George Powe
{{Short description|Jamaican-British equity activist}}
{{Use dmy dates|date=April 2022}}
{{Infobox person
| name = George Powe
| image = George Powe recent.jpeg
| birth_name = Oswald George Powe
| birth_date = 11 August 1926
| birth_place = Spanish Town, Jamaica
| death_date = 9 September 2013
| death_place = Nottingham, England
| education = Electrical engineering, Kingston Technical School
| known_for = Labour activism, anti-racism
}}
Oswald George Powe (11 August 1926 - 9 September 2013), known as George Powe,{{Cite web|last=Westby|first=Jill|date=2013-11-04|title=George Powe obituary|url=http://www.theguardian.com/uk-news/2013/nov/04/george-powe-obituary|access-date=2021-11-09|website=The Guardian|language=en}} was a Jamaican-born, England-based, radar operator, electrician, teacher, writer and racial-equality activist.{{Cite web|last=Pittam|first=David|date=2018-08-22|title='Historic' Notts manufacturing giant's HQ becomes listed building|url=https://www.nottinghampost.com/news/nottingham-news/former-heart-raleigh-manufacturing-empire-1923642|access-date=2021-11-09|website=NottinghamshireLive|language=en}}{{Cite web|title=Don’t Blame the Blacks Exhibition Highlights Extraordinary Activism of Oswald George Powe|url=https://www.leftlion.co.uk/read/2021/july/don-t-blame-the-blacks-exhibition-highlights-extraordinary-activism-of-oswald-george-powe/|access-date=2021-11-09|website=LeftLion|language=en}}{{Cite web|last=Jessel|first=Ella|date=2018-08-22|title=Art Deco airport terminal in Birmingham among latest batch of listings|url=http://www.architectsjournal.co.uk/news/art-deco-airport-terminal-in-birmingham-among-latest-batch-of-listings|access-date=2021-11-09|website=The Architects’ Journal|language=en}}
Powe served in the Royal Air Force during World War II, before moving to England. He led a successful campaign forcing Raleigh Bicycle Company to improve their treatment and recruitment of Black workers. He is the author of the 1956 publication Don’t Blame the Blacks. When he was elected as a Labour Party local councillor, he became one of the first Black Labour councillors and the first Black Labour councillor in Greater Nottingham.
A blue plaque marks Powe's family home and a bus was named after him in 2022.
Early life
Powe was born on 11 August 1926 in Spanish Town, Jamaica. His parents were, Richard Pow / Pow Un Chun, a Chinese migrant to Jamaica, and Leonora Sinclair. They were shopkeepers.{{Cite web|title=Oswald George Powe - RAF Recruits|url=https://www.africansinyorkshireproject.com/raf-recruits-oswald-george-powe.html|access-date=2021-11-09|website=African Stories in Hull & East Yorkshire|language=en}}
Powe's father was Confusionist, his mother Catholic.
At the age of five he attended the Kingston Chinese school, thereafter St Ann's Elementary School in Kingston. Later he studied electrical engineering at Kingston Technical School before volunteering to join the Royal Air Force (RAF) in 1944, pretending to be older than 17 years of age.
His birth name was Oswald George Pow, which before he acquired British nationality, he changed by deed poll from Pow to Powe.
Career
After enlisting in the RAF, in Kingston, Jamaica, Powe was part of a contingent of 1,935 volunteers who sailed on a troopship which docked at Greenock, Scotland, in November 1944. On November 12 they were taken by train to RAF Hunmanby Moor, near Filey, Yorkshire, for two month’s initial training.{{cite web |last1=Audrey |first1=Dewjee |title=The Forgotten 4,000: West Indian Airmen at RAF Hunmanby Moor, Filey |url=https://www.historycalroots.com/west-indian-airmen-at-raf-hunmanby-moor-filey/ |website=Historycal Roots |access-date=19 June 2024}} Powe was later relocated to RAF Yatesbury, Wiltshire, for radar training. He was then assigned for one year to RAF Sennen, Penzance, and then posted to RAF West Prawle, South Devon. He returned to Jamaica in May 1948 and was demobilised in August.
He travelled back to England on the SS Orbita, disembarking at Liverpool on October 2, 1948. He subsequently worked in Birmingham and the East Midlands as an electrician. In 1969 he trained as a teacher before teaching mathematics at Robert Mellors School in Nottingham.{{cite web |last1=Horton |first1=Cynthia |title=William Wilberforce Monument Fund Community Project, RAF recruits in WW2: The stories behind the names of the Caribbean RAF servicemembers from WW2 who trained in Hunmanby Moor, Filey, East Yorkshire" |url= https://www.africansinyorkshireproject.com/raf-recruits-oswald-george-powe.html |access-date=19 June 2024}} He retired in 1983.
