INTRODUCTION BY BONNIE GREER. The Contribution of Immigrants
to Britain. The American playwright and cultural commentator
questions how indigenous anyone or thing is to the British Isles –
and celebrates the achievement of individuals from elsewhere and
improved the UK and the world
AUTHORS' NOTE. 'We started our research in the aftermath of
the Brexit vote and the associated negative rhetoric about
immigration. We felt ashamed that we were unaware of how many
aspects of our modern British lives had been shaped – if not
created – by immigrants... we are forever grateful'
ADE ADEPITAN • Athlete and TV presenter. Born in Lagos,
Nigeria, at 15 months old, Ade contracted polio which left him
unable to walk. Aged three, his family moved to London. He
represented Great Britain in basketball at the Olympics before
presenting The World's Busiest Cities and other TV shows
ALAN YAU • Restaurateur. Alan Yau was born Yau Tak Wai in
Hong Kong in 1962 and moved to join his family in Norfolk aged 12.
He learnt how to run a food business while helping out his parents
at their Chinese restaurant in Wisbech. He founded Thai chain
Busaba Eathai and Hakkasan Chinese restaurant
ALEC ISSIGONIS • Car designer. His Greek family fled the
Greco-Turkish War in 1922. His most famous creation is the Mini,
which became known as the quintessentially British car due to its
practicality and popularity with the working class. He worked on
Morris Minor, Austin 1100 and Austin Maxi
ALEK WEK • Model. After leaving Sudan, she went into fashion
and starred in music videos for artists including Tina Turner and
Janet Jackson and became recognised globally. Her success blazed a
trail for dark-skinned women at a time when the industry was
dominated by white faces
ALF DUBS • Politician. Alf Dubs was born in Prague in 1932.
His father was Jewish and the family fled Czechoslovakia when
Germany invaded in 1938. He escaped to Britain on the
Kindertransport. He became director of the Refugee Council, a
Labour life peer and immigration campaigner
ANDRAS SCHIFF • Pianist and conductor. András Schiff was
born in Budapest, Hungary, to a Jewish family, the only child of
two Holocaust survivors. His interpretations of Mozart, Bach,
Beethoven and Schubert have earned him a worldwide following and
his discography is renowned for its excellence
ANISH KAPOOR • Sculptor. Born in India, he has designed
several architecturally scaled public artworks; notably Cloud Gate
in Chicago’s Millennium Park, Sky Mirror in Nottingham, Temenos in
Middlesbrough, and Ark Nova, an inflatable concert hall created in
the wake of the tsunami in Japan in 2011
ANNA FREUD • Psychoanalyst. When the Nazis occupied Austria,
she moved to England with the rest of her family, aged 43. She
continued her work in London, but whereas her father Sigmund
Freud’s work centred on the analysis of adults, she worked with
children, with her friend Dorothy Burlingham
ARTHUR WHARTON • Footballer. He became the first black
footballer in the English football league and the world’s first
black professional football player when he kept goal for Darlington
FC, then Preston North End in the 1880s. Statues of him stand at
FIFA HQ in Zurich and FA HQ in the UK
BARBARA COOPER • RAF officer. Born in Canada, in 2008
Barbara made history when she was made an Air Commodore, becoming
the highest-ranked female RAF officer. In 2010, she was put in
charge of the Air Cadet Organisation, responsible for training
45,000 teenagers and 15,000 adult volunteers
BUSHRA NASIR • Headteacher. When she arrived from Pakistan
aged eight, Bushra could not speak a word of English. In 23 years
as headteacher of Plashet girls school in east London, she worked
with staff and pupils to transform it from an underachieving school
to one rated outstanding by Ofsted
CARLOS ACOSTA • Ballet dancer. Carlos Acosta’s family lived
in deprivation in Havana, Cuba, when he was born in 1973, the
youngest of 11 siblings. He joined the Royal Ballet in 1998, often
taking romantic roles and reinforcing his reputation as one of the
world’s greatest dancers
CAROLINE HERSCHEL • Astronomer. Caroline Lucretia Herschel
was born in Hanover, Germany, in 1750, one of eight siblings. When
she was 10, she fell ill with typhus which stunted her growth and
damaged her eyesight. She discovered 8 new comets and 560 stars –
presenting her work to the Royal Society
CHARLES KAO • Physicist and engineer. Born in Shanghai,
China, his most notable piece of work was the development of cables
containing ultra-pure glass that could transmit light over long
distances with minimal loss of signal. This discovery laid the
foundation for the evolution of the internet
CHARLES YERKES • Financier. Born in 1837, Charles Yerkes was
a highly successful financier from Philadelphia, USA, who was
instrumental in building one of London’s most famous features – the
London Underground. He funded the digging of the Tube’s deepest
lines: the Northern, Piccadilly and Bakerloo
CHARLOTTE AUERBACH • Geneticist. As a German Jew, she fled
the Nazis. Her work helped to establish the science of mutagenesis,
when genes are changed naturally or by a physical or chemical
element. In 1976, she received the Royal Society’s Darwin Medal, in
recognition of her contribution to biology
CLAUDIA JONES • Journalist and activist. She was deported to
Britain in 1955 after the McCarthyite 'reds under the bed' scare.
