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Donor Family Sues College for Stripping Ancestor’s Name From Campus Chapel

Lawsuit says ancestor was mischaracterized, wants name restored or $2.23 million

The family of Vermont governor who paid for a chapel to be built on his college campus a century ago is suing the institution after his name was removed.
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Donor Family Sues College for Stripping Ancestor’s Name From Campus Chapel
The nameplate of Mead Memorial Chapel at Middlebury College was removed on Sept. 27, 2021. Courtesy of James Douglas
Darlene McCormick Sanchez
By Darlene McCormick Sanchez
8/17/2023Updated: 8/18/2023
0:00

A Vermont judge has ruled a lawsuit will move forward against Middlebury College for removing the name of a prominent donor from the campus chapel because of his views on eugenics.

The 223-year-old college had filed a motion to dismiss the lawsuit. But Judge Robert A. Mello ruled in the first week of August to reject that request and let the lawsuit proceed.

In the lawsuit, the donor’s family states that without warning or public discussion the college removed the name of Dr. John Abner Mead—an alumnus and a former Vermont governor—from the chapel named for him.

The 79-page lawsuit states Dr. Mead paid $75,000 to have the Mead Memorial Chapel built in 1914.

The lawsuit contends that having the chapel bear the Mead name was a condition of the donation that funded it. If the name isn’t restored to the building, the plaintiffs want “its full monetary value,” plus interest—about $2.23 million in today’s dollars.

In September, it will be two years since the Mead name occupied a place of honor over the chapel door. The college did not respond to requests for comment from The Epoch Times.

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On its website, the college posted a statement addressed to the Middlebury community about the controversy.

James Douglas, a former Republican governor of Vermont, speaks for the family of previous Vermont governor John A Mead, M.D., who died in 1920. (Courtesy of James Douglas)
James Douglas, a former Republican governor of Vermont, speaks for the family of previous Vermont governor John A Mead, M.D., who died in 1920. Courtesy of James Douglas

The statement indicates that the decision to remove the Mead name was triggered by a public apology issued by the Vermont Legislature in 2021.

Lawmakers said they were sorry about former bipartisan legislation “authorizing the forced sterilization of at least 250 Vermonters as part of the implementation of a eugenics policy in the first decades of the 20th century.”

The lengthy statement said Dr. Mead had promoted the eugenics policy, citing a transcript of a speech he made in 1912 as he left his role as governor.

In the speech, he said “degenerates” should be prevented from having children.

But this doesn’t accurately represent the whole of Dr. Mead’s character or take into account the good he did for the state, the community, or the college, according to another former Vermont governor, James Douglas.

The college wants to hold someone from the past to the standards of the present, Mr. Douglas told The Epoch Times.

And that amounts to just another instance in the growing trend of “cancel culture” that must be fought, he said.

Two Governors, One Battle

Middlebury College is a private school with about 2,800 undergraduates and an endowment of $1.5 billion. The total cost of attendance per student is about $84,000 a year, according to the college website.
Middlebury is Mr. Douglas’s alma mater, and he teaches political science there. Dr. Mead’s descendants contacted him after news of the name’s removal spread, he said.

“They want justice, which means a restoration of their ancestor’s name,” Mr. Douglas said.

Dr. Mead’s story at Middlebury College started when he was working his way through college. He paused his education in 1864 to join the Union Army. During the American Civil War, he fought in the battle of Gettysburg, according to the lawsuit.

He eventually graduated from Middlebury in 1864 and went on to be a businessman, physician, politician, and philanthropist. He served as Vermont’s 47th lieutenant governor from 1908 to 1910. From 1910 to 1912, he served as Vermont’s 53rd governor.

He funded the chapel construction in 1914 and died in 1920.

Dr. John Mead, a former Vermont governor, graduated from Middlebury College in Vermont in 1864. (Courtesy of James Douglas)
Dr. John Mead, a former Vermont governor, graduated from Middlebury College in Vermont in 1864. Courtesy of James Douglas

Now, the family is suing the college for “breach of contract,” because the chapel no longer bears his name.

Mr. Douglas is listed on the lawsuit as a special administrator of the Mead Estate, so he can serve as the family’s representative.

‘Under Cover of Darkness’

In September 2021, Mr. Douglas heard rumors that something was afoot concerning the iconic chapel. So one morning, he walked to the site.

There, he saw a ladder.

“And sure enough, the space for the nameplate was empty, and the brick behind it was showing through,” Mr. Douglas recalled.

The Mead name was gone.

The administration seemed to have made “this decision under cover of darkness,” Mr. Douglas said.

Efforts to talk to campus administrators or get answers from board members were unsuccessful, he said.

