Thursday, September 13, 2012

Amelia King & racism in the WWII Land Army (1943)

In September 2012 black historian Caroline Bressey appeared in a 5 mins sequence in the last 18 mins of episode 2 of the BBC TV documentary series ‘Wartime Farm’ outlining the case of Amelia King (d. 1995?), a black London-born woman who was refused employment by the WWII Land Army on the grounds that no white farmer would want a black person on the farm. Her father was a merchent seaman and her brother was in the navy. Rather than taking this dismissal quietly King took her case to her local MP and the matter was raised in parliament in 1943. When the story hit the national newspapers farmer Alfred Roberts offered her work but she insisted it be arranged through the Land Army – which subsequently became the case.

Clover Graham obituary

http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2012/sep/12/clover-graham-obituary

Photographs from the 1960s/70s

see http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/in-pictures-19558613

Wednesday, September 12, 2012

Dido Elizabeth Belle (1771-1804)

Amma Asante wrote & directed the film ‘Belle’ to tell the story of Dido Elizabeth Belle – her 2nd feature film. Dido Elizabeth Belle (1771-1804) the illegitimate daughter of Sir John Lindsay (1737–1788), naval officer with the Royal Navy. Her mother was a black slave of African origin, possibly called Belle, who had been captured from a Spanish slave ship in the West Indies and brought to England.

Monday, September 10, 2012

BBC Radio 4 - Stir It Up - 50 Years of Writing Jamaica

BBC Radio 4 - Stir It Up - 50 Years of Writing Jamaica

www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b01mhxml -

Poet Salena Godden considers the impact of her Jamaican heritage on her
literary identity.

BBC Radio 3 - Composer of the Week, Samuel Coleridge-Taylor

BBC Radio 3 - Composer of the Week, Samuel Coleridge-Taylor ...
www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b01mkc0z

Wednesday, September 5, 2012

Helen Grant: first black female Tory MP

Helen Grant: first black female Tory MP (for Maidstone & The Weald, Kent since 2010)

Born: 28 September 1961
Place of birth: London raised in Carlisle

Family Background: born to an English mother & Nigerian father, but grew up in a single parent family after her parents separated & her father emigrated to the United States. She lived on Carlisle’s Raffles council estate with her mother, maternal grandmother & maternal great-grandmother.

Education: as the only black resident of the Carlisleestate she was the victim of racist bullying. At school she was captain of the school tennis & hockey teams, & represented Cumbria in hockey, tennis, athletics, & cross-country. She was also an under-16 judo champion for the north of England & southern Scotland. She studied law at the University of Hull, after which she planned to take specialist legal qualifications. When it appeared unlikely that her local education authority would fund a place at her preferred college, her local MP Willie Whitelaw championed her cause, & she took a place at the College of Law in Guildford where she qualified as a solicitor in 1988. She returned to Carlisle to do her articles of clerkship at Cartmell, Mawson & Main solicitors

Key details: Helen Grant met her husband, Simon, in 1990, & the couple are married with two sons. She divides her time between homes in Marden, Kent, & Kingswood, Surrey.

She joined a legal practice in Wimbledon specialising in family law. She established her own practice, Grants Solicitors, in 1996, which also specialises in family law. Grant was a non-executive director of the Croydon NHS Primary Care Trust from January 2005 to March 2007 before stepping down to concentrate on her political career.

Grant joined the Labour Party in 2004 & was asked by a senior local party figure to consider becoming a local councilor but she rejected the idea. She became disillusioned with Labour & joined the Conservatives in 2006. In 2006 Grant worked with Iain Duncan Smith's Centre for Social Justice in the formation of Conservative policy to deal with family breakdown. Grant was one of the authors of the Social Justice Policy Group Report 'State of the Nation - Fractured Families' published in December 2006, & the follow-up solutions report 'Breakthrough Britain' published in July 2007.

Grant applied to become a parliamentary candidate, & was approved as a candidate in May 2006. She was selected by the Conservative Party as the prospective candidate for Maidstone & The Weald in January 2008, replacing longstanding MP Ann Widdecombe who had announced that she would be stepping down at the next general election. The seat, at the time, had a majority of 15,000. Grant was selected as an A-List candidate and, although she was publicly supported by the sitting MP, Widdecombe criticised David Cameron's policy of ensuring 50% of the Conservatives' A-list candidates were women—a policy thought to have helped Grant win the nomination. This was quickly followed by revelations from a Sunday newspaper regarding her previous membership of Labour.

She was elected at the 2010 general election on 6 May 2010, achieving a reduced majority of 5,889.

In June 2010 she was elected to the Justice Select Committee, a House of Commons select committee which oversees the policy, administration, & spending of the UK's Ministry of Justice.

Grant received her first government appointment on 4th September 2012, following a government reshuffle, when she received the dual roles of Under-Secretary of State for Justice & Under-Secretary for Women & Equalities.

Adapted by Ms A.J Allison from information found at: http://en.wikipedia.org

Swanson's stop and search blackberry app 2012

Swanson's stop and search blackberry app 2012 - featured on Eddie Nestor's UK Black Podcasts 5th Sept 2012

Interesting to see if anything comes of this.

Sunday, September 2, 2012

New scholarly volume on the iconography of slavery in European art

A New scholarly volume has been published on the iconography of slavery in European art, exploring imagery both old and new.  The volume has been published by the Warburg Institute, edited by Jean Michel Massing (Cambridge) and Elizabeth McGrath (Warburg) and includes scholarship on the imagery of slaves and slavery in European art between the Renaissance and the period of Abolitionism. It resulted from a conference held at the Warburg at the end of 2007. You will find a short account of the book and list of contents on the Institute's website, linked here:

http://warburg.sas.ac.uk/publications/colloquia/the-slave-in-european-art/