She campaigned against its manifestation in education, employment,
housing and laws that restricted non-white migration to Britain.
She founded the West Indian Gazette
CLAUS MOSER • Statistician. He learnt his love of statistics
while being interned during World War Two. As head of the UK
Central Statistics Office, he improved the reliability of economic
data. He was behind the influential annual report tracking changes
in British society, Social Trends
CONNIE MARK • Campaigner. In 1980, Connie founded Friends of
Mary Seacole, later named the Mary Seacole Memorial Association, to
recognise the accomplishments of the black Crimean War nurse and,
in 1993, the British government set up an award in Mary Seacole’s
name
DEBORAH DONIACH • Immunologist. With her fellow researchers
Ivan Roitt and Peter Campbell, she helped to further the
understanding of the thyroid gland’s role in immunity and disease,
leading to the recognition of organ-specific autoimmunity – a
discovery that has saved countless lives
DENNIS GABOR • Physicist and engineer. As a scientist at the
British Thomson-Houston engineering company in Rugby, Warwickshire,
Gabor, a Hungarian Jew who had fled Germany in 1933, unexpectedly
invented the hologram in 1947. The ‘Father of Holography' received
the Nobel Prize in Physics in 1971
DIETRICH KUCHEMANN • Engineer. In 1953, Dietrich became a
British citizen and eventually chief scientific officer and head of
the aerodynamics department at the Royal Aircraft Establishment in
Farnborough, Surrey, where he helped design the delta wing, used on
the Eurofighter Typhoon and Concorde
DOREEN LAWRENCE • Campaigner. On 22 April 1993, Doreen's son
Stephen was brutally murdered in a racially motivated attack while
waiting for a bus in Eltham. She and her husband kept up pressure
on the police, who secured convictions. In 1998, she set up the
Stephen Lawrence Charitable Trust
EDITH BULBRING • Scientist. For her work on smooth muscle,
Edith received two of the highest accolades in her field – the
Wellcome Gold Medal in Pharmacology and the German Pharmacological
Society’s Schmiedeberg-Plakette. She worked at the Physiology
Laboratory in Oxford
EMMA ORCZY • Novelist and playwright. Born in Hungary, in
1903 she came up with a short story. The Scarlet Pimpernel
recounted with swashbuckling verve the secret double life of a
foppish Englishman, Sir Percy Blakeney, who rescued aristocrats
during the French Revolution
ERICH REICH • Entrepreneur. Taken to England under the
Kindertransport programme, Erich worked at Thompson Holidays and
Thomas Cook, where he became managing director in 1979. Eight years
later, he established Classic Tours, a global charity fundraising
company that hosted outdoor challenges abroad
ERNST CHAIN • Scientist. In 1945, Ernst, Howard Florey and
Alexander Fleming won the Nobel Prize for Physiology or Medicine
for the development of penicillin, which is estimated to have saved
more than 200 million lives – four times the number of deaths in
World War Two
ERNST GOMBRICH • Author. Published in 1950, The Story of Art
has sold over seven million copies, making it the highest-selling
art book of all time. This and many other works such as Art and
Illusion have led him to be hailed as ‘one of the most influential
scholars and thinkers of the 20th century
EUGENE RIMMEL • Perfumer. Eugène Rimmel was born in France,
the son of a perfume maker, who taught his son how to make
exquisite scents. Eugène moved to London, where he opened a perfume
shop, The House of Rimmel, on Bond Street in 1834, popular with
Queen Victoria
FANNY EATON • Model. Fanny Entwhistle (later Eaton) was born
in Jamaica in 1835 to a previously enslaved mother. Fanny was
beautiful. In her twenties, she began to sit regularly as an
