Black alumni looking back, 1996

Har­vard offered its first degree to an African Amer­i­can stu­dent in 1870, with Yale fol­low­ing in 1874. At Prince­ton, how­ever, the first two black stu­dents grad­u­ated only in 1947 and 1948, after arriv­ing on cam­pus as mem­bers of the Navy’s wartime V-12 pro­gram. His­tor­i­cally the “Ivy League school for South­ern gen­tle­men,” Prince­ton was a lit­tle “tardy,” accord­ing to Cor­nel West (then direc­tor of the Cen­ter for African Amer­i­can Stud­ies) in the doc­u­men­tary fea­tured here (32:01). In the words of Franklin Moore, Asso­ciate Direc­tor of Admis­sions 1970–1980: “If you had a seg­re­ga­tion­ist atti­tude or would like to cher­ish that atti­tude a lit­tle longer before real life hit you after you grad­u­ated, this was the place to come to.” (31:35).

The first two black grad­u­ates, John Howard ’47 and James Ward ’48, are among the 35 alumni who were inter­viewed for the doc­u­men­tary Look­ing Back: Reflec­tions of Black Prince­ton Alumni, which was writ­ten and directed by Melvin McCray ’74 and pro­duced by McCray and Calvin Nor­man ’77 on the occa­sion of Princeton’s 250th anniver­sary in 1996. Most of the alumni inter­viewed are from the 1960s and 1970s, when the admin­is­tra­tion started to make diver­si­fi­ca­tion of the stu­dent body a pri­or­ity. In the doc­u­men­tary Robert F. Goheen, pres­i­dent between 1957 and 1972, explains how the racial riots of 1963 in the South made him real­ize that Prince­ton, which counted only seven African Amer­i­can under­grad­u­ates in 1962, should pro­vide more edu­ca­tional oppor­tu­ni­ties to qual­i­fied blacks (20:52). Goheen’s suc­ces­sors William G. Bowen (Pres­i­dent 1972–1988) and Harold T. Shapiro (Pres­i­dent 1988–2001) are also inter­viewed, as well as Carl Fields (Assis­tant Direc­tor of Stu­dent Aid 1964–68 and Assis­tant Dean of the Col­lege 1968–1972), and the afore­men­tioned Franklin Moore.

The 75 minute doc­u­men­tary, in which alumni describe con­trast­ing expe­ri­ences and feel­ings, is divided into sev­eral chap­ters: “The early his­tory” (2:59), “Inclu­sion” (20:46), “Diverse back­grounds” (25:59), “First impres­sions” (28:44), “A mat­ter of race” (31:57), “Aca­d­e­mics” (43:51), “Nas­sau Hall Protest” (detail­ing the protest of April 14, 1978 over Princeton’s invest­ments in South Africa, 56:40), “Grad­u­a­tion” (1:01:35), “One Word” (1:04:20), and “Part­ing thoughts” (1:05:20). In the first chap­ter Woodrow Wilson’s racism is dis­cussed (6:16). The intro­duc­tion of coed­u­ca­tion in 1969 is dis­cussed at 48:43.

In addi­tion to the inter­views, the pro­duc­ers use his­tor­i­cal footage and pho­tographs (includ­ing mate­ri­als from Mudd Man­u­script Library and pri­vate sources) and ren­der­ings of “Old Nas­sau and “Going Back” by the a capella group “The Persuasions.” The doc­u­men­tary was pro­duced under the aus­pices of the Steer­ing Com­mit­tee for Princeton’s 250th Anniver­sary, in con­junc­tion with the Asso­ci­a­tion of Black Prince­ton Alumni (ABPA) and the Alumni Coun­cil. It won a Bronze Medal from the Coun­cil for the Advance­ment and Sup­port of Edu­ca­tion (1998).

This VHS video is part of the Uni­ver­sity Archives’ His­tor­i­cal Audio­vi­sual Col­lec­tion (item no. 1361).