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Bevin Boys

Bevin Boys were young British men conscripted to work in coal mines between December 1943 and March 1948,[1] to increase the rate of coal production, which had declined through the early years of World War II.[2] The programme was named after Ernest Bevin, the Labour Party politician who was Minister of Labour and National Service in the wartime coalition government.[3]

Bevin Boys receiving training from an experienced miner at Ollerton, Nottinghamshire, February 1945

Chosen by lot as 10% of all male conscripts aged 18–25 (plus some volunteering as an alternative to military conscription) nearly 48,000 Bevin Boys performed vital and dangerous civil conscription service in coal mines. Although the last ballot took place in May 1945 (shortly before VE Day), the final conscripts were not released from service until March 1948. Few chose to remain working in the mining industry after demobilisation; most left for further education or for employment in other sectors.[4]

Bevin Boys were targets of abuse from the general public, who mistakenly believed them to be draft dodgers or cowards. They were frequently stopped by the police as possible deserters.[4] Unlike those who had served in the military, Bevin Boys were not awarded medals for their contribution to the war effort and official recognition by the British government was only conferred in 1995.[4]

Creation of programme edit

Shortfall in UK coal output edit

 
UK coal output for the years 1913 to 1950. The periods of the two World Wars are highlighted in grey.[2]

At the start of WWII, the UK was highly dependent on coal to power ships and trains, and as the main source of energy for electricity generation.[5] Although output from mines had increased as the world economy recovered from the Great Depression, it was in decline again by the time war broke out in September 1939.[2]

At the beginning of the war the Government, underestimating the value of strong younger coal miners, conscripted them into the armed forces. By mid-1943, the coal mines had lost 36,000 workers, and they were generally not replaced, because other likely young men were also being conscripted to the armed forces.[citation needed]

Industrial relations were also poor: In the first half of 1942, there were several local strikes over wages across the country,[6][7] which also reduced output.[8] In response, the government increased the minimum weekly pay to 83 shillings (for those over the age of 21 working underground)[8] and established a new Ministry of Fuel, Light and Power, under the leadership of Gwilym Lloyd George to oversee the reorganisation of coal production for the war effort.[9] In late summer, a bonus scheme was proposed to reward workers in mines that exceeded their output targets.[10] These measures resulted in an increase in production in the second half of 1942,[11][12] although volumes were still short of the tonnage required.[13]

Absenteeism (miners taking time off work as a result of e.g. sickness) also rose through the war from 9.65% in December 1941 to 10.79% and 14.40% in the Decembers of 1942 and 1943 respectively.[14]

By October 1943, Britain was becoming desperate for a continued supply of coal, both for the industrial war effort and for domestic heating throughout the winter.[citation needed]

Appeals for volunteers edit

 
Ernest Bevin (photographed in 1942)

On 23 June 1941, Bevin made a broadcast appeal to former miners, asking them to volunteer to return to the pits, with an aim of increasing numbers of mineworkers by 50,000.[15] He also issued a 'standstill' order, to prevent more miners being called up to serve in the armed forces.[16]

On 12 November 1943, Bevin made a radio broadcast aimed at sixth-form boys, to encourage them to volunteer to work in the mines when they registered for National Service. He promised the students that, like those serving in the armed forces, they would be eligible for the government’s further education scheme.[17][18]

We need 720,000 men continuously employed in this industry  This is where you boys come in. Each one of you, I am sure, is full of enthusiasm to win this war. You are looking forward to the day when you can play your part with your friends and brothers who are in the Navy, the Army, the Air Force ... But believe me, our fighting men will not be able to achieve their purpose unless we get an adequate supply of coal ... So when you go to register and the question is put to you "Will you go into the mines?" let your answer be, "Yes, I will go anywhere to help win this war".

— Ernest Bevin, 12 November 1943[18]

The term 'Bevin Boys' is thought to originate from this broadcast.[citation needed]

Conscription edit

On 12 October 1943, Gwilym Lloyd George, Minister of Fuel and Power, announced in the House of Commons that some conscripts would be directed to the mines.[19] On 2 December, Ernest Bevin explained the scheme in more detail in parliament, announcing his intention to draft 30,000 men aged 18 to 25 by 30 April 1944.[20][21]

From 1943 to 1945, one in ten of young men called up was sent to work in the mines. This caused a deal of upset, as many young men wanted to join the fighting forces and felt that as miners they would not be valued.[citation needed]

The first Bevin Boys began work, having completed their training, on 14 February 1944.[22]

