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Population Migration
For a timeline
of events c.
1763
- 1980 - Click here
For a list of
sources for further study available at
Archives & Local Studies - Click
here
For questions
to use in the classroom - Click
here
This section concentrates
on the following aspects of population migration:
18th century - George
Africanus
19th century - Irish
World War I (1914 - 1918)
- Belgians
World War II (1939 - 1945)
- Other Europeans
Post war (1945 - ) -
Indian Sub Continent
Post war (1945 - )
- African - Caribbean
Migration to the United
Kingdom is a not a recent phenomenon. People have been coming to
Britain from all over the world for hundreds if not thousands of
years.
Most of the documents
in the collections of Wolverhampton Archives and Local Studies relate
to the 19th and 20th centuries. What information there is from the
18th and earlier centuries tends to record events of the local indigenous
population. There is much more work to be done on researching into
the records to see if they contain references to people who originated
from outside Britain. This section which looks at migration
in Wolverhampton since the 18th century, is the result of initial
research into the archives. It examines who came, and what happened
to them in their new surroundings. It looks at individuals and groups
from Africa, Europe, the Caribbean, and Asia.
Further information may
also be obtained from the Channel 4 Black History map www.channel4.com/history/microsites/B/blackhistorymap/
as well as the CASBAH project www.casbah.ac.uk
(a pilot web site for research resources relating to Caribbean Studies
and the history of Black and Asian peoples in the UK).
©
Copyright. Wolverhampton City Council, 2002
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