
Shortly after midnight on 17 May 1959, Kelso Cochrane, a 32-year-old Antiguan carpenter walking home from Paddington General Hospital through Notting Hill, was set upon at the junction of Golborne Road and Southam Street by a gang of white youths and stabbed through the heart with a stiletto knife.
He died an hour later.
Oswald Mosley
His murder came less than a year after the 1958 Notting Hill race riots, in a district that was a stronghold of Oswald Mosley’s Union Movement. Police denied a racial motive, claiming it was a robbery despite Cochrane having no money.
No one was ever charged. His case remains officially unsolved: the Metropolitan Police sealed the files until 2054. More than 1,200 people attended his funeral procession.
His death is considered the first racially motivated murder of a Black person in post-war Britain. And the killer’s identity was an open secret on the far right.
Face of hate
Searchlight’s Steve Silver wrote a major piece on the case in 2006, coinciding with a BBC documentary. Claudia Jones, who organised the first London Carnival partly in response to his death, described it as killing in ‘the face of hate from white racists’.
You can read Steve Silver’s article here:





