Mifflin Gibbs: First Black man elected in B.C. won a Victoria council seat in 1866
VICTORIA — The first Black person elected in British Columbia was an American abolitionist and entrepreneur who won a Victoria city council seat in 1866 and played a role in Confederation.
In 1858, about 800 Black people left San Francisco for the promise of better lives on the colony of Vancouver Island.
Mifflin Gibbs was among the early arrivals to Victoria and nearby Salt Spring Island.
“He represents a hero,” said Silvia Mangue, president of the B.C. Black History Awareness Society. “For us he represents a role model of the person we all want to be. He left this legacy. He opened this path. That is powerful.”