Database of the Harvard Slavery Remembrance Program
The Harvard Slavery Remembrance Program (HSRP) is charged with identifying individuals enslaved by University leaders, faculty, or staff or who labored on Harvard’s campus between 1636 and 1865 and their direct descendants – living and deceased. This charge seeks to advance Recommendation 4 included in the 2022 Report of the Presidential Committee on Harvard & the Legacy of Slavery.
HSRP released a database in 2026, which builds on initial work included in the 2022 Report, and reflects the most recent update on this research as led by American Ancestors, the nation’s oldest genealogical nonprofit and Harvard’s partner in this work (updated as of May 2026).
This database should be treated as a work-in-progress with possible errors. As research continues, we anticipate finding additional information and individuals who were enslaved by Harvard leaders, faculty, or staff. After Harvard has more fully expanded this database, we look forward to beginning to engage direct descendants, tell their stories, and honor their memories.
Resources
Frequently Asked Questions
In 2022, the Report of the Presidential Committee on Harvard & the Legacy of Slavery (“the Report”) outlined the University’s direct, financial, and intellectual ties to slavery. Since that time, Harvard – through the Harvard & the Legacy of Slavery Initiative (H&LS) – has been engaged in active and long-term implementation work to cast light on its legacies of slavery and address enduring consequences through purposeful change. This work is grounded in Harvard’s educational mission and the recommendations from the Report. The ongoing research of the Harvard Slavery Remembrance Program (HSRP), which compiles ongoing genealogical research on enslaved individuals who labored on Harvard’s campus as well as those enslaved by Harvard leadership, faculty, or staff (Harvard affiliates) from 1636 and 1865, is a key part of this ongoing work.
American Ancestors is the nation’s oldest genealogical nonprofit, based in Boston, MA. With a team of over 100 that includes historians, genealogists, educators, archivists, librarians, and data specialists, they are dedicated to the study of family history, heritage, and culture.
American Ancestors has been a partner in the HSRP since 2022, when the H&LS Initiative was first established, working to identify the individuals enslaved by Harvard leaders, faculty, and staff, and their descendants. In February 2025, Harvard expanded the partnership with American Ancestors who now leads the continuing descendant research.
HSRP’s research methodology relies on a wide range of documented evidence, including wills, journals, letters, land deeds and property, marriage, court and church records to identify documentation that indicates a Harvard affiliate enslaver, the individuals enslaved, and where enslaved individuals recorded their life events.
HSRP’s researchers rely on these types of evidence because enslaved individuals were not named in censuses until after emancipation, and because federal censuses only began in 1790, after the abolition of slavery in Massachusetts. To the extent that documentation can help shed light on family lore and oral tradition, we fully support doing so. However, this database, while not setting aside family lore and oral tradition, relies on the archival historical documentation described above to confirm relationships and support further research.
For more information on the research methodology, please read A Note on Process.
Recent News
Read more about the ongoing work of the Harvard Slavery Remembrance Program.
Harvard releases information on 1,613 individuals enslaved by leaders, faculty, or staff
Tracing Harvard’s ties to slavery: Recovering names and histories
Slavery researchers seek more detailed picture of pre-Civil War Harvard
Harvard Slavery Descendants Program: What's Next?
Harvard, American Ancestors expand efforts to reconstruct family histories — Harvard Gazette
Harvard University Expands Partnership with American Ancestors in Support of Slavery Remembrance Program
Resources
If you are interested in doing research on your ancestry, here are a few resources (some free and others fee-for-service) that provide information on how you can get started.
- Afro-American Historical and Genealogical Society – Genealogy 101, Getting Started with African American Family Research
- Afro-American Historical and Genealogical Society New England Chapter
- American Ancestors – Getting Started in Family History
- American Ancestors – 10 Million Names
- American Ancestors – Getting Started in African American Research
- Ancestry.com
- Black Pearls of Genealogy
- FamilySearch – Find your African American ancestors
- Library of Congress – Local History & Genealogy
- Massachusetts Archive – Genealogy Resources & More
- Massachusetts Society of Genealogists, Inc.
- National Archives – Native American Heritage
- National Archives – Resources for Genealogist
- People of the Historical Slave Trade
- SlaveVoyages
- U.S. Department of the Interior – Trace Indian Ancestry