A Historical Walking Tour of Guelph

Taylor Brown, Karlie Castle, Alexandra Gristey and Dana Share

A map of Downtown Guelph

Welcome! Thanks for joining us on this lovely day. Today, we’ll be reimagining the geography of Guelph by walking through neighbourhoods you’re probably familiar with. We’ll be visiting Essex Street, Paisley Street, Norfolk Street, Macdonell Street and Toronto Street to retrace black presence in Guelph. The purpose of today’s walk is to explore the origins of Guelph’s African-Canadian community.

The British Methodist Episcopal Church

The BME Church, November 2018. 
A 1927 newspaper excerpt showing pictures of three different Guelph churches. The BME church is pictured on the top right. The article heading reads “Religious Growth of Guelph Shown by Fine Array of Stately Churches.” Guelph Civic Museum.

The walk begins at 83 Essex Street. Since 1880, the British Methodist Episcopal (BME) Church has stood on this spot and has acted as the focal point for the black community in Guelph (Shelley). Many members of the church were originally fugitive slaves who reached Canada through the Underground Railroad (Shelley). As Linda Brown-Kubisch outlines in The Queen’s Bush Settlement: Black Pioneers, 1839-65, Black individuals and communities were frequently segregated from the white community and forced to create their own churches, educational institutions, and communities. The BME Church in Guelph was a “hub” for the Black community, providing a social and spiritual support network for African-Canadians within Guelph.

The Guelph Collegiate Vocational Institute

The front entrance of the Guelph Collegiate Vocational Institute, November 2018.
Front cover of Acta Nostra,
The Guelph Collegiate Vocational Institute yearbook, from 1950. Guelph Civic Museum.

From the BME church, we will walk 1km north to the Guelph Collegiate Vocational Institute (GCVI) at 155 Paisley Street. Here we will introduce the Jewell family, who are a prominent part of Guelph’s Black history. The Jewell children attended high school at GCVI. Both Melba and Ted Jewell are mentioned in the 1950 edition of the GCVI yearbook, Acta Nostra. In this year, Melba would have been 17 years old and in the 10th or 11th grade. In an interview with the Guelph Social History Project, Melba fondly recalls her high school years. She had a lively social life during this time. Along with her siblings, she was actively involved in extracurricular activities, such as school plays and sports, and her brother, Ted Jewell, was President of the Students’ Council in 1948 (Jewell 1998; “Brotherhood” 17).

Melba’s experience at GCVI was not without its issues, as she and her siblings faced discrimination throughout both middle and high school. Few Black students attended GCVI with the Jewells, who were subjected to racist comments from other students and even teachers. The Jewell children’s parents were a primary source of support against the racial discrimination that they endured. Melba’s mother made many visits to the school in an effort to educate the staff and compel them to address these issues properly. Her father taught her and her siblings how to fight, resulting in physical altercations with other students and trips to the principal’s office (Jewell 1998).

Furthermore, the city of Guelph led initiatives such as “Brotherhood Week” in order to promote “unity and understanding” in the community. As detailed in a 1948 Globe and Mail article, this city-wide event aimed to “bring the theme and the full import of its meaning into every Guelph home.” Student narratives provide examples of cooperation between children of different races and nationalities. The article also cites Melba Jewell (then age 14) as a proud Guelph citizen, and describes an essay she wrote in which she advocates for racial equality (Cole 17). Evident here is the complexity of the relationship between African-Canadians and the rest of the community. Acceptance and discrimination occurred simultaneously in Guelph. The Jewell family responded to this discrimination by advocating for themselves and others, thereby evoking positive social change.

81 Norfolk Street

A close up of a Guelph directory from 1941. 81 Norfolk Street is listed as the address for Douglas N Jewell and Ellen J Jewell. Guelph Civic Museum.
A close up of a Guelph directory from 1972. “Jewell, M & P” are listed beside the 81 Norfolk Street Address. Guelph Civic Museum.
The Family Medical Centre, November 2018.

From 155 Paisley Street, walk 800m east to 81 Norfolk Street. You will notice that this address no longer exists because the Family Medical Centre takes up the entire block. Before that building, a house owned by the Jewell family rested on this spot until the 1980s. The house was owned by Percy Cornelius Jewell and his wife Margaret Ada Brooks Jewell with their four children: Melba, Percy, Patricia and Theodore (Ted). Percy Cornelius’s mother, Ellen Jane Lawson Jewell, came to Guelph in the late 1800s from the Queen’s Bush Settlement. Ellen Jane’s grandfather, Henry Dangerfield Lawson, escaped slavery in the United States and settled in the Queen’s Bush. Ellen Jane is listed in the 1941 directory under this address and a directory from 1972 lists Patricia and Melba Jewell as residents. The Jewell family has been in Guelph and the surrounding area for over 150 years, marking an important presence within the black community and (noting their interracial heritage) showing ties to Guelph’s white community.

Percy Jewell and Ida Brooks stand together for an engagement photo, circa 1944. Guelph Civic Museum.
Melba Jewell riding a bicycle as a young girl, circa 1944. Guelph Civic Museum.


95 MacDonell Street and 22 Toronto Street

Before we stop by our next location, we will walk 500m east to 95 Macdonell Street, where Charles Bollen’s barber shop once stood. From there, we will walk 1km east to 22 Toronto Street, the former home of the Bollen family. The Bollen family was a prominent interracial family in Guelph from the the end of the 1800s and through the 1900s. The family home was located at 22 Toronto Street, where Charles Bollen and Eveline Bollen lived with their children throughout the years (Statistics Canada 1911). All family members are documented to have been born in Ontario, but Charles’ parents were born in the United States and Eveline’s in the United States and Ireland (Statistics Canada 1911). The Bollens also identified as Baptists (Statistics Canada 1891). Charles L. Bollen owned and worked at a barber shop at the Royal Hotel block in market square, providing for his family, for most of his life, while two of his sons (Junious and John) were documented as labourers in the year 1911 (Statistics Canada 1911). To take a look at the various members of the Bollen family refer to the table below (Table 1.0).

The Bollen family also had ties to other families in Guelph. Rita Bollen, one of the children, was linked to the Stickland family when she married William (Bill) Stickland on September 13th, 1924 (Ontario Marriages). Little is known about their marriage although they are photographed in one of the pictures provided.

Table 1.0 – The Bollen Family Names and Birth Years

NameYear of Birth
Charles L. Bollen 1858
Eveline Bollen1860
Annie Bollen1878
Frederick Bollen1882
Eva Bollen1884
Gertrude Bollen1886
Louis Bollen1888
Edward Bollen1888
Edwin Bollen1889
Kate Bollen1880
Rita Bollen1904
Warren Bollen1908
Ella Bollen1899
John Bollen1893
Junious Bollen1894

Final Thoughts

The Bollen/Stickland family and the Jewell family were both interracial. The two families represent a connection between the Black community and the white community in Guelph. While there was clear racial division between Blacks and whites between the 1880s and 1960s, there were also moments of exposure and integration between the two communities. While African-Canadians lived close to each other in certain wards, they were very much a fabric of everyday life in Guelph.

This concludes our walk today.

We hope you learned something new about African-Canadian presence in Guelph. We encourage you to consider the spaces we inhabit and reflect upon their origins and the traces of former inhabitants.  

Remember, some historical narratives are more represented than others; we shouldn’t be hesitant to explore “hidden” histories.