Sam Morris (anticolonialist)

Samson "Sam" Uriah Morris (1908–June 1976) was a Grenada-born educationalist, anti-colonialist and civil rights activist who came to London in 1939, becoming deputy chair for the Commission for Racial Equality in the 1970s.[1]

Biography

Morris was born in St Andrew's, Grenada, in 1908 and received part of his education in Barbados at Codrington College. In 1939, he sailed to the United Kingdom, and served in the British Army for two and a half years. He subsequently became active in the League of Coloured Peoples — which was formed by Harold Moody and was concerned with racial equality and civil rights in Britain and elsewhere in the world — becoming general secretary of the organisation in 1945. Morris participated in several BBC programmes, including Calling the West Indies and Caribbean Voices.

He was a Liaison Officer to Learie Constantine in the Welfare Department of the Colonial Office during the Second World War. In 1953 Morris left Britain for Africa and worked on Radio Ghana before becoming a private secretary and press officer to Kwame Nkrumah in Ghana for eight years, returning to the UK in 1967. He was then the Development Officer for the Midlands with the National Committee for Commonwealth Immigrants.[2] He later became Assistant High Commissioner for Grenada and deputy chair for the Commission for Racial Equality. He lived in Hammersmith and was an active member of the Hammersmith and Fulham Council for Racial Equality. He died in June 1976 in Fulham, London.

Selected writings

Legacy

There is a Sam Uriah Morris Society that had a centre in East London with an exhibition about black history.[3]

References

  1. Petra Pryke, "YT? Youth Training in the visual arts: The Sam Morris Project", in Patricia Potts, Felicity Armstrong and Mary Masterton (eds), Equality and Diversity in Education vol. 1, Learning, Teaching and Managing in Schools. Routledge, 1995, p. 153.
  2. Pendennis. "Who's Who in Race", The Observer, London, 3 March 1968.
  3. Sam Uriah Morris Society. Hackney Council website. Accessed 31 March 2014.

External links

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