artist’s model at the Royal Academy. Dante Gabriel Rosetti praised
her beauty and depicted her in The Beloved
FREDDIE MERCURY • Pop singer. In 1964, when a revolution
overthrew the Sultan of Zanzibar and thousands died, Freddie’s
family fled Africa for Feltham, London. As lead singer of Queen
(and Bohemian Rhapsody), Freddie’s vocal range and flamboyant
on-stage persona made them one of rock's greatest acts
GEORGE FRIDERIC HANDEL • In 1727, he became a British
subject, earning him the right to compose music for the Chapel
Royal, for which he wrote the Coronation Anthem for George II and
the Funeral Anthem for Queen Caroline. In 1741, he composed one of
the most performed choral works ever, Messiah
GEORGE Weidenfeld • Publisher. After leaving Nazi Australia,
in 1949, he co-founded a book publisher with the British politician
Nigel Nicolson, Weidenfeld & Nicolson. The company’s success was
predicated on some bold decisions, for instance daring to publish
Vladimir Nabokov’s Lolita
GINA MILLER • Entrepreneur and activist. Gina Miller was
born in 1965 in British Guiana. At the age of 10, she was sent by
her parents to school in Eastbourne. She co-founded investment firm
SCM Direct and funded two legal cases that halted the Government's
attempts to ignore Parliament after Brexit
GRAEME HICK • Cricketer. In 2008, at the age of 42, Graeme
retired from professional cricket, by which stage he had surpassed
the record for the most cricket matches played, 1,214 – still a
global record – and accumulated 64,000 first-class runs, including
136 centuries: an English cricketing legend
HANS HOLBEIN • Painter. In 1497, Hans Holbein the Younger
was born into an artistic family in the free imperial city of
Augsburg, in what is now Bavaria. He moved to England in 1526, was
employed by Sir Thomas More with the help of a recommendation from
Erasmus, and became a court painter for Henry VIII
HANS KREBS • Scientist. With his colleague William Johnson,
the German biologist began the research that led to the discovery
of the ‘citric acid cycle’, by which organisms release stored
energy from carbohydrates, fats and proteins. In 1953, Hans
received the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine
HARRY GORDON SELFRIDGE • Retailer. The future owner of the
celebrated British department store, Selfridge's, was born in
Wisconsin, USA, in 1858. Harry’s father had left the family after
fighting in the American Civil War. Harry set up a department store
in Oxford Street in London
HENRY WELLCOME • Scientist. When the American was 27 years
old, his friend Silas Burroughs, a travelling pharmaceutical
salesman, invited him to London, and together they formed Burroughs
Wellcome & Co (later GlaxoSmithKline) which utilised Henry’s talent
for combining pharmaceuticals with marketing
IDA COPELAND • Politician. During World War One, Ida
volunteered for the British Red Cross Society working in military
hospitals. After the war, she became an active member of the Girl
Guides, becoming one of its leading members and propelling its
strong growth worldwide. She became a Conservative MP
IDA FREUND • Academic. Having overcome the challenges faced
by women who wanted to gain a higher education, Ida – born in
Austria – began working as a demonstrator at Newnham College and
excelled in her work. In 1890, she became the first-ever female
chemistry lecturer in Britain
IRA ALDRIDGE • Actor and playwright. He wanted to become an
actor but felt that his prospects would be brighter in England
where he hoped he would face less discrimination than in the United
States. In 1824, he boarded a ship bound for Liverpool, and made
his way across the Atlantic to a new life
IRIS MURDOCH • Novelist. The Irish writer's gift for
language and her adventurous love life made her a skilled novelist.
