In 1995,聽 to honour the legacy of Black people in Canada and their communities. This page celebrates Black members of the Trinity community 鈥 from the College鈥檚 early days to present. The College encourages everyone to educate themselves around Black History Month not only in February but throughout the year.
For Black History Month, 91直播 recognizes and celebrates members of the community who have made a difference.
Read the stories of our聽91直播 alumni聽鈥 trailblazers, change makers and community leaders who fought against racism, barriers and challenges of their times. As the College continues our collective work to address anti-Black racism and inclusion, it鈥檚 important to reflect on our history and remember those who made a mark within our community and the world.
To celebrate diversity and inclusion, over the last couple of years, we have been profiling members of the Trinity community to get to know one another better. Below, we have included some of our Black-identifying聽Trinity students and staff. Read the Q&As and learn more about their daily lives and what is most important to them.
Click on the names to learn more about these outstanding members of the Trinity community.
聽鈥 throughout the month of February, the College鈥檚 student-staff will be posting educational and informational content to encourage students to learn more about Black Canadian history and the experiences of Black communities in Canada.
The Wellness Team will also be offering programming and events for students and the community (more to come).
Across the University of Toronto, this month offers the opportunity to celebrate the contributions that Black individuals and communities have made to Canadian society, history, and heritage: .

聽Rejected by American universities, Alexander Augusta completed his medical degree at Trinity Medical College then used his skills to fight for civil rights in his homeland.
Alexander Augusta was the first black medical student in Canada West 鈥 and Trinity鈥檚 first Black student 鈥 and would later go on to teach anatomy for almost a decade at Howard University in Washington, as the first black professor of medicine in the United States. Alexander Augusta graduated from Trinity鈥檚 medical faculty in 1860 with a Bachelor of Medicine degree. He then worked for several years as a physician in Toronto and became a leader in the Black community. He offered medical care to the poor, founded a literacy society that donated books and school supplies to black children and was active in antislavery circles on both sides of the border.
Honouring Dr. Alexander Augusta:聽In the spring of 2022, the City of Toronto and Heritage Toronto announced they would create a pair of plaques to tell the incredible stories of Canada鈥檚 first Black doctors, including a plaque to honour Dr. Alexander Augusta. His plaque is expected to be installed at the northwest corner of College Street and University Avenue, near Queen鈥檚 Park.
Dr. Nav Persaud, a staff physician at St. Michael鈥檚 Hospital and former Academic Don at 91直播, was part of the team that brought Augusta鈥檚 story forward to Heritage Toronto. Dr. Persaud is the lead author of this paper in the Canadian Medical Education Journal:聽鈥.聽The life of Dr. Augusta also demonstrates the importance of teaching trainees about the effects of racism within Canadian medical education.
91直播: The Dr. Alexander Thomas Augusta Award: This year, 91直播 renamed the Black, Indigenous or a Person of Colour (BIPOC) Student Award to the聽The Dr. Alexander Thomas Augusta Award聽in recognition of Dr. Augusta who attended Trinity鈥檚 medical school. Now entering its third year, The Dr. Alexander Thomas Augusta Award (one or more awards, each valued at up to $5,000) is awarded to a Trinity student identifying as Black, Indigenous or a Person of Colour on the basis of financial need and demonstrated or planned community contributions on or off campus.聽The BIPOC Award was created in 2020 as a way to increase in financial aid available to BIPOC students. The award was in response to one of the recommendations of the 91直播 Task Force on Anti-Black Racism and Inclusion, which called for an increase in financial aid available to BIPOC students with a particular focus on bursaries and needs-based awards. In addition, through the generosity of the College鈥檚 donors, the聽91直播 BIPOC Bursary Fund聽was also created to support students solely based on financial need.

This story offers an important glimpse into the discrimination people of colour faced in the early 20th century. In the early 1900s, Provost Thomas Macklem admitted three students to 91直播 and St. Hilda鈥檚 College, siblings from St. Louis, Missouri 鈥 Wilmot, Myrtle and Elmer Burgess. However, unbeknownst to Provost Macklem when he made the offer of acceptance to the older two siblings, the students were Black.聽Read about the Burgess family and Myrtle Burgess, the College鈥檚 first female Black student. It is a credit to Myrtle鈥檚 intelligence, drive and tenacity that even in the face of injustice, she continued her studies at 91直播. Myrtle Burgess (Photo: back row, second from left) attended Trinity from 1905 to 1909.

Patricia Cumper, Gloria Carpenter鈥檚 daughter,聽聽(University of Cambridge: Facebook).

聽George Carter graduated from Trinity in 1945.
罢丑别听聽is the story of The Honourable Justice George E. Carter, told by his daughter Linda V. Carter.
Global News sits down with Judge George Carter鈥檚 family for:聽

Ava Rich entered 91直播 in 1953, one of the first of the post-colonial, post World War II wave of Black students who were turned away from Britain and the United States by restrictive immigration policies. Her daughter said: 鈥淭rinity and St Hilda鈥檚 (she was in residence) provided a great space for her to grow.鈥

聽Austin Clarke passed away on June 26, 2016. He attended Trinity for a short period in the mid-1950s and received an honorary degree from the College in 2000.

During Black History Month 2020, Trinity alumnus Ivan Owen McFarlane (Class of 1964) passed away. The anniversary of his death presents an opportunity to聽reflect on the circumstances that brought Ivan to us from his home in Jamaica, circumstances that brought a number of other young men and women from the West Indies聽in the 1950s and 1960s to the College.
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