LEN JOHNSON was born on October 22 1902 in Clayton, Manchester, to an Irish mother and a father from Sierra Leone.
In a boxing career spanning a decade between 1923 and 1933, at middleweight he fought an astounding 134 bouts, winning 95, losing 12 and drawing 7.
Yet despite this remarkable record, he was prevented from fighting for a British title by the British Boxing Board of Control under the board’s then racist rule 24, which mandated that only fighters born from white British parents could do so.
On the 121st anniversary of communist Claudia Jones’s birth ROGER McKENZIE looks at political events that shaped her, and those she helped shape
PAUL FOLEY welcomes a dramatic account of the men and women involved in the pivotal moment of the 5th Pan African Congress



