New Cross house fire explained

Place:New Cross Road, New Cross, south-east, London, United Kingdom
Type:Fire
Deaths:13 (direct); 1 (suicide)

The New Cross house fire was a fire that occurred during a party at a house in New Cross, south-east London, in the early hours of Sunday, 18 January 1981. The blaze killed 13 young black people aged between 14 and 22, and one survivor killed himself two years later.[1]

No one has ever been charged in connection with the fire, which forensic science subsequently established started inside the house. Inquests into the deaths were held in 1981 and 2004. Both inquests recorded open verdicts.

In the immediate aftermath of the fire, a New Cross Massacre Action Committee (NCMAC) was set up, chaired by John La Rose, which organised a "Black People's Day of Action" on 2 March 1981, when some 20,000 people marched over a period of eight hours through London, carrying placards that bore statements including: "13 Dead, Nothing Said".

Fire

A forensic science report produced for the Metropolitan Police in 2011 ruled out a firebomb attack, finding instead that the fire had started when somebody in the house set fire to a foam-filled armchair in the front room of the property at 5:40 am on Sunday morning.[2] There had been some early complaints from neighbours about excessive noise from the party. A white Leyland Princess car was seen driving away from the fire.[3]

The party was a joint birthday celebration for Yvonne Ruddock (one of the victims of the fire) and Angela Jackson (who survived) and was held at No. 439, New Cross Road. It began on the evening of Saturday, 17 January 1981, and continued throughout the night and into the early hours of Sunday, 18 January.[4]

Victims

The victims of the fire were all young Black, Mixed Race, British people between the ages of 14 and 22.[5] They were:

Inquests

Police also ruled out the theory that a fight had taken place.[6] The inquest into the deaths of the 13 teenagers, began on 21 April 1981. The initial police suspicion was that the party had been firebombed, either as a revenge attack or in an attempt to stop the noise; there was also an alternative theory that a fight had broken out, from which the blaze emanated. The jury returned an open verdict.

In 2002, a new action in the High Court led to an order for a second inquest, which was held in 2004.[7] This second inquest also resulted in an open verdict. The coroner said that the fire was probably started deliberately by one of the guests, but as he could not be sure of this, he returned an open verdict.[8]

Aftermath

One week after the fire, on 25 January, a meeting was held at the Moonshot Club in New Cross, attended by more than one thousand people. The meeting concluded with a march to the scene of the fire and a demonstration there, which blocked New Cross Road for several hours. The New Cross Massacre Action Committee (NCMAC) was set up, chaired by John La Rose,[9] and organised weekly meetings in New Cross, which saw increasing participation as the police investigation announced that there was no evidence of arson and that the fire was believed to be accidental.

Documents and papers related to the New Cross Massacre Action Committee's campaign are held in the archives of the George Padmore Institute and can be accessed by the public.[10] The Black Power group Black Unity and Freedom Party (BUFP) published an account of what happened on the night of the fire in their journal, Black Voice.[11]

The New Cross fire, described by Darcus Howe in 2011 as "the blaze we cannot forget", is significant as a turning point in the relationship between Black Britons, the police and the media, and marks an "intergenerational alliance to expose racism, injustices and the plight of black Britons".[12]

Black People's Day of Action

The Action Committee organised a "Black People's Day of Action" on 2 March, when 20,000 people marched over a period of eight hours from Fordham Park to Hyde Park carrying placards that bore statements including: "Thirteen Dead, Nothing Said", "No Police Cover-Up" and "Blood Aga Run If Justice Na Come".[13] One slogan read: "Dame Jill Knight Set The Fire Alight!";[14] an apparent reference to a controversial speech by Dame Jill Knight, a right-wing member of the ruling Conservative Party, which was widely interpreted as condoning or even encouraging "direct action" against noisy parties.[15] [16]

Tribune described the march as "the largest mass movement for racial justice on British soil at the time", but also noted that "journalists stationed in the offices of Fleet Street chanted monkey noises at the protestors down below."[17]

Memorials

On 14 January 2011, an event called "Remembering the New Cross Fire 30 Years On" was held at the Albany Theatre in Deptford. The event was hosted by Kwame Kwei-Armah and was an evening of spoken word, film, discussion and Lovers rock music. It featured contributions from Alex Pascall, Gus John, filmmaker Menelik Shabazz, novelist Courttia Newland and musicians Janet Kay and Carroll Thompson. Many of the victims' families and the survivors attended the event.[18] [19]

St. Andrew's Church in Brockley has a strong connection with the victims, as many of them attended the youth club there. In October 2002, Lewisham council installed a special stained-glass window at the church in their memory.[20] [21] On 16 January 2011, a memorial service was held there, with speakers including George Francis, chair of the New Cross Fire Parents' Committee, Lewisham Council leader Steve Bullock and Joan Ruddock, MP for Lewisham Deptford.[22]

The victims were also commemorated in January 2011 with a blue plaque from Nubian Jak Community Trust.[23] [24] There is a stone memorial in Fordham Park, Deptford, listing those who died; facing the stone memorial is a bench with a memorial inscription.[25] Both were installed in 2012.

