I grew up on a Mining Estate and now, 30 years on I wish there was a Community Spirit like there used to be back then, they were the best years of my life.
@jimmy27paul9 жыл бұрын
+stratos fun Im from Ireland myself so i am no fan of Thatcher to begin with, but what she did to the lovely little mining communities in England was unforgivable and makes me very angry. She wanted a cut throat, US style, me me me society and she has largely succeeded unfortunately.
@markgraham11098 жыл бұрын
+stratos fun Too Right!
@PreservationEnthusiast7 жыл бұрын
+stratos fun. Move abroad if you don't like it here.
@yacovlevi6 жыл бұрын
How can you take it serousilly? People moaning about not having money but smoking? Simply quit.
@yacovlevi6 жыл бұрын
Thatcher was right.
@michaeltaylor10811 жыл бұрын
was proud to have been part of the struggle.Solid for the whole dispute. When anyone ever says Scargill shut the pits they should look at what happened to the Notts pits which produced coal and those who scabbed, got the same treatment all closed. what happened to Greaterex notts union official. Jailed for stealing money out of the pension fund of his members.Yes we lost but better to die on your feet than on your knees
@pathfinder19622 жыл бұрын
Scargill closed no pits down. That man tried his hardest to keep the pits open. But That tramp Thatcher and her cronies had other ideas. Thatcher punished the miners because they brought the Tory Government down after the 1974 strike
@wattage20072 жыл бұрын
Yeah unions are so great, their officials rob their members' pensions.
@helium83149 жыл бұрын
Absolutely frightening how accurate the prophecies in this video turned out to be. Are these documentaries being shown in schools? no! this important part of our social history has been completely erased from school curriculum.
@ademolad72155 жыл бұрын
Literally had this explored in detail in my geography lesson
@stephenjackson41954 жыл бұрын
well bleeding said.... am proud to be working class... and am a trade unionist and believe in the union and the young uns dont understand and havent a fuckin clue about the the value of strength and a being a part of a community ..... Thatchers model is still here and its sickening... soul destroying....I got tears in me eyes writing this.......gutted....gutted..... were fuckin finished....
@leighnassau11584 жыл бұрын
i just spoke to someone on facebook, a millilenial generation child , of course , had no idea! she said , 1st time that she had ever heard of it ! Cant believe that were not passing this on through our children ! those who remember bloody well should!
@courtneycharlie4 жыл бұрын
40 years on and Maggie was right! Bless her. Life still exists. Bring in more immigrants and give them benefits. Yhis is the real issue!
@jamiejosh963 жыл бұрын
@@stephenjackson4195 the irony is that the union killed mining in the uk
@glennburton6339 жыл бұрын
This is a landmark in social commentary. Don't know where these people are now but politically aware, articulate and energetic, these people ought to be running the bloody country today. Yesterday I marched with the kellingley miners and heard much the same. Is the current situation just the death throes of thatchers -well documented-bizarre relationship with ted Heath? Anybody featured on the tape reading this, God bless yer.
@ARMINIUS448 жыл бұрын
Well said mate. "politically aware, articulate and energetic, these people ought to be running the bloody country today." Bang on.
@jbmuggins8815 Жыл бұрын
men that knew their industry inside and out
@russellnewton66605 жыл бұрын
I left the pits when I was 25 and now I’m not far off 60 and all those years, I’ve never experienced the camaraderie I had as a young miner. I left the area for work in 1986.
@ydnallah15413 жыл бұрын
I was born in Sheffield in 1984, I grew up with the fall out of the destruction of the coal and steel industries. I know loads of former miners and my family were mainly in steel and engineering, talking about the strikes and what’s been lost is still a raw wound that’s never to be healed. They treated those men and their families like feral dogs, not human beings.
@mrkipling22012 жыл бұрын
I was born in 1979 in Littleborough, near Rochdale. All I saw as a kid was the mills and factories getting demolished. My Nan would take me to see them getting blown up and destroyed. As a kid I loved watching the buildings explode!! Yet now I realise that they were getting demolished because local industry had declined big time. We had to move to London in 1984 because my Dad couldn’t find a job locally. My Grandparents stayed there so we would see what was happening when we visited them.
