fbpx
Wikipedia

National Union of Mineworkers (Great Britain)

The National Union of Mineworkers (NUM) is a trade union for coal miners in Great Britain, formed in 1945 from the Miners' Federation of Great Britain (MFGB). The NUM took part in three national miners' strikes, in 1972, 1974 and 1984–85. After the 1984–85 strike, and the subsequent closure of most of Britain's coal mines, it became a much smaller union. It had around 170,000 members when Arthur Scargill became leader in 1981,[5] a figure which had fallen in 2015 to an active membership of around 100.[6]

National Union of Mineworkers
PredecessorMiners' Federation of Great Britain
FoundedJanuary 1945 (1945-01)
Headquarters2 Huddersfield Road, Barnsley
Location
Members
423,085 (1946)[1]
750 (2016)[2]
311 (2018)[3]
Key people
AffiliationsTUC, Labour,[4] NSSN
Websitewww.num.org.uk

Origins

The Miners' Federation of Great Britain was established in Newport, Monmouthshire in 1888[7] but did not function as a unified, centralised trade union for all miners.[8] Instead the federation represented and co-ordinated the affairs of the existing local and regional miners' unions whose associations remained largely autonomous. The South Wales Miners' Federation, founded in 1898,[9] joined the MFGB in 1899,[10] while the Northumberland Miners' Association and the Durham Miners' Association joined in 1907 and 1908, respectively.[citation needed]

Post-1945

In January 1945, the MFGB was superseded by the National Union of Mineworkers.[8] Within the organisation, each coalfield continued to exercise a degree of autonomy, having its own district association, president, general secretary, and headquarters. Originally, a national strike required a two-thirds majority in a ballot of members, however, this proved near impossible to achieve, and the majority was reduced to 55% in 1970,[11] and to 50% in 1984.[citation needed] Regions of the union could call their own strikes. Different areas varied as to how militant they were, and it was not uncommon for animosity to exist between areas.

On formation, the NUM had the following areas:

Area Membership (1944)[12] Membership (1979)[13]
Bristol 400 N/A
Cokemen 3,000 5,138
Colliery Officials N/A 18,980
Craftsmen Group No.1 15,200 9,471
Craftsmen Group No.2 12,200 4,638
Cumberland 7,500 914
Derbyshire 25,000 11,617
Durham 106,472 16,258
Kent 5,100 2,759
Lancashire and Cheshire 40,000 8,798
Leicester 4,000 3,241
Midlands 30,000 13,973
Northumberland 28,561 7,767
North Wales 7,526 1,052
Nottingham 30,000 34,275
Power 13,561 4,982
Power Group No.2 N/A 1,230
Scotland 51,000 16,373
Somerset 2,600 N/A
South Derbyshire 5,743 3,269
South Wales 100,000 26,092
Yorkshire 115,000 64,060

The NUM was strongly supportive of the Labour Party. During the first government of Harold Wilson, hundreds of pits closed and thousands of miners left the coal industry but the NUM leadership put up little resistance to the programme.[14] Unofficial strikes were common in the coal industry. Following an unofficial strike in 1969 about the pay of surface workers, it was decided that the threshold for the ballot should be lowered.[14]

The NUM opposed membership of the European Economic Community, beginning with a unanimous conference vote in 1971. During the 1975 referendum, there was a debate within the NUM over the sponsorship giving to Labour MPs in coalfields, given how many of them were campaigning in favour of membership and defying the NUM policy. The Yorkshire Area passed a resolution that tightened the conditions for sponsorship of MPs.[15]

The Miners' Strike, 1984–85

In the 1980s, because many coal mines were overwhelmingly unprofitable, the Conservative government headed by Margaret Thatcher sought to close them and privatise the rest.[16] In some areas, the NUM was militant[11] and threatened strikes in 1981 when the government raised the issue. As the government was not ready for a confrontation, it negotiated a settlement with the union, and backed down from the closures. In what the NUM considered a confrontational move, Ian MacGregor, who had overseen cutbacks and closures at British Steel Corporation, was appointed head of the National Coal Board by Thatcher in 1983.

In 1984, after secretly stockpiling coal at power stations, the NCB announced the closure of 20 pits.[16] Local regions organised strikes but NUM President Arthur Scargill, without a national ballot of the union's membership, declared a national strike in March 1984, which was ruled illegal in England, making striking miners ineligible for benefits.[17] Support for the strike was not universal; in some areas such as North Wales, support was small but great in others such as South Wales.[18] Also, Yorkshire was more enthusiastic about the strike than Nottinghamshire where many miners refused to strike.

