Community rallies behind bid to preserve home of Nova Scotia’s first Black doctor
HALIFAX — Prominent members of Nova Scotia’s Black community are supporting a bid to protect the Halifax home and clinic of the late Clement Ligoure, the province’s first Black doctor and an unsung hero of the 1917 Halifax Explosion.
Originally from Trinidad, Ligoure graduated in 1916 with a medical degree from Queen’s University in Kingston, Ont., and he would later become editor of Nova Scotia’s first Black newspaper, the Atlantic Advocate. He was also co-founder of the No. 2 Construction Battalion, Canada’s only all-Black unit to serve during the First World War.
“He was a leader in many fields and he had a lot of courage,” said Peggy Cameron, director of the Friends of Halifax Common and the person who applied to have Ligoure’s former home granted heritage status.
“He understood that he had a role as a leader in the Black community. He was outstanding on many levels — personally, professionally, locally and nationally.”