Reasons for Migration
Housing and Leisure
Racism and Policing
Black Activism
Mangrove Nine
100

What 1948 piece of legislation granted all subjects of the British Empire full citizenship rights, including the right to live and work in the UK?

The British Nationality Act (1948)

100

Caribbean migrants frequently encountered explicit, racist signs on lodging windows. What phrase did these signs commonly read alongside "No Dogs" and "No Irish"?

"No Blacks"

100

What was the name of the white youth subculture that wore Edwardian-style clothing, loved rock and roll, and drove much of the racist violence during the 1958 riots?

Teddy Boys

100

Who was the pioneering Trinidadian activist and journalist who helped unite the West Indian community following the 1958 riots and co-founded an early Caribbean festival?

Claudia Jones

100

What was the name of the popular West Indian restaurant on All Saints Road that served as an essential community hub and was repeatedly raided by the police?

The Mangrove

200

What popular term describes how Caribbean people viewed Britain due to their colonial education, leading to shock when they faced hostility?

"The Mother Country"

200

Which major transportation hub, located within short walking distance of Notting Hill, acted as a primary point of entry for boat train arrivals?

Paddington Station

200

In which year did the infamous Notting Hill race riots erupt, starting in late August and lasting into early September?

1958

200

What was the name of the highly influential, anti-racist newspaper founded in 1958 that Claudia Jones edited to give the Caribbean community a political voice?

West Indian Gazette

200

Who was the community leader, activist, and owner of the restaurant who fiercely stood up to police harassment and became one of the defendants in the trial?

Frank Crichlow

300

Approximately how many buildings were destroyed or damaged in London by the end of the Blitz, creating a massive pull factor for reconstruction labor?

Over 1.7 million buildings damaged (70,000 destroyed)

300

Which famous street market in Notting Hill adapted to the growing Caribbean community by setting up stalls that sold traditional West Indian ingredients?

Portobello Road Market

300

What was the name of the explicitly racist, white supremacist group that established a headquarters in Notting Hill to stir up xenophobic hostility against black residents?

White Defence League

300

What civil rights activist group—modeled closely on an iconic American movement—was established in Britain to directly fight discrimination and support the black community in areas like Notting Hill?

The British Black Panthers (BBP)

300

In which year did the historic Mangrove Nine march take place, where hundreds of protesters clashed with police while demonstrating against targeted raids?

1970

400

Post-war economic difficulties prompted heavy emigration from the UK. Roughly how many people left Britain between 1945 and 1960, worsening the domestic labor shortage?

1.5 million people

400

What is the historical term used to describe the practice of denying ethnic minorities access to jobs, housing, or promotion, which was completely legal in the 1950s?

The Colour Bar

400

A police report from September 1958 by PC Dennis Clifford reveals the charging of which black resident, who was arrested simply after being surrounded by a menacing white crowd?

Miguel Defreitas

400

What month of the year does Carnival take place?

August

400

The Mangrove Nine defense made legal history by successfully demanding what?

An all-Black jury

500

While Australia heavily subsidized British migrants' travel for a £10 fare, how much did a standard ship ticket to Britain cost a Caribbean migrant, equivalent to several months' salary?

£65 to £75 (or around $350 on Italian liners)

500

What specific term was coined to describe the exploitative tactics of slum landlords, named after a notorious Notting Hill property owner who overcharged desperate migrants for run-down housing?

Double Points: Give the name of the landlord the term is named after.

Rachmanism

Double Points: Peter Rachman

500

Which retired Metropolitan Police Commissioner candidly admitted in 2002 that officers in the 1950s automatically and wrongly assumed black youths on street corners "were up to no good"?

Sir Peter Imbert

500

Which prominent black activist and ex-serviceman worked as a volunteer welfare officer in the 1950s, standing at Paddington Station to help guide new boat train arrivals to safe housing?

Baron Baker

500

Who was the trial judge at the Old Bailey who made a historic legal breakthrough by acknowledging that there was "evidence of racial hatred" within the Metropolitan Police?

Judge Edward Clarke

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