BC Black History “Firsts”

Artist, Artisan, Athlete, Community Leader, Dentist, Educator, Judge, Juror, Lawyer, Musician, Policeman, Politician, Public Service, Soldier, Sport icon, Teacher, Television Host …

Julia Griffith, an English comrade of abolitionist Frederick Douglass gave this advice to Mifflin Gibbs as he was deciding to make the move to Victoria “What! Discouraged? Go Do Some Great Thing.”
We honour these “Firsts” who have done GREAT THINGS.

Sepia toned photo, man in senior years sitting in a chair with a cane leaning against his leg. In the background is a house and ivy hedge

CHARLES ALEXANDER

Carpenter by trade, Charles Alexander and Fielding Spotts built the first school in South Saanich in 1862 and became school trustees. At the same time Alexander and Spotts were involved in the establishment of the original Shady Creek Church, a community church, including Methodists and Baptists.
Image: Charles Alexander (1823-1913) in his senior years, circa 1900. M01016 Courtesy of City of Victoria Archives
The story of Charles and Nancy Alexander

FRANK ALEXANDER

Frank Alexander, a descendant of Charles and Nancy Alexander, is the first Black Rock’n’Roll and blues vocalist on Vancouver Island.
Poster: Frank Alexander. Beloved musician, singer, and friend. Frank began performing in Victoria, BC in the sixties. “Founding member of the Joe Blues Band and lead singer for the Blue Cadillac Band, Frank’s passion for high energy blues drew people out of their seats and onto the dance floor for nearly 40 years.”
Frank passed away on November 17, 2017.
On Sunday, February 23rd, 2025 he was honoured at The Queen’s in Nanaimo, BC, which has been in operation since 1892 and where he often performed.

Poster Image courtesy of Barb Hudlin.

THÉRÈSE ALEXANDER


Thérèse Alexander was called to the BC bar in 1984 and was appointed a BC Provincial Court judge on January 8,1996 — the first Black woman in BC to be appointed. Her great-great-grandparents were Charles and Nancy Alexander. She served on numerous boards and commissions, is a recognized community advocate through her volunteer work and has been honoured by the BC Association of Black Law Students and the Association of Black Lawyers.

When I am in Victoria, I always make a pilgrimage to Shady Creek United Church on East Saanich Road. There is a Heritage Canada marker at the church acknowledging the Black pioneers that came to Saanich and their contributions to the community” Source Provincial Court of British Columbia https://www.provincialcourt.bc.ca/enews/enews-07-03-2022

man in legislation robes standing behind desk , speakers mace on desk

EMERY BARNES

In March 1994 Emery Barnes becomes the first Speaker in B.C. to be elected by a secret ballot of the MLAs. Barnes was the first Black person to hold this position in any Canadian province.

Image courtesy of Office of the Speaker, Province of British Columbia.

https://bcblackhistory.ca/emery-barnes/

TONI BOOT

On November 15, 2014 Toni Boot was the first Black women to be elected a Councillor in BC. Toni Boot served as a Councillor in Summerland, BC for 4 years and on October 20, 2018 was elected Mayor of Summerland – the first Black mayor in BC. In addition to being a Councillor and mayor, she had served on various boards including Regional District Okanagan-Similkameen board, Okanagan Basin Water Board, Okanagan Similkameen Regional Hospital Board and Grasslands Conservation Council of B.C

Image courtesy of Toni Boot
©Toni Boot, all rights reserved

portrait of black woman with short hair, dark un-collared dress with scarf
young bearded man standing at easel with paint brushes and palette in left hand and 1 brush in right hand

GRAFTON TYLER BROWN

Grafton Tyler Brown lived in BC for a short time and while here painted landscapes of the Greater Victoria area and BC’s Mainland. He is considered the first professional Black artist on the Pacific North West AND the first to hold an art exhibition in Victoria.

Here we see Grafton Tyler Brown in his Victoria studio at the Occidental Hotel. The painting in progress on the easel is “Valley of the Similkameen” painted in 1883”.

