Black and British: A Forgotten History is a four-part BBC Television documentary series, written and presented by David Olusoga and first broadcast in November 2016,[1][2] and a book of the same title written by Olusoga to accompany the series.[3][4][5]
It documents the history of Black people in Britain and its colonies, starting with those who arrived as part of the Roman occupation, and relates that history to modern Black British identity.[1]
As part of each programme, commemorative plaques – twenty in all – honouring the people discussed, were erected.[6]
The series' music was composed by Segun Akinola, who in 2019 received a nomination at the Screen Nation Awards in the "Rising Star" category for his work on this and two other programmes.[7]
Each episode had several main topics, and saw the erection of commemorative plaques, as listed in parentheses below, five of which were overseas.
1: First Encounters
Beachy Head Lady, purported to be the earliest Black Briton (plaque at a cricket pavilion in East Dean; now removed as DNA analysis has determined the remains origins to have been from "southern Europe – most likely Cyprus")[10][11]
Cabaret singer Leslie Hutchinson (at the nightclub Quaglino's in London, where he regularly performed; unveiled by two of his children, Gabrielle and her half-brother Chris)
Black GIs stationed at Pontypool, Wales, during World War II (bilingual plaque in English and Welsh, at Trinity Methodist Church, Abersychan; unveiled by Anne, a "Brown Baby" with a Black GI father)
Olusoga excavates our shared heritage with humanity and verve. One of his main messages is that remembrance is a political act. And in a present as tumultuous as ours, facing a future as uncertain as it gets, we need to look to the past more than ever. History never seemed so prescient.
In a four-starred review for The Daily Telegraph, Jasper Rees said "This is a likeable series. So why has it taken so long to be made?"[2]
Book
Colin Grant wrote in The Guardian: "Olusoga's insightful 'forgotten history' amounts to much more than a text to accompany a TV series. Yet despite its many attributes, is it too temperate?"[3]
In the New Statesman, David Dabydeen said that the book "addresses one of the greatest silences in British historiography".[4]
Aamna Mohdin interviewed Olusoga for The Guardian after the second edition of the book was published. Olusoga said that hostility to his work had been growing "to the point where some of the statements being made are so easily refutable, so verifiably and unquestionably false, that you have to presume that the people writing them know that. And that must lead you to another assumption, which is that they know that this is not true, but they have decided that these national myths are so important to them and their political projects, or their sense of who they are, that they don't really care about the historical truths behind them.... They have been able to convince people that their own history, being explored by their own historians and being investigated by their own children and grandchildren, is a threat to them."[9]