A tribute to a man that served

Ahead of #WindrushDay celebrations later this week, we remember Allan Charles Wilmot (1925 – 2021)

SO PROUD: Allan Wilmot was always at the forefront of events to honour the West Indian war effort (Pic: Getty Images)

ALLAN WILMOT volunteered first for the Royal Navy in 1941 when there was a call for volunteer servicemen from Jamaica. 

He saw an advertisement in the Jamaica Gleaner newspaper when he was sixteen and a half years old stating that the British government needed recruits for the Royal Navy. Allan applied, passed the test and was accepted. 

His service on HMS Hauken, in the Caribbean theatre of war, had its dangers, which came mainly from German submarines in the area. 

They often sank British and allied tankers as well as cargo boats. For instance, on May 25, 1942, the SS Empire Beatrice, an unescorted and unarmed cargo ship, was sunk by a torpedo fired by a German U Boat (or submarine).

At the time, Allan was among the team that rescued nine survivors from a raft and took them to Kingston, Jamaica. 

PIONEERS: (L-R) Former Windrush passengers and members of the RAF Donald Clarke, George Mason, Sam King MBE and the late Allan Wilmot in the Imperial War Museum in 2008 in London, England. (Pic: Cate Gillon/Getty Images)

However, he felt his career was not progressing fast enough. At the same time, the British government began to recruit Jamaican volunteers for the Royal Air Force ground crew, and advertisements were published in the Jamaica Gleaner in late 1943. He applied to the RAF and was accepted. 

After WWII ended, the British were quick to demob thousands of West Indian servicemen and women. Allan was among them, and having returned to Jamaica in 1946, he felt that it was not the place in which he would settle down, and so he returned to London. 

Life in London in the Winter of 1947 was not pleasant, but he survived. It soon dawned on him that he could employ his talent in London’s show business, and he did so with a degree of success with The Southlanders, a male singing quartet that dominated the entertainment scene from the 1950s to the early 1970s.

The Southlanders shared the stage with most of Britain’s popular performers, including Jimmy Young, Morecambe & Wise, Vera Lynne, Andrews Sisters, Marty Wilde, Max Bygraves, Tommy Trinder, Petula Clark, Tommy Cooper, Tony Hancock, Bruce Forsyth, Helen Shapiro, David Frost, Norman Vaughan, Shirley Bassey, Tommy Steele, Cliff Richard and the Shadows, to name but a few. 

LEGEND: Former Windrush passenger and member of the RAF Allan Wilmot, stands infront of a photograph of himself as a child in the new exhibition ‘From War To Windrush’ at the Imperial War Museum. Pic: Cate Gillon/Getty Images)

Also, The Southlanders’ hit records, like: I am a Mole and I live in a Hole, were produced at Abbey Road Studios by George Martin whose productions, in the 1960s, made the Beatles’ music national and international favourites. 

After 24 years in the business and with stiff competition from such young talented groups, he realised his days as an entertainer were numbered.

He obtained a job in the Post Office Telecommunications Department in 1974, and he retired from the service in 1990. During the two decades that followed, he played an important role in the establishment of the West Indian Ex-Services Association (now the West Indian Association of Service Personnel). 

During the 1980s they had obtained a permanent meeting place at 161, Clapham Manor Street, London. 

The aim was to ensure that their contributions and service would not be forgotten by present and future generations of British people. Their members provide social services voluntarily. 

He has held positions of responsibility (including being President) in the Association over the years. From 1998, he has been a member of the Memorial Gate Council, which is chaired by Baroness Flather, JP DL FRSA. 

The Memorial Gates, a war memorial, located at the Hyde Park Corner end of Constitution Hill in London, commemorate the armed forces of the British Empire from Africa, the Caribbean and the five regions of the Indian subcontinent that served in WWI and WWII. The memorial was officially inaugurated in 2002 by Her Royal Majesty The Queen.

He published his memoirs in 2015 and believes that the book, Now You Know’, will help others to read about the contribution he and others have made to Britain from 1941 to date. 

Allan continued to serve communities in the UK, and on 16 April 2019 he received the ‘Certificate of Recognition’ from the Mayor of Lambeth, Councillor Christopher Wellbelove, for his voluntary work in the borough.

Allan passed away unexpectedly but peacefully on 20 October 2021.

Contribution by The Windrush Foundation

Comments Form

1 Comment

  1. | Chaka Artwell

    In the early 1980s, whilst living in Bath England, and unable to secure a job-not even as a dishwasher at a popular Hotel because of my African-skin.
    I organised a conference to celebrate the contribution of Caribbean-heritage people to the Second European Banking and Trade War against Germany.

    Part of my motivation for organising the conference was to remind my Caucasian-heritage friends and family members of the huge contribution of Caribbean-heritage people to England during the war.

    I invited the West Indian Ex-service Association as the guest of honour.
    I cannot forget, in walked a white-haired retired member of the RAF, Mr Donald Clarke, Mr Sam King MBE.
    They were pleased to share their wartime experience with us. We felt unwanted and rejected as Caribbean-heritage youth by the English public generally.

    Mr Donald Clarke looked at the pictures of Caribbean soldiers that covered the walls said, “I knew that man, he was a gunner in a Lancaster Bomber but he never returned from a sortie over Berlin.”
    The one question that I, and other asked repeatedly was why he decided to offer his life in defence of England and Her Majesty?
    Most of us were unemployed and could not even secure employment washing dishes because of the colour of our African-skin.
    We felt rejected and unwanted by the English Institutions, and could imagine offering our lives for a society that had rejected us.
    In their gentle Caribbean tones these men said, they had been taught that England was the Mother Country and they were pleased to be loyal servant of Her Majesty.

    We pointed out the fact that Caribbean soldiers at that time were still banned from honouring their fallen soldiers at the annual cenotaph celebration in November.

    Mr Donald Clarke said he was campaigning to the Royal Family and the Royal British Legion and Cabinet Minister to reverse this ban against non-Caucasian people honouring their soldiers at the cenotaph.

    Shortly after this we saw Mr Clarke and his West Indian Ex-Servicemen Colleagues honouring at the Cenotaph our Caribbean ancestors who offered their life for Her Majesty and the English people during England’s Banking and Trade war against Germany in 1939.
    Mr Donald Clarke, Mr George Mason, Mr Sam King MBE and Mr Allan Willmott of the West Indian Ex-Servicemen Association represented the noble 90,000 Caribbean men and women who voluntarily offered their life in defence of this English nation; a nation that has treated them and us so shabbily and dishonourably because of our African skin and features.
    The English Establishment’s treatment of the West Indian Ex-Servicemen Association would embarrass Lucifer.

    How many Caucasian-English men and women even know that 90,000 Caribbean-heritage men and women offered their livres in defence of the English people and the Monarch?

    Reply

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