Image A-08775 Courtesy of the Royal BC Museum and Archives, Grafton Tyler Brown in his Victoria studio (1883)

https://bcblackhistory.ca/grafton-tyler-brown/

ROSEMARY BROWN

Rosemary Brown is Canada’s first Black female member of a provincial legislature and the first woman to run for leadership of a federal political party. She was elected to the BC legislature in 1972 and served until 1986. In 1975, she ran for the leadership of the Federal NDP Party.
In February 2009, Canada Post Corporation issued this commemorative stamp showing Rosemary Brown standing before the BC Legislature Buildings.

https://bcblackhistory.ca/rosemary-brown/

Rosemary Brown Commemorative Stamp
eleanor collins sitting with commemorative stamp poster on easel on the right

ELEANOR COLLINS, CM

Eleanor Collins is the first woman in Canada and one of the first artists of colour in North America to host her own national weekly television music variety show. The very first Eleanor show aired on June 12, 1955. She has received many awards and honors and on January 21 2022 Canada Post Corporation issued this commemorative stamp.
Michael Marmur Photographer, Canada Post.
More than a century of Black History

FRANK COLLINS

Frank Collins is the eldest of 4 brothers – Frank, Fred, Richard (Dick), and Dave. In 1945 after signing a collective agreement with The Canadian Pacific Railway, the first meeting of the Brotherhood of Sleep Car Porters (BOSCP) was held in Vancouver and Frank Collins was voted President of the Vancouver division; in that same year he was also elected and served as President of the British Columbia Association for the Advancement of Coloured People (BCAACP).

Frank Collins and the Brotherhood of Sleeping Car Porters

Full length portrait of black men, body slightly turned facing right, looking straight ahead, dressed in formal black suit, hands in pockets

SERAPHIM “JOE” FORTES

Initially Seraphim Joseph Fortes took it upon himself to be the English Bay lifeguard while teaching generations of children to swim. In 1900, Joe became an official employee of the city and received a monthly salary. In 1910 the City of Vancouver recognized him as the first English Bay lifeguard and made him a special constable, qualifying him to carry a revolver. A commemorative stamp was issued in February 2013.

Image Credit: Portrait of Joe Fortes VPL Accession Number: 39420 Date: 1910 Photographer / Studio: White, J. Studio Content: Public Domain Vancouver Public Library.
https://bcblackhistory.ca/seraphim-joseph-fortes/

newspaper notice

ABNER HUNT FRANCIS

In 1865 Abner Hunt Francis was the first Black elected as a Victoria City Councillor and sworn in as a representative of the Yates Street Ward, however Francis decided to not pursue this position.

The next day Francis resigned to avoid what was generally agreed and described as unfairness in not recognizing his property ownership. Francis’ notice of resignation, ‘YATES STREET WARD” effective November 15, 1865 was posted in the Times Colonist, November 16, 1865, pg.2

Portrait. Black male age 50, dressed semi-formally wearing jacket, vest, winged-collar white shirt with a striped pattern bow-tie

MIFFLIN WISTAR GIBBS

Mifflin Wistar Gibbs was the first Black to be elected and serve on Victoria City Council. He served as a Councillor from 1866 to 1869 representing the James Bay Ward. While on council Gibbs chaired the council’s ways and means committee and from time-to-time acted as Deputy Mayor. Gibbs returned to Little Rock, Arkansas in 1870, passed the bar exam, became an attorney. Three years later, he was elected there as a city judge, the first Black judge elected in the United States.
Image B-01601 Courtesy of Royal BC Museum and Archives.

He did many great things

REBECCA GIBBS

Rebecca Gibbs is one of Canada’s first Black female poets; a sister-in-law of Mifflin Gibbs. Four known poems were published.
*Proclamation Day, published in the San Francisco newspaper Elevator, Volume 3, Number 39, 27 December 1867
*The Barkerville Fire, also published in The Elevator, Volume IV, Number 48, 5 March 1869.
*The Old Red Shirt” published in about 1869 in a “Sawney’s letters and Cariboo Rhymes” by James Anderson and is printed on her grave marker at Ross Bay Cemetery.
*On the Death of Judge Brew was published in the Cariboo Sentinel, June 11 1870.
Images © BC Black History Awareness Society, all rights reserved.
Rebecca Gibbs – Community Story

Rebecca Gibbs Gravemarker at the Ross Bay Cemetery
Giscome Portage Trail sign hanging from timber arch

JOHN GISCOME AND HENRY MCDAME

In 1862 Jamaican born Robert Giscome and his Bahamian partner Henry McDame explored forests, lakes, rivers and mountains in central and northern BC, about a 330 mile trek. Led by a Lheidli T’enneh guide they reached their destination of Fort McLeod where they were greeted with a gun salute in their honour as they were the first non-Indigenous people to travel this route. Giscome, Giscome Portage, Giscome Rapids and McDame Creek were named for this duo.
Entrance to Giscome Portage Trail Image courtesy of Kevin Creamore, Prince George.
More about Giscome

JOSHUA HOWARD

Joshua Howard was the first lawyer to advertise in a B.C. newspaper. The “Legislative Library of British Columbia Background Paper, May 2, 2007, pg. 8 states “In July 1858, the first legal advertisement in the colony was apparently published. Joshua Howard, an African American man from Virginia, offered “advice in Law, to the poor, gratis.”

