Introduction
In late April 2021, the news broke that the bones of a Black child murdered by the Philadelphia police in the 1985 MOVE bombing were used as props in a free online Princeton University course, filmed at Philadelphia’s University of Pennsylvania Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology (hereinafter Penn Museum).Footnote 1 The previous week, the Penn Museum issued a public apology for their “unethical possession” of over 1,300 crania from which white racial scientist – and University of Pennsylvania graduate – Samuel George Morton extracted data to prove the inherent superiority of the white race.Footnote 2 This article addresses the unfolding situation, catalyzed by these weeks in April 2021 but starting decades and centuries earlier. As I finalize my edits on this article in June 2023, the implications of an extensive report on the treatment of the MOVE remains, released by the city of Philadelphia a year ago,Footnote 3 have yet to be fully addressed, and most of the demands of the MOVE organization have not been met.Footnote 4
In the time since I originally researched and wrote this article, I have become personally involved in descendant community organizing around the Morton Cranial Collection, as a court granted the Penn Museum’s request to be allowed to bury the remains of what they claim to be 20 “Black Philadelphians,” instead of relinquishing control over their remains to those who can best care for them.Footnote 5 My involvement has been not only as a scholar who works in this area but also as a person who is acutely aware that my own Indian ancestors have sat on shelves in the Penn Museum’s basement alongside the skulls that Penn now seeks to bury and were likewise used by Morton and his successors to prove the superiority of the Caucasian race, as he termed it. This shared legacy and fate of people from all over the world ties together complex and overlapping descendant communities of care, and the work of finding ceremony and rest for these ancestors will last for decades.Footnote 6
These are painful stories to explore – ones that constitute targeted, ongoing terrorism against specific people and against racialized groups of people. I am sharing these stories because I do believe that the dead rise when they are ready – ready to force the conversation about the crimes committed against them, ready to demand the remembrance and rest that they are due. Long after they lost their lives within contexts of white supremacist violence, they live on, precisely because their bodies are not in the right place. It matters that the people who are responsible for stealing, retaining, and abusing ancestral remains were – and, in some cases, remain – highly regarded by their colleagues. The Penn Museum describes Samuel George Morton as “the pre-eminent American scientist of his time,”Footnote 7 and Alan Mann, who insistently misidentified and then hoarded the remains of two MOVE children when he was the curator-in-charge of the Morton Cranial Collection, says that Morton is considered by some to be “the founder of physical anthropology.”Footnote 8
During Morton’s lifetime, the city of Philadelphia was the cultural and medical center of the United States, and Morton was a well-connected and well-respected member of the political elite.Footnote 9 Mann himself had a distinguished career first at the University of Pennsylvania, and later at Princeton University, where he retains emeritus status despite student protests after his role in the theft of MOVE bombing victim remains became public.Footnote 10 And Mann’s former student, Janet Monge, the curator who filmed the video using Katricia Dotson’s remains,Footnote 11 who was also in charge of the Morton Cranial Collection, is fondly regarded by many who have encountered her in real life or through her numerous television appearances and presentations and was even named 2014 Curator of the Year by Philadelphia magazine.Footnote 12 Each of these scientists was nurtured by, and remains embedded in, institutional structures that trained and supported their work and sanctioned it in various ways – for example, Monge was recently a co-author on a publication in the prestigious journal Nature. Footnote 13
At the other end of the spectrum, there have been calls in printFootnote 14 as well as commissions established by various anthropological associationsFootnote 15 seeking stricter legal and ethical standards as a result of the abuses that came to light in 2021. Still more of their colleagues and successors have attempted to minimize the actions of Mann, Monge, and the Penn Museum as just another example of possibly unethical, but unexceptional, practices that appear everywhere. This is absurd and reflects the continued racism rampant in museum, medical, and anthropological fields; indeed, if it is true that every museum contains the remains of victims of very recent police violence whose families believed them to be buried, this in no way makes it okay.
The focus of this article, however, is on centuries-old practices of data sharing by white scientists and on how it is a political act when people who consider themselves to possess the remains of our ancestors publish the data they extract from them. We cannot heal the wounds of empire by making the intricacies of its violence available to all. Every act of data sharing is political; given my own position within the academic and museum worlds, it is a political act for me to share the story of the work of Morton, Mann, Monge, and the Penn Museum as well as of the broader structures of power that have supported, enabled, and encouraged them. At the same time, I am intentionally not sharing everything that has been entrusted to me by those who are involved in this ongoing struggle, or that I have uncovered through my own archival research, because much of it is not for me to share. In attempting to strike a balance, I have made some calls with which I do not feel fully at ease. One involves sharing a blurred image from the online Princeton course video, which appears in the next section.
Turning people into data
The data that colonizers create out of the bodies of those they oppress is itself violence. The data discussed here includes not only the measurements and value placed on the skulls by Morton himself but also the online presence of data, images, and the ongoing circulation of racist analyses grounded in his work as well as the circulation of photographs and x-rays of Katricia’s remains and the teaching video of the examination of her bones. The data crimes of scientific experts are multifaceted and are a major tool that they use to keep afloat a dispute grounded on the territory that they control – to have the excuse to continue to keep the dead as their property.
Katricia was 14 years old when she was murdered. She would have been 50 by the time 4,553 students from all over the world had enrolled in Princeton University’s Massive Open Online Course (MOOC) on the free platform Coursera and watched the first lesson that culminated in the examination of her bones.Footnote 16 The six-week course was titled “REAL BONES: Adventures in Forensic Anthropology.” Coursera removed the course from public view when the controversy over it broke out in April 2021, but, at the time of writing, part of the video in which Monge uses Katricia’s bones as teaching tools can be viewed in a segment from “Democracy Now!”Footnote 17 Additionally, some of the pages associated with the course are preserved on the Internet Archive’s Wayback Machine, including transcripts of some of the videos and the description of the first week’s contents.Footnote 18
This learning tool was originally filmed to support Monge’s own teaching at Princeton,Footnote 19 and she assigned it to students in her own Spring 2021 Forensic Anthropology course at the University of Pennsylvania. Monge later said that she understood the MOOC “would have a global reach, forensic anthropologists routinely handle cases involving missing persons or genocide” and considered the MOVE case study of special value for that audience.Footnote 20 In the first four videos of this “lesson” (Figure 1), Monge, then a visiting lecturer at Princeton, introduces the MOVE bombing as the kind of event that can take away “personhood” and describes some of the methods that forensic anthropologists use to determine the age of an unknown victim.Footnote 21 In the second and third videos, she spends time discussing the images of Katricia’s bones – closeup photographs as well as x-rays – and explains how this is a controversial case because while “we” have concluded that this was the body of a young woman, of the age of 18 or older, “other folks looking at the material” have concluded that she was 14 years old.
