Princeton students want to scrub Woodrow Wilson's name from campus
Students from the Black Justice League organized a protest Wednesday, drawing nearly 200 students outside the building holding President Christopher Eisgruber's office, reported the Daily Princetonian.
The student protesters began chanting, "We here. We been here. We ain't leaving," and moved into the building, commencing a weeklong sit-in at the foot of Eisgruber's office, the Daily Princetonian wrote.
Pres. Eisgruber listens to the concerns of students holding a sit-in at Nassau Hall. pic.twitter.com/2tJwnfFV1C- Princeton University (@Princeton) November 18, 2015
As of Wednesday, Eisgruber said he would not meet the demands.
The protests are ongoing, as students have set up camp inside Nassau hall and vow to stay until their demands are met. As of Thursday afternoon, Eisgruber hadn't been to his office and hasn't made any further public statements.
Wilson, who was Princeton's president from 1902 to 1910, also served as the 28th president of the US.
Born in Virginia, and coming of age during the Confederacy, Wilson was a traditional southern Democrat. While many of his policies were liberal, Wilson and his staff fought to re-segregate the federal government, making it difficult for black employees to secure senior government positions, according to the Washington Post.
Even more egregious, Wilson's scholarly writings served as the basis for the now-infamous silent film "Birth of a Nation," which glorified the white supremacist Ku Klux Klan. Wilson loved the film so much that he held private screenings in the White House, noted the Washington Post.
Wilson even went as far as telling Monroe Trotter, a prominent black activist at the time, that "...segregation is not humiliating, but a benefit, and ought to be so regarded by you gentlemen."
The protest at Princeton comes on the heels of a wave of activism at colleges across the US, where students have banded together against racism on campus.
The student protests began at University of Missouri with the #ConcernedStudent1950 movement that successfully demanded the resignation of President Tim Wolfe over what students saw as the administration's inaction over a series of racist occurrences. The protests quickly spilled over to schools in the Northeast, like Yale, where the debate over offensive Halloween attire catalyzed a larger discussion about how marginalized many black, Latino, and other students of color feel on campus.