Main House Efficiency

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Main House Efficiency RATE INFORMATION Welcome and Thank You for your inquiry reguarding rental of the Tortola House. The Tortola House is a spacious Mountainside home, A/C equipped, with two Masterbedrooms, fully equipped kitchen, a large living area and a sprawling veranda offering spectacular views of Little Apple Bay. If you like to surf, dive or just relax on the beach (only 300 feet away), then you will fall in love with this romatic Caribbean setting. Plenty of restaurants and local entertainment are available within short walking distance. The Tortola House also offers a fully equipped efficiency just below the Main House. We built the Tortola House for those people that enjoy life to the fullest. Make yourself at home in our corner of Paradise and you will have a vacation you will never forget. SEASON DEC. 15 - APN 45, POST-SEASON APRIL 46 - JUNE 15 OFF-SEASON JUNEl6-OCT. 14, PRE-SEASONOCT.15-DEC. 14 MAIN HOUSE SEASON 4 PEOPLE $1,785* PRE/POST-SEASON $1400" OFF-SEASON $980* EFFICIENCY SEASON $525* PRE/POST-SEASON $455* OFF-SEASON $385* THEREARE 2 ROLL AWAY BEDS AT NO ADDITIONAL CHAGRES AVAILABLE IN THE MAIN HOUSE. We will need a written confirmation of your rental date and a deposit of $500.00 to guarantee the date requested as reservations do fill up fast, If we do not receive your confirmation form, and you deposit 30 days before arrival, you will be notified that your dates have been cancelled, and we cannot guarantee we will have space available for you. All rates are weekly and subject to an additional 7% Accomodation Tax. e Please note: YOU WILL WED A PASSPORT TO RE-ENTER THE UNITED STATES UPON YOUR RETURN/ AFTER DECEMBER lST2005. THERE WILL BE NO EXCEPTION VIA THE UNITED STATES GONVERNMENT. Thank you ROBERT J. McDONALD RECOMMENDED mSTAUUNTSAND LOCATIONS Long Bay Beach Resort 495-4252 * Sebastian's on the Beach 495-4212 * Sugar Mill Hotel 495-4355 * Eclipse (Parham Town) 495-1646 Mrs. Scatliffe's Restaurant 495-4556 Pusser's Landing ( West End ) 495-4554 * Skyworld 494-3567 The Last Resort ( East End ) 495-2520 Pusser's Pub and Outpost ( Road Town 494-2467 * Spaghetti Junction ( Road Town 494-4880 Clubhouse Restaurant (Frenchman's Cay 495-4844 B.V.I. Steak, Chop, & Pasta House (Carrot Bay) 494-5433 Round Hill Catering ( Cane Garden ) 495-9353 * C & F Restaurant ( Purcell Estate ) 494-494 1 Peg Leg Landing ( Sea Cow Bay ) 494-4895 * Jolly Roger Restaurant & Bar ( West End ) 495-4559 e Palm's Delight Snack Bar (Carrot Bay) 495-4863 Quito's Restaurant & Bar (Cane Garden) 495-4837 The Pub (Fort Burt) 494-2608 For additional details concerning these and other area restaurants consult the Welcome tourist guide and look for other guest recommendations in our Guest Book. For entertainment happenings, look for a 6ee copy of Limin' Times, available at many local businesses. GROCERY STORES Bobby's (Road Town) Downtown by circle Rite Way Food Market (Road Town) Two stores downto.wn; name brands Big Ben's (West End) Over the hill by the house; small like a 7-1 1 TAXI INFORMATION Murlise Home: 284 - 495-4619 Mobile: 284 496-8635 Freddie's Taxi Home: 284 -495-4438 Mobile: 284 496-0347 Calvin Home: 284- 499-4120 Mr. Potter Home: 284-495-2399 Mobile: 284 496-0451 HELICOPTER SERVICE Air Center ST. THOMAS 340 775-7335 800 619-0013 BEACHES Smugglers Rustic beach, worth finding, good for snorkling, calm water Long Bay Long sandy beach, rough water Apple Bay Surfing Beach, rough water Cane Garden Bay Calm water beach where sailboats harbor EMERGENCY INFO: PEEBLES HOSPITAL, Road Town 284-494-3497 VISCAR (Virgin Islands Search & Rescue) Persia Stoutt Areana Villas (284) 4945864 General Information "PLEASE NOTE Bring your passport!!! U.S. Guidelines Mandate that you cannot return to the U.S. without a passport1 Any Questions you can call The United States Government. ADVISE: Don't let your vacation get ruined. Hide your valuables, and lock up the house ... Don't be paranoid, but use common sense..... EMERGENCY Peebles