@aslc2547 Жыл бұрын
And it continues with disgusting treatment of workers in warehouses. Unions too busy following a middle class agenda for the most part, they don’t back up the working class.
@stevenlepine188310 ай бұрын
I was a striking miner,I did the full strike picketing and all.Now 70 and retired loooking back at these times via these videos, I just fill with pride .These men older now and wiser, we did our best but you can't always win. But those women! Them lasses! Brilliant,our wives. Mothers and sisters.Such determination and loyalty, I wonder if 40 years on if todays women, some who can't be bothered to get out of their pyjamas to take the bairns to school some of them daughters of striking.miners wives could do what their parents did Now and again I see some of these women in the street,in shops and the like, and I think ,yes we went through the strike BLESS you all .
@TheGranty17396 ай бұрын
At the time I regarded them as Arthur Scargill's storm troopers trying to beat a government ,this film reinforces that view.
@nufcdrunk10 жыл бұрын
Fine, upstanding, principled, hard working people. This country will never see your like again.
@homeone40546 жыл бұрын
Hear hear
@stephenjackson41954 жыл бұрын
fuckin dead right... sorry for swearing but this boils my piss .... working class familys fighting for their lifes communities .....1980s Britain coming back in 2020 trust me ....
@f.t.g.fuckthegovernment14984 жыл бұрын
@@stephenjackson4195 very true mate!.
@dandohando12423 жыл бұрын
The Yorkshire man who mentioned the women, you Sir, are a true gentleman. ❤️
@malcolmbird992810 жыл бұрын
One word ' dignity '. Signed Malc Bird, Ex derbyshire miner & proud.
@thomasandersen67196 жыл бұрын
Dignity doesn't put food in your mouth
@stephanblack455810 ай бұрын
The greedy Miners lost in the end but Arthur Scargill got rich out of it!! plus he scammed the Miners funds for his own Bank Account.
@leestephenson762310 жыл бұрын
look at these miners, do they look as if they have half the lifestyle the politicians who destroyed them had?... People who begrudge folk who work for industries that prop up the economy a ordinary decent wage AND YET totally accept football players, celebs, and politicians (people who have very little effect on the standard of living) can earn limitless amounts of cash should be whipped!!!!
@pgl08979 жыл бұрын
Lee Stephenson “I have no particular love for the idealized 'worker' as he appears in the bourgeois Communist’s mind, but when I see an actual flesh-and-blood worker in conflict with his natural enemy, the policeman, I do not have to ask myself which side I am on.” - George Orwell
@john1112579 жыл бұрын
Lee Stephenson that is so so true
@leestephenson76237 жыл бұрын
nobody won you clown.
@leestephenson76237 жыл бұрын
I think the economy should be there to serve the people not the other way round. The same with technological advancements making life easier, not harder. The Government handed power to corporations through privatisation. So therefore the government should all be made redundant for failing to their jobs.
@theminister38097 жыл бұрын
heelfan1234 you must be very lonely
@danholliday55645 жыл бұрын
Still not recovered up here in the North from the deliberate decimation of the coal and steel industries .
@blaydonroth1004 жыл бұрын
I grew up in Easington Colliery in the 80s and 90s when the pit was open it was thriving Town full of life and a high street with dozens of shops where you would now everyone you walked past. Now almost 25 years since the pit closed its a ghost town full of strangers and take away shops. My grandfather worked there for 40 years and would be ashamed of how it looks now. Their is an entire generation that have grown up seeing their parents unemployed.
