Shandy drinker
Striker
Ask Nigel faraj I believe he wants to reopen them
For other people to work there of course
For other people to work there of course
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I’ve always thought that this is a beautiful, maybe romanticised look at mining in Wales by Richard Burton.
It was always called why’aye-fi in the Northumberland pits..What would the wifi be like?
This website is excellentSounds grim as fck. I often walk the dog through Whitburn cemetery and there are two headstones that mention the person died in Whitburn Colliery in 1912 and Monkwearmouth in 1974. Curious to what happened I googled the names and there is an excellent site on North East mines that includes a list of all the poor lads that were killed.
The Whitburn lad injured his face getting out of the lift carrying him out and ended up dead from his injury!!! (Can only assume he got infected) and the Monkwearmouth lad was killed as he was crushed between two carts. Some horrific ways to go reading through the list.
Definitely not for me like and absolute respect to all the men and boys that did it
ThisSeems to be this exaggerated mythology and yearning for the ‘good old days’ of working in the shipyards or the mines.
My dad, his brother and their father worked the yards all their life
My brother in law’s dad as well as lot of my mates worked the pits
They all said it was , apart from a couple of years in the golden era of union strength and solidarity, dirty, boring hard work and in Winter, even worse
The camaraderie and craic ( mainly gallows humor) was one of the main things most missed when darling of the black shirts Thatcher closed both industries down.
It’s like those who yearn for a return to standing on terraces at footy but who only really know what they see in old footage
It’s reminiscing through rose tinted specs and harsh dark realities are conveniently forgotten about
Sounds absolutely shite tbh. My grandad did his best to make sure my dad never had to work down there.
My dad came home several times after gas bottles went off in double bottoms. Couple of his mates died in such explosions.
This
What was it like? Dark, dirty and dangerous.
Safety undoubtedly improved in the latter years but one of my earliest memories is sitting with my next door neighbour in the late 1950's/early 60's as he gasped for breath suffering from "the dust". He died around 60 years old.
Seems to be this exaggerated mythology and yearning for the ‘good old days’ of working in the shipyards or the mines.
My dad, his brother and their father worked the yards all their life
My brother in law’s dad as well as lot of my mates worked the pits
They all said it was , apart from a couple of years in the golden era of union strength and solidarity, dirty, boring hard work and in Winter, even worse
The camaraderie and craic ( mainly gallows humor) was one of the main things most missed when darling of the black shirts Thatcher closed both industries down.
It’s like those who yearn for a return to standing on terraces at footy but who only really know what they see in old footage
It’s reminiscing through rose tinted specs and harsh dark realities are conveniently forgotten about
Tin hat on but for unskilled men would it be any worse than going to Nissan?A similar thread from about a year ago suggested that the wage was about 3-4k a year back in the 70s? If so, adjusted for inflation that would be about 40k nowadays. Not much to work in those conditions, albeit a lot of items have increased much much higher than inflation (house prices, price of a pint etc).