Programme edit

Selection of conscripts edit

To make the process random, one of Bevin's secretaries each week, from 14 December 1943, pulled a digit from a hat containing all ten digits, 0–9, and all men liable for call-up that week whose National Service registration number ended in that digit were directed to work in the mines, with the exception of any selected for highly skilled war work such as flying planes and in submarines, and men found physically unfit for mining. Conscripted miners came from many different trades and professions, from desk work to heavy manual labour, and included some who might otherwise have become commissioned officers.[citation needed]

An appeals process was set up, to allow conscripts the opportunity to challenge the decision to send them to the pits, although decisions were rarely overturned.[23] Those who refused to serve in the mines were imprisoned.[24][25][26] By 31 May 1944, 285 conscripts had refused to serve as miners, of whom 135 had been prosecuted and 32 had been given a prison sentence.[27] By the end of November 1944, out of a total of 16,000 conscripts, 143 had refused to serve in the mines and had been sent to prison, some with the imposition of hard labour.[28]

Training edit

 
A classroom lecture where Bevin Boys are learning about the Davy lamp at Ollerton, Nottinghamshire, in February 1945

Boys when they were nearly 18 years old received an official postcard instructing them in five days time to report to a training centre such as at Cresswell Colliery, Derbyshire.[29]

Bevin Boys with no previous experience of mining, were given six weeks' training (four in a classroom-type setting and two at their assigned colliery).[20] For their first four weeks of underground work, they were supervised by an experienced miner.[20] With the exception of those working in the south Wales coalfields, the conscripts could not work at the coalface until they had accrued four months' experience underground.[20]

For the most part, the Bevin Boys were not directly involved in cutting coal from the mine face, but acted instead as colliers assistants, responsible for filling tubs or wagons and hauling them back to the shaft for transport to the surface.[4] Conscripts were supplied with helmets and steel-capped safety boots.

Pay and working conditions edit

Almost as soon as the first Bevin Boys had reported for training, there were complaints that their remuneration (44 shillings per week for an 18-year-old) were barely sufficient to cover living costs.[30] Some 140 went on strike in Doncaster for two days before their training had finished.[31] There were also complaints from experienced miners, who resented the fact that a 21-year-old recruit received the same minimum wage as they did.[32]

Bevin Boys did not wear uniforms or badges, but the oldest clothes they could find. Being of military age and without uniform caused many to be stopped by police and questioned about avoiding call-up.[33]

Contemporary attitudes to Bevin Boys edit

Many Bevin Boys suffered taunts as they wore no uniform, and there were accusations by some people that they were deliberately avoiding military conscription. Since a number of conscientious objectors were sent to work down the mines as an alternative to military service (under a system wholly separate from the Bevin Boy programme), there was sometimes an assumption that Bevin Boys were "Conchies". The right to conscientiously object to military service for philosophical or religious reasons was recognised in conscription legislation, as it had been in WWI. Old attitudes prevailed amongst some members of the general public, with resentment by association towards Bevin Boys. In 1943 Ernest Bevin said in Parliament:

There are thousands of cases in which conscientious objectors, although they have refused to take up arms, have shown as much courage as anyone else in Civil Defence and in other walks of life.

— Ernest Bevin, 9 December 1943[34]

End of programme edit

The final conscription ballot took place in May 1945 (shortly before VE Day); however, the final conscripts were not released from service until March 1948.

Recognition of contribution to the war effort edit

Within a few months of the first Bevin Boys starting work, there were calls for a badge to be awarded in recognition of the importance of their national service.[35]

After the war, Bevin Boys received neither medals nor the right to return to the jobs they had previously held.[4] (Like Forces veterans, they were entitled to participate in the Government's Further Education and Training Scheme, which paid university fees and an annual means-tested grant of up to £426 to cover living expenses whilst studying.[36])

The role played by Bevin Boys in Britain's war effort was not fully recognised until 1995, 50 years after VE Day, when Queen Elizabeth II mentioned them in a speech.[37]

On 20 June 2007, Tony Blair informed the House of Commons that thousands of conscripts who worked in mines during WWII would be awarded a veterans badge similar to the HM armed forces badge awarded by the Ministry of Defence.[38] The first badges were awarded on 25 March 2008 by the then Prime Minister, Gordon Brown, at a reception in 10 Downing Street, marking the 60th anniversary of discharge of the last Bevin Boys.[39] In 2010, Tom Hickman's "Called Up Sent Down": The Bevin Boys' War was published, containing accounts of around 70 of the boys sent to the coal mines.[40]

Front and side views of the Memorial to the Bevin Boys. National Memorial Arboretum, Alrewas.
 
Inscription reads: "The Bevin Boys were National Service conscripts, directed to work underground in British coal mines, providing unskilled labour to safeguard vital coal production to power the British war effort and produce coal for the nation."

