Notting Hill Race Riots
The number of Caribbean migrants arriving in London after the Second World War was rising, and by 1961 there was an estimated 100,000 Caribbean residents in London.
Notting Hill, North Kensington in the 1950's was an area of slum housing, poverty and crime were rife, not the stomping ground for the wealthy with multi-million pound properties as it is today. Britain was short of labour and the government actively encouraged immigration calling for West Indians came to 'the mother country'.
During this time a strong
Caribbean community grew up in Notting Hill. Both poor white families and Caribbean families were at the mercy of unscrupulous landlords, like Rachman who became one on Britains most infamous landlords, giving rise to the term
Rachmanism.
There was rising hostility from young white working-class 'Teddy boys' towards the growing Caribbean community. Fascist, Right-wing groups fanned the flames, by distributing leaflets and holding meetings in the area, Sir Oswald Mosely, held meetings in the streets urging people to 'Keep Britain White'.
By the
summer of 1958, Notting Hill was the centre of a brewing unrest, the gangs of Teddy Boys were becoming increasingly violent toward anyone who was Black, and Caribbean shops and business were being attacked.
On 24 August, there were two incidents in Shepherd's Bush and Notting Hill, involving white youths who had assaulted Black men, some of whom were seriously injured.
In the week that followed, a group of white youths, armed with knives, iron bars, and other weapons, and intent on finding trouble. After their rampage they left a number of black men injured in hospital.
Days later on the
29 August 1958, things were going to get worse.
It is generally accepted that the riot was finally sparked when a domestic dispute between a black man and his white wife. Majbritt Morrison, a young Swedish woman, was arguing with her Jamaican husband, Raymond, near Latimer Road Tube station.
Morrison later wrote an autobiographical book,
Jungle West 11 (Tandem Books, London 1964), which included details of her ordeal.
The crowds got involved, arguements escalated and by midnight violent clashes had began. A lynchmob of around 400 white men chased the Caribbean residents, who had now joined forces in to defend themselves, and attacked houses occupied by West Indians. petrol bombs and glass bottles were thrown. There were clashes each night, until the police eventually regained control on 5th September.
Around 140 people were arrested, mainly white, but also Black victims who had been armed in self-defence.
In
January 1959, five months after the riot, the first carnival was held indoors at St Pancras town hall in central London as an act of solidarity and defiant in response to the racist events.
Claudia Jones was central to organising the evnt which in 1965 became an annual outdoor parade in Notting Hill.
The tensions of the riot were to stay and that May 1959, a carpenter from Antigua,
Kelso Cochrane, was stabbed to death in Kensal Rise (then know as Kensal New Town) by a gang of white men. This was to be a social turning point, with more than 1,200 people, both black and white, attending his funeral, followed by Oswald Mosley losing the General election.