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Home Nigerian News

UNB Strips Ludlow’s Name From Law Faculty Building

Stanley Ugagbe by Stanley Ugagbe
May 27, 2020
in Nigerian News
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By Stanley Ugagbe

The University of New Brunswick board of governors has voted to strip George Duncan Ludlow’s name from the school’s law faculty building in Fredericton because of his connections to slavery and the abuse of Indigenous people.

The Nigerian Canadian News gathered that crews removed the name within 30 minutes of the vote, which also recommended installing a permanent display that explores Ludlow’s history and explain why his name was removed from the building.

Recall that Ludlow was a loyalist from New York who became New Brunswick’s first chief justice in the 1780s, and he was also one of the last judges in the British empire to uphold the legality of slavery.

The former chief justice was also a member of the board of directors for the Sussex Vale Indian Day School, which contracted out First Nations children as indentured servants.

According to reports, the UNB Student Union and the Law Students’ Society both pressured the school to have Ludlow’s name removed.

We also gathered that the student union sought to have the name removed from all maps and university literature, and lobbied for a plaque to be created to contextualize Ludlow’s place in New Brunswick’s history.

In his remarks, Paul Mazerolle who is the president UNB, said a working group that studied the issue has recommended holding an educational event or events to share what was learned through its review and encourage further study of African-Canadian and Indigenous history in New Brunswick.

Mazerolle said “Obviously lots of people won’t agree with this decision and lots of people are heartened by this decision,”

“Maybe in time more and more people will understand and respect the decision we’ve made.”

The working group in its 40-page report said it heard from people who wanted the name removed, along with a “smaller number” who supported keeping it.

The report stated that “Notably, several current law students expressed feelings of shame, embarrassment and re-victimization when entering the Faculty of Law with Ludlow’s name prominently displayed above the main entrance”.

“Some were against removing or changing names and some feel a sentimental attachment to the name, without connecting it to the man himself.”

According to the report, no documentation could be found in the archives indicating that the president at the time of the naming, Colin B. MacKay, had been told about Ludlow’s association with slavery or the Sussex Vale school. However, Karl Dore, then assistant professor and later dean of law, wrote to the working group to say he raised the concerns with MacKay in 1968 before the opening of the building.

The detailed report also contains written submissions made to the working group that demonstrate strong emotions on both sides of the issue.

“The thought of renaming Ludlow Hall is repulsive,” wrote one person, while another wrote to say they are embarrassed to have the name Ludlow associated with the school. “As far as I am concerned, his association with the school should have already been removed.”

Yet, another said there will be scrutiny of whatever name is chosen as a replacement: “What happens in 50 years when the new namesake is discovered to have done things that are against the current day’s standards?”

We also gathered that others expressed concerns that efforts are being made to rewrite history and said the issue should be explained without removing the name.

But President Mazerolle said the university is not trying to erase history, noting that a plaque with Ludlow’s biography and the reasons for removing the name will be in place permanently.

According to the President, a new name will be chosen before the end of the year. He succinctly averred that the working group will now review the process for naming places at both the Fredericton and Saint John campuses. Another report is to be completed by December 1.

However, pundits believe the issue at UNB is just the latest example of efforts to remove colonial names and symbols from public spaces in Canada.

Recall that two years ago, the City of Halifax removed a statue of Edward Cornwallis, who founded the city in 1749, over his proclamation offering a bounty to anyone to killed a Mi’kmaq person.

We also recall that in 2018, a statue of Sir John A. Macdonald, Canada’s first prime minister, was removed from the steps in front of Victoria City Hall because of Macdonald’s role in creating the residential school system.

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Stanley Ugagbe

Stanley Ugagbe

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