Black History Month:

North Listings


Follow the links to -

24hourmuseum:  A guide to local galleries and museums
BBC Liverpool:  Black History Month on the bus
Imperial War Museum North:  Afrikan Heroes
Kirklees, West Yorkshire:  Preserving Our Heritage
Manchester: Celebrating Diversity and Black History Month in Manchester
Merseyside Maritime Museum:  Connections with the past
Oldham:  The best of Black and Asian culture
Stockport:  Find out more about celebrations in Stockport.
Stockport, Hat Works Museum : Cultural connections
The People’s History Museum:  Plans to celebrate October’s Black History Month
Victoria Baths:  Black History Market in Manchester
 
 
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Joseph Clough - London’s First
Black Motorbus Driver

Joe Clough - London's First Black Motorbus Driver

Joseph 'Joe' Clough was born in Kingston, Jamaica, in 1887, but was orphaned in childhood. As a boy, he worked as a stable hand looking after polo ponies for the Scottish Dr RC White.

In February 1906, a young servant and his employer stepped off a boat from the West Indies at Bristol docks. The servant, frozen with cold in spite of his new warm underwear and exhausted by seasickness, was Joseph Clough, one of the very first West Indians to emigrate to Britain. He would never see the Caribbean again.

Joe's public transport career started in 1908, when he was employed as a bus driver by the London General Omnibus Company (LGOC), the largest bus company in the world at that time. Unknown to Joe he was making history - as London's first black motorbus driver. He trained at Shepherd's Bush garage, passed his Scotland Yard driving tests and became a spare driver. Soon, Joe was driving a B-type motorbus along the LGOC's route No. 11 between Liverpool Street and Wormwood Scrubs.

Up until the end of the Second World War, Joe was Bedford’s only black inhabitant. He died in January 1977 and his impact on Bedford’s community is still felt today, as people continue to talk about him with huge affection and respect nearly 30 years after his death.
 
 
Click to view the Africa 05 double page spread at full size Black Victorians gives a fascinating and often surprising insight into the presence of people of African descent in 19th century British art.                                                             
This is one of many articles to be found in the 2006 edition of BHM. Click on the pages (left) to open them in a new full sized window for easy reading. BHM - The Official Guide To Black History Month
Click to view this double page spread at full size
Visit the Sugar Media website Click to view the Africa 05 double page spread at full size