In these videos, Monge lectured in a studio on Princeton’s campus.Footnote 22 But, for the final video, titled “Forensic Anthropologist at Work: Jane Weiss,” the scene shifts to the Center for the Analysis of Archaeological Materials (CAAM) Room 190 classroom, in the basement of the Penn Museum, where Monge was a curator.Footnote 23 This location was chosen by Monge as a better set.Footnote 24 In this video, a number of bones are arrayed on a table – some smaller, more fragmentary bones on the right, in front of Monge, and larger, more complete bones whose origin is never given, in front of her student, Jane Weiss. The three small, fragmentary bones in front of Monge are part of Katricia’s right thigh (femur), right hip (innominate), and part of the left pubic bone (pubic symphysis).Footnote 25
While they discuss the bones of a murdered Black child, the two white women literally stand in the center of a triangle of racialized human remains – on the examination table in front of them and also in two walls of glass-fronted cabinets full of Morton’s stolen skulls behind them (Figure 2). As their visual arrangement in the Coursera video suggests, these two sets of remains – the bones of the MOVE children murdered in 1985 and the crania in Morton’s nineteenth-century collection – are directly linked in ways that can help us to see how white scientists extract data from the remains of the Black and brown dead in order to support their interests. Morton’s collecting practices were both enabled by, and constituted, US empire. Historian Ann Fabian describes the 138 suppliers that Morton recruited to rob graves: “[M]issionaries in Africa, doctors in Florida and Cuba, diplomats in Mexico and Cairo, white settlers … in Indiana, soldiers in Georgia, explorers in the Arctic, scientists in Oregon, and a president of Venezuela.”Footnote 26 The dead that Morton accumulated in Philadelphia were trophies of American whiteness, which enacted the expanding empire simply by being gathered together in one place, thousands of miles from where they had lived and breathed; just as Katricia’s remains – from a house in West Philadelphia whose proximity Monge stressed in the first video lesson – represent trophies of white dominance over Black resistance.
Everything that shaped this fifth, and final, video in the lesson was built upon a foundation of operationalizing the bodies of non-white dead in the service of white supremacy. The CAAM 190 classroom was built in 2014 to Monge’s specifications, with custom-made, old-fashioned cabinets to display skulls from the Morton Cranial Collection.Footnote 27 Their ordered presence, contained behind glass, conveys authority, control, knowledge – all of which are about whiteness, wealth, and empire. The crania represent the proud lineage of racial science as they were the very instruments with which Morton “proved” the biological superiority of the white race, in the 1830s and 1840s. The door that led to the hallway was to the left of where the film crew set up, and the shelves of the cabinet that faced the glass window of that door exhibited dozens of skulls of dozens of African people who died in Cuban slavery.Footnote 28
In the final Coursera video, Monge describes the condition of the remains and explains that very little was recovered from “this individual”Footnote 29 – one who she had implied in the previous four videos is still unidentified. She introduces her student, Jane Weiss, as “the person who’s looked at them most carefully” because she is doing her senior thesis on them (this lesson was filmed in January 2019). While Monge holds one of the bones up to the camera, she explains that they are “juicy,” they have a sheen reflecting the leeching of bone marrow to the outside of the bone and a distinctive greasy smell – a sign that they are not that old, and she points out the remains of the ligaments.
At Monge’s prompting, Weiss recites some of the different kinds of testing that she has done, and some other kinds of testing that they hope to do. Monge adds that “hopefully this is part of your thesis too, like sampling for DNA analysis and then attempting to match it with, you know, records that are out there of missing folks,” reinforcing the impression that the identity of the person whose remains are in the video is entirely unknown. When asked to estimate the age of the bones, Weiss states: “I know that the person is in their preteen or teenage years,” and Monge redirects her to offer the same explanations that she herself gave in the previous videos for why the bones might seem to be that age (according to Monge, those reasons include: their size, the apparent state of the various growth plates, and so on), but, really, they are of an older individual (according to Monge, those reasons include: MOVE people were malnourished, what look like an unfused epiphysis on the innominate bone is really just the effect of the high heat and of something falling onto the bone when the house collapsed, and so on).
Monge’s language, which I cannot see a way to quote directly without compounding the harm, is remarkable – as intimate as the details she describes are, she does not acknowledge that the forensic experts officially hired to investigate the bombing agreed on the identification of this individual, whose remains were initially designated “B-1.” The expert forensic team that was brought in to identify the remains after the city very publicly botched their investigation of the crime they committed, identified the B-1 remains as those of 14-year-old Katricia “Tree” Africa, who was also described as being present in the basement of the MOVE house at 6221 Osage Avenue by both of the bombing’s two survivors.Footnote 30 In the Coursera videos, Monge notably does not call them “Body B-1,” even though that label is used in the x-rays of Katricia’s remains that she shows in the second videoFootnote 31 and by Weiss in her thesis.Footnote 32 Monge’s specific line of reasoning to support her aging estimate, however, can be traced back to 1985, when her mentor Alan Mann, first used these same arguments to identify “Body B-1” as a 20-year-old woman.Footnote 33 Weiss also replicates Mann’s analysis (presenting it as her own independent opinion) in her senior thesis, completed months after the video was filmed.Footnote 34
How did Katricia’s remains – separated from her name and identity so as to serve as an introductory “case study” of what it means for forensic anthropologists to restore “lost personhood” – end up in front of a film crew in the museum of the Ivy League university in the city that had been that child’s home? Why did Monge claim that her remains had not been identified? And why does she, and the Penn Museum, continue to deny that they also had Delisha Africa’s remains?Footnote 35
Anonymizing Katricia, Disappearing Delisha
The harm in this case is unthinkable.Footnote 36 And, yet, the violence inflicted on the children by the police department that took their lives, by the white medical examiner who gave away their remains, and by the white scholars and curators who used them as teaching tools and props for over 30 years, even exposing them in a teaching video distributed worldwide, is not in any way inexplicable. Rather, it is part of a centuries-long pattern of Philadelphia’s scientists and agents of the state defining themselves as white and human and defining people who looked like these murdered children as Black and subhuman. On 13 May 1985, the Philadelphia Police Department bombed the West Philadelphia home of the members of MOVE, a Black anti-police organization, igniting a fire that burned down an entire Black neighborhood, and murdered 11 people.Footnote 37 The premeditated attack was designed to kill everyone in the house that day, including the children – a fact acknowledged obliquely in October 2022 when the Department of Public Health reissued the death certificates of all 11 victims, to characterize their deaths as homicides rather than accidents.Footnote 38
