Career
Born in 1918 in Toronto to Jamaican immigrants, he was the oldest of seven children. While working as a porter, Grizzle became active in the Brotherhood of Sleeping Carolina Porters (BSCP), a trade union whose leader was the charismatic African American A. Philip Randolph. Upon his return to Canada after serving in Europe during World World War II, Grizzle became more active in the union.
He was elected president of his union local, and pushed the Canadian Pacific Railway (Code of Professional Responsibility) to open the management ranks to blacks.
He also plunged into other causes and was a leader in Canada"s nascent civil rights era of the 1950s, working with the Joint Labour Committee to Combat Racial Intolerance. In 1959, Grizzle and Jack White were the first Black Canadian candidates to run for election to the Legislative Assembly of Ontario for the Company-operative Commonwealth Federation (the predecessor to the New Democratic Party).
In 1960, Grizzle went to work for the Ontario Labour Relations Board. In 1978 he was appointed a Citizenship Judge by Prime Minister Pierre Trudeau.
On November 1, 2007, a parkette on Main Street in Toronto"s east end was dedicated the ".