There is also a memorial to the victims consisting of a park bench, plus 13 trees with a plaque at either end, on Hackney Downs in east London, and a memorial plaque on the wall of Catford Civic Hall listing the names of the "fourteen young people who died in the New Cross Fire of 18th January 1981". This was updated and refurbished in 2024.[26]

In 2017, the "13 Dead, Nothing Said"[27] exhibition was hosted at Goldsmiths College, University of London. The exhibition[28] shows photographs documenting the Black People's Day of Action, taken by Vron Ware, who had attended the march on 2 March 1981.[29]

Depiction in media

Blood Ah Go Run, a 1981 film by Menelik Shabazz, documents the response of the Black community to the fire.[30]

The deaths in the fire were commemorated or mentioned in a number of reggae songs and poems at the time, including Johnny Osbourne's "13 Dead and Nothing Said", Benjamin Zephaniah's "13 Dead", Linton Kwesi Johnson's "New Crass Massakah"[31] and UB40's "Don't Let It Pass You By". The events are referenced in The Young'uns song "These Hands" on the album Strangers, which won BBC Radio 2 Folk Awards "Best Album" 2018. Additionally, reggae producer Sir Collins, whose son Steve died in the fire, released a tribute album in memory of the victims.[32]

Rex Obano's radio play Lover's Rock (BBC Radio 3, broadcast in November 2012) is a fictional account of the events leading up to the New Cross Fire.[33] In March 2018, poet Jay Bernard's performance work investigating the fire, Surge: Side A, won the 2017 Ted Hughes Award for new poetry.[34] [35] [36]

In 2020, a BBC Radio 4 documentary entitled "From the Ashes of New Cross", an episode in the series Lights Out, was broadcast to mark the 40th anniversary of the fire.[37] [38] The New Cross fire and the protests that followed are pivotal to the 2020 Steve McQueen drama Alex Wheatle,[39] part of the filmmaker's Small Axe series for the BBC. The fire and the protests that followed were part of the Steve McQueen co-directed television documentary series Uprising shown on BBC One in July 2021.[40]

