Denham Jolly

Brandeis Denham Jolly (born August 26, 1935)[1] is a Jamaican Canadian businessman, publisher, broadcaster, human rights activist, philanthropist and author of In the Black: My Life. He was the President and CEO of Milestone Communications.[2]

Early life and education

Jolly was born in Green Island, Jamaica, and attended Cornwall College.[3] He studied at the University of Guelph, Dalhousie University, Nova Scotia and McGill University, Montreal where he graduated in 1960 with a degree in science.[4]

Career

Jolly returned to Jamaica after graduation and worked at Nutrition Research for the government of Jamaica.[5] He moved to Canada in 1962 and engaged in Air Pollution Research for Metropolitan Toronto.[1] After studying Education and obtaining a teaching certificate, Jolly taught Chemistry and Physics at Forest Hill Collegiate in Toronto, 1963-1968.[1][6]


Jolly entered the business world by buying a rooming house on the University of Toronto Campus and in 1968 started Donsview Nursing Home in Toronto. He went on to build a Day’s Inn Hotel in Mississauga, Ontario and also acquired a nursing home in Dallas, Texas. He owned and operated for over 40 years a 210 bed nursing and retirement home facility, Tyndall Nursing Home and Estates on a 2.5 acre property in Mississauga. At on time Jolly owned, two medical laboratories in Toronto, Ed-Beck Pharmaceuticals and Standard Medical Diagnostics.[1]


In 1982 Jolly bought and published the Community newspaper Contrast.[4][7][8] That year he also founded and led the Black Business and Professional Association and the Harry Jerome Awards.[1] He was also active in the civil rights organizations and spoke out on social justice issues as a member of the Black Action Defence Committee and was a founding member of the Committee for Due Process.[9]


Jolly launched Canada's first Black-owned radio station FLOW 93.5 CFXJ-FM through Milestone Communications.[10][11] The fight to get the license took a dozen years[12] and his struggle was featured in the Washington Post and the Toronto Star as an example of racial barriers in Canada.[13] [14] The license was finally awarded in June 2000.[15] It was supported by both the Toronto Star[16] and the Toronto Sun, which ran an editorial saying that "At long last the dinosaurs at the Canadian Radio and Telecommunications Commission have admitted Toronto needs a black-owned urban format station on the FM dial."[17]


FLOW 93.5 went on air in February 2001 and was the first mainstream radio station to introduce hip-hop to Canada and the first to play Drake, and played and actively promoted Canada's Black musicians. It aired as a mixture of talk and music, including O.T.A. (On the Air) Live!, a weekly interview program with hip hop artists.[18] FLOW 93.5 devoted airtime to black-oriented music and provided opportunities, at the highest level for many Black Canadians in the broadcasting industry. Many world class Artists like Janet Jackson, Lady Gaga, Jay-Z, Kanye West, Damian Marley, Rihanna and Drake found it imperative to visit the FLOW Studios in Toronto, even Sir. Richard Branson personally visited to launch his Virgin Mobile communications.


In 2005 FLOW won the Station of the Year Award in the Contemporary Hit Radio category at the Canadian Music Week Industry Awards.[19] That year Jolly invested in a radio station in Edmonton, called The Bounce 91.7FM CHBN-FM.[1]


Jolly was on the boards of the YMCA, Surrey Place and the world renowned Toronto International Film Festival, plus currently serves on the board for Caribbean Tales, a film production company based in Toronto. He has won awards for his cultural contributions including the Black Media Pioneer Award.[20][21] the African Canadian Lifetime Achievement Award[22] and the Canadian Urban Institute's City Soul Award in 2006. In 2007 he was presented with a Black History Award from the Markham African Caribbean Association.[23]


Jolly sold his radio holdings in 2011 for $27 million.[24][25][26] He then invested US$750,000 in a real estate development project in Barbados.[27]


In Green Island, Hanover, Jamaica he developed 200 acres of beachfront and sold to Princess Hotels of Spain for their 2,000 room hotel, opening 2022.


