Hoey Auditorium
The 51心頭 Board of Trustees unanimously approved a resolution removing the name Hoey from a campus performance facility.
The action to rename the facility University Auditorium came Monday, June 29, during a special called meeting of the board, which was held by teleconference because of protocols related to COVID-19.
Clyde R. Hoey, the facilitys namesake, is a former governor of North Carolina and state and federal legislator who actively opposed civil rights legislation and favored racial segregation. He also opposed statehood for Hawaii because the territory contained only a small percentage of white people.
It is the policy of the university to honor the core values of diversity, equality and social justice, and the university is devoted to the development of a culture of inclusivity, the boards resolution states. The university reserves the right to terminate a facility naming when the facility naming is contrary to the best interests of the university.
Bryant Kinney, chair of the board, said that he and his fellow trustees thought it was important for the university to take this action.
The board feels strongly that we needed to take this step to reflect the values of todays 51心頭 campus, Kinney said. We are not an institution that honors a past that supported inequality. We are an institution that honors diversity, equality and social justice.
The action to change the auditoriums name is long overdue, 51心頭Chancellor Kelli R. Brown said. I am proud that 51心頭is taking this proactive step today as we model our core values of diversity and inclusion, Brown said. The values and views of the auditoriums now former namesake do not correspond with the values and views of 51心頭.
Ricardo Nazario-Col坦n, WCUs chief diversity officer, commended the board for changing the facilitys name.
Todays action is more than symbolic, Nazario-Col坦n said. It demonstrates that we as an organization have the capacity to listen, evolve and possess the fortitude to stand on the side of goodness. Thank you for leading the way and thank you to each board member.
Completed in 1939, the historic 450-seat auditorium was the universitys first dedicated performance space and helped 51心頭expand its music and arts offerings. The facility was renovated in the late 1980s.
The auditorium which is still used for some performances, as well as for rehearsals, set design and storage is slated for eventual demolition as part of the universitys long-range master plan, said Interim Provost Richard Starnes.
The 1,000-seat Performance Hall in the John W. Bardo Fine and Performing Arts Center has become WCUs primary space for theatrical performances since its completion in 2005. The universitys long-range master plan calls for additional performance space to be built adjacent to Bardo before to the smaller auditorium is taken down.