The attack continues to haunt the city of Philadelphia. Thus, the news in April 2021 that some of its violated dead had been kept at the Penn Museum – and, in the following month, that the city’s Medical Examiner’s Office had also secretly kept a number of trophies from the victims’ bodiesFootnote 39 – opened old wounds for many, including specifically those who loved these people during their lives. Fourteen-year-old Katricia’s family thought that she had been buried, alongside her sister Zanetta, in December 1985, when her father watched her baby blue coffin be lowered into the earth as her aunt collapsed in tears beside the grave.Footnote 40 Katricia’s brother, Lionell Dotson, learned that his sister’s bones were in a teaching video when his wife saw an article about it on the Internet in 2021.Footnote 41 A representative for 12-year-old Delisha’s incarcerated parents authorized the burial of their daughter in September 1986. After believing her daughter to have been buried for 35 years, Janet Africa has had to live with uncertainty as to the whereabouts of her daughter’s remains since 2021. Shortly after the news broke in April 2021, she described the horror: “[W]hen our babies are born, they kill them. When they’re growing up, they kill them. When they get older as adults, they kill them … over and over. And now after so called death … they’re going to do this?”Footnote 42
The “why” behind this horror is complex and also not: the dismembered remains of these criminalized Black people constituted trophies for the white people who had subdued them – a long-standing practice of American white supremacy, reflecting what historian Daina Ramey Berry terms their “ghost value.”Footnote 43 The “how” is still emerging, but what we do know of the path that the girls’ unburied remains took – from the day that their home was bombed to that teaching video – is long and horrifying. Three days after the bombing, Monge, who was then a doctoral student, and her advisor, Mann, a paleoanthropologist at the University of Pennsylvania, examined the remains of all 11 people murdered on 13 May and made identifications of their age and whether they were male or female.Footnote 44 An independent team was brought in two months later, hired by the Philadelphia Special Investigation Commission set up by the mayor and led by world-renowned forensic experts. This team found that Mann and Monge had misidentified a number of the bodies.Footnote 45
Even though he had only been employed by the Medical Examiner’s Office for a day and a half at the beginning of the investigation, Mann reinserted himself following the MOVE Commission’s public hearings in November 1985.Footnote 46 Upon re-examining the remains with Janet Monge, challenged the expert reevaluation of the remains where it contradicted his own, particularly the assessment of the two bodies for which the new teams’ identifications were not backed up by airtight evidence (prior x-rays of unique injuries or bone configurations and so on). Mann insisted these remains, which the external team had identified as 12-year-old Delisha (“Body G”) and 14-year-old Katricia (“Body B-1”), were instead those of a six-year-old girl and an 18- to 20-year-old woman, respectively. Because no individuals fitting those descriptions were in the house at the time of the bombing, Mann essentially argued that there were two Jane Does, two unknown victims of the fire. He was backed in these identifications by the city’s assistant medical examiner, Robert Segal, who had reportedly threatened the leader of the independent team with filing a contradictory report if he was not allowed to co-author their report.Footnote 47 Segal’s own write-up of that reexamination seems to show that Mann quietly conceded that it was possible that Body G was indeed Delisha.Footnote 48 Mann continued to insist that B-1 was not Katricia Dotson.
The painful paper trail for Delisha’s and Katricia’s bones that ended up in Mann’s possession can be seen in three documents from a box that was recently discovered at the Medical Examiner’s Office and is now in the City of Philadelphia’s Archives.Footnote 49 On 6 March 1986, after Katricia’s family believed they had buried her, Segal sent both Katricia’s and Delisha’s remains out for one last review by Stephanie Damadio, an anthropologist at the Smithsonian Institution’s National Museum of Natural History, who still had the remains when Segal submitted his final report on 18 March 1986 (Figure 3).Footnote 50 And when Damadio sent them back in September 1986 (Figure 4) – without the written aging report that Segal had asked for – he gave Katricia’s and Delisha’s bones to Mann (Figure 5). His graduate student, Monge, picked them up at the Medical Examiner’s Office, which was then a short walk away from the Penn Museum, and Mann kept the murdered children’s remains in his office at the museum – where he held the curatorial position his advisee, Monge, would later hold – and never bothered to return them.Footnote 51
Mann appears to have lost interest in the remains quickly, stating that, after 1986, “I do not recall opening the Penn Museum cabinet that safeguarded the fragments or reviewing the fragments.”Footnote 52 However, over the next three decades, Monge invited multiple students to confirm Mann’s aging of Katricia’s bones.Footnote 53 Jane Weiss, the daughter of Jill Topkis Weiss, a major donor to the Penn Museum and member of its Board of Overseers, as well as a trustee of the University of Pennsylvania, was only the most open and public sharing of the data that Mann extracted from Katricia Dotson’s body. In the Coursera video, we witness Monge in the process of teaching yet another student how to “properly” replicate the data of her advisor.
Monge engaged in this pattern of inviting students to replicate the data of a white male predecessor with Morton’s crania as well. In Morton’s case, his data had been publicly debunked in Stephen Jay Gould’s Reference Gould1981 bestseller The Mismeasure of Man. Footnote 54 By 1985, Monge recruited students into the project of measuring and remeasuring the crania in order to defend the accuracy of Morton’s science. With their focus on Morton’s data, the multiple generations of students who have jumped into this debate – either to challenge Gould or to support him – continue to miss the fact that the “collection” is not a set of scientific “specimens”; it is evidence of an ongoing colonial crime in which they are now, at the very least, accomplices.Footnote 55
The Coursera video’s visual juxtaposition of the two sets of stolen remains – Morton’s Cranial Collection and Katricia’s bones – allows us to unlock the ways in which the more recent and ongoing racial violence was built upon a broader logic of white supremacy, rather than just being the deeds of a misguided handful of deranged racists. As Black biocultural anthropologist Rachel Watkins has observed, anatomical collections such as Morton’s often come from the same places that have witnessed some of the most horrifying instances of anti-Black state violence, pointing to their role in shaping white perceptions of Black bodies: the Robert J. Terry anatomical collection, now held by the Smithsonian, originated near where Michael Brown’s body was left in the street for four hours, and the Hamann-Todd anatomical collection is still housed in the same town where, as she describes it, “a 12-year-old boy playing in a park with a toy gun, Tamir Rice, was mistaken for a 20-year-old man brandishing a weapon and was shot dead.”Footnote 56 Similarly, the Morton Cranial Collection is housed just over three miles from 6221 Osage Avenue, the site of the MOVE bombing.
White science, Black bodies, open data
Katricia Dotson and Delisha Africa were not the first criminalized Black Philadelphians to have parts of their bodies collected by the Penn Museum. A number of the skulls that lined the walls of the classroom in which Monge filmed her Coursera video (Figure 2) were also unofficial gifts of the City of Philadelphia to white scientists.Footnote 57 Prior to publishing the 1849 catalog of his collection of crania, Samuel George Morton appears to have personally stolen the heads of at least seven Black people who died in Philadelphia’s almshouse, who were confined there for the crime of being poor.Footnote 58 Such theft from the city-run institution was not an anomaly but, rather, an accepted practice; grave robbing from the almshouse’s burial ground was so widespread that an 1845 letter revealed: “[T]hat it occasions dread and anxiety in the minds of some of the inmates of this House is a well known fact.”Footnote 59 Morton was a physician at the almshouse and may have treated the people whose heads he stole after death. He turned them into objects for his collection of “crania,” the anatomical term for the top portion of the skull that holds the brain and upper teeth, without the moving mandible or lower jaw. There, they joined nearly 1,000 crania that Morton stole from around the world over about two decades.
