Saskatoon

Black history in Saskatchewan: Mayes family's story teaches fortitude

The Mayes family came to Saskatchewan in 1910. They were among 1000 black people who fled persecution in the U.S. for a better life in Canada.

In 1910, about 1000 black people moved to Saskatchewan from the U.S.

An archival black and white portrait of Mattie Mayes sitting in front of a wooden building.
Freed slave Mattie Mayes was a well-respected midwife in the Eldon district. (Provincial Archives of Saskatchewan/R-A10362)

This story was first published on Feb 28, 2017.

The water dripped constantly. That's part of what Murray Mayes remembers of his time living in a leaky sod house in the province's first black settlement of Eldon.

"It would drip, drip, and mom would take a wash pan and put it under that drip," he recalled in a recent interview, sitting in his daughter's kitchen.

Years later, he would shiver every time it rained even when he lived in a shingled house.

Today, he lives in a sod-free home in the town of Elrose, Sask. where life is quiet and he grows strawberries.

Murray Mayes is a descendant of black pioneers in Saskatchewan. (CBC)

His grandparents, Joe and Mattie Mayes, led a group of black families from the U.S. state of Oklahoma who were seeking a better life in the north in 1910.

A whole bunch of them got together and they moved up. [They] came by train.- Murray Mayes

 

"I'm thinking that when they got here, there were berries and everything was so nice. But the first winter would be really something because they're not used to that cold weather," he joked.

The Mayes family's story is steeped in slavery, racial segregation, and the fierce desire for emancipation by accessing cheap land in Canada. The family bought a quarter-section of land, about 49 hectares, for $10.

"There were about a thousand of them that arrived here, and they arrived in the Battlefords, Lloydminster district, Maidstone, Eldon," explained historian Bill Waiser.

Not all the newcomers stayed. Some went back to the United States, while others went to Alberta.

A typical pioneer life, in some ways

Three generations of the Mayes family in front of the Shiloh Baptist Church they built. (Leander Lane Family Photo Archives)

"Their story is not that peculiar or different from other settlers that might have not made it as farmers," said Waiser.

As such, life was hard, remembered Murray Mayes. Food was scarce as poverty prevailed.

"A lot of poor people, not just the blacks — white people were poor," he said.

However, Waiser noted that the black pioneers faced discrimination in Canada.

He says the Canadian government discouraged black immigration "under pressure from the Canadian public".

For instance, the federal government sent emissaries to American black communities to dissuade their migration to Saskatchewan.

"Canadians believed blacks were America's problem," said Waiser.

In fact, Wilfrid Laurier's government introduced an order in council in 1911, which stated that province was not suitable for black people. It lasted for a few weeks.

"People need to learn that these people made a contribution," added Waiser.

Persistence and fortitude

The black pioneers persisted despite hardships.

In the Eldon district, they built the Baptist Shiloh Church, which has become a provincial historical site, a graveyard, and a school.

Matriarch Mattie Mayes was well-known and renowned as a midwife in the Eldon district.

Murray Mayes, who owned a body shop for 30 years in North Battleford, taught mechanics to about forty people.

Long suffering and challenges and all those things is what will bring you to the top.- Murray Mayes

He says his daughter Charlotte Williams is the first black president of the Saskatchewan Veterinary Association.

Daughter Lesa Mayes-Stringer is a professional bobsledder who now lives in France.

Murray Mayes and his granddaughter Sascha Martynes perusing old pictures of family members. (CBC)

His son Rueben, perhaps the most well-known of the lineage, was an accomplished football player. In 1986, he was named the National Football League's rookie of the year for the New Orleans Saints. He now resides in Washington and raises millions of dollars for hospitals, according to his father.

"We're all over the world," said Murray Mayes with a smile.

A quest to exhume history

Crystal Mayes advocates for more black history in schools. (CBC)

Murray's youngest daughter, nurse Crystal Mayes, said the history of black pioneers is largely unknown.

"We don't hear about the black movement about 100-plus years ago into Saskatchewan. So people don't really know anything about it," she said.

She wants the history of black cowboys to find its way into school books since it is "a part of Saskatchewan history".

Crystal gives presentations in public libraries about black cowboys in the province every year during Black History Month.

 "I am very proud of that my great-grandparents were one of the first black settlers in Saskatchewan," Crystal Mayes said. 

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Omayra Issa

Journalist

Omayra Issa is a senior reporter for CBC News based in Saskatchewan. She has reported in several Canadian cities, including Saskatoon and Ottawa. @OmayraIssa