Showing posts with label Black British History. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Black British History. Show all posts

Sunday, June 29, 2025

Recognising Haringey’s pioneering black protest leaders

 From Haringey Community Press.

Hannah Francis from the George Padmore Institute on the significance of the Black Parents Movement in Haringey 50 years ago.

The Black Parents Movement protest in 1975 with John La Rose at the front right of the group (credit Julian Stapleton)

The Black Parents Movement protest in 1975 with John La Rose at the front right of the group (credit Julian Stapleton)

This year marks the fiftieth anniversary of the Black Parents Movement (BPM), founded in 1975 following the arrest of an innocent West Indian student in Haringey.

On 17th April 1975, 17-year-old Cliff McDaniel and his two friends, Keith and Chris, all students of the Stationer’s Company’s School in Hornsey, were on their lunch break when they were targeted by police officers. McDaniel was well known to the teaching staff, pupils and parents associated with the George Padmore Supplementary School, founded by Trinidadian activist John La Rose in 1966.

Following this incident, many parents and teachers rallied support for McDaniel and formed the Black Parents Movement. At the same time, a group of pupils and young black people formed their own independent but collaborative organisation called the Black Students Movement (later renamed Black Youth Movement). With the unlawful arrest of McDaniel acting as the catalyst, the aims of the BPM were to advance the interests of black working class, unemployed and young people.

John La Rose was a key founding member with early members including local supplementary school teachers Roxy Harris and Albertina Sylvester, as well as educator and campaigner Gus John. Guyanese publishers and activists Jessica and Eric Huntley, who founded the Ealing Concerned Black Parents and Youth Movement in 1976, were also closely affiliated with the activity of the BPM in its most active period.

Current George Padmore Institute (GPI) chair and BPM member Roxy Harris says of the movement: “The BPM played a leading role in developing strategies and action in Britain for black people to fight back against the racism and discrimination in the schooling system and against police corruption and violence and the complicity of the courts.

“John La Rose’s leadership was inspiring and down to earth. One memory is that however urgent and serious a meeting was, John never objected to the presence of children. Indeed he would take persistent fractiousness by the children present as a sign that we had gone on too long and that it was time for the meeting to end!”

BPM grew out of Haringey’s wider history of black radical activism and led to the formation of the Alliance in 1979, a partnership of the Black Youth Movement, Bradford Black Collective and the Race Today Collective. Key campaigns included the Bookshop Joint Action Committee (BJAC) which was formed to campaign against a string of racist and violent attacks on black and progressive bookshops across the country, as well as international solidarity campaigns such as demonstrating against apartheid in South Africa.

The BPM archive collection at GPI is a comprehensive resource preserving the history of the organisation’s founding, key activities, collaborators and organisational principles. Fifty years on, the GPI is marking the occasion by acknowledging this movement’s contributions to campaigning for the rights of black youths and workers against a racist criminal justice system, building alliances and community organising in Haringey and wider British society.


Friday, January 12, 2018

New publications from Past Tense

Past Tense have published six new pamphlets as below, five for sale and one FREE.
“They came out in October, but we've been so busy with one thing and another that we
haven't had much time to publicise them as yet.”

• BLACK WOMEN ORGANISING
The Brixton Black Women’s Group and the Organisation for Women of African and Asian Descent
£3.00 + £1.50 P&P
ISBN: 978-0-9932762-7-9

The Brixton Black Women’s Group, founded in 1973, emerged among women who had been active in the Black Power movement in London in the late 1960s and early 1970s. This pamphlet reprints two articles originally published in feminist journals in the 1980s - an interview with three Brixton Black Women’s Group activists about the development of the group, and an appraisal of the national Organisation for Women of African and Asian Descent.
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• RENT STRIKE: ST. PANCRAS 1960 Dave Burn
£3.00 + £1.50 P&P
ISBN: 978-0-9932762-5-5

