CLAUDIA JONES founder of the Notting Hill Carnival

CLAUDIA JONES founder of the Notting Hill Carnival was born in Trinidad. She moved to the United States with her family when she was eight years old.

In early adulthood Claudia Jones joined the Young Communist League in the US, eventually becoming its Director and editor of its national newspaper.

Imprisioned several times for her political activism Claudia Jones was deported from the US to the United Kingdom in 1955 rather than her home country of Trinidad where it was feared that she would stirred people up.

Claudia Jones continued her political agitation in the UK where she worked with other activists of African descent including Amy Ashwood Garvey. She founded the West Indian Gazette, the first black weekly newspaper in the UK, in 1958 and in early 1959 the first "Carnival" was held

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  • Does anyone here on the forum know the book: "Notting Hill Carnival" by Sebastian Klöß? It's a PhD thesis published in 2014, but as far as I know not translated into English yet. I got it two days back and hope I'll find the time to read it (500 pages). 2959990176?profile=original2959990377?profile=original

  • It seems that Ms. Claudia Jones was an important and powerful activist on behalf of black progress in Britain in the nineteen fifties and sixties, a time when the modern struggle for racial equality was in its infancy.

    As usual, Pan Times has done a great job of raising our awareness of this important leader and activist, and her contributions to the advancement of the social and economic conditions of our black brothers and sisters in Britain.

    As a leader in the black community, I suspect that she may have had some involvement in the beginning of the Notting Hill festival, though given her obvious interests in political activism, such involvement may have been limited.

    We in this forum are fortunate to have a lot of "old timers" who were around when many historical events relating to the steelband and Carnival occurred, and are therefore able to set the record straight.

     

    So, thank you Paddy Corea.

    People like you need to step forward and make sure the real story is told, for the historical record.

    Like I said, we're fortunate to have people like you who were on the ground back then, and to have this forum where we can set the record straight..

     

    • I will endeavour to get Leslie Palmers phone or address in Tobago. Bro James (San Juan All Stars) from Bim Bim Lane  San Juan (living in Harlem) is the only one I know who has communicated with Leslie recently. Will try to find him. Bro James is also a musician. (congas, tympani, cowbells, glockenspeil and general rhythm) paddy corea

  • apparently the thought process by detractors and neuvo historians is "" if you muddy the waters enough people wont get the facts"" unquote.  LET  me state again.  The LONDON STREET CARNIVAL was NOT  started by any one person. There were a group of people in 1965 (in All Saints Church basement Labroke Grove)  discussing having a street carnival   Two of those people were LESLIE PALMER (teacher, Trumpeter from T&T) and I (paddy Corea musician). The FIRST LONDON street carnival took place the next year 1966. I discontinued my presence because of my musical commitments.   paddy corea

    • As always, thanks for the info Paddy...

  • I always try to point out that Claudia Jones did not start Notting Hill Carnival. Claudia Jones started carnival shows after the 1958 riots. Claudia Jones did some of great significance that is always mentioned as an after thought and, that is founding one of the first black newspapers in Britain. I believe historians should give her acolade for this instead of perpetuating that she started Notting Hill Carnival. Notting Hill carnival, now in its 48th year must give credence to two individuals and that is Russell Henderson who played the first steelpan on the streets of London an embryo that took eight years before its navel string got burried into ladbroke Grove when Leslie Palmer presented the template for what we now know as Notting Hill Carnival today. 1973 Remembered celebrated 40 yrs of Notting Hill Carnival as we know it today and Leslie's 70th birthday. While this may create healthy debate, history should be just that-the facts and not altered to suit certain purposes.

    David Kalloo

    Culturepulse Magazine

    • The discussion of Claudia Jones (especially the question of where is she now by Bertel) presents an excellent opportunity for me to add another dimension to the comments on WST about the "flawed" Panwomen is Boss All-Female Pan Jazz Concert which I produced at the LaJoya Auditorium on July 28. 

      The extensive comments were motivated by the Tuesday, August 6, 2013 article by David Cuffy in the Trinidad and Tobago Guardian Online and on posted on WST entitled “Poor production but rich performances at female steelpan jazz concert.”

      The concert was just one of several interesting (and maybe xenophobic) episodes I experienced during the seven months (January 4 to August 6) I spent in Trinidad, six of them as a US Fulbright Scholar in residence at the University of Trinidad and Tobago.

      As I reflect on these experiences it may be very possible that UTT (specifically the Acting Principal/Provost until July 5th, Dr. Fazal Ali, and to a lesser extent, Dr. Hollis Liverpool, Director of the Academy of Arts Letters, Culture and Public Affairs at UTT) and Pan Trinbago (specifically Bryon Serrette and Keith Diaz) may not have been the only ones who denied me the opportunity to present my ideas.

       

      I arrived in Trinidad on January 4th to begin my residency at UTT. Within two weeks of my arrival I became incensed by two incidents reported in the newspapers: the UWI Fete and the funeral of my colleague, Dr. Tony Martin.

      I tried to get two articles in which I expressed my displeasure published, first via Sandra Blood, feature writer for the Guardian, and then with Jeff Hackett, editor of the Mirror (we had a two hour meeting!) The first one was entitled “UWI’s ‘Eat ah Food’ Fete” and the next “Claudia Jones: A ‘Trini’ Sister to the ‘Left of Karl Marx’”. To my knowledge, neither was published.

      I subsequently developed a web site, www.panatlantanetworks.com in which I posted the two articles under the “ISSUES” tab. [Maybe WST may post them.]

      The piece on UWI's fete is even more important today, given the escalation of the unrest in Egypt and the civil war in Syria where there may have been the use of chemical weapons against civilians.

      I still say that the Chairman of the Fete Committe, Dennis Ramdeen and top UWI administrators, the Pro Vice Chancellor, Professor Clement Sankat, and Ronald Harford, Chairman of the UWI Development and Endowment Fund should be asked to resign from their positions for their insensitivity and the myopic worldview they demonstrated by focusing on the Middle East for the UWI Fete.

      And there is more! The story about my interaction with the leadership of "my band", Harmonites (specifically Captain, Shelford Lawrence, and Manager, Owen Serrette), is intriguing and really sad. But everything in its appropriate time.

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