In all, she wrote 26 novels, along with a vast array of plays,
poetry collections, essays and short stories. Her 19th novel The
Sea, the Sea, won the Booker Prize in 1978
ISAIAH BERLIN • Philosopher. In 1917, his family fled
anti-Semitism and Bolshevik oppression in Russia. His greatest
contribution to philosophy during a dazzling career was
acknowledging the importance to an individual of a sense of
belonging, which could take many forms, as it had during his
life
JACOB EPSTEIN • Sculptor. Jacob was born in New York City to
a Polish-Jewish family. As a child, he spent long periods of time
ill with pleurisy and believed that the time he spent alone drawing
was the reason for his later success as an artist, as a member of
the Vorticism movement
JIMI HENDRIX • Musician. ‘Jimi’, born James Marshall
Hendrix, in 1942 in Seattle, Washington, had a volatile childhood
and sought solace in music. In 1960s London, the Jimi Hendrix
Experience had three UK top 10 hits in quick succession: Hey Joe,
Purple Haze and The Wind Cries Mary
JOAN ARMATRADING • Musician. Grammy-nominated
singer-songwriter Joan Armatrading was born on the island of St
Kitts in 1950, the third of six children. When she was three, her
parents swapped the Caribbean for Birmingham. Her hits include Love
and Affection, Down to Zero and Me Myself and I
JOHANNA WEBER • Engineer. She was born in Düsseldorf,
Germany into a poor farming family. With her life-long friend
Dietrich Küchemann, she joined the aerodynamics department at the
Royal Aircraft Establishment in Farnborough, where she re-designed
the wings of the Handley Page Victor bomber
JOHN BARNES • Footballer. From Jamaica, he became a star
midfielder for Liverpool and became one of the first black players
to claim a regular place in the national side. A year later, he
scored a ‘miracle’ goal against Brazil in the Maracana, dribbling
past five players
JOHN EDMONSTONE • Naturalist. John is thought to have been
born into slavery in Guyana. He became good friends with Charles
Darwin and would tell him tales of his homeland, describing
rainforests filled with animals and plants unseen by Europeans and
landscapes wildly different from Scotland’s hills
JOSEPH CONRAD • Author. Often regarded as one of the finest
novelists to write in the English language, Joseph didn’t actually
speak fluent English until he reached his mid-20s, having been born
in Ukraine in 1857. He was orphaned at 12 and worked on British
ships, later writing Heart of Darkness
JOSEPH ROTBLAT • Physicist. Born in Warsaw to Polish-Jewish
parents, during World War Two, Joseph was part of the research team
working on Tube Alloys, the codename of the British nuclear weapon
programme. He later campaigned against nuclear proliferation,
winning the Nobel Peace Prize
JUDITH KERR • Author. The woman who would go on to become
one of the best-loved children’s authors of all time was born in
Berlin in 1923. Her father, Alfred Kerr, a theatre critic, was an
outspoken critic of the Nazis and in 1933 the Kerrs fled Germany.
She wrote The Tiger Who Came To Tea
KARAN BILIMORIA • Entrepreneur. Karan Bilimoria was born in
1961 in Hyderabad, India, into a family of Zoroastrian Parsi
descent. Karan adored Indian cuisine but felt that the British beer
served alongside it was too gassy and marred the meal. He and his
friend Arjun Reddy founded Cobra Beer
KAREL KUTTELWASCHER • Fighter pilot. A Czech, he joined the
Royal Air Force and was assigned to No 1 Squadron. He quickly made
a name for himself in the cockpit of a Hawker Hurricane during the
Battle of Britain and, later, during the Channel Dash, an operation
to sink German destroyers
KRYSTYNA SKARBEK • Wartime spy. 'Christine Glanville' was
reputedly Winston Churchill’s favourite spy. The resourceful and
determined Pole threatened, charmed, harangued and bribed a Gestapo
commander into freeing two colleagues from a French prison hours
before they were due to be executed
KYLIE MINOGUE • Pop singer. Kylie Minogue, who would go on
to become famous first as a car mechanic in a daytime soap opera
and then as a popstar, was born in Melbourne, Australia, in 1968. A
child actress, she appeared in several popular soap operas, before
landing the role of Charlene on Neighbours
