Part of the former territory of Africville is occupied by a highway interchange that serves the
A. Murray MacKay Bridge. The port development at Fairview Cove did not extend as far east as Africville, leaving its historic waterfront intact. In light of the controversy related to the relocation, the city of Halifax created the Seaview Memorial Park on the site in the 1980s, preserving it from development. The park was most often used as an off-leash dog park. Eddie Carvery has been living on the Africville site since 1970 in protest of the razing despite city officials seizing his trailers several times. Likewise, former Africville residents carried out periodic protests at the park throughout the 1980s and 1990s. The Africville Genealogy Society was formed in 1983 to track former residents and their descendants. Halifax mayor
Peter Kelly offered land, some money, and various other services for a replica of the Seaview
African United Baptist Church. After the offer was made in 2002, the Africville Genealogy Society requested some alterations to the Halifax offer, including additional land and the possibility of building
affordable housing near the site. The area that once was Africville was thereby declared a national historic site in 2002.
Africville apology In May 2005,
New Democratic Party of Nova Scotia MLA Maureen MacDonald introduced a bill in the provincial legislature called the
Africville Act. The bill called for a formal apology from the Nova Scotia government, a series of public hearings on the destruction of Africville, and the establishment of a development fund to go towards historical preservation of Africville lands and social development in benefit of former residents and their descendants. On 23 February 2010, the Halifax Council ratified a proposed Africville apology, with an arrangement with the Government of Canada to establish a $250,000 Africville Heritage Trust to design a museum and build a replica of the community church. The dedicated site was a area. On 24 February 2010, Halifax Mayor Peter Kelly made the
Africville Apology, apologizing for the eviction as part of a $4.5 million compensation deal. The City restored the name Africville to Seaview Park at the annual Africville Family Reunion on 29 July 2011.
Africville Museum A building designed to mimic the Seaview African United Baptist Church, demolished in 1969, was erected in the summer of 2011 to serve as a museum and historic interpretation centre. The nearly complete church was ceremonially opened on 25 September 2011. The opening ceremonies included a gospel concert, several church services, and the release of a compilation audio album with archival recordings of songs sung in Africville. Since then, the museum has given tours of the site, put on a number of exhibits, commissioned a play about the beginnings of Africville, and organized a number of fundraisers and petitions, including to add a transit stop at and accessibility improvements to the museum. A civil lawsuit has been filed seeking individual compensation for property in Africville.
Tributes and related media Music •
African Canadian singer/songwriter
Faith Nolan released an album in 1986 titled
Africville. •
Africville Suite (1996) is an album of original music, released by Montreal-born jazz pianist
Joe Sealy, that includes twelve pieces reflecting on places and activities in Africville, where Sealy's father was born. Sealy worked and lived in Halifax during the time of the destruction of the community, and began the suite in memory of his father. The album won a
Juno Award in 1997. • ''Ain't No Thing Like a Chicken Wing'' (1997) is an album released by Canadian jazz pianist
Trevor Mackenzie as a tribute to the neighbourhood where his father grew up. • "A Nourishment by Neglect" (2007) is a song by Newfoundland metal/hardcore band
Bucket Truck accompanied by a video that details the events surrounding the destruction of the Africville community. • In 2007,
Canadian hip-hop group Black Union released a song featuring
Maestro about the historic community of Africville. The music video was recorded in Seaview Park (now Africville Park). The video has over 50,000 views on YouTube.
Film •
Remember Africville (1991) is a documentary film, released by the
National Film Board of Canada, which received the Moonsnail Award for best documentary at the
Atlantic Film Festival. •
Stolen From Africville (2008) is an independently produced documentary that follows the lives of those displaced from the Africville community over the course of a year. Written and directed by Canadian activist/performer Neil Donaldson (known as Logikal Ethix) and Sourav Deb, the film received funding from
Heritage Canada in 2007. • ''Africville: Can't Stop Now'' (2009), produced by Marty Williams and Juanita Peters with Africville Productions, is a documentary that presents the community that has survived despite having lost its home.
Literature •
Consecrated Ground (1998), a play by
George Boyd and produced by Eastern Front Theatre, dramatized the Africville eviction. In 2000, the play was nominated for a
Governor-General's award for English-Language Drama. •
Last Days in Africville (2006, Dundurn Press), by
Dorothy Perkyns, is a fictional account of life for a young Africville girl at the time of the community's destruction. • The story of Africville has influenced the work of
George Elliott Clarke. •
The Children of Africville (2007), a children's book by Christine Welldon, tells the story of the children who were growing up during the communities final years, before it was destroyed and the residents were relocated. On 15 June 2009, the
Rev. Jesse Jackson, a noted American civil rights activist, was presented with the book at the Nova Scotia Alliance of Black School Educators. Irvine Carvery, president of the Africville Genealogy Society and chair of the
Halifax Regional School Board, made the presentation. •
The Hermit of Africville (2010, Pottersfield Press) is a biography of longtime Africville protester
Eddie Carvery. •
Big Town (2011, Nimbus Publishing/Vagrant Press), a novel by
Stephens Gerard Malone, is a fictional account related to the eviction of residents and the razing of Africville. •
Africville (2018) is a book by
Shauntay Grant, for which the Africville Museum held a book launch for on September 13, 2018. •
Africaville (2019), an adult novel by American Jeffrey Colvin, explores the lives of three generations associated with the community, frequently referring flashbacks to earlier history.
Other • In 1989, a historic exhibit about Africville toured across Canada. It has been developed as a permanent exhibit at
Nova Scotia's Black Cultural Centre in
Preston. • In 2012, the Africville Heritage Trust created the "Out Home: Africville" Educational Resource Kit. This kit consists of teaching resources and a variety of student activities that foster empathy, cultural understanding, and a sense of empowerment as students uncover the complexities of an important story. • In 2020, college student Danielle Mahon created the online project
Mapping Memories of Africville. It exhibits public records and interviews from two former Africville residents, while tagging the sources to specific locations in an aerial view of Africville's former site. ==Notable residents==