The renaissance of Hogan's Alley: Deal struck to revive Vancouver's historic Black neighbourhood - Action News
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The renaissance of Hogan's Alley: Deal struck to revive Vancouver's historic Black neighbourhood

The Hogan's Alley Society is set to provide housing, amenities and a new cultural centre on the site that was formerly home to about 800 black Vancouverites,through a recently-announced community land trust with the City of Vancouver.

City planning in the early '70s led to the displacement and erasure of Hogan's Alley

Jane Francis of the Hogan's Alley Society stands by a mural commemorating Hogan's Alley. The society hopes to create a new hub for the city's Black community. (Justine Boulin/CBC)

For decades,Hogan's Alley served as a hub for Vancouver's Black community before city planning in the 1970s led to the displacement of a once-vibrant neighbourhood.

Now, arecent agreement with the City of Vancouver will provide a community land trust to the Hogan's Alley Society for the land bordered by Main and Gore streets to the west and east and Union and Prior streets to the north and south.

In return, the society will providehousing, amenitiesand acultural centre.

June Francis, the co-chair of the Hogan's Alley Society and director of the Institute for the Black and African diaspora atSimon Fraser University, said the project is an attempt to revive what was once the main street and focal point of Vancouver's Black community.

"The whole idea is to bring back and redress what was lost," Francis said.

WATCH | Archival footage of Hogan's alley:

A look at the past and future of Hogan's Alley

2 years ago
Duration 1:07
Vancouver's Black neighbourhood was dismantled in the late 1960s to make room for the Georgia and Dunsmuir street viaducts.

Black settlement in the area dates back to 1858 when governor James Douglas introduced a policy welcoming Black Californians to British Columbia. The Great Northern Railway station nearby also meant many Black porters chose Hogan's Alley as a home in the 1920s.

At one point, Hogan's Alley was home to more than 800 Black community members and featured the African Methodist Episcopal Chapel, a residence for the Brotherhood of Sleeping Car Porters, as well as the legendary Vie's Chicken and Steak House a hotspot where Jimi Hendrix's grandmother Nora, a vaudevillian performer and choir singer, worked as a cook.

Over the years, the neighbourhood faced obstacles.

The city's efforts to rezone Strathcona made it difficult for residents to obtain mortgages or loans for home improvements. Newspaper articles portrayed Hogan's Alley as a centre of squalor, immorality and crime, according to the Vancouver Heritage Society.

At one point, Hogans Alley in Vancouver was home to more than 800 members of the Black community. (Justine Boulin//CBC)

Much of the area was razed to make way for the Georgia and Dunsmuirstreet viaducts as part ofa plan to build a freeway through the city.The viaducts opened in 1972, although plans for a larger freeway never came to pass.

Francis said the destruction of Hogan'sAlley was part of a larger pattern that saw Black communities displaced in cities across North America. The loss of Hogan's Alley, Francis said, left Vancouver's Black community fragmented.

Coun.Christine Boyle says through the land trust, the city aims towork with the Hogan's Alley Societyto make up for past injustices.

"The Black community was lively and thriving in Hogan's Alley, and approaches to what was then called urban renewal displaced, erasedand removed them."

Djaka Blaisof the Hogan's Alley Society said the community land trust is a chance to turn the area into a thriving hub for the Black community. (Justine Boulin/CBC)

The city notes the redevelopment will require the removal of the viaducts and the introduction of a new street network, both of which are still several years away.

Society executive director Djaka Blaissays the project hopes to reclaim some of the hope that was lost.

"Theopportunity here istoreclaim that sense of presence and place and to be working towarda thriving hub againfor the Black community," Blais said.

Hogan's Alley: Why a thriving Black community in Vancouver was demolished

4 years ago
Duration 5:59
The area around Vancouver's Georgia and Dunsmuir viaducts was once the heart of a thriving Black community established in the early 1900s known as Hogan's Alley.
A banner of upturned fists, with the words 'Being Black in Canada'.

For more stories about the experiences of Black Canadians from anti-Black racism to success stories within the Black community check out Being Black in Canada, a CBC project Black Canadians can be proud of.You can read more stories here.

With files from Joel Ballard and Canadian Press