On Tuesday 7 May 2013, a memorial to the Bevin Boys, based on the Bevin Boys Badge, was unveiled by the Countess of Wessex at the National Memorial Arboretum at Alrewas, Staffordshire.[41][42] The memorial was designed by former Bevin Boy Harry Parkes; it is made of four stone plinths carved from grey Kilkenny stone from Ireland. The stone should turn black over time, to resemble the coal that the miners extracted.[42]

The Bevin Boys Association is trying to trace all 48,000 Bevin Boy conscripts, optants or volunteers who served in Britain's coal mines during and after the war, from 1943 to 1948.[43]

Notable Bevin Boys edit

Bevin Boys Association edit

The Bevin Boys Association was formed in 1989 with 32 members in the Midlands area. By 2009 the membership had grown to over 1,800 from all over the UK and overseas. The association continues to hold meetings and reunions as well as attending commemoration services.

In popular culture edit

Douglas Livingstone's radio play, Road to Durham, is a fictional account of two former Bevin Boys, now in their eighties, as they visit the Durham Miners' Gala.[59]

British musician Jez Lowe wrote the song "The Sea and the Deep Blue Devil" from the perspective of a Bevin Boy who loses his girlfriend to a Royal Navy recruit.[60]

English singer-songwriter Reg Meuross wrote a song called "The Bevin Boys (Bill Pettinger's Lament)". The song was commissioned by Martin Pettinger as a tribute to his Bevin Boy father, Bill.[61]

See also edit

  • Unfree labour – a related, although different concept; labour in time of war or national emergency is specifically exempted from the category of 'unfree labour', as is work related to fulfilling a civic obligation.

