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Amy Barbour-James

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Amy Barbour-James

Amy Barbour-James (25 January 1906 – 4 May 1988) was a British-born Guyanese Black civil rights activist and civil servant.

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Amy Barbour-James
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Amy Barbour-James in the mid-1930s[1]
Born
Caroline Amy Aileen Barbour-James

(1906-01-25)25 January 1906
Died4 May 1988(1988-05-04) (aged 82)
Harrow, London
Known forCivil rights activist
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Early life and family

Caroline Amy Aileen Barbour-James was born in Acton, London,[2] on 25 January 1906[3] to Guyanese parents, John and Caroline Barbour-James,[4] one of their eight children.[1] The Barbour-James family were a middle-class family who lived in west London in the early 20th century. Her father, John Barbour-James, worked as administrator in West Africa[2] and had access to a large network of contacts throughout the continent. In 1918, he founded the African Patriotic Intelligence Bureau.

Activism

Inspired by her father, Barbour-James became active in the civil rights movements and was involved in the African Progress Union and the League of Coloured Peoples, becoming secretary of the latter organisation in 1942.

In 2011, a short drama based on Barbour-James's life was broadcast by BBC Radio 4.[5]

Death

Barbour-James died in Harrow on 4 May 1988, aged 82.

References

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