A00201 - A Tale of Two Memorial Services

A little over a month ago, Amherst College held a remembrance service for Gerald Penny, the member of the Class of 1977 who died while taking a swimming test during his first year ... his first month ... at Amherst College on September 12, 1973.



This memorial service was a formal affair and was held in, I believe, Chapin Chapel, in Chapel Hall, the location where the black students typically gather twice a semester for a Christian church service.  Notable about the service held in September was that it appears that only two people who actually knew Gerald were in attendance.  One was Bob Bellinger, a fellow member of the Class of 1977, and the other was the poet Sonia Sanchez who was a professor at Amherst at the time of Gerald's death in 1973.

I noted with appreciation the location, the formality and structure of the remembrance service on September 12, 2023 and found myself, self-consciously, comparing it to the one I conducted in 2017.   

For the 2017 Black Alumni Weekend, the Alumni Liaison requested that I focus the memorial service that I conduct for all the deceased Black Alumni on Gerald Penny.  The College wanted this focus during this time because it was thought that members of Gerald's family would be in attendance at the Black Alumni Weekend.  Indeed, as I recall the liaison asked that I rename the memorial service at the 2017 Black Alumni Weekend, the "Gerald Penny Memorial Service" in honor of Gerald.

I resisted this suggestion because, for me, the Black Alumni Weekend memorial service is a tribute to all the Amherst College Black Alumni and not just a tribute to one.   Nevertheless, in the spirit of cooperation with a sincere and hard-working alumni liaison, I acquiesced with the request and offered that I would even try to get one of Gerald's classmates to come and speak.

 My program for the memorial service held on March 26, 2017 reads as follows:

Order of Service:

Shaman's Call by Charles Nakai

Introductions

Prayer by Gregory Domingue, Class of 1972

Scripture Reading, Matthew 5:1-16

A Remembrance of Gerald Penny, Class of 1977

A Tribute to the Class of 1892

A Reading of the Names of Those Who Have Joined the Ancestors

A Time to Name Those Not Listed

Concluding Remarks

A Moment of Silence in Remembrance

A Parting Blessing: Numbers 6:24-26

Amazing Grace by Charles Nakai

This Memorial Service was held in the Octagon in the place -- the cultural center -- that now bears Gerald Penny's name.  As I recall, this service was attended by only about twelve people but no one from Gerald's family was there.  However, the people that were there were significant.  The noted historian Bob Bellinger, a fellow member of the Class of 1977, graciously consented to attend this memorial service and to provide the remembrance of Gerald Penny, I seem to recall that Tony Jackson, Class of 1976, was present to read the Sermon on the Mount (Matthew 5:1-16), and perhaps most importantly of all Wayne Wormley, Class of 1972, was present to read the Prayer by Gregory Domingue, Class of 1972, who had passed away in 2014. 

I say that Wayne Wormley was probably the most important attendee because Wayne Wormley was the Green Dean for the 1972-1973 school year.  A "Green Dean" was a position then held be a recent graduate to assist in the recruitment of students to Amherst College. During his tenure as the Green Dean, Wayne was intimately involved in the recruitment of Gerald Penny and knew the most about his background.  I believe it is fair to say that of all the people from Amherst College alive today, it was probably Wayne who knew Gerald best.

The March 26, 2017, Memorial Service began well, but once the Remembrance of Gerald Penny segment began, it evolved and would not end.  The words of Wayne and Bob and Tony brought back so many memories of those emotion filled days in September of 1973.  So many memories.  So many.  I only had an hour for the service, but the remembrance of Gerald went beyond an hour. I was not able to give my tribute to the Class of 1892, the class that produced probably the most influential group of black graduates in the history of the College.  Nor was I able to read the Names of Those Who Have Joined the Ancestors.  Indeed, I did not do any more of my program except that about 15 minutes beyond our allotted time, I stated my apology that we had not recorded these remembrances for posterity and then I turned to a special guest to lead us out by playing Amazing Grace


And then we were done.

*****

There will be another memorial service for Gerald Penny during the Homecoming Weekend, November 10-12, 2023.  It is slated to be a formal affair held in Chapin Hall.  I am sure that it will be fine.  However, for those who do attend the Homecoming Weekend, I hope some of you will venture over to the Gerald Penny Cultural Center, gather in a circle, and say a little prayer.  If you do, you just might find that the spirit of Gerald will be there with you.

Peace,

Everett "Skip" Jenkins
Class of 1975
Fairfield, California
October 17, 2023

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College Remembers Gerald Penny ’77

In a ceremony on the 50th anniversary of his death in Pratt Pool, the college community remembered Gerald Penny ’77, who drowned during a college-mandated swimming test.

College Remembers Gerald Penny ’77Professor of Black Studies and History Stefan Bradley spoke at the ceremony honoring Gerald Penny ’77. Photo courtesy of Amherst College.

