Associated Press
ORANGE, Va. (AP) — Less than a year after the board that manages James Madison’s Montpelier estate in Virginia announced plans to share authority equally with descendants of people once enslaved there, the board has voted to strip power-sharing status from a group representing African Americans who trace their roots to the historic estate.
The Montpelier Descendants Committee chose three descendants of enslaved people serving on the board and the foundation picked another two, but Friday’s vote means the committee can’t name future members, giving the foundation greater control over the board’s makeup, The Washington Post reported.
“It is a complete reversal of their public commitment that was made on June 16, 2021,” said James French, head of the committee and a member of the Montpelier Foundation’s board. “It’s a rejection of the principle of equality of descendant voices and it’s very unfortunate, because it is a missed opportunity for Montpelier to make history.”
The last two years have seen heightened tensions between the board and the committee, while Montpelier’s reputation as a pioneer in empowering traditionally marginalized groups has grown.
At issue is how the estate frames the history surrounding Madison, the nation’s fourth president who is known as the father of the Constitution.
The board “wants to continue telling the public a whitewashed narrative about the Constitution and its chief architect and deciding what should be said about the 300 people Madison owned,” Bettye Kearse, a board member who was put forward by the descendants committee, told the Washington Post in an email.
Foundation chairman Gene Hickok said the board isn’t backing away from its commitment to fully represent descendants on the board, an idea known as structural parity, but working with the committee has been difficult and the board wants to be able to choose descendant members from a wider pool.
“This is an effort to reset the process,” Hickok said. “It certainly doesn’t have the board backing away from parity. We are very committed to parity. The challenge has been organizationally getting there.”
The change upset many estate staffers, who say the committee of descendants has been a partner in interpreting the history of Madison, his family and the roughly 300 enslaved people who lived and died there over 140 years.
A majority of the roughly 40 full-time staffers urged the board not to approve the change in an unsigned resolution.
Paul Edmondson, the chief executive of the National Trust for Historic Preservation, which owns Montpelier, wrote to Hickok on Thursday, urging him not to go ahead with the bylaw change. The descendants chose the committee as their formal voice, he said, and the original commitment to give them equal seats on the board “acknowledged the right of the descendant community to define itself, rather than to be defined by the foundation. The newly proposed revisions to the bylaws would do the opposite.”