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the river windrush is about 4 miles long!
HMS Windrush was a British frigate which was transferred to the Free French Navy in 1944 who renamed her Decouverte.
There were around 492 passengers on the HMT Empire Windrush ship that arrived in Britain in June 1948 from Jamaica, marking the beginning of large-scale migration from the Caribbean to the UK.
John Agard met a 13 year old boy, who was the youngest boy on the first trip on the Windrush ship. He got inspired, and then wrote the poem about the adventures trip on the Windrush.
The Windrush, officially known as the MV Empire Windrush, traveled from Jamaica to the United Kingdom in 1948. It carried one of the first large groups of Caribbean migrants to Britain, marking a significant moment in post-war immigration. The ship's arrival in Tilbury Docks, Essex, facilitated the migration of many individuals seeking better opportunities in the UK. This event became emblematic of the broader Windrush Generation, which had a lasting impact on British society and culture.
The people from the SS Windrush were West Indians who came to England in 1948 to have a better life and came to get jobs.
The SS Empire Windrush was a ship which was used by a lot of migrants from the Caribbean when they were going to England in the late 1940s.
HMS Windrush is a ship which was built in Scotland in 1943. It was one of the few WWII ships which still survive to this present day.
The Windrush was the name of the ship that brought the first group of organised immigrants from the West indies to Great Britain.
Titanic was much larger than the s.s empire windrush and carried 200 more than the s.s empire windrush but the similarities are the were used as war ships for WWII and both sank unfortunately
1954 by a bomb
The Windrush, which was officially named MV Empire Windrush, took about two weeks to sail from Jamaica to Britain. It departed from Jamaica on May 24, 1948, and arrived at Tilbury Docks in Essex on June 22, 1948. The journey covered approximately 8,000 miles, making it a significant voyage for many Caribbean migrants who were seeking new opportunities in the UK.