Forty-three direct descendants of Prof. Louis Agassiz signed a letter in support of the family of the enslaved man, Renty, and his daughter Delia, whose photos were commissioned by Agassiz in the 1850s. Earlier this year, Tamara Lanier, a descendant of Renty, had filed suit against Harvard asking that the university turn over the images of Renty and to pay unspecified damages. The suit claims the photos of Renty and Delia were taken a few years after Harvard had recruited Agassiz, who espoused a theory that Africans and African-Americans were inferior to whites.After being named head of Harvard's newly created Lawrence School of Science, Agassiz became an advocate for polygenism — the theory that the suit said was used to justify the enslavement of black people and, later, their segregation.The photos, also referred to as daguerreotypes, are some of the earliest known photos of slaves. In the photos, Renty was stripped naked and photographed from every angle "without consent, dignity, or compensation," according to the lawsuit, which was filed in Middlesex County Superior Court. Delia, stripped to the waist, posed next to him."For Harvard to give the daguerreotypes to Ms. Lanier and her family would begin to make amends for its use of the photos as exhibits for the white supremacist theory Agassiz espoused," the letter from Agassiz's family said. "It is time for Harvard to recognize Renty and Delia as people. The daguerreotypes are, as Ms. Lanier has said, family photos."One of Lanier's lawyers is civil rights attorney Ben Crump, who underscored the sentiments of the Agassiz family."With the Agassiz family's letter and their vocal support, along with the knowledge that it is the right and honest thing to do, we hope Harvard will finally face the ugly truth of its past and immediately return the images of Renty to Tammy Lanier, the great-great-great granddaughter of the African slave," In an email Read More – Source

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