Barabara Howard with souvenir koala bear

BARBARA HOWARD

Barbara Howard, born and raised in Vancouver, is the first Black woman athlete to represent Canada in an International competition at the 1938 British Empire Games held in Sydney, Australia from February 5th to 12th; and the first person from a visible minority to be hired as an educator by the Vancouver School Board (1948).

Image Credit: A 17-year-old Barbara Howard holds a gift from a fan, a stuffed koala bear. Vancouver Archives Reference Code: AM54-S4-2-: CVA 371-1643 Public Domain: Photographer: Major James Matthews

https://bcblackhistory.ca/barbara-howard/

JAMES DOUGLAS “DOUG” HUDLIN

Doug Hudlin was the first non-American to be invited to umpire the Little League World Series in Williamsport, Pennsylvania in 1967 and in 1974; a founding member and first president of the British Columbia Baseball Umpires Association. He was also a founding member of the British Columbia Black History Awareness Society. In 2017, Doug was inducted, posthumously, to the Canadian Baseball Hall of Fame.

Image courtesy of Barbra Hudlin

The Gentleman Umpire

senior man standing in umpires uniform, baseball field in the background

HARRY JEROME

Harry Jerome made headlines when he ran the 100m dash in 10.0 seconds at the Canadian Olympic trials in Saskatoon in July 1960. This equaled the world record set by German sprinter Armin Hary a month earlier; the first Canadian to hold, officially, a world track record.

Image: Statue of Harry Jerome in Stanley Park in Vancouver, British Columbia is licensed under CC BY-SA 2.
To mark Canada’s 150th birthday, 150 noteworthy British Columbian’s were named. February 22, 2017 – Canada 150: Harry Winston Jerome, fastest man on earth.

Black & white portrait of older male in suit with full white beard

JOHN CRAVEN JONES

John Craven Jones, middle brother of three who arrived in BC circa 1858. Jones is the first Black teacher in the Province and first teacher on Salt Spring Island from 1859 to 1875.

Shown is purported to be portrait of John Craven Jones, 1885, after returning to the United States; he continued teaching for about 20 years.
Image 2005005001 Courtesy of Salt Spring Island Archives

https://bcblackhistory.ca/john-craven-jones/

WILLIAM ALLEN JONES

William Allen Jones is the oldest of three brothers who arrived in BC in 1858. He and his youngest brother Elias initially mined in the Cariboo, returned to Ohio, William studied dentistry at Oberlin College and then returned to settle in Barkerville. William Jones is the first dentist (1886) to be granted a licence under the British Columbia Dental Act.
Image is a pencil sketch by Gene Grooms, local artist (1994); ©BC Black History Awareness Society.

https://bcblackhistory.ca/william-allen-jones/

William Allen Jones - The Barkerville Dentist
b&w portrait, older man, balding with salt & pepper short beard and sideburns, dressed in suit with vest, white shirt and bowtie

PETER LESTER

In February 1860 Peter Lester was the first Black person to sit as a juror in B.C. However, Black men were not on the “official list of jurors maintained by the Sheriff’s office” as had been promised by Douglas, until November 1872; and only after they petitioned the Legislative Assembly requesting their names be added to the official list. Their first petition in March 21, 1872 was lost 5 to 13.
Image A-01626 Courtesy of Royal BC Museum and Archives.

https://bcblackhistory.ca/peter-lester/

HONORABLE SELWYN ROMILLY

Honourable Selwyn Romilly is the first Black person to serve on the British Columbia Supreme Court. Prior to his appointment he served on the Provincial Court in Terrace and then Burnaby.
An eminent jurist


Image: © Selwyn Romilly all rights reserved

judge seated at desk
Historical plaque on post white lettering on black background

HENRY HOUSTON SCOTT & FAMILY

In 1912, the Scott family were the first Black family to settle in Surrey. The plaque was installed in April 2019 by the City of Surrey. The Scott’s were one of the first African American families to settle in the Surrey area in 1912. The park site is located in Cloverdale at 64 Avenue and 181A Street, which is part of the original Scott family property.