LEW GRADE • Broadcaster. The future cigar-chomping media
tycoon Lew Grade was born Louis Winogradsky in 1906, into a Jewish
family in Tokmak in the Russian Empire near the Black Sea. He
produced popular kids shows such as Captain Scarlet and
Thunderbirds
LUCIAN FREUD • Painter. Lucian was born in Berlin in 1922,
the grandson of the renowned psychiatrist Sigmund Freud and the son
of the architect Ernst Freud. During his later career, he became a
lead figure in a collective of artists named The School of London,
a movement based on figurative drawing
LUDWIG GOLDSCHEIDER • Publisher. After the Nazis marched
into Vienna, Ludwig moved to Britain. In London, he and his
colleague Béla Horovitz re-opened Phaidon Press. They managed the
company together until Béla’s sudden death in 1955. In 1950,
Phaidon published The Story of Art by Ernst Gombrich
LUDWIG GUTTMAN • Neurologist. In 1944, he established a
national spinal injuries unit at Stoke Mandeville Hospital. He
organised a sporting event specifically for disabled people to take
place on the same day as the Olympic Games. After he died in 1980,
the games were renamed the Paralympics
MAGDI YACOUB • Heart surgeon. The famous heart transplant
surgeon Magdi Yacoub was born in 1935 in Bilbeis, Egypt. From an
early age, he wanted to follow his father’s footsteps into the
operating theatre. When his aunt died of heart complications, he
decided to specialise in cardiac medicine
MALALA YOUSAFZAI • Campaigner. Malala was born in Swat
District, Pakistan, in 1992 to a Sunni Muslim family. Her father
was an educational activist who inspired his daughter to take an
interest in educational rights for women and she resisted the
Taliban, who shot her in the head. She survived
MARC ISAMBARD BRUNEL • Engineer. Marc was born in 1769 in
Normandy, France to a prosperous farming family. He worked on big
infrastructure projects, mainly in London. One of his most notable
achievements was the development of a method for moving pulleys
mechanically rather than by manual labour
MARGARET BUSBY • Publisher and editor. Margaret was born in
Accra, Gold Coast (now Ghana) in 1944 to a family with links to
prominent journalists, politicians and authors. With friend Clive
Allison in 1967, she founded the publishing firm Allison & Busby,
becoming Britain’s first black female publisher
MARIE TUSSAUD • Entrepreneur. Tutored by a Swiss doctor,
Marie developed a talent for modelling and created wax figures of
notable individuals such as the French writer Voltaire. After
cheating death in the French Revolution, in 1802 she travelled to
London and began exhibiting her waxworks
MARY PRINCE • Campaigner. A slave in Bermuda, Mary was freed
in England. As an anti-slavery campaigner, she published The
History of Mary Prince, making her the first black woman and first
enslaved woman to publish an autobiography. The book exposed the
horrors endured by slaves in the West Indies
MARY SEACOLE • Nurse. Mary was born in 1805 in Kingston,
Jamaica to a Jamaican mother and a Scottish father. She volunteered
to nurse British soldiers in the Crimean War, but was rejected. She
made her way to Turkey under her own steam and built the makeshift
'British Hotel' for sick officers
MAUREEN DE POPP • Pilot. In World War Two, Maureen enrolled
as one of the few female pilots delivering aircraft to the front
line. She would only find out what type of aeroplane she was flying
on the day of the job. She had to be able to pilot both Spitfires
and Wellington Bombers
MICHAEL MARKS • Retailer. Michael was born in Slonim, Russia
(now Belarus) in 1859. He was born into a Polish-Jewish family and,
aged about 23, moved to England to escape persecution from the
Russian state. In 1894, a cashier, Tom Spencer, invested £300 for
half of his growing market stall business
MO FARAH • Athlete. Mo Farah, one of the greatest
long-distance runners in the world, was born in Mogadishu, Somalia
in 1983. With political and social tensions rife in the country,
his family were forced to flee. At the age of eight, he was
resettled in London without a word of English to his name
MONA HATOUM • Artist. From a young age she loved to draw but
her life was uprooted by the outbreak of Lebanon’s long Civil War.
