Talk:Americans in the United Kingdom

(Redirected from Talk:American migration to Britain)
Latest comment: 3 years ago by Rklahn in topic Ethnicity

Name change

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Like COP663 i'm noit a huge fan of the original name 'American-British' as I've never really seen or heard it used. Not sure that 'American Migration to Britain' covers it either - the article is actually about people with American descent, rather than a population movement per se. How about 'Britons with American Ancestory'. Lets discuss it a little before making a move. Indisciplined (talk) 19:26, 6 January 2008 (UTC)Reply

"Britons" are people who are actually British. Is Madonna a "Briton" if she owns a house here? The article says "London is home to many Americans, mostly workers in the City of London. This population is anecdotally thought to be fairly mobile, coming for a few years or just perhaps a few months before departing again." Are such people "Britons with American ancestry?" Of course not. If you want to call this article "Britons with American ancestry" you'll need to delete a lot of unrelated material. The title "American migration to Britain" covers everything this article is about: immigrants, the children of immigrants, migrant workers, and temporary residents. So it depends what you think the article should be about. Cop 663 (talk) 20:12, 6 January 2008 (UTC)Reply
Hmmm. And therein might lay the bigger problem. Lots of these articles were created in a very short space of time without a particularly clear theme. This is one of them. Americans aren't an Ethnic group, like say Greek Britons. Whether there is an 'American community' in Britain is questionable. Not all the people cited are US citizens or US born. Some people listed were born to British parents who happened to be living in the states at the time. But the article isn't about a 'migration'. What is the article for? As more and more information has been added, it seems the article's focus has become a lot more blurred. (BTW, doesn't Madonna probably holds UK citizenship by right of her British husband?)Indisciplined (talk) 22:23, 7 January 2008 (UTC)Reply
Well, quite. If we don't know what the article is for, it makes sense to have a title as broad as possible. There is an "American community" in Britain, but it's mostly students and temporary workers hanging out together, nothing like the long-standing Greek-British community. Using the word 'migration' doesn't mean a migration, it just means the act of migration in general (Madonna has migrated to Britain). But maybe something even broader like "Americans in Britain" would be better. Incidentally, I don't think citizenship is automatically conferred by marriage. Cop 663 (talk) 00:29, 8 January 2008 (UTC)Reply
'Americans in Britain'. Perfect! (Phew! The Wikipedia concept does work after all). Lets go with that. (And ditto 'Canadians in Britain') Indisciplined (talk) 23:56, 9 January 2008 (UTC)Reply
Of course, if Winston Churchill is going to stay, the title will have to be interpreted loosely as including the 'effect' of Americans in Britain (i.e. the existence of jowly prime ministers of part-American ancestry on our native soil). But I don't suppose that's a big problem. Cop 663 (talk) 02:59, 10 January 2008 (UTC)Reply

Ethnicity

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Erm....what exactly is the point of stating the ethnicity of the notable people. It's crept in somewhere, and I can't see why. Indisciplined (talk) 12:06, 17 February 2008 (UTC)Reply

Even worse..... What is the point of categorizing notable people by ethnicity? And the notable people section mixes people with history about the ethnic group in the UK. It's all very bad, and I would have started cleaning it up, time permitting, but it does not. Rklahn (talk) 18:27, 8 August 2021 (UTC)Reply

Just to say...

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I moved the Union Flag to infront of the USA flag as it should come first. —Preceding unsigned comment added by 79.69.200.23 (talk) 19:22, 23 May 2008 (UTC)Reply

1980S

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I am going over the Life in the UK test, and it is saying that one of the largest groups to enter the UK during the 1980s were Americans. Why the 1980s? Did something happen during that time period that I don't know about? —Preceding unsigned comment added by 87.74.179.78 (talk) 21:36, 1 March 2009 (UTC)Reply

