SydneyFan
Striker
It's the 50s but your point still stands.They've got a 60s village there now man. Being from Ryhope it was like visiting the future.
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It's the 50s but your point still stands.They've got a 60s village there now man. Being from Ryhope it was like visiting the future.
Beautifully told, but on balance I think I'd prefer being a millionaire actor pretending to be a Roman all day and bucking a young Elizabeth Taylor all night.I only knew a few that worked underground but every one of them said that they wouldn’t want it for their children.
Most of the lads from my neighborhood went into the Heavy End of the Steelworks and those that are left are coming close to retirement.
I’ve always thought that this is a beautiful, maybe romanticised look at mining in Wales by Richard Burton.
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That last sentence isn’t the thumbs up to the Coal Industry you think it is.It really wasn’t that bad. Main roadways had plenty of height. You rode to the face on a conveyor belt or a loco even. Okay there was no lighting, bogs or running water, but that just made you more self sufficient in yourself. You learned teamwork and you all had a role to play to make everything work. Any shyness you had was soon dispelled. You made mates for life. The craic was great and the pisstaking relentless. Those of us who learned trades down there really benefited when we left the industry. Yes it could be noisy and dirty at times but it could also be very serene at times. Turn your cap lamp off and see what true darkness is like. I always said that when I started I went from having one dad to having many. Great times and helped shape me to be the adult I became.
You are not wrong thereThat last sentence isn’t the thumbs up to the Coal Industry you think it is.![]()
It wasnt without risk, however from when I joined in the late 70s these diseases associated with mining were very much on the wane. Conditions had improved so much compared to what went before. The H&S act had come into being in 1974 and whilst the mines were basically covered by the mines and quarries act, the “new” H&S at work act also played a part in getting more improved conditions for the miners. My grandad died with Pneumoconiosis too. Modern mines were well ventilated in comparison to conditions many years previous. More dust suppression was employed on the faces where the cutting of coal was happening. The old hewer never had that and had a lot worse time of it than we did, hence why mining diseases were much more prevalent before that. Silicosis was another risk. The last of us who worked the mines in the north east are now in our 60s, 70s and above, and not many of us are suffering from any of those diseases that I am aware of.I’d have asked my grandad but he had difficulty talking, what with the cancer, tuberculosis and pneumoconiosis raging though his body whilst it trembled as he slowly died.
I think the OP is talking more 70s 80s rather than 1912.![]()
They've got a 60s village there now man. Being from Ryhope it was like visiting the future.
That’s weird as it was sold to us as a job for life when I joined at a similar time, especially if you worked in one of the bigger coastal super pits like westoe , wearmouth, Dawdon and Easington etc. of course it didn’t work out that way at all. Your dad was very astute.When I left school in the late 70s my mates Dad told me that the pits wouldnt be going in 10 years time.
He`d been at Westoe for years and hated it but it was all he knew.
Oddly enough, both his sons joined the NCB and were based at Westoe as well.