Thursday, 23 June 2016

Freelance Project Researcher-Interpreter: African Stories in Yorkshire

We are pleased to offer a job vacancy for a Freelance Project Researcher/Interpreter for the William Wilberforce Monument Fund's African Stories in Yorkshire project, details below.

Details
Position: Freelance Project Researcher-Interpreter
Organisation: William Wilberforce Monument Fund
Location: UK, England, East Yorkshire
Closing date:  Friday 22nd July 2016
Job Type:  Freelance
Fee: £200/day, 2.5 days per week over a maximum period of 18 months.

The William Wilberforce Monument Fund is looking to hire a freelance researcher-interpreter to work on a new project to explore the presence of people of African descent in Hull and East Yorkshire from 1750 to 2007.  This project is supported by the Heritage Lottery Fund. It will culminate in a dedicated website and two exhibitions at the Hull History Centre and Beverley Treasure House. There will also be an oral histories element to the project supported by the James Reckitt Trust through Untold Hull.

This is a community project that will encourage everyone to participate. The position requires an ability to retrieve stories and information across a vast array of areas, from archival research through to personal recollections and community connections.

A keen interest in cultural heritage and research, with particular reference to diversity and the recognition of the historical presence of people of African descent in the Britain is essential. In addition the candidate should have excellent research and writing skills and particular practical experience of archival research and interpretation.

Fee
A fee of £200 per day for 2.5 days per week over a maximum period of eighteen months. This includes all expenses incurred by the post holder during the term of the contract.

Applications
To apply please send your CV and a covering letter outlining your experience. Please also include a sample of writing of around 500 words to demonstrate your writing skills.

Return your submission by Friday 22nd July 2016 by email to Mrs Gifty Burrows, wilberforcemonumentfund@gmail.com.

A full job description is available at http://www.africansinyorkshireproject.com/job-vacancy.html or contact Mrs Gifty Burrows at wilberforcemonumentfund@gmail.com.

Sunday, 12 June 2016

William Wilberforce Monument Fund Awarded Heritage Lottery Fund Grant!


We are thrilled to announce that the William Wilberforce Monument Fund has been awarded a grant of £39,100 from the Heritage Lottery Fund. Thanks to National Lottery players, we are now able to begin exploring the stories of people of African descent in Hull and East Yorkshire from the Wilberforce era of the 1750s until 2007.

About the Project

This project is unique to this area and connects with this region’s strong historical association with William Wilberforce and the anti-slavery movement. It intends to demonstrate that an African presence in Britain is not a recent phenomenon and instead will recover stories from around the time of Wilberforce to the present day: 1750-2007. This important new website has been created to showcase the new stories and new research. It will enable and encourage everyone to participate in the collecting of stories of people of African descent by inviting people to view and submit information, ideas, photographs, essays and individual stories. We are also planning exhibitions at Hull History Centre in 2017 and Beverley Treasure House in 2018.

A Community Project: How can you get involved?

This project is community-driven and inclusive with the opportunity for any interested person to contribute to the outcomes. The charity welcomes the help and support of volunteers to engage in archival research in areas such as military history, education, fisheries, health, public services, entertainment and sport in the local area. This archive is of national importance because it will evidence Britain’s rich and diverse history. The project will also be of social and educational value and serve as direct support to the GCSE History curriculum.

We also welcome contact from anyone of African descent (African, Caribbean, American) who were living in the area before 2007 in order that we can collect contemporary oral recordings of stories for future generations.

If you can help with our research we would love to hear from you! You can contact us with information, images, ideas, suggestions and offers of help by going to the website for more details. Thank you.

Visit and Like African Stories in Hull & East Yorkshire on Facebook and Twitter!

Sunday, 29 May 2016

Ever Closer: May 2016 Update


The mini-series 'Roots' by Alex Haley was one of the most evocative pieces of television in the 1970s, introducing generations of viewers to the true horrors of the transatlantic slave trade and its aftermath. It was a truly gripping piece of theatre that brought to life the suffering of thousands of people of African descent. With the issue of modern day slavery so prominent today, with people traffickers exploiting the young and vulnerable, it is perhaps appropriate that the 'Roots' story is being remade; being shown to UK audiences later this year. In doing so it may introduce a contemporary audience to the slavery narrative that is so often forgotten. It is a thread that the William Wilberforce Monument Fund seeks to keep in the public consciousness.

The charity's efforts to raise sufficient funds to light the Wilberforce monument in 2017 have moved a step closer with a successful third annual quiz night held on 20th May at the Cottingham Parks Golf Club. The charity raised over £400 on the night. Thanks must go to Gerry Smyth, Chris Smyth and Andy Marsters who all worked hard to make the evening a success. Many thanks also to Best Western Hotels, The Deep, North Yorkshire Moors Railways and all individuals who donated gifts on the evening.

In addition we have also received generous donations from both Orbis Business Intelligence Ltd and St. John's College, Cambridge towards the fund.

