The great-great-great granddaughter of an enslaved man named Renty has filed a lawsuit against Harvard University, alleging that the institution repeatedly ignored requests to stop licensing pictures of her ancestors for the university’s profit, and stop misrepresenting her great-great-great grandfather.
Tamara Lanier’s lawsuit, filed Wednesday in Middlesex County Superior Court, seeks damages from Harvard, validation of her lineage and the return of the 169-year old daguerreotypes of the man she knew through family stories as “Papa Renty” and his daughter Delia.
Commissioned in 1850 by the controversial Harvard professor Louis Agassiz, the images depict Lanier’s enslaved ancestors naked and from various angles. The daguerreotypes – used by Agassiz to support racist theories of African and African-American inferiority – are currently housed in the Peabody Museum of Archeology and Ethnography at Harvard.
“For years, Papa Renty’s slave owners profited from his suffering – it’s time for Harvard to stop doing the same thing to our family,” said Lanier, in a press statement. “Papa Renty was a proud and kind man who, like so many enslaved men, women and children, endured years of unimaginable horrors. Harvard’s refusal to honor our family’s history by acknowledging our lineage and its own shameful past is an insult to Papa Renty’s life and memory.”
Lanier’s lawsuit alleges that after the long-forgotten daguerreotypes of Renty and Delia were found in 1976, Harvard made no effort to identify their descendants.
It alleges that Harvard has continued to profit from her ancestor’s images, pointing to a recent example in 2017 where the university used Renty’s image on the cover of the 13th anniversary edition of From Site to Sight: Anthropology, Photography and the Power of Imagery, which sells for $40.
During a press conference Wednesday, civil rights attorney Benjamin Crump, co-lead counsel for Lanier, said Lanier’s efforts to trace her family history is “nothing short of miraculous,” given that many Black Americans cannot trace their lineage because of slavery.