Records of the Community Roots Trust
Scope and Contents
This collection is held offsite - please give a week's notice in order that we can retrieve it. The collection consists of records related to the running of the organisation, information on related projects, and supplementary documents.
Dates
- 1980-1988
Biographical / Historical
Community Roots Trust
The Community Roots Trust (CRT) was set up in 1977. The charity had the aim to improve the management and service delivery of community self-help projects with particular reference to the needs of ethnic minority communities. The organisation operated at a national level and had units based in London, Birmingham, Wolverhampton and High Wycombe.
The Trust offered support and resources for various community groups through a number of activities and provisions. These included day care centres, youth provision, elderly projects, single parent projects, performance and visual arts, placements, and community enterprise. Community Roots Trust formed project relationships with other relevant projects such as the National Association for the Care and Resettlement of Offenders (NACRO), and was a constituent member of Black Business in Birmingham (3Bs).
Initially the Trust was run in a voluntary capacity. Funds were promised by the Commission for Racial Equality but never released by the Home Office. Despite this dire situation CRT managed to provide an advisory service for groups, and run two sets of courses - the first for black group workers and management committees, the second geared toward the white officials who interacted with them. The organisation saw itself as pioneering race awareness training in Britain. In 1981 the Trust received funding from the Manpower Services Commission, and from the Inner City Partnership (ICP) in 1983. Initially the Trust and its activities were concentrated in Birmingham, spreading to other areas of the country in the early 1980s.
ACRP
Studies conducted by CRT in the early 1980s reflected a consensus of dissatisfaction regarding the media representation of the African-Caribbean community in the aftermath of the uprisings in 1981. In 1982 a number of community and arts groups assembled to discuss the problem and how to provide sufficiently for the needs of the Caribbean community. It was concluded by this session that a community radio station was one way to enable the essential to happen. At this point the Afro-Caribbean Radio Project (ACRP) was born.
By 1984 the ACRP had a constitution, elected officers and established meetings. It received assistance from the Greater London Council's Community Radio Project. ACRP was incorporated on 3 March 1986 and at that point was run by a council of management.
Walter Baker
Walter Baker was born in Cuba and spent many years studying and teaching zoology in Canada and England. Dr Baker worked professionally in community development in Africa, the Caribbean, Italy, the Netherlands and the United Kingdom and had an active involvement in community arts groups. While at CRT Baker acted as Community Programme Manager and Director of Community Programmes Division. He resigned from the Trust in September 1986, but remained a member of the team in a voluntary capacity.
This administrative history was compiled from information held within the collection.
Extent
5 boxes
Language of Materials
Undetermined
- Title
- Black Cultural Archives: Records of the Community Roots Trust
- Author
- Black Cultural Archives
- Date
- 21/02/2022
- Language of description
- Undetermined
- Script of description
- Code for undetermined script
Repository Details
Part of the Archives Collection Repository