Hospital, Road Town (494-3497) VISAR (Virgin Islands Search & Rescue (494-4357) TAXI Calvin Mobile 284-499-4120 Muriise Mobile:284-496-8635 Freddie's Taxi 495-4438 Mobile:284-496-0347 Mr. Potter 495-2399 Mobile:284-496-0451 FERRY It's always a good idea to call and confirm times!!! Native Son Inc. 495-4617 Smith's Ferry 495-4495 GROCERY Road Town, if you feel like driving, has better stocked stores: Riteway Food Markets Bobby's Farmer Market K Mark's Or if you want the closest convenience store: Big Ben's Superette PHONE FACTS -Tortola House phone # Main & Efficiency (284)495-4917 -Local calling is now 7 digit calling -In order to call back to the U.S. use the direct access code or 1-800-872-2881 -Cellular service in the BVI is provided by CCT Boatphone for add'l info dial 494-3825 TV OPERATION 1) Turn TV on manually 2) Turn on cable box using Pioneer remote (power button) 3) Use the remote for station changing (2-36) / -7i 1' ,, .kL' $0:~,0. .. I...r.:..,,. .,.... ., . a Mouse n house As a quiet getaway, the advarltages of Tortola are apparent as soon as you land. Extrernely mountainous, Tortola rises abruptly from a seemingly irrcandescerrt turquoise sea to fonn a l~klt,narrow ridgge cut by nurnerous sand- fi-inge bays. The northenl s11ore aciil t11e Atlantic, is draped hnearjunglelf, ldness; the Caribbean slrore to tlre south is drier but still verdant. BrigItt red and yellow hibiscus blossotn everywhere. Steep, twisti~lgroads crisscross t11e mountairrs yielding s ectacular views o seueral ~~eigiborizgisles, h~udingtlze nearby 6.S. Virgin Islands. Tlte Tortola House offers a spectacular view of Little Apple Bay. Witlr its spacious rnourrtainside location 2 rnaster bedrooms, filly equipped kitchen, /urge livirlg area and a sprawlilgveralrda. I you like to sud dive or just relax on te beach hOOj3. away,), you wiU faU in love wit11 this romantic Caribbean settin Restaurant and entertairunent is witlzin waging distance. For more information, please write: P.O. Box 6.351 * Delray Beach, El 33445 1-808-867-8652 .
Recommended publications
  • Rights in a Pandemic – Lockdowns, Rights and Lessons from HIV In
    RIGHTS IN A PANDEMIC Lockdowns, rights and lessons from HIV in the early response to COVID-19 UNAIDS | 2020 Cover photo: Supplied to UNAIDS by Twinkle Paul, Guyanese transgender activist Contents 2 Foreword 4 Abbreviations and acronyms 6 Executive summary 12 Introduction 14 Methodology 16 Setting the scene: limiting movement of people in response to COVID–19 19 COVID–19 public health orders and human rights 19 Avoid disproportionate, discriminatory or excessive use of criminal law 22 Stop discriminatory enforcement against key populations 24 Explicitly prohibit state-based violence, and hold law enforcement and security forces accountable for disproportionate responses or actions when enforcing COVID-19 response measures 25 Include reasonable exceptions to ensure legal restrictions on movement do not prevent access to food, health care, shelter or other basic needs 29 Take proactive measures to ensure people, particularly from vulnerable groups, can access HIV treatment and prevention services and meet other basic needs 37 Rapidly reduce overcrowding in detention settings and take all steps necessary to minimize COVID-19 risk, and ensure access to health and sanitation, for people deprived of liberty 39 Implement measures to prevent and address gender-based violence against women, children and lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender and intersex people during lockdowns 41 Designate and support essential workers, including community health workers and community-led service providers, journalists and lawyers 46 Ensure limitations on movement are specific, time-bound and evidence- based, and that governments adjust measures in response to new evidence and as problems arise 47 Create space for independent civil society and judicial accountability, ensuring continuity despite limitations on movement 50 Conclusion 52 References Foreword The COVID-19 crisis has upended the world.
