One of the seminal moments of my early adulthood, when I was a wet behind the ears, callow youth just embarking on my university experience, was the year long miner's strike in the UK of 1984/5. I am ashamed to say that I was a Thatcherite asshole who was very anti-strike. As I have aged, my position has moved sharply and extremely left to the extent that I have recently been looking for books that provide a retrospective on this key moment in the country's industrial relations history. This has proven to be a difficult exercise and I was hoping to get more on the strike from this book, which I found in the US surprisingly.
This is not about the strike per se of course, and about two thirds of the book examines the aftermath when the industry was basically being closed down by the government or for the workings being exhausted. I knew, of course, about the import of mining and the pits to many of the communities where they were situated and this book focuses on the Durham and South Wales coalfields specifically. Many communities were decimated by pit closures and although the NUM strove valiantly to prevent these closures, knowing the impact that shuttering pits would have, the government was inexorable in ensuring that there is today no deep mining to speak of in the UK.
Now, as climate change has taken hold (a fact not covered in this book), there is not much question that coal's days as a prime source of power generation for example, are numbered and the pits may well have closed in any event. There is an example quoted here of miners actually purchasing their colliery and keeping production going for another decade plus after initial closure, although the workings were eventually exhausted anyway.
However the fact remains that successive governments did little, the Tories especially of course, to alleviate the suffering caused by the implosion of communities that were formally tied to mining. It is laid out here. The breakdown of social cohesion, closure of social clubs, businesses, shops, poverty, boredom, people moving away, property speculation, lack of training programs, no jobs etc. I recall Michael Heseltine taking something of a lap of honor for closing down what was undoubtedly a dirty and dangerous industry that had and has, long term detrimental health impacts on those tasked with digging coal from beneath the lands of the UK. However, as I realized, it is clear from this book that coal mining does have something of a unique place in the annals of the UK. Clearly pivotal to the establishment of Empire, dangerous and lethal for many, but nevertheless being more than a job. Being a miner was an identity and one that all in the community revered and respected and when it was gone, that community all too often fell apart.
I feel as though, from 40 years distance, I owe Arthur Scargill a personal apology. It is clear that the government was out to shut down the industry as he warned about, and which I failed to heed. Having said that, mining was already on the decline from the heady days of the late nineteenth and early 20th centuries, and even then, the mines were killing hundreds of men and boys a year to the benefit of the industrialists. Pits were being closed well before the 80s and coal was clearly out of favor as a fuel and would likely have continued its decline even without the UK's most overrated and heartless Prime Minister at the helm. The real crime though, is the failure to recognize, or perhaps callously ignore, the impact that closing the main lifeblood of a community would do to said community, and the impact of that is laid out here.
Not without interest but I don't know why I found this rather turgid reading. I suspect this is because I was looking for something that this book didn't even purport to do. It's not the first time I've done that, and I did come away better informed on some of the details of a situation that I was already pretty aware of.