References edit

  1. ^ Bevin Boys – BERR 14 July 2009 at the Wayback Machine
  2. ^ a b c "Historical coal data: coal production, availability and consumption". UK Government. 25 January 2019. from the original on 23 April 2018. Retrieved 23 April 2020.
  3. ^ "Bevin, Ernest". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/31872. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
  4. ^ a b c d e "Remembering the Bevin Boys in the Second World War". National Museum Wales. 3 January 2008. from the original on 21 September 2020. Retrieved 24 April 2020.
  5. ^ Hannah, Leslie (1979). "War and Post-war Crisis". Electricity before Nationalisation. London: Macmillan. pp. 289–328. ISBN 978-0-333-22086-3.
  6. ^ "Kent coal strike over". The Times. No. 49146. London. 29 January 1942. p. 2.
  7. ^ "Colliery Taken Over By Mines Department". The Times. No. 49250. London. 1 June 1942. p. 4.
  8. ^ a b "Miners Accept Wage Award". The Times. No. 49270. London. 24 June 1942. p. 2.
  9. ^ "The Coal Plan". The Times. No. 49253. London. 4 June 1942. p. 5.
  10. ^ "Bonus on coal output". The Times. No. 49328. London. 31 August 1942. p. 2.
  11. ^ "Increased output of coal". The Times. No. 49368. London. 16 October 1942. p. 2.
  12. ^ "Coal output up slightly". The Times. No. 49417. London. 12 November 1942. p. 2.
  13. ^ "Coal output still below standard". The Times. No. 49442. London. 13 January 1943. p. 2.
  14. ^ HC Deb, 29 May 1945 vol 411 c109
  15. ^ "Urgent call to miners". The Times. No. 48960. London. 24 June 1941. p. 2.
  16. ^ "No more miners for the army". The Times. No. 48961. London. 25 June 1941. p. 5.
  17. ^ "Coal output up". The Times. No. 49702. London. 13 November 1943. p. 2.
  18. ^ a b Bevin, Ernest (December 1943) [1st broadcast 12 November 1943]. "A call to youth for the coal mines". British Speeches of the Day. Vol. 10. London: British Information Services. pp. 22–24.
  19. ^ HC Deb, 12 October 1943 vol 392 cc764-766
  20. ^ a b c d HC Deb, 2 December 1943 vol 395 cc521-529
  21. ^ "Young men for the mines". The Times. No. 49719. London. 3 December 1943. p. 4.
  22. ^ "First "Bevin Boys" start work". The Times. No. 49779. London. 14 February 1944. p. 2.
  23. ^ "Bevin Boy loses appeal". The Times. No. 49821. London. 3 April 1944. p. 2.
  24. ^ "Bevin Boy changes his mind". The Times. No. 49830. London. 14 April 1944. p. 2.
  25. ^ "Prison for Bevin Boy". The Times. No. 49942. London. 23 August 1944. p. 2.
  26. ^ "Bevin Boy cases". The Times. No. 49953. London. 6 September 1944. p. 8.
  27. ^ HC Deb, 15 June 1944 vol 400 c2105
  28. ^ HC Deb, 14 December 1944 vol 406 c1328
  29. ^ Interview 29 August 2019 with ex-Bevin Boy Kenneth Jones born 1926.
  30. ^ "Grievances of Bevin Boys". The Times. No. 49758. London. 20 January 1944. p. 8.
  31. ^ "Pit recruits go back". The Times. No. 49760. London. 22 January 1944. p. 4.
  32. ^ "Coal strikes continued". The Times. No. 49802. London. 11 March 1944. p. 4.
  33. ^ Called Up Sent Down : The Bevin Boys' War – Tom Hickman Pub. The History Press 2008 ISBN 0-7509-4547-8
  34. ^ HC Deb, 9 December 1943 vol 395 c1108
  35. ^ "Young mine workers". The Times. No. 49870. London. 31 May 1944. p. 8.
  36. ^ Dent, Harold Collett (2007). "Chapter 1". Growth in English education, 1946–1952. London: Routledge. ISBN 9780415432160.
  37. ^ "Bevin's Boys – British Conscripts Forced To Mine Coal – Kept in the Dark for Over 70 Years". 29 January 2016. from the original on 31 August 2019. Retrieved 31 August 2019.
  38. ^ "Bevin Boys' war effort honoured with badge". The Daily Telegraph. from the original on 31 August 2019. Retrieved 31 August 2019.
  39. ^ "Bevin Boys honoured". The Times. No. 69281. London. 26 March 2008. p. 4.
  40. ^ Appell, James (2008). . The Oxonian Review of Books. 7 (3): 8–9. ISSN 1756-3909. Archived from the original on 22 July 2022. Retrieved 22 July 2022.
  41. ^ "Court Circular". The Times. No. 70879. London. 8 May 2013. p. 51.
  42. ^ a b . The Daily Telegraph. Archived from the original on 27 October 2013. Retrieved 12 May 2013.
  43. ^ "Bevin Boys Association entry on Culture24". from the original on 20 July 2010. Retrieved 16 December 2009.
  44. ^ "Lord Archer of Sandwell". The Times. No. 70605. London. 21 June 2012. p. 51.
  45. ^ "Sir Stanley Bailey". The Times. No. 69406. London. 19 August 2008. p. 53.
  46. ^ "Glasgow-born comedy star Stanley Baxter shows no sign of ending his love with radio". Glasgow Times. from the original on 23 January 2021. Retrieved 23 January 2020.
  47. ^ "Last of the Summer Wine's John Comer | Tea Time Tidbits | MPT Afternoon Tea". from the original on 17 September 2016. Retrieved 5 August 2016.
  48. ^ "Lord Finsberg". The Times. No. 65705. London. 10 October 1996. p. 23.
  49. ^ "Roy Grantham". The Times. No. 71043. London. 15 November 2013. p. 70.
  50. ^ Mosse, Werner Eugen; Carlebach, Julius (1991). Second chance: two centuries of German-speaking Jews in the United Kingdom. Mohr Siebeck. p. 376. ISBN 9783161457418. Retrieved 10 May 2013.
  51. ^ . Archived from the original on 27 September 2011. Retrieved 18 December 2012.
  52. ^ "Dr Dickson Mabon". The Times. No. 69298. London. 15 April 2008. p. 54.
  53. ^ "Lives in brief". The Times. No. 68637. London. 2 March 2006. p. 70.
  54. ^ a b Cooke, Ken (2007). History of the Percy Jackson Grammar School: Adwick-le-Street, Doncaster, Yorkshire, 1939–1968 : Recollections of Schooldays of the 1940s, 1950s & 1960s. Troubador Publishing Ltd. p. 6. ISBN 9781905886784.
  55. ^ "Alun Owen". The Times. No. 65132. London. 8 December 1994. p. 23.
  56. ^ "Kenneth Partridge, interior designer – obituary". The Telegraph. 21 December 2015. from the original on 30 December 2015. Retrieved 21 January 2016.
  57. ^ English Dance & Song. Vol. 41–44. English Folk Dance and Song Society. 1979. p. 18.
  58. ^ Morton, Ray (2011). Amadeus: Music on Film Series. Hal Leonard. p. 21. ISBN 9780879104177.
  59. ^ Giddings, Robert (30 April 2009). . Tribune. Archived from the original on 30 September 2011. Retrieved 25 August 2011.
  60. ^ Foster, Richard (10 May 2007). "Jez Lowe, Jack Common's Theme (Tantobie Records)". The Press. from the original on 23 January 2021. Retrieved 4 May 2020.
  61. ^ "Reg Meuross | The Bevin Boys (Bill Pettinger's Lament) - the PRSD". PRSD. 17 May 2007. from the original on 17 May 2021. Retrieved 25 May 2020.

