Gloucestershire Heritage Hub

Lives of Colour: I-MMigrate Exhibition

Lives of Colour I-MMIGRATE exhibition is a curation of 20 images and oral histories.

Saturday 15 February to 18 April 2020, 10am - 5pm

FREE! (but all donations welcome)

Museum of Gloucester,Brunswick Road, Gloucester, GL1 1HP.

(01452) 396131 | museum@gloucester.gov.uk | www.museumofgloucester.co.uk

These are stories of black and minority ethnic communities from the Windrush generation in Gloucester and African diaspora in Cheltenham of their experience of moving and living in their new home land. They chose to travel from different countries to come, rebuild and seek a better life in the UK.

The year 2018 marked 70 years since the ship MV Empire Windrush arrived at Tilbury Docks, Essex, on 22 June 1948. It brought people from Jamaica, Trinidad, and other Caribbean Islands to help rebuild the UK after the war (ons.gov.uk 2019). Today, those who arrived to live in the UK between 1948 to 1971 have been labelled as the Windrush generation. People have continued to migrate to the UK from the Commonwealth countries. In 1990, many African’s came to Cheltenham through the education and cultural programme a partnership with the Rendevous Society. The formation of a friendship town between Kisumu and Cheltenham Borough Council let to many from Kenya to settle in Cheltenham.

Lives of Colour a project by Nowans Community Trust charity in partnership with photojournalism students at the University of Gloucestershire have been working to curate a collection of portraits and oral histories. The project was specifically focused on the Windrush generation in Gloucester and the African diaspora in Cheltenham. This was funded by the Heritage Lottery Fund since 2018 and marks the contribution of our multicultural society.

https://www.gloucester.gov.uk/museum-of-gloucester/latest-news/lives-of-colour-i-mmigrate-exhibition/

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