Harvard University Acquires the Family Papers of Professor Patricia J. Williams

The Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Study at Harvard University has acquired the archives of the family of Patricia J. Williams, the James L. Dohr Professor at the Columbia University School of Law. The archives include 65 boxes of family documents going back more than century.

Professor Williams notes that “my family are pack rats. They saved everything. They took pictures of everything. They kept detailed journals and scrapbooks; they published articles and books; and they often were themselves the subject of articles, particularly in the African-American press.” The archives include papers that were stored in her parents attic in Boston and at their summer home in Martha’s Vineyard.

Williams’ great-grandfather on her father’s side, was in his 70s when he walked away from the swamps of north Florida, where he had been enslaved. He made it to a “maroon” colony in South Carolina, where runaway slaves, Native Americans, and abolitionist missionaries lived. After settling there, he married a younger woman with whom he had eight children, all of whom survived. Williams’ grandfather, the eldest, lived to be 96, and the other children lived to be over 100.

Professor Williams has taught at Columbia University since 1991. She is a graduate of Wellesley College and Harvard Law School.

Related Articles

1 COMMENT

  1. YOUR BOOK, THE ALCHAMY OF RACE, YOU WERE QUITE PROFOUND, SO MUCH SO, I COULD AND WOULD BE ABLE TO VIBE WITH YOU THROUGH THE FOGGEST ASPECTS OF BLACK LIFE. IF YOU ARE STILL IN THE TRUGGLE, I AM HAVE A SEIOUR PROJECT I’D LIKE YOUR INPUT. AND YOU ARE THAT CRACY BITCH. SMILE111

Leave a Reply

Get the JBHE Weekly Bulletin

Receive our weekly email newsletter delivered to your inbox

Latest News

UCLA and Charles Drew University of Medicine Receive Funding to Support Equity in Neuroscience

Through $9.8 million in funding, the Dana Foundation will establish the UCLA-CDU Dana Center for Neuroscience & Society, which aims to gain a better understanding of the neuroscience needs of historically underrepresented communities in Los Angeles.

American Academy of Physician Associates Launches Program to Increase Diversity in the Field

"Increasing the representation of healthcare providers from historically marginalized communities is of utmost importance for improving health outcomes in all patients,” said Jennifer M. Orozco, chief medical officer of the American Academy of Physician Associates.

James Crawford Named Sole Finalist for President of Texas Southern University

Texas Southern University has named James W. Crawford as the sole finalist for president. He has spent the past two years as president of Felician University in New Jersey and has over 30 years of service in the United States Navy.

Report Reveals Black Students Significantly More Likely to Drop Out of Postsecondary Education

In analyzing data of postsecondary education among students who were in ninth-grade in 2009, the study found Black students were significantly less likely than their White peers to enroll in and complete all levels of postsecondary education.

Featured Jobs