The Japan Times - UK museum hunts 'Windrush' migrants in forgotten pictures

EUR -
AED 4.381992
AFN 78.750894
ALL 96.772834
AMD 453.127673
ANG 2.135904
AOA 1094.155023
ARS 1723.006224
AUD 1.703048
AWG 2.147741
AZN 2.027312
BAM 1.958039
BBD 2.409237
BDT 146.15714
BGN 2.003807
BHD 0.449939
BIF 3543.827792
BMD 1.193189
BND 1.513334
BOB 8.264659
BRL 6.197065
BSD 1.196143
BTN 110.049154
BWP 15.598819
BYN 3.379033
BYR 23386.513916
BZD 2.405733
CAD 1.613288
CDF 2693.62495
CHF 0.916376
CLF 0.025958
CLP 1024.95004
CNY 8.290757
CNH 8.289248
COP 4358.721191
CRC 591.863639
CUC 1.193189
CUP 31.619521
CVE 110.393555
CZK 24.34441
DJF 213.004295
DKK 7.467153
DOP 75.15697
DZD 154.308073
EGP 56.001272
ERN 17.897842
ETB 185.122907
FJD 2.620781
FKP 0.864978
GBP 0.867162
GEL 3.215635
GGP 0.864978
GHS 13.067272
GIP 0.864978
GMD 87.697079
GNF 10497.500171
GTQ 9.177688
GYD 250.242459
HKD 9.315768
HNL 31.595737
HRK 7.533438
HTG 156.800337
HUF 381.275947
IDR 20028.222449
ILS 3.690338
IMP 0.864978
INR 109.703873
IQD 1563.674821
IRR 50263.107265
ISK 144.99605
JEP 0.864978
JMD 187.688003
JOD 0.845975
JPY 183.732053
KES 154.243589
KGS 104.344067
KHR 4800.801608
KMF 491.594467
KPW 1073.96939
KRW 1718.932363
KWD 0.365955
KYD 0.996727
KZT 600.839544
LAK 25677.437566
LBP 107117.524012
LKR 370.074058
LRD 221.3444
LSL 18.780413
LTL 3.523179
LVL 0.721749
LYD 7.487269
MAD 10.834074
MDL 20.11961
MGA 5321.625216
MKD 61.62671
MMK 2505.752956
MNT 4256.95142
MOP 9.615976
MRU 47.572579
MUR 54.20683
MVR 18.434798
MWK 2072.570214
MXN 20.625111
MYR 4.698727
MZN 76.065949
NAD 18.864464
NGN 1658.366152
NIO 43.187477
NOK 11.432366
NPR 176.101211
NZD 1.969586
OMR 0.458787
PAB 1.196098
PEN 3.989425
PGK 5.083586
PHP 70.333154
PKR 333.88428
PLN 4.210294
PYG 8026.784566
QAR 4.344522
RON 5.097187
RSD 117.389486
RUB 90.086234
RWF 1733.107728
SAR 4.475517
SBD 9.614842
SCR 16.593195
SDG 717.661496
SEK 10.535953
SGD 1.512051
SHP 0.895201
SLE 29.08404
SLL 25020.586042
SOS 681.867426
SRD 45.34538
STD 24696.61331
STN 24.609533
SVC 10.465837
SYP 13196.168479
SZL 18.855865
THB 37.48407
TJS 11.171609
TMT 4.188095
TND 3.373445
TOP 2.872914
TRY 51.903862
TTD 8.118318
TWD 37.534758
TZS 3072.463155
UAH 51.192889
UGX 4254.972804
USD 1.193189
UYU 45.262709
UZS 14550.945781
VES 437.717685
VND 30924.48849
VUV 142.715687
WST 3.23879
XAF 656.694211
XAG 0.011511
XAU 0.000235
XCD 3.224654
XCG 2.155638
XDR 0.816792
XOF 653.27021
XPF 119.331742
YER 284.461217
ZAR 19.03704
ZMK 10740.145808
ZMW 23.653834
ZWL 384.206528
  • SCS

