Skip to content
Campus Alert Archive
Harvard

Three Weeks in the Old Yard: How Harvard Avoided the Police Sweep That Defined Spring 2024

MAcivil unrestadvisorymedium confidence

On the morning of April 24, 2024, pro-Palestine students erected approximately 13 tents in Harvard Yard outside University Hall, launching a divestment encampment in the wake of the suspension of the Harvard Undergraduate Palestine Solidarity Committee. Harvard had pre-emptively restricted Yard access to HUID holders only on April 22 and kept the Yard closed for the duration. Unlike Columbia, MIT, Northeastern, UMass, and Dartmouth — all of which called in police — Harvard waited out the encampment for 20 days, ending it on May 14, 2024 by negotiation rather than by sweep.

Alerts
3
Response
Killed
0
Injured
0
Institution
Harvard University
Private R1 · MA
~23,731 studentsMessageMe
Confirmed Timeline

Alert Sequence

3 messages in sequence

Some alert texts below are approximate reconstructions from news coverage, not confirmed verbatim transcripts. Reconstructed texts are shown in italic with a dashed border. Verified verbatim texts have a solid border and are marked accordingly.

INITIAL ALERTEmail
Effective immediately, Harvard Yard will be closed to the public and access will be restricted to Harvard ID holders only. The Yard will remain closed until Friday. Signage and structures requiring approval are not permitted in the Yard at any time. Setting up tents, tables, or other structures in the Yard without permission may result in disciplinary action.

This text has been reconstructed from news coverage and may not reflect the exact original wording.

The closure was announced by FAS Dean Hopi Hoekstra in an email sent the afternoon of April 22, 2024, the Monday after Columbia's Friday arrests at the South Lawn encampment
Harvard pre-emptively restricted Yard access two days before any tents went up — a notable departure from the reactive postures taken at most peer institutions
The original 'until Friday' framing was abandoned; the Yard remained closed for approximately six weeks until June 6, 2024
UPDATEEmail+2d
An unauthorized encampment was established in Harvard Yard this morning in clear violation of University policies. Participating students will be referred to their Schools for disciplinary action, and non-affiliates present in the Yard are trespassing.

This text has been reconstructed from news coverage and may not reflect the exact original wording.

Interim President Alan Garber issued the statement after the encampment had been in place for approximately 36 hours
Harvard initially declined to push the message to phones via MessageMe SMS — it was distributed by email and posted to the President's Office website
The statement notably did not threaten police clearance, a contrast to similar messages issued at Columbia, MIT, and Northeastern in the same week
FOLLOW-UPEmail+20d
The encampment in Harvard Yard has ended. Protesters have agreed to dismantle their tents and clear the Old Yard. The University will request the reinstatement of students placed on involuntary leaves of absence, and disciplinary proceedings for individual participants will continue in accordance with established procedures.

This text has been reconstructed from news coverage and may not reflect the exact original wording.

The May 14 agreement included Harvard committing to expedite reinstatement proceedings for the 20 students placed on involuntary leaves on May 10
Harvard College ultimately blocked 13 seniors from graduating; this provoked a walkout of approximately 1,000 students from Commencement on May 23, 2024
The negotiated end stood in contrast to the police sweeps at Northeastern (98 arrests), UMass (134 arrests), and Dartmouth (90 arrests)
Context

Background

The April 24 to May 14, 2024 Harvard Yard encampment is significant in this archive for its absence of police action: at every comparable peer institution (Columbia, MIT, Northeastern, UMass Amherst, Dartmouth), administrators called in police and arrests followed, while Harvard waited the encampment out for three weeks. The encampment was erected at approximately 6:30 AM EDT on April 24, 2024 with roughly 13 tents in the Old Yard outside University Hall and grew to over 50 tents at peak in both the Old Yard and New Yard. Harvard had closed the Yard to non-HUID holders on April 22, 2024 — two days before any tents were erected — a pre-emptive posture that distinguishes Harvard's response from the reactive closures elsewhere. Interim President Alan Garber issued a statement on April 25 declaring the encampment unauthorized but stopped short of threatening police action. On May 10, 2024, Harvard placed 20 students on involuntary leaves of absence, escalating the disciplinary stakes. The encampment ended on May 14, 2024 following negotiations in which Harvard agreed to expedite reinstatement proceedings. The aftermath produced its own crisis: Harvard blocked 13 seniors from graduating, provoking a walkout of approximately 1,000 students at Commencement. Harvard Yard reopened to the public on June 6, 2024 — a six-week public closure of the symbolic center of the University. The case documents an institutional choice: Harvard treated the encampment as a disciplinary matter rather than an emergency, used email-and-statement communication rather than emergency push notifications, and avoided the optics of riot-gear arrests that defined coverage at Columbia, Northeastern, and Dartmouth.
Analysis

Key Findings

Harvard pre-emptively closed Harvard Yard to non-HUID holders on April 22, 2024 — two days before any tents were erected — distinguishing its posture from the reactive closures elsewhere
Unlike Columbia, MIT, Northeastern, UMass Amherst, and Dartmouth, Harvard did not call in police during the 20-day encampment, ending it instead by negotiation on May 14, 2024
Harvard distributed all encampment communications via email and the President's Office website — no MessageMe SMS pushes were issued for the encampment itself
The disciplinary fallout (20 involuntary leaves, 13 seniors initially blocked from graduating) generated greater controversy than the encampment itself, prompting a Commencement walkout of approximately 1,000 students
Harvard Yard remained closed to the public for six weeks (April 22 – June 6, 2024), one of the longest closures of the Yard since the 1969 University Hall occupation documented elsewhere in this archive
Outcome
The encampment ended voluntarily on May 14, 2024 after Interim President Alan Garber declined to call in police. Harvard placed 20 students on involuntary leaves of absence on May 10 and later placed 23 on multi-semester probation and suspended five. Thirteen Harvard College seniors were initially blocked from graduating, prompting walkouts at Commencement. Yard remained closed to the public for six weeks, finally reopening on June 6, 2024.
Provenance

Sources

  1. Student Paper
  2. Student Paper
  3. official press release
  4. official press release
  5. Student Paper
  6. official press release
  7. Student Paper
Tags
civil-unrestgaza-encampmentharvard-yardnegotiated-resolutionharvardivy-leaguemassachusettscambridgeprivate-r1no-arrestshuid-restriction
Added May 2026Updated May 2026Via ingestion