Politics and activism
In 1956, Powe campaigned for bike manufacturer Raleigh Bicycle Company to improve their recruitment policies for Black workers. His successful campaign, which included arranging the threat of a Jamaican trade embargo, resulted in Raleigh eventually becoming one of the major employers of Black people in Nottingham.{{Cite web|last=Banjoko|first=Panya|title=The UK needs more regional Black archives so it can celebrate Black British history in its entirety|url=http://theconversation.com/the-uk-needs-more-regional-black-archives-so-it-can-celebrate-black-british-history-in-its-entirety-168410|access-date=2021-11-09|website=The Conversation|language=en}}
In 1958, Powe authored Don’t Blame the Blacks, a publication about the UK's complicated relationship between Britain and its Commonwealth citizens.{{Cite book |last=Powe |first=George |title=Don't Blame the Blacks |publisher=Five Leaves Bookshop |year=2022 |isbn=9781910170984 |location=Nottingham}} In a 2022 edition and his daughter's account the date is incorrectly stated as 1956. In the 1960s, he was a leader in the campaign against a local pub that refused to serve Black people. In 1964, Powe was a key part of a campaign to push Nottingham City Council to abolish their practice of channeling all labour complaints from Black workers though a specific welfare officer, rather than dealing directly with the complainants.
After initially joining the Communist Party, from 1963 to 1966 Powe was elected as the Labour Party local councillor for Long Eaton in Derbyshire. From 1989 to 1992 he was a Labour councillor on Nottinghamshire County Council,{{Cite news|first1=Colin|last1=Rallings|first2=Michael|last2=Thrasher|title=Nottinghamshire County Council - Election Results 1973-2009|work=The Elections Centre, Plymouth University|url=http://www.electionscentre.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2015/06/Nottinghamshire-County.pdf}} making him one of the first Black Labour councillors in the UK, and the first in Greater Nottingham.
In 1972, Powe was the chairman of a committee who successfully campaigned for better treatment of Pakistani workers at Nottingham textile company Crepe Sizes Ltd.{{Cite news|date=29 June 1972|title=Pakistani Workers Win Lenton Strike|work=Nottingham Worker|url=https://resistantstrain.files.wordpress.com/2015/12/nottingham-worker-no-1-plus-leaflet-june-29th-1972.pdf}}
He was a key part of founding the [https://acnacentre.co.uk/ African Caribbean National Artistic Centre], now one of the UK's oldest Black community centres. In 2011, Powe donated his documents to the [http://nottinghamblackarchive.org/ Nottingham Black Archive].
Family life
Death and legacy
Powe died at home on 9 September 2013, aged 87. His funeral was held in Mansfield Road Baptist Church and he was buried in Wilford Hill Cemetery, Nottingham.{{Cite web |title=Hundreds pay tribute to 'outstanding' Nottingham campaigner {{!}} The Voice Online |url=https://archive.voice-online.co.uk/article/hundreds-pay-tribute-outstanding-nottingham-campaigner |access-date=2022-05-13 |website=archive.voice-online.co.uk}}
Powe was a community elder and a founding member of the African Caribbean National Artistic Centre (ACNA Centre), one of the UK's oldest Black community centres.
In 2011, Powe donated a substantial number of historic documents to the [http://nottinghamblackarchive.org/ Nottingham Black Archive], as well as being filmed for a documentary about the experiences of black servicemen who came to the UK following WW2.
In 2021, Powe's activism was the focus of the Don't Blame the Blacks exhibition at Nottingham Castle. A blue plaque was installed on the Powe family home in July 2022,{{Cite web |last=Letters |date=2022-08-04 |title=My husband, George Powe, was an unsung hero of civil rights in Nottingham |url=https://www.theguardian.com/world/2022/aug/04/my-husband-george-powe-was-an-unsung-hero-of-civil-rights-in-nottingham |access-date=2022-08-24 |website=The Guardian |language=en}} and Nottingham City Transport named a bus after Powe in August 2022.{{Cite web |last=Blake |first=Keimae |date=2022-08-15 |title=Bus named after campaigner who made 'Nottingham a better place' |url=https://www.nottinghampost.com/news/nottingham-news/nottingham-city-transport-names-bus-7453000 |access-date=2022-08-24 |website=NottinghamshireLive |language=en}}
References
{{reflist}}
External links
- [https://www.georgepowe.net/ Official website]
- [http://www.thesparrowsnest.org.uk/collections/public_archive/8466.pdf Don't Blame the Blacks, 1956 publication]{{Authority control}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Powe, Oswald George}}
Category:British anti-racism activists
Category:Jamaican emigrants to the United Kingdom
Category:Royal Air Force personnel of World War II
Category:People from Spanish Town
Category:20th-century British writers
Category:British schoolteachers