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Vehicle    From 4/12/1930  To 30/3/1954

Empire Windrush

Categories: Race Issues, Transport

Countries: Germany, Jamaica

Empire Windrush

Liner, built in Hamburg with the name 'Monte Rosa' as a luxury cruise ship. Many of the passengers in the early days were privileged members of the Nazi Party. She saw active service in WW2 and was captured by the British in May 1945. The Empire Windrush was acquired from Germany at the end of WW2 and was used as a troopship until 1954 when it sank in the Med. as the result of a fire.

But the ship’s claim to fame was its arrival on 22 June 1948 at Tilbury Docks carrying 792 passengers from Jamaica, people responding to an advertisement to work in England in the post-war reconstruction. This was the first large-scale arrival of black people and it caused a stir.

"The Windrush Generation" describes the thousands of men, women and children who travelled to the UK from 1948 to 1971.

See The Drum for where the travellers slept on arrival, and an explanation for why so many settled in Brixton. On what turned out to be her final voyage, a fire broke out on board and she sank while being towed to Gibraltar.

18 June 2018: The government announced that " will take place on 22 June every year to celebrate the contribution of the Windrush Generation and their descendants." This announcement was made in the midst of the media storm caused by the discovery of just how badly the Windrush immigrants had been treated by that very government. We believe the day was already being celebrated by the black community, on that date, back in 2017, possibly earlier, but in 2018 it was officially recognised and some funding provided.

2020: While statues of slave-traders are being taken down as a response to the Black Lives Matter campaign, one new memorial is being planned. The (paywall) reports that a shipwreck hunter is hoping to find funding to search for the anchor of the Windrush, for erection somewhere yet to be determined: "Tilbury Dock, Windrush Square in Brixton, or a spot in central London as possibilities."

2024: answers the question "What Became Of the Empire Windrush?"

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This section lists the memorials where the subject on this page is commemorated:
Empire Windrush

Commemorated ati

Bronze Woman

This was the first statue of a black woman to be on permanent display anywher...

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National Windrush monument

Unveiled on Windrush day in 2022. The full poem is available at Laura Serrant.

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The Drum

Subbrit gives more information. Everyone loves a hidden tunnel. For more see...

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Tottenham and West Green - Windrush

It looks familiar but we cannot determine the significance of the jigsaw puzz...

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Windrush & Commonwealth NHS Nurses and Midwives Statue

London Post has drawings for the sculpture and informs "16 pieces of granite,...

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Show all 9

Other Subjects

Francis Barber

Francis Barber

Born in Jamaica circa 1742/3 with the name 'Quashey' (a common name for male slaves). He was brought to England by his owner, Colonel Richard Bathhurst, and was sent to school in Yorkshire and then...

Person, Friend / family, Race Issues, Caribbean Islands

1 memorial
Sir Thomas Fowell Buxton (1st Baronet)

Sir Thomas Fowell Buxton (1st Baronet)

MP, brewer, slave abolitionist and social reformer. Born Essex. Entered the Brick Lane brewery Truman, Hanbury & Company in 1808, eventually taking on sole ownership. 1807 married Hannah Gurney...

Person, Commerce, Food & Drink, Race Issues, Social Welfare

3 memorials
Carl Linnaeus

Carl Linnaeus

Born Stenbrohult, Småland in southern Sweden. Inventor of a system for naming, ranking, and classifying organisms. One of the great collectors of the 18th century. At his death Joseph Banks tried b...

Person, Race Issues, Science, Sweden

2 memorials
Sam King, MBE

Sam King, MBE

Born in Jamaica, he served in the R.A.F. during the second world war. Along with other Jamaican airmen, he was ordered to leave the service at the end of the war. He returned to Britain as part of ...

Person, Politics & Administration, Race Issues, Jamaica

1 memorial
Joe Slovo

Joe Slovo

South African freedom fighter. Born Lithuania. His family emigrated to South Africa when he was 8. Married First in 1949. died at home in Johannesburg, as a member of Nelson Mandela's government.

Person, Nationalism, Race Issues, Lithuania, South Africa

1 memorial