Margaret Thatcher described the strikers as the "enemy within", but Scargill was equally confrontational. Picket lines were stationed outside the pits and other industrial sites requiring coal and violent clashes with police were common. Strikers had no source of income and some were forced by circumstances to cross the picket lines as reluctant "scabs". The strike ended on 3 March 1985 and the miners returned to work without agreement with the NCB. The strike was unsuccessful and its failure was an era-defining moment in British politics. After the strike large numbers of collieries were closed.[18]

The strike's effectiveness was reduced because the NUM leaders refused to nationally ballot members on strike action and argued that it was an issue for each area to decide. In some areas that held ballots the majority voted against striking but were subject to picketing from areas that had declared a strike. The strike was deemed illegal by the courts on the basis that the NUM rulebook required a secret ballot for a national strike. Although working miners had instigated the legal action, the NUM leadership presented it as an attack on its right to conduct its own internal affairs. The lack of a ballot reduced public support and made it easier for the government to use legal and police powers against the union without significant political consequences.[citation needed]

The closed shop in the state-owned coal sector was ended when a breakaway union, the Union of Democratic Mineworkers, was formed mostly by miners in Nottinghamshire and South Derbyshire who felt betrayed by the NUM for insisting on a strike after their area ballot had rejected strike action. In contrast, the Leicestershire area stayed in the NUM, as the area leader Jack Jones had kept good relations with the local miners by openly defying Scargill.

After the end of the strike, the NUM took an active leadership role in working to align the labour movement in the UK more closely with LGBT rights issues. Following the Lesbians and Gays Support the Miners campaign of 1984–85, the organisation's Welsh chapters became the first non-LGBT organisation to participate in London's Lesbian and Gay Pride parade,[19] and at the Labour Party's 1985 policy conference, the NUM's unanimous block voting support contributed to the successful passage of Composite 26, a resolution which formally committed the party to an LGBT rights platform.[20]

Decline

Long based in London, Scargill commissioned a new headquarters building in Sheffield, which was completed in 1988. However, with membership declining, the union relocated again in 1992, to share the Yorkshire Area offices in Barnsley.[21][22]

Although weakened by the strike, the NUM was still a significant force into the early 1990s. A major scheme of closures of deep mines was announced by the government in 1992. The NUM ran a national ballot on possible strike action, and this was passed by members. It worked with the National Association of Colliery Overmen, Deputies and Shotfirers to challenge the closures in the High Court; the court imposed an emergency injunction against the closures and the strike action was called off. However, from mid-1993, the mines started closing;[23] the number of working miners and therefore also the membership of the union continued to fall.

In 2011 the union had 1,855 members.[24] In 2012 the union's general secretary, Chris Kitchen, admitted it was in decline after the investigative website Exaro[25] revealed that in 2011 the Derbyshire branch had just one member who was not a paid official. Filings with the Trades Union Certification Officer showed that the NUM's Derbyshire branch had just four members, three of whom were paid officials.[26]

In 2012 it emerged in court cases between the NUM and its former president Arthur Scargill that a substantial proportion of union members' subscriptions was being spent on expenses for Scargill, including unauthorised rent payments for a flat in London's Barbican Estate.[27]

A further 540 miners' job losses were announced in January 2013.[28]

Areas

As of 2016, the following area unions are affiliated to the NUM:[29]

Landmark events

  • 1947: nationalisation of 958 coal mines under state control; 400 small mines were left in private hands.[30]
  • 1969: a widespread unofficial strike over the pay of surface workers leads to a change in the rules on authorising a national strike: the threshold in a ballot is reduced from two-thirds to 55%.[31]
  • 1972: Official national strike. This ended in success after the Battle of Saltley Gate, where the miners' pickets were supported by solidarity strikes by engineering workers in the Birmingham area.
  • 1973-74: Three-Day Week results from an overtime ban from December 1973. A vote by the NUM to strike at the end of January led Prime Minister Ted Heath to call a general election, in which he was defeated. The new government of Harold Wilson accepted the pay demand.
  • 1984-85: National strike, which divided the union after the strike motion was rejected in several local ballots and the executive refused to hold a national ballot. After almost a year, the NUM returned to work having won almost no concessions. End of the closed shop with the establishment of the UDM.
  • 1994: privatisation of the fifteen state-owned coal mines still in operation, with ownership transferred to the company RJB Mining.[32]

Officers

Notable people

  • Dave Feickert, Industrial Relations Officer then Head of Research 1983 to 1993, later Mines Safety advisor NZ and China.[33]