External links edit

  • The Forgotten Conscript
  • Wartime Memories – Bevin Boys and their recognition
  • The Bevin Boys in Bures. Suffolk
  • A short film about the Bevin Boys
  • The Bevin Boys Official Association

bevin, boys, indian, technical, workers, sent, 1940s, bevin, trainees, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, source. For the Indian technical workers sent to the UK in the 1940s see Bevin trainees This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Bevin Boys news newspapers books scholar JSTOR December 2012 Learn how and when to remove this template message Bevin Boys were young British men conscripted to work in coal mines between December 1943 and March 1948 1 to increase the rate of coal production which had declined through the early years of World War II 2 The programme was named after Ernest Bevin the Labour Party politician who was Minister of Labour and National Service in the wartime coalition government 3 Bevin Boys receiving training from an experienced miner at Ollerton Nottinghamshire February 1945Chosen by lot as 10 of all male conscripts aged 18 25 plus some volunteering as an alternative to military conscription nearly 48 000 Bevin Boys performed vital and dangerous civil conscription service in coal mines Although the last ballot took place in May 1945 shortly before VE Day the final conscripts were not released from service until March 1948 Few chose to remain working in the mining industry after demobilisation most left for further education or for employment in other sectors 4 Bevin Boys were targets of abuse from the general public who mistakenly believed them to be draft dodgers or cowards They were frequently stopped by the police as possible deserters 4 Unlike those who had served in the military Bevin Boys were not awarded medals for their contribution to the war effort and official recognition by the British government was only conferred in 1995 4 Contents 1 Creation of programme 1 1 Shortfall in UK coal output 1 2 Appeals for volunteers 1 3 Conscription 2 Programme 2 1 Selection of conscripts 2 2 Training 2 3 Pay and working conditions 2 4 Contemporary attitudes to Bevin Boys 3 End of programme 4 Recognition of contribution to the war effort 5 Notable Bevin Boys 6 Bevin Boys Association 7 In popular culture 8 See also 9 References 10 External linksCreation of programme editShortfall in UK coal output edit nbsp UK coal output for the years 1913 to 1950 The periods of the two World Wars are highlighted in grey 2 At the start of WWII the UK was highly dependent on coal to power ships and trains and as the main source of energy for electricity generation 5 Although output from mines had increased as the world economy recovered from the Great Depression it was in decline again by the time war broke out in September 1939 2 At the beginning of the war the Government underestimating the value of strong younger coal miners conscripted them into the armed forces By mid 1943 the coal mines had lost 36 000 workers and they were generally not replaced because other likely young men were also being conscripted to the armed forces citation needed Industrial relations were also poor In the first half of 1942 there were several local strikes over wages across the country 6 7 which also reduced output 8 In response the government increased the minimum weekly pay to 83 shillings for those over the age of 21 working underground 8 and established a new Ministry of Fuel Light and Power under the leadership of Gwilym Lloyd George to oversee the reorganisation of coal production for the war effort 9 In late summer a bonus scheme was proposed to reward workers in mines that exceeded their output targets 10 These measures resulted in an increase in production in the second half of 1942 11 12 although volumes were still short of the tonnage required 13 Absenteeism miners taking time off work as a result of e g sickness also rose through the war from 9 65 in December 1941 to 10 79 and 14 40 in the Decembers of 1942 and 1943 respectively 14 By October 1943 Britain was becoming desperate for a continued supply of coal both for the industrial war effort and for domestic heating throughout the winter citation needed Appeals for volunteers edit nbsp Ernest Bevin photographed in 1942 On 23 June 1941 Bevin made a broadcast appeal to former miners asking them to volunteer to return to the pits with an aim of increasing numbers of mineworkers by 50 000 15 He also issued a standstill order to prevent more miners being called up to serve in the armed forces 16 On 12 November 1943 Bevin made a radio broadcast aimed at sixth form boys to encourage them to volunteer to work in the mines when they registered for National Service He promised the students that like those serving in the armed forces they would be eligible for the government s further education scheme 17 18 We need 720 000 men continuously employed in this industry This is where you boys come in Each one of you I am sure is full of enthusiasm to win this war You are looking forward to the day when you can play your part with your