Henry Houston Scott (b.1854), his wife Amy (b. 1864) and their three youngest children Roy, Jesse and Benola. Roy worked at the local lumber mill and for CPR and Jesse
became a dairy farmer, oil refinery worker and celebrated baseball player for the local team. In spring the apple trees still blossom.

EDSWORTH SEARLES

Edsworh Searles was the first Black lawyer called to the bar in BC. Canadian born, of British West Indian parents, Edsworth graduated from the University of Toronto with a Bachelor of Law. Following his short time in Vancouver, he returned to Toronto. In 1959 he was called to the Ontario bar.

RUBY SNEED

“In 1972 a grant from the Community Music of Greater Vancouver (a.k.a Vancouver Academy of Music) enabled Ruby to travel to Japan where she observed firsthand the internationally renowned Suzuki Talent Education Method for piano students. Impressed with the appeal and effectiveness of the Suzuki philosophy, she organized the first Canadian Suzuki Piano Program at the Vancouver Academy of Music. It met with an enthusiastic enrollment of some 50 children ages 3 to 5. The program was so successful she returned to Tokyo in 1974 with two of her students who performed in several recitals throughout Japan.”
Renowned Classical Pianist & Music Educator

Text and image ©Theresa Lewis.

FIELDING SPOTTS

Carpenters by trade, Charles Alexander (1824-1913) and Fielding Spotts assisted in building the first school in South Saanich in 1862 and became school trustees.
At the same time Alexander and Spotts were involved in the establishment of the original Shady Creek Church, a community church, including Methodists and Baptists.

Image: F-00651 Courtesy of Royal BC Museum and Archives

Farmer, cooper, husband, father, church leader, school trustee …

senior man seated facing camera holding what is likely a bible with two hands at his lap
Hand tinted photo, young adult female standing next to a chair posing for the camera with a slight smile; wearing a long light-colored dress with wide belt, ruffles on the skirt. hair is in ringlets

EMMA STARK

Emma Stark is the first Black teacher on Vancouver Island 1874 at the Cranberry-Cedar School located near Nanaimo.
Emma grew up on Salt Spring Island and completed high school near Nanaimo. On August 1, 1874, at the age of 18 Emma was appointed the first teacher in the new North Cedar School in 1874, becoming the first Black teacher on Vancouver Island
Image: Emma Stark, 1875, 989024010 Courtesy of Salt Spring Archives. Professional Photographer. The photo is believed to have been taken at a portrait studio in Nanaimo.

https://bcblackhistory.ca/emma-stark/

VICTORIA PIONEER RIFLE CORPS

In the spring of 1860, 40 to 50 black men were enrolled in the Victoria Pioneer Rifle Corps. This first corps of all Black men, was officially sworn in on July, 1861

Victoria Pioneer Rifle Corps standing in ranks with band members
March 1864. About 20 members of the Victoria Pioneer Rifles Corps stand in their ranks with the British flag in the background. Image F-00641 Courtesy of Royal BC Museum and Archives

HOPE MEETS ACTION – ECHOES THROUGH THE BLACK CONTINUUM

The first provincial Black History exhibition in BC. Opened on August 14, 2021 at the Royal BC Museum, Victoria BC until April 14th 2022. This exhibition has continued as a travelling exhibition across the province.

exhibition area with information panels, light boxes on walls, art in display case

BC BLACK HISTORY AWARENESS SOCIETY – FOUNDING MEMBERS

Our non-profit Society was formed in February 1994, incorporated on March 18,1994. Since March 2019 the Society is a charity registered with the Canada Revenue Agency. The first Board members were Clyde Griffith -President, Valin Marshall -Vice-President, Jean Howell -Secretary, Carl Thompson -Treasurer, and Directors-at-large Jonathan Johnson and Tyrone Gaskin.

color-group of 6 men and women in business attire
Some of the first board members, committee members, and supporters, in November 1994 are (l-r) Valin Marshall – Vice President, Jean Howell – Secretary, Emery Barnes (seated) Frank Robinson, Menziwe Mbeo, Clyde Griffith – President
©BC Black History Awareness Society, all rights reserved

Compiled by BC Black History Awareness Society, however, we cannot do this important work without the support and dedication of researchers, archivists, organizations, community, and family members who tirelessly support our work. Thank-you!