1 / 13

Africville

Africville. Instructions: Textbook = Towards Freedom Read pages 120 to 122. Answer questions #1 to 7 on Africville that are located on the hand-out with the map of NS. You have 15 minutes to complete the questions!. 1. Where was Africville located? - North end of Halifax, NS

luka
Télécharger la présentation

Africville

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Africville

  2. Instructions: Textbook = Towards Freedom • Read pages 120 to 122. • Answer questions #1 to 7 on Africville that are located on the hand-out with the map of NS. You have 15 minutes to complete the questions!

  3. 1. Where was Africville located? - North end of Halifax, NS - Beside the MacKay Bridge at the edge of the Bedford Basin Answers

  4. Answers • When and how did Africville form? - 1848 - Through a Land Purchase

  5. Answers • What was the base of the community? - The Seaview Baptist Church

  6. Answers • How were the people of Africville industrious? - They worked as labourers and in service jobs in Halifax - Halifax stonemasons helped construct many of Halifax’s public buildings - Worked on ships and at the ship yard.

  7. Answers • Why was land expropriated from the community in the 1850’s? - Railroad tracks and sewage disposal pits were located there.

  8. Africville • What did the city council locate just a “stone’s throw away” in the mid-1950s? - A large dump

  9. Answers • Why did city council vote to expropriate Africville in 1964? - In the name of “urban renewal” - They believed that Africville was slums and there was an article in a newspaper calling it a black ghetto.

  10. Notes These are located on the handout with the questions #1 to 7 • Majority of the residents were descendents of the black refugees from the War of 1812. • It was initially known as Campbell Road, but because the residents were black it was changed to Africville • Although the residents paid the city taxes, there was a lack of basic services such as sewers, running water and paved roads • It became the home to Rockland Prison (1853), an infectious disease hospital (1870s), a trachoma hospital (1905) and a slaughter house.

  11. Notes • Residents were given $500 to relocate • They owned there homes in Africville, but were moved to public housing and had to pay rent. This caused a lot to go on welfare. • They were moved in City dump trucks • The two main areas they were moved to were: Uniacke Square and Mulgrave Park

  12. Notes • It is now a national historic site known as Seaview Memorial Park

  13. Africville Homework Hand-out You are a resident of Africville who has been asked to relocate. Write a letter to the City Council asking them to keep Africville instead of destroying it. You must defend your argument by using examples. length = app. 150 to 200 words

More Related