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  1. Oct 22, 2018 · Many took relatively menial jobs and found accommodation hard to find especially when so many were made homeless and forced to live in appalling conditions in part as a result of the wartime blitz. This preceded the first Race Relations Act, when it was not yet illegal to advertise rooms for rent but ‘no blacks, no Irish’.

  2. Key learning points. What local records, including newspapers and diaries, can tell us about Notting Hill. What national records, including opinion polls and census reports, can tell about Notting Hill. Sources have different strengths and weaknesses. Common misconception.

  3. In 1976 a bloody riot erupted at Notting Hill Carnival. A recently passed law, known as the “sus” law, meant that police officers could stop and search anyone without hard evidence - if the officer suspected an individual might be planning a crime, they could be detained.

  4. Oct 13, 2018 · How did it come to be this way? Penny Churchill explains all. Notting Hill was a rural hamlet in the county of Middlesex until the westward expansion of London reached Bayswater in the early 19th century.

    • Penny Churchill
  5. Feb 4, 2013 · A brief history of Notting Hill, an area in West London, from its early beginnings in the 19th century, through to its multicultural 20th century and today.

  6. A Storied Past. In the 1800s, Notting Hill began to transform. It became a hub for brick and pottery manufacturing, which brought an influx of residents and workers. The rapid urbanization, however, led to crowded living conditions and issues of poverty.

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  8. Abstract. The impact of the 1958 Notting Hill riots tends to figure in histories of the political right, as a galvanizing force for anti-immigrant sentiment—or as radical catalyst in the transnational history of the Black Atlantic.

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