@davidkeenan56424 жыл бұрын
People moved to Easington Colliery because of coal, and when coal became a dying industry, their descendants, understandably, wanted to stay. But my father moved from Ireland to get work in the early 1950s. Towns dependent on a single industry are always vulnerable to economic change, if the demand for what that industry produces. And demand for coal reduced. But the miners had brought down previous governments. The Dockers had also held previous governments to ransom. The power of the unions "had" to be broken. Scargill gave Thatcher the perfect opportunity to break that power. I hated the woman, but nothing could have saved the coal industry. Gas and oil are currently predominant, but that too is changing. Oil towns will have to adjust in the future, or die. Easington Colliery is not a victim of Thatcher. it's a victim of progress, and economics shift.
@HE-1622 жыл бұрын
@@davidkeenan5642 you’re right in some ways, but not entirely. Unions are supposed to hold the power, it’s a good thing. It keeps the power balance in check, and their wins trickle down into the non union industries as well. Coal was a dying industry, no doubt about it. It’s time was limited. Still, mines were closed without putting anything in place to transition the tens of thousands of workers to a different line of work. Nothing was put in place to support the support industries that served the pits. Nothing was put in place to support the countless cities and towns whose population of thousands existed because of their pit. Pit closures thrust entire regions into poverty overnight, and it was done by threat of policeman’s club. The cruelest irony was/is the continued use of imported coal to offset the loss of domestic consumption. Instead of taking the time to transition from coal responsibly, it was done so in a manner that inflicted immense damage to the working class, and the damage is no where near finished. Thatcher irreparably hurt the UK, while she got to live in a gilded castle insulated from the destruction she inflicted, never having to live with the consequences of her campaign. She gets to rot in the ground, corpse full of maggots, not a care in the world, while the miners and their communities are still living in dead communities rife with poverty and unemployment and drugs and crime that she forced upon them.
@DarrenThirlaway-zd2mr9 ай бұрын
Tories twats
@goinblinddoggone4 ай бұрын
Very well said @@HE-162
@Harry2000hjh9 жыл бұрын
If pits were open now we wouldnt be full of smackheads in council houses and immigrants
@Peasant_of_Pontus5 жыл бұрын
How do you watch 45 minutes of footage of poor people being fucked in the ass by the rich and the government and end up complaining about other poor people?
@truck-a-bout19585 жыл бұрын
@@Peasant_of_Pontus You sound like you've never had to live in government housing. I can tell you I live in Australia and it seems like we have very similar problems.
@Peasant_of_Pontus5 жыл бұрын
@@truck-a-bout1958 I don't anymore but I used to live in a council flat. UK doesn't build poor ghettos anymore, council flats are decentralised. Every new buliding gets a council flat or two instead of entire neighbourhoods of them.
@johndouglas57125 жыл бұрын
Spot on !
@fuckfannyfiddlefart5 жыл бұрын
The capitalists imported the immigrants, don't blame other poor people, that is how they divide us so easily.
@paulwynn802910 жыл бұрын
awesome people,very proud,brought tears to my eyes,awesome,i was yorkshire miner,nostell colliery,west yorkshire,13 years underground
@MarkHarrison7338 ай бұрын
Scargill was a self-described "Stalinist" who destroyed the coal industry and the NUM by starting a fight he could not win.
@philglover29732 жыл бұрын
Ex miner and proud of it , God bless you all 👍🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧
@davidstewart96655 жыл бұрын
From a Glaswegian, The UK Government should be ashamed for this treatment of upstanding grafters of many communities who fought for their livelihoods, we salute them.
@TommyTightPants01159 жыл бұрын
I started working at pit just after the strike and had 30 good years and made a lot of good mates i would go back tomorrow. All of the pits have now gone. I could have giving years ago but i tried to keep moving from pit to pit as they shut down in the end i was traveling 64 miles each way their and back some times doing a 12 hour shift on top of travel even in snow and ice but the lads made it worth it . the last place of work was KELLINGLEY in Yorkshire. but know all have gone. I pray that the coal prices go though the roof and the government will see scene but its too bloody late SO SO sad. Every one says that you can have the same crack any were i don't think so can you imagine working in a bank and some old dear asking for a tenner and you reply saying is that all want you tight **** i only wish MAGGIE is a warm place
@danieltrubman82038 жыл бұрын
+TommyTightPants0115 I'm glad it worked out for you, but did you consider going in to a different industry? It blows my mind that a young man would have decided that mining for a career with a future at that point.
