- 1985 Brixton riot
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The Brixton riot of 1985 started on 28 September in Lambeth in South London.[citation needed]
It was the second major riot that the area had witnessed in the space of four years.
It was sparked by the shooting of Dorothy 'Cherry' Groce by police, while they sought her son Michael Groce in relation to a suspected firearms offence - they believed Michael Groce was hiding in his mother's home. It is reported that the police did not give the required warning (which alerts residents to the fact that a raid is about to proceed), and Mrs. Groce was in bed when the police began their search. Michael Groce was not there at the time of the shooting, and Mrs. Groce was paralysed below the waist by the police bullet.
Mrs. Groce had migrated to Britain from Jamaica in her youth, and the incident was immediately perceived by many local residents as further evidence of what was widely regarded as institutional racism in the Metropolitan Police.
As word of the shooting spread through the community, rumours persisted that Mrs. Groce had in fact been killed in the shooting, and a large group of protesters gathered at the local police station chanting anti-police slogans and demanding disciplinary action against the officers involved. However, hostility between the largely black crowd and the largely white police force quickly escalated into a series of street battles.
The police lost control of the area for approximately 48 hours during which several shops were looted and fires started, leaving at least one building and dozens of cars destroyed. One photo-journalist, David Hodge, died a few days later as a result of head injuries he received from a gang of looters whom he was trying to photograph and dozens of arrests were made.
Contents
Aftermath
The police officer who shot Mrs. Groce, Inspector Douglas Lovelock, was prosecuted but eventually acquitted of malicious wounding. Mrs. Groce received compensation from the Metropolitan Police.
One week later, another serious conflict, sparked by similar circumstances, broke out between the Metropolitan Police and mainly black residents of North London's Tottenham district in what became known as the Broadwater Farm riot.
Cultural references
- Stephen Frears' 1987 film Sammy and Rosie Get Laid opens with an incident very similar to the Groce shooting.
See also
- Brixton riot (1981)
- Brixton riot (1995)
- Broadwater Farm riot
- Eleanor Bumpurs
- The Guns of Brixton
- Urban riots
External links
- BBC News Online - 'My mum got caught in the crossfire'
- BBC News Online - 1985: Riots in Brixton after police shooting
- BBC News Online - 1987: Officer cleared in Groce shooting case
- Guardian Archives: Riots in Brixton After Police Shooting
Categories:- 1985 in England
- 1985 in London
- 1985 riots
- Black British history
- History of Lambeth
- Metropolitan Police
- Race riots in England
- Riots in London
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