In 1960 over 2000 council tenants in the then London borough of St Pancras went on partial rent strike, against a new rent scheme introduced by the Conservative council. This pamphlet recounts the causes and the history of the rent strike, examining the reasons the rent scheme was brought in, and the history of the tenants’ movement. A comprehensive but also compelling story of a community struggle, as well as a thoughtful analysis of its motives and possibilities.
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“MENACING LANGUAGE AND THREATS” The Anti Corn Law Riots of 1815
£1.50 + £1 P&P
ISBN: 978-0-9932762-4-8


At the end of the Napoleonic Wars in 1815, corn prices fell to nearly half their war level, causing panic among British farmers - many of whom were also voters. In response the government introduced the Corn Laws in 1815; banning cheap wheat imports, to ensure the high incomes of farmers and landowners.
This was class legislation at its most blatant. It made sure aristocrats could continue to benefit from high bread prices, and the high rents that they supported; knowing well enough this law meant penury for the poor, who relied on bread to stave off starvation.
Riots broke out in the area around Parliament as the Acts were being debated, and spread out around London and Westminster as the London houses of the MPs and lords held most responsible were targeted by crowds...

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• I HAVENT HAD SO MUCH FUN SINCE MY LEG FELL OFF The North London Civil Servants Strike, 1987/88 Jean Richards
£2.00 + £1 P&P
ISBN: 978-0-9932762-2-4

An account of a strike by low-paid civil servants across North London Department of Employment offices in 1988, also involving Job Centre and Department of Health & Social Security staff who came out in solidarity when they were asked to do the strikers’ work.

By a woman civil servant who worked for 10 years in one of the offices in dispute.

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THE ESTABLISHMENT VERSUS THE ROTUNDA!
£2.00 + £1 P&P
ISBN: 978-0-9932762-3-1

In the early 1830s a building on Blackfriars Road became the most notorious radical political meeting places of its era. For a few short years, the Rotunda was the heart of radical London. The Rotunda entered its golden age in 1830, when it was taken over by freethinker Richard Carlile, and was transformed into a centre of political and scientific education and theatrical anti-religious performances... It became home to diverse radical groups and speakers, including the National Union of the Working Classes, Robert Taylor (known as the “Devil’s Chaplain’), and female atheist lecturer Eliza Sharples, the ‘Pythoness of the Temple’.

The Rotunda was feared and hated by the political establishment, who saw it as influencing all radical and rebellious opinion. The reactionary Duke Of Wellington considered the battle for the future of society as one of “The Establishment Vs The Rotunda.”

[See also https://pasttenseblog.wordpress.com/2018/01/10/today-in-london-radical-history-richard-carlile-jailed-for-supporting-swing-rioters-1831/]

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• WE REMEMBER WAT TYLER A6 pamphlet
£1.00 + £1 P&P

The 1381 Peasants’ Revolt remains one of the most cataclysmic and inspiring events in British history. At its heart stands a figure of whom so littl4 is known… Wat Tyler. A man who appears for
two weeks, is elected leader of a peasant rebellion, articulates a demand for the abolition of classes, and is killed… Who was Wat Tyler?

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• TROUBLE DOWN SOUTH
Free (£1 P&P)

Some thoughts on gentrification & resistance to gentrification in Brixton, with historical digressions, experiences, and some ranting...

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And don't forget - the 2018 LONDON REBEL HISTORY CALENDAR is still available, it's not too late to order your coy for the year...
Only £6 plus £3 P&P

All of the above are available from Past Tense, either via our publicationspage
where you can pay by card or paypal

Or ooooold style by post from:
Past Tense, c/o 56a Infoshop, 56 Crampton Street, London, SE17 3AE

These publications will also soon be available from radical bookshops in London, and some good local independent bookshops and the odd caff too!
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Sunday, July 2, 2017

"An opportunity for historians to engage with activists"


Black Lives Matter

Thursday 6 July 2017 11am to 12.30pm
Modern British Studies Conference 2017
University of Birmingham, Arts Building, B15 2TT


Free, no need to book.

History Acts <http://www.historyacts.org/?p=93> workshops are led by activists, who give a short talk or presentation about their work. Historians working on a relevant topic will then respond, before opening it up to group discussion.

Contact:
Steffan Blayney sblayn01@mail.bbk.ac.uk  or Guy Beckett gbecke01@mail.bbk.ac.uk for more information.

