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Clip courtesy of the North East Film Archive. Watch the full film and more from the Britain on Film Coast and Sea collection on BFI Player - player.bfi.org.uk/britain-on-film
It's a coastline that leaves the Costa del Sol standing, perspiring, but it is doomed to be forever the Costa del Coal.' Presenter Johnny Morris is in a melancholy mood on a tour of the fading harbour and town of Seaham, which 'fell asleep' in the 30s, and owes its life and death to coal. The harsh lives of miners are chiselled into the epitaphs on local graves but he notes signs of hope for a revival in the town, especially when he tucks into a tasty local lobster thermidor.
This early 70s Tyne Tees TV documentary on Seaham harbour and environs is tinged with children's television presenter Johnny Morris's nostalgia for his home town in South Wales, also a victim to the fortunes of coal mining. Seaham town and port were originally developed by Charles Stewart, the 3rd. Marquess of Londonderry, to better manage his coal industry. The fate of the East Durham mines was finally sealed in the decade after the divisive miners' strike of 1984. Work at Dawdon Colliery ended in 1991. As this fascinating documentary reveals, Seaham Hall was once the home of a 'prophet of the computer age', Ada Lovelace, daughter of Lady Anne Isabella Milbanke and infamous poet Lord Byron.
North East Film Archive is one of a network of regional film archives established to collect, preserve and show film made in, or about the North East of England. Our collections are non-fiction, and date from the early 1900s to the present day, providing a rich record of life in the region over the 20th century. Many of our films are available to watch, free of charge, on our website.
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