History of African presence in London
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The history of African presence in London may extend back to the Roman period.
Roman London
Using
16th century
The population density of Africans in 16th-century London is poorly understood. Due to the proliferation of documentation in the Tudor and Stuart periods, we know that Africans were present in most of the noble courts of this century.[3]
An African trumpeter, John Blanke served King Henry VII and King Henry VIII. Blanke is depicted on Westminster tournament roll in 1511, is said to have arrived in England with Catherine of Aragon in 1501, although a document from June 1488, lists a person named John Blank, a footman already in service of Henry VII. Documentation from the court of Queen
Aside from presence within the courts, parish documentation also establishes that African people were embedded in all echelons of London society, Reasonable Blackman a silk weaver who likely emigrated from the Netherlands, lived in Southwark around 1579–1592. Mary Fillis, a daughter of a basket weaver from Morocco, came to London around 1583–84 and ended up a seamstress from East Smithfield. Prince Dederi Jaquoah, the son of King Caddi-biah who ruled of a kingdom in modern Liberia was baptised in London on New Year's Day 1611 and lived as a merchant.[8]
17th–18th centuries
By the middle of the eighteenth century, African people comprised somewhere between one and three percent of the London populace.
In 1610, Prince Dederi Jaquoah was brought, aged 20, to the City of London from West Africa by an English merchant, and records state that he was "sent out of his cuntrye by his father ... to be baptised" and that he stayed in London for two years.[12] In 1684, Katharine Auker was brought to England from Barbados by her enslaver, plantation owner Robert Rich. After Auker was baptised in 1688 at St Katharine by the Tower, she was made destitute by her enslaver. In 1690 she succeeded in a court petition to be discharged from his enslavement.[13] An official record of this is held in The National Archives.[14] In 1737, black Briton George Scipio was accused of stealing Anne Godfrey's washing, with the case resting entirely on whether or not Scipio was the only black man in Hackney at the time.[15]
Around the 1750s, London became the home of many African people,
In this same period many enslaved soldiers who fought on the side of the British in the
19th century
Coming into the early 19th century, more groups of black soldiers and seaman were discharged after the Napoleonic Wars and some settled in London. These emigrants suffered and faced many challenges as did many black people in London. The slave trade was abolished completely in the British Empire by 1833. The number of black people in London was steadily declining with these new laws. Fewer black people were brought into London from the West Indies and parts of Africa.[18] During the mid-19th century there were restrictions on foreign immigration. In the later part of the 19th century there was a buildup of small groups of black dockside communities in towns such as Canning Town,[22] Liverpool, and Cardiff. This was a direct effect of new shipping links that were established with the Caribbean and West Africa.
Despite facing social prejudice, some 19th-century black people living in England achieved exceptional success.
20th century
In 1909, the Sierra Leonese barrister and writer, Augustus Merriman-Labor published a travelogue where he wrote, "Negroes in London do not much exceed one hundred."[24]
One black Londoner, Learie Constantine, a cricketer from Trinidad and welfare officer in the RAF, was refused service at the Imperial Hotel in London in July 1943. He stood up for his rights and later was awarded compensation. That particular example is used by some to illustrate the slow change towards acceptance and equality of all citizens in London.[25]
Post-war period
In 1950, it was estimated there were no more than 20,000 non-White residents in the United Kingdom, mainly in England; almost all born overseas.
In 1962, the
By the end of the 20th century, the number of Black Londoners numbered half a million, according to the 1991 UK census. An increasing number of these Black Londoners were London-born, or British-born. Even with this growing population and the first black members elected to the UK Parliament, many argue that there was still discrimination and a socio-economic imbalance in London amongst the Black community. In 1992, the number of Black members in Parliament doubled from three to six and in 1997, this was tripled from a decade previously to nine. There are still many problems that Black Londoners face; the new global and high-tech information revolution is changing the urban economy and some argue that it is driving unemployment rates among Blacks, higher relative to non-Blacks,[citation needed] something which, it is argued, threatens to erode the progress made thus far.[18]
As of June 2007, the Black population of London was 802,300, equivalent to 10.6% of the population of London; 4.3% of Londoners are Caribbean, 5.5% of Londoners are African and a further 0.8% are from other black backgrounds including American and Latin American. There are also 117,400 people who are mixed black and white.[28] At the 2011 UK census, the total Black population of London stood at 1,088,640 or 13.3% of the population.[29]
See also
References
- .
- ISSN 0068-113X.
- ^ Girma, Marchu (October 2015). "A snapshot of the little-known history of black Tudor women". gal-dem. Retrieved 2 July 2021.
- ISBN 0861047494.
- S2CID 154728438.
- ISBN 978-1-85109-700-5.
- ^ Joy, Anji (27 August 2012). "Lucy Negro, prostitute: The Dark-Lady of Shakespeare's sonnets". Black British History. Retrieved 2 July 2021.
- ^ Bidisha (29 October 2017). "Tudor, English and black – and not a slave in sight". The Guardian. Retrieved 2 July 2021.
- ^ Gerzina, Gretchen (1995). Black London: Life before Emancipation. New Brunswick: Rutgers University Press. p. 5.
- ^ Banton, Michael (1955), The Coloured Quarter. Jonathan Cape. London.
- ISBN 978-1856282130.
- ^ "Stories from the Switching the Lens project – Dederi Jaquoah". City of London. Retrieved 29 January 2022.
- ^ "Stories from the Switching the Lens project – Katharine Auker". City of London. Retrieved 29 January 2022.
- ^ "Black presence". nationalarchives.gov.uk. Retrieved 29 January 2022.
- ^ "Communities – Black Communities – Central Criminal Court". oldbaileyonline.org. Retrieved 22 January 2016.
- ISBN 1-86030-284-X.
- ^ Roy A. Sundstrom, "French Huguenots and the Civil List, 1696-1727: A Study of Alien Assimilation in England." Albion 8.3 (1976): 219-235.
- ^ ISBN 978-0435311735.
- ^ Siva, Michael (Winter 2021). "Why did the Black Poor of London not support the Sierra Leone Resettlement Scheme?" (PDF). History Matters Journal. 1 (2): 44. Retrieved 10 March 2022.
- ^ "The Sierra Leone Company", Black Loyalists: Our History, Our People.
- ^ The Map Room: Africa: Sierra Leone Archived 27 January 2010 at the Wayback Machine, British Empire. Retrieved 17 March 2011.
- ^ Geoffrey Bell, The other Eastenders : Kamal Chunchie and West Ham's early black community (Stratford: Eastside Community Heritage, 2002)
- ^ "William Cuffay (1788 – 1870)". History. BBC.
- ISBN 0331561875.
- PMID 18161216.
- ISBN 9789287149749.
- ^ "Black British timeline | Black London | Black British History". The Black Presence in Britain. 15 September 2009. Retrieved 14 February 2016.
- ^ "Resident Population Estimates by Ethnic Group, All Persons". Archived from the original on 12 June 2011. Retrieved 26 July 2008.
- ^ "2011 black population london".