Posted on 04 May 2011. Tags: Books, Slavery, Thames & Hudson, Walvin

When I was asked to review "The Slave Trade" By James Walvin, It was with some trepidation because I had read many books on the Slave Trade during my time as a student and expected some weighty and wordy tome. That would have to be waded through and then deciphered before I could even begin to think of writing ...
Posted in Black Britain, Black History, Black History Month, Books, Caribbean, Education, Europe, Men, Slavery, Students, The Americas, Women
Posted on 04 May 2011.

The story of the slaves in America begins with Christopher Columbus. His voyage to America was not financed by Queen Isabella, but by Luis de Santangelo, who advanced the sum of 17,000 ducats (about 5,000 pounds-today equal to 50,000 pounds) to finance the voyage, which began on August 3, 1492.
Columbus was accompanied by five 'maranos' ...
Posted in Africa, African American, Black History, Slavery, The Americas
Posted on 18 April 2011. Tags: Canada, Fox News, Quebec, Racism

August 9, 2010 - It's like the damn Planet of the Apes. Nothing Makes Sense, said Fox News Glenn Beck in a recent rant against President Obama and the America he has created. It was one of the angriest and most thinly veiled racist rants in recent history but simply a continuation of his ...
Posted in African American, Black Blog Posts, Black History, Education, Media, The Americas
Posted on 24 March 2011. Tags: Black History, British History, Civil Rights, Civil Rights movement in Britain, Martin Luther King, No blacks, Paul Stephenson, US Civil Rights movement, no dogs, no irish

History classes in the National Curriculum will often gloss over slavery, idolize the efforts of William Wilberforce and study the methods of Martin Luther King’s struggle for civil rights. For many young Black people in Britain, one would argue that it is very easy for them to recall the names of US Civil Rights icons, better ...
Posted in African American, Black Britain, Black History, Community, Education, Europe, Politics, Racism, Students, The Americas
Posted on 07 October 2010. Tags: Any Means Neccesary, Malcolm X

http://malcolmxfiles.blogspot.com/
"Recently when I was blessed to make a religious pilgrimage to the holy city of Mecca where I met many people from all over the world, plus spent many weeks in Africa trying to broaden my own scope and get more of an open mind to look at the problem as it actually is, one ...
Posted in Africa, African American, Black History, Black History Month, Education, Politics, Racism, The Americas, Video
Posted on 04 October 2010. Tags: Caribbean, Eric williams, Slavery, Trinidad and Tobago, capitalism and slavery, de boissiere, inward hunger

Eric Eustace Williams (25 September 1911 – 29 March 1981) was the first Prime Minister of Trinidad and Tobago He served from 1956 until his death in 1981. He was also a noted Caribbean historian.
Eric Williams was a descendant from the de Boissiere family which made its fortune trading African slaves illegally after ...
Posted in Black History, Black History Month, Caribbean, Education, Poetry, Slavery, The Americas
Posted on 02 October 2010.

Black American GIs Park Street Bristol - During World War II, originally uploaded by brizzle born and bred.
Posted in African American, Black History, Black History Month, Military, The Americas
Posted on 21 September 2010. Tags: America, Black British, Black British History, Black History, Black boxers, Black sportsmen, Boxer, Boxing magazine, Deptford, Heavyweight, Reading, Sports, colour bar, cruiser weight, tommy Martin

Tommy Martin was born in Reading in 1916. In 1917, the family moved to Deptford. At 14 he ran away from home and joined a fairground, working in a Boxing Booth. In the late 1920s / early 30s there was always a token black boxer in a troupe, which helped draw crowds along with the slogan ...
Posted in Black Britain, Black History, Education, Europe, Racism, Sports, The Americas
Posted on 20 September 2010. Tags: Baroness amos, Black Politicians, British peers, Guyana, Labour Party, Valerie Amos

Valerie Ann Amos, Baroness Amos, PC (born 13 March 1954), was a British Labour Party politician and life peer, she served as Leader of the House of Lords and Lord President of the Council.
Valerie Ann Amos, Baroness Amos, PC (born 13 March 1954), is a British
Labour Party politician and life peer, served as Leader of ...
Posted in Black Britain, Black History, Black History Month, Caribbean, Community, Europe, Politics, The Americas, Women
Posted on 06 September 2010. Tags: Black musician, Brazil, Cornwall, Joseph Emidy, Music, Portuguese, Violin, black composers, black violinists, composers, slave

