given a penny to the University knowing that the University would later dishonor the family.â It was a might more than a penny; Rob has done the math:
âAt a six-percent compounded interest over 132 years, [T.C.âs] gift to the law school alone is now valued at over $51 million, and this does not include many other substantial gifts from my family to the University.â Bottom line:
âThe ethical and virtuous decision is clear. Return the money.â Rob told The College Fix his family has sent President Kevin â20 (unreturned) emails asking for the evidenceâ regarding their ancestorâs slavery connection.
Furthermore, Robâs October 11th letter indicates the family may have assisted minorities during a pivotal time:
â[T.C.] hired thousands of workers, many were blacks and women. Productive work and industry is the only thing that lifts people out of poverty. The Williams family gave away all of their immense wealth, most of it was anonymous⌠Many Richmond institutions are the result of their goodwill and generosity.â Perhaps similar things could be said of departed others ejected from prominent places. Even so, name removal has titanically taken hold:
William Peace University Votes to Cancel William Peace â but Itâs Still Called William Peace University
George Washington University Decolonizes Itself by Displacing Its Mascot
Woke Fail: University Evicts a Slaveholderâs Statue, Still Puts His Name on Every T-Shirt
Salute to Self-Awareness: Washington Post Publishes a Denouncement of George Washingtonâs âRacistâ Name
A Ghost Reminds Six Students of a KKK Equestrian, and That Alone May Unsaddle a $100,000 Statue
Article at Bidenâs Alma Mater Cancels Abe Lincoln â a Racist Executioner
Back to the University of Richmond and T.C. Williams, it may surprise some people that the demand of a refund hasnât been made in many other instances. Could we be headed toward more? Maybe.
Meanwhile, Rob thinks the University and its president need to look inward:
âThe University itself participated in slavery! Using your Orwellian logic, then shouldnât the University have to change its name? ⌠Using your T.C. Williams logic, then donât you have to resign since you preside over a school that participated in slavery?â -ALEX
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All that is needed now is to perform a genealogical search on the entire University staff and the board. Go back as far as needed to locate ancestors of every one that has ties to slavery. Publish the results and demand that every "guilty" member is removed from their position. The cure for cancel culture is to cancel everyone.