Based on what he and the men who did most of the stealing for him recorded, the people likely came from all of the countries highlighted on the map (Figure 6).Footnote 60 Morton’s research was boldly expansive in its faith that measuring skulls offered definitive proof of the relative inferiorities of the darker people of the world: those who he believed deserved enslavement, displacement, and exploitation. Morton was not the first to suggest that the human head could be the key to the science of race – a science that was ultimately concerned with proving the superiority of white people over the races they encountered, subjugated, and murdered in their imperial endeavors. In the second half of the eighteenth century, European scientists made much of the supposed perfection of form of Greek and Roman statues as indicative of white superiority,Footnote 61 and the practitioners of phrenology measured thousands of living heads in a closely related project of linking human character and worth to head shape.Footnote 62 Many nineteenth-century scientists and doctors in the United States and Europe also collected skulls of various humans and animals, and engaged in similar work,Footnote 63 though arguably none had the impact that Morton did.
Morton used German racial scientist Johann Friedrich Blumenbach’s division of humanity into five races, between which Morton’s uniquely large collection supposedly allowed him to distinguish on the basis of skull size and shape. According to Morton, bigger skulls meant more intelligence, and he interpreted the data he extracted from his collection to mean that “Caucasians” had the biggest heads,Footnote 64 and the other races fell into a hierarchy beneath them, based on their head size: first “Mongolian,” then “Malay,” “American” (meaning people indigenous to the Americas), and, finally, “Ethiopian.” The central aspect of Morton’s work was data making – capturing data – which is every bit as much a colonial process as is race making. How a measurement gets defined, and what meaning gets assigned to it, is far from neutral or natural. All data creation is reductive, and, when applied to humans, it turns a person into a number or a two-dimensional image, reducing them to something less than fully human. Through the data that he created from the crania he held captive, Morton ventriloquized the beliefs in white superiority that were as widespread among white men in Philadelphia as they were in the American South.Footnote 65
Proving Black people’s “natural” subservience, low intelligence, and, thus, suitability for enslavement seems to have been Morton’s primary preoccupation, whether ostensibly writing about Indigenous people of the Americas or Ancient Egyptians.Footnote 66 For his efforts, he was eulogized thus in the Charleston Medical Journal: “[W]e of the South should consider him as our benefactor, for aiding most materially in giving to the negro his true position as an inferior race.”Footnote 67 What made Morton’s work so powerful was his aggressive openness with his data. Morton spread his racist ideologies beyond his circle of friends and correspondents most significantly through his two major books and their prospectuses and published reviews, which traveled more broadly than did the expensive, image-rich volumes themselves and inspired devoted followers who would advance his racial science even further.Footnote 68 Crania Americana and Crania Aegyptiaca are filled with lists of measurements and detailed lithographs of his collection, tied together by racist conclusions to support the growth of the white supremacist republic he held dear.Footnote 69 In a practice that is still well regarded as a sign of scientific rigor and transparency, Morton obsessively made his raw data available, inviting challenges to his conclusions without, of course, inviting challenges to the data itself. Morton also published and then republished and then republished again the catalog of his collection so that gentlemen scientists everywhere could know as much as possible about its contents.Footnote 70
Images are data too, and, as with Morton’s measurements, the extremely detailed drawings in his books quite literally “capture” that which he has determined to be meaningful about the person, a two-dimensional representation that is so overflowing with details that it redirects our attention from noticing all of the details – all of the three-dimensionality, the humanity of the person – that are missing. These images also hide the damage, violence, and violation that produced the state of the cranium depicted by the artists who Morton hired – the theft, the dismembering, the boiling off of flesh, and, before all of that, perhaps, the violence and starvation that caused the death. The artists also left off of their illustrations all of the writing that Morton and his dealers scribbled directly onto the bones of his “specimens.” Nevertheless, they are a substantial presence in all of the modern photographs and in-person encounters with the crania. Collectively, these labels make a powerful impression of the intellectual mastery of Morton and his circle, across time and space, and their physical possession of these people who he had made his property.
Due to the violence and violation that is Morton’s data, I am reproducing it as little as possible in this article. The specific manner in which he shared his data is crucial and directly related to the Penn Museum’s data-sharing practices, so I feel the need to at least give a sense of the outlines and the characteristics of this data. In doing so, I seek also to foreground my awareness of my position as a scholar and a human with respect to those who were, and continue to be, violated. When it comes to the Morton Cranial Collection, the question of positioning is rendered extremely complex by the breadth of his collecting. His work targeted not just one person or a group of people but was quite clearly also designed to dehumanize all non-white people.
I approach this material as a member of one of the many descendant groups from whom Morton and his network of donors stole ancestors. My Indian ancestors lived and died under Portuguese and British colonial rule in Bombay, Goa, Mangalore, and Karachi; South Asian crania made up one of the largest “groups” in Morton’s collection, after Native Americans, ancient Peruvians, ancient Egyptians, and enslaved Africans.Footnote 71 Following patterns that more or less hold for the rest of his collection, Morton’s catalogs record little other than a racial categorization for most of the 40 heads stolen from the subcontinent, sometimes followed by a gender, some measurements, and maybe concluding with the name of the donor. The person themselves is almost always nameless, their identity subsumed within that of the white collector and the white scientist.
Three of these Indian crania – nameless but for another physician at the Philadelphia almshouse, Joseph Carson, who brought them back from India – hover above the right shoulder of the white student, Jane Weiss, in the widely published stills from the Coursera video, exposed in their own degradation even as they witness the consequences of nearly 200 years of Morton’s numericized racial hatred (Figure 2).Footnote 72 Like Katricia’s bones, their skulls have been rendered anonymous by science, removed from the contexts of their lives and families to become the research tools of empire.
Data versus repatriation
After Morton’s death in 1851, his followers continued his work, providing some of the most enduring images of racial science.Footnote 73 In 1966, his collection of crania was given on permanent loan to the Penn Museum by the Academy of Natural Sciences of Philadelphia. Two decades later, Monge, then a graduate student, was appointed as the first and only “keeper” of the collection, a title that is rarely used in the United States, which the Penn Museum uses to describe a role that combines aspects of a curator and a collections manager.Footnote 74 Monge’s oversight of the Morton Cranial Collection reveals a set of curatorial practices that we see mirrored in her ownership of the MOVE remains: a strategic deployment of the idea of science, of the primacy of data, of the expert and their research that directly overrides the rights of survivors, family, and descendants of lost loved ones who were snatched from crime scenes, battlefields, and graves.Footnote 75 She has been able to do so in large part because there are few rules – whether in terms of law or professional practice – preventing non-medical scientists from extracting data from human remains or requiring them to return the dead to their respective communities.
