Ontario Black Canadians

Online Records

 * 1834-1934 - The Black Canadian Experience in Ontario: 1834-1914
 * 1899-1949 - Immigrants to Canada, Porters and Domestics, 1899-1949
 * 1836-1895 - William King Collection

Background and History
Black Canadians is a designation used for people of full or partial sub-Saharan African descent, who are citizens or permanent residents of Canada. The majority of Black Canadians are of Caribbean origin, though the population also consists of African-American immigrants and their descendants, as well as many native African immigrants.
 * Black History in Canada

Many Canadians of Afro-Caribbean origin strongly object to the term African Canadian, as it obscures their own culture and history, and this partially accounts for the term's less prevalent use in Canada, compared to the consensus African American south of the border. Black Nova Scotians, a more distinct cultural group, some of whom can trace their Canadian ancestry back to the 1700s, use both terms, African Canadian and Black Canadian. Caribbean Canadian is often used to refer to Black Canadians of Caribbean heritage. More specific national terms such as Jamaican Canadian, Haitian Canadian, or Ghanaian Canadian are also used.

As a group, Black people arrived in Canada in several waves:
 * 1) A few thousand Africans arrived in Canada in the 17th and 18th centuries as slaves.
 * 2) After the American Revolution, the British gave passage to over 3000 slaves and free Blacks who had remained loyal to the Crown.
 * 3) Fearing for their safety in the United States after the passage of the first Fugitive Slave Law in 1793, over 30,000 slaves came to Canada via the Underground Railroad until the end of the American Civil War in 1865. They settled mostly in southern Ontario.
 * 4) Other migrations of Black people from the United States occurred during the War of 1812, when over 2000 refugees came to Nova Scotia and New Brunswick.
 * 5) Many Black people migrated to Canada in search of work and became porters with the railroad companies in Ontario, Quebec, and the Western provinces or worked in mines in the Maritimes.
 * 6) From 1910 to 1962, the government of Canada implemented a new Immigration Act that barred immigrants into Canada from races deemed undesirable and very few Black people entered Canada. Canada maintained its restrictions of immigration until 1962, when racial rules were eliminated from the immigration laws. By the mid-1960s, approximately 15,000 Caribbean immigrants had settled in Toronto. Over the next decades, several hundred thousand Afro-Caribbeans arrived, becoming the predominant black population in Canada. Between 1950 and 1995, about 300,000 people from the West Indies settled in Canada.

Ontario Black Africans

 * Most of Ontario's black settlements were in and around Windsor, Chatham, London, St Catharines and Hamilton. Toronto had a black district, and there were smaller concentrations of blacks near Barrie, Owen Sound and Guelph.
 * In Ontario the Underground Railroad fugitives tended to concentrate in settlements, less as a consequence of government policy than for the sake of mutual support and protection against white Canadian prejudice and discrimination and American kidnappers.
 * The fugitive blacks who had arrived in Ontario via the Underground Railroad typically arrived destitute, and without government land grants were usually forced to become labourers on the lands of others, although some farmed their own land successfully, and some worked for the Great Western Railway.