Following the end of the
Second World War, and as a result of the losses of lives during the war, the British government began to encourage mass immigration from the various territories of the
British Empire, and later the
Commonwealth, to fill shortages in the labour market. The
British Nationality Act 1948 gave Citizenship of the UK and its colonies to all people living in the British Empire, and the right of entry and settlement in the UK. Many West Indians were attracted by better prospects in what was often referred to as the mother country. As a result, Afro-Caribbean immigration to Britain increased. By the 1950s, a certain gang of white working-class teens known as "
Teddy boys" was beginning to display hostility towards black families in the area. The situation was exploited and inflamed by groups such as
Oswald Mosley's
Union Movement and other far-right groups such as the
White Defence League, which urged "Keep Britain White" (aka "KBW") using leaflets and wall graffiti. There was an increase in violent attacks on black people throughout the summer. On 24 August 1958 a group of ten English youths committed serious assaults on six West Indian men in four incidents. At 5.40 a.m., the youths' car was spotted by two police officers who pursued them into the
White City estate. Just prior to the Notting Hill riots, there was
racial unrest in St Ann's in
Nottingham which began on 23 August, and continued intermittently for two weeks. ==Majbritt Morrison==