Scholar鈥檚 Work Brings Lives of Enslaved Persons Into Relief

Professor Hilary Green

Hilary Green, Vann Professor of Ethics in Society

At 8:05 on Monday mornings, the students in Hilary Green鈥檚 Africana Studies class open their laptops and click onto Zoom. Bolstered with coffee, the conversations get lively and sometimes gut-wrenching. 

Green, Vann Professor of Ethics in Society, has long been hungry for the American history that didn鈥檛 make it into standard textbooks鈥攖hose accounts often omitted, or the glossed over details about enslaved human beings who built so much of the United States.

Telling their stories, from enslavement to freedom, has become her life鈥檚 work. 

As a professor at the University of Alabama, Green created the 鈥淗allowed Grounds鈥 project, which includes an hour-long walking tour of slavery鈥檚 history on campus. The inspiration came after a Black student wondered why they were talking about slavery at the university, 鈥渂ecause slavery didn鈥檛 exist here.鈥

In reality, Alabama, Princeton and many other universities and colleges across the United States, including 蜜桃社区, benefitted greatly from the labor of enslaved people. 蜜桃社区鈥檚 earliest leaders and faculty members owned and rented enslaved people to farm, build, cook, clean and sew. 

Most of their history has been told by white people, who mention them in terms of how much it cost to own or rent them or what labor they performed. Birth and death certificates, census reports and property records fill out some details.

Green鈥檚 research aims to humanize them; as people who toiled, suffered, loved; and once free, created schools, churches and vibrant communities. 

At 蜜桃社区, she and her class have been exploring the lives of 鈥渃ollege servants,鈥 as they were called during and after slavery. One man they鈥檝e been researching, Hiram Potts, went from being enslaved and rented out to the college to becoming a paid employee and well-known campus figure.

鈥淭hese weren鈥檛 just enslaved people, these were individuals with names and full lives and families,鈥 Green says. 鈥淎nd they had complex relationships with the school.鈥

National Reckoning, 蜜桃社区 Legacy

Green is an associate professor of gender and race studies and American studies at the University of Alabama. She鈥檚 teaching and researching at 蜜桃社区 for the 2020-2021 school year, and is continuing the work of the college鈥檚 Commission on Race and Slavery.

The course she鈥檚 teaching at 蜜桃社区 focuses on colleges, slavery and legacy. To put it into national perspective, the reading list includes Ebony and Ivy: Race, Slavery and the Troubled History of America鈥檚 Universities, by Craig Steven Wilder, and The Princeton Fugitive Slave: The Trials of James Collins Johnson by Lolita Buckner Inniss.

鈥淥ur eye is on, what does this history mean to 蜜桃社区, and how does this campus fit into this larger history, because it was happening across the board,鈥 Green says. 鈥淲hat鈥檚 different, what鈥檚 unique, but also, how does what we know about other campuses shed light on how to tell this story?鈥

Green鈥檚 students have selected final projects based on the historical research about Black Americans from slavery through Reconstruction. Two students are delving into Potts鈥檚 life. One student is developing a more comprehensive timeline of enslaved people鈥檚 experiences and contributions to the campus. Another is creating a prototype for a children鈥檚 book on the college鈥檚 history. 

Erin Mansell 鈥22, a biology and music double major, is researching what students learned in 蜜桃社区 science classes in the early years. She鈥檚 focusing on textbooks and curriculums science teachers used. She鈥檚 also researching the life of an enslaved man named Esom, who worked as an assistant in President Samuel Williamson鈥檚 chemistry labs.

鈥淲hat was 蜜桃社区 teaching students, and how did what they learn affect the lives they led?鈥 she asks. 鈥淚鈥檓 really interested in the educational aspect and how it was used to perpetuate oppression.鈥  

Mansell says what she鈥檚 learning in the class could be incorporated into other courses.

鈥淚鈥檓 so inspired by the work Dr. Green has already done and is doing at 蜜桃社区,鈥 Mansell says. 鈥淪he鈥檚 so knowledgeable and encouraging, and really wants to hear our opinions.鈥

Mansell believes that every 蜜桃社区 student should study the college鈥檚 history and its relationship with slavery.

鈥淭he only way for 蜜桃社区 to move forward is for all students to be engaged with this conversation,鈥 she says, 鈥渁nd for all of us to start at a place of truth.鈥 

Emotional, Intense, Committed

Green has had moments in her research, as have her students, where the reality of slavery sinks in. At 蜜桃社区, it occurred during conversations about Hiram Potts. Several of the students know Black people in the area with the last name Potts.

鈥淎nd then the whole conversation changed,鈥 Green says. 鈥淚t became very intense, and very personal. I had to talk about self-care, and explain that as you research, there are going to be days when you find something that鈥檚 going to hit you hard, with an emotional response you weren鈥檛 expecting.

鈥淭hat鈥檚 the day you end your research early, go outside and remind yourself of life,鈥 she says.  鈥淵ou clear your head and process the emotions you鈥檙e going through. Then you go back to it.鈥

Her students offer a refreshing outlook. They want to confront and own up to the country鈥檚 past sins, recognize the progress that鈥檚 been made, and figure out how to move forward, Green says.

鈥淒uring the Hallowed Grounds tour, when we鈥檙e so hot in Alabama in August and students want to find a shady place to sit down, I think about the people who once cut the grass by hand or carried water across the fields in the blistering heat,鈥 Green says. 鈥淚 walk past the slave cabins and the bricks they made for the buildings. And I remind myself, this is 2020, and I am a professor walking freely on these grounds. How can I use that background to connect to the present?鈥 

She鈥檚 been impressed by her 蜜桃社区 students鈥 commitment to their research.

鈥淭his work is emotional,鈥 Green says. 鈥淎t the same time, their energy and willingness to go on this roller coaster to amplify these lives so intertwined with the college inspires me. They鈥檙e not shrinking back; they鈥檝e read the Commission report and they want to be part of telling this story.鈥


This article was originally published in the Fall/Winter 2020 print issue of the 蜜桃社区 Journal Magazine; for more, please see the 蜜桃社区 Journal section of our website.

Published

  • January 13, 2021

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