Jolly’s media appearances and interviews include programs: The Agenda with TVO’s Steve Paikin, CBC Radio Q with Tom Powers, CTV’s Pop Life and more.


Throughout Jolly’s career he has been a keynote, motivational and guest speaker on many occasions. Jolly has spoken at: The National Word on the Street Book Festival in Toronto and at CBC Tent Halifax Festival and many libraries, schools and organizations in Toronto. Jolly has reviewed his book for the Inmates Book Club Collins Bay Medium Security Penitentiary in Kingston, ON.


Jolly’s Philanthropic endeavors have included:


  • In 2008 Jolly donated $50,000 towards the endowment of the Jean Augustine Chair in Education in the New Urban Environment at York University.[28]
  • In 2010, Jolly funded and organized a small group of volunteers to load a 20' shipping container with walking aids from his nursing home, to send to Haiti after the devastating earthquake.
  • Jolly donated $50,000 to Sunnybrook Hospital Urology Department, Toronto.
  • He also donated to the Lucie & Thorton and Blackburn Conference Centre project, George Brown College Toronto.
  • Jolly paid off the mortgage of the Jamaican Canadian Association centre with a donation of $312,000.
  • In 2019, Jolly revived a breakfast program at his Alma mater Cornwall College, Montego Bay, Jamaica, for sixty students per day.
  • He continues his sponsorship of Industry Cove Basic School in Hanover, Jamaica.
  • Since 2019, Jolly continues to sponsor the 2019 undefeated (Cosmos) Regent Park boys under twelve soccer team. In addition to sponsoring other local and Olympic Canadian athletes over the years.


He continues to contribute to many other philanthropic endeavors in the community.


His memoir, In the Black: My Life was published in February 2017 by ECW Press.[29] The book won the 2017 Toronto Book Award. Jolly also received an engraved stone placed in the Toronto's Official Book Garden memorializing his work.[30]


On March 10, 2020, award winning filmmaker and producer, Frances-Anne Soloman of Caribbean Tales announced that she is in the process of developing Jolly's memoir into a feature film and is now in production.

Honours

The City of Toronto, on February 28, 2017, the final day of Black History Month, announced the naming of a street in a new Scarborough sub-division in honour of Mr. Denham Jolly, a Black pioneer in Canada’s radio broadcasting industry. "Jolly Way" will commemorate the exceptional contributions to Canada of Denham Jolly. Jolly Way is located near the southwest corner of Midland Avenue and Ellesmere Avenue, in a residential neighbourhood under development by the Goldman Group. "It is most appropriate that approval to name a street after Mr. Jolly has come through today, the last day of Black History Month 2017," said Councillor Michael Thompson, Chair of Toronto’s Economic Development Committee. "Mr. Jolly has been instrumental in giving voice to the culture, achievements, challenges and aspirations of Toronto’s Black and Caribbean communities when few channels for such messages were available," Thompson added. On November 1, 2019, The City of Toronto hosted a street name unveiling celebration honouring Jolly.

[31]

Further reading

  • B. Denham Jolly. In the Black: My Life. ECW Press, 2017. ISBN 1770413782
  • Fil Fraser. "How The Blacks Created Canada". Dragon Hill Publishing, 2009. ISBN 9781896124438
  • "The Canadian Encyclopedia". Denham Jolly.
  • Dawn P. Williams. "Who's Who in Black Canada". 2006. ISBN 0973138424
gollark: Christ is his own antiparticle, so originally just Christ, not sure about the remaining one.
gollark: I would be impressed if they managed to get tracking beacons with reasonable range and battery life to actually fit.
gollark: Yes, it's not really a *significant* issue compared to the bigger ones of spreading disease, but it is there.
gollark: Apparently quite a lot of that runs over side channels like facial expression rather than actual words.
gollark: > How are masks dehumanizing?They somewhat worsen communication, I guess?

