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British Columbia

How Black American soldiers built one of B.C.'s most important highways

The efforts of Black American soldiers were instrumental in building the Alaskan Highway. Representing one-third of the 11,000 troops involved in construction, their contributions were largely ignored until the past five years.

Segregated troops laid the foundation of 2,400 km road linking Alaska to Dawson Creek

A black and white photo shows five Black soldiers in fur-lined parkas during work on the Alaskan Highway in 1942.
A photo from the South Peace Heritage Archives George Hifferman collection at the Visitor's Centre in Dawson Creek, B.C., shows some of the soldiers who helped build the Alaskan Highway during the Second World War. (Andrew Kurjata/CBC)

The Alaska Highway is one of the most legendary routes in North America, running over2,200 kilometres from Dawson Creek, B.C., to Delta Junction in Alaska.

It connectsAlaska with the lower 48 states, passing through the Yukon and British Columbia along the wayand was completed in 1943with bulldozers, shovels and manual labour.

But the legacy of the Black soldiers who helped build it has long been overlooked.

In recent years, American lawmakers and a Canadian authorhave endeavoured to right that wrong, one voting to set aside a day of recognition for the soldiersand the other writing a book about the Black history behind the highway.

At the height of the Second World War, in the aftermath of Japan's attack on Pearl Harbour, 11,000 American troops were shipped out tobuildthe foundation of the Alcan(as the highwaywas formerly known).

About a third of those soldiers were Black, part of three all-Black regiments sent to work on the highway ina military that was still segregated and didn't allow Black soldiers to carry out sensitive assignments orfight on the front line.

In 2017, on the 75th anniversary of the highway's construction, Leonard Larkinssaid it was "way past time"he and the other Black soldiers who worked on the project got their due.

Larkins worked with the 93rd Engineers, helping clear a path through virgin wilderness on both sides of the border. He remembered the shock of Arctic temperatures he experienced for the first time as a young man from Louisiana.

"You can't stand there too long, you know. It's entirely too cold," he said.

The Alaska Highway threads through northern B.C., the Yukon and into Alaska. (Luigi Zanasi)

A photo of the meeting of bulldozers when Black Cpl. Refines Sims Jr. and white Private Alfred Jalufkamet in the middle andcleared thefinal link of the eventual highway in the Yukon forest was a watershed moment for integration, according to the New York Times.

Fighting through freezing temperatures and permafrost in thewinter, which turnedtosweltering heat, mud and mosquitosin the summer,the Black soldiers defied the expectations of their white supervisors anddebunkednotions of racial inferiority by producing quality work in extremely difficult conditions.

American journalist,author and historianLaelMorgan, who died in August 2022, researched the highway project for its 50th anniversary and waslargely credited with introducing it to a modern audience.

She said before the Alaska Highway's construction, Black soldiers were mainly relegated to housekeeping and clerical duties. And when the highway was completed, their role was reduced to a historical footnote, and only a fraction of the photographs publicly shared showed any of the Black soldiers who contributed.

This June 5, 2017, photo shows Second World War veteran Leonard Larkins at an event in Anchorage, Alaska, celebrating the 75th anniversary of the construction of the Alaska Highway. Larkins, of New Orleans, was among scores of segregated black soldiers who toiled in North America's harshest weather and terrain to help build a highway through Alaska and Canada as a supply route during World War II. (AP Photo/Mark Thiessen)

Ken Coates,a professor and Canada research chair in regional innovation in Saskatchewan, has also studied the historyand saysBlack American soldiers literally laid the foundation for the monumental highway. They felled countless trees, laid wood across the swamp and permafrost and covered it in brush, branches and dirt soengineers, contractors and civilian workersfollowing behind couldcomplete the roadway.

"It is impossible to imagine in this day and age ... that a comparable group of people could accomplish this much with as few tools," said Coates. "They had some bulldozers. They had some trucks. It was a huge accomplishment to do what they did in a short period of time."

According to historical records, the soldiers who built the highway started arriving in the latewinter of 1942, and some stayed as late as 1943, with the work being completed in just nine months.

One of the reasons the Black soldiers'contributions weren't recognizedwas largely due to discriminatory military policies that prevented them from visiting cities such as Seattle, Vancouver and Whitehorse.

This Oct. 25, 1942, photo shows Corporal Refines Slims, Jr., left, and Private Alfred Jalufka shaking hands at the 'Meeting of Bulldozers' for the ALCAN Highway near Beaver Creek, Yukon. Nearly 4,000 segregated Black soldiers helped build the highway across Alaska and Canada during World War II. (U.S. Army Corps of Engineers Office of History via AP)

The Canadian section wasturned over to Canada in April 1946 and opened to the general public in 1948.

Mile 0 of the Alaska Highway is in Dawson Creek, B.C., where photos and artifacts from its construction including the history of the Black soldiers who helped build it are preserved at the Visitor's Centre, local art gallery and the Pioneer Village.

The highway has become a popular tourist destination of its own, drawing Canadians, Americans and people from around the world to drive it every summer.

A banner of upturned fists, with the words 'Being Black in Canada'.

For more stories about the experiences of Black Canadians from anti-Black racism to success stories within the Black community check out Being Black in Canada, a CBC project Black Canadians can be proud of. You can read more stories here.

With files from Andrew Kurjata and the Associated Press