Harrison Context: Miners Strike Flashcards

1
Q

What events led to the Miner’s Strike taking place?

A
  • The National Coal Board (NCB) ran the country’s collieries - coal mines or pits and their buildings- and distributed coal.
  • It wanted to close 20 pits it said were unprofitable.
  • This would be 20,000 job losses.
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2
Q

How was the Miner’s Strike resolved?

A
  • The Miners’ eventual defeat the end of an era for Britian’s trade union movement and helped cemnent Mrs Thatcher’s reputation as the Iron lady.
  • Union funds were running low by early 1985 and striking miners had endured almost a year of hardship, with only donations to support their families.
  • With some miners still working and police protecting coal deliveries, the union’s position was weakened.
  • When the NUM held a special conference on 3 March 1985, coalfield delegates narrowly voted to the end the strike.
  • Miners returned to work 5 March.
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3
Q

Who was Arthur Scargill and what was the NUM?

A
  • Former miner Arthur Scargill, then president of the National Union of Minerworkers (NUM), believed no pit should close if it had coal reserves.
  • He claimed there was a plan for more than 70 closures.
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4
Q

What impacts did the Miner’s Strikes have on families, the economy and society?

A
  • The defeat of the strike led very quickly to the closure of most coal mines, a general deindustrialistation of the economy, the rapid privatisation of nationalied industries, the shattering of organised labour, growing unemploymentm the hollowing-out of mining and other working class communities, and a steady increase in social inequality in British Society.
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5
Q

What lasting effect did the Miner’s Strike have on the country, even decades later?

A
  • A wave of pit closures followed the strike and almost all of the UK’s deep coal mines were shut within the next 20 years.
  • It caused a lasting unemployment and poverty in former mining areas, just as the workers had warned with their slogan “Close a pit, kill a community”.
  • In 2019, Sheffield Hallam University researchers said the former coalfield areas - with a combined population of 5.7 million people - continue to be dogged by deprivation and poor health.
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