The Clemson Board of Trustees voted Friday to change the name of the Calhoun Honors College after former players Deshaun Watson, DeAndre Hopkins and many others urged the university to make the change.
The honors college was named for John C. Calhoun, a South Carolina politician who served as vice president from 1825-1832 and was an outspoken advocate of slavery, saying it was “a positive good.” It will now be known as the Clemson University Honors college, and the change was voted on during a special meeting.
Since George Floyd’s death in Minneapolis, protests around the country have not only addressed police reform but also racial and social injustice.
Watson and Hopkins, who played at Clemson together, took to social media to share a link to a petition that demands that Clemson “remove John C. Calhoun’s name from one of our most distinguished academic programs.”
Nearly 20,000 people signed the petition.
“Board members have felt and feel that it is important to address this matter now rather than what until July due to the recent events happening across our country,” Clemson Board of Trustees Chairman E. Smyth McKissick said Friday. “No one can watch what happened to George Floyd in Minneapolis and not be outraged. That terrible death and other incidents across our country reinforced that we all still have work to do, and that includes Clemson.”
In addition, the Board of Trustees asked the South Carolina legislature to allow the university to rename another building on campus, Tillman Hall, named for Benjamin “Pitchfork” Tillman, a former governor and white supremacist who led an all-white militia after the Civil War in the lynching of black people.
Tillman Hall is subject to a state law called the Heritage Act, passed in 2000. The law requires a two-thirds vote of the General Assembly to change any historical monument or building.