    [Show full text]
  • Presidential Commission on the Supreme Court of the United States
    Presidential Commission on the Supreme Court of the United States Composition of the Supreme Court Tuesday, July 20, 2021 Written Statement of Marin K. Levy Professor of Law, Duke University School of Law Co-Chair Bauer, Co-Chair Rodriguez, and distinguished members of the Commission: Thank you for the opportunity to testify on the subject of Supreme Court expansion and composition. By way of background, I am a Professor of Law at the Duke University School of Law and a faculty advisor to the Bolch Judicial Institute. My research and teaching over the past twelve years have focused on judicial administration and appellate courts. It is a distinct honor and privilege to speak with you on these matters. Court expansion and other changes to the Court’s composition implicate fundamental questions about the role and operation of our nation’s highest court. These include whether expanding the Court would harm the institution’s legitimacy, whether expansion would prompt a series of expansions in the future, whether an expanded Court could function well as a single decision-making body, and whether expansion would contradict existing constitutional norms and conventions. Even if the answers to these questions were known, there is a larger background question to be answered—namely how such considerations should be weighted in assessing any proposal to change the Court’s structure. It is no easy task that the Commission has been given, and I hope that the legal community and public at large is cognizant of this. In contrast to the subject of the panel, my own testimony will be fairly circumscribed.
    [Show full text]
  • Section 5.5 Residential Relocations
    Real Estate Program Manual Chapter Five: Relocation 5.5 RESIDENTIAL RELOCATIONS This section describes general requirements for a replacement housing payment (RHP) to be made available to a person(s) displaced from a dwelling. A person is not required to relocate to the same owner or tenant occupancy status, but has other options as specified under this section. An agency will make one replacement payment for each dwelling unit, except in cases of joint occupancy of a single-family dwelling. 5.5.1 Replacement Housing Payment Eligibility Persons who meet length of occupancy requirements as an owner or tenant occupant displaced from a dwelling are eligible for a replacement housing payment (RHP) if the person occupied the dwelling for not less than 90 days immediately before the initiation of negotiations as an owner or 90 days as a tenant. A less than 90-day owner/tenant may qualify for a tenant replacement payment under hardship circumstances. These basics are necessary: • Displaced person is in occupancy when a notice of intent to acquire is issued by WisDOT, and said occupancy fulfills all requirements for a RHP. • Displaced person is in occupancy on date of initiation of negotiations for partial or total acquisition of parcel. Payment will be made to a displaced person who either rents or purchases and occupies a decent, safe and sanitary (DSS) replacement dwelling not later than one year after the later of: • Required amount is deposited with county court for Award of Damages. • Final payment is made for subject property. • Subject property is vacated. A replacement dwelling is purchased when a person: • Acquires an existing dwelling.
    [Show full text]
  • Draft Relocation Impact Statement and Last Resort Housing Plan
    Draft Relocation Impact Statement and Last Resort Housing Plan Transit Center Parking Expansion Project Prepared for The City of Manteca Submitted by Associated Right of Way Services, Inc. March 2021 City of Manteca Transit Center Parking Expansion Project Relocation Impact Statement and Last Resort Housing Plan __________________________________________________________________________________________________________ TABLE OF CONTENTS I. INTRODUCTION Project Scheduling ................................................................................................ 1 Project Assurances ............................................................................................... 2 II. ASSESSMENT OF NEEDS Occupant Characteristics ...................................................................................... 3 Special Circumstances ......................................................................................... 3 Available Housing ................................................................................................. 4 Project Cost Estimate ........................................................................................... 5 II. RELOCATION ASSISTANCE PROGRAM Definition of Terms ................................................................................................ 6 Summary of Benefits for Permanently Displaced Persons ................................... 7 A. Relocation Advisory Assistance ................................................................ 7 B. Moving Cost Assistance ...........................................................................
