The Story of Britain's Immigrants
Britain’s story is, in so many ways, an immigrant story. 100 Immigrants Who Made Britain Great gathers one hundred short, vivid biographies that celebrate people born elsewhere who helped shape the United Kingdom’s science, sport, culture, politics, business and everyday life. From the cover promise — “Inspiring Stories of Talented People” — to the final page, this is an uplifting, fact‑rich tour of ingenuity and grit.
Introduced by playwright and commentator Bonnie Greer, the book sets the record straight: migration is not a footnote to British history — it’s part of the fabric. Then, in crisp, page‑turning entries, you’ll meet household names and hidden heroes across four centuries. The Contents span icons such as Mary Seacole, Alec Issigonis, Mo Farah, TS Eliot, Zaha Hadid, Claudia Jones, George Frideric Handel, Malala Yousafzai, Richard Rogers, Anish Kapoor, Raheem Sterling, Valerie Amos and many more.
Each profile foregrounds the essentials—birthplace, dates, and “Known for”—then brings the person’s journey to life in a concise, engaging narrative. You’ll discover the first Black professional footballer Arthur Wharton breaking barriers in the 1880s; Nobel laureates Dennis Gabor and Venkatraman Ramakrishnan transforming how we see and understand the world; entrepreneur Alan Yau changing the way Britain eats; campaigners Doreen Lawrence and Alf Dubs turning private grief into public good; and artists from Alek Wek to Lucian Freud redefining beauty and seeing.
What you’ll find inside
See More Children's / Teenage: general non-fiction
See More History & the past: general interest
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