South Wales Echo

Betty campbell statue is voted the best in uk

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CARDIFF’S Betty Campbell monument has been voted the best in the UK by the public at a prestigiou­s statue and sculpture awards.

The monument was announced as the winner of the public vote at the Public Statues and Sculpture Associatio­n (PSSA) Marsh Awards 2022 for Excellence in Public Sculpture.

The monument was unveiled in Cardiff city centre on September 29 last year. It was created following a campaign by Monumental Welsh Women, a not-for-profit organisati­on dedicated to recognisin­g the contributi­on of women to the history and life of Wales.

The subject of the four-metre high sculpture – which stands in front of the HMRC building in Central Square – is Wales’ first black headteache­r, Betty Campbell, known for paving the way to equality and diversity in the capital and beyond.

She was born Rachel Elizabeth Campbell in 1934 in Cardiff’s docklands area to a Jamaican father and Welsh Barbadian mother and grew up in Tiger Bay.

She worked as a teacher in diverse areas of the city – first in Llanrumney, then at her local Mount Stuart Primary School. She was appointed headteache­r at Mount Stuart Primary School in Butetown, where she taught for 28 years.

During her time at the school she became inspired by the US Civil Rights movement and taught her students about slavery and black history. Later on, she was among those who created Black History Month in the UK.

She was on the race relations board between 1972 and 1976, a member of the Broadcasti­ng Council for Wales from 1980 to 1984, a member of the Home Office’s race advisory committee and served in many education roles.

She was also a member of the preparatio­n committee for the opening of the National Assembly in 1998 and a former councillor for the Butetown ward.

In 2003, Mrs Campbell was made an honorary fellow of UWIC – now Cardiff Metropolit­an University – for services to education and community life for which she was also awarded an MBE in the Queen’s Birthday Honours list.

She died in 2017, aged 82. Remarkably, her monument was the first statue of a real, named Welsh woman in Wales.

It is the first of five statues of named Welsh women being erected by Monumental Welsh Women in five different locations around Wales in five years. Internatio­nally renowned figurative sculptor Eve Shepherd was given the task of depicting her.

For the first time in the history of the annual PSSA Marsh Awards, the public were given a chance to vote for their favourite work. Nine public works of sculpture from across the UK made the shortlist. The Betty Campbell Monument was the only work nominated from Wales.

Following the public vote win, sculptor Eve Shepherd said: “I am truly honoured that The Betty Campbell Monument has won the public vote. Who, in my opinion, is better qualified to judge sculptures made for public spaces, than the public themselves!

“A public sculpture depicting not only women, but the black community has been long overdue and I’m proud of the Monumental Welsh Women’s Committee, Betty Campbell’s family, the people of Cardiff and the black community for entrusting me to represent this sculpture and an incredible woman. Thank you to all who took the time out of their busy lives to vote for The Betty Campbell Monument.”

 ?? MARK LEWIS ?? The Betty Campbell statue, Cardiff
MARK LEWIS The Betty Campbell statue, Cardiff

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