Miners Leaving Pendlebury Colliery (1901)
- Pendlebury
- 1901
The West Indian cricketing legend is filmed in his role as a welfare officer, working to help African and Caribbean factory workers in Merseyside.
Trinidadian Learie Constantine was a celebrated cricketing all-rounder for the West Indies and the club professional for Lancashire League team, Nelson 1929-1937. This short film made by the Colonial Unit shows the cricketing legend in his role as welfare officer for the Ministry of Labour in Liverpool - acting as advisor to African and Caribbean munitions workers on Merseyside.
Learie Constantine: sportsman, author, lawyer, politician and champion of racial equality, was awarded an MBE in 1945, Knighted in 1962 and was created a life peer in 1969 - Baron Constantine of Maravel and Nelson.
There was a substantial black presence in Britain long before the Empire Windrush arrived from Jamaica in June 1948. Some of the earliest moving images of black Britons survive in the extraordinary Mitchell and Kenyon collection from the dawn of the 20th century. WWI newsreels offered occasional glimpses of black soldiers from Britain - or more likely the Empire. In WWII the contribution of black servicemen and women was more prominently acknowledged in newsreels and documentaries. Between the wars, black performers began to make a splash, from music hall entertainers Scott & Whaley to Britain's first black screen star, US-born actor, singer and activist Paul Robeson. Stars like these had an easier time than many, but still faced unthinking stereotypes and prejudice. But they forged a path for others to follow. The films in this selection span some five decades, serving as a vital record of a much longer history of black people and culture in Britain than is often remembered.