In the United States, the idea that it was possible for descendant communities to take back their ancestors from the museums and scientists who claimed them as property was codified into law by the Native American Graves Protection and Repatriation Act (NAGPRA) in 1990.Footnote 76 Under NAGPRA, federally funded museums must at least attempt to return certain stolen remains – those that can be associated with federally recognized Indian tribes and Native Hawaiian organizations.Footnote 77
Beyond Native American remains, however, there are few laws that protect human remains in museum contexts. Despite increasing recognition internationally of the rights of postcolonial nations to seek repatriation for their ancestors stolen for science by former colonial powers, museums in the United States are not required to comply with such requests.Footnote 78 Additionally, no legislation offers protection similar to NAGPRA for Black remains in the United States, though efforts to create an African American Graves Protection and Repatriation Act were reinvigorated by the revelation that the Penn Museum secretly held Katricia’s and Delisha’s remains.Footnote 79
This leaves the majority of the Morton Cranial Collection not legally covered by any repatriation laws – positioned, in the words of Rachel Watkins, as “static entities perpetually available for research”Footnote 80 – to be used without consent at any time and in any way that the researchers desire. While these practices are widespread among museum anthropologists, Monge is extreme in her insistence on making sensitive data widely available and unique in terms of the sets of remains on which she has primarily focused her work at the Penn Museum: the iconic collection of Samuel George Morton, which was used to rank the relative value of different races, and the remains of Black people murdered by the police in the 1985 MOVE bombing.
In 2019, the Penn Museum’s cavalier attitude toward the remains it treats as its possessions was directly challenged by West Philadelphia organizer and writer Abdul-Aliy Muhammad, who was the first to say, according to Manlu Liu in The Daily Pennsylvanian, that “[t]he crania in the Morton collection should be returned to relatives, and if that’s not possible, buried.”Footnote 81 Muhammad found out that the remains of enslaved people were in the museum’s basement at the 2019 Penn & SlaveryFootnote 82 Symposium on 3 and 4 April, which they learned about from a pop-up ad online the previous day.Footnote 83 The following year, Muhammad’s calls for return and reparationsFootnote 84 were joined by others, including the abolitionist assembly Police Free PennFootnote 85 and Penn undergraduate student Gabriela Alvarado.Footnote 86 Alvarado, who was transcribing Morton’s correspondence at the time of the George Floyd Uprising, published a piece in the Penn student newspaper on 25 June 2020, vividly describing the horror of the Morton Cranial Collection, wherein “[m]any [of the human beings in the collection] were brutally exploited by colonialism while they were alive, and now they rest in a predominantly white institution.” Alvarado uplifted Muhammad’s and Police Free Penn’s demands for repatriation, stating that “[t]hese people belong with their descendants. They belong in their homeland.”
By the end of the summer, the Penn Museum had removed “the part of the Morton Collection that has been located in a classroom,”Footnote 87 noticeably not mentioning how many crania had been on display in CAAM 190. In part, this reflects the broader disorganization of the Morton Cranial Collection. To this day, there is no precise count of the crania in the collection, though Paul Wolff Mitchell, who worked for Monge for a decade, estimates that between 500–600 of the crania were arranged on shelves in the small classroom.Footnote 88 The museum also established an internal committee to study the “complications” of repatriating the remains of enslaved people in the Morton Cranial Collection.Footnote 89 The membership of this committee remains secret. The Morton Collection Committee’s initial charge was to address the repatriation of the 51 crania of African-born enslaved people who were stolen from their graves in Cuba.Footnote 90 In February 2021, Mitchell, who was then a doctoral candidate in anthropology at the University of Pennsylvania, published a report that called into question the basic assumption that those were the “only” remains of enslaved people in the collection, highlighting the presence of 14 Black Philadelphians who were listed in Morton’s catalogs, some of whom would have been enslaved earlier in their lives.Footnote 91 As a result, the Penn Museum press release on 12 April 2021, containing their apology, and the Morton Collection Committee’s recommendations, expanded the scope of repatriation to include the entire Morton collection.Footnote 92
Another recommendation was “the Museum should ensure that Community consultation is integrated into the process of assessment and action at every step.”Footnote 93 And after hiding from a sea of bad press related to the MOVE remains, the Penn Museum did indeed form a “Morton Cranial Collection Community Advisory Group,” to address the Black Philadelphians in the Morton Cranial Collection. It appears, however, that this is a purely superficial attempt at “community involvement”; without informing the group’s members, the Penn Museum petitioned Philadelphia’s Orphans’ Court for permission to bury these Black Philadelphians, claiming that the burial plan in their petition is the recommendation of the Advisory Group.Footnote 94 However, one member of that body has made it clear that the plan was proposed in its current form by the museum’s director, Christopher Woods, and that they were not even notified that the museum had sought legal permission to carry out the plan.Footnote 95 These top-down processes by the Penn Museum, to borrow the words of Police Free Penn about other egregious actions of the museum, “reproduce[e] Morton’s violent and white supremacist assumption: that the descendents [sic] of enslaved Africans, and of Indigenous, Latinx, and Asian communities do not have the right to care for their own ancestors; and that the desires of imperial knowledge-producers supersede the self-determination of Black and brown communities.”Footnote 96 Will the ancestors be returned, or will the “complications” of repatriation necessitate ever more research by “experts” – and the extraction and open sharing of ever more “data” – indefinitely?
Data theft
The Penn Museum’s promise to repatriate the collection has not been accompanied by any indication that they are considering relinquishing the valued property of the data that their staff and students – and, before them, Penn Medicine alumnus Morton and his followers – extracted from these crania and which the Penn Museum has disseminated on their website for years. The inherent violence of data creation makes each instance of its use an intensification of that violence. This was as true when Morton shared his data widely as it is when Monge used the Internet to spread them even further. In continuing to use this data following any commitment to repatriation, Monge and the museum call into question their understanding of the concept of, and need for, repatriation in the first place. Either they really do not get it, or they are not acting in good faith.
The Penn Museum’s lack of transparency means that it is not entirely clear who “they” are – who is making the decisions about these matters at the museum and if it really goes beyond Monge, who, having worked at the museum for over four decades and developed close relationships with many donors, has an unusually high level of influence for a curator. Regardless, their continued support of her extraction and dissemination of information about the crania is entirely at odds with the perspectives of those who are calling for repatriation of the crania and who insist as well that the museum should “[e]nd the use of data sourced from the collection without consent and remove all images from the Museum’s digital footprint that represent the deceased without consent.”Footnote 97
Is the supposed absence of identification a justification for proceeding without consent? If we lack a known descendant to seek consent from – more often than not because the links of kinship have been severed by empire – is there any ethical way to conduct scientific research or teaching activities on human remains? The emphasis of student activists on the principles of consent invokes the many non-consensual experiments on Black people and other colonized populations carried out by doctors like MortonFootnote 98 as well as the theft of Henrietta Lacks’s DNA, taken from a Black woman dying of cancer at Johns Hopkins University, without her knowledge or consent, by doctors who profited from it financially.Footnote 99 Similar concerns are raised by the ongoing #FreeRenty campaign, supporting the legal battle of a descendant of enslaved people photographed by one of Morton’s collaborators, Louis Agassiz, to get the daguerreotypes of her ancestors back from Harvard University’s Peabody Museum of Archaeology and Ethnology.Footnote 100
On the new “Morton Collection” webpage that the Penn Museum posted in April 2021 to coincide with their apology and commitment to repatriate the collection, the following answer is offered to the “Frequently Asked Questions”: “How has the Morton Collection been used for research?”:
From 2004 to 2011, the Museum was awarded a National Science Foundation grant to CT scan the Morton Collection. As of March 2020, more than 17,500 CT scans have been distributed to scholars around the world; often, researchers use both the actual crania with the CT scans in their research. Researchers have included colleagues from Penn Medicine, Penn Dental, and Penn Law; topics have included worldwide variation in the functional morphology (shape) of the cranium, patterns of growth and development of the cranium and dentition, the analysis of traumatic injury, shape changes in dentition and palate, health and disease patterns of peoples in past human populations, and more.Footnote 101
This statement reflects Monge’s understanding of the crania as scientific research specimens first, foremost, and fairly exclusively. Her pride at making the Morton cranial data so very available to researchers seems to be in alignment with the values of her dissertation research on the methods and materials for casting fossil hominids and primates as tools for scientists – work in which Mann trained her and which she continued to employ students to assist with in the museum’s casting lab.Footnote 102 The seamless connection that she perceived between the two projects is evident from the webpage for the University of Pennsylvania Museum Fossil Casting Program, which includes under “Related Links” on its homepage a (now defunct) link to the database for ordering the CT scans of the crania in the Morton Cranial Collection.Footnote 103
Even with this context, it is hard not to read the above words, which were posted on a website in April 2021, as a refusal to hear or acknowledge the demands to cease research and the distribution of data extracted from stolen ancestral remains. Or perhaps it is the opposite: can we read this as Monge showing by her words and actions that she does hear these demands but that, as a white scientist who is officially in charge of the collection, she is still the one who gets to make decisions about extracting and sharing new data in the form of National Science Foundation-funded CT scans?
