New museum will honour the Windrush generation
by OLIVE VASSELL
When the HMT Windrush Empire ship arrived at London’s Tilbury Docks in June 1948, on board were 500 plus citizens from the Caribbean colonies eager to begin life in their new homeland.
Though Black people have lived here for over 2,000 years – as far back as the Roman invasion in 43 AD – the mid-20th century arrival symbolized the beginning of Black mass immigration to the country. When this period ended more than 20 years later, some 500,000 people from the region had settled in the UK.
The Windrush Generation, as they were named, had enthusiastically accepted the British government’s invitation to rebuild a country devastated by World War Two. However they were immediately faced with virulent discrimination, including frequent exclusion from skilled employment, housing and social venues and even physical attacks.
Sadly, nearly 70 years later in 2018, their descents were the victims of a “scandal” which saw the then-government challenging their right to live in the country, many losing jobs and services and still others deported to countries they barely knew.
In 2021, Jamaican-born, philanthropist and cultural advocate Dr. Les Johnson founded the National Windrush Museum (NWM) to honour the strength, fortitude and contribution of these pioneers. Funding the startup personally, he has worked since then to bring public and private awareness to the cause, garnering support from national and local organizations, as well as prominent personalities, such as chef and entrepreneur Levi Roots, actor Rudolph Walker and broadcaster Moira Stuart.
According to Johnson, who came to the UK in 1962 and was one of the first Black students to obtain a master’s degree from the Royal College of Art, the idea was initiated after a series of conversations with the Museums Association, which is responsible for developing the institutions across the country.
“The conversation went that despite having 2,500 museums in the UK, there was no museum devoted to the Windrush generation, and there are no museums dedicated to the expression of Black culture.
“This is quite sad because of the 2,500 stories that are being told in very many different ways, representing very many different communities, it meant that the Caribbean community and the Black British community, particularly those of the Windrush descents, those stories were not being told or captured within a museum.”
Today, the NWM consists of a board of 15, a development council, headed by Roots and a group called Next Gen, made up of young innovators. In November 2023, the plan received a major boost when the organization signed a memorandum of understanding (MoU) with the Royal Museums Greenwich. The project allows a partnership with curators and various experts to conduct research, create exhibitions and promote the heritage of Windrush pioneers through the National Maritime Museum, and to develop the NWM.
“This partnership represents not just a collaboration but a significant opportunity to advance the National Windrush Museum mission – sharing the stories of the Windrush generation and their descendants,” Johnson said.
He is hopeful that within the next three to five years, an independent entity will be developed, in addition to the partnership. In the meantime, the NWM continues to actively promote its cause through a wide variety of events and programmes. In 2024, it launched an inaugural Windrush lecture series with speakers like Professor Dame Donna Kinnair DBE, head of the Runnymede Trust and former chief executive of the Royal College of Nursing. An accompanying conference featured broadcaster, theologian and climate and social justice professor, Dr. Robert Beckford, and sociologist and University of Greenwich professor, Dr. Tracey Reynolds.
Johnson is excited about the future and the host of activities planned including documenting and archiving the Windrush generations’ contributions to food, medicine, the NHS, arts, and politics amongst others. However, reaching young people, through the Windrush Futures Program, has a special place in his heart.
“What it does is it looks at speculations of where the Windrush generations are going to be in years to come because my mantra is ‘doing museums differently,’ and for sure we need to encourage the younger generation to take the storytelling further and to develop the leadership that we need to institutionalize and build the National Windrush Museum.”
For more information visit https://www.nationalwindrushmuseum.com/
New museum will honour the Windrush generation
London-born Black Brit journalist Olive Vassell has co-edited and written a chapter on her birthplace for a pioneering book about Europe’s Black communities. Mapping Black Europe: Monuments, Markers, Memories is the first account by Black Europeans who have collectively marked sites of public memory, from monuments and statues to street names and city plaques, in the European capitals they call home.
The capital city is one of eight highlighted in the book, others are Berlin, Brussels, Luxembourg City, Oslo, Paris, Rome and Warsaw. The work highlights the experiences of each city’s Black communities, offering answers to questions, such as: What is the state of Black memory? Which Black philosophical movements have helped to rewrite distorted histories? How is community activism involved?
In London, monuments like the African Caribbean War Memorial and the Mary Seacole statue are spotlighted, revealing extensive histories about how they came to be created and who was involved. The impact of the Black Lives Matter movement is a starting point for all the book’s chapters, including London.
In tracing the long history of Black communities who challenge racism and create their own memorials to mark Black presence and contribution, this publication allows for comparison and for a collective narrative to be formed across the continent, creating a ‘Blackprint of Europe’.
In addition to Vassell, other contributors include co-editor Natasha A. Kelly, as well as Sibo Rugwiza Kanobana (Brussels), Bernardino Tavares, Aleida Vieira (Luxembourg, Epée Hervé Dingong (Paris,) Michelle A. Tisdel (Oslo)l, Kwanza Musi Dos Santos (Rome), and James Omolo (Warsaw).
About the editors
Olive Vassell is a journalist and professor who founded and headed the pioneering Black European news site, Euromight.com (2009-2022). Olive launched BBrit Project in 2022 and was joined by sociologist and writer Lisette Felix in 2023. BBrit Project is a content platform that aims to amplify the people, places, events, histories and ideas that embody the Black British experience.
Natasha A. Kelly, PhD, is a bestselling author and editor of eight books, Natasha acts as curator, artist, filmmaker, theater director and professor. Her film “Millis Awakening” debuted at the 10th Berlin Biennale in 2018. Natasha presently is the founding director of Germany’s first Institute for Black German Arts and Culture.
Mapping Black Europe: Monuments, Markers, Memories
Natasha A. Kelly & Olive Vassell (editors)
Published by Transcript Verlag on March 2023
Hardback £25.73/ €29.00
Free downloadable PDF available: here