Sub-groups

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Recent edits have added a sub-groups section to the article. This whole section is problematic for a number of reasons. Firstly, a substantial proportion of the material added is not about Americans in the UK but Americans in general. An example of this is "Native Americans are the oldest ethnic group in the United States and represent roughly 1.4% of the population". What does this have to do with the UK? Secondly, much of the material is unsourced. Furthermore, even where sources are provided, they often don't back up the statements being made. So, for example, we read that "In 2001, 306 people in the UK reported their birthplace as Puerto Rico, and many more British born people had ancestral roots on the island, some Puerto Rican born people with a strong 'American' identity could have alternatively stated their birthplace as the United States". The source provided supports the 306 figure, but nothing about many more people having Puerto Rican ancestry or about people stating their birthplace as the US. I propose that all of the unsourced and/or irrelevant material should be removed. Cordless Larry (talk) 16:19, 3 June 2009 (UTC)Reply

I thought it was important to include the subgroups such as Puerto Ricans etc as typically speaking they are part of the USA but have their own culture, laws etc. The census gave data on the people born in the US, Puerto Rico, Guam and American Samoa. this is all sourced, and there are obviously more British born people with ancestry in these islands (or are you saying these people haven't reproduced), feel free to remove the 'many' if that is what you have an issue with. Also for example people from Northern Ireland could identify as British or Irish, whilst people from Puerto Rico could identify as Puerto Rican or American, so it is likely that some people would have stated the US as their place of birth, because as I stated before this is technically still correct. If you believe that the unsourced or irrelevant information should be removed, tell me exactly what you want to remove and do so. Some of the information was added to give a brief background of the ethnic group (i.e. Asian Americans) so that they are not completely ruled out or left un-mentioned. America is a diverse nation and this article should reflect it. Even some unsourced information like the large number of English Americans in the UK due to family etc is obvious and could easily be sourced. Stevvvv4444 (talk) 16:32, 3 June 2009 (UTC)Reply
I am not claiming that the information is not true and I fully understand the status of Puerto Ricans, but truth is not the criterion for inclusion on Wikipedia, verifiability is. I quote:
The threshold for inclusion in Wikipedia is verifiability, not truth—that is, whether readers are able to check that material added to Wikipedia has already been published by a reliable source, not whether we think it is true. Editors should provide a reliable source for quotations and for any material that is challenged or likely to be challenged, or the material may be removed.
If material can easily be sourced as you claim, then please provide a source. Cordless Larry (talk) 16:36, 3 June 2009 (UTC)Reply
I know you follow absolutely every move I make on wikipedia, and fair enough but there is considerably worse issues on other articles that exist to this day because no one has bothered to change it. With this article please could you just put citation marks on what you think needs sourcing, and not the obvious things. I don't understand why completely obvious things cannot be left on. VV Brown is a example that Puerto Rican immigrants to the UK have reproduced. Stevvvv4444 (talk) 16:42, 3 June 2009 (UTC)Reply
I don't follow every move you make. I have all of the migration to the UK-type articles on my watchlist because it's a topic that interests me, and I frequently find you adding unsourced material to them. By the way, please see Wikipedia:Other stuff exists regarding your statement that "there is considerably worse issues on other articles that exist to this day because no one has bothered to change it". I will add citation templates as requested, but my complaint wasn't only due to lack of sources and I will also remove material that is not relevant to the article. Cordless Larry (talk) 16:48, 3 June 2009 (UTC)Reply
This article IS NOT about the United States, let's get the absolutely clear. It's about people in the United Kingdom of American origins. Any details about the status or proportion of any ethnic group in the United States is therefore, completely off-topic. I have removed them, along with the unsupported sweeping statements that have been made in this exceptionally poorly-written section. This is just not up to Wikipedia standards. My favourite bit was where being born in American Somoa or Guam was taken as being people of Pacific Islander descent. It, of course, ONLY indicates that they were born in American Somoa or Guam. They could be of any ethnic origin. Frankly I think we can dump this entire section as pointless. It smacks of an obsession with race irrelevant to the article. Maybe a couple of sentances on people born in Puerto Rico, American Somoa, Guam etc as they are sepearate legal entities, but let us never make the mistake of assuming that this in any way indicates an ethnic origin. Indisciplined (talk) 23:54, 5 October 2009 (UTC)Reply