    0.0200

    16.14

    +0.12%

  • CMSC

    0.0100

    23.71

    +0.04%

  • CMSD

    0.0392

    24.09

    +0.16%

  • AZN

    -0.6300

    92.59

    -0.68%

  • GSK

    0.5600

    50.66

    +1.11%

  • RBGPF

    1.3800

    83.78

    +1.65%

  • NGG

    0.3900

    85.07

    +0.46%

  • BTI

    0.0600

    60.22

    +0.1%

  • BCE

    0.2200

    25.49

    +0.86%

  • RIO

    1.7600

    95.13

    +1.85%

  • JRI

    -0.0500

    12.94

    -0.39%

  • RYCEF

    -0.0700

    16.88

    -0.41%

  • BCC

    -0.5500

    80.3

    -0.68%

  • BP

    0.3400

    38.04

    +0.89%

  • RELX

    -1.2100

    36.17

    -3.35%

  • VOD

    0.1400

    14.71

    +0.95%

UK museum hunts 'Windrush' migrants in forgotten pictures
UK museum hunts 'Windrush' migrants in forgotten pictures / Photo: JOHN SIBLEY - POOL/AFP

UK museum hunts 'Windrush' migrants in forgotten pictures

The anonymous face of a new arrival towered over Prince William at the unveiling of a national memorial to the "Windrush" generation of Caribbean migrants in London last month.

Text size:

One fresh-faced young man is smartly dressed in a bow tie and Trilby hat. A woman, perhaps his wife or sister, stands to his right looking sideways at the camera.

Nervous anticipation is written over both their faces.

But the identity of the well-dressed people on the platform at London's Waterloo station, waiting for their new lives to begin, has been a mystery.

Now, a search has been launched to identify the young couple and others who arrived that day in 1962.

Britain's National Railway Museum in York, northern England, has acquired some of the photographs and is seeking to put names to the faces and tell their stories.

The "Windrush" migrants are named after the MV Empire Windrush ship, one of the vessels that brought workers from Jamaica, Trinidad and Tobago and other islands to help fill UK labour shortages after World War II.

- Underexposed -

The photographs show the new arrivals being greeted by friends and family already in Britain. There are smiles and embraces as families are reunited.

Others look uncertain, pensive. In one, a family of four including two young children, all dressed in their Sunday best, wait by a newspaper stand.

In another, a man in a striped tie listens intently as something is explained to him. Piles of bags and old-fashioned suitcases lie on the platform.

But the faces of the new arrivals were nearly lost to history and only came to light recently because of new technology -- and the determination of the man who took the pictures.

On the day the migrants arrived, a young London photographer named Howard Grey had an idea.

Taking a break from his job photographing ladies' corsets, he decided to chance his hand at a bit of reportage.

Hopefully, he thought, he might capture a historic moment -- the last large-scale arrival of Caribbean migrants in Britain before new legislation imposed far tighter entry restrictions.

But arriving at the station on an overcast day in March or April, he says, he quickly realised the light conditions were so poor the photographs would be unusable.

"The glass roof of Waterloo station at that time was coated on the outside with grime," Grey, now 80, told AFP.

"It made the light yellow and so I knew when I was taking these pictures I really was up against it."

After around only 20 minutes Grey said he realised he hadn't got anything and went back to work.

"I did develop them the following day and I was right -- there was nothing there. They were all underexposed."

Despite his disappointment, something stopped him from throwing the negatives away as he usually did with failed projects.

- New scanner -

In fact, his own family background as refugees from what is now Ukraine gave the subject a subconscious hold on him.

"Because my family were immigrants in the 1900s from the Jewish pogroms I was always brought up with their stories and the stories of family friends who had relatives in the Holocaust.

"It was that kind of horror, it gave me a subconscious fear about immigration, the trepidation of the asylum-seeker or refugee," he added.

Instead Grey put the negatives in an envelope and tucked them away in a drawer where they stayed for about 50 years.

Decades later after a successful career as an advertising photographer, the London-based Grey had almost completely forgotten about the negatives in the envelope.

"One day I had a new scanner and I just thought I'd try it," he said.

"I did three scans of the same negative and made it into one and it (the image) just popped up, like invisible ink. I was astounded. it was a Eureka moment."

It's hoped that those in the photographs or their relatives may recognise their faces and come forward so their stories can be told as part of a major exhibition by the National Railway Museum planned for 2024.

"The pictures are incredibly special and very beautiful in their own right, but we don't actually know who the people in them are," a spokesman for the museum said.

"We want to have their stories properly told so we can do them the sort of justice and respect they deserve," he added.

S.Fujimoto--JT