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College History Task Force

In July 2020 the St. John’s College History Task Force was tasked with researching the college’s past in order to understand its relationship to indigenous and enslaved people, and to make recommendations to the board on how that history should be acknowledged. Although most of this history took place in Annapolis, as the Santa Fe campus was established more than 250 years after the college was founded, this is not the history of one campus or the other, but the history of the college. Reflecting this, the Steering Committee of the Task Force has representation of all the roles that make up the college community. 

In February 2025, the College History Task Force provided their final report to the board on how to acknowledge the institution’s history and association with slavery. The task force’s recommendations, which will be taken under advisement by the presidents and implemented where funding is available, include: 1) expanding historical information on the website, reprinting historical books and articles, and including a short overview in freshman orientation 2) partnering with community organizations in Annapolis to increase the amount of academic support and community service opportunities for students 3) developing additional campus signage and self-guided walking tours 4) including college history in the New Program via lectures, preceptorials, faculty seminars, and student discussions 5) establishing an annual lecture on democratic citizenship and different legal topics 6) considering a second phase to research other historical topics identified by the task force but not included in this phase and applying for grant money to fund this research. Following this set of recommendations, the work of the task force is considered complete. With sincere gratitude, the college thanks the task force and its chair, Adrian Trevisan (A84), for their dedication and the more than 700 volunteer hours they put forth for this important project.

College History Report

On November 1, 2024, the college released a historical report focused on the men for whom buildings on the college’s Annapolis campus are named and their association with the institution of slavery. Read the announcement. Read the report.

Discussion Guide

The Task Force solicited comments from the St. John’s College community on how the college’s history should be acknowledged. The comment period closed on December 12, 2024. The task force considered these comments in formulating recommendations to the Board of Visitors and Governors on how the college’s history should be acknowledged. This discussion guide was prepared to serve as a tool to accompany the report.

Wednesday, April 17, 2024: Panel Discussion—The Legacy of Francis Scott Key, Class of 1796

This panel event organized by the College History Task Force discussed the complicated legacy of Francis Scott Key, one of St. John’s College’s most notable alumni. Panelists included Professor Mark Clague, author of O Say Can You Hear?, Marc Leepson, author of What So Proudly We Hailed, and Professor William Thomas, author of A Question of Freedom, and moderated by Chanel Compton Johnson, Executive Director of the . .

Presidential Testimony: Maryland Lynching Truth and Reconciliation Commission

On October 8, 2022, President Demleitner attended the Maryland Lynching Truth and Reconciliation Commission hearing, where she submitted testimony to the historical record regarding the 1906 lynching of Henry Davis. Read the testimony here.

College History Report Archive

Task Force Steering Committee Members