Claudia
Jones
- Community
leader
BIRTH
DATE
1915
BIRTH PLACE
Belmont, Trinidad
OCCUPATION
Community
leader and journalistrse
KNOWN FOR
The West Indian Gazette and
the Notting Hill Carnival
DIED
1964
Claudia Jones, feminist, black nationalist, political activist,
community leader, communist and journalist, has been described as the
mother of the Notting Hill carnival. The diversity of her political
affiliations clearly illustrate her multifaceted approach to the struggle
for equal rights in the 20th century.
Born in Belmont, Port-of-Spain, Trinidad in 1915 and
at the age of eight moved to Harlem, New York with her parents and three
sisters. Her education was cut short by Tuberculosis and the damage
to her lungs as well as severe heart disease plagued Claudia for the
rest of her life.
For over 30 years she lived in New York and during this
time became an active member of the American Communist party, an organisation
in which her journalistic and community leadership skills were maximised.
By 1948 she had become the editor of Negro Affairs for the party's paper
the Daily Worker and had evolved into an accomplished speaker on human
and civil rights.
In 1955 she was deported from the US and given asylum
in England, where she spent her remaining years working with London's
African-Caribbean community. She founded and edited The West Indian
Gazette which despite financial problems remained crucial in her fight
for equal opportunities for black people.
Claudia
Jones lasting legacy is undoubtedly the Notting Hill carnival, which
she helped launch in 1959 as an annual showcase for Caribbean talent.
These early celebrations were held in halls and were epitomised by the
slogan, 'A people's art is the genesis of their freedom'.
Claudia
continued working on the newspaper until her death in 1964