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Paul Stephenson OBE (6 May 1937 – 2 November 2024) was a British community worker, activist and long-time campaigner for civil rights for the British African-Caribbean community in Bristol, England.
Owen Henry had met Paul Stephenson, whose father was from West Africa, and who had been to college. The group decided that the articulate Stephenson would be their spokesman. [6] Stephenson set up a test case to prove the colour bar existed by arranging an interview with the bus company for Guy Bailey, a young warehouseman and Boys' Brigade ...
Paul Stephenson (civil rights campaigner) (1937-2024), British civil rights campaigner Paul Stephenson (police officer) (born 1953), Metropolitan Police Commissioner, 2009–2011 Paul Stephenson (rugby league) (born 1983), Australian rugby league footballer
Mr Stephenson helped to rally thousands of people for a boycott in 1963 against the Bristol Omnibus Company.
Following the promotion of Sir Paul Stephenson to Commissioner, Godwin served as Acting Deputy Commissioner from January 2009 until he was sworn in on 16 July 2009. [6] He then spent a brief period as Britain's most senior police officer as Acting Commissioner from July 2011 until the post was permanently filled by Bernard Hogan-Howe, a former ...
History portal; Pennsylvania portal ... Paul B. Moses; Roger W. Moss Jr. Bruce Mowday; Edgar Munhall; ... This page was last edited on 27 October 2022, at 06:42 (UTC).
Stephenson partnered with Arizona State University's Center for Science and the Imagination [4] which now administers the project. In September 2014, the project's first book, Hieroglyph: Stories and Visions for a Better Future, edited by Ed Finn and Kathryn Cramer was published by William Morrow . [ 5 ]
In 2017, Stephenson was part of the team, with Philip Mead, that discovered the only known period image of General George Washington's Revolutionary War tent in the field. [8] In June 2023, Stephenson came under scrutiny for the Museum of the American Revolution's decision to hold space for a Moms for Liberty event. Thirty-nine of the museum's ...