Tri-County Vanguard

Dr. Elizabeth Cromwell CM invested into Order of Nova Scotia posthumous­ly

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council to the Chancellor of the Order of Nova Scotia.

ABOUT DR. ELIZABETH CROMWELL

Dr. Cromwell, who passed away on Oct. 2, has been recognized and honoured for her work in preserving and promoting black history in Nova Scotia numerous times. She was awarded the Canada 125 medal as well as a Queen Elizabeth II Diamond Jubilee medal. In 2014, she received an honorary degree from Mount Saint Vincent University, as well as an honorary degree from Dalhousie University Schulich School of Law in May 2017. In the same year, she was appointed to the Order of Canada as a member (CM) for her contributi­ons to Black Heritage Preservati­on and Education in Nova Scotia.

“Dr. Elizabeth Cromwell, C.M., is an African Nova Scotian and a Black Loyalist descendant of great strength, vision and perseveran­ce,” reads her biography for the Order of Nova Scotia. “She spent the majority of her career as a caseworker supervisor with the Shelburne County Children’s Aid Society. She was dedicated to volunteeri­ng for organizati­ons across the province as well as in her community for the Christ Church Anglican Council and parish and was a founding board member of the Shelburne County Cultural Awareness Society, the precursor to the Black Loyalist Heritage Society.

“In the 1980s, she fought against the environmen­tal racism of a proposed landfill in her community, which led to the formation of the Shelburne County Cultural Awareness Society in 1989. The society successful­ly blocked the proposed landfill, which would have destroyed valuable African Nova Scotian archaeolog­ical items and records.

“Dr. Cromwell collected genealogic­al informatio­n and other historical informatio­n to promote the contributi­ons of the Black Loyalists and their descendant­s in Nova Scotia. She was instrument­al in mobilizing the community to promote

Black Loyalists and African Nova Scotian history,” her bio reads. “Under her leadership, the society secured a national historic site and monument board designatio­n for the historic event of the landing of Black Loyalists in Canada in 1783. Dr. Cromwell was instrument­al in assisting Lawrence Hill in his research in the writing of ‘The Book of Negroes,’ which later was turned into a movie that was filmed in the Town of Shelburne. Her passion and dedication to preserve the history of the Black Loyalists and share this history with the broader community culminated in the developmen­t and constructi­on of the Black Loyalists Heritage Centre which opened in 2015.”

She has been described as a staunch advocate for celebratin­g African Nova Scotian history, and the journey of black loyalists who arrived in Birchtown.

“Her voice and persistent determinat­ion helped give black history its rightful place in the provincial and national narrative,” her Order of Nova Scotia biography states.

 ??  ?? The late Dr. Elizabeth Cromwell CM.
The late Dr. Elizabeth Cromwell CM.
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