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 Africa, Arts, Black Britain, Black History, Black History Month, Education, Europe, Men, Music, Slavery, The Americas
Posted on 25 July 2010. Tags: Planes, Tuskeegee, WW2, War, airmen

Tuskeegee Airman, originally uploaded by RickRaven.
Fantastic photo of one of the Tuskeegee Airmen
Posted in African American, Black History, Education, Men, Military, Racism, The Americas, War
Posted on 25 July 2010. Tags: African American, Black History, Conjoined Twins, Disability, Siamese Twins, disease

Millie-Christine Dead - S.O. 11 Oct. 1912 p1, originally uploaded by snap-happy1.
An unsympathetic news report regarding
African American Siamese Twins. Who Died in 1912
Posted in African American, Black History, Community, Education, Health, Science, The Americas, Women
Posted on 25 July 2010. Tags: Black People, Canada, United States, miscegenation, mixed race, race mixing

Couple Were Deported - S.O. 5 Apr. 1913 p8, originally uploaded by snap-happy1.
A Mixed Race Couple were Deported to the United States from Canada, in part of anti-Miscegenation laws. 1913
Posted in Black History, Community, Politics, Racism, The Americas, Women
Posted on 13 July 2010. Tags: Black Canadians, Black boxers, Boxing, Canada, Famous Black People, Famous history, Heavyweight Boxers, Lennox Lewis, Sport, World Champion, black man

Lennox Lewis was Britains last Heavyweight Champion boxer. Despite a reputedly high, undisclosed personal wealth, Lennox Lewis remains one of the most likeable sporting personalities of this century. Lennox Claudius Lewis was born in Stratford, London on 2 September 1965.
His names could not be more aptly chosen as Lennox is Gaelic and means 'chieftain' ...
Posted in African American, Black Britain, Caribbean, Men, Sports, The Americas
Posted on 02 May 2010. Tags: African Caribbean, Black Churches, Christians, Church, Gospel, Keep the faith, Pentecostal, Religious Tv, Rev Wale Hudson-Roberts, Website collaboration, Young Christians, black colaboration, black economics, black faith

As part of our collaboration Project Black Presence is continuing to publish articles about other Black websites. Keep the Faith Magazine is the U.K's leading Black Christian Magazine. Below is a message from Marcia Dixon introducing you to the magazine.
This month's Keep The Faith, Britain's leading magazine about black faith, is filled with ...
Posted in Africa, Black Britain, Black Writing, Blackpresence Supports, Caribbean, Community, Education, Health, Media, Politics, Religion, The Americas
Posted on 23 February 2010. Tags: Civil rights Movement, Fisk University, Howard University, Mary B Talbert, NAACP, Niagra Movement, Ossie Davis, The Souls of black folks, W.E dubois, William Edward Burghardt DuBois

William Edward Burghardt Du Bois was born on (February 23, 1868? he was an American civil rights activist,Pan-Africanist,sociologist,historian,author, and editor.
He grew up in Great Barrington, a predominately Anglo American town. His Mother, Mary Silvina Burghardt's family was part of the very small free black population of Great Barrington, having long owned land in the state. ...
Posted in African American, Arts, Black Writing, Books, Caribbean, Education, Politics, Racism, Slavery, The Americas
Posted on 16 February 2010. Tags: C.L.R.James, Caribbean Artists movement, Caribbean Education and Community Workers Association', Caribbean poets, Derek Walcott, Third World books, Trinidad, West Indian Independence Party, black Poets, black writers, he Black Parents movement

John La Rose is a political and Cultural activist. He came to Britain from Trinidad where he had been working as General Secretary to the West Indian Independence Party.
John La Rose is a political and Cultural activist. He came to Britain from Trinidad where he had been working as General Secretary to the West Indian ...
Posted in Arts, Black Britain, Black Writing, Books, Caribbean, Community, Education, Environment, Media, Men, Poetry, Politics, The Americas
Posted on 31 January 2010. Tags: 761st Tank division, Africa, African American, Baseball, Fort Hood, Negro League, World series

