Hogan's Alley
- Wayde Compton, author
In 1858, Governor James Douglas invited Black Americans from California to settle in British Columbia. They came first to Victoria and Salt Spring Island, then to Vancouver. By the early 1900s, Black porters working the Great Northern Railway settled in the blocks between Union and Prior streets, Main and Jackson. Homesteaders from Alberta, families originally from Oklahoma, followed. The neighbourhood they built became known as Hogan's Alley.
By the 1940s, nearly 800 Black residents called Strathcona home. They didn't just live here. They built here. Restaurants, nightclubs, churches, and businesses, block by block, from nothing.