Merger proposal

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The following discussion is closed. Please do not modify it. Subsequent comments should be made in a new section. A summary of the conclusions reached follows.
The result was merge into Americans in the United Kingdom. Cordless Larry (talk) 20:05, 20 October 2009 (UTC)Reply

I propose that we merge African Americans in the United Kingdom into this article. Both articles are quite short and the material at African Americans in the United Kingdom could easily be used to bulk up the material under the sub-groups heading here. We'd then have a more complete article rather than two less complete ones. Cordless Larry (talk) 23:38, 3 October 2009 (UTC)Reply

The discussion above is closed. Please do not modify it. Subsequent comments should be made on the appropriate discussion page. No further edits should be made to this discussion.

Notable people section

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I've removed the notable people section because it was unsourced. If anyone wants to reinstate it, with reliable sources as references, I've pasted it below as it appeared prior to removal. Cordless Larry (talk) 17:40, 31 December 2010 (UTC)Reply

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Name Details
John Barrowman actor, born in Glasgow, raised in Illinois, now works in the UK
Bill Bryson writer, born in the US, lives in the UK
Barbara Cassani former chief-executive of the airline Go, and first leader of London's bid for the 2012 Summer Olympics
Sandra Dickinson actress, born in Washington DC
T. S. Eliot Poet, born in St. Louis, Missouri, became British citizen
Rich Fulcher Comedian, co-star of The Mighty Boosh and Snuff Box
Sir John Paul Getty businessman, born in California and later moved to the UK
Terry Gilliam Film director, animator and member of the Monty Python comedy troupe. UK based since the late 1960s, now a British citizen.
Bonnie Greer playwright and critic, born and raised in Chicago, lives in UK
Alvin Hall financial expert
Rich Hall comedian, writer
Jimi Hendrix musician, spent much of career in London
Tim Howard A professional soccer player playing in England for Everton Football Club
Reginald D. Hunter comedian
Chrissie Hynde musician, founder of The Pretenders
Henry James American novelist, became a British citizen
Stanley Kubrick Film director and producer; lived in the UK from 1962 till his death in 1999.
Richard Lester Film director born in Pennsylvania; based in UK since early 1950s. Directed first two Beatles films, The Three Musketeers, and 2nd and 3rd Superman films.
Madonna singer, songwriter, actress, has a house in the UK
Linda McCartney American photographer, married Paul McCartney and lived in the UK
Patrick McGoohan actor, born in New York City but raised in Ireland and the UK
Sienna Miller model and actress; born in the US but raised in the UK
Patrick Ness An author born and raised in Virginia, US, now is a British citizen and lives in London
Gwyneth Paltrow American actress, divides her time between UK and US
Sylvia Plath Poet, novelist, and short story writer; born in the US, then lived in the UK
Suzi Quatro singer, guitarist, radio personality
James Rubin news presenter & commentator, former aide to Bill Clinton
Wallis Simpson
(later Duchess of Windsor)
American wife of HRH The Duke of Windsor (formerly Edward VIII)
Sinitta US born actress and singer living and working in the UK
David Soul Actor, became British citizen
Kevin Spacey Actor, theatre director living and working in the UK
Gwen Stefani Singer, songwriter; married to a Briton and divide time between the UK and the US
Zoë Wanamaker Born in the US, raised in the UK, now a British citizen
Ruby Wax American comedienne, writer, and television personality, lives and works in the UK
Beth Ditto American singer who lives in London

