Black Loyalists, Jamaica Maroons and Black Refugees
2 users like thisThree of the most significant migrations of the African diaspora to Nova Scotia happened within a span of thirty years. Read more about the settlement and struggles of Black Loyalists (1783), the Maroons of Jamaica (1795) and Black Refugees (1816).


35 items
Almost Home
Maroons Between Slavery and Freedom in Jamaica, Nova Scotia, and Sierra Leone
North to Bondage
Loyalist Slavery in the Maritimes
The Black Loyalists
Southern Settlers of the First Free Black Communities in Nova Scotia
Chasing Freedom
a Novel
To Stand and Fight Together
Richard Pierpoint and the Coloured Corps of Upper Canada
Blacks on the Border
the Black Refugees in British North America, 1815-1860
Rough Crossings
Britain, the Slaves, and the American Revolution
From American Slaves to Nova Scotian Subjects
the Case of the Black Refugees, 1813-1840
Report on Early History of the Preston Area :
Cherry Brook, Lake Loon, Lake Major, East Preston, and North Preston
Sand Hill
Cumberland County's Historical Black Community
Black Loyalists of Nova Scotia
Tracing the History of Tracadie Loyalists 1776-1787
The Shelburne Black Loyalists
a Short Biography of All Blacks Emigrating to Shelburne County, Nova Scotia After the American Revolution 1783
Archaeological Surveys in Two Black Communities, 1998
Surveying the Tracadie Area and Testing Two Sites in Birchtown
Was This the Home of Stephen Blucke?
the Excavation of AkDi-23, Birchtown, Shelburne County
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