Our Panel

Malachi Thomas is one of the organisers of Black Lives Matter protests in Nottingham. In November 2016 he was convicted of unlawfully obstructing a highway having used foam-filled “lock-on devices” to link himself to other activists before lying across tram lines outside Nottingham’s Theatre Royal during a “national day of action” in August.

Tippa Naphtali is the founder of 4WardEver UK and the cousin of custody death victim, Mikey Powell, from Birmingham. Established June 2006, 4WardEver provides a one-stop-resource for case profiles, news and event details, useful resources, statistics, appeals, and more in relation to deaths and abuses whilst in custody; including the death penalty, other injustices and human rights abuses in the UK and internationally.

Dr Christienna Fryar is starting as a lecturer of the history of slavery and unfree labour at the University of Liverpool this July. Previously, she spent four years as an assistant professor of history at SUNY Buffalo State. She is completing her first book, The Measure of Empire: Disaster and British Imperialism in Postemancipation Jamaica, which explores how imperial disaster politics belied contemporary popular narratives of Jamaica’s ruin in the eight decades after emancipation. Her work focuses on the history of emancipation as the history of Britain, the British Empire, and the British Commonwealth since 1800.

Dr Kennetta Perry specializes in Atlantic World history with a particular emphasis on transnational race politics, empire, migration and movements for citizenship among people of African descent in Europe, the Caribbean and the United States. Her book, London Is The Place For Me: Black Britons, Citizenship and the Politics of Race (Oxford University Press, 2015), examines how a largely Afro-Caribbean population of Black Britons advocated for citizenship rights and transformed the political landscape in Britain in the decades following World War II.

www.raphael-samuel.org.uk/events/history-acts-07-black-lives-matter/   www.historyacts.org/?p=93

Monday, March 16, 2015

Next Independent Working Class Education Seminar (London) and Public History event

IWCE : planning education for change
Saturday 21st March 10.30 - 3.00
London Brunswick Community Centre, Foundling Court.
See the note on the door for Room 10.
Across from Russell Square tube station.

Provisional Agenda

Meirian Jump, Archivist & Library Development Officer, 'Archives & Education at the Marx Memorial Library’
Arthur McIvor (Stratthclyde Uni.) on Working Lives, Work in Britain since 1945 
Rosa Vilbr, An oral history on Centreprise bookshop/cafe in Hackney 
Doug Wright The history of busworkers in London and the present dispute

and "We are fortunate to have Osamu Umezaki from the Osaka Labour Archive in Japan joining us on Saturday. His interests include Oral history."

Each presentation is short and a lively discussion is welcome. 

We'll also look at the IWCE Manifesto and plan future events in Leicester, Edinburgh and London.

Cost £5.00 (includes lunch). Pay on the day.

To book email Keith Venables iwceducation@yahoo.co.uk

Also on 21st March (could look in on both):
***
Public History Discussion Group

Saturday 21st March 2015
Room 209

Institute of Archaeology, 31-34 Gordon Square, London WC1H 0PY
Room on the 2nd floor- lift and stairs to all floors
Talk starts promptly at 11.30am

“Making public forgotten black histories 1750-2014: From ghostly hands to children’s memorials on slave graves” 

The talk discusses not only traditional memorials, walking trails and artworks, but also ghostly legacies of the trade, including human body parts. Taking the small slave port of Lancaster, England, as a key case study, the talk draws on recent theoretical work on corporeality, spectrality, Holocaust studies, trauma, dark tourism, the Black Atlantic and memory studies to interrogate the meanings of these legacies. It develops the idea of “guerrilla memorialisation” used historically and in recent responses to the trade.

