A resolution before the Board of Alders would issue a formal apology for the city’s actions preventing the founding of a local Black college in 1831.
Beaver Hills Alder Tom Ficklin proposed the resolution alongside newly appointed City Historian Michael Morand.
A joint meeting of the Education and Health and Human Services Committees convened for a public hearing on the item on Thursday, where one member of the public arrived to testify; the alders decided to postpone a vote on the item to allow for more people to attend a future meeting.
The resolution addresses a 19th century abolitionist-led movement to found a college for Black men in New Haven, before any Black higher education institution had been established.
Both the city of New Haven and the state of Connecticut took action to block such an institution, with the state eventually passing a law prohibiting Black people from out of state to gain an education in Connecticut.
In 1831, a mayoral committee reviewing the matter framed the proposed Black college as an “unwarrantable and dangerous interference with the internal concerns of other States” — criticizing the proposal for posing a risk to African-American enslavement.
The committee also wrote that a Black college would negatively impact Yale University, whose alumni played a critical role in opposing the college. A Black college would be “incompatible with the prosperity, if not the existence of the present institutions of learning” such as Yale, the committee wrote.
The story of the 1831 college proposal is documented in Tubyez Cropper and Morand’s short documentary What Could Have Been, as well as in the Yale & Slavery Research Project’s website, book, and exhibit in the New Haven Museum.
On Thursday, Ficklin said he was motivated to submit the resolution because of the history behind his very role as an alder.
“Our ancestors were there,” Ficklin said of the 1831 college proposal — not only “literal ancestors,” he explained, but also the alder-equivalents of the time who chose to maintain a white supremacist status quo.
“We carry the legacy,” Ficklin said. “We are a part of history, and we are making history.”
He quoted from a letter submitted by Morand, who wasn’t able to attend Thursday’s meeting in person, calling on the city to “reckon with an essential and long under-recognized part of New Haven history and national history.”
The sole public testifier was Charles Warner, Jr., a local historian, public school administrator, and Connecticut Freedom Trail chair, who donned a button commemorating the 1831 college.
Warner prompted the committee to imagine what New Haven could have been like had a historically Black college been an anchor here, pointing to how institutions like Howard University and Morehouse College have had ripple effects on their surrounding communities.
“I myself grew up in a time when crack and hard drugs were having a very deleterious effect” on New Haven, he said. “I was protected from that because my parents had the opportunity to have a college education” — an avenue to career paths out of reach for many Black New Haveners, who have nevertheless worked to “lift up the really beautiful parts of New Haven.”
“We would have had a different city economically, educationally, politically, and so forth” with a historically Black college in the city, Warner said.
The resolution commits to “fostering educational opportunities” and “explor[ing] ways to memorialize this history,” while urging Yale to “consider further reparative action” — beyond the Yale & Slavery Research Project — to address the generational impact of rejecting the 1831 college proposal.
Fair Haven Alder Frank Redente, Jr. echoed this last call in particular.
“Shame on the leaders of New Haven in 1831,” he said. “There seems to be an all-too-familiar player: Yale. … With the endowment that Yale has,” he argued, the university should provide more monetary resources to the city as compensation.
While Committee Chair Eli Sabin moved to advance the resolution, Majority Leader Richard Furlow called on the committee to hold off.
“You’re discussing an item that should have citywide support,” he said, expressing disappointment with a nearly empty room. “I would be offended if we were to send this out of committee with such little dialogue.”
Sabin withdrew his motion to allow for a future public hearing with more participation, and the committee adjourned.
Read the full resolution below.