@Elizabeth-Mags7 жыл бұрын
Daniel Trubman well not many families could afford higher education in order to get into many other industries and "what about the lower industries where they didn't need a proper education?" well, mining was obviously the main one but there were also steel workers and blacksmiths- oh wait, their furnaces had to be fuled BY COAL! Can't u c the effect this had on the economy? 😒
@jamiejosh963 жыл бұрын
New mine being opened soon. We are importing from abroad and are bringing it back. Tbh the unions killed mining in the uk, made it to easy to import from abroad for cheaper
@DarrenThirlaway-zd2mr9 ай бұрын
Tories are scum
@russchamberlain5365 ай бұрын
I’m from a family of miners from Derbyshire I was born just after the minors lost the strike and was forced back to work all I ever wanted was to go down the pit like all my family. My old man did the same went from pit to pit following the work, I was always told my old man was a amazing header so never went with out work but in the end he was travelling more and more and he got fed up. Iv still got some old NCB magazines with pictures of my dad working. When I was a kid mooregreen pit had a open day it was one of the best days I had as a child standing by my dads side just standing in the lift was amazing wish I’d got the chance to actually get on the pit face. Respect to all these hard working great British coal minors you did our country proud and the scabs I hope you was ashamed
@charleswebster26826 жыл бұрын
coppers made plenty out of it loads of overtime while all the miners suffered we should be proud of the miners through history.
@jcbairmaster7311 жыл бұрын
It was never about economics from the word go,Thatcher made her mind up what she wanted from her investiture,the breaking of the NUM and the downfall of the industry.Lots of Nott's men stood firm,some did not.But your end statement I agree with in spades.
@RedDevil669913 жыл бұрын
My Grandfather was a miner for 41 years before his pit closed in 1968... He got £2,000.
@davidobful11 жыл бұрын
These miners know what they r talking about,the way they were treated by the tories the police and media was absolutely disgraceful
@greigs93846 ай бұрын
Arthur’s doing fine lads. He owns his Barbican flat outright, probably worth about 2 million now. 🍾🥂
@matteoj2269 жыл бұрын
I wasn't born in 1984 but I'm from deepest Nottinghamshire and I feel physically ill watching this. I don't believe for one minute there's any difference between Notts miners or Durham miners or Yorkshire miners, but sadly for one reason or another they dug their heels in and ended up devastatingly colluding with Thatcher. Everything the lads say in this video is true. Communities have collapsed and it's like living in a nuclear wasteland here now. I've never been involved with the mining industry but I only wish the strike was happening today because I'd be on the picket line pleading with the UDM to come out on strike. What a fucking disaster.
@iwestminster5449 жыл бұрын
+Bobby Jones It's also a forgotten subject, something not being taught in schools as part of modern history. Absolutely disgraceful how these men were treated, they're without doubt some of the bravest men of their time. I'm not sure I'd have the balls to work a 12-hour shift a thousand feet under the soil, not many could and if we had to rely on the ruling classes to find the nation coal, we'd have all died off about a hundred and fifty fuckin' years back. Labour till I die.
@gabrielstone34578 жыл бұрын
Funny... how the subject isn't taught in schools while the schools have been run under a conservative government for so long
@iwestminster5448 жыл бұрын
Gabriel Stone To be honest Gabe, the industry part of life is now so far gone that teaching about the destruction of it wouldn't really resonate with them. You've got to have had something or lived with it to appreciate the demise of it. I dare say my kids will be having this same conversation in 30 years time about the death of British steel and the NHS.
@ddd-ly3rv6 жыл бұрын
it wasn't about that. if you thought you could trust them?
@gordonsmith28722 жыл бұрын
Watching this video Thirty plus years on with tears in my eyes pride in my heart. I still retain all those principles which I shared with the other 30 gentlemen in my group THE DiRTY 30. We have unfinished business! I am 84 now and I still believe we were right! I still share friendships with ex strikers from that era and am proud to carry our banner at the Durham Miners gala every June . Gordon Smith. 2022.
