After Quaker Foods launched its rebranding, the great-grandson of the original Aunt Jemima expressed his outrage that pop culture is erasing her roots.
As we previously stated, Quaker Foods fell into pressure to “cancel” Aunt Jemima, and the brand will now be rebranded. Anna Short Harrington, the real Aunt Jemima’s great-grandson, is finally coming out to voice his fury and disappointment over the deletion of her legacy.
The Great-Grandson of “Aunt Jemima” Anna Short Harrington Speaks Out
My family and I feel wronged by this. This is part of my past, sir,” Larnell Evans Sr. told Patch. “Their use of images from slavery shows that the racism they claim comes from the other side, from white people.”

“This company profits off images of our slavery. They’ve made the decision to do this by eliminating my great-grandmother’s background. a woman of color. It aches.
A former slave named Nancy Green made her debut as “Aunt Jemima” in 1893 at the Chicago World’s Fair. On the South Side of the city, Cook Green had a job. She was hired to dress in an apron and a headscarf and serve pancakes to fairgoers.
She played “Aunt Jemima” up until her death in 1923. Evans asserted that his grandmother, Anna Short Harrington, then assumed control.
Quaker Foods uses for Anna Short Harrington’s likeness
Harrington’s pancakes won accolades from the fraternities at Syracuse University, where she worked as a chef. She was handing out handmade pancakes at the 1935 New York State Fair when a Quaker Foods employee stumbled upon her.
When she first started working for Quaker Foods, the firm used her likeness in commercials and on merchandise. In her role as “Aunt Jemima,” Harrington was also dispatched across the nation to serve pancakes, making her a household name.
She was employed with Quaker Oats for 20 years. According to Evans, she served pancakes as Aunt Jemima to people from all across the United States and Canada.
“It was the era following slavery, and this woman served everyone. She is an Aunt Jemima working for. She acted in that manner. How do you suppose I feel about telling you about my family’s past as a black man, which they are trying to erase?
The 66-year-old handicapped U.S. Marine veteran Evans claims that Quaker Foods also used Harrington’s pancake recipe. Her heirs made an unsuccessful attempt to sue the company for $3 billion for neglecting to pay them royalties in 2014.
Evans commits fully.
Evans claimed that Quaker Foods should acknowledge that they generated money off the likenesses of Green and Harrington and pictures of slavery rather than completely deleting the images from stores.
How many white people were raised watching shows like Aunt Jemima at breakfast every day, he wondered? How many white companies made enormous profits but gave us nothing? They should, in my opinion, investigate it. They can’t just wipe it out while we still suffer.
After making all that money, “they’re just going to erase history as if it never happened,” and now that “backers are demanding restitution for slavery,” Evans went on. They won’t present us with anything, correct? What gives them this power?
By the end of the year, all goods will, according to Quaker Foods, be free of all Aunt Jemima branding or artwork.