African Nova Scotians

African Nova Scotian

The earliest definite evidence of black people living in Nova Scotia comes from the surviving records from the Fortress of Louisbourg on Cape Breton Island. Nearly 200 black slaves can be identified among the general population living there during the French régime, 1713-58. The early inhabitants of Halifax also included numerous slaves and free Blacks, the latter working mostly as tradesmen and labourers.

When the New England Planters came to Nova Scotia in the 1760s, they brought an estimated 150 Blacks with them, having been promised “100 acres to every person, Master or Mistress of a Family, with [an additional] 50 acres for every white or black man, woman or child.” These Blacks were probably all slaves, with occasional exceptions such as Barbery Cuffee, a black mid-wife in Liverpool, and Robbin Robbins, a mulatto carpenter at Cornwallis.

The 1767 township census identified 104 black people then living in Nova Scotia: “Annapolis 6; Cape Breton Island 7; Canso 2; Chester 1; Cornwallis 7; Dartmouth 1; Falmouth 4; Granville 5; Halifax 54; Hopewell 3; Horton 2; Lawrencetown 1; Liverpool 4; Lunenburg 2; Maugerville (Saint John River) 1; Newport 2; and Island of St. John’s (Prince Edward Island) 2.”

The first large group of Blacks to arrive in the province were the Black Loyalists who came as refugees after the American Revolution. Some of them had served in Loyalist regiments, others had worked in various capacities with British military and civilian units, and still others had fought in the war as part of their own company, the Black Pioneers. Some had been free before the Revolution, but most gained liberty by escaping their masters and fleeing behind the British lines, where they were emancipated.

The Black Loyalists came with thousands of other refugees evacuated from New York City in 1783. A written record known then and now as “The Book of Negroes” was compiled at their departure, listing by name approximately 3,000 black and mulatto men, women and children, all free, who sailed north to begin new lives. Their arrival marked the first time that the notion of ‘community’ was a meaningful concept and a real possibility for Blacks in Nova Scotia.

The British government scattered them throughout the colony -- some in Halifax, Annapolis Royal, Clements and Granville, others in new communities, including Birchtown (near Shelburne), Brindleytown (outside Digby), Preston (near Halifax), Little Tracadie and Chedabucto (Guysborough).

An estimated 1,230 black slaves also arrived in Nova Scotia after the Revolution, travelling with their Loyalist owners and settling with them throughout the colony. An incomplete list compiled then showed their dispersal as: “Dartmouth 41; Country Harbour 41; Chedabucto 61; Island of St. John 26; Antigonish 18; Cumberland area 21; Partridge Island (Parrsboro) 69; Cornwallis and Horton 38; Newport and Kennetcook 22; Windsor 21; Annapolis Royal area 230; Digby 152; St. Mary’s Bay 13; Shelburne [not tallied]; River St. John 441.”

It was a confusing time, with free Blacks and slave Blacks often living in close proximity, all struggling to adjust to new realities and old attitudes. Black Loyalists received indifferent and inferior treatment compared to white Loyalists when it came to granting land, provisions and other resources to begin their new lives. As a result, some 1,200 Black Loyalists left Nova Scotia in 1792 for Sierra Leone in West Africa. Their departure removed a substantial portion of the black population, creating new challenges for those who remained.

The next major immigration was in 1796, when nearly 600 Jamaican Maroons were brought to Halifax and settled as a group in Preston Township. They helped to build Government House, worked on new fortifications at the Citadel, and served in the local militia. A few became farmers in Boydville, near Sackville.

The Maroons brought their own religion and customs, and did not see themselves as permanent residents. They pointed this out repeatedly to the authorities and in 1800, when the cost of supporting them could no longer be sustained, they were sent to Sierra Leone.

The last substantial group was the Refugee Blacks from the War of 1812. Nearly 2,000 arrived in Halifax, 1812-15. Over 300 settled in the city and a few went to Dartmouth. Otherwise they were accommodated in two large groups at Hammonds Plains (outside Halifax) and Preston; and in various smaller settlements around the province, including Cobequid Road, Windsor Road, Five Mile Plains, Beech Hill, Refugee Hill, Porter’s Lake, Fletcher’s Lake, Prospect Road, Beaverbank, Avonport, Pine Woods, Pictou and Mill Village.

Again, settling in was not easy. Although the Refugees at Hammonds Plains received land grants of ten acres each in 1816, those at Preston were given only warrants, and did not receive full title until 1842.

Occasional black settlers, mostly sailors from the Caribbean, came to Nova Scotia after the 1820s, but no sizeable group arrived until the early 1900s when black immigrants, chiefly from Barbados, came to Industrial Cape Breton to work in the steel mills and coal mines.

Today’s African Nova Scotians continue to live in their historical places of settlement, although many have moved to larger urban areas. Founding family names such as Cromwell, Farmer, Hamilton, Langford, Marsman, Oliver, Slaughter and States remain common. Proud of their ancestry, their history and their cultural traditions, they have built strong communities which continue to the present.

29-Feb-2012 6:35 PM
A presentation begun a couple of years ago - an original song written by myself and my husband - ...

(Source: Favourite Places in Nova Scotia)
20-Feb-2012 3:09 AM
We are getting married August 17, 2013! My fiance is from Tatamagouche, and we would like to get ...

(Source: Favourite Places in Nova Scotia)
07-Feb-2012 3:25 AM
I had the chance to visit my good friends in Coldbrook in October 2011 and was treated to some great ...

(Source: Favourite Places in Nova Scotia)
22-Oct-2011 2:22 PM
On Oct 18 I was finally able to get out on the road for a bit of leaf peeping. Left Halifax and ...

(Source: Nova Scotia Leaf Watch)
16-Oct-2011 8:28 PM
Although the leaves have fallen off the tree on the Island that I was watching, there are lots of ...

(Source: Nova Scotia Leaf Watch)
The feed was updated at 21-May-2012 8:52 AM
02-May-2012 4:29 PM
I think of Pinterest as a wonderful tool for vision or dream boarding. For many of us, our dreams often include travel and adventure. And for those who are part of our Nova Scotia online community, those dreams include a Nova Scotia. And so begins our adventure with Pinterest.
30-Apr-2012 2:34 PM
The big camping experience last winter was spending a night in a yurt at kejimkujik national park. The only problem was finding an open weekend to book one of the two Yurts at the park. With time running out, we booked a single overnight in late March at the Eel Weir Yurt.
22-Apr-2012 10:33 AM
The Pubnico Point Wind Farm provides a unique location for walking.
16-Apr-2012 4:49 PM
The Tall Ships Festival, last hosted in Halifax in 2009, is returning to Nova Scotia this year, making this year a really great year to visit! I love the Tall Ships Festival for the excitement and majesty it brings. Here are my top 10 reasons why you'll love them too!
06-Apr-2012 12:41 PM
Spring has arrived in South West Nova and the gardens are leaping into life.
The feed was updated at 21-May-2012 8:52 AM