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Biography: source only specifies that he had to be a rate payer, which is true; at this time women were only *implicitly* barred from voting due to property requirement, but the occassional widow etc did vote
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London was one of "no more than 14% of people who were entitled to vote at the time", due to being a rate payer.<ref name="G first black" /> He was also one of approximately 10,000 black people living in London during the [[Georgian era]], out of approximately 700,000 Londoners.<ref name="Times Cursive" /> In the November 1749, he and his eligible neighbours from the [[Hungerford Market]] were among the 9,465 men who voted in [[by-election]] for the [[Westminster (UK Parliament constituency)|Westminster constituency]]; he was recorded as "John Loudon [''[[sic]]'']" in that year's Poll Book voting for [[Granville Leveson-Gower, 1st Marquess of Stafford|Viscount Trentham]].<ref name="HoP" />
London was one of "no more than 14% of people who were entitled to vote at the time", due to being a rate payer.<ref name="G first black" /> He was also one of approximately 10,000 black people living in London during the [[Georgian era]], out of approximately 700,000 Londoners.<ref name="Times Cursive" /> In the November 1749, he and his eligible neighbours from the [[Hungerford Market]] were among the 9,465 men who voted in [[by-election]] for the [[Westminster (UK Parliament constituency)|Westminster constituency]]; he was recorded as "John Loudon [''[[sic]]'']" in that year's Poll Book voting for [[Granville Leveson-Gower, 1st Marquess of Stafford|Viscount Trentham]].<ref name="HoP" />


As Trentham had won by a majority of just 157 votes, the second place candidate, [[Vandeput baronets|Sir George Vandeput, 2nd Baronet]] called for an ''[[ex post facto]]'' scrutiny of the votes for disqualified voters.<ref name="HoP" /> London's vote was one of those challenged at the hearing in 1750;<ref name="G first black" /> voting was restricted to British, male ratepayers, over the age of 21.<ref name="HoP" /> London had only recently moved into his property on One Tun Alley, but the parish's "overseer of the poor", Mr Rybot, was able to testify that he had paid his rates in September 1749, thereby qualifying for the by-election.<ref name="HoP" /><ref name="Times Cursive" /> Rybot, however, also described London as a "[[Blackamoor]]" (i.e. a Black or dark-skinned person) which led to the further questioned as to where London was born to ascertain if he was British or not; London, having attended the hearing in person, was able to answer that he was born in [[Bury St Edmunds]], Suffolk, England, thereby satisfying the requirement to be British.<ref name="G first black" /> His vote stood, and his ethnicity was therefore recorded for posterity.<ref name="HoP" />
As Trentham had won by a majority of just 157 votes, the second place candidate, [[Vandeput baronets|Sir George Vandeput, 2nd Baronet]] called for an ''[[ex post facto]]'' scrutiny of the votes for disqualified voters.<ref name="HoP" /> London's vote was one of those challenged at the hearing in 1750;<ref name="G first black" /> voting was restricted to British, male ratepayers, over the age of 21.<ref name="HoP" /> London had only recently moved into his property on One Tun Alley, but the parish's "overseer of the poor", Mr Rybot, was able to testify that he had paid his rates in September 1749, thereby qualifying for the by-election.<ref name="HoP" /><ref name="Times Cursive" /> Rybot, however, also described London as a "[[Blackamoor]]" (i.e. a Black or dark-skinned person) which led to further questioning as to where London was born to ascertain if he was British or not; London, having attended the hearing in person, was able to answer that he was born in [[Bury St Edmunds]], Suffolk, England, thereby satisfying the requirement to be British.<ref name="G first black" /> His vote stood, and his ethnicity was therefore recorded for posterity.<ref name="HoP" />


===Later life===
===Later life===

Revision as of 19:36, 4 November 2024

John London (died c. 1770) was an English victualler or publican. In 2024, it was discovered via documents relating to the Westminster by-election of November 1749 that he was the earliest recorded black person to vote in Great Britain.[1] This was 25 years before than the previously earliest known vote cast by Ignatius Sancho.[2][3]

Biography

Earliest known black voter

The Viscount Trentham, whom London voted for in 1749

London was one of "no more than 14% of people who were entitled to vote at the time", due to being a rate payer.[2] He was also one of approximately 10,000 black people living in London during the Georgian era, out of approximately 700,000 Londoners.[3] In the November 1749, he and his eligible neighbours from the Hungerford Market were among the 9,465 men who voted in by-election for the Westminster constituency; he was recorded as "John Loudon [sic]" in that year's Poll Book voting for Viscount Trentham.[1]

As Trentham had won by a majority of just 157 votes, the second place candidate, Sir George Vandeput, 2nd Baronet called for an ex post facto scrutiny of the votes for disqualified voters.[1] London's vote was one of those challenged at the hearing in 1750;[2] voting was restricted to British, male ratepayers, over the age of 21.[1] London had only recently moved into his property on One Tun Alley, but the parish's "overseer of the poor", Mr Rybot, was able to testify that he had paid his rates in September 1749, thereby qualifying for the by-election.[1][3] Rybot, however, also described London as a "Blackamoor" (i.e. a Black or dark-skinned person) which led to further questioning as to where London was born to ascertain if he was British or not; London, having attended the hearing in person, was able to answer that he was born in Bury St Edmunds, Suffolk, England, thereby satisfying the requirement to be British.[2] His vote stood, and his ethnicity was therefore recorded for posterity.[1]

Later life

London continued to be recorded in the parish's rate book until 1751.[1] His victualling business, likely an alehouse, was called "The Blackamoor's Head".[1][2] He was then missing from records until spring 1770 when, as a pauper, he was admitted to the St Martin in the Fields workhouse.[1] Having suffered with a fever, he subsequently died in the workhouse.[2][3]

References

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i Dr Gillian Williamson (21 October 2024). "John London: Britain's First Black Voter?". historyofparliament.com. The History of Parliament. Retrieved 24 October 2024.
  2. ^ a b c d e f Osuh, Chris (24 October 2024). "Britain's first black voter was in 1749, 25 years earlier than thought, and ran a pub". The Guardian. Retrieved 24 October 2024.
  3. ^ a b c d Blackburn, Jack (24 October 2024). "Cursive clue proves that first black Briton voted in 1749". The Times. p. 17.