FIRST JOHNSTON CHAIR ARCHIVES

1996-2002 Archived pages of The First James Robinson Johnston Endowed Chair in Black Canadian Studies

The James Robinson Johnston Endowed Chair in Black Canadian Studies is an unprecedented national initiative established to “bring Black culture, reality, perspectives, experiences and concerns into the Academy. ” A truly government-public collective effort and collaborative partnership between both institutions and individuals from across Canada, the Johnston Chair was established with the support of a $2.5 million endowment.

The Johnston Chair was set up at Dalhousie University and is symbolically named for James Robinson Johnston, the first African Nova Scotian university graduate, and the first from his Community to earn a law degree from Dalhousie Law School in 1898.

Following a national recruitment campaign to find a senior scholar, in 1996 Dalhousie University invited Quebec Human Rights Educator,
Esmeralda M.A. Thornhill to inaugurate, anchor and pilot the James Robinson Johnston Endowed Chair in Black Canadian Studies. Homed in Dalhousie’s then Faculty of Law, Professor Thornhill held the Chair from 1996-2002.

Visit some of the 1996-2002 Archived Web Pages of the First Johnston National Endowed Chair in Black Canadian Studies

Visit Tributes

Visit the 1996-2002 First Johnston Chair’s Public Lecture Series

Visit the Archived Pages of the First Johnston Endowed Chair’s  2001  International Symposium: Racism and the Black World Response