CAMBRIDGE, MA - JUNE 20: Shonrael Lanier, a descendant of former slave Renty Taylor, holds a sign at a press conference held at Harvard University to talk about the lawsuit that the family has filed against the university in Cambridge, MA on June 20, 2019. Under cover from a torrential downpour, two families came together on Harvard Universitys campus Thursday to demand that the institution turn over historical photographs of two slaves and reckon with its history of white supremacy. Tamara Lanier, a Connecticut woman who sued Harvard in March, has said shes a descendant of Renty and his daughter Delia, two slaves who were forced in 1850 to pose naked for daguerreotypes, or early photographs. She said the images, discovered in 1976 and stored in Harvards Peabody Museum, rightfully belong to her, and her lawsuit alleges that Harvard is shamelessly capitalizing on them. She was joined at a press conference Thursday by descendants of controversial Harvard scientist Louis Agassiz, who commissioned the daguerreotypes in an attempt to support his theory of white biological superiority. (Photo by Jonathan Wiggs/The Boston Globe via Getty Images)


Harvard College has launched possession of what students take into account the earliest surviving images of enslaved African People, settling an eight-year dispute with a lone descendant of the themes captured within the pictures.

Below a confidential settlement introduced on Wednesday, the Cambridge, Massachusetts faculty mentioned it is going to switch fifteen daguerreotypes dated round 1850, lengthy stored within the Peabody Museum of Archaeology and Ethnology, to the Worldwide African American Museum in Charleston, South Carolina,

The Charleston museum plans to show the early copper-plate produced pictures in cooperation with Tamara Lanier, the lady behind the authorized dispute. In authorized filings, Lanier has claimed the pictures depict her great-great-great-grandfather, Renty, and his daughter, Delia and that unbiased analysis confirms her genealogical hyperlinks to them.

The dispute started in 2019 when Lanier sued Harvard, arguing the college had no authorized declare to pictures she describes as “dehumanizing” and brought with out consent on fee for the Swiss-born biologist Louis Agassiz, a former Harvard professor. (Harvard denied Lanier’s preliminary request to have the images returned in 2017.)

Agassiz, now extensively discredited, was a proponent of controversial theories round White superiority that when underpinned justifications for a slavery system within the U.S.

In 2022, Lanier hit a stalemate when a Massachusetts courts dominated that possession of the objects stays with the photographer, not the themes, however allowed Lanier to pursue damages primarily based on “emotional misery” associated to Harvard’s continued use of the pictures in advertising supplies. She was granted the prospect to pursue the declare additional in a separate ruling in 2023.

In a press convention, Lanier’s attorneys referred to as the restitution a “singular victory for descendants of the enslaved,” arguing that the return comes at a important time for Harvard and requires fairness, because the college faces concentrating on by the Trump administration and a $2.2 billion funding freeze associated to its dealing with of Palestinian solidarity campaigns on campus. (Lanier was joined by a descendant of Agassiz, who has supported the efforts to return them.)

Harvard mentioned in statements across the settlement that it has for years been looking for choices to position the daguerreotypes in a extra acceptable and public setting. Their placement in a Southern museum now marks a interval of newly opened entry to the works. Monetary phrases of the settlement weren’t disclosed.