David Hendy is a writer, broadcaster and Emeritus Professor of Media and Cultural History at the University of Sussex. He worked as a current-affairs producer at the BBC in the late-1980s and early-1990s, covering a range of domestic and international affairs, and has since written and presented several series for BBC Radio 4 and BBC Radio 3, including *Noise: A Human History *and The Essay. His latest book is The BBC: A People’s History.
The Miners’ Strike: Forty Years On
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The Miners’ Strike: Forty Years On
Tuesday 5th March 2024 19:00 – 20:30
The Miners’ Strike: Forty Years On
A look back at the impact and legacy of the Miner’s Strike.
This week marks the fortieth anniversary of the Miners’ Strike, the last great industrial battle of the twentieth century, which gripped the country for an entire year. 170,000 miners came out on strike across the coalfields of South Wales, the Midlands, North of England and Scotland in defence of their pits, which were scheduled for closure, and for their families and communities.
While prime minister Margaret Thatcher denounced ‘the enemy within’ and the media highlighted the violence on picket lines, support groups were set up, run largely by miners’ wives, to raise funds for soup kitchens and food parcels to keep their families fed.
Activists and trade unionists across the country and abroad supported the strike, but hardship finally forced the miners back to work. Pit closures, unemployment and the devastation of mining communities followed, shaping the bleak landscape of post-industrial Britain. Yet there are also amazing stories of former miners and their wives reinventing themselves, finding other careers and endeavouring to repair their communities.
On our panel for a conversation on the significance and legacy of the Miners’ Strike will be
Frances O’Grady, former General Secretary of the Trades Union Congress and the sister of a miner who was on strike; Siân James, a miner’s wife from the Swansea Valley who became a Labour MP; Robert Gildea, historian and author of Backbone of the Nation: Mining Communities and the Great Strike of 1984-85 and John Harris, Orwell Prize winning Guardian columnist and writer on British politics and pop music. The evening will be chaired by broadcaster and historian David Hendy.