Prior to European colonization, the
Mi'kmaq inhabited the land throughout Atlantic Canada and Northern Maine. The North End of Halifax began as an
agricultural expansion north from central Halifax as
African American and
German Foreign Protestant settlers arrived in the province. It became the focus of industry in Halifax with the construction of the
Nova Scotia Railway in the 1850s which located its terminal in the North End. Factories such as the
Nova Scotia Cotton Manufacturing Company, Hillis & Sons Foundry, and the Acadia Sugar Refinery, made the North End the focus of manufacturing in Halifax. Railway growth intensified with the extension of railways further into the North End and construction of the
North Street Station in 1878, the largest station east of Montreal. Wharves warehouses lined the waterfront, along with the city's prison at Rockhead and major defence installations such as
HMC Dockyard and Stadacona (formerly HMCS Stadacona and Wellington Barracks, now part of
CFB Halifax). On 6 December 1917, the
Halifax Explosion damaged and destroyed much of the North End. The explosion's aftermath saw the area north of North Street razed, and a new street grid was superimposed over the old street patterns. New residential construction saw the creation of the
Hydrostone neighbourhood, built during the relief construction following the disaster. Today the memorial bells at Fort Needham, which were recovered from a church that didn't survive the event, may be heard in the carillon and monument to the disaster. The Memorial was designed by Nova Scotia architect Keith L. Graham. The
Halifax Shipyard was built in 1918 beside the Naval Dockyard, further entrenching the industrial character of the North End. The area once included historic
Africville. A former African-Canadian community settled by African
slaves coming to Canada, it was located on the shores of the
Bedford Basin within the North End. A consequence of the
Halifax Explosion, the community was damaged on 6 December 1917. In January 1964, the City Council of Halifax voted to relocate the residents of the community. The municipal government justified the destruction of Africville by citing the poor living conditions of the community, despite having historically refused to extend those services to the community. The community was torn down in the 1960s preceding a proposed urban redevelopment of the region which would see new highways and the construction of the
A. Murray MacKay Bridge, although the lands of the community were never used in a proposed port expansion. In the ensuing controversy it was designated as parkland. The Africville expropriation is often characterized as an example of
institutional racism in Halifax. Descendants and residents of Africville were dispersed among some of the North End's public housing projects, as well as into other communities throughout the urban area, and beyond. Seaview Park on the
Bedford Basin is the site of
Africville The North End has traditionally been home to a number of important African Nova Scotian institutions. Provincial institutions like the African United Baptist Association and the Nova Scotia Association for the Advancement of Colored People were formed in the North End at
New Horizons Baptist Church. Throughout the 20th century, Gottingen Street was the epicenter for black business and enterprise in Nova Scotia, including being home to a beauty shop and school owned by
Viola Desmond. The North End housed one of the first
Afrocentric schools in Canada, St. Patrick's-Alexandra School (closed in 2011). A neighbourhood with strong
African Nova Scotian roots, the area has undergone
gentrification in recent years. As a result, the proportion of Black residents in the neighbourhood has fallen from 30% in 2006 to 15% in 2016. In 1966, the Halifax North Memorial Public Library was opened in memory of the victims of the explosion. Located on at 2285 Gottingen Street. opened in 1955, changing the North End and the Halifax-Dartmouth region forever. Its western abutment is located at the foot of the North End and the bridge connects North Street with
Dartmouth. ==Geography==