Halifax naming street after civil rights champion and 'unsung hero' Dr. Alfred Waddell - Action News
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Halifax naming street after civil rights champion and 'unsung hero' Dr. Alfred Waddell

Halifax is paying tribute to Dr. Alfred Waddell, who dedicated his life to helping people who did not have access to medical care while fighting racial injustice by naming a street in his honour.

A street will honour him in the new Cogswell District, where he worked as a doctor

Doctor who championed civil rights will have a Halifax street named after him

6 days ago
Duration 3:08
Halifax is naming a street in the new Cogswell District in honour of Dr. Alfred Waddell. He was one of the only physicians during his time to provide house calls to historically Black communities such as the Prestons, Africville and Beechville.

Halifax is paying tribute to a doctor who dedicated his life to helping people who had limited access to medical care while fighting racial injustice by naming a street in his honour.

Dr. Alfred Waddell Streetwill be part of the new Cogswell District, the area where he used to work, live and volunteer through the 1930s until his death in 1953.

"It's great," said Dr. Ron Milne, Waddell's grandson. "I think it's overdue that the city and the province should recognize him because of all the work he did in civil rights and advocacy as well as in medicine."

Milne's mother and Waddell's daughter, Winifred Milne, who is now 98, is also pleased with the news, he said.

Waddell, who was born in 1896 in Trinidad and Tobago, moved to Halifax to study at Dalhousie University, where he became one of the first Black doctors to graduate in 1933.

Paying tribute to ahero

The street that will be in his name will be off Brunswick Street, where Proctor Street is now. It is a few blocks from where Waddellestablished his first practice in what is now the Black Educators Association.

"I think this is a fitting way to honour him," said Ron Milne, 73. "He made a big difference. He's an unsung hero."

Milne, who was three when his grandfather died,said Waddellis credited as one of the onlyphysicians during his time to provide house calls to historically Black communities such as thePrestons, Africville andBeechville.

A man stands by a street closure sign with the Halifax Harbour in the background.
Dr. Ron Milne, seen here on Proctor Street, says he and his family are pleased the city is naming a street in his grandfather's honour. (Gareth Hampshire/CBC News)

During the polio outbreak of the 1930s, he also helped immunize people in those communities. He did all this in vehicles he had to borrow to get there.

"They didn't have a car in the early days because they were poor and people couldn't pay for services. They paid him with chickens and eggs," Milne said.

Waddell is perhaps best known fortreating Viola Desmond for her injuries following her arrestwhen sherefused to leave a whites-only section of a theatre in New Glasgow, N.S., in 1946.

"He was very upset about what had happened to her," Milne said. "He helped her by writing several letters to the provincial government and the federal government, trying to get her conviction overturned."

Waddell was alsoinstrumental in desegregating the swimming pool at the HalifaxCommonafterone ofhis sons was asked to leave in the 1930s.

In addition to his work as a physician, Waddellcontributed articles for the Clarion and the Negro Citizen, two Black newspapers he helped set up and fund.

Waddell 'was way ahead of his time'

Waddell'sname was in the running to replaceCornwallis Street in Halifaxbefore Nora Bernard was chosen.

Proctor Street is a block away, in the area of a former community where manyBlack families lived untiltheir homes were torndown to make way for the Cogswell Interchange.

"By naming a street after Dr. Waddell, we hope to highlight the history, cultural significance and contributions of the African Nova Scotian community in this neighbourhood," the Halifax Regional Municipality said in a statement.

Waddell's achievements were highlighted in the2001 documentary filmBefore his Time.

"He was way ahead of his time in terms of all his social activities and how much he cared for people and what he contributed," said Lalita Krishna, the film's writer and director.

Weighing scales and a black and white photo are shown in a glass case.
A display honouring Dr. Alfred Waddell is shown at the Sir Charles Tupper medical building at Dalhousie University's medical school. (David Laughlin/CBC News)

The film shows a picture of hisclassmates from his graduation year at Dalhousie, where Waddellfaced being denied an internship on the basis of his race.

"But his classmates stood up for him and basically protested and said that they wouldn't do their residency either if he was not allowed to graduate," said Krishna.

Milneis continuing his grandfather'slegacy as a physician. He is part of the teamofferingculturally specific health care to Black men with the Nova Scotia Brotherhood Initiative.

It is one part of his efforts to carry on Waddell's advocacy.

"There are still inequities, disparities in income and health care and housing, so many areas of life," said Milne."So it's still a battle going on."

For more stories about the experiences ofBlackCanadians from anti-Blackracism to success stories within theBlackcommunity check outBeingBlackinCanada, a CBC projectBlackCanadianscan be proud of.You can read more stories here.

A banner of upturned fists, with the words 'Being Black in Canada'.
(CBC)

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