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Great-grandson of Aunt Jemima feels furious that her legacy is being destroyed.

The great-grandson of the original Aunt Jemima has expressed his anger over the rebranding of the iconic brand, claiming that cancel culture is erasing his family’s heritage. This comes after Quaker Foods announced it would remove the Aunt Jemima brand in response to pressure over its racial stereotypes.

Larnell Evans Sr., the great-grandson of Anna Short Harrington, who portrayed Aunt Jemima after Nancy Green, voiced his frustration in an interview with Patch. “This is unfair to my family and me. My history is tied to this,” Evans said. He argued that the accusations of racism came from white people who used imagery from slavery, and that the company profited from these depictions while erasing his great-grandmother’s legacy.

Nancy Green, a former slave, first portrayed Aunt Jemima in 1893 at the Chicago World’s Fair, serving pancakes while dressed in an apron and headscarf. After her passing in 1923, Anna Short Harrington, Evans’ grandmother, took over the role.

Harrington, a chef at Syracuse University, was discovered by a Quaker Foods representative at the 1935 New York State Fair while making her famous pancakes. She was hired by Quaker Foods, and her image was used in advertisements and on packaging. For two decades, Harrington traveled across the U.S. and Canada as Aunt Jemima, serving pancakes and helping make the character a household name.

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