    [Show full text]
  • Covid-19 Crackdowns Police Abuse and the Global Pandemic
    COVID-19 CRACKDOWNS POLICE ABUSE AND THE GLOBAL PANDEMIC Amnesty International is a global movement of more than 10 million people who campaign for a world where human rights are enjoyed by all. Our vision is for every person to enjoy all the rights enshrined in the Universal Declaration of Human Rights and other international human rights standards. We are independent of any government, political ideology, economic interest or religion and are funded mainly by our membership and public donations. © Amnesty International 2020 Except where otherwise noted, content in this document is licensed under a Creative Cover photo: A police officer hangs a face mask over his gun at Toncontin Commons (attribution, non-commercial, no derivatives, international 4.0) licence. International Airport, in Tegucigalpa, Honduras, on March 12, 2020. © ORLANDO https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/legalcode SIERRA/AFP/Getty Images For more information please visit the permissions page on our website: www.amnesty.org Where material is attributed to a copyright owner other than Amnesty International this material is not subject to the Creative Commons licence. First published in 2020 by Amnesty International Ltd Peter Benenson House, 1 Easton Street London WC1X 0DW, UK Index: ACT 30/3443/2020 Original language: English amnesty.org CONTENTS 1. EXECUTIVE SUMMARY 4 METHODOLOGY 5 2. INTRODUCTION 7 3. LAWS AND POLICIES VIOLATING INTERNATIONAL HUMAN RIGHTS LAW AND STANDARDS 9 4. HUMAN RIGHTS VIOLATIONS COMMITTED BY THE POLICE 11 ARBITRARY ARRESTS AND DETENTION 11 CRACKDOWN ON CRITICISM OF PANDEMIC RESPONSE 13 UNLAWFUL USE OF FORCE 14 4.3.1 ENFORCING THE LOCKDOWN 14 4.3.2 POLICING OF PUBLIC ASSEMBLIES 16 VIOLATIONS RELATED TO SITUATIONS OF DETENTION 17 TORTURE AND OTHER ILL-TREATMENT 18 ILLEGAL EXPULSION OF REFUGEES AND MIGRANT WORKERS 19 FORCED EVICTIONS 19 5.
    [Show full text]
  • Attachment 17 Of
    Synthesis and Integrative Research Final report Adaptor of last resort? An economic perspective on the Government’s role in adaptation to climate change Leo Dobes, Frank Jotzo and Patrick Doupé Adaptor of last resort? An economic perspective on the Government’s role in adaptation to climate change Australian National University AUTHORS Leo Dobes Frank Jotzo Patrick Doupé Published by the National Climate Change Adaptation Research Facility 2013 ISBN: 978-1-925039-42-9 NCCARF Publication 71/13 Australian copyright law applies. For permission to reproduce any part of this document, please approach the authors. Please cite this report as: Dobes, L, Jotzo, F & Doupé, P 2013, Adaptor of last resort? An economic perspective on the Government’s role in adaptation to climate change, National Climate Change Adaptation Research Facility, Gold Coast, 70 pp. Acknowledgement This work was carried out with financial support from the Australian Government (Department of Climate Change and Energy Efficiency) and the National Climate Change Adaptation Research Facility. The role of NCCARF is to lead the research community in a national interdisciplinary effort to generate the information needed by decision makers in government, business and in vulnerable sectors and communities to manage the risk of climate change impacts. The authors wish in particular to thank Dr. Le Ma (Deakin University) who carried out preliminary quantitative analysis of flood risk data as a Postdoctoral Fellow at the Crawford School, ANU. A number of people and organisations generously
    [Show full text]
  • Clearinghouse Loan Certificates in the Banking Panic of 1907
    ATLANTA Liquidity Creation without a Lender f o of Last Resort: Clearinghouse Loan Certificates in the Banking Panic of 1907 Ellis W. Tallman and Jon R. Moen Working Paper 2006-23b October 2007 FEDERAL RESERVE BANK WORKING PAPER SERIES FEDERAL RESERVE BANK of ATLANTA WORKING PAPER SERIES Liquidity Creation without a Lender of Last Resort: Clearinghouse Loan Certificates in the Banking Panic of 1907 Ellis W. Tallman and Jon R. Moen Working Paper 2006-23b October 2007 Abstract: We employ a new data set comprised of disaggregate figures on clearinghouse loan certificate issues in New York City to document how the dominant national banks were crucial providers of temporary liquidity during the Panic of 1907. Clearinghouse loan certificates were essentially “bridge loans” arranged between clearinghouse members that enabled and were issued in anticipation of monetary gold imports, which took a few weeks to arrive. The large New York City national banks acted as private liquidity providers by requesting (and the New York clearinghouse issuing) a volume of clearinghouse loan certificates beyond their own immediate liquidity needs. While loan certificates were a temporary solution at best to the liquidity crisis in 1907, their issuance allowed the New York banks to serve their role as central reserve city banks in the national banking system. JEL classification: N11, N21, E42, D71 Key words: clearinghouse, financial crisis, panic, lender of last resort The authors thank Elmus Wicker for graciously sharing data on New York Clearinghouse loan certificates outstanding during late 1907 and early 1908, which he calculated from the records of the New York Clearinghouse.