Middlebury College’s online statement included a link to a transcript of Dr. Mead’s speech when he left the office of governor, two years before funding the chapel.

After researching, the college wrote, a decision was made that “the name of former Governor Mead on an iconic building in the center of campus is not consistent with what Middlebury stands for in the 21st century.”

In his speech, the college pointed out, Dr. Mead had said those with “cursed defects” were marrying others with “defects,” thus increasing their population.

Dr. Mead said the “insane, the epileptics, the imbeciles, the idiots, the sexual perverts, together with many of the confirmed inebriates, prostitutes, tramps and criminals that fill our penitentiaries, jails, asylums, and poor farms are the results of these intermarriages or the natural offspring of defective parents.”

Mr. Douglas said he wasn’t aware of protests on campus from students or faculty about the chapel’s name. He questions the wisdom of wiping away mention of historical figures based on parts of their past now deemed unacceptable.

But “this is not about erasing history,” according to the college’s explanation. Removing the name was necessary because the chapel is meant be “a place of welcome for all.”

Apologizing for Eugenics

The Mead family’s lawsuit argues the college made “grossly distorted” accusations that their ancestor made an “urgent call” for the Vermont Legislature to adopt policies and make laws based on eugenics theory.

It points out that Dr. Mead died more than a decade before the Vermont Legislature enacted eugenics-based legislation.

The result of that 1931 legislation was a state-sanctioned eugenics movement targeting indigenous people and other groups. Eugenics calls for sterilizing people based on race, sex, ethnicity, economic status, or disabilities.

The Vermont Legislature’s formal apology came 90 years later. It triggered the college’s review of Dr. Mead.

Civil War re-enactors at the Battle of Gettysburg reenactment event in Gettysburg, Pa., on July 2, 2022. (Samira Bouaou/The Epoch Times)
Civil War re-enactors at the Battle of Gettysburg reenactment event in Gettysburg, Pa., on July 2, 2022. Samira Bouaou/The Epoch Times

According to the lawsuit, Dr. Mead had said lawmakers should “safeguard and restrict the issuing of marriage licenses to persons convicted of rape, incest, open or gross lewdness, and cases where either of the parties are known to be suffering tuberculosis, syphilis, or epilepsy, and in cases where either party has been in confinement for habitual drunkenness, feeble-mindedness, or insanity.”

The college wronged Dr. Mead by suggesting he was motivated by racism and by failing to look at his overall history, which included “selfless acts and the altruistic contributions” made to “his nation, state, county, town, church, and to Middlebury College itself,” the family’s lawsuit states.

A solution better than removing his name from the chapel would have been to install a plaque outlining how eugenics was wrong and has since been condemned by society, Mr. Douglas said.

“Whether it’s [George] Washington or [Thomas] Jefferson or [Abraham] Lincoln or Governor Mead, you can pick out something you don’t like” about the flaws of any historical figure, Mr. Douglas said.

In an effort to show his displeasure with the college, Mr. Douglas didn’t participate in his 50th class reunion. The former governor graduated in 1972 and is among the school’s most famous alumni.

Portrait of T.C. Williams Sr., who was instrumental in establishing the law school at the University of Richmond. (Courtesy of Stuart Smith)
Portrait of T.C. Williams Sr., who was instrumental in establishing the law school at the University of Richmond. Courtesy of Stuart Smith

Cost of Erasing History

The Vermont case and others have garnered national attention as a symbol of the ongoing culture war over U.S. history.

Many universities have renamed or removed statues of historical figures in the name of anti-racism since the death of George Floyd in 2020.

Left-wing groups nationwide have demanded racial justice and called for the removal of statues of Christopher Columbus, Abraham Lincoln, and others.

And that’s propelled descendants of other university benefactors to make legal complaints similar to the Mead family’s action.

The University of Richmond removed the name of donor T.C. Williams from its law school, citing student complaints that he allegedly owned slaves more than 175 years ago. 

Now, the Williams family wants the Virginia school to give back donations they’ve made throughout the years, with interest. The amount tops $3.6 billion.

Family member Robert Smith, who graduated from the law school that formerly bore his great-great-grandfather’s name, told The Epoch Times that if the family name is no longer good enough for the university, neither is the family’s money.

Darlene McCormick Sanchez
Darlene McCormick Sanchez
Reporter
Darlene McCormick Sanchez is an Epoch Times reporter who covers border security and immigration, election integrity, and Texas politics. Ms. McCormick Sanchez has 20 years of experience in media and has worked for outlets including Waco Tribune Herald, Tampa Tribune, and Waterbury Republican-American. She was a finalist for a Pulitzer prize for investigative reporting.
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