Harvard Law School officials are reviewing the use of the school’s seal, which displays part of the crest of a slaveholding family.
The school’s seal includes three bushels of wheat, which also appears on the coat of arms for the family of Isaac Royall, a slaveholder who left part of his estate to Harvard to help found the law school.
The law school is among a number of other American universities that are evaluating their historical connections to the slave trade.
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Harvard Law School Dean Martha Minow announced a committee on Monday to research the symbol and if the school should change the crest.
“Symbols are important,” Minow said. “They become even more important when people care about them and focus on them.”
The committee is expected to make a recommendation in March.
The scrutiny over the seal took hold when a group of students created a Facebook page in October called “Royall Must Fall” to bring attention to what the crest represents.
Modelling their movement after a student movement at the University of Cape Town in South Africa to remove an image of Cecil Rhodes, a British imperialist, from the campus, the Harvard Law student called for the removal of the Royall coat of arms.
The students posted a picture of the crest replacing the bushels of wheat with images of people carrying the bushels on their backs.
Artist's statement: The crest. The crest. The crest. It’s been at the center of so much at the law school these days….
Posted by Harvard: Royall Must Fall on Monday, November 30, 2015
The Royall family, whose estate can still be visited today, was the largest slaveholding family in Massachusetts. Royall’s father was also known to be a cruel slave owner. According to the letter students wrote to Minow, he was responsible for burning 77 slaves alive and torturing and murdering others.
“Harvard Law School was founded on the exploited labor, broken bones, and ashes of enslaved human beings,” the students wrote.
The letter was posted on the group’s page after strips of tape were found over photographs of black professors at the school. The incident is being investigated as a hate crime.
“It reminded us once again that racism is ever-present in our school and society,” the students said. “The brutal history of the slave trade is not a thing of the past—it lives on in the present.”
Here are the other schools where similar controversies have taken or are currently taking place:









