WW2 Brown Babies: A little known part of British 20th Century history BBC World Service podcast
I just wanted to be accepted for who I was : The story of the children born from relationships between British women and AfricanAmerican soldiers during World War Two. Subscribe The US first began sending troops to the UK in 1942 to help in the war effort. It is estimated that at least two million American servicemen passed through the UK during World War Two, and tens of thousands of them were black. The AfricanAmerican GIs stationed in Britain were forced by the American military to abide by the racial segregation laws that applied in the deep south of the US. But that didn t stop relationships developing between British women and the black soldiers, some of whom went on to have children. The AfricanAmerican press called these children Brown Babies. Babs GibsonWard was one those children. She spoke to Farhana Haider about the stigma of growing up as mixedrace child in postwar Britain. Historian Lucy Bland
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