Ann Dummett

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Ann, Lady Dummett
Born
Agnes Margaret Ann Chesney

4 September 1930
Ware Grammar School for Girls
Alma materSomerville College, Oxford
Occupation(s)Activist, author
Years active1950s–2012
Spouse
(m. 1951; died 2011)
Children7
Parent(s)Arthur Chesney
Kitty Chesney (née Ridge)
FamilyEdmund Gwenn (uncle)
Cecil Kellaway (cousin)
Alec Kellaway (cousin)

Ann, Lady Dummett (born Agnes Margaret Ann Chesney; 4 September 1930 – 7 February 2012) was an English activist, campaigner for racial justice and published author.

Early life and career

Ann (as she was always known) was born on 4 September 1930 at Westminster Hospital, the daughter of actor Arthur Chesney (1882–1949) and artist Kathleen ('Kitty') née Ridge (1901–1988).[1][2] At the time of her birth her parents lived in Pimlico, London, but she was to grow up in Battersea, then a poor working-class part of the city,[3] And the family were so 'hard up' that Kitty "sometimes pretended she had eaten earlier to have enough food to feed her".[4]

She was a child prodigy, being able to read at the age of two.[5][4] A 'lifelong friend' Jill Kaye recalled that "at the British Museum when we were five or six ... an old chap gave her sixpence ... impressed she was translating Ancient Greek from the Rosetta Stone."[5]

Ann attended Guildhouse School in Pimlico, London, and then, having fled

Ware Grammar School in Hertfordshire[6][4] She performed exceptionally at the latter,[4] and unusually for a young woman of her background, won a scholarship to read modern history at Somerville College, Oxford from where dhe graduated in 1951.[3] She was awarded an MA at the same.[1]

In December 1951 she married the philosopher

With Evan Luard, Oxford's MP, they founded the Oxford Committee for Racial Integration, forerunner to Oxfordshire Council for Community Relations, and she became a full-time community relations officer .[6]

She went on to work at the

Institute of Race Relations, the Joint Council for the Welfare of Immigrants and the Runnymede Trust
of which she was director from 1984 to 1987.

Dummett died on 7 February 2012 in Oxford, six weeks after the death of her husband.[6]

Publications

  • A Portrait of English Racism, Penguin, 1973;
  • Citizenship and Nationality, Runnymede Trust, London, 1976
  • A New Immigration Policy, Runnymede Trust, London, 1978
  • British Nationality: the AGIN guide to the new law (with
  • Towards a Just Immigration Policy (ed.), Cobden Trust, London, 1986;
  • Subjects, Citizens, Aliens and Others, (with Andrew Nicol), Weidenfeld and Nicolson, 1990
  • Racially Motivated Crime: responses in three European cities: Frankfurt, Lyons and Rome (ed.), Commission for Racial Equality, London 1997;

For a complete bibliography (and an introduction to her work) see "Ann Dummett's Contribution to the Understanding of Immigration and Racism" (2015).[7]

References

External links