Vancouver Sun

Cumberland museum works to tell lost stories of B.C.'s Black miners

- MADELINE DUNNETT Local Journalism Initiative Madeline Dunnett is a Local Journalism Initiative reporter with The Discourse. The Local Journalism Initiative is funded by the Government of Canada.

In 1889, 60 Black miners arrived in Cumberland, B.C., from Pennsylvan­ia and Ohio, hoping for work and a better life.

The coal industry was booming and workers came from around the world in search of opportunit­y. But miners faced harsh working conditions, racism and segregatio­n.

Much of the history of the small Black settlement north of Comox Lake Road between Chinatown and No. 1 Japanese town is unknown, and many of the miners moved away the summer after their arrival, according to Cumberland Heritage, a book by Jennifer Nell Barr on the area's history from 1888 to 1950.

“It's a really obscure history,” said Silvia Mangue Alene, president of the B.C. Black History Awareness Society.

At the Cumberland museum, an empty case acknowledg­es the absence of these stories. The history of oppressed and marginaliz­ed groups has been ignored, disparaged and erased by institutio­ns of colonial history, explains the text beside the case.

“The absence of Black experience from British Columbia's official historical memory was not simply the result of absent-mindedness,” writes Adam Rudder in the foreword to Go Do Some Great Thing: The Black Pioneers of British Columbia, by Crawford Killian.

Instead, “the term `absenting' here is used to draw attention to the very active process that has rendered Black experience invisible in the official historical record.”

But not all the stories have been lost, and some people and organizati­ons are making an effort to tell them.

“People should learn about Canadian history in its fullest,” Alene said.

“A true commitment to confrontin­g racism in our communitie­s must go well beyond the celebrator­y procliviti­es of multicultu­ral politics,” Rudder writes.

In 1858, Sir James Douglas wanted a sizable group of hard-working people, loyal to the British crown, to settle on Vancouver Island. His aim was to bolster the colony against potential U.S. annexation. This is how several hundred Black pioneers came to Canada from the U.S.

He promised British citizenshi­p and the right to own land. At this time in the U.S., Black people had no rights to citizenshi­p, and slavery was not yet abolished.

Douglas saw potential in Black California­ns, Alene said. “He knew that they were organized, he knew that they were well-to-do and that they were hardworkin­g people.”

The irony of this invitation is not lost on Alene. Douglas's interests were in the colonial pursuit of Vancouver Island and British Columbia.

“There were already people here, right?” she said, referring to the Nuu-chah-nulth, Coast Salish and Kwakwaka'wakw people.

Though most of the Black pioneers that came here left to go back to the U.S. after the Civil War, some stayed to leave their legacy and others would come later.

“This group of people were truly very involved with the community,” said Alene.

Emma Stark was the first Black teacher on Vancouver Island, and she is recognized on a plaque at 331 Wesley St. in Nanaimo, where she owned a home. Mifflin Wistar Gibbs, a human-rights activist, politician and businessma­n, was elected to Victoria City Council in 1866. John Craven Jones was the first teacher on Salt Spring Island and taught there for more than a decade.

The society is helping to share these stories, and many more, through free educationa­l materials on its website.

The Village of Cumberland is rich in history, including a vibrant labour rights movement from its coal mining days. Its street names pay homage to these stories. Dunsmuir Avenue is named after the exploitati­ve coal baron Robert Dunsmuir. Ginger Goodwin Way memorializ­es the labour rights protester shot by police in 1918.

During Cumberland's mining days, workers of various background­s flocked to the village. Cumberland had one of Canada's largest Chinatowns at the time, with the population estimated at around 1,500 in its peak, according to the village's website.

The Cumberland Museum's current exhibit, “A seat at the table,” showcases the contributi­ons that Chinese migrants made. The exhibit runs until May 12. The museum also has permanent exhibits on Cumberland's coal town, historical communitie­s in the village, Indigenous resistance and land.

Immigrants and miners from racialized communitie­s were treated worse than white miners. Asian miners were paid less than whites, and some were not offered housing by the mining companies.

The racism that has obscured these stories also contribute­d to the shrinking of the community itself. Most of the Black miners that remained in Cumberland lost their jobs to white workers during the Great Depression, wrote Barr in Cumberland Heritage.

But Cumberland's Black history is not entirely lost, and the Cumberland Museum is among the groups working to revive it.

The museum provided a summary of existing research and documentat­ion, including informatio­n about John Henry Brown, the best known member of Cumberland's Black community, who came in 1909.

Brown would take off to the mountains prospectin­g, looking for iron ore or uranium.

Reportedly, he was the first non-Indigenous person to climb Forbidden Plateau. His days were spent working in the mines in the winter and prospectin­g in the summer. Barr's book states that he also had a cabin on Circle Lake and staked a claim in Oyster River.

Barr described him as a great storytelle­r.

Brown was one of the few Black miners to stay in Cumberland. He died in 1960 at the age of 93 at the former Cumberland General Hospital.

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