Further reading

See also

External links

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Notes and References

  1. Web site: Inquest begins into 14 victims of 1981 fire . Bowcott . Owen . 3 February 2004 . . . 8 August 2016.
  2. Web site: Report says New Cross fire was not race attack . https://ghostarchive.org/archive/20220618/https://www.independent.co.uk/news/report-says-new-cross-fire-was-not-race-attack-1077312.html . 18 June 2022 . subscription . live . Burrell . Ian . 22 October 2011 . . 28 July 2020.
  3. News: 1981: Nine die in New Cross house fire. 1981. BBC. 2018-05-26. en-GB.
  4. Web site: Alexis. Akwagyiram. Did the New Cross fire create a black British identity?. BBC News. 18 January 2011.
  5. Web site: The New Cross Fire . Black History Studies . 31 August 2021.
  6. News: Lahiri. Dee. 15 May 2001. 'I don't think I can die before I find out what happened to my son'. The Guardian.
  7. News: Judd. Terri. 3 February 2004. 23 years on, new inquest opens into black youths killed in fire. The Independent. https://ghostarchive.org/archive/20220618/https://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/crime/23-years-on-new-inquest-opens-into-black-youths-killed-in-fire-5354285.html . 18 June 2022 . subscription . live.
  8. Web site: Pallister. David. David Pallister. 7 May 2004. Coroner repeats open verdict on New Cross Fire 7 May 2004. 12 July 2021. The Guardian.
  9. https://www.georgepadmoreinstitute.org/collection/new-cross-massacre-campaign "New Cross Massacre Campaign"
  10. Web site: Johnson. Linton Kwesi. 26 August 2011. Preface to New Cross Massacre Story published by New Beacon Books. 16 October 2020. LKJ Records – Linton Kwesi Johnson.
  11. 1981. 1981 BUFP New Cross Massacre. Black Voice. 12. 1. woodsmokeblog.
  12. Web site: Hunter. Virgillo. 9 June 2019. The New Cross Fire (January 18, 1981). 16 November 2020. BlackPast.
  13. Web site: Nadine. White. Nadine White. Black People's Day Of Action: Inside The 1981 New Cross Fire March That Brought Britain To A Standstill. HuffPost. 2 March 2020.
  14. Web site: New Cross Fire – 13 dead and nothing said!. 20 January 2001 . I Rise . May 22, 2022.
  15. News: Darcus. Howe. New Cross: the blaze we cannot forget. The Guardian. 17 January 2011.
  16. Web site: Kurt. Barling. Kurt Barling. New Cross fire - a turning point? Barling's London. BBC. 18 January 2011.
  17. Web site: Adam. Almeida. '13 Dead, Nothing Said': The New Cross Fire at 40. Tribune. 18 January 2021.
  18. Muir, Hugh (11 January 2011), "Hideously diverse Britain: Memories of the New Cross tragedy never fade", The Guardian.
  19. http://www.thealbany.org.uk/event_detail/602/Events/Remembering-the-New-Cross-Fire "Remembering the New Cross Fire"
  20. Web site: New Cross fire victims memorial. News Shopper. 8 October 2002. 25 July 2021.
  21. Web site: New Cross Fire Memorial Window at St. Andrew's Church, Brockley, London SE4 - detail. Nicole. Hopweed. Axis. 2002. 25 July 2021.
  22. Web site: New Cross fire: Memorial service and commemorative plaque unveiling. Brockley Central. 15 January 2011. 25 July 2021.
  23. http://www.waymarking.com/waymarks/WMMZQ7_New_Cross_Fire_New_Cross_Road_London_UK "New Cross Fire - New Cross Road, London, UK"
  24. Web site: Memorial plaque for New Cross fire victims unveiled. BBC News. 18 January 2011.
  25. http://transpont.blogspot.com/2014/02/new-cross-fire-memorial-in-fordham-park.html "New Cross Fire Memorial in Fordham Park"
  26. Web site: 2024-03-16 . Memorial space to New Cross fire victims unveiled . 2024-07-04 . jamaica-gleaner.com . en.
  27. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ypfcqyj-FiM "13 Dead, Nothing Said" exhibition at Goldsmiths
  28. https://www.gold.ac.uk/calendar/?id=10585 "13 Dead, Nothing Said" | 16 May 2017 – 27 May 2017" – Exhibition notes
  29. Web site: Photographs uncover 1981 New Cross march for racial equality. East London Lines. Victoria. Lancaster. 18 March 2017. 16 November 2020.
  30. Web site: Blood Ah Go Run: New Cross Fire 1981 Documentary. Menelik. Shabazz. YouTube.
  31. Web site: Linton Kwesi Johnson - New Crass Massahkah. https://ghostarchive.org/varchive/youtube/20211221/FUMYAqAlAXA . 2021-12-21 . live. YouTube.
  32. Web site: Sir Collins - New Cross Fire Page One . .
  33. Web site: Lover's Rock, Drama on 3 - BBC Radio 3. BBC. 11 November 2012.
  34. News: Jay Bernard wins Ted Hughes new poetry award. . 28 March 2018. BBC News Online. BBC. 8 April 2018 .
  35. News: Jay Bernard's 'personal and brave' poetry wins Ted Hughes award . Lea . Richard . 28 March 2018. The Guardian . 8 April 2018 .
  36. Web site: British writer launches poetry show based on 'New Cross Massacre' which killed 13 Blacks. Black Star News. Colin. Benjamin. 8 June 2019. 18 January 2021.
  37. Web site: From the Ashes of New Cross. Lights Out. BBC Radio 4. 26 October 2020.
  38. Web site: Remembering the New Cross house fire. Anna. Leszkiewicz. New Statesman. 4 November 2020. 25 July 2021.
  39. Haynes. Suyin. 11 December 2020. Alex Wheatle on the Life Story That Inspired Steve McQueen's Latest Small Axe Film. TIME.
  40. Web site: Kanter. Jake. 10 May 2021. Steve McQueen To Co-Direct BBC Race Relations Documentary Series 'Uprising'. Deadline Hollywood.
  41. Web site: 30 years after the New Cross fire: challenging racism today. Gus. John. Socialist Worker. 6 December 2011.