@fredjones95558 ай бұрын
Scargill did not give his wages to the miners strike only person who did was Dennis skinner.
@mikeweston3514 Жыл бұрын
Im from a mining family in north wales my dad was down pit over 35yrs
@timfly7674 жыл бұрын
Deirdre Barlows everywhere. Big perms and big glasses.
@bumblebeejimmy10 жыл бұрын
We are now making a Russian mine owner very rich as we have to purchase our coal from there because we cannot provide our own anymore.
@jody13675 жыл бұрын
I remember watching the miners getting beaten by the police while families suffered and fat Tories bloated on gluttony. I hope kids these days are taught this Era. It's as important now as it was then.
@balthiersgirl26582 жыл бұрын
Im a miners daughter and I learned never trust a Tory
@angelhalo14515 жыл бұрын
God bless the miners❤️
@theyazankelly2268 ай бұрын
This video is incredible. These men and woman are hero’s for the rights of workers all around the world ❤
@thornwarbler4 жыл бұрын
Bloody heart breaking i lived through the strike on the Northumberland coal field it decimated the area with the pit closures
@FireStrikeFilms10 жыл бұрын
30 Years On, the miners are still fighting and although their pits have long gone their unity still stands the test of time proving Thatcher could never break their will
@booopdooop10 жыл бұрын
You're absolutely right, these people are some of the hardest-working and honest folk that this land has ever known. Never let it be forgotten what the Tories did to them.
@dominicmackrill59536 жыл бұрын
Lol they kept their will but not their job! 😂
@Al-ol3tu3 жыл бұрын
@@booopdooop and scargill wasn't much better another twat out to feather his own nest
@garethhelliwell97365 жыл бұрын
I thought I sounded Yorkshire until I watched this 🤣
@medwayhospitalprotest11 ай бұрын
They're Derbyshire miners.
@markcooke8396 Жыл бұрын
13:46 ........its like he knew the future 🤣🤣
@angusmeigh51414 жыл бұрын
I remember that the miners in Nottinghamshire refused to join the strike and several years earlier had formed their own union called the Union of Democratic Mineworkers. Eventually though they finally admitted that Arthur Scargill had been right all along.
@shanklyreds7 ай бұрын
I'm from Liverpool,, Thatcher ripped the shit out of the dockers in Liverpool as well,,,,bless the miners👍👍👍👍
@MarkHarrison7337 ай бұрын
Liverpool voted for impoverishment.
@kevinwilliams1421Ай бұрын
I’ve just come of the picket line this morning in Knowsley..we was joined by some miners from Sutton manor today
@Jeremy-y1tАй бұрын
@@kevinwilliams1421 The Liverpool fans caused 97 deaths.
@shanelangton12176 жыл бұрын
some forget there were some Notts miners who came out on strike.Those who did had it the hardest of all the coal miners on strike.NEVER FORGET THAT.
@alunhughes26325 жыл бұрын
Of course you are right, those Notts miners that came out and stayed out were the salt of the earth and did have it harder than the rest of us. They are not forgotten my friend
@EdwardAveyard4 жыл бұрын
In Leicestershire, there were so few that struck that they got called "the dirty thirty". Oddly enough, these 30 men were often called "scab" by other miners in Leics. They were perceived as having betrayed their colleagues and sided with another area. After a while, there were collections done in other areas to raise money for them.
@timfly7674 жыл бұрын
Look how grimy and down at heel the eighties were. Things had to change. Mistakes were made on all sides, but to this day I never understood how it was cheaper to import coal from the other side of the world.
@ARCHSTANTON616 жыл бұрын
police earn`t enough to buy a new house cash on the over time they did....
@cheapy20062 жыл бұрын
I was 11 when the strike was on. There was McGregor, Thatcher and the riot squad on one side, and Arthur Scargill and the miners on the other. I swear to God, I'm nearly 50 now, and from back then to this day I DETEST management.
