I was 10. My step father was a miner. I remember days of not having food to eat. Having to go to soup kitchens. Receiving parcels from miners in germany/poland etc at Christmas. Going coal picking to keep the house warm. Horrible times
Lots of local mining towns/villages are still recovering. Whole communities torn apart.
Yes, army regulars volunteered, put blacks and whites over their greens and then tore into overall peaceful pickets. Goading starving miners with wads of overtime money.
Some of the replies here make me sick.
Did your step father explain how in some mines they dug for miles in the dirt to get to a few hundred yards of coal?
Did he mention the refusal to use new machines that would have improved productivity?
Did he chip in to help with the cost of huge numbers of subsidence affected homes cause by them digging round in circles at the unions request?
It amuses me that the miners blaming everyone else but their unions refusal to modify for their predicament
Listen, I'm under no illusions as to how scargill contributed, he's a leech. What I cannot let lie is how the miners were treated back then, by the government and police and yes scargill to some extent.
It just sounds like the strikes against modernising the Underground / Royal Mail / add public body here which still happen now. Stuff like this holds back this country from really making leaps in technology to improve day to day lives. Yes it does involve a machine doing someones job better - its 2016...
What you need though is a plan for what to do with the people you replace and innthe case of coal mining the 100 year old communities you rip the hearts out of. The people of the welsh Valleys and the like helped propel this country to greatness and were then dumped with less compassion than a stray dog that's been hit by a car.
The rights and wrongs of the strikes will never be cleared up and agreed on there are far to many hidden agendas even now let alone back then, but anyone who can't see the great wrong we did to these communities is mad.
What you need though is a plan for what to do with the people you replace and innthe case of coal mining the 100 year old communities you rip the hearts out of. The people of the welsh Valleys and the like helped propel this country to greatness and were then dumped with less compassion than a stray dog that's been hit by a car.
The rights and wrongs of the strikes will never be cleared up and agreed on there are far to many hidden agendas even now let alone back then, but anyone who can't see the great wrong we did to these communities is mad.
This of course means that anyone or any group wishing to have such an enquiry must be confident that they can match the funds of the establishment - thereby ensuring that the establishment can safely avoid criticism.The use of public enquiries to witch-hunt perceived historic wrongs has to stop. <SNIP> [Such enquiries must also have] a clear link of funding to those who demand the enquiry.
This of course means that anyone or any group wishing to have such an enquiry must be confident that they can match the funds of the establishment - thereby ensuring that the establishment can safely avoid criticism.
Erdoğan in Turkey has a much more honest and straightforward approach to this, just jail anyone who has the temerity to question his dictatorship.
My understanding of the miners strike was that the tory government of the time wanted the unions destroyed and that the miners were a thorn in the side of politicians holding a heavy hammer over the government. Thatcher and co used the police force to do their dirty work and THAT is what this enquiry should be focusing on, there is a difference when police are there to keep the peace OR brought in to effectively smash the miners up then arrest them for picketing. There were wrongs done on both sides but the government should not have used the police as henchmen. It seems that at that time no one wanted to listen, both sides were decided already.
I remember the government subsidised gas appliance shops that opened up all around S.Yorkshire - natural gas was the way forward and coal was out - a perfect strategy to kill off the miners unions grip in politics. I also remember, in the years leading up to the strikes, the local TV news would report on which pits were getting the most coal out of the ground, like a league table - they paid the miners a bonus for breaking records and all the time it was being stockpiled at the powerstations and so they had the electricity 'issue' sorted out, all it took was a few years of patience but the government wanted the mines gone once they had the gas and electricity sorted and they didnt want to wait any longer - the miners were doomed and the surrounding communities declined. The old Orgreave site is an industrial estate now, home to a Rolls Royce plant and a college to give youth apprenticeships, it took decades for regeneration to take place all over S.Yorkshire due to the loss of steel and coal.
The police should have never been involved in the way they were, the transition was brutal for many people at that time and the hate and distrust of the tory government still lives on strong.
Well, if you're going to dredge up history let's be fair about. Thatcher came into power off the back of pledging a strong response to trade unions following a decade where they crippled the country. This includes the coal miners work to rule and strikes in 1974, the 3 day working week and the winter of discontent at the end of the decade. It's arguable that Thatcher had a democratic mandate to effectively break the unions.
Could you list the public inquiries relating to wrongs that were merely 'perceived'?The use of public enquiries to witch-hunt perceived historic wrongs has to stop. It costs a fortune and achieves nothing.
My understanding of the miners strike