Common as Mook
Not Posh as Fook
- Jul 26, 2004
- 5,642
A bit of myth busting around the miners' strike, written by someone alive at the time and living in Sheffield:
It's himself, Phelan: Myths and the miners strike
Key bit here which I never knew:
In 1955 only 9.2% of coal was power loaded, by 1969 this had risen to 92.2%. Jobs were lost in numbers that the Thatcher years never got close to. 346,000 miners left the industry between 1963 and 1968, in 1967 there were 12,900 forced redundancies. Under the prime minister during that period, Harold Wilson, one pit closed every week yet there are few people planning trips to his grave with their tap shoes.
It's himself, Phelan: Myths and the miners strike
Key bit here which I never knew:
In 1955 only 9.2% of coal was power loaded, by 1969 this had risen to 92.2%. Jobs were lost in numbers that the Thatcher years never got close to. 346,000 miners left the industry between 1963 and 1968, in 1967 there were 12,900 forced redundancies. Under the prime minister during that period, Harold Wilson, one pit closed every week yet there are few people planning trips to his grave with their tap shoes.