- Black Nova Scotians
"'Infobox Ethnic group
group=Black Nova Scotians
caption=
poptime=19,230ndash 2.1% of Nova Scotia's population [http://www12.statcan.ca/english/census06/data/highlights/ethnic/pages/Page.cfm?Lang=E&Geo=PR&Code=01&Table=1&Data=Count&StartRec=1&Sort=2&Display=Page Visible minority groups, 2006 counts, for Canada, provinces and territories] ]
popplace=flagicon|Nova ScotiaNova Scotia
langs=Canadian English ,Canadian French
rels=Christianity ,Islam , and others
related=African American s,Black Canadians Black Nova Scotians are the descendants ofAfrican American slaves and freemen who came toNova Scotia ,Canada during the 18th and 19th century. [ [http://www.novascotialife.com/?q=node/101 Cultural Renaissance | Nova Scotia - Come to life] ] Like their African American cousins, the average Black Canadian living in Nova Scotia is estimated to be of 17% European ancestry. [ [http://highway7.com/t_culture/culture_0402_black_heritage2.html Halifax's Black Loyalists - Halifax Nova Scotia] ]First black person in Canada
The first recorded instance of a black presence in Canada was that of
Mathieu de Costa . Da Costa arrived in Nova Scotia sometime between 1603 and 1608 as a translator for the French explorerPierre Dugua, Sieur de Monts . The first known black person to live in Canada was a slave from Madagascar namedOlivier Le Jeune (who may also have been of partial Malay ancestry).Immigrants from Africa
An increasing number of immigrants from Africa have been coming to Canada, as is also the case in the United States and Europe. This includes large numbers of refugees, but also many
skilled worker s pursuing better economic conditions. Many black Canadians today are ofCaribbean origin, with some of recent African origin and smaller numbers fromLatin America n countries. However, a sizable number of Black Canadians who descended from freed American slaves can be found in Nova Scotia and parts of SouthwesternOntario . As with their counterparts in the U.S., some descendants of the freed American black slaves have mixed into the white community and have mostly lost their ethnic identity.History
African American refugees from the American Revolution
Black people arrived in Canada in several waves. The first of these came with the French as free persons serving in the French
army andnavy , and some were enslaved. The British colonial authorities promised land grants to those who had escaped to the Crown during theAmerican Revolution , though more promises were broken than kept.White American Loyalists fled north, bringing their African American slaves with them, while freeAfrican American s also made their way to the colonies ofBritish North America , settling predominantly in Nova Scotia. This latter group was largely made up of tradespeople and labourers, and many set up home in Birchtown near Shelburne. Many of these African Americans had roots mainly in American states like,Virginia ,South Carolina , Georgia andMaryland . [ [http://www.gov.ns.ca/nsarm/virtual/africanns/ch2.asp Nova Scotia Archives & Records Management - African Nova Scotians - Black Loyalists, 1783-1792] ] Some came fromMassachusetts ,New Jersey andNew York as well. [ [http://museum.gov.ns.ca/blackloyalists/index.htm Remembering Black Loyalists, Black Communities in Nova Scotia] ]In 1782, the first
race riot inNorth America took place there, with white soldiers attacking the black settlers who were getting work that the soldiers thought they should have. Due to the unkept promises of the British government and the discrimination from the white colonists, 1,192 African American men, women and children leftNova Scotia onJanuary 15 ,1792 and settled inFreetown, Sierra Leone .Arrival of the Maroons and immigration to Sierra Leone
In 1796, the Maroons of
Jamaica were re-settled in Nova Scotia, following their long battle against colonization. While in Nova Scotia the Maroons from Jamaica deterred an attack byNapoleon , and were very important to the construction efforts of the Nova Scotia government, constructing the parts of theHalifax Citadel and all of Government House. The Jamaican Maroons were sent toFreetown, Sierra Leone in 1800 by the British Government in order to avoid the cost of maintaining them in Nova Scotia. Upon their arrival in Sierra Leone, the Maroons were used to quell an uprising among the Black settlers unhappy with their treatment by theSierra Leone Company .African American refugees
The next major migration of blacks into Nova Scotia occurred between 1813 and 1815. Black war
refugee s from theUnited States settled in Hammonds Plains, Beechville,Lucasville and Africville.Canada was not suited to the large-scale
plantation agriculture practised in the southern United States, and slavery became increasingly rare. In 1793, in one of the first acts of the newUpper Canada colonialparliament , slavery was abolished. It was all but abolished throughout the other British North American colonies by 1800, and was illegal throughout theBritish Empire after 1834. This made Canada an attractive destination for those fleeing slavery in the United States, such as American ministerBoston King .Underground Railroad for African Americans
From the late 1820s until the
American Civil War began in 1861, the Underground Railroad brought tens of thousands of fleeing slaves to Canada. While many of these returned to the United States after emancipation, a significant population remained, largely in Southern Ontario, widely scattered in both rural and urban locations, including Chatham, Windsor, London, Hamilton, Collingwood andToronto .20th century immigrants from the Caribbean and United States
In 1858, the governor of the colony of
Vancouver Island , James Douglas, replied to an inquiry from a group of blacks inSan Francisco about the possibilities of settling on the island. Governor Douglas, whose mother had been at least part black, replied favourably, and several dozen travelled to Victoria at the outbreak of theCariboo gold rush . Two of these people, Peter Lester and Mifflin Gibbs, became successful Victoria merchants, and Gibbs was elected to the Council of the City of Victoria in the 1860s.In the late nineteenth century, there was an unofficial policy of restricting blacks from immigrating to Canada, and in the 1920s, formal racially-based immigration standards excluding blacks were developed. The huge influx of immigrants from
Europe and the United States in the period beforeWorld War I included only very small numbers of black arrivals.Another wave of immigration to Nova Scotia occurred in the 1920s, with blacks from the
Caribbean coming to work in the steel mills ofCape Breton Island . The restrictions on immigration remained until 1962, when racial rules were eliminated from the immigration laws. This coincided with the dissolution of the British Empire in the Caribbean, and over the next decades several hundred thousand blacks came from that region to Canada.ources
External links
* [http://www.gov.ns.ca/nsarm/virtual/africanns/ Nova Scotia Archives & Records Management - African Nova Scotians]
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