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Albert Jackson Commemorative Plaque, 2017  

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71.1 cm × 50.8 cm @ 300 PPI

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Resource details

Resource ID

5249

Access

Open

Address

30 Lombard Street, Toronto, ON M5C 3H8

Credit Line

Heritage Toronto

Date of Creation

2017

Historical Themes

Black Heritage
Labour History

Program Category

Plaques

Rights

Heritage Toronto

Time Period

1835-1899
1900-1953

Caption

Albert Jackson Commemorative Plaque, 2017

Description

Born into slavery in Delaware during the late 1850s, Albert Jackson became the first Black letter carrier in Toronto and one of the few people of colour to be appointed a civil servant in 19th-century Canada.

Jackson’s mother, Ann Maria, escaped from the United States to Canada with the help of the Underground Railroad network after two of her sons were sold and her husband died of grief. In 1858, Ann Maria and seven children arrived in Toronto where Albert, a toddler at the time, grew up and was educated.

Jackson was appointed a letter carrier on May 12, 1882. Because of racial discrimination, white postal workers refused to train Albert to deliver mail so his supervisor assigned him to an indoor position as a hall porter instead.

Toronto’s Black community organized support for Jackson, arranging a public meeting and creating a committee to advocate for him. A heated debate ensued in the press about his appointment, during which he was supported by Prime Minister Sir John A. Macdonald who was courting Black voters. Jackson began his training on June 2, 1882; he worked at the post office for 36 years, until his death in 1918.

The Toronto General Post Office stood on this site from 1873 to 1958, and it was here that Jackson picked up mail for delivery along his routes.

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Location Data

Marker lat / long: 43.651504, -79.376533 (WGS84)

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