She moved to London. Her artwork often uses the human body to
depict oppression, violence, sexuality and the psychological effect
of being displaced
MONTAGUE BURTON • Retailer. After fleeing programs in
Lithuania, After taking British citizenship, Meshe opened a new
shop which he named Burton & Burton. The firm offered bespoke
tailoring where customers could choose their own fabrics and
designs. By 1929, Burton & Burton had 400 shops
MOSES MONTEFIORE • Banker. Moses was born in 1784 in
Leghorn, Tuscany, to a prosperous Jewish family with roots across
Europe. But he not complete his schooling in England when his
family ran out of money. He amassed a business fortune and spent
the rest of his life and his fortune to helping others
NASSER HUSSAIN • Cricketer. Born in Chennai, India, in 1968,
to an English mother and an Indian father, Nasser became a
distinguished England cricket captain. In 2004, he retired from
English cricket, having played 96 tests and 88 one-day
internationals – 'perhaps the finest captain'
OSCAR NEMON • Sculptor. The Jewish Croatian artist moved to
England in 1938. In 1951, he was introduced to Winston Churchill
and his wife, Clementine, who was so impressed by his work that she
commissioned him to sculpt her husband as a gift for the Queen. He
was famed for his charm
PARVEEN KUMAR • Doctor. Born in Lahore in 1942, Parveen
became a doctor and BMA President. She decided to write a new
doctor-friendly guide to clinical medicine, with the help of her
colleague Mike Clark. Their work, Kumar and Clark’s Clinical
Medicine is now the new standard medical textbook
PETER PORTER • Poet. In 1983, the Australian former reporter
won the Duff Cooper Prize for Collected Poems, followed five years
later by the Whitbread Prize for Poetry. In 2001, he was made Poet
in Residence at the Royal Albert Hall, and a year later received
the Queen’s Gold Medal for poetry
PRINCE ALBERT • Royal consort. At first unpopular with the
British public, Albert had a keen interest in public causes. He
supported raising the working age for children. He campaigned for
the abolition of slavery and, in 1851, he co-organised the Great
Exhibition, showcasing the power of science
RAHEEM STERLING • Footballer. Before he became one of
England’s best footballers, Raheem had a tough upbringing in
Jamaica and Britain. His father was murdered two years after he was
born in 1994. His mother decided to study for a degree in England
in the hope of giving her children a better life
RICHARD ROGERS • Architect. Born into an Italian family,
with ties to England, Richard became an architect. The Richard
Rogers Partnership has designed a string of innovative buildings:
the Millennium Dome, Heathrow Terminal Five, National Assembly of
Wales, and the European Court of Human Rights
SAKE DEAN MAHOMED • Surgeon. In 1810, he opened the
Hindostanee Coffee House at 34 George Street in Mayfair, London –
the first Indian restaurant in Britain. A restaurant guide
mentioned that the nobility enjoyed traditional hookah and Indian
dishes. In 1814, he moved to Brighton to introduce shampoo
SHANTA PATHAK • Entrepreneur. Shanta Pandit was born in 1927
in Zanzibar, Tanzinia. She married a man from Gujarat in India,
Laxmishanker Pathak, in Kenya, where they ran a small business
selling sweets and samosas. In London, their pickles business
became Patak’s, which now employs 700 people
SISLIN FAY ALLEN • Police officer. After four years in
Britain, she saw a newspaper advertisement recruiting men and women
police trainees and decided to apply. At the time there were only
600 police women in the whole of Britain, all of them white. She
got the job and found Missing Persons
SOLLY ZUCKERMAN • Military adviser. Moving from Cape Town,
he became a resident anatomist at the London Zoological Society,
specialising in primatology. In World War Two, he was asked to
research the effects of bombings on civilians and their homes, and
designed the Zuckerman helmet for air raids
STELIOS HAJI-IOANNOU • Entrepreneur. The son of a shipping
tycoon, Stelios was given a small fortune to start a business. He
turned it into a big fortune, founding a no-frills travel company,
easyJet, in 1995 with a pitch of lowering the cost of airfare for
ordinary people by lowering customer service
STEVE SHIRLEY • Entrepreneur. Faced with rampant sexism in
the emerging computer industry, in 1962 Vera, from Germany, set up
a women-only software business Freelance Programmers with just £6.