@bereal6590 Жыл бұрын
👏👏👏✋✌
@jongreen6422 Жыл бұрын
Grandson and nephew of Mines ime proud of my rout's and lived through the strike s God bless all those Miners and families that stood solid and resolute ❤
@paulmahon583411 жыл бұрын
To the lot of you harping on about subsidies fod thatchet and her tory cronies ever think to not subsidies british arms manufacturers or farming both of which would be unprofitable without massive taxpayers help.
@jackkruese4258 Жыл бұрын
I remember all this but looking back 40 years later I get the impression that people back then were less worldly wise than people now but at the same time we’re more mature and responsible in their outlook.
@bereal6590 Жыл бұрын
Not really, times were very different is all
@kevinadams34610 ай бұрын
All of this takes me back to the good old days. Back when there were good communities who stuck together. Don't really see this nowadays. People got fucked over by the Government . 😢😢😢
@andrewhamshare25112 жыл бұрын
Proud of these families.
@scottdavey9905 Жыл бұрын
I'm wanting to talk to someone who crossed the Pickett line just to get a insight on their thoughts and feelings behind it. With all the strikes currently taking place and cost implications of doing so it will be good to see the difference from 40 years ago. Can anyone help
@johnwalsh80169 жыл бұрын
The thing about the pits and the mining communities is that there was one type of work and no other. These places relied solely on the pit for employment and there was nothing else. also the men wernt trained in anything else. when the car factories closed most people got other jobs quickly. also you had a variety of folk working on the tracks- hairdressers, plumbers etc who could fall back on their trades.
@stephanblack455810 ай бұрын
Arthur Scargill got very rich off of the backs of the miners.
@russchamberlain5365 ай бұрын
Don’t forget about the $9 million blood money from Libya that was ment for the minors yet didn’t see a penny
@mrblondeno211 жыл бұрын
Correct, and infact Labour closed 93 pits under Harold Wilson
@seanwood88836 ай бұрын
Shame those miners were so stubborn and stupid to listen to a far left subversive like scargill. I also hate how they treated the so called "scabs", the miners who went back to work to look after their families. That was just disgusting but not really surprising given they were people who would never listen anyway.
@alanbrown15632 жыл бұрын
a scab is a scab I will never forget or forgive
@seanwood88836 ай бұрын
Why?, just because they wanted to look after their own families, and not be led off a cliff by someone like scargill
@russchamberlain5365 ай бұрын
I agree with you buddy. My dads best man and the closest mate he had from childhood have never spoke since the strikes all because he wouldn’t do what was right by the minors and strike it should of always been one out all out
@colinjennings36615 жыл бұрын
Never was the phrase lions led by donkeys been more apt.
@TerenceDoherty8 ай бұрын
I was arrested at Babbington Colliery in Nottingham April 9th 1984.
@Jeremy-y1tАй бұрын
Scargill destroyed the NUM.
@blackhand89035 жыл бұрын
I was 9 when this strike took place and within 10 years I lost my first friend to drugs the after another 10 years I lost the rest of my friends to drugs. I believe the destruction of the unions,mines and eventually the close communities we had lead to the deaths of my old pals.
@MarineAqua455 жыл бұрын
lee jarvis The Unions caused alot of problems, as they were full of communists & they brought it on themselves. They were a problem that needed to be dealt with, harshly. Ken Livingstone did the same thing in the GLC & that got dissolved by Thatcher, because of militants ousting the rightfully-elected leader. However, innocent people in these communities, like mining, ship-building & car manufacturing all paid the price for those militants.
@HE-1622 жыл бұрын
Sorry to hear that my friend. The miners and their communities were the salt of the earth, and what was done to them(and the rest of the working class) is going to hurt for decades more. We haven’t yet seen nor understand the full extent of the damage Thatcher and Reagan did to the English and American working class. Criminals, both of them. May they rest in piss!
