Viola Desmond

@Business Women, Family and Life

Viola Desmond was a Canadian citizen of mixed race, who championed the cause of equal rights for people with dark skin, in early 20th century

Jul 6, 1914

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Biography

Personal Details

  • Birthday: July 6, 1914
  • Died on: February 7, 1965
  • Nationality: Canadian, American
  • Famous: Business Women, Activists, Civil Rights Activists
  • Spouses: Jack Desmond
  • Siblings: Alan Davis, Constance Scott, Emily Clyke, Eugenie Parris, Gordon Davis, Helen Fline, John Davis, Olive Scott, Wanda Robson
  • Universities:
    • Bloomfield High School

Viola Desmond born at

Halifax, Nova Scotia

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Birth Place

She married Jack Desmond, who owned a barbershop on Gottingen Street. He had been brought up in Glasgow and was accustomed to be treated badly by white-skinned people. However, Viola was a strong supporter of the black movement to demand equal rights.

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Personal Life

In November 1946, she refused to vacate a seat reserved for the whites in a movie theater in New Glasgow. She was then forcibly removed, put under arrest for 12 hours, and fined $20. She had to spend a night in a prison cell and injured her hip in the process. She was neither informed about her legal right to a lawyer nor granted bail.

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Personal Life

When she told her husband about the incident, he advised her to forget about it. However, she gained the support of the church and decided to fight her case. Since she was sold a cheaper ticket for the area reserved for the blacks, she was charged with tax evasion of one cent, which was the difference in the cost of tickets for the whites and the blacks. However, the actual reason for her arrest was not the difference in cost, but the fact that she had refused to vacate a seat reserved for the whites.

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Personal Life

She was born Viola Irene Davis, on July 6, 1914, in Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada, to James Albert Davis and Gwendolin Irene Davis. She belonged to a large family with 10 children. Her father, who worked as a stevedore before opening a barbershop, was black, while her mother was white.

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Childhood & Early Life

Her parents were highly regarded and active among the black community in her hometown. Viola took up a teaching job in a school for black children. However, she wanted to address the needs of the black community by introducing beauty products for people with dark skin. Since people of African descent were not allowed to join beautician training in Viola’s hometown, she moved to Montréal, Atlantic City, to start training as a beautician at the ‘Field Beauty Culture School’ and finally completed her training from one of Madam CJ Walker’s beauty schools in New York.

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Childhood & Early Life

She had a sister named Wanda Robson, who later wrote a book about activism in the family, titled ‘Sister to Courage,’ highlighting the life of Viola.

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Childhood & Early Life

After completing her training, she returned to Halifax to open her own hair salon called ‘Vi’s Studio of Beauty Culture.’ Her salon catered particularly to the black community. She also opened her own school for beautician training, known as the ‘Desmond School of Beauty Culture.’ This was done to prevent any more discrimination against black people in her field. She went on to start her own line of beauty products that catered particularly to the needs of the black community. Each year, as many as 15 black women graduated from her school and started their own ventures that provided further job opportunities to the black community.

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Career

After getting married, she joined her husband’s barbershop to make it a combined barbershop and hairdressing salon. She started making several business trips to popularize and sell her beauty products. It was on one of those trips that she faced racial discrimination in a theater in New Glasgow and went to court after being charged with tax evasion.

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Career

Soon, she decided to close her business and move to Montréal to join a business college.

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Career

Viola Desmond is remembered as a citizen who stood for a cause. She was featured in a commemorative stamp released by ‘Canada Post’ in 2012.

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Awards & Achievements

In December 2016, she became the first non-royal Canadian woman to be featured on a Canadian $10 note. She also became the first colored woman to have been featured in a ‘Historica Canada Heritage Minute’ short film that year.

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Awards & Achievements

In January 2018, she was named a ‘National Historic Person’ by the Canadian government.

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Awards & Achievements