Posted on 07 September 2010. Tags: Black British, Black Welsh, Bute town Cardiff, Goldfinger, Shirley Bassey, Singers, tiger bay, Wales

Shirley Bassey was born in Cardiff in 1937. She went on to become one of Britains premiere entertainers. Shirley Bassey has indeed risen from humble beginnings
to become one of the greatest female performers in the world today.
Shirley Veronica Bassey was born on January 8, 1937, the youngest of seven children. She grew up in Tiger ...
Posted in Arts, Black Britain, Black Britons, Black History, Black History Month, Caribbean, Community, Education, Entertainment, Entertainment, Europe, History, Women
Posted on 06 September 2010. Tags: black composers, Black musician, black violinists, Brazil, composers, Cornwall, Joseph Emidy, Music, Portuguese, slave, Violin

Joseph Emidy (also spelt Emedy or Emedee) had been second violin in the orchestra of the Lisbon opera house before being pressed into the Royal Navy in 1795.
Born in West Africa in c.1775 JOSEPH ANTONIO EMIDY was enslaved as a child by Portuguese traders, taken to Brazil and subsequently Portugal where he became a virtuoso ...
Posted in African, Arts, Black Britain, Black Britons, Black History, Black History Month, Black Presence, Education, Europe, History, Men, Music, Slavery, The Americas
Posted on 04 September 2010. Tags: African Caribbean, Afro Caribbean, black British actors, Caribbean actors, Love they Neighbour, Rudolph Walker, The Crouches

Rudolph Walker, O.B.E was one of the first black actors in sitcom and broke many barriers as a performer. Working extensively in theatre and becoming the first black person to star in a major television series.
Rudolph Walker was one of the first black actors in sitcom and broke many barriers as a performer. Working extensively ...
Posted in Arts, Black Britain, Black Britons, Black History, Black History Month, Caribbean, Education, Entertainment, Entertainment, Europe, History, Media, Men, Racism
Posted on 02 September 2010. Tags: Black Britain, Black British, Black Irish, Black Musicians, Black recording artists, Catholic, Donegal, Evon Brennan, Ghanaian, London, Nuns, Orphanage, Singers, UK

Evon Brennan is a singer songwriter from Donegal in Ireland. Now living in London, Evon has firmly established herself on the live circuit. A unique voice...inspired by
her many experiences. None more so than being Black and Irish and raised in a rural setting in Ireland. Her Mother was a Dublin girl. Her Father a Ghanaian medical student
studying at Dublin ...
Posted in Arts, Black Britain, Black History, Black History Month, Black Presence, Education, Entertainment, Entertainment, Europe, History, Women
Posted on 23 August 2010. Tags: Black History Month, black rugby Players, British Lions, England Rugby, Jeremy Guscott, Rugby

Jeremy Guscott was one of Britains finest Rugby players in the 1990's. He Made his international debut in 1989 against Romania. A few weeks later he went with the Loins to Australia. He appeared in the last test for scored a famous match winning try. Jerry went on to win 3 Grand Slams with England ...
Posted in Black Britain, Black Britons, Black History, Black History Month, Education, Europe, History, Men, Sports
Posted on 23 August 2010. Tags: Black Athletes, Black British, black women, British Athletics, Heptahlon, Strictly Come Dancing

Denise Lewis is a Black British Athlete, a superb all-round talent. Denise progressed to the highest world-class at the heptathlon, her highest accolade was the Olympic gold medal she won in Sydney.
She achieved a best of 5277 points in her first year at the event in 1989. She was Britain's woman athlete of the year ...
Posted in African, Black Britain, Black Britons, Black History, Community, Education, Europe, Health, History, Sports, Women
Posted on 23 August 2010. Tags: Debt, Servants, slaves

Today Most Western countries are struggling to pay off their national debt and keep their houses in order, it seems though, that things have been the same many times before. The 1770's were no different. People came up with unpopular and outlandish ideas to balance the books, just as they do today. The ...
Posted in Black Britain, Black History, Books, Business, Europe, Finance, History, Slavery
Posted on 23 August 2010. Tags: 89th Foot, Black Bandsmen, black soldiers, British armed Forces, Chelsea Pensioners, Dominican Republic, East India Company, French West Indies, George Cocoa, George Warner, Gosport, Haiti, Hampshire, Ireland, jamaican, Java Clasp, Joseph Gasford, Meath, Military General Service Medal, Napoleonic Wars, Portsmouth, Royal Irish Fusiliers, slave, Soldier, St Domingo, Turkish Music, Ukawsaw Gronniosaw, Waterloo, West India Regiments, West Indies

Far from Home; A Brief Record of the Life, Military Service and Death of Joseph Gasford; A Black Bandsman of the 89th Foot; Late of St. Domingo and Gosport, Hampshire. By John D Ellis. Joseph Gasford was born in French governed St. Domingo, (modern day Haiti and the Domincan Republic), in 1785. Whether he was ...
Posted in Black Britain, Black Britons, Black Presence, Caribbean, Education, Europe, History, Men, Military, War
Posted on 23 August 2010. Tags: Arabs, Blacks in Port Cities, Lascars, Liverpool, seamen, South Shields, Yemeni

Black Britons - Race Riots in South Shields The first race riots to take place in Britain were in South Shields (Tyneside). A number of Arab and Somali seamen had settled there in the 1860's, and theses populations were added to by West African and West Indian Seamen who settled in North shields before the First ...
Posted in African, Black Britain, Black Britons, Community, Europe, History, Law and Order, Men, Middle East, Politics, Racism
Posted on 17 August 2010. Tags: Adelaide Hall, Black British History, Black Britons, Black Londoners, black soldiers, Blitz, Britains Black Community, Dr Harold Moody, E.I Ekpenyon, Elizabeth Welch, Esther Bruce, Ken (Snake Hips) Johnson, Learie Constantine, Mother Country, Stephen Bourne, The Home Front, Una Marson, WW11, WW2

Black British History went through something of a coming out party in the late 1990's and early naughties. Real interest arose in the contributions of Black people in Britain and The Internet brought forth a whole plethora of sites and snippets of information all with the aim of finally setting the history books straight.
However, ...
Posted in Arts, Black Britain, Black Britons, Black History, Blackpresence Supports, Books, Community, Education, Europe, History, News, Politics, Racism, Women
Posted on 29 July 2010. Tags: blamadur, Blamenn, Blokkumaddur, Blue Men, Fjords, Iceland, Norse, Old Norse, svertingi

"Blamenn!" Palli, our Iceland Review photographer, shouts. "You call them Blamenn!" Of course, Palli is a leg-puller from way back, so I take this with a grain of salt. Although it's something I desperately want answered. What are black people called in Iceland?
Palli's answer of "blamenn" (blue men), however dubious, is historically how the ancient ...
Posted in African, Black History, Black Presence, Education, Europe, History, Racism
Posted on 29 July 2010. Tags: court records, Crime, John guy, Law and Order, Mary Gunnis, negro, Old Bailey, Thomas Robinson, Tower Hill

Part of the Myth that black people have only been living in Britain since the 1950's has been due to the general inaccessible nature of public records to the masses. In today's modern world, more and more records are becoming available to people online. The Old Bailey Online site is one such resource ...
Posted in African, Black Britain, Black Britons, Black History, Black Presence, Community, Education, Europe, History, Law and Order, Men
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