• Facebook
  • Twitter
x

London News Pictures

  • News Feed
  • In the papers
  • sell pictures
  • work with us
  • Privacy policy
Show Navigation
search results
Cart Lightbox Client Area
Prev 6 of 1349 Next

London Poll Tax riot 30th anniversary

Download

NOTE TO EDITORS - THIS IMAGE MATCHES WITH HISTORIC IMAGE no 009a RELEASED IN THIS POLL TAX FEATURE © Licensed to London News Pictures. 25/03/2020. London, UK. Modern day locations of 1990 poll tax riot. Image matches with 'a protester throws a brick at the windows of a bank on Charing Cross Road '. The protest on the last day of March in 1990 started peacefully when thousands gathered in a south London park to demonstrate against Margaret Thatcher's Government's introduction of the Community Charge - commonly known as the poll tax. Marchers walked to Whitehall and Trafalgar Square where violence broke out with the trouble spreading up through Charring Cross Road and on to the West End. Police estimated that 200,000 people had joined the protest and 339 were arrested. The hated tax was eventually replaced by the Council Tax under John Major's government in 1992. Photo credit: Peter Macdiarmid/LNP

Filename
LNP_Poll_Tax_PMA_009b.JPG
Copyright
©2020 Under licence to London News Pictures +44 208 088 1155 press@londonnewspictures.co.uk
Image Size
1033x687 / 491.2KB
londonnewspictures.co.uk
poll tax riots police 30th anniversary
Contained in galleries
twitterlinkedinfacebook
NOTE TO EDITORS - THIS IMAGE MATCHES WITH HISTORIC IMAGE no 009a RELEASED IN THIS POLL TAX FEATURE  © Licensed to London News Pictures. 25/03/2020. London, UK. Modern day locations of 1990 poll tax riot. Image matches with 'a protester throws a brick at the windows of a bank on Charing Cross Road '. The protest on the last day of March in 1990 started peacefully when thousands gathered in a south London park to demonstrate against Margaret Thatcher's Government's introduction of the Community Charge - commonly known as the poll tax. Marchers walked to Whitehall and Trafalgar Square where violence broke out with the trouble spreading up through Charring Cross Road and on to the West End. Police estimated that 200,000 people had joined the protest and 339 were arrested. The hated tax was eventually replaced by the Council Tax under John Major's government in 1992.  Photo credit: Peter Macdiarmid/LNP