5. From the Ground Up
After the 1980s Handsworth uprisings in Birmingham, Shades of Black used allotments to regrow their community. How does this legacy live on today?
Gardens and green spaces might not be what springs to mind when you think of the industrial heartlands of Birmingham. But the city has long been the allotment capital of the UK, and these spaces are crucial to the rhythms of inner-city life.
In the aftermath of the 1980s Handsworth uprisings, it was allotments Eunice McGhie-Belgrave used to regrow her community. In this episode, we speak to Eunice, who arrived with the Windrush generation and formed the community group Shades of Black. She reflects on racism, resistance and the importance of documenting the untold stories of green spaces.
Digging deeper into the archives with sociologist Lisa Palmer, we uncover the ideological battle that raged in Birmingham over who and what allotments were for. The legacy of Shades of Black lives on. Today, people are creating community gardens with arts organisation Grand Union in a rapidly changing landscape, as the arrival of high-speed railway HS2 looms.
Writer, producer and presenter: May Robson
Supervising Producer: Emily Esson
Sound Design: Steve Urquhart
Theme Music: Contours
Executive Producer: Elizabeth Clark
大象传媒 Scotland Production for 大象传媒 Sounds Audio Lab
Commissioning Editor: Khaliq Meer
More episodes
Previous
Podcast
-
Now Here
Stories of people coming together to fight neighbourhood decline and neglect.