    [Show full text]
  • Central Banks As Regulators and Lenders of Last Resort in an International Context: a View from Theunited Kingdom
    Central Banks as Regulators and Lenders of Last Resort in an International Context: A View from theUnited Kingdom C.W. McMahon* The implications of national sovereignty constitute a characteristic, and evolving, twentieth century problem. The nation-state, developed over previous centuries, has proved capable of horrific abuse; but at its best it has produced a legal, administrative, economic and financial framework in which its citizens have been able to prosper as never before. A natural counterpart of these developments was the emergence of at least potential conflicts with the world outside; and it has been common for people, in attempting to reconcile these conflicts or solve the problems they pose, to draw on successful domestic national experience and suggest that this should be analogically extended beyond the frontier. There have been various kinds of challenge posed this century to the competence of a single nation-state to solve its problems alone. First, po- litical conflicts with other nation-states, of which the first and most spec- tacular example was the 1914-18 war. Secondly, economic conflicts with other nation-states -- particularly virulent between the wars when many countries suffered the intended or unintended effects of other countries’ tariff regimes, exchange-rate movements and fiscal and monetary policies. Thirdly, and especially in the last two decades, there has been the drama- tic development of private institutions large enough to affect the economic sovereignty of even quite major countries -- the multinational companies and banks. It has been tempting to many people to meet these different demon- strations of the limitation of the power of the single state by trying to en- visage and bring about the development of a sovereignty over and above that of individual nations.
    [Show full text]
  • The Case for Investing in Last Resort Housing, 16 March 2017
    The case for investing in last resort housing Issues Paper No. 10, March 2017 About Melbourne Sustainable Society Institute (MSSI) Issues Papers MSSI strives to inform and stimulate public conversation about key sustainability questions facing our society. Our Issues Papers provide information and trigger discussion about these issues. Each paper encapsulates the insights of a thinker or practitioner in sustainability. While MSSI endeavours to provide reliable analysis and believes the ma- terial it presents is accurate, it will not be liable for any claim by any party acting on the information in this paper. Lead Author Ellen Witte is a Senior Associate, Director and Partner at SGS Economics and Planning, a leading planning and economics firm whose purpose is to shape policy and investment decisions to achieve sustainable places, communi- ties and economies. Ellen is a leading expert and commentator in the field of social and affordable housing. She has extensive experience in social, environmental and economic impact assessments, and financial feasibility studies. Acknowledgements This Issues Paper was authored by SGS Economics and Planning (SGS). A Project Steering Group also provided input for the study reported in the paper, and some members provided specific information for the report through personal communications, which is gratefully acknowledged. The Steering Group members were: • Prof Brendan Gleeson, Melbourne Sustainable Society Institute, University of Melbourne • Prof Carolyn Whitzman, Lead Researcher, Transforming Housing Research Network, University of Melbourne • Dr Kate Raynor, Post-Doctoral Researcher, Transforming Housing, University of Melbourne • Mike Lennon, Housing Choices Australia • Dr Heather Holst, Launch Housing • Rob McGauran, MGS Architects • Robert Pradolin, Concerned Property Developer • Dr Marcus Spiller, SGS Economics and Planning • Patrick Fensham, SGS Economics and Planning Citing this paper Please cite this paper as Witte, E.