Further to the primary cause of the charity to light the monument, we have a related project under consideration. African Stories in Hull and East Yorkshire seeks to delve into a little known part of Hull and East Yorkshire's history, researching the history of people of African descent in the area from 1750 to 2007. With this project we hope to provide a counter-narrative to the widely held view that there was virtually no presence of such people in the area during that timeframe.

If you'd like to know more, visit www.africansinyorkshireproject.com or email wilberforcemonumentfund@gmail.com.

Image credit: The Wilberforce statue outside Wilberforce House, Hull. Image found at the Hull and Hereabouts photo blog.

Friday, 15 April 2016

On the up?


The Human Trafficking Foundation is one of several organisations that have revised the number of people involved in modern slavery in the UK from 13,000 to 20,000. But how is possible that the number is rising after the Modern Slavery Act came into force last year?

The reasons are complex. For example, the UK Government put out a host of modern slavery adverts over a year ago with the catchphrase “It’s closer than you think”. The statement is true, but a year ago is in the distant past for many people and without being frequently reinforced, the message is easily forgotten.

The point was that we, the public, have a key role to play as the eyes and ears of suspicious activity happening under our noses. Yet recent research undertaken by a team led by Dr David Walsh (University of Derby) and reported in a recent public lecture evidences that too often we do not know what to look out for, or understand the true nature of modern day slavery and trafficking.

This lack of awareness is also mirrored within the business world. Too often we do not perceive the most powerful factor of control - psychological coercion - as part of the story. We also have the perception that modern day slavery is something that happens abroad without the possibility of any aspect of it touching our lives, despite the official figures stating the contrary. We forget that as consumers, users of service industries and workers using secondary products that we are indeed part of the story.

Very soon, businesses with a turnover of more than £36m will be obliged to report annually on the health of their supply chain. But the quality of this reporting will vary from wilful ignorance or genuine lack of awareness of the need to conform to this part of the Act. Campaign organisations such as Kalayaan work to make the laws surrounding the employment of overseas domestic workers less open to exploitation. Many workers are currently tied to their employers through the need to have their passport visas fixed to the visa of the employer they came to the UK with, which makes them more vulnerable.

In addition to public ignorance and business negligence, crisis situations created by natural disasters can leave refugees of impoverished countries at greater risk of exploitation. For refugees, climate-caused disaster or foreign policies which bring war into their home nations, can enhance the problems caused by their low economic output, leaving the country more prone to modern day slavery.

So, fewer wars, better responses to natural disasters, less famine, greater corporate responsibility and fair pricing structures are just some of the responses needed to bring down the number of people affected by modern slavery from the 35 million worldwide. It may seem like big figures and small individuals, but many a drop make an ocean, and maybe it is time to consider what we can do as individuals.

Image credit: http://www.theprospect.net/

Sunday, 28 February 2016

New Website for African Stories in Hull & East Yorkshire Project

We have a new website to support the African Stories in Hull & East Yorkshire project: africansinyorkshireproject.com. On the site, you will find useful information on how to research and where this can be done.

We will archive everything that is submitted and the website will give you the chance to contribute research, short essays, ideas and images. The purpose of this project is to provide an archive which is designed to be open to everyone and welcomes anyone to take part to share the experience.

Please support the project. Download the poster here, then print it and put it up in your offices, local cafes, workplaces etc. Thanks as ever for your wonderful support!

Saturday, 9 January 2016

Project Announcement: The Story of People of Africans Descent in Hull and East Yorkshire


Project Aim: An exploration of the presence of people of African descent in Hull and East Yorkshire from the Wilberforce era of the 1750s, up until 2007.

The migration of black minorities to Britain is commonly associated with the ‘Windrush Generation’ that migrated from the West Indies in the period after World War II. However, this is inaccurate. The National Archives, in commenting about black presence, acknowledges that “Black and Asian presence in Britain is not a recent one. Black and Asian people have lived, worked and died in Britain for 500 years or more. They have contributed to the wealth, development and history of this country, directly and indirectly helping put the Great into Great Britain.”

The oldest skeleton of an African in Britain is said to pre-date William the Conqueror, dated between 896 and 1025 AD, and there are other examples from the 12th Century. Even as recently as November last year, Roman skeletons found in London were said to have had members of African heritage. These examples give credence to the fact that Africans have been present in Britain since before the ‘Windrush’ period and that of the Transatlantic Slave Trade, which are the points in history that most people associate with black presence. The Georgian and Edwardian period also saw significant periods of migration, a fact that further challenges the perception that minority groups are recent additions to British society. It took until 1984 for the narrative to change when Hull journalist Peter Fryer wrote about black people as individuals “woven into English society” rather than as a collective group in his book Staying Power (Kathleen Chater, Untold Histories).

There has been recent research into black presence but the gaze is often on larger cities, especially those with their own slavery connections such as Liverpool, Bristol and London. Exploring the black presence in Hull with its somewhat different relationship to the slavery story will offer an interesting alternative especially in this region which still has proportionately fewer examples of minority presence. Hull’s link to William Wilberforce perhaps makes the presence of Africans particularly relevant and deserving of some attention.

