A NEW musical based on the life of Walter Tull, a pioneering black footballer and army officer, has several local dates, beginning with Exeter’s Barnfield Theatre on 17th and 18th February, followed by the Redgrave at Bristol, Dorchester and Poole as part of a national tour.
Commissioned by Show Racism the Red Card, the show is part of a national campaign to address a century-old injustice that has denied Britain’s first “Black British” army officer the award of the Military Cross for which he was recommended during the First World War.
Our Little Hour tells the inspirational story of Walter Tull, the first black footballer to play at the highest level of the domestic game in the UK. He went on to achieve another historic breakthrough as the first man of his heritage to be commissioned as an officer in the British Army. His appointment in 1917 came despite an official ruling made just three years before that all British army officers should be of “pure European descent”.
Leon Newman, who plays Tull, says the play is not only an artistic celebration of Walter Tull’s life: “It is also part of an active mission to persuade the British government to honour the award of the Military Cross for which Walter was recommended following his courage and leadership during a mission which took place on January 1st 1918 when he led a party of 26 men as part of a raid across the Piave River in Northern Italy.”
Walter Tull’s party had to shield the rest of the battalion involved in the raid and provide cover as they crossed multiple streams and advanced on enemy lines. The raid was a complete success and Walter returned with all 26 of his men safe and unharmed. As a consequence he received a citation for “gallantry and coolness” under fire from Major-General Sydney Lawford, Commander of the 41st Division of the British Army.
For some inexplicable reason the award has never been made. Playwright Dougie Blaxland has placed Tull’s role in the raid across the Piave River at the very centre of the drama. He argues that “the failure to honour Walter Tull with the award he so clearly deserved is made all the more disgraceful by the fact that he was killed just three months, later fighting in Northern France.”
Director Amanda Horlock described Our Little Hour as “a celebration of the life of an extraordinary man whose pioneering spirit continues to inspire the campaign for justice and equality. This production honours the memory of one of the most significant figures in British sporting and military history.”
Paul Kearns, who is director of operations at Show Racism the Red Card, believes that the production “tells a really important story which will help to reinforce the work that we are doing to combat racism by engaging new audiences in a celebration of Walter Tull’s pioneering contribution to British society.”
To date more than 3000 people have signed up in support of the campaign. But in the words of Dougie Blaxland: “We still have a long way to go to reach the 10,000 signatures needed for a formal response from the government, but we hope audiences will be moved to support us when they have heard the great man’s extraordinary story”.
More details of the campaign to honour Walter Tull can be found via the following link:
https://www.change.org/p/honour-walter-tull-by-awarding-him-the-military-cross-and-by-erecting-a-statue-in-london
Our Little Hour is at the Barnfield Theatre, Exeter, on 17th and 18th February, the Redgrave Theatre at Bristol on 10th March, Poole Lighthouse on 11th March and Dorchester Arts at the Corn Exchange on 12th March.