The city fears its discussion on slave owner Edward Colston is being dragged into a divisive national ‘culture war’

A history commission set up by Bristol’s mayor after the toppling of the Edward Colston statue has urged ministers to stay out of debates on the future of dozens of city streets named after slave traders.

Prof Tim Cole, the commission’s chair, said a new audit by Bristol city council had identified a handful of streets named after Colston, whose company enslaved at least 80,000 Africans, and dozens more streets named after other slave traders. “It should be up to people who live on those streets to decide – it is an uber-local issue,” he said. “If a bunch of people who live on Colston Avenue want to change the name of their street they should be empowered to do so.”

Continue reading…

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

You May Also Like

Tom Brady, the Super Bowl and the aging athlete’s mind-body problem

Like the Buccaneers quarterback, I played well into my 40s. But eventually…

Dutch prosecutors seize land owned by Vladimir Putin’s former son-in-law

Exclusive: Jorrit Faassen, previously married to Putin’s elder daughter, is said to…

Euros’ big hitters win but Netherlands go Dutch – Women’s Football Weekly

Faye Carruthers, Karen Carney, Alex Ibaceta and Nick Ames reflect on the…

Vintage Grand National enough to make Willie Mullins lose his cool | Sean Ingle

Trainer adds I Am Maximus’s success at Aintree to his Gold Cup…