See also

References

Citations

  1. ^ Labour Party, Report of the Forty-Fifth Annual Conference of the Labour Party, p.77
  2. ^ Trade Union Certification Officer, "Annual return for a trade union: National Union of Mineworkers" (2016)
  3. ^ https://assets.publishing.service.gov.uk/government/uploads/system/uploads/attachment_data/file/811570/199T_2018.pdf[bare URL PDF]
  4. ^ . Archived from the original on 11 March 2012. Retrieved 14 February 2012.
  5. ^ Michael Crick (4 October 2012). "Scargill's fight to remain in his NUM Barbican flat". Channel 4 News. Retrieved 13 March 2016.
  6. ^ James McCarthy (26 December 2015). "Now down to just 100 active members – the decline of the once-mighty NUM". Wales Online. Retrieved 13 March 2016.
  7. ^ National Union of Mineworkers 1989, p. 7.
  8. ^ a b National Union of Mineworkers 1989, p. 67.
  9. ^ Lewis, E.D. The Rhondda Valleys, Phoenix House: London, (1959) pg 172
  10. ^ The Welsh Academy Encyclopaedia of Wales. John Davies, Nigel Jenkins, Menna Baines and Peredur Lynch (2008) pg827 ISBN 978-0-7083-1953-6
  11. ^ a b Pierre-François GOUIFFES. "MARGARET THATCHER & THE MINERS" (PDF). Retrieved 28 February 2015.
  12. ^ Arthur Marsh and Victoria Ryan, Historical Directory of Trade Unions, vol.2, pp.198–199. Membership figures are from immediately prior to the formation of the NUM.
  13. ^ Allen, V. L. (1981). The Militancy of British Miners. Shipley: The Moor Press. p. 268. ISBN 0907698018.
  14. ^ a b Douglas, David John (1994). Pit Sense versus the State: A history of militant miners in the Doncaster area. London: Phoenic Press. pp. 10–13. ISBN 0-948984-26-0.
  15. ^ Taylor, Andrew (1984). The Politics of the Yorkshire Miners. Beckenham: Croom Helm. pp. 153–155. ISBN 0-7099-2447-X.
  16. ^ a b "The Miner's Strike". British Broadcasting Corporation. 15 August 2008. Retrieved 28 February 2015.
  17. ^ Hutton, Guthrie (2005). Coal Not Dole Memories of the 1984/85 miners' strike. Catrine, Ayrshire: Stenlake Publishing. p. 8. ISBN 9781840333299.
  18. ^ a b The miners' strike, The BBC, retrieved 3 December 2011
  19. ^ "When miners and gay activists united: the real story of the film Pride". The Guardian (London), 31 August 2014.
  20. ^ Stephen Brooke, Sexuality, Family Planning, and the British Left from the 1880s to the Present Day. Oxford University Press, 2012. ISBN 9780199562541. pp. 245–246.
  21. ^ Hatherley, Owen (November 2010). A Guide to the New Ruins of Great Britain. New York: Verso Books. pp. 104–5.
  22. ^ "Sheffield casino plan approved for ex-NUM headquarters". BBC. 19 December 2011. Retrieved 19 April 2012.
  23. ^ Lorenzo Bosi, Marco Giugni and Katrin Uba, The consequences of social movements, pp.54–55
  24. ^ Documents lodged on the website of the Trades Union Certification Officer, The website of the Trades Union Certification Officer, retrieved 8 January 2013
  25. ^ "NUM branch with 4 members pays £80k per year to top officials". Exaro news. Retrieved 8 January 2013.
  26. ^ Documents lodged on the website of the Trades Union Certification Officer, The website of the Trades Union Certification Officer, retrieved 8 January 2013
  27. ^ "Arthur Scargill loses London flat case". BBC News. 21 December 2012. Retrieved 6 February 2014.
  28. ^ Barnard, Stephanie (18 December 2012), "Maltby miners face Christmas gloom", BBC News, retrieved 8 January 2013
  29. ^ Trade Union Certification Officer. "Trade unions: the current list and schedule". gov.uk. UK Government. Retrieved 14 July 2016.
  30. ^ Strike: 358 Days that Shook the Nation. London: Sunday Times. 1985. p. 5. ISBN 0-340-38445-X.
  31. ^ Douglas, David John (1994). Pit Sense versus the State: A history of militant miners in the Doncaster area. London: Phoenic Press. pp. 11–12. ISBN 0-948984-26-0.
  32. ^ Hudson, Ray (November 2001). . University of Sunderland. Archived from the original on 3 December 2005. Retrieved 6 March 2009.
  33. ^ France, Duncan (5 May 2015). "Dave Feickert - Champion for Workers' Safety - a Short Biography".