Professor Alan Rice, University of Central Lancashire
Alan Rice is Professor in English and American Studies at the University of Central Lancashire and co-director of the recently formed Institute for Black Atlantic Research (IBAR) there. He  has degrees from the University of Edinburgh, Bowling Green State University, Ohio and Keele. He has worked on the interdisciplinary study of the Black Atlantic for the past two decades including publishing Radical Narratives of the Black Atlantic (Continuum, 2003). Alan was academic advisor to the Slave Trade Arts Memorial Project in Lancaster, was editor in chief of Manchester’s Revealing Histories Website and a co-curator of the Whitworth Art Gallery Manchester’s 2007-8 exhibition Trade and Empire: Remembering Slavery. His latest monograph is Creating Memorials, Building Identities: The Politics of Memory in the Black Atlantic (Liverpool UP, 2010) and his latest edited collection is a special issue of Atlantic Studies on the “Slave Trade’s Dissonant Heritage” edited with Johanna Kardux (2012). He is also continuing the work on black abolitionists in Britain started in his co-edited Liberating Sojourn: Frederick Douglass and Transatlantic Reform (Georgia, 1999) with a new collection in Slavery and Abolition (2012) with Fionnghuala Sweeney. He is an advisor to museums in Liverpool, Lancaster and Manchester and his latest museum publication is a catalogue essay for Manchester’s 2012 We Face Forward West African Art exhibition. His articles have appeared in a wide range of journals including, Slavery and Abolition, Atlantic Studies, Patterns of Prejudice, Journal of American Studies and Research in African Literatures. He has organised landmark events on issues in Black history in Britain including a 2013 event commemorating the mutiny of African American GIs in Bamber Bridge. He has given keynote presentations in Britain, Germany, the United State and France and in January 2012 he gave the Martin Luther King Memorial Lecture in Hamburg. He has contributed to documentaries for the BBC, Border Television and public broadcasting in America as well as appearing on BBC’s The One Show in February 2013.  More information can be found at:
http://ibaruclan.com/



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Tuesday, February 3, 2015

Things happening this month [Feb.2015], and a bit after


Things happening this month, and a bit after

Reminders, updates, new notices relating to radical history…


From LSHG:
A final reminder about the London Socialist Historians "Attlee" event on Saturday 28th February.

Registration is from 11.30am in the Wolfson Room (basement of the Institute of Historical Research and a dedicated conference space).

Speakers should be underway from a little after midday, followed by discussion until no later than 4pm.

At that point we'll adjourn for a coffee in the basement of Dillons books just up the road, which has ample space and comfortable seats

Speakers are:

Keith Flett – ‘A History of 1945: Beyond Ken Loach’
Ian Birchall – ‘Exits from Empire: British and French choices in 1945′
Francis Beckett, Biographer – ‘Clement Attlee’
John Newsinger – ‘Labour, the Welfare State and Korea’
Mike Sheridan – ‘The Labour Independent Group’
======================
The Working Class Movement Library, Salford      http://www.wcml.org.uk/events

14th Feb 2015      LGBT History Month talk - 'Unity is Strength – Lesbians and Gays Support the Miners and their lasting links of comradeship with mining communities’ . Speakers: Mike Jackson, co-founder with Mark Ashton of Lesbians and Gays Support the Miners (LGSM), and David (Dai) Donovan, South Wales NUM.

7th Mar 2015       (Eve of International Women's Day) Tansy Hoskins talks about her book Stitched Up - The Anti-Capitalist Book of Fashion.

11th Mar 2015     From Bilbao to Manchester: the Basque child refugees of 1937 - Charles Jepson

19th Mar 2015     Exhibition ‘probing behind the myths of war and its "glories"’: The Great War: myths and realities explores topics such as Salford's response to the outbreak of war, the strength of the anti-war movement locally and nationally, what happened to the campaign which had gathered momentum by 1914 to get the vote for women - and the realities of trench warfare. Open Wednesdays to Fridays 1-5p.m.

25th Mar 2015     ''Red Nelson": the English working class and the making of C.L.R. James - Christian Hogsbjerg

8th Apr 2015        The People: the Rise and Fall of the Working Class, 1910-2010 - Selina Todd

22nd Apr 2015     Notoriously militant: the story of a union branch at Ford Dagenham - Sheila Cohen
 
=========
What’s Happening in Black British History? II 
Thursday, 19th February,
Leggate Hall, University of Liverpool.