The period between 2015 and 2024 has been declared the International Decade for People of African Descent by the United Nations. This initiative aims to eliminate discrimination as it recognises that racism and racial disadvantage still impacts on people of African descent. In so doing, it aims to promote inclusion and recognise the important contributions made by such people to other societies. This project will go some way in supporting this ethos.

This project also aims to promote better social cohesion through a greater understanding of migration and insight into the commonalities of lives in all cultures in an effort to dispel the sense of ‘otherness’.  Further to this, the project intends to provide a local resource to the new GCSE History curriculum which offers Migration in Britain as an option (http://www.ocr.org.uk/Images/207164-specification-draft-gcse-history-b-j411.pdf, p.13).

Current, relevant exhibitions can be found nationally at Tate Britain, the British Library, and Black Cultural Archives, all of which makes the African story current.

This project should be seen as community-driven with the opportunity for any interested person to contribute to the outcomes. It is hoped that there will be an educational resource, narratives, photographs and oral histories cataloguing the experiences of individuals. We also envisage a display of African artefacts representing black culture from a leading collector, who is happy to be involved. This will sit beside local findings to give a more rounded exhibition of national importance that will reflect African culture.

We have established support from academics, educationalists, historians and individuals within the community. We need everyone who is interested to start looking through photographs, archives, and other sources of local knowledge, and let us know what you are finding. We need talented organisations and individuals to support us in our work.

Please get in touch with your interest or findings by email at wilberforcemonumentfund@gmail.com. This is a community project - be part of the story.

Our thanks in the initial consultation go to Audrey Dewjee, Allison Edwards, Prof John Oldfield, Dr Nick Evans, Dr Jacqueline Jenkinson, Dr Madge Dresser, Dr Ryan Handley, Alex Ombre, Dr Carolyn Conroy, Martin Taylor, Greenwich Maritime Museum, Beverley Treasure House, Jessica Leathley, Clare Huby, Jeffrey Green and Martin Spafford.

Image of Sarah Forbes-Bonneta from http://www.nationalmediamuseum.org.uk/collection/photography/royalphotographicsociety/collectionitem.aspx?id=2003-5001/2/22392.

Wednesday, 25 November 2015

November 2015 Update: Hull & Beverley Connections


UCL Slavery Database - Hull and Beverley Connections

In 1833, slavery was abolished, and with emancipation came compensation. Not, however, for the enslaved who had endured a life of misery and suffering, but rather for the slave owners to the tune of £20m - a staggering amount now, but even more phenomenal then.

A recent exercise undertaken by University College London which attempts to trace the beneficiaries of the government’s decision to compensate slave owners for the loss of their slaves following the Emancipation Act makes very little reference to the city of Hull.

Indeed, the only individual cited as living in the city and linked to the slave trade was a Thomas Holt who was awarded the compensation for eight enslaved people from Falmouth, Jamaica. He inherited the compensation on the death of Elizabeth Kirkpatrick Holt. In the 1851 census he was recorded as an 80-year-old widower born in Jamaica, living at 63 Great Thornton Street, Hull with his 30-year-old daughter Jane who was born in Leeds.

The only other reference to the city comes with Elizabeth Haworth (née Foster), who inherited a share in the Lancaster estate in St Elizabeth, Jamaica, from her father Samuel Warren Foster. According to the 1801 census she was present in Hull for the birth of her daughter.

Relative to other cities more closely associated with the slave trade, these references seem minor by comparison.

If we broaden the exercise to the East Riding, there is a more noticeable entry, that of Stephen Denton who is described as a “returned slave owner awarded the compensation both as owner-in-fee of enslaved people and as trustee on John Hall and Somerset estate, and as mortgagee of the Devon and Green Vale and Norway estates.” All of these were located in Manchester, Jamaica. In total he was awarded in excess of £12,000 for the 637 slaves that he either owned outright or was mortgagee for between 1835 and 1836.

The Dentons went on to become one of the largest landowners in the Beverley area in the 1800’s, acquiring an area that included Hampston Hill Farm and Old Hall Farm, which is located in the Woodmansey area on the outskirts of the town.

There is one other reference to Beverley, Ebenezer Robertson, formerly of Jamaica but latterly of Beverley, East Yorkshire though no reference of slave ownership has been found.

The UCL database has open access and searches can be done by individuals, firms or addresses, so it makes fascinating reading when entering searches on prominent people in political circles.

Campaign Update

Thank you to our supporters and guest panellist for our recent Gardener’s Question Time event: horticulturalists Mike Kinnes, John Hickling and Doug Stewart, and florist Jo Pearson (Floral Studio) for an excellent occasion. We raised £250.60 on the evening.

The image is a reproduction of ’An Accurate Map of Yorkshire’ by Thomas Kitchin c. 1786 (ex-Boswell Atlas), seen at www.wellandantiquemaps.co.uk.