1981 Toxteth riots

The Toxteth riots of July 1981 were a civil disturbance in Toxteth, inner-city Liverpool, which arose in part from long-standing tensions between the local police and the black community. They followed the Brixton riots earlier that year.

Background

The Merseyside police force had, at the time, a poor reputation within the black community for stopping and searching young black men in the area, under the "sus" laws, and the perceived heavy-handed arrest of Leroy Alphonse Cooper on Friday 3 July,[1][2] watched by an angry crowd, led to a disturbance in which three policemen were injured. The existing tensions between police and people had already been noticed by local magistrate, Councillor and Chair of the Merseyside Police Committee, Margaret Simey, who was frequently critical of the hardline tactics used by the then Chief Constable Kenneth Oxford. She said of the rioters "they would be apathetic fools ... if they didn't protest,[3] although she was unprepared for the personal criticism that followed.[3]

With the economy in recession, unemployment in Britain was at a 50-year high in 1981, and Toxteth had one of the highest unemployment rates in the country.

Events

Over the weekend that followed, disturbance erupted into full-scale rioting, with pitched battles between police and youths in which petrol bombs and paving stones were thrown. During the violence, milk floats were set on fire and directed at police lines. Rioters were also observed using scaffolding poles to charge police lines. The Merseyside Police had issued its officers with long protective shields but these proved inadequate in protecting officers from missile attacks and in particular the effects of petrol bombs. The overwhelming majority of officers were not trained either in using the shields or in public order tactics. The sole offensive tactic available to officers, the baton charge, proved increasingly ineffective in driving back the attacking crowds of rioters.

At 02:15 hours on Monday 6 July Merseyside police officers fired between 25–30 CS gas grenades for the first time in the UK outside Northern Ireland. The gas succeeded in dispersing the crowds. In all, the rioting lasted nine days during which 468 police officers were injured, 500 people were arrested, and at least 70 buildings were damaged so severely by fire that they had to be demolished. Around 100 cars were destroyed, and there was extensive looting of shops. Later estimates suggested the numbers of injured police officers and destroyed buildings were at least double those of the official figures.[4]

Such was the scale of the rioting in Toxteth that police reinforcements were drafted in from forces across England including Greater Manchester Police, Lancashire, Cumbria, Birmingham and even Devon to try to control the unrest.[5]

A second wave of rioting began on 27 July 1981 and continued into the early hours of 28 July, with police once again being attacked with missiles and a number of cars being set alight. 26 officers were injured.[6] However, on this occasion the Merseyside Police responded by driving vans and land rovers at high speed into the crowds quickly dispersing them. This tactic had been developed as a riot control technique in Northern Ireland by the Royal Ulster Constabulary and had been employed with success in quelling the Moss Side riots by the Greater Manchester Police. A local man David Moore died after being struck by a police vehicle trying to clear crowds.

Because it was seen to involve mainly black youths (similar to riots around the same time in Brixton, Handsworth, and those in 1980 in Bristol), the Toxteth upheaval was generally reported as a "race riot", but there[7] were also reports of frustrated white youths travelling in from other areas of Liverpool to fight alongside Toxteth residents against the police.

One facility looted in the riots was a sports club called the Racquet Club,[8] which was opened in 1877 on Upper Parliament Street, when Toxteth was an upper-middle-class area. The area's character had changed over the years and it had declined as wealthier residents moved to newer areas and the older houses were bought by residents on lower incomes or by landlords who rented them out to tenants.

When the riot started, the clubhouse included 3 squash courts and 12 bedrooms. During the riot, on the morning of 6 July 1981, the clubhouse and all of its facilities and records was burnt and destroyed, and it did not reopen until 20 May 1985, in another building.[9]

Dozens of senior citizens were evacuated from the Princes Park Hospital during the riots.[10][11]

Aftermath

The subsequent Scarman Report (although primarily directed at the Brixton Riot of 1981) recognised that the riots did represent the result of social problems, such as poverty and deprivation. The Government responded by sending Michael Heseltine, as "Minister for Merseyside" to set up the Merseyside Task Force and launch a series of initiatives, including the Liverpool international garden festival and the Mersey Basin Campaign.

1985 riots

21 August 1985: "50 youths attack cops with spikes torn from railings and bricks in Toxteth in the early hours. Roof of a patrol car is pierced. This is a relatively common occurrence in Toxteth, but since '81, all mini-riots not connected with the miners strike (or the NGA dispute at Warrington) have been subject to a press blackout. Talking of such things in the media becomes a way of making them seem a lot less common than they are making spectators think that when the media doesn't mention such things they're clearly not happening."[12]

1 October 1985 10 people (including three police officers) were injured in a second riot in Toxteth on 1 October 1985, after gangs stormed the district's streets and stoned and burnt cars in response to the arrest of four local black men in connection with a stabbing. The Merseyside police Operational Support Division was deployed into the area to restore order and were later criticised by community leaders and the Roman Catholic Archbishop of Liverpool, Derek Warlock for their "over zealous and provocative tactics" which included the drumming of batons on riot shields.[13]

Toxteth Riots in popular culture

[14]

Further reading

See also

References

  1. "Leroy Cooper, Artist and photographer". Where I Live – Liverpool. BBC. Retrieved 27 June 2012.
  2. Waddington, Marc. "Leroy Cooper: The Toxteth Riots were a wake-up call and did some good". Liverpool Echo. Retrieved 27 June 2012.
  3. 1 2 Clarke, Raymond (29 July 2004). "Guardian Obituary". The Guardian. London. Retrieved 19 January 2009.
  4. Toxteth riots remembered BBC
  5. "Toxteth riots remembered". BBC News. 4 July 2001.
  6. https://news.google.com/newspapers?id=C6orAAAAIBAJ&sjid=K_0FAAAAIBAJ&pg=5637,5410829&dq=toxteth+car&hl=en
  7. Charles, Marie; Boyle, Bill (April 2011). "Tightening the Shackles: The Continued Invisibility of Liverpool's British African Caribbean Teachers". Journal of Black Studies. 42 (3): 427–435. doi:10.1177/0021934710376937.
  8. "our history – Racquet Club | Racquet Club". Ainscoughs.co.uk.
  9. "Welcome to The Racquet Club Hotel and Ziba Restaurant". Retrieved 1 April 2015.
  10. "The Emergency Evacuation of a Geriatrics Hospital in Toxteth". Ageing.oxfordjournals.org. 2 March 2014.
  11. "Rebel Violence vs. Hierarchical Violence: A Chronology of Anti-State Violence on the UK Mainland July 1985 - May 1986, p.2" (PDF). 17 May 1986. Retrieved 2015-04-01.
  12. "1985: Riots erupt in Toxteth and Peckham". BBC News. 1 October 1985.
  13. "역사는 드라마다! CNTV" (PDF) (in Korean). Cntv.co.kr.
  14. "Billy Bold". NZ On Screen. 1 October 2015.

External links

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