Black History Buff Podcast artwork

10: No dogs, No Blacks, No Irish

Black History Buff Podcast

English - January 07, 2019 23:00 - 41 minutes - 94.7 MB - ★★★★★ - 254 ratings
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Show Notes: 

This is an interview completed with the Family members of Asquith Xavier.

The Interview took place over the phone with Ebanie Xavier and Edrina Xavier, who speak about their inspiring ancestor at length and give us an insight into what life was like in Britain in the 1960's.

Asquith Camile Xavier was a West Indian-born Briton who ended a colour bar at British Railways in London by fighting to become the first non-white train guard at Euston railway station in 1966. Trevor Phillips, the chairman of the Commission for Racial Equality, said in 2006: "Asquith's stand against discrimination brought to light the inadequacy of early race discrimination laws and persistent widespread discrimination faced by ethnic minorities." A plaque at the station commemorates his achievement.

Xavier was born on 18 July 1920 in Dominica, which was then a British colony. He was a member of the Windrush generation of British African-Caribbean people who migrated to the United Kingdom after the second world war to fill vacancies in service industries.

If you have an exciting story or are connected to a fascinating figure from Black History and would like to be featured on the show, you can contact me via:

Instagram: @blackhistorybuff777

Email: [email protected] 

Telegram: https://t.me/BHB777

If you've enjoyed this or any of the other episodes, you can support the show and gain exclusive extras at:

Patreon: www.patreon.com/Blackhistorybuff/posts 

Or 

Paypal: paypal.me/blackhistorybuff777 

Finally, you can reach me on all socials at the below link:

linktr.ee/black_history_buff_777 

Thank you for your time and support the encouragement I've received means the world to me.

---

Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/blackhistorybuff/message
Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/blackhistorybuff/support (https://anchor.fm/blackhistorybuff/support) Support this podcast

Support the show on Patreon


OR

Buy me a coffee


Show Notes: 


This is an interview completed with the Family members of Asquith Xavier.


The Interview took place over the phone with Ebanie Xavier and Edrina Xavier, who speak about their inspiring ancestor at length and give us an insight into what life was like in Britain in the 1960's.


Asquith Camile Xavier was a West Indian-born Briton who ended a colour bar at British Railways in London by fighting to become the first non-white train guard at Euston railway station in 1966. Trevor Phillips, the chairman of the Commission for Racial Equality, said in 2006: "Asquith's stand against discrimination brought to light the inadequacy of early race discrimination laws and persistent widespread discrimination faced by ethnic minorities." A plaque at the station commemorates his achievement.


Xavier was born on 18 July 1920 in Dominica, which was then a British colony. He was a member of the Windrush generation of British African-Caribbean people who migrated to the United Kingdom after the second world war to fill vacancies in service industries.


If you have an exciting story or are connected to a fascinating figure from Black History and would like to be featured on the show, you can contact me via:

Instagram: @blackhistorybuff777

Email: [email protected] 




Telegram: https://t.me/BHB777




If you've enjoyed this or any of the other episodes, you can support the show and gain exclusive extras at:




Patreon: www.patreon.com/Blackhistorybuff/posts 




Or 




Paypal: paypal.me/blackhistorybuff777 




Finally, you can reach me on all socials at the below link:




linktr.ee/black_history_buff_777 




Thank you for your time and support the encouragement I've received means the world to me.



---

Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/blackhistorybuff/message
Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/blackhistorybuff/support