
Atlantic Road

Brixton tube
|
|
| |
| BRIXTON SW9. This south London town has developed into what is
thought to be the spiritual home of Black Britain. It became home to many
of Britain's Windrush generation who were decamped to the nearby Clapham
upon arrival. The town, which is the capital of the London Borough of
Lambeth, became synonymous with Black Britain after civil disturbances
in the early 80s - The Brixton Riot. |
| |
| BRIXTON RIOT. A flammable alcohol heavy cocktail served in bars
in and around Lambeth town. Thought to have been conceived at the bar
formerly known as The Brixtonian. |
| |
|
BRIXTON RIOT - 1981. It's thought the violent arrest of a black
man led to hundreds of people taking to the streets of Brixton hurling
petrol bombs at police, burning cars and looting shops in what was one
of the largest civil disturbances in modern times. Some 400 people including
50 police officers were injured. Rioting was centred around the Railton
Road and Atlantic Road areas of central Brixton - known at the time as
the 'frontline'. Rioting lasted three days. Police using a discriminatory
tactic of stopping under suspicion, SUS or 'Stop and Search' as it was
commonly known, is thought to have been behind the riot and many others
that followed throughout inner city Britain. Young Black people felt they
were being unfairly targeted by a heavy-handed unchecked police force.
The spring of 1981 had seen the launch of Operation Swamp aimed at combating
street crime. Police stopped and questioned people at random in and around
the borough, but it proved to be the last straw as Brixton erupted. Riots
also erupted in Toxteth, Liverpool and Southall, west London. |
| |
| BRIXTON RIOT - 1985. Days of civil unrest brought about by the
police shooting of innocent mother Cherry Groce. Her gunman son Michael,
wanted by London's Metropolitan Police, was thought to have been hiding
out at his mother's home. Word of her motiveless shooting which resulted
in her being paralysed from the waist down, spread along Brixton's then
'frontline' Railton Road, the upshot of which saw several days of running
battles with the police, looting and burning. One person died, some 50
people injured and police made over 200 arrests. Riots also erupted that
year on Tottenham's Broadwater Farm housing estate, north London. |
| |
|
BRIXTON BOMBER - brought London to its knees. 1999 angry white
boy brings London to its knees. Bombes Brick Lane and a Soho gay bar in
London's West End. |
| |
Jak
Bubeula-Dodd, once described as a jack of all trades, is an
entrepreneur? It appears that he's done everything, if not most
things. Although he achieved notoriety creating the popular 'edu-tainment'
board game Nubian Jak, Bubeula-Dodd,
true to the jack of all trades tag, has been a model,
singer-songwriter-producer (working with among others Jazzy B, George Michael, Seal, Stigma, The
Skatelites, Musical Youth, The Might Sparrow and Motorhead), author
and social-worker.
In 1993 he became the face for Interflora and featured in an
international advertising campaign. As a writer, he's written two factual books, a novel,
and worked with The Voice newspaper.
He also featured in the Channel 4 series Superhuman.
He is currently with the Mayor of London on a pioneering new scheme
to get heritage plaques commemorative of past historical BME
figures. |
| |
Dr Robert Beckford - academic, Birmingham University.
Also writer/producer/presenter of a number of controversial television and radio
documentaries |
| |
| Bernie Grant - the late Bernie Grant.
Former Haringey councillor and Labour MP for Tottenham north
London. |
| |
| Michael Butscher -
is a former West Africa magazine and
Voice newspaper journalist. Last heard of reporting from the civil war
in his homeland Sierra Leone. Any news of his whereabouts, please
e-mail: editorial@BlackInBritain.co.uk |
| |
Toni-Ann
Byfield (d) - Seven-year-old girl shot dead whilst in the care
of a drug-dealer
thought at the time to have been her father. Joel Smith was sentenced to life imprisonment
for shooting Bertram Byfield, 42 and then killing
Toni-Ann in a
bid to cover up the crime. Smith robbed crack houses, sometimes at the point of a
gun and had planned to do the same to Byfield. On September 2003
Smith, tricked their way into the ground floor bedsit on Harrow Road,
London to kill Byfield, a Jamaican. Toni-Ann, was murdered with a single shot. |
|
|
Black Britain - 90s Black newspaper started as an alternative to
the Voice newspaper. Edited by Joseph
Harker now at the Guardian. |
|