@DRokKster11 жыл бұрын
In mining you are battling against Mother Nature.Sometimes you come across a white face caused by a collapse in the strata and a pit would become uneconomic. But that can change. A pit may have a bad year, then find anew seam and have 30 more good years.Also, when the closures began, we had already developed and opened a clean coal plant. But when you are involved in revenge, when you are determined to do better than Heath and tame the miners, rationalisation and reason go out of the window.
@gedrooney9305 Жыл бұрын
Wonderful people, cheers for the upload 👍
@elizabethstadler27757 жыл бұрын
I hope the Lord will put his hands in all that.
@retrorambles5175 жыл бұрын
Labour closed twice as many mines than Thatcher The strike was between the unions and Scargill taking on Thatcher and Thatcher not backing down Thatcher didn't screw the miner's , Scargill and the unions did
@elliotjones33244 жыл бұрын
Correct, he's a shithouse scargill. The worst general of an army in history, Thatcher was right to shut these places down.
@kialaitakari90416 жыл бұрын
Hello djemmo! I would like to use a few seconds of this video for Billy Elliot the musical in Finland. Please contact me about the license fees/rights asap. Thank you!
@paulberesford93603 жыл бұрын
Those boys were well and truly "shafted".
@ianhobbs2 жыл бұрын
I remember the 1994 strike and believed that the miners were right.
@sharonensor74717 жыл бұрын
I'm from Stainforth but have never seen this prog as i lived in Germany at the time. It's great to see loads o familiar faces.
@InOmniaParatus83 Жыл бұрын
3:27 what's the song?
@pathfinder19622 жыл бұрын
My Dad worked down the Stoke and Lancashire Coalmines for almost 40 years. He loved his job and couldn't settle down in any other form of work. The Labour Party actually closed down more pits than the Tories Did but it was Thatcher's attitude to the Miners that caused the 1984\85 strike. She hates the Miners because of the way they topped the Heath Government and made sure to cause the strike and beat the strongest Union so that the rest of the Unions would also fall and her plan worked the might of the Unions was over
@Ukipmiddleleft Жыл бұрын
I was a miners strike child and remember the hardship and the money issues as a child growing up realised there and then the class disparities in the UK which have only got bigger and wider
@pathfinder1962 Жыл бұрын
@@Ukipmiddleleft I was a miners strike child too. 1972\74 the 74 strike finally brought down Heath and his cronies. But the 84 strike actually broke the NUM and that was exactly what Thatcher wanted when she broke the NUM all the other Unions fell like Domino's
@paulwoodmore62263 жыл бұрын
Massive goalkeeping error there,big lad with the peno 👍👌
@TheStupidestGenius10 жыл бұрын
Miner's United! We'll continue our cause, for England!
@Hollows19974 жыл бұрын
Great Grandad retired in 1984, he first went down the pit in the war years. Disliked Scargill just as much as he did Thatcher.
@oliverearnshaw618911 ай бұрын
My grandad was the same, hated scargill cos he wouldn’t have a national ballot, said it would have never happened under Gormley
@leonblittle2263 жыл бұрын
They were so convinced the coal was worth the money, truth was it wasn't worth jack shit which is why the money didn't ever turn up, the only place it was worth burning was the power stations MGR system. But leaving behind a body of working men the size of this was a fucking disgrace, and those towns were destroyed.
@kevmccormack98573 жыл бұрын
Nice Time Piece. Well Posted
@MrThathurt18 жыл бұрын
Do you mind if I sample footage from this for a documentary I'm making at college?
@nigelhamilton81511 ай бұрын
Looking back I believe we, the working class, let the miners down. THE TUC should have called a general strike.
@Conorspillane4 жыл бұрын
I love the Miners there families and the communities but sorry Arthur Scargill walked them right into the trap set by Thatcher. They had record stocks of coal, he did not have a ballot. The Nuclear industry got a subsidy he should have taken that to court as unfair competition the moment that hit the court all investment in Nuclear would have stopped Sorry but Thatcher played a very clever game Scargill played a very stupid game and the Miners there families and the communities paid the price.
@ARCHSTANTON616 жыл бұрын
GOOD BRAVE MEN, COWARDLY POLICE..