The science performed with this data painfully illustrates how reproduction of data compounds the violence of its extraction. The researchers who use the CT scans treat them as generic samples: their violent origin and their connection to Morton and his research is irrelevant, and they are merely useful data points. In one of the many examples of scientific research offered in the “Bibliography” published as part of the Penn Museum’s April 2021 Morton Cranial Collection site,Footnote 104 three scholars from Texas A&M and Florida Atlantic University – Lauren N. Butaric, Robert C. McCarthy, and Douglas C. Broadfield – selected 26 “specimens” from the Morton Cranial Collection for their study of the variation in size and shape of the maxillary sinus in “a small sample of 39 dried human crania of known ecogeographic provenience.”Footnote 105
The public face of Monge’s lack of consideration for consent is a database called the Open Research Scan Archive (ORSA).Footnote 106 The timing of this project, initiated in the early 2000s, is not at all coincidental; many museum anthropologists who were concerned about losing valuable scientific specimens, endeavored to capture and share as much data as possible from any remains that they might be forced by NAGPRA to relinquish.Footnote 107 While the ORSA does not hold the actual CT scans, it is, in effect, a mail-order catalog for these “scholars around the world,” a one-stop shop for nearly all of the dehumanizing data extracted from, and recorded about, the crania by everyone from Morton in the 1830s to Monge and her students and colleagues in the 2000s. The database, which is linked to the Penn Museum’s website currently has 4,450 entries, of which 1,677 are from the Morton Cranial Collection. The main page of the user interface is shown in Figure 7.
The entries in this database are not based on the actual composition of the Morton Cranial Collection at the Penn Museum since no catalog of that collection exists.Footnote 108 Instead, there is an ORSA entry for each skull contained in the published and manuscript sources for this collection,Footnote 109 specifically the crania listed in Morton’s Reference Morton1849 catalog, J. Aitken Meigs’s Reference Meigs1857 catalog,Footnote 110 the Academy of Natural Sciences of Philadelphia’s Ethnology Collection catalog, as well as curatorial notes on the collection from the late 1930s and early 1940s. This means that the entries do not represent the specific crania that the Penn Museum physically possesses and includes many that they do not possess, such as the cranium of a Black Philadelphian that Morton cataloged as no. 55.Footnote 111 What each ORSA entry for each cranium from the Morton Cranial Collection does do is replicate the violent “data” collected by Morton and his successors (including his protégé, J. Aitken Meigs), presented uncritically, no matter how racist the descriptions (and they are all racist). The Penn Museum’s webpage offers a justification for using these terms that boils down to the “man-of-his-time” idea that that is just how “people” talked.Footnote 112 The association of data creation with whiteness is profoundly evident here, as Monge joins her nineteenth-century predecessors in being unable to conceive of the (mostly) non-white people whose heads they stole and held captive as humans, who would most definitely have found those descriptions of their bodies to be “insulting and racist,” even “in the nineteenth century.”
The “Photos” tab displays images from a number of invasive angles, many of which reveal that some of that language that is “insulting and racist to us today” has been literally written onto the crania – whether by Morton or by the small army of white men of leisure and science who may stole these ancestors for his study.Footnote 113 Viewing them in these photographs makes it almost impossible to imagine the overwhelming horror of being in a classroom surrounded by the crania, as Alvarado describes CAAM 190: “[R]ow upon row, marked with numbers and labels such as ‘idiot,’ ‘lunatic,’ and ‘negro’ directly on their foreheads.”Footnote 114 Among the final text fields on the “Other” tab is one for “Repatriation,” which is almost always answered “No” or left empty. It is pretty chilling.
Because the ORSA is based on nineteenth- and early twentieth-century catalogs, rather than the actual catalog of the crania currently at the Penn Museum, it still contains all of the crania that have been designated as subject to NAGPRA, including those that have already been repatriated.Footnote 115 This turns the ORSA into a complete, digital Morton collection, unblemished by the ravages of repatriation, complete with the racist descriptions and “data” extracted from each person. The only thing that distinguishes the NAGPRA-repatriated or eligible crania from the others is that, for almost all Native American crania, the “Photos” tab is empty.Footnote 116 The violation and dehumanization of the nonconsensual publication of images of the dead has become increasingly well understood among anthropologists as unethical,Footnote 117 but it is not forbidden legally by NAGPRA.Footnote 118 It’s somewhat confusing why Monge would make what seems to be a concession toward the idea that the photographs themselves constitute a form of intangible heritage that someone other than her might have claim to and similarly confusing why she would not extend that awareness to other impacted communities who are not covered by NAGPRA. Whatever the reason, it seems a clear example of the bifurcation of anatomical collections that Watkins identifies with the passage of NAGPRA.Footnote 119
The continued existence of this dehumanizing database – which has not been changed at all since the demands for return began in 2019 – seems to powerfully contradict the museum’s April 2021 claims that they wish to repatriate the crania. The disorganization of the collection, and the inconsistent relationship between the ORSA and the crania at the Penn Museum, is evident in the Penn Museum’s May 2022 petition to bury “at least thirteen” crania of Black Philadelphians, with a provision for burying any additional crania from the Morton collection that they discover in the future to be those of Black Philadelphians.Footnote 120 Although the original petition did not specify which crania these are, the research reports released in January 2023 confirmed that the original number was based on the Black Philadelphians identified in Mitchell’s Reference Mitchell2021 report,Footnote 121 which was based primarily on an analysis of Morton’s Reference Morton1849 catalog, and did not involve an examination of the actual collections of the museum.Footnote 122
In their revised request to the Orphans’ Court judge, which was granted, the Penn Museum increased the number of Black Philadelphians to bury to 20. But because the Morton Cranial Collection has never been catalogued by the Penn Museum, it is extremely unclear whether the physical crania they are claiming they plan to bury correlate to particular descriptions by Morton and his successors. Based on my ongoing research, which is limited by my access only to the ORSA and to published and manuscript sources and not to the crania themselves, I think it is unlikely that all of the 20 crania that the Penn Museum plans to bury are in fact the crania of people of African descent who died in Philadelphia; some seem to lack identifying marks that would allow us to match them clearly with the descriptions of a given Black Philadelphian in Morton’s catalog. And, of course, despite the Penn Museum’s claims to desire to give them rest, each person’s skull is still laid bare in dehumanizing descriptions, violating data, and invasive photographs in their entries within the ORSA.