friends and brothers who are in the Navy the Army the Air Force But believe me our fighting men will not be able to achieve their purpose unless we get an adequate supply of coal So when you go to register and the question is put to you Will you go into the mines let your answer be Yes I will go anywhere to help win this war Ernest Bevin 12 November 1943 18 The term Bevin Boys is thought to originate from this broadcast citation needed Conscription edit On 12 October 1943 Gwilym Lloyd George Minister of Fuel and Power announced in the House of Commons that some conscripts would be directed to the mines 19 On 2 December Ernest Bevin explained the scheme in more detail in parliament announcing his intention to draft 30 000 men aged 18 to 25 by 30 April 1944 20 21 From 1943 to 1945 one in ten of young men called up was sent to work in the mines This caused a deal of upset as many young men wanted to join the fighting forces and felt that as miners they would not be valued citation needed The first Bevin Boys began work having completed their training on 14 February 1944 22 Programme editSelection of conscripts edit To make the process random one of Bevin s secretaries each week from 14 December 1943 pulled a digit from a hat containing all ten digits 0 9 and all men liable for call up that week whose National Service registration number ended in that digit were directed to work in the mines with the exception of any selected for highly skilled war work such as flying planes and in submarines and men found physically unfit for mining Conscripted miners came from many different trades and professions from desk work to heavy manual labour and included some who might otherwise have become commissioned officers citation needed An appeals process was set up to allow conscripts the opportunity to challenge the decision to send them to the pits although decisions were rarely overturned 23 Those who refused to serve in the mines were imprisoned 24 25 26 By 31 May 1944 285 conscripts had refused to serve as miners of whom 135 had been prosecuted and 32 had been given a prison sentence 27 By the end of November 1944 out of a total of 16 000 conscripts 143 had refused to serve in the mines and had been sent to prison some with the imposition of hard labour 28 Training edit nbsp A classroom lecture where Bevin Boys are learning about the Davy lamp at Ollerton Nottinghamshire in February 1945Boys when they were nearly 18 years old received an official postcard instructing them in five days time to report to a training centre such as at Cresswell Colliery Derbyshire 29 Bevin Boys with no previous experience of mining were given six weeks training four in a classroom type setting and two at their assigned colliery 20 For their first four weeks of underground work they were supervised by an experienced miner 20 With the exception of those working in the south Wales coalfields the conscripts could not work at the coalface until they had accrued four months experience underground 20 For the most part the Bevin Boys were not directly involved in cutting coal from the mine face but acted instead as colliers assistants responsible for filling tubs or wagons and hauling them back to the shaft for transport to the surface 4 Conscripts were supplied with helmets and steel capped safety boots Pay and working conditions edit Almost as soon as the first Bevin Boys had reported for training there were complaints that their remuneration 44 shillings per week for an 18 year old were barely sufficient to cover living costs 30 Some 140 went on strike in Doncaster for two days before their training had finished 31 There were also complaints from experienced miners who resented the fact that a 21 year old recruit received the same minimum wage as they did 32 Bevin Boys did not wear uniforms or badges but the oldest clothes they could find Being of military age and without uniform caused many to be stopped by police and questioned about avoiding call up 33 Contemporary attitudes to Bevin Boys edit Many Bevin Boys suffered taunts as they wore no uniform and there were accusations by some people that they were deliberately avoiding military conscription Since a number of conscientious objectors were sent to work down the mines as an alternative to military service under a system wholly separate from the Bevin Boy programme there was sometimes an assumption that Bevin Boys were Conchies The right to conscientiously object to military service for philosophical or religious reasons was recognised in conscription legislation as it had been in WWI Old attitudes prevailed amongst some members of the general public with resentment by association towards Bevin Boys In 1943 Ernest Bevin said in Parliament There are thousands of cases in which conscientious objectors although they have refused to take up arms have shown as much courage as anyone else in Civil Defence and in other walks of life Ernest Bevin 9 December 1943 34 End of programme editThe final conscription ballot took place in May 1945 shortly before VE Day however the final conscripts were not released