    [Show full text]
  • The Time Has Come to Talk of Major Curtailment in the Supreme Court's Jurisdiction, 48 N.C
    NORTH CAROLINA LAW REVIEW Volume 48 | Number 1 Article 6 12-1-1969 The imeT Has Come to Talk of Major Curtailment in the Supreme Court's Jurisdiction Frank R. Strong Follow this and additional works at: http://scholarship.law.unc.edu/nclr Part of the Law Commons Recommended Citation Frank R. Strong, The Time Has Come to Talk of Major Curtailment in the Supreme Court's Jurisdiction, 48 N.C. L. Rev. 1 (1969). Available at: http://scholarship.law.unc.edu/nclr/vol48/iss1/6 This Article is brought to you for free and open access by Carolina Law Scholarship Repository. It has been accepted for inclusion in North Carolina Law Review by an authorized administrator of Carolina Law Scholarship Repository. For more information, please contact [email protected]. THE TIME HAS COME TO TALK OF MAJOR CURTAILMENT IN THE SUPREME COURT'S JURISDICTION FRANK R. STRONG* "The Time has come," the Walrus said, "To talk of many things: Of shoes-and ships-and sealing wax-Of cabbages-and kings-And why the sea is boiling hot-And whether pigs have wings." Lewis Carroll, Through the Looking-Glass By commencing with this familiar quotation the writer does not mean to concede any close likeness to his fellow mammal even though he does admit to inhabiting the murky waters of the law. Nor is he concerned with the items that were of moment to Alice's friend. Yet the quote is apt, for in the writer's considered opinion the time has definitely come for serious talk of major curtailment in the jurisdiction of the Supreme Court of the United States.
    [Show full text]
  • Katz in the Age of Hudson V. Michigan: Some Thoughts on “Suppression As a Last Resort”
    Katz in the Age of Hudson v. Michigan: Some Thoughts on “Suppression as a Last Resort” Sharon L. Davies* and Anna B. Scanlon** In its landmark decision of Katz v. United States, the U.S. Supreme Court reconfigured the framework in which Fourth Amendment violations are defined and analyzed by rejecting the notion of constitutionally protected areas and adopting a new emphasis on the individual expectation of privacy. In doing so, the Court extended the Amendment’s previously circumscribed reach to protect “people, not places.” But the force of Katz’s protections was, and still is, ultimately predicated on the remedy of exclusion. Unquestioned at the time of Katz, the exclusion of evidence was once a near-certain consequence of unconstitutional searches. In the forty years since Katz, however, the Court has carved out numerous exceptions to the exclusionary rule, thereby limiting both its effectiveness and its protective reach. The Court’s most recent retraction of the exclusionary rule in the facially innocuous Hudson v. Michigan threatens to undermine the Katz remedy. This Article explains how Justice Antonin Scalia’s 5-4 majority opinion in Hudson misstates and diverges from traditional exclusionary rule jurisprudence, and it warns of the ramifications of such divergence. * John C. Elam, Vorys Sater Professor of Law, The Ohio State University Moritz College of Law. I would like to thank the UC Davis Law Review for including us in its fine Symposium marking the Katz anniversary. ** Juris Doctor, The Ohio State University Moritz College of Law. Thanks are due to Sharon Davies for her continued mentorship; to United States District Court Judge Algenon Marbley, Professors Douglas Berman, Joshua Dressler, Alan Michaels, Bob Krivoshey, and Ric Simmons, Assistant United States Attorneys Rhonda Redwood-Ray and George Varghese, Joseph Dipierro, and members of the Ohio State Journal of Criminal Law for furthering my criminal law education; and to my friends and family for all their support.
    [Show full text]
  • Original Flyer for the Last Resort CHAPTER ONE 1977–1979
    58 THE WHITE NATIONALIST SKINHEAD MOVEMENT Original flyer for the Last Resort CHAPTER ONE 1977–1979 National Front By the mid-1970s Britain was polarised like never before. The reason for this was the emergence of the National Front. Founded in 1967, the National Front [NF], a right-wing political party, campaigned for an end to ‘coloured’ immigration, the humane repatria- tion of immigrants living in Britain, withdrawal from the European community, and the reintroduction of capital punishment. Even though the NF regarded ‘International Communism as the number one ene- my of civilization’ and ‘International Monopoly Capitalism’ as dangerous an enemy as communism, only one issue was ever likely to arouse the feelings of the masses and that was race. And racial tension was running high because of the large influx of immi- grants from the Commonwealth, which the NF exploited to the full. Indeed, the expul- sion of all Asians with British passports from Uganda by General Idi Amin and their arrival in Britain had ignited widespread popular protests. If ever the political climate was favourable for the growth of an openly racist right-wing party the time was now. The 1973 West Bromwich by-election shocked many when the NF candidate, Martin Webster, managed to poll 16.2 percent of the votes, coming in third and saving his deposit for the first time in the NF’s history. This was a danger sign to the major parties that NF support was on the increase in certain areas, particularly those badly hit by the recession with considerable social problems.
    [Show full text]