Canada·Video

Canadian man's Black Loyalist heritage leads him to Africa

Birchtown, N.S., is famous for having been one of the largest settlements of Black Loyalists, black soldiers who sided with the British during the American Revolution and found refuge in Canada. CBC's Kimberly Gale talks to Wayn Hamilton, a Canadian who traced his family tree back two centuries and discovered relatives in Sierra Leone.

Black Loyalists' history

12 years ago
Duration 4:48
Wayn Hamilton traces his family's history back to black soldiers who sided with the British during the American revolution, and eventually found refuge in Nova Scotia

Birchtown, N.S., is famous for having been one of the largest settlements of Black Loyalists, black soldiers who sided with the British during the American Revolution and found refuge in Canada.

Many of these liberated slaves eventually left Canada's icy landscape for greener pastures in Africa.

CBC's Kimberly Gale talks to Wayn Hamilton, a Canadian who traced his family tree back two centuries and discovered long-lost relatives in Sierra Leone.