Remembering Miners' Strike 35 years on: Feelings still running high after more than three decades

Hundreds of people showed their support for the miners in this demonstration in Easington.Hundreds of people showed their support for the miners in this demonstration in Easington.
Hundreds of people showed their support for the miners in this demonstration in Easington. | JPIMedia
It is now 35 years since the end of the Miners’ Strike of 1984/85, but feelings still run high over the bitter dispute.

It lasted almost exactly a year and caused divisions within communities, even within families, that have not healed to this day.

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More than half the country's 187,000 miners left work in what was the biggest industrial dispute in post-war Britain.

The ill-feeling between striking and non-striking miners would last lifetimes in some cases.

Miners return to work defeated, at Easington on March 5, 1985.Miners return to work defeated, at Easington on March 5, 1985.
Miners return to work defeated, at Easington on March 5, 1985. | JPIMedia

For decades, coal mining in the UK was the backbone of the economy, not least in the North East, employing hundreds of thousands of people.

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In 1981 the country was producing 128million tonnes of coal a year. Today only a handful of pits remain. Ironically, the strike was about pit closures.

The two sides were the Government and the National Union of Mineworkers, headed respectively by Margaret Thatcher and Arthur Scargill; political polar opposites but equally committed.

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NUM leader Arthur Scargill on a visit to Easington in 1984.NUM leader Arthur Scargill on a visit to Easington in 1984.
NUM leader Arthur Scargill on a visit to Easington in 1984. | JPIMedia

Pete Lewis said: “The problem is with (Facebook) posts like this is, we would rather forget them. But there is no harm in telling it how it was "’in The Good Old Days’, but it’s difficult finding any kids these days who are interested.”

Kevin Leary said: “The miners lost a lot of support using flying pickets and not having a (national) ballot.

“Scargill deliberately used communist Kent branch to come out, then abused the decency of union members to fight a political battle he was never going to win.”

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Gary Duncan said: “The miners were heroes! How many sections of the working class have taken on the government in such a militant style? Absolute legends every one of them.”

David Almond asked: “Did the miners HAVE to go on strike? Did the government or police close the gates so the well paid workers couldn’t get in?This needs to be left from where it came.”

John Reed said: “If they were all still open today Greta Thunberg would be having kittens.”