Pete Taney knew this day would come.
โIโve been looking over my shoulders all of my life, so this is no surprise,โ said Taney, lead vocalist, banjo, fiddle and harmonica player for The Juggernaut String Band, a popular Stroudsburg, Pennsylvania, ensemble.
Taney is talking about a published report out of the nationโs capital that detailed recent meetings between his family members โ descendants of one-time slave owners โ and Dred Scott, a slave who in 1857 unsuccessfully filed a suit arguing that he and his family should be given their freedom because they had lived in Illinois and other places where slavery was considered illegal.
Charlie Taney, Peteโs brother, repeated some of the words his great-great-grand-uncle wrote in the U.S. Supreme Courtโs Dred Scott decision 160 years ago while standing outside the Maryland State House this week.
โBlack people cannot be U.S. citizens and have no rights except the ones that white people give them. Whites are superior to blacks. Slavery is legal.โ
โYou canโt hide from the words that [Roger Brooke] Taney wrote,โ Charlie Taney told the reporters as he stood a few feet from a statue of his ancestor, who lived in Maryland and was chief justice of the nationโs highest court from 1836 until his death in 1864.
โYou canโt run, you canโt hide, you canโt look away,โ Charlie Taney said. โYou have to face them.โ
For Pete Taney, his brotherโs words resonated โ and it brought back so many memories.
โIt wasnโt something that we didnโt talk about,โ Pete Taney said on Tuesday. โIt was discussed at family dinners all of the time, our history. Iโm just so proud of my brother and my niece to be able to stand up [publicly] and do this and take responsibility. I completely agree with them,โ he said.
In Maryland, Charlie Taney had turned to Lynne M. Jackson, the great-great-granddaughter of Scott, and apologized โ on behalf of his family, to the Scott family and to all African-Americans, for the โterrible injustice of the Dred Scott decision.โ
Jackson accepted the apology from her family and โall African-Americans who have the love of God in their heart so that healing can begin.โ
Taney asked for a hug, and the two embraced.
Pete Taney said he had been there when the groundwork was first set for such a meeting. There was a workshop for a one-act play and a taping for a National Public Radio appearance.
โI got to meet Dred Scottโs descendants and it was very emotional, but very wonderful,โ he said.
Their appearance this week in Annapolis was part of an ongoing reconciliation process, and a push by the descendants of both families to add a statue of Scott near the statue of the late Justice Taney, which activists have sought to remove for years.
While Charlie said the meeting and the statue presents opportunities to learn and a chance to come together and chance to heal a nation โ and not to bury the past, Pete said he wholly supports a statue of Scott.
โI believe adding a statue of Dred Scott would create the kind of dialogue that needs to be discussed openly in this country,โ Pete Taney said. โMuch of the stain on my familyโs history needs to be discussed.โ
Jackson, a former law firm manager from Missouri and the founder of the Dred Scott Heritage Foundation, told reporters at the gathering that her family also believes that having the statue of the pro-slavery chief justice, along with one of Scott and historical information about the court decision, would be a โlearning experience and an educational opportunity.โ
โAdd to it, donโt take from it,โ Jackson said.
Reportedly, a proposal in the Maryland legislature to remove the Taney statue died in committee last year, however. There is no similar bill this year, and some of the activists who in the past have called for the statueโs removal now appear to agree with the Taney and Scott descendants that placing the statue in a more complete historical context would be preferable.
Charlie Taney, an advertising executive who lives in Connecticut, called his uncle a โcomplicated man,โ but also readily acknowledged that he was a โstone racist.โ
It was Charles Taneyโs daughter, Kate Billingsley, who wrote โA Man of His Time,โ a one-act fictional play about a Taney descendant meeting a Scott descendant. The play, produced in New York last year, brought real descendants of each family together for the first time.
โA Taney bringing an apology to a Scott is like โbringing a Band-Aid to an amputation,’โ Charlie Taney quoted his daughter as saying Monday, underscoring what the family says is need for additional dialogue and continued healing.
โAn apology is not enough,โ he said. โBut it is necessary.โ
His brother agreed.
โWeโve got to do outreach. This country and its leaders are not doing it but we can,โ he said. โIโm so proud of my brother and my niece. Our family needs to keep having these important discussions.โ