Worse, images of the Morton crania are unfortunately not confined to the ORSA. The Penn Museum’s extensive and profligate use of the images of the stolen crania in the Morton Cranial Collection is in evidence on many pages of their website. On various museum webpages, they function in a decorative manner, marking the topic, the content of the collection in that particular space, setting the tone while simultaneously asserting a white institution’s ownership over these people of color whose bodies were stolen from around the country and around the world. Photographs dehumanize. They measure. They thing-ify. What does Penn hope to gain through its promise of repatriating the entire collection, if not to end and counteract, to the extent possible, such treatment of the colonized by the colonizer?
Again, it is hard to take seriously the museum’s commitment to repatriation when it apparently cannot see the need to make the very straightforward changes to remove these dehumanizing images from its website. Views on the use of images of human remains are currently in flux,Footnote 123 and this is reflected in how multiple publications have first added and then removed images of Morton crania or stills from the Coursera video from their online news articles in recent years.Footnote 124 In each case, the editors have cited different reasons for removing the violent images, but they all seemed to agree that doing so was necessary. This is reflective, I think, of the degree to which such images are one of those aspects of the violence of empire that are not easily parsed. Nevertheless, it is striking that multiple editors at campus, local, and national media outlets all recognized that it was not ethical to show even one image of human remains to illustrate the subject of their news story, while the Penn Museum persists in using thousands of images of the deceased without consent on their website.Footnote 125
Centering the ancestors
The Penn Museum and the University of Pennsylvania have shown again and again that, when it comes to the remains of over 12,000 people that they hold in their collections – accessioned and unaccessioned – they cannot be relied upon to understand what the right thing is, much less do it.Footnote 126 This is most evident in the way in which the museum has continued to act unilaterally in connection with the Morton Cranial Collection. After promising to return the entire collection in 2021, they sought permission from the courts in 2022 to bury the remains of “at least 13” Black Philadelphians, claiming to be acting on the recommendation of their “Community Advisory Group.”Footnote 127 Despite the fact that five of the 14 members appointed to this group are high-level Penn administrators, including the museum’s director,Footnote 128 and that this group at no point operated according to best practices for working with descendant communities,Footnote 129 a judge threw out the objections of the concerned parties and ruled that Penn could proceed with the burial without the knowledge or consent of the descendants of the Black Philadelphians in the Morton Cranial Collection.Footnote 130
Whatever comes next cannot be about “shared authority”; it is time for the museum and the university to relinquish their control entirely, however benevolent they may believe themselves to be. But this does not mean that they can step away completely. The museum and the university are responsible for this violence and for making it right as much as they possibly can. These institutions have only two roles to play in the work to come: to raise and provide the funding for the development of solutions by descendant communities as well as for the implementation of those solutions and to fully cooperate with any requests for support or information made of them by descendants and family members of those whose bodies they have treated as their property.Footnote 131 This goes hand in hand with the Penn Museum having insisted on its right to use the crania for so many decades, regarding them as items of prestige from which it has benefited and proudly claiming Morton as a valued alumnus of the university.Footnote 132 Indeed, the Penn Museum can conceptualize this as part (but not all, by any means) of the reparations it owes as one of dozens of institutions of higher education in the United States that directly profited from slavery as well as provided intellectual backing for white supremacy.Footnote 133
There are at least three types of harm that need to be addressed: on the levels of the actual physical bones (and associated materials, including the documentation of the Medical Examiner’s Office, Morton’s correspondence, and so on); the intangible (digital data such as CT scans of the crania, intellectual property such as Weiss’s Reference Weiss2019 senior thesis, and curatorial notes from the Academy of Natural Sciences, the only copies of which are currently held by the Physical Anthropology Section of Penn Museum); and what I will term “legacy harm,” referring to the broader impacts of the Penn Museum’s actions and the actions of the white supremacist systems that it benefits from.
The Penn Museum must abandon its support for Monge’s claim that she only ever had the remains of one MOVE bombing victimFootnote 134 and must work to return Delisha’s remains to her mother, Janet Africa. In contrast to the reports commissioned by the Penn Museum and Princeton University, a number of published and unpublished investigations by scholars, journalists, lawyers, and community members have concluded, as do I, that there is ample evidence that Monge herself brought Delisha’s remains to the museum in September 1986 and ordered x-rays of her remains at the Penn Museum in November 2018.Footnote 135 While it is very possible that Monge, or someone else, removed Delisha’s remains from the museum subsequent to the November 2018 x-rays, it is absolutely the Penn Museum’s responsibility to find them and return them to her mother.
Similarly, the Penn Museum owes Katricia’s family a full explanation for the missing right pubic symphysis, as specified by her brother Lionell Dotson’s November 2022 lawsuit against the University of Pennsylvania and the city of Philadelphia.Footnote 136 This bone fragment is visible in the November 2018 x-ray of Katricia’s remains and described in the forensic records from 1985 and 1986 but does not appear with the other three bone fragments in the Coursera video with Monge and Weiss.Footnote 137 Could it have been destroyed for the DNA testing that Monge mentioned in the Coursera video she was planning in 2019? Although the legal reports commissioned by the Penn Museum and by Princeton described Monge’s 2019 plan for stealing a sample of Katricia’s mother’s DNA from her trash (in order to support Monge’s and Mann’s assessment that the bones were not Katricia’s), neither report explains how she planned to get the DNA from the remains for comparison.Footnote 138 Of all the fragments, it does seem likely to me that the one she would choose to test would be the right pubic symphysis, given that it is more clearly associated with the innominate and femur.Footnote 139
As for the Morton Cranial Collection, the secret Morton Cranial Committee that the museum established – on which Monge herself was widely known to sit – proposed in April 2021 that the museum “[f]ollow the NAGPRA model” and establish a parallel process for the repatriation of non-NAGPRA remains in the collection. But NAGPRA, which is a process that was developed in consultation with Native Americans in the 1980s, is out of date with evolving understandings of the rights of colonized peoples and vests far too much power and control over the remains in the hands of the same colonial institutions that originally stole and have retained ancestral remains in order to dehumanize non-white people. Instead, we need to think beyond the assumptions and practices of perpetrator-driven repatriation.
