From these roots My fight with Harvard to reclaim my legacy

Tamara Lanier, 1962-

Book - 2025

"Tamara Lanier grew up listening to her mother's stories about her ancestors. As Black Americans descended from enslaved people brought to America, they knew all too well how fragile the tapestry of a lineage could be. As her mother's health declined, she pushed her daughter to dig into those stories. "Tell them about Papa Renty," she would say. It was her mother's last wish. Thus begins one woman's remarkable commitment to document that story. Her discovery of an eighteenth-century daguerreotype, one of the first-ever photos of enslaved people from Africa, reveals a dark-skinned man with short-cropped silver hair and chiseled cheekbones. The information read "Renty, Congo." All at once, Lanier k...new she was staring at the ancestor her mother told her so much about-Papa Renty. In a compelling story covering more than a decade of her own research, Lanier takes us on her quest to prove her genealogical bloodline to Papa Renty's that pits her in a legal battle against one of the most powerful institutions in the country, Harvard University. The question is, who has claim to the stories, artifacts, and remnants of America's stained history-the institutions who acquired and housed them for generations, or the descendants who have survived? From These Roots is not only a historical record of one woman's lineage but a call to justice that fights for all those demanding to reclaim, honor, and lay to rest the remains of mishandled lives and memories"--

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Subjects
Genres
Rita Cox Black and Caribbean Heritage Collection
Autobiographies
Biographies
Published
New York : Crown [2025]
Language
English
Main Author
Tamara Lanier, 1962- (author)
Other Authors
Liz Welch, 1969- (author)
Edition
First edition
Physical Description
272 pages, 8 unnumbered pages of plates : illustrations (some color) ; 24 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references (pages [271]-272).
ISBN
9780593727720
  • 1. Sankofa
  • 2. Losing My Mom, Finding Papa Renty
  • 3. Genealogical Trees Do Not Flourish Among Slaves
  • 4. What's in a Name?
  • 5. De-Mounting Agassiz
  • 6. Praying for a Breakthrough
  • 7. Looking for Renty, Finding Rose
  • 8. The Truth Is in the Ground
  • 9. The Hubris of Harvard
  • 10. The Aha Moment
  • 11. The Reichlin Letter
  • 12. The Making of a Dream Team
  • 13. The Agassiz Descendants-"Shame Makes You Not Curious"
  • 14. The Harvard Students Mobilize
  • 15. An Opportunity for Harvard
  • 16. Facts Are Stubborn Things-Summary of My Genealogy
  • 17. Reparations Flow from the Tortfeasor to the Victim, Not the Other Way Around
  • 18. Documents of Dubious Origin
  • 19. Renty Finally Has His Day in Court
  • 20. Fulfilling My Promise
  • Acknowledgments
  • Bibliography
Review by Kirkus Book Review

Battling on behalf of enslaved forebears. This inspiring memoir features unforgettable dialogue: "We're going to Columbia, South Carolina, to spend the weekend with the family who enslaved our ancestors!" So Lanier tells her daughters, announcing a remarkable development in a long campaign. Her goal: compel Harvard University to hand over images of her great-great-great grandfather Renty Taylor and his daughter Delia, enslaved in the 19th century and treated as "specimens" to be studied. Lanier's memoir begins in 2010, when she promises her dying mother that she'd chronicle her family's history. She serendipitously mentions the project to the owner of an ice cream shop near her Connecticut home. Turns out he's a "genealogical whiz." With his help, she discovers that Renty and Delia are among seven enslaved people seen in infamous daguerreotypes commissioned in 1850 by Louis Agassiz, a Harvard professor with repugnant white supremacist theories. Lanier informs Harvard of her lineage but is thwarted by "academic arrogance." Nevertheless, she persists. A phone call to the family that enslaved her relatives leads to a powerful moment, with Lanier "sitting in a chair hand-carved by" Prince Thompson, another ancestor. She also collaborates with descendants of Agassiz on a public appeal for Harvard to surrender the images, which the school published on a textbook cover and projected on a large screen at an academic conference, while denying similar requests from Lanier. Her 2019 lawsuit didn't force Harvard to give up the daguerreotypes, but in a decision by Massachusetts' highest court, justices cited strengths in Lanier's claim and ruled that she could sue Harvard for emotional distress. This "marked the first time," Lanier writes, "that a descendant" of enslaved people was "afforded the opportunity to seek accountability from an American institution for the atrocities caused by slavery." A stirring first-person account of holding powerful institutions responsible for abetting slavery. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.