Alley 61

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Hendrix Shrine — Hogan's Alley, Vancouver

Hogan's Alley area, East Vancouver, Strathcona
Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada

49.2800° N · -123.0991° W

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What happened here?

Hogan's Alley was a predominantly Black neighbourhood in the Strathcona area of Vancouver, British Columbia, that was demolished in the late 1960s to make way for freeway construction — a story of urban renewal that destroyed a community with deep roots in African American and Caribbean culture. The neighbourhood is connected to Jimi Hendrix through his paternal grandmother, Nora Rose Moore Hendrix, who lived in the Hogan's Alley area. The Hendrix family had roots in the African American Pacific Northwest community, and Nora's presence in Vancouver was part of that broader migration history.

The demolition of Hogan's Alley — Vancouver's historic Black neighbourhood — by the construction of the Georgia Viaduct in the early 1970s is one of the most significant and contested acts of urban destruction in Canadian history. The community that was displaced had been one of the most vibrant African American cultural spaces on the West Coast of Canada, with its own churches, restaurants, and social organisations. Various community groups have worked for decades to acknowledge and commemorate what was lost, and the area has become a focus for discussions of race, planning, and urban justice.

A mural and informal shrine to Jimi Hendrix has been installed in the Hogan's Alley area as part of ongoing community commemoration projects. The site is in Strathcona, east of downtown Vancouver. Plans for a Hogan's Alley cultural centre and park have been developed by the City of Vancouver to acknowledge the neighbourhood's history. The Hendrix connection gives the site an additional dimension of significance in the history of both music and Vancouver's African American community.

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