Britons with American ancestry

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Name Occupation Link
Damon Buffini entrepreneur, businessman (American father)
Agatha Christie novelist (American father, Frederick Alvah Miller)
Winston Churchill politician, statesman (American mother, Jennie Churchill)
Mark Getty entrepreneur, businessman (American father, Sir John Paul Getty)
Elizabeth Jagger model (American mother, Jerry Hall)
Oona King former MP (American father)
Harold Macmillan politician, statesman (American mother, Helen (Nellie) Artie Tarleton Belles)
Stella McCartney fashion designer (American mother, Linda McCartney)
Mika singer, songwriter (American father, although born in Lebanon, he was raised in London)
Sienna Miller actress, model (American father, although born in United States, she was raised in London)
Brian Molko musician (American father, although born in Belgium, he was raised in Scotland)
Will Self novelist, columnist (American mother)
Elizabeth Taylor actress (American parents)
Louis Theroux television presenter, writer (American father, although born in Singapore, he was raised in London)

Remove Benedict Arnold Image and remove political biases

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While my national prejudices may coincide my grievance, they alone don't dictate my reasoning and justification behind this complaint. I shall present Four reasons why Benedict Arnold's picture should be removed from this article's page:

1) Benedict Arnold's notoriety is rooted in American history, not British history. His contributions to Great Britain, along with his effect on British history is miniscule and overshadowed by various other contemporary American loyalists and immigrants.

2) His notoriety is rooted in treasonous actions. To put this man in the same category as the American men and women who worked with Great Britain to mutually strengthen both nations is inappropriate. This figure

3) Considering Benedict Arnold's relatively unimportant role in British affairs, history and culture; this man's presence in the articles Collage is both unnecessary and, to many, intentionally offensive. If his presence on this page were to be eliminated, the national neutrality of this article would be better preserved.


4) It goes without saying that Wikipedia must remain politically and ideologically neutral but the presence, or in other cases absence, of specific important historical figures in nationality image collages suggests naked political bias and soft historical revisionism. The fact that Adolf Hitler is absent from the page on Austrians; Mussolini is ignored on the Italian page; Tsar Nicolas the Second is absent on the the Russian collage while Vladimir Lenin and multiple minor figures are present; and the fact that Joseph Stalin is present on the Georgian page's collage despite his human rights record being worse than all mentioned absent individuals COMBINDED suggests that political and national biases are clearly violating Wikipedia's NPOV. If ethics is used as justification to proscribe powerful individuals from presence in nationality collages, then why are ethically controversial and morally maleficent individuals such as Stalin and Lenin included while equally important leaders are excluded despite having cleaner (albeit still dirty) human rights records and only fundamentally differ in political and ideological ways from those included in national collages?

As a political and ideological centrist, I see this phenomenon of selective exclusion/inclusion is worrying and immature. I rely on this site more than most and my trust has been violated by certain obviously politically motivated content decisions. Benedict Arnold does not deserve to be pictured in this article. When it comes to these national collages, Tsar Nicolas the 2nd belongs on the Russians page; Adolf Hitler belongs on the Austrians page; Benito Mussolini belongs on the Italians page; and Benedict Arnold belongs on no national collages unless they're used as visual aid within pages on traitors.

Fix these biases asap. Senior editors have no logical, religious, or historical excuse not to fix these unnecessary violations of Wikipedia's NPOV; violations which hurt the credibility of this site and raise questions regarding content accuracy.

Thank you for your time — Preceding unsigned comment added by 97.112.91.98 (talkcontribs) 15:33, 16 November 2013‎ (UTC)Reply

Brits of Native American decent

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Ironic, isn't it...o_O Ismael Perez (talk) 03:08, 23 February 2014 (UTC)Reply

Article Is Cultural Appropriation

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Tim Dalton is British, born in the UK with an English father and an American mother, having lived in the UK all his life. You could argue that he could be added to the 'British-Americans' article but he is not 'American'. I think we need to remove anyone who was born in the UK, who was on holiday or working in the UK from America temporaririly and move them to the correct article otherwise editors will complain that its nothing more than US-centric identity appropriation, regards. Twobellst@lk 10:02, 17 September 2015 (UTC) Edit. I have gone ahead and removed 'born in the UK of American descent' as many listed are British nationals aka 'British-Americans' who may have one parent of American descent, not 'Americans' which implies citizenship, otherwise we'll have to add 60% of the US population to the 'British people' article. Twobellst@lk 10:13, 17 September 2015 (UTC)Reply

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