Nathaniel Rochester Hall, a building originally dedicated to the land speculator and active participant in the slave trade
In recent decades, renaming has become an important vehicle for communities attempting to commit to social change, and the Rochester metropolitan area is no exception.
In the
On
Students gathered to celebrate the renaming and to learn more about why
Evelyn Sutkus, a third year Motion Picture Science student at RIT, expressed her view on the renaming.
“I think it was a very intelligent choice, I think it reflects the change that RIT wants to make in a more tangible way other than just saying they promote it.”
While many students and Rochester residents may view renaming as a positive change, there is still the matter of the entire city and even the airport code remaining a firm reminder of Nathaniel Rochester.
When asked about our city and whether it being named after Nathaniel Rochester should be reconsidered, Sutkus said, “It’s a complicated issue
This rededication is but a small part in a much larger, national conversation involving America's complicated history with regards to its Black residents, who only a few generations ago were still second-class citizens and not 200 years ago were enslaved.
Hannah Ray, a first year Biomedical Engineering student, felt that this issue is worth thinking about. “It's a part of history but history changes, history moves on,” she noted.
While renaming the city might be off the