The college held a ceremony of remembrance on Sept. 12 in honor of the 50th anniversary of the death of Gerald Penny ’77, who drowned in Pratt Pool in 1973 while taking a swimming test, then a requirement for new students. In addition to the ceremony, an exhibition dedicated to Penny’s memory is up at Frost Library throughout the fall semester, featuring his academic record, the original Amherst Student article on his death, and the program from his 1974 memorial. Additional events are planned for Black Alumni Weekend, on November 10-12, 2023.

The event began with remarks from Professor of Black Studies and History Stefan Bradley, filling in for Special Assistant to the President Allen Hart, who could not be in attendance on Tuesday.

Bradley discussed Penny’s life and the structural inequities that led to his untimely death.

An African American student from New Orleans, Penny had been a standout basketball player, served on student council and graduated as salutatorian at his prestigious all-Black Catholic high school, St. Augustine High School. But upon arriving at a nearly all-white campus in the fall of 1973, Penny was required to either swim four lengths of Pratt Pool or take a remedial class. Since segregation had limited access to public pools and beaches for many African Americans in the south, Penny had never learned how to swim.

“The path to inclusion should not demand assimilation,” Bradley said and repeated.

Sheree Ohen, ​chief equity and inclusion officer, also spoke about the factors that led to Penny’s death. She quoted from the 2006 Convocation Address of former President Anthony Marx, who said, “Looking back today, had we tried to be more aware then, Gerald Penny might now be alive. This community must yet confront how Gerald Penny, tragically, was swallowed in the waters of our ignorance.”

The college removed the swimming test as a graduation requirement in 1973 after Penny’s death. The following year, a room in the Octagon was named the Gerald Penny 1977 Memorial Black Cultural Center.

Robert Bellinger ’77, a classmate of Penny’s and his friend during the short time they knew each other, reflected on the kind of person Penny was. He discussed Penny’s openness and affability. “I may be a Penny but I’m worth a lot more,” Bellinger recalled him often saying.

“Penny was known for saying ‘hi’ to everyone he knew,” The Student reported in 1973 after his death. “Within just one week on campus, Penny was known on all four floors of James. His friends would call him Penny.”

Bellinger felt it was important to speak at the ceremony. “I came not to speak for my class but to represent my class,” he told The Student. “To pay honor to Gerald and to be part of this memorial.”

The entire men’s and women’s swim and dive team was in attendance for the ceremony.

Will Taylor ’24, captain of the men’s team, was particularly struck by one moment: “I’m a swimmer and I swim everyday,” he said. “The pool is a place where I find a lot of peace, … a lot of happiness. So to hear [Bellinger] say, ‘I can’t go back,’ remembering the pool as a place of institutionalized violence, that was really shocking.” Bellinger had told the crowd that he had only ever returned to Pratt Pool once since Penny’s death.

“The idea of Amherst having a swim test, it’s obvious the sort of socioeconomic discrimination that instills,” Taylor added.

Bellinger said that he believed that the college did not properly reckon with Penny’s death at the time. “I think that they were not sure how to deal with it and really not willing to take full responsibility,” he said.

He added, however, that he really appreciated the event and that the college was honoring Penny’s memory.

“It was wonderful to see people coming out who want to know about him, to want to pay tribute to him,” he said. “And he is now part of the college’s story. Not something that’s swept to the side and forgotten about but something that is going to be central and centered and will inform future generations of students.”

Ohen expressed a similar sentiment. “The 50th anniversary of the Gerald Penny Commemoration was a beautiful moment of community building and togetherness,” she wrote in a statement to The Student. “We did not shy away from the painful truths of our past or its connection to the racial realities then and now.”

While Ohen stressed the progress Amherst has made in the half century since Penny’s death, she also emphasized how much work still needs to be done. “We have made significant strides in diversifying the student body on many dimensions. The racial and ethnic demography and socio-economic diversity of the students has increased in meaningful ways,” she wrote.

She also mentioned in her statement to The Student the creation of the office she heads and the college’s transition to thinking about “an equity and inclusion framework that asks us to assess how our programs and practices serve all of our students,” as steps in the right direction.

But her speech concluded with more hesitation. “A dear colleague said to me recently, ‘Remember that if you think you have arrived, what it tends to mean is that you have that much further to go.”’

Bellinger’s speech was followed by a reading of a poem Sonia Sanchez had composed for Penny’s 1974 memorial. Sanchez was the first black woman on the faculty at Amherst College and the chair of the Black studies department at the time of Penny’s death.

“There is nothing which does not come to an end, / And to live seventeen years is good in the sight of God,” its final lines read.

The event also featured two moving musical performances with vocals by Vanessa Ford, who sang “Lift Every Voice and Sing,” often referred to as the Black National Anthem, and “You Raise Me Up,” composed by Rolf Løvland.

The event concluded as it began, with remarks from Bradley. “I don’t want any people to think life is so different now than it was in 1973,” he said.

“I feel that changes for the positive should come about, and I want to be in that number when this trend begins,” Penny had written in his application to the college.

“You know what’s not different now as well? The spirit for young people to want to be in that number,” Bradley added.

Bradley closed by asking the audience to say Penny’s name. “Gerald Penny,” the audience replied in unison.


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