The workshop agenda is available to download here, as is an extended version including abstracts for each talk here.
<< Like the WHBBH1 event hosted in London in October 2014, presentations at WHBBH2 will cover a wide range of topics - from Sport to CultureWW1 soldiers to West End sound systems - so there’s sure to be something for everyone.>>
You can book online here EarlyBird tickets are priced from £5 - 

Network for Peace

There will be a meeting on 19 February in London at 1.30. Friends House in Euston.

We will have a short NfP business meeting followed by a discussion on where we are with WW1 Campaigning.

We also hope to have a guest speaker, an academic who will report on her research (just waiting for a confirmation).

No need to confirm your place, or send your apologies. But if you cannot come and have something interesting to report please send something to me in good time for me to distribute before the meeting if at all possible. 

Here’s a link to the event on the NfP website: 


London Socialist Historians Seminars Spring Term 2015
Monday February 2nd      Matthew  Burnett-Stewart,  Arming both sides. The Armaments industry in World War One.
Monday February 16th    Deborah Lavin, Charles Bradlaugh and the First International
Saturday February 28th  70 years since the 1945 Attlee Government: Francis Beckett, Ian Birchall, John Newsinger and others From 11.30am - [LSHG Conference]. 
Monday March 16th Launch of A History of Riots (CSP) Keith Flett and others

All LSHG seminars take place in Room 102 at the Institute of Historical Research, Senate House, Malet St, WC1 and start at 5.30 p.m. with the exception of February 28th.

On Saturday 28th February at 1pm, the Wakefield Socialist History Group will be holding an event HOUSING AND THE CLASS STRUGGLE at the Red Shed, Vicarage Street, Wakefield WF1.
With speakers:
*Cllr Hilary Mitchell
*Karen Fletcher (Secretary, Barnsley Against the Bedroom Tax)
*Alan Stewart (Convenor, Wakefield Socialist History Group)
*Kevin Feintuck (rank and file housing worker in Sheffield)
The chair is Kitty Rees.
Admission is free and there will be a free light buffet.

Queer Season at Sutton House

Starting in LGBT History Month, Sutton House is hosting its first Queer Season, a series of exhibitions and events celebrating the lesbian, gay, bisexual, trans and queer communities.

126 
5th February to 29th March,
Weds to Sun 12pm to 5pm

Building on February 2014's exhibition 'Master-Mistress', the first LGBT History Month event to be held in a National Trust property we think, '126' is a crowd-sourced audiovisual experience featuring all 126 of Shakespeare's Fair Youth sonnets as read by members of the LGBTQ community. Each sonnet is self-recorded and is accompanied by video portraits of the contributors.

Admission: Adult £3.50, Child £1, Family £6.90, National Trust Members FREE. 

The Amy Grimehouse and National Trust’s Sutton House present:

The Craft Valentine's Massacre 
14 February 7pm to late

 Join The Amy Grimehouse for their special presentation of that 90s classic, The Craft. Explore Sutton House and participate in some anti-Valentine's spells, Hex-Your-Ex, the Nancy Booth, The Craft Craft Room with binding and poison pen Valentine's cards and more. All before the pre-screening show with the Bitches of Eastwick. The screening will make way for the 'Invoking the Spirit of Manon Ball' with Connie Francis on the jukebox and more til late. "Now is the time. This is the hour. Ours is the magic. Ours is the power."  

Nick Fox and National Trust’s Sutton House Present:

Bad Seed 
5th February to 29th March,
Weds to Sun 12pm to 5pm

 This will include the first comprehensive survey of work by South African-born artist Nick Fox. Arranged over seven rooms, the exhibition brings together artworks created over the last ten years, principally painting but also films, installations, cyanotype prints and intricately laboured object d’art from his celebrated Nightsong and Phantasieblume series. Fox has also chosen Sutton House to launch a new artistic project called Seedbank, which invites members of the public to select seeds linked to a veiled dictionary of floral meanings to give as long term and living tokens of love and loves loss. Bad Seed will be shown simultaneously with Fox’s International touring exhibition Nightsong, at Angus-Hughes Gallery (7th February – 7 March 2015), which is also located in Hackney.

Admission: Adult £3.50, Child £1, Family £6.90, National Trust Members FREE.

