New walking tour teaches Kitchener's forgotten Black history
CBC
A new walking tour in downtown Kitchener wants to teach people about some of the the city's forgotten Black history.
Black Presence in Berlin is being run by Stroll Walking Tours in honour of Black History Month.
Tour company owner Juanita Metzger and Peggy Plet — who did the research for the specialized tour — say they hope to restore and preserve the contributions Black settlers had in early Kitchener, which then would have been known as Berlin.
"It's a part of our Waterloo region history that is missing in the telling of how this community was formed and who was here in the 19th century," Metzger told CBC Kitchener-Waterloo.
Plet said extensive research went into the project and it was "quite a challenge" looking through old directories to track down former Black residents and their stories — partly because little remains of the original structures.
Ultimately, Plet hopes people who take the tour discover a deeper connection to their community and learn more about downtown Kitchener's rich Black history.
"Former Black residents walked the same streets I am walking on today and that is very exciting," Plet said. "After all, this is part of local history. It's not separate history."
CBC Kitchener-Waterloo joined Plets and Mertzer on a mini-tour, to learn more about three sites on King Street.
Emancipation Day celebrations and events use to be held at the former North American Hotel, just across from the CBC Kitchener-Waterloo station.
Today, a condo building is being built there, but Plet said back in the early 1900s, many would make the trip to downtown to celebrate.
"People would come out to Kitchener to celebrate Emancipation Day, a remarkable day in Black history," she said.
In 1953, the sound of Louis Armstrong's trumpet could be heard through downtown Kitchener. He stayed at the Walper Hotel that year.
"There use to be a balcony right above the Coffee Culture sign," said Plet, pointing to the windows above where Coffee Culture is now located on the corner of Queen and King streets.
"He performed at the Auditorium and at night he use to play his trumpet from the balcony."
'It's our space': Thunder Bay residents rally to save parkette as city aims to sell land for housing
Residents of a small southside neighbourhood in Thunder Bay, Ont., say they're willing to fight once again to save their parkette from being sold by the city and redeveloped into housing.