When her letters to potential clients, she changed her name to
Steve. She sold her business for £150m
STUART HALL • Academic. Stuart Hall was born in 1932 in
Kingston, Jamaica, into a middle-class family of African, British,
Portuguese-Jewish and Indian descent. All of his essays, books,
articles and films were in some way dedicated to explaining and
understanding British society and culture
TS ELIOT • Poet. Thomas Stearns Eliot was born in 1888 in
Missouri, United States. From a young age he could not play much
with other children because of a congenital double hernia, which
meant that he spent a lot of time reading. He became one of the
20th Century's greatest writers
TESSA SANDERSON • Athlete. Born in 1956 in Jamaica, of
Ghanaian ancestry, Tessa represented Britain at the Montreal
Olympics. In Los Angeles in 1984, she became one of the first
British women athletes to win an Olympic gold. After retiring from
javelin, she set up the Tessa Sanderson Foundation
TREVOR MCDONALD • Newscaster. In 1992, the Trinidadian
became ITV’s main news anchor, respected by the viewing public for
an assured style many described as avuncular. He presented the ITV
news in its various guises as News At Ten, The ITV Evening News
and, later, ITV News at 10.30pm
VALERIE AMOS • Lawyer and politician. Valerie Amos was born
in 1954 in Guyana, South America. She attended secondary school in
London and universities in Warwick, Birmingham and East Anglia.
Throughout the 1980s, she worked in local government in London
VENKATRAMAN RAMAKRISHNAN • Biologist. Born in India, he
researched the ribosome, the protein machine in every living cell
that brings DNA to life. In 2009, Venkatraman and colleagues were
awarded the Nobel Prize for Chemistry for discovering how to
disable the ribosome, boosting antibiotic research
VERA ATKINS • Wartime spy. In 1939, she helped smuggle the
Polish code-breakers who had broken Germany’s Enigma machine into
Romania and then to the West where they passed on their expertise.
In 1941, she joined the Special Operations Executive, running
espionage and sabotage in occupied Europe
VIOLETTE SZABO • Wartime spy. Born in Paris in 1921 to a
French mother and English father, Violette was free-spirited and
energetic. On her first mission in 1944, she discovered many French
resistance workers had been captured by the Gestapo, helping the
British defeat the Nazis
WILLIAM BUTEMENT • Scientist. An innovation by the New
Zealander nudged Britain into developing radar, which detected
Luftwaffe planes early and won the Battle of Britain. He also
helped invent the proximity fuse, which automatically detonated
when the missile neared its target
YASMIN QURESHI • Politician and barrister. Yasmin's
Pakistani family moved to Britain when she was nine and settled in
Watford. After a law degree, she became a barrister prosecuting
complex criminal cases. In 2010, she, Rushanara Ali and Shabana
Mahmood became the UK's first female Muslim MPs
YVONNE THOMPSON • Entrepreneur. Yvonne Thompson’s
entrepreneurial spirit manifested itself from an early age. Born in
Guyana, she moved to Britain with her parents in 1961, settling in
Battersea, London. When she experienced racism and sexism in her
early career, she set up ASAP Communications
ZAHA HADID • Architect. Zaha Hadid was born in Iraq in 1950
to a wealthy family familiar with business and art. Known as the
queen of curves, she designed the wavy-roofed Riverside Museum in
Glasgow and the sleek fly-away 2012 Olympics London Aquatics
Centre. She won the Stirling Prize twice
THE 100TH IMMIGRANT. Your parent, friend, or workmate. There
is room at the end of the book for the reader to fill in the
details of an immigrant close to them who has made a contribution
to Britain
CROWDFUNDERS. List of individuals who helped fund the book
through a collaboration with the publishers Unbound
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS. Thanks to, among others, Sarah Marcus and
her colleagues at the Joint Council for the Welfare of Immigrants
enthusiastically promoted it to its social media followers
ABOUT THE AUTHORS. Bonnie Greer is an American-British
playwright, novelist, critic and broadcaster. Louis Stewart works
for an educational company marketing books to schools. Naomi Kenyon
studied sociology at university and has since worked primarily in
women’s healthcare
Louis Stewart works for an educational company marketing books to schools. He started tweeting stories of inspirational immigrants after listening to a podcast about Brexit. He was taken aback by the warm response these brief biographies received; many people wanted to make them better known. He studied sociology at the University of Sussex. He lives in Brighton.
Naomi Kenyon studied Sociology at university and has since worked primarily within women’s healthcare in the fields of obstetrics and gynaecology. She has worked both for the NHS and as a researcher for the University of Oxford. She co-wrote and illustrated the book.
Bonnie Greer is an American-British playwright, novelist, critic and broadcaster. Born in Chicago, she has lived in the UK since 1986. She is a columnist for the New European, a regular commentator on TV and radio, and Chancellor of the University of Kingston.
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