@fuckfannyfiddlefart5 жыл бұрын
This shows that the job of police is to protect capitalists as why they are the violent force constraining humanity.
@Mod-rw9cw5 жыл бұрын
Police are fascists
@fuckfannyfiddlefart5 жыл бұрын
@@Mod-rw9cw that is a conflation, police work for capitalists who tend to side with fascists and individual officers are more likely to be sympathetic to fascism, but honestly if police are all fascists we would live in a fascist system rather than a capitalist one which is bad enough!
@renhoek38515 жыл бұрын
trying not to laugh 9:11! what a beautiful woman
@jasper71299 жыл бұрын
Who is the trade union speaker with the moustache and the broad Yorkshire accent, anybody ?
@waynes62719 жыл бұрын
Sammy Thompson
@joshesOK6 жыл бұрын
Who is speaking at the 26:45 mark?
@forddude1976 Жыл бұрын
What strikes me is, thees man and women are facing losing their jobs possible their home but they aren't swearing or attacking people. My partners grandfather was a miner and she is really upset by the mines closeing, that's why I'm watching to see what went on
@MrGoneTroppo4 ай бұрын
Heroes, but at the end of the day the taxpayer don't owe you a living
@Jaya365Күн бұрын
No they owe banks, farmers, politicians and everyone else. Course, you don't live in a former mining community so you have no idea what the mass closures did and still does to the areas, areas that fuelled the industrial revolution and powered the country.
@nodamiaen11 жыл бұрын
thanks for uploading. this really helped give me some perspective i was missing.
@paulwalker9014 Жыл бұрын
What was the final score?
@VinylBlog4 жыл бұрын
11.40 that chap looks a bit like Jim McDonald- for all the Corrie fans. In seriousness though god bless these men and women who worked and fought so hard
@Tykewarrior11 ай бұрын
I wish our police still looked as competent and imposing as they do here.
@aslc25473 ай бұрын
Refreshing to hear the right to work being mentioned, this has been off the agenda of all parties for decades now.
@alyoshakaramazov353211 жыл бұрын
just recently posted an Emotive Tribute to ALL Coal miners everywhere plus those that were killed in the biggest mining disaster in Scotland UK at the Blantyre pit, its done in pics and music .. would be grateful for your feedback Alex Hodgson "Blantyre" A Scottish Mining Disaster
@deborahoconnor76016 жыл бұрын
I still live in this village.x
@robA234511 жыл бұрын
Fascinating video thanks for posting and that's coming from someone who's definitely more free market capitalist than socialist. The miners are not 'think as pig shit northerners', they make coherent, passionate arguments and even though I think the closures were right based on the fact that from 1970 to 1990, coal output only decreased by some 22 million tonnes while manpower decreased by a whooping 210,000 hours, it doesn't mean their cause and cost to their communities wasn't real.
@dandohando12423 жыл бұрын
#CoalNotDole also, Nottingham miners must have a lot of regret for their original stance.
@JG_UK11 жыл бұрын
Very interesting. Thanks for sharing!
@hellooutthere89567 жыл бұрын
were those cops in a union?
@sharonplant41027 жыл бұрын
What year was this made ty
@jamesellis62536 жыл бұрын
sharon plant 84/85
@julietparker770811 жыл бұрын
What Programme is this from and which Channel?
@иванепифан-к8ж7 жыл бұрын
It's so interesting ! Britain and its working class ! The lives of the British miners in 80 years. English White bone and and ...strikes?
@Hickey6611 жыл бұрын
I got married in Doncaster. She was a fine Yorkshire woman. A Vicking.
@thezak11046 жыл бұрын
Union should have recommended strike and give us a proper ballot No one would have gone through the picket line if they got the result for strike from a National ballot Everyone would have been out
@AAAA88927 Жыл бұрын
How much was redundancy pay
@swarthyjake44335 жыл бұрын
I wouldn't mind being a coal miner , must be great fun and you get free coal ! a free turkey at xmas , free housing and paid summer breaks when no one needs coal .