Drawing on materials from our mutual collections alongside new research, we hope in this exhibition to provide an insight into the presence and experiences of mixed race Irish families in Britain, the range of social reactions towards them, and the social contexts in which they lived. By creating an Irish perspective within the history of racial mixing in Britain, we seek to further highlight the longstanding diverse history of Britain itself.
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Early accounts of people of colour and racial mixing
Sending mixed race children to Ireland
Mir Aulud Ali; the 'Irish Negroes'
Potential histories of mixedness
The formerly enslaved African preacher and his Irish wife, Mary
The Indian-Irish entrepreneurs
The circus performer and the priest
Tony and Julia Small; William G. and Mary Allen
A longstanding history
Not such an unfamiliar sight
London and Liverpool
A spectrum of views
The Irish-Jamaican revolutionary couple
Attitudes towards racial mixing
Early twentieth century life
The Black Mayor of Battersea
Resentment, recrimination and violence in Britain's portside communities
Overlooked histories
Prejudice and stigmatisation
Sailors, students, professionals
Aubrey Menin, Johnny Sadiq and Pat Cross
An initial lessening of public interest
New narratives, old attitudes: the problematising of the children of Black GIs and white British women
Not just GI babies: Elizabeth Anionwu
The forced disintegration of families in Liverpool
One of the first Black women to join the British Armed Forces
Children from the 1920s and 1930s grow up
Philomena Lynott, Gus Nwanokwu and Kit de Waal
Dolores Mantez and Kenny Lynch
In the years after the ‘Brown Babies’ scandal, the issue of mixed race children in care would continue to become a topic of public debate. Due to the continuing moral condemnation of illegitimacy and racial mixing that carried into the post-war years, a disproportionate number of mixed race children – including those born to Irish […]
Racism and daily life in the 1970s and 1980s
A blackface portrayal of an Irish-Pakistani
Gabriel Gbadamosi, Jenneba Sie-Jalloh and Second Generation Irish
A British boxing champion
The Thin Lizzy frontman of Irish and Guyanese heritage
A pioneering television producer
The first black footballer to play for Ireland
Poetic performance of a mixed race family history
Semi-autobiographial depiction of a racially mixed English-Nigerian-Brazilian-Irish family over 150 years
Award winning semi-autobiographical depiction of transracial adoption
Phil Babb, Terry Phelan, Kanya King
Mixed race Irish families in official statistics
Further thoughts on the AMRI exhibition
Our thank you to those who helped us put the AMRI exhibition together
A quick reference index to the exhibition's content
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