After fighting in the Napoleonic Wars, most notably by the side of the Duke of Wellington in the Battle of Waterloo (1815), Lord Dalhousie was gifted his appointment as Lieutenant Governor of the Province of Nova Scotia and so a year after the conflict’s conclusion in 1816, Dalhousie travelled over to the new land he owned as an official of the Crown. Dalhousie’s arrival mirrored the arrival of over 4,000 African-American refugees after the conclusion of the War of 1812, who had been promised a list of freedoms for their contributions to the war effort, such as physical resources and human rights. Coincidentally, around the same time these arrivals were occurring, the British troops occupying Maine had been using the port of Castine as a customs entry point, where trade taxes were being charged on imports entering the town. This resulted in a significant revenue and after the war ended, the British withdrew from Maine and took a fortune of about £12,000 with them. This large sum of money was granted to Lord Dalhousie to use as he pleased and so he asked his advisors what should be done with it. Some believed a new prison should be built, others asked for spending on town roadworks, but one individual, Lord Bathurst, suggested that the money could be used to assist the refugees pouring into the province. Unsurprisingly, as a racist who saw black people as naturally inferior due to what he believed was their ‘idleness’ and ‘lack of industry’, Lord Dalhousie staunchly dismissed the proposal. Instead, the majority of the funds were used to establish Dalhousie College, which was ironically known for being nonsectarian, meaning it was ‘open to all, regardless of class or creed.’ Of course, it was not open to the black refugees or indeed any person of colour.