Navy commander overwhelmed by visit to historic cotton tree in Sierra Leone
HALIFAX — Standing in the shadow of Freetown’s towering Cotton Tree, Lt.-Cmdr. Paul Smith felt the weight of history as he stood in a spot that welcomed hundreds of free slaves who set out from the shores of Nova Scotia to the distant coast of Sierra Leone 225 years ago.
The commanding officer of HMCS Summerside was intent on visiting the sacred site as part of a personal and professional mission to connect with a community settled in 1792 by about 1,500 Black Loyalists who left his hometown province to settle the capital of Sierra Leone after the American Revolution.
Smith, who is the first African-Canadian to command a navy patrol ship, said he was keen to see the Cotton Tree, now at the centre of one of Freetown’s busy roundabouts, after learning that settlers started praying there when they arrived.
“Getting to see the actual tree and noting that there’s a plaque there recognizing the Nova Scotia settlers was a big deal to me,” he said Wednesday in an interview from his ship, which was off Ivory Coast.