from service until March 1948 Recognition of contribution to the war effort editWithin a few months of the first Bevin Boys starting work there were calls for a badge to be awarded in recognition of the importance of their national service 35 After the war Bevin Boys received neither medals nor the right to return to the jobs they had previously held 4 Like Forces veterans they were entitled to participate in the Government s Further Education and Training Scheme which paid university fees and an annual means tested grant of up to 426 to cover living expenses whilst studying 36 The role played by Bevin Boys in Britain s war effort was not fully recognised until 1995 50 years after VE Day when Queen Elizabeth II mentioned them in a speech 37 On 20 June 2007 Tony Blair informed the House of Commons that thousands of conscripts who worked in mines during WWII would be awarded a veterans badge similar to the HM armed forces badge awarded by the Ministry of Defence 38 The first badges were awarded on 25 March 2008 by the then Prime Minister Gordon Brown at a reception in 10 Downing Street marking the 60th anniversary of discharge of the last Bevin Boys 39 In 2010 Tom Hickman s Called Up Sent Down The Bevin Boys War was published containing accounts of around 70 of the boys sent to the coal mines 40 Front and side views of the Memorial to the Bevin Boys National Memorial Arboretum Alrewas nbsp Inscription reads The Bevin Boys were National Service conscripts directed to work underground in British coal mines providing unskilled labour to safeguard vital coal production to power the British war effort and produce coal for the nation On Tuesday 7 May 2013 a memorial to the Bevin Boys based on the Bevin Boys Badge was unveiled by the Countess of Wessex at the National Memorial Arboretum at Alrewas Staffordshire 41 42 The memorial was designed by former Bevin Boy Harry Parkes it is made of four stone plinths carved from grey Kilkenny stone from Ireland The stone should turn black over time to resemble the coal that the miners extracted 42 The Bevin Boys Association is trying to trace all 48 000 Bevin Boy conscripts optants or volunteers who served in Britain s coal mines during and after the war from 1943 to 1948 43 Notable Bevin Boys editPeter Archer lawyer and Labour Party politician 44 Stanley Bailey senior police officer 45 Stanley Baxter actor and impressionist 46 John Comer actor 47 Geoffrey Finsberg Conservative politician 48 Roy Grantham trade union leader 49 Paul Hamlyn founder of the Hamlyn group of publishers and Music for Pleasure record label 50 Wally Holmes rugby union player Nat Lofthouse footballer 51 Dickson Mabon Labour politician 52 Tom McGuinness artist 53 David McClure artist Eric Morecambe comedian 54 Alun Owen screenwriter 55 Kenneth Partridge interior designer 56 Jock Purdon folk singer poet 57 Peter Alan Rayner numismatic author Brian Rix actor manager and President of Mencap 54 Peter Shaffer dramatist 58 Jimmy Savile disgraced radio television personality Alf Sherwood footballer Gerald Smithson cricketerBevin Boys Association editThe Bevin Boys Association was formed in 1989 with 32 members in the Midlands area By 2009 the membership had grown to over 1 800 from all over the UK and overseas The association continues to hold meetings and reunions as well as attending commemoration services In popular culture editDouglas Livingstone s radio play Road to Durham is a fictional account of two former Bevin Boys now in their eighties as they visit the Durham Miners Gala 59 British musician Jez Lowe wrote the song The Sea and the Deep Blue Devil from the perspective of a Bevin Boy who loses his girlfriend to a Royal Navy recruit 60 English singer songwriter Reg Meuross wrote a song called The Bevin Boys Bill Pettinger s Lament The song was commissioned by Martin Pettinger as a tribute to his Bevin Boy father Bill 61 See also editUnfree labour a related although different concept labour in time of war or national emergency is specifically exempted from the category of unfree labour as is work related to fulfilling a civic obligation References edit Bevin Boys BERR Archived 14 July 2009 at the Wayback Machine a b c Historical coal data coal production availability and consumption UK Government 25 January 2019 Archived from the original on 23 April 2018 Retrieved 23 April 2020 Bevin Ernest Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 31872 Subscription or UK public library membership required a b c d e Remembering the Bevin Boys in the Second World War National Museum Wales 3 January 2008 Archived from the original on 21 September 2020 Retrieved 24 April 2020 Hannah Leslie 1979 War and Post war Crisis Electricity before Nationalisation London Macmillan pp 289 328 ISBN 978 0 333 22086 3 Kent coal strike over The Times No 49146 London 29 January 1942 p 2 Colliery Taken Over By Mines Department The Times No 49250 London 1 June 1942 p 4 a b Miners Accept Wage Award The Times No 49270 London 24 June 1942 p 2 The Coal Plan The Times No 49253 London 4 June 1942 p 5 Bonus on coal output The Times No 49328 