First racially integrated preschool in Halifax to be subject of documentary - Action News
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Nova Scotia

First racially integrated preschool in Halifax to be subject of documentary

A Halifax filmmaker is working on a two-part documentary looking at the first racially integrated preschool in Halifax.

Brunswick-Cornwallis Pre-school started in 1960s and ran for 3 decades

In this 1964 photo of the school at the Cornwallis St. Baptist Church, Catherine Verall and Muriel Cromwell supervise a group of children.
Black and white children attended the Brunswick-Cornwallis Pre-school that was established in the early 1960s. Catherine Verrall is on the right and co-founder Muriel (Desmond) Cromwell is in the back row. (Verrall Collection)

Halifax filmmaker Ann Verrall is working on a two-part documentary aboutthe city's first racially integrated school.

The Brunswick-CornwallisPre-school was started in the city's north end in the 1960s and ran for almost 30 years.

Verrall'sfamily moved to Halifax in 1961.

Her father,Arthur Verrall,became the minister at theBrunswick Street United Church.

Verralltold CBC Radio's Information Morning Nova Scotia that she asked her mother, Catherine, what led to her decision to start the preschool. Catherine died in 2021.

"She said that when we moved there, she was just so shocked and depressed by how racist it was in Halifax," Verrall said. "Shejust felt that she had to do something."

Segregated schools

Her mother joined forces with Juetta Coleman, wife of the pastor atthe nearby Cornwallis Baptist Church now New Horizons Baptist Church.After meeting with mothers in the community, it was decided that an integrated school was a good idea and members of both churches came together to form a board, Verrall said.

Thatled to the creation of theBrunswick-CornwallisPre-school.

"So it was it was kind of like a gradual kind of process of reaching out to both communities and and then deciding that both together that this was a good idea," said Verrall. "It was through those church communities that the children kind of came to the the preschool."

Segregated schools were the norm in Nova Scotia at the time. But Verrall said the new pre-school wasn't just integrated it establisheda model of equal representation of Black and white students, staff and board members.

New school was 'revolutionary'

Sheryl Grant, Verrall's collaborator and the co-producer ofthe documentaries, grew up in the north end. She said the idea for an integrated school was "revolutionary at the time."

Grantsaid her mother was a teacher in the segregated school system and her conversations with Catherine Verrall were instrumental in the creation of the school.

Grant said the preschool influenced the province's Africentric Four Plus program. That program, launched in the 1990s,prepares four-year-oldsfor Grade Primary.

Verrall said the first part of the documentary explores the relationship between her mother and Grant's mother.

She said it looks at the historical context of the preschool and the stories of both women leading up to when they met in 1961.

The second documentary will look at the history of the preschool, Verrall said.

Research ongoing

The research on the school is ongoing, she said, and the group has set up a Facebook page.

In her research, Verrallsaid she has found a number of former teachers at the school, including 90-year-old Muriel Cromwell, then Muriel Desmond. Desmond was a co-founder of the school alongside Catherine Verrall and Juetta Coleman and served as the first assistant director.

An elderly woman and a younger woman look at photos.
Teachers Betty Strugnell and Muriel Cromwell looking at photos. (Ann Verrall)

Verrallsaid they will have a table at the Africville reunion this weekend to gather any stories that people may have.

Some surviving teachers from the school will be with them, Verrall said.

"Alot of the records have been lost so we're hoping to find the people who have gone to the preschool," Verrall said.

"Over 600 students went through that school and so we're we're trying to recreate the records."


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.

Five fists raised, different shades of brown skin, next to text that says Being Black in Canada surrounded by an orange and red border.
(CBC)

With files from Information Morning Nova Scotia