Resolution acknowledging the City of New Haven's Action in 1831 to oppose a college for Black men, apologizing for the harm done, and calling for reparative measures and racial equity initiatives:
WHEREAS: Knowledge is power, and higher education is a proven and essential means for personal improvement, community development, and intergenerational wealth creation; and
WHEREAS: throughout much of the history of the United States, the doors to educational opportunity have been closed to Black people and other demographic groups on the basis of race, gender, religion, and socioeconomic status; and
WHEREAS: Black Americans were not allowed to enroll at most colleges or universities, including Yale University, much before the Civil War; and
WHEREAS: in 1831, a group of courageous and committed abolitionists, including New Haveners John Creed, J. L. Cross, Simeon Jocelyn, Alexander C. Luca, Augustus Scipio, and Bias Stanley, came together to support a bold idea-to establish the nation’s first college for Black men-an idea formally endorsed by the first annual Convention of the Free People of Color meeting in Philadelphia; and
WHEREAS: committees were formed to raise $10,000 from Black donors and $10,000 from white allies, with the college to be governed by a board of four Black trustees and three white trustees; and
WHEREAS: these visionaries chose New Haven as the site of their proposed college, believing it to be “healthy and beautiful” with “friendly, pious, generous, and humane” people, among other advantages; and
WHEREAS: the site for the college would have been on Water Street between East and Wallace Streets, land that now sits below the juncture of Interstates 91 and 95; and
WHEREAS: Dennis Kimberly, the Mayor, called the city’s “freemen,” i.e., white male property owners eligible to vote, to an extraordinary town meeting on the proposed college, where town leaders, including distinguished Yale alumni of Yale and others in positions of power and prestige, spoke against the college and so against the full citizenship and humanity of Black people; and
WHEREAS: on September 10, 1831, the Aldermen, Common Council, and Freemen of the City of New Haven passed a set of resolutions opposing the college, calling it proposed college “an unwarrantable and dangerous interference” in the affairs of states with slavery and a threat to Yale and other existing educational academies in New Haven, and affirming that they would “resist the establishment of the proposed College in this place by every lawful means;” and
WHEREAS: these resolutions were drafted by a committee appointed by Mayor Kimberly that included significant New Haven leaders, including Simeon Baldwin, a former congressman, judge, and mayor; William Bristol, a judge and former state senator, state representative, and mayor; David Daggett, a judge, founder of the Yale Law School and former U.S. Senator, state representative, and mayor; Samuel Hitchcock, another founder of the law school and later mayor; Ralph Isaacs Ingersoll, the congressman and former state representative and mayor; all of whom were also Yale alumni; and
WHEREAS: the white male property holders of New Haven voted 700 to 4 to oppose this experiment in Black higher education, thereby thwarting the dream of the nation’s first HBCU and postponing the establishment of a college open to young Black people by decades; and
WHEREAS: in the wake of New Haven’s action in 1831 and the opposition of Canterbury, Connecticut residents to the education of young Black women at an academy in their town in 1832, the State of Connecticut passed legislation in 1833 that for some time legally prohibited Black people from out of state from being educated in Connecticut; and
WHEREAS: Ebenezer Don Carlos Bassett of Derby graduated in 1853 from the Connecticut Normal School (now Central Connecticut State University), and Cortlandt Van Rensselaer Creed and Richard Henry Greene of New Haven graduated in 1857 from Yale, being the first people of African descent known to have graduated from colleges in Connecticut; and
WHEREAS: the prohibition of Black people accessing higher education in New Haven and Connecticut from colonial founding days well into the 19th century, along with limits on access that persisted for generations, has had detrimental and far-reaching consequences down to the present day; and
WHEREAS: it is essential to acknowledge the full history of our community, the tragedies as well as the triumphs, to understand the present, and to work for a better future.
NOW THEREFORE BE IT RESOLVED that the New Haven Board of Alders apologizes for the great harm that was done to Black Americans when City leaders and New Haven voters came together to oppose the college of 1831; and
BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED that the City of New Haven recommits itself to fostering educational opportunities for all its citizens as one means of remediation of the harm done by the action of New Haven leaders and voters in 1831; and
BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED that the City of New Haven will explore ways to memorialize this history so that others may learn not only about the effort to block the college but also about the brave visionaries who dreamed, planned, and worked for abolition, equality, and a truly democratic nation; and
BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED that the City of New Haven encourages the New Haven Public Schools to include this history in teaching local history; and
BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED that the City of New Haven recognizes the work that Yale University, with the Yale and Slavery Research Project, has done to research this history and to acknowledge the role its leaders and alumni played in blocking the proposed college for Black men in 1831; and
BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED that the City of New Haven commends the effort to illuminate this important story by the Beinecke Library and its partners through the documentary film What Could Have Been and the exhibition Shining Light on Truth: New Haven, Yale, and Slavery at the New Haven Museum, and encourage city residents to learn more about this history through the film and exhibition; and
BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED that the City of New Haven commends the establishment of the Pennington Fellowships at New Haven Promise by Yale University to support New Haven public high school graduates who attend historically Black colleges and universities; and
BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED that the City of New Haven encourages Yale University to consider further reparative action and ongoing educational programs to address the legacy of the harm done in 1831.