Feb 3, 2023
In September 2022, the University of Richmond Board of Trustees voted to change the name of its law school from the T.C. Williams School of Law to the Richmond School of Law. It was discovered that the namesake, an alumni and generous benefactor of the university and a successful tobacco merchant, owned between two dozen and three dozen slaves during the antebellum period. All this is in accordance with a UR policy passed last year that prohibits naming any campus building or program after a person who engaged in or advocated slavery. To be sure, this isn't an uncommon occurrence in our times. But what's unique is what happened next. The Williams family, led by great-great grandson Robert C. Smtih, has called upon to the university to return their ancestor's generous gift, which helped establish the law school, with interest. In a lengthy letter explaining their case, Smith writes that if his ancestor's name "is not good enough for the university, then isn't t