After 44 years !
Secret papers reveal truth about five nights of violence
in Notting Hill
Senior officers tried to play down reports of race riots
but police on street witnessed attacks by white mobs
Alan Travis, home affairs editor
Saturday August 24, 2002
The Guardian
http://www.guardian.co.uk/arts/nottinghillcarnival2002/story/0,12331,780023,00.html
Senior Metropolitan police officers tried to dismiss the
Notting Hill race riots which raged for five nights over
the August bank holiday in 1958 as the work of "ruffians,
both coloured and white" hellbent on hooliganism, according
to newly released official files. But police eyewitness
reports in the secret papers confirm that they were overwhelmingly
the work of a white working class mob out to get the "niggers".
The ferocity of Notting Hill "racial riots" as
the press called them at the time, shocked Britain into
realising for the first time that it was not above the kind
of racial conflict then being played out in the American
deep south. The carnival, which will fill the streets of
west London with more than 1.5 million people this weekend,
was started in 1959 as a direct response to the riots.
While senior officers tried to play down the racial aspects
to the riots the internal Metropolitan police files released
this month at the public record office confirm that the
disturbances were overwhelmingly triggered by 300-to 400-strong
"Keep Britain White" mobs, many of them Teddy
boys armed with iron bars, butcher's knives and weighted
leather belts, who went "nigger-hunting" among
the West Indian residents of Notting Hill and Notting Dale.
The first night left five black men lying unconscious on
the pavements of Notting Hill.
The battles raged over the bank holiday weekend as the
black community responded in kind with counterattacks by
large groups of "men of colour" similarly armed.
Thomas Williams was stopped by the police as he came out
of Bluey's Club on Talbot Road, Notting Hill. He was found
to have a piece of iron down his left trouser leg, a petrol
bomb in his right pocket and a open razor blade in his inside
breast pocket: "I have to protect myself," he
told the arresting officer.
The confidential files, which were closed under the 75-year
rule but have been released early, show that senior officers
tried to convince the then home secretary, "Rab"
Butler, that there had not really been a racial element
to the rioting.
In his official report Detective Sergeant M Walters of
the Notting Hill police said the national press had been
wrong to portray the "widespread series of street disturbances"
as "racial" riots: "Whereas there certainly
was some ill feeling between white and coloured residents
in this area, it is abundantly clear much of the trouble
was caused by ruffians, both coloured and white, who seized
on this opportunity to indulge in hooliganism."
But the police witness statements and private statistics
told a different story.
The Met commissioner was told that of the 108 people who
were charged with offences ranging from grievous bodily
harm to affray and riot and possessing offensive weapons,
72 were white and 36 were "coloured".
It is popularly believed that the riot began on the night
of Saturday August 20 when a 400-strong crowd of white men,
many of them "Teds", attacked houses occupied
by West Indians. Among the victims was Majbritt Morrison,
a young white Swedish bride of a Jamaican. She was pelted
with stones, glass and wood, and struck in the back with
an iron bar as she tried to get home.
The internal police witness statements provide graphic
evidence of the motives of the mobs - at one point crowds
several thousand strong roamed the streets of Notting Hill,
breaking into homes and attacking any West Indian they could
find.
PC Richard Bedford said he had seen a mob of 300 to 400
white people in Bramley Road shouting: "We will kill
all black bastards. Why don't you send them home?"
PC Ian McQueen on the same night said he was told: "Mind
your own business, coppers. Keep out of it. We will settle
these niggers our way. We'll murder the bastards."
One officer, PC Anthony Saunders, was to find out exactly
what that meant when he intervened to stop a black man being
beaten by whites, one of whom had a piece of iron tubing
raised above his head: "There were milk bottles raining
down on us. I felt blood running down my face, the side
of my nose and cheek," he said.
The police witness statements show that the mobs were openly
defiant of the police. PC Victor Coe said he had seen a
man called David Slater in Artesian Road "sitting astride
a motorcycle in company with a crowd of about 50 youths
dressed in Edwardian-type clothing. I told him to move and
he said: 'Why the hell should I?"
PC Roy Fuller said that on the Monday night he was with
other plainclothes officers when he saw Brian Greenham in
company with five or six other youths in Latimer Road where
a large crowd had gathered: "Greenham had a leather
belt about 3ft in length hanging from his neck. It was weighted
with nuts and bolts projecting through the belt." "I
came up here to look for a bloke who had done one of my
mates up," he told the officer.
The police also arrested a group of four white men, including
Patrick Short, a private from the Royal Irish Fusiliers,
who were driving around Notting Hill during the riots. "The
occupants of this van were seen by the police to be shouting
offensive remarks at groups of coloured people standing
in Talbot Road and Portobello Road."
When it was searched a large wooden drum stick, a "pointed
loaded stick" and a shillelagh were found in the van.
"I know it sounds silly, but we were looking for fun,"
Short told the police.
But it was not all white on black violence. As Detective
Sergeant Walters reported on the third night there was a
"large group of coloured men" walking along Ladbroke
Grove: "What can only be described as a mob were shouting
threats and abuse, and openly displaying various most offensive
weapons, ranging from iron bars to choppers and open razors.
Denton Boyd [who was later sentenced to 12 months' imprisonment]
in particular had a chopper in his hand and was shouting:
'Come and fight,' and, 'What about it now?"'
One of the most famous confrontations took place in the
Notting Dale area where a black student, Seymour Manning,
was attacked by three men and fled towards Latimer Road
tube station. He was nearly overtaken and turned into a
greengrocer's shop and slammed the door behind him. "A
moment later the shopkeeper's wife ... appeared in the doorway,
locked the door behind her, and turned to face the trio
of toughs." She faced down what quickly grew to an
angry crowd until the police arrived.
The disturbances continued night after night until they
finally petered out on September 5. At the Old Bailey Judge
Salmon later handed down exemplary sentences of four years
each on nine white youths who had gone "nigger hunting".
While those dealt with by the courts were overwhelmingly
white, the large number of black people also arrested and
the official insistence there had not been a racial motive
ensured a legacy of black mistrust of the Metropolitan police
that has never really been eradicated.