This is work that I am personally committed to and am actively in conversations about how to proceed. Along with Abdul-Aliy Muhammad, I am co-convening a descendant-controlled process we call “Finding Ceremony,” which we are building as a stewardship body made up of members of the many descendant communities, hailing from (at least) all of the countries indicated in Figure 6.Footnote 140 This body would be truly independent and composed of people drawn to the work of caring for ancestors rather than arbitrarily selected and appointed by the museum (as happened with the “Morton Cranial Collection Community Advisory Group”).Footnote 141 Such a body could arrange for the respectful transfer of the ancestors out of the basement of the Penn Museum to an intermediate site and provide care for the crania, while determining how to help them return home – with the ultimate fate of each person’s remains determined exclusively by their lineal descendants, their descendant community members, and their relatives.
Ending the use of all the data extracted from our ancestors – and, thus, the violence its use does to those from whom it was extracted as well as its ability to continue to uphold patriarchal white supremacy – will also be a massive undertaking. Penn must take the ORSA database offline immediately, and provide it, along with all the CT scans, x-rays, 3D scans, and photos and other digital and analog materials related to the collection, to the descendants. Of course, we do not even know the extent of the data that will be revealed in this process. As of 2018, Monge had unsuccessfully attempted DNA testing on two of the 11 crania that Morton described as Nubian; it is unknown whether she extracted material from other crania for testing since then.Footnote 142 Additional intangible materials must also be relinquished, including the Coursera course, which includes images not only of Katricia’s remains but also of dozens of crania in the Morton Cranial Collection as well as other human remains that Monge filmed for the other lessons in the course. These videos are currently Monge’s property.
Other issues that descendant communities will be faced with include the many digitizations and ebooks of Morton’s works that are available free to the public via Google Books, the National Institutes of Health, the Smithsonian Institution’s Biodiversity Heritage Library, the Wellcome Collection in the United Kingdom, the Internet Archive, Project Gutenberg, HathiTrust, and Canadiana. In addition to perpetuating the intentionally shaming exposure of the people whose heads Morton held captive, these publications contain a wealth of fodder for present-day hate groups seeking to justify the oppression of people of color, much as they did when Morton first had them printed in the 1830s and 1840s. And what of the archives around the world where Morton’s correspondence and papers have been preserved and sometimes digitized, including the American Philosophical Society and the Library Company of Philadelphia, once again enacting the ideal of “open data” without consideration of the harm these materials can cause?Footnote 143
So much of the harm of the actions supported by the Penn Museum cannot even be paused or halted, as the property transfers described above suggest. The consent of a person whose head was stolen, abused, and used as a source of data with which to oppress their kin cannot be retroactively restored. The best we can aim to do is offer survivors and descendants that which will, if not make them whole, then support them in moving toward healing, which will doubtless look different in every case. The broader challenge is that the legacy of the white supremacist acts of the past will continue to shape our future, even after the ancestors have been returned to the care of their descendants. Morton’s work asserted American Empire overseas in order to collect the “specimens,” which in turn justified the institution of slavery, the war against Mexico, and the colonization of the West, while the collecting practices of Morton’s dealers removed the social ties of those they kidnapped, dismembered, and entrusted to the US Postal Service to deliver to Morton in Philadelphia.
The data that Morton extracted from the crania created the scientific support for white Philadelphia’s racism in the 1830s and beyond, laying the foundations upon which was built the specific flavor of racism that made it thinkable in 1985 to bomb a house full of Black people and shoot those who tried to escape; that made it thinkable to let the fire burn until it destroyed a Black neighborhood; that made it thinkable to excavate the burned home, which held the remains of the murdered MOVE members, using construction equipment, thus dismembering and intermingling the remains and making it even possible to question the identity of two of the young girls murdered by the police, to begin with. Morton’s data laid the foundation for the respect accorded to the white scientist, which made it seem reasonable for a white assistant medical examiner to slip his boss’s pal, the paleoanthropologist, a box of the remains of murdered Black children; for that professor to leave the remains in a cardboard box in a filing cabinet in his office; for his former student to later take them out and display them at a donor reception; for her to assign them as a senior thesis project to a white student and have that white student handle the bones on camera for a public teaching video.
There is not a part of the MOVE story – or of any modern story of white supremacist violence – that has not been enabled by the work of Samuel George Morton and supported by the data he extracted from the stolen ancestors to justify the colonial projects of his white nation. It is impossible for us to know the wishes of the people who were decapitated for Morton’s collection, and so much time has passed that, even in cases where we can identify their direct descendants, we will not be able to speak to those who knew them in life. We would like to think that, if we could, we would follow their desires fully and without question.
But the loved ones of Katricia and Delisha have made it clear what they wanted us to do. As Krystal Strong, then an assistant professor of education at the University of Pennsylvania asked readers of Anthropology News, “[h]ow might we professional anthropologists honor the one demand MOVE has consensus around – the release of political prisoner Mumia Abu Jamal – and organize toward his release in honor of Delisha and Tree Africa and MOVE?”Footnote 144 And, indeed, this demand was first linked to the Penn Museum’s possession of Katricia and Delisha’s remains by the MOVE mothers at their press conference on 26 April 2021: “If they want to do anything to show people that they are sincere about resolving this situation with MOVE and the city, let Mumia out. He’s still alive.”Footnote 145
As I write today, more than two years later, this demand for the release of a Black political prisoner has not even been acknowledged by the University of Pennsylvania. It may seem that it is not the role of a university to secure freedom for a prisoner – that it is too political to even consider – but, if that is the case, then how will the University of Pennsylvania ever make amends for its role in the oppression of Black Philadelphians over its proud 283 years of existence? That oppression was, and is, political too, and Mumia’s 1983 conviction and initial death sentence for killing a white police officer is also built upon Morton’s racial science. The University of Pennsylvania needs to make this right, and it is within its power to do so. It may not be able to sign Mumia Abu Jamal’s pardon, but, as the state’s respected and powerful Ivy League university, there is no question that it can influence the person who can. And as scholars who would seek to bring healing to the long-dead families of those stolen by Samuel George Morton, and held captive by our professional colleagues, it would be hypocritical to do anything other than to support existing efforts to free Mumia Abu Jamal and to put pressure on the University of Pennsylvania to secure his release, that it may bring some healing to the MOVE mothers.
Acknowledgments
In addition to the interviews cited in this article, I must thank the many dozen museum professionals, anthropologists, historians, heritage scholars, Philadelphia community members, journalists, and current and former Penn and Princeton students, faculty, and staff, who spoke (or direct messaged) with me about the issues at the Penn Museum. This research was also facilitated by the staff of the City of Philadelphia Archives, the Penn Museum Archives, the Library Company of Philadelphia, the Historical Society of Pennsylvania, Temple University Special Collections, and the Academy of Natural Sciences of Drexel Archives. The writing itself would not have been possible without the knowledgeable, trauma-informed, and laughing-to-keep-from-crying support of Margaret Sanford; the sweet giggles of Alexandre; and the deep wells of curiosity, kindness, and care (for me, for the living and the dead in this story and for my cat!) of Elisabeth Koechlin and Vic Vega.