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SACK BOB LAMBERT!
Former Police Spy, Serial Liar & Exploiter of Women


After a couple of successful pickets outside London Metropolitan University, help us to increase the pressure! Join us to demand the removal of Bob Lambert from his position as a lecturer on policing and criminology from London Met university.

When: Friday February 27th – 12.00 – 2.00pm
Where: Outside LMU Tower, 166-220 Holloway Road, London N7 8DB

Bring placards, banners, sound systems, anything to make noise…

Former police spy, Special Branch manipulator, abuser of women, agent provocateur, Bob Lambert is now lecturing at London Met on policing and criminology.

This is a man who has:

• Built a police career on lying, spying on political groups and community campaigns;
• Stolen the name of a dead child to build a false identity;
• acted as an agent provocateur, actively encouraging people to commit crimes so they could be arrested;
• has been named in parliament as having planted a firebomb in a store in 1987;
• started several sexual relationships & fathered a child just to make his cover more convincing, (a child he abandoned with no contact for 24 years); while all the time having a ‘real’ family back home;
• encouraged other police spies working under his supervision to follow his dubious example – including sleeping with some of their targets;
• sent undercover police to spy on the families of racist murder victims and people who have died in custody;
• helped to arrange meetings between police spies and senior officers looking for ways to smear the family of Stephen Lawrence;
• passed on undercover reports on trade unionists campaigning for better working conditions on building sites, which was used to blacklist workers;

 …and much more…

For a brief account of Bob Lambert’s dubious record, check our website:
https://islingtonagainstpolicespies.wordpress.com/about-bob-lambert/

If we have any kind of standards at all that we expect of teachers, lecturers, people in a position on responsibility and influence, Bob Lambert fails to meet up to them.

He has a long history of lying, exploiting women and manipulating others for his own ends. Is this really someone London Met thinks is appropriate to be teaching at a supposedly ‘progressive’ university?

The exposures of the activities of undercover police spying on campaigning groups, grieving families and political activists over recent years has led to many enquiries and investigations; women exploited by these officers are also suing the Metropolitan Police as the institution ultimately responsible. But the individual police spies themselves need to also be held to account. Lambert has pathetically ‘apologised’ for some bits of his past; because he was (belatedly) caught out. He needs to properly face the consequences of his a_ctions.

This campaign is being organised by Islington Against Police Spies, a group of local residents and activists. We are committed to putting pressure on the University and raising awareness of Lambert’s past, until he is forced to leave London Met. We know this CAN be done – but it’s not necessarily going to be easy. Hopefully this campaign will get stronger until it’s irresistible. BUT WE NEED HELP – we call on anyone who thinks Bob Lambert should not be working in a supposedly progressive university to support our campaign.

WHAT YOU CAN DO

Come down and join the picket on January 30th. The bigger and noisier
our protest, the more notice London Met will have to take of us.

Protest to the following in the London Met hierarchy, and demand that
they sack Bob Lambert:

 * John Raftery
, Vice-Chancellor; email: j.raftery@londonmet.ac.uk


Tel: 020 7133 2001




 * Peter McCaffery
, Deputy Vice-Chancellor; email:
P.McCaffery@londonmet.ac.uk. Tel: 020 7133 2401
 * Jonathan Woodhead, Executive Officer; email:
j.woodhead@londonmet.ac.uk
. Tel: 020 7133 2042



 * Paul Bowler
, Deputy Chief Executive; email: P.Bowler@londonmet.ac.uk
Tel: 020 7133 2031
 * Peter Garrod
, University Secretary and Clerk to the Board; email:
p.garrod@londonmet.ac.uk
. Tel: 020 7133 2004


You can also email Bob Lambert directly and let him know what you think
of his activities: r.lambert@londonmet.ac.uk
 Tel: 020 7133 4692/2911


Spread the Word - tell others about this campaign, raise the issue in
your networks, communities, union, etc - the more people know about Bob,
the more pressure we all put on the university, the more likely it is
that he will have to go.

You can download, print and spread our leaflet from the link below:
https://islingtonagainstpolicespies.wordpress.com/resources/


For more info on undercover police spies see:
http://campaignopposingpolicesurveillance.com
http://policespiesoutoflives.org.uk/