London 31 August 1942 p 2 Increased output of coal The Times No 49368 London 16 October 1942 p 2 Coal output up slightly The Times No 49417 London 12 November 1942 p 2 Coal output still below standard The Times No 49442 London 13 January 1943 p 2 HC Deb 29 May 1945 vol 411 c109 Urgent call to miners The Times No 48960 London 24 June 1941 p 2 No more miners for the army The Times No 48961 London 25 June 1941 p 5 Coal output up The Times No 49702 London 13 November 1943 p 2 a b Bevin Ernest December 1943 1st broadcast 12 November 1943 A call to youth for the coal mines British Speeches of the Day Vol 10 London British Information Services pp 22 24 HC Deb 12 October 1943 vol 392 cc764 766 a b c d HC Deb 2 December 1943 vol 395 cc521 529 Young men for the mines The Times No 49719 London 3 December 1943 p 4 First Bevin Boys start work The Times No 49779 London 14 February 1944 p 2 Bevin Boy loses appeal The Times No 49821 London 3 April 1944 p 2 Bevin Boy changes his mind The Times No 49830 London 14 April 1944 p 2 Prison for Bevin Boy The Times No 49942 London 23 August 1944 p 2 Bevin Boy cases The Times No 49953 London 6 September 1944 p 8 HC Deb 15 June 1944 vol 400 c2105 HC Deb 14 December 1944 vol 406 c1328 Interview 29 August 2019 with ex Bevin Boy Kenneth Jones born 1926 Grievances of Bevin Boys The Times No 49758 London 20 January 1944 p 8 Pit recruits go back The Times No 49760 London 22 January 1944 p 4 Coal strikes continued The Times No 49802 London 11 March 1944 p 4 Called Up Sent Down The Bevin Boys War Tom Hickman Pub The History Press 2008 ISBN 0 7509 4547 8 HC Deb 9 December 1943 vol 395 c1108 Young mine workers The Times No 49870 London 31 May 1944 p 8 Dent Harold Collett 2007 Chapter 1 Growth in English education 1946 1952 London Routledge ISBN 9780415432160 Bevin s Boys British Conscripts Forced To Mine Coal Kept in the Dark for Over 70 Years 29 January 2016 Archived from the original on 31 August 2019 Retrieved 31 August 2019 Bevin Boys war effort honoured with badge The Daily Telegraph Archived from the original on 31 August 2019 Retrieved 31 August 2019 Bevin Boys honoured The Times No 69281 London 26 March 2008 p 4 Appell James 2008 Forgotten conscripts no longer The Oxonian Review of Books 7 3 8 9 ISSN 1756 3909 Archived from the original on 22 July 2022 Retrieved 22 July 2022 Court Circular The Times No 70879 London 8 May 2013 p 51 a b Bevin Boys memorial unveiled by Countess of Wessex The Daily Telegraph Archived from the original on 27 October 2013 Retrieved 12 May 2013 Bevin Boys Association entry on Culture24 Archived from the original on 20 July 2010 Retrieved 16 December 2009 Lord Archer of Sandwell The Times No 70605 London 21 June 2012 p 51 Sir Stanley Bailey The Times No 69406 London 19 August 2008 p 53 Glasgow born comedy star Stanley Baxter shows no sign of ending his love with radio Glasgow Times Archived from the original on 23 January 2021 Retrieved 23 January 2020 Last of the Summer Wine s John Comer Tea Time Tidbits MPT Afternoon Tea Archived from the original on 17 September 2016 Retrieved 5 August 2016 Lord Finsberg The Times No 65705 London 10 October 1996 p 23 Roy Grantham The Times No 71043 London 15 November 2013 p 70 Mosse Werner Eugen Carlebach Julius 1991 Second chance two centuries of German speaking Jews in the United Kingdom Mohr Siebeck p 376 ISBN 9783161457418 Retrieved 10 May 2013 Bolton Council Bolton s Bevin Boys remembered Archived from the original on 27 September 2011 Retrieved 18 December 2012 Dr Dickson Mabon The Times No 69298 London 15 April 2008 p 54 Lives in brief The Times No 68637 London 2 March 2006 p 70 a b Cooke Ken 2007 History of the Percy Jackson Grammar School Adwick le Street Doncaster Yorkshire 1939 1968 Recollections of Schooldays of the 1940s 1950s amp 1960s Troubador Publishing Ltd p 6 ISBN 9781905886784 Alun Owen The Times No 65132 London 8 December 1994 p 23 Kenneth Partridge interior designer obituary The Telegraph 21 December 2015 Archived from the original on 30 December 2015 Retrieved 21 January 2016 English Dance amp Song Vol 41 44 English Folk Dance and Song Society 1979 p 18 Morton Ray 2011 Amadeus Music on Film Series Hal Leonard p 21 ISBN 9780879104177 Giddings Robert 30 April 2009 RADIO Seamless drama goes underground to dig deep for victory Tribune Archived from the original on 30 September 2011 Retrieved 25 August 2011 Foster Richard 10 May 2007 Jez Lowe Jack Common s Theme Tantobie Records The Press Archived from the original on 23 January 2021 Retrieved 4 May 2020 Reg Meuross The Bevin Boys Bill Pettinger s Lament the PRSD PRSD 17 May 2007 Archived from the original on 17 May 2021 Retrieved 25 May 2020 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Bevin Boys The Forgotten Conscript Wartime Memories Bevin Boys and their recognition The Bevin Boys in Bures Suffolk A short film about the Bevin Boys The Bevin Boys Official Association Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Bevin Boys amp oldid 1189358445, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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