"We had no desire to be set apart": Forced Segregation of Black Students in Canada West Public Schools and Myths of British Egalitarianism
Authors
Kristin McLaren
Abstract
The practice of school segregation in mid-nineteenth-century Canada West defied
popular images of the province as a guardian of British moral and egalitarian
ideals. African Canadians in Canada West found themselves excluded from public
education or forced into segregation, practices that were against the spirit if not the
letter of British and Canadian law. Education laws were changed to accommodate
racism, while guardians of the education system tolerated illegal discriminatory
practices. A number of historians have described the emergence of segregated
racial schools in Canada West as a response to requests by black people to be separate;
however, historical evidence contradicts this assertion. African Canadians in
the mid-nineteenth century fought against segregation and refused to be set apart.
Numerous petitions to the Education Department complained of exclusion from
common schools and expressed desires for integration, not segregation. When black
people did open their own schools, children of all ethnic backgrounds were welcome
in these institutions.