Jack Roosevelt "Jackie" Robinson (January 31, 1919 October 24, 1972) was the first African American Major League Baseball (MLB) player of the modern era. Robinson broke the baseball color line when he debuted with the Brooklyn Dodgers in 1947. As the first black man to openly play in the major leagues since the 1880s, ...
Posted in African American, Education, Environment, Men, Sports, The Americas, War
Posted on 15 January 2010. Tags: Aid agencies, DEC, Earthquake, Haiti, Help Haiti

In the UK the Disasters Emergency Committee (DEC) - an umbrella group which launches and co-ordinates responses to major disasters overseas - has launched a Haiti Earthquake Appeal.
Disasters Emergency Committee
The DEC represents 13 charities, many of which have bases around the world:
* ActionAid
* British Red Cross
* CAFOD
* Care International UK
* Christian Aid
* Concern Worldwide
* Help ...
Posted in Blackpresence Supports, Caribbean, Community, The Americas
Posted on 07 January 2010. Tags: African Art, Art, Black Artists, Chelsea School of Art, Controversial art, Elephant dung, Ofili, Zimbabwe, Zimbabwean

Chris Ofili is an Artist known for his controversial use of Elephant dung in his work. He is also a former winner of the Turner Prize.
Ofili was born in Manchester in 1968. He studied fine art at the Chelsea School of Art and completed a master's degree in painting at the Royal College of ...
Posted in Africa, Arts, Black Britain, Entertainment, Europe, The Americas
Posted on 04 January 2010. Tags: Jam, Jamaica, John wedderburn, Joseph Knight, Knight v Wedderburn, Legal cases involving slavery, Perth, Scotland, Slavery in the UK, slaves in Scotland

Joseph Knight was born in Africa, and taken as a slave to Jamaica. He was sold to a Scottish landowner. He was taken to Scotland in 1769. Three years later a ruling in England (see Somersett's Case) cast doubt on the legality of slavery under the common law. Assuming this applied to the rest of ...
Posted in Africa, Black Britain, Caribbean, Education, Europe, Men, Politics, Racism, Slavery, The Americas
Posted on 25 October 2009. Tags: American Communist party, Claudia Jones, Mcarthyism, Notting Hill, Notting Hill Carnival, Port-of-Spain, Trinidad, West Indian, West Indian Gazette, black activists

Claudia Jones founded the first major black post- war newspaper -The West Indian Gazette; and also helped launch the Notting Hill Carnival.? Claudia Jones was born in Port-of-Spain, Trinidad in 1915 Cladia moved with her family to Harlem.
She had a short education as she was plagued by lung and heart problems, which would persist for ...
Posted in Arts, Black Britain, Black Writing, Blackpresence Supports, Business, Caribbean, Community, Education, Media, The Americas, Women
Posted on 22 October 2009. Tags: Barber, Boswell, Burntwood, Cannock in Staffordshire, HMS Stag, Johnson, Lichfield, Plantation, Sir John Hawkins, Stafford, Staffordshire

Francis Barber was a servant and companion to the writer Samuel Johnson.? Francis Barber was born in Jamaica around 1735. He came to Britain with a planter from the island. For one year he went to school in the small village of Barton nr Darlington in Yorkshire England.
Then, as he got older he entered the ...
Posted in Black Britain, Black History, Black History Month, Blackpresence Supports, Caribbean, Education, Military, Slavery, The Americas
Posted on 18 October 2009. Tags: Black actors, Brixton, Connaught Theatre, Desmonds, Guyana, Norman Beaton, The tempest

Norman Beaton was a teacher turned actor. He will be best remembered for his role as Peckhams best loved Barber in the hit T.V show 'Desmonds'.
Norman Lugard Beaton was born in Georgetown Guyana.
Beaton attended Queen's College in Guyana until he was expelled for truancy and bad grades. He was given a second chance at ...
Posted in Arts, Blackpresence Supports, Caribbean, Education, Entertainment, Media, Men, Movies, The Americas