References

  1. "Business: Real Life Narratives - Brandeis Denham Jolly" Archived 2012-03-27 at the Wayback Machine. Literacy for Black History, Ontario Teachers' Federation.
  2. "Radio ga ga". Daily Xtra, December 15, 1999.
  3. "Western News: High honours for Cornwall College stalwarts" Archived 2016-12-20 at the Wayback Machine. Jamaica Observer, May 18, 2002
  4. "Denham Jolly honoured". Jamaica Gleaner, Eddie Grant, March 8, 2012
  5. Wilma Patricia Holas (2000). Millennium Minds : 100 Black Canadians. Pan-African Publications. p. 119. ISBN 978-0-9682734-4-9.
  6. Dawn P. Williams (2006). Who's who in Black Canada 2: Black Success and Black Excellence in Canada : a Contemporary Directory. Who's Who in Black Canada. pp. 200–. ISBN 978-0-9731384-2-9.
  7. "The Audible Minorities". Ryerson Review of Journalism, Martin Cash — April 1, 1984
  8. "Denham Jolly". Profile at Bloomberg.
  9. "Remembering: Black-rights activist Dudley Laws". National Post, Peter Kuitenbrouwer | March 24, 2011
  10. Will Comerford (2000-06-22). "Canada To Get First Black-Owned, Urban-Format Radio Station". MTV News.
  11. Carol Tator; Frances Henry; Winston Mattis (1998). Challenging Racism in the Arts: Case Studies of Controversy and Conflict. University of Toronto Press. pp. 131–. ISBN 978-0-8020-7170-5.
  12. "Rhythm and Blues". The Canadian Encyclopedia, January 31, 2014.
  13. Howard Schneider (December 29, 1997). "WashingtonPost.com: Canada Special Report: For Some, the Racial `Mosaic' Pales at Top". Washington Post.
  14. Toronto Star, January 30, 2000. p.D7
  15. Canada (2000). The Canada Gazette: Part II. Queen's Printer. p. xliv.
  16. Black Community gets its radio voice, Toronto Star, June 29, 2000, p.A27
  17. A Radio Milestone, Toronto Sun editorial, June 19, 2000
  18. "Exploring the History of 'O.T.A. Live': Toronto's Most Beloved Radio Show - Noisey". noisey. Retrieved 2016-09-22.
  19. "Flow 93.5 takes home CHR station of the year award ". Broadcaster Magazine, March 8, 2005
  20. "From Nuclear Physics to Filmmaking Archived 2016-12-20 at the Wayback Machine. To Live with Culture, July 2, 2012. Christopher Jones
  21. "Media Pioneer to be honored in Black History Month". caribbeantales-newz.blogspot.ca. Retrieved 2016-09-22.
  22. "African Canadian Achievement Awards | 2011 Awardees". africancanadianachievementawards.com. Retrieved 2016-09-22.
  23. "Black History Month Celebrated with Impressive Ceremony at Markham Town Centre". Guiding Star, Feb 27, 2007.
  24. "Off air: Toronto’s Black community loses radio voice". Excalibur Magazine, Feb 14, 2012. Tricia Kanhai
  25. "CTV takes over Flow 93.5 FM | Toronto Star". thestar.com. Retrieved 2016-09-22.
  26. " Radio pioneer sells station". Mississauga News, Feb 03, 2011
  27. "Not jolly". Nation News, MARIA BRADSHAW, 28 July 2013
  28. "York to the Power of 50: Launch of the Jean Augustine Chair" Archived 2016-12-20 at the Wayback Machine. York University website. 22.07.2008
  29. "Daily Deals: Bundoran Press acquires two novels; Kate Blair’s Transferral optioned for TV; ECW acquires memoir by Denham Jolly". Quill and Quire, by Becky Robertson. May 1, 2016.
  30. "B. Denham Jolly's memoir about growing up Black in Toronto wins Toronto Book Award". CBC Books, October 13, 2017.
  31. http://pridenews.ca/2017/02/28/north-toronto-street-name-honour-african-canadian-radio-pioneer-b-denham-jolly/
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