Bibliography

  • National Union of Mineworkers (1989), A Century of Struggle Britain's Miners in Pictures 1889–1989, National Union of Mineworkers, ISBN 0-901959 06 5

Further reading

  • Arnot, Robert Page. The Miners: a History of the Miners' Federation of Great Britain, 1889-1910. London: Allen and Unwin, 1949.
  • Arnot, Robert Page. South Wales Miners, Glowyr de Cymru: a History of the South Wales Miners' Federation (1914–1926). Cardiff : Cymric Federation Press, 1975.
  • Arnot, Robert Page. The Miners; One Union, One Industry: a History of the National Union of Mineworkers, 1939–46. London: Allen and Unwin, 1979.
  • Ashworth, William, and Mark Pegg. History of the British Coal Industry: Volume 5: 1946–1982: The Nationalized Industry (1986)
  • Baylies, Carolyn. The History of the Yorkshire Miners, 1881–1918 Routledge (1993).
  • Beckett, Francis and David Hencke, Marching to the fault line: The Miners' Strike and the battle for industrial Britain (2009) on 1980s
  • Benson, John. "Coalmining" in Chris Wrigley, ed. A History of British industrial relations, 1875–1914 (Univ of Massachusetts Press, 1982), pp 187–208.
  • Benson, John. British Coal-Miners in the Nineteenth Century: A Social History Holmes & Meier, (1980) online
  • Rowe, J.W.F. Wages In the coal industry (1923).
  • Supple, Barry. The History of the British Coal Industry: Volume 4: 1913–1946: The Political Economy of Decline (1988) excerpt and text search
  • Towers, Brian. "Running the gauntlet: British trade unions under Thatcher, 1979–1988." Industrial & Labor Relations Review 42#2 (1989): 163–188.
  • Waller, Robert. The Dukeries Transformed: A history of the development of the Dukeries coal field after 1920 (Oxford U.P., 1983) on the Dukeries
  • Williams, Chris. Capitalism, community and conflict: The south Wales coalfield, 1898–1947 (U of Wales Press, 1998).

External links

national, union, mineworkers, great, britain, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, national, union, minew. 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 National Union of Mineworkers Great Britain news newspapers books scholar JSTOR June 2011 Learn how and when to remove this template message The National Union of Mineworkers NUM is a trade union for coal miners in Great Britain formed in 1945 from the Miners Federation of Great Britain MFGB The NUM took part in three national miners strikes in 1972 1974 and 1984 85 After the 1984 85 strike and the subsequent closure of most of Britain s coal mines it became a much smaller union It had around 170 000 members when Arthur Scargill became leader in 1981 5 a figure which had fallen in 2015 to an active membership of around 100 6 National Union of MineworkersPredecessorMiners Federation of Great BritainFoundedJanuary 1945 1945 01 Headquarters2 Huddersfield Road BarnsleyLocationUnited KingdomMembers423 085 1946 1 750 2016 2 311 2018 3 Key peopleChris Kitchen secretary Nicky Wilson president AffiliationsTUC Labour 4 NSSNWebsitewww wbr num wbr org wbr uk Contents 1 Origins 2 Post 1945 3 The Miners Strike 1984 85 4 Decline 5 Areas 6 Landmark events 7 Officers 8 Notable people 9 See also 10 References 10 1 Citations 10 2 Bibliography 11 Further reading 12 External linksOrigins EditThe Miners Federation of Great Britain was established in Newport Monmouthshire in 1888 7 but did not function as a unified centralised trade union for all miners 8 Instead the federation represented and co ordinated the affairs of the existing local and regional miners unions whose associations remained largely autonomous The South Wales Miners Federation founded in 1898 9 joined the MFGB in 1899 10 while the Northumberland Miners Association and the Durham Miners Association joined in 1907 and 1908 respectively citation needed Post 1945 EditIn January 1945 the MFGB was superseded by the National Union of Mineworkers 8 Within the organisation each coalfield continued to exercise a degree of autonomy having its own district association president general secretary and headquarters Originally a national strike required a two thirds majority in a ballot of members however this proved near impossible to achieve and the majority was reduced to 55 in 1970 11 and to 50 in 1984 citation needed Regions of the union could call their own strikes Different areas varied as to how militant they were and it was not uncommon for animosity to exist between areas On formation the NUM had the following areas Area Membership 1944 12 Membership 1979 13 Bristol 400 N ACokemen 3 000 5 138Colliery Officials N A 18 980Craftsmen Group No 1 15 200 9 471Craftsmen Group No 2 12 200 4 638Cumberland 7 500 914Derbyshire 25 000 11 617Durham 106 472 16 258Kent 5 100 2 759Lancashire and Cheshire 40 000 8 798Leicester 4 000 3 241Midlands 30 000 13 973Northumberland 28 561 7 767North Wales 7 526 1 052Nottingham 30 000 34 275Power 13 561 4 982Power Group No 2 N A 1 230Scotland 51 000 16 373Somerset 2 600 N ASouth Derbyshire 5 743 3 269South Wales 100 000 26 092Yorkshire 115 000 64 060The NUM was strongly supportive of the Labour Party During the first government of Harold Wilson hundreds of pits closed and thousands of miners left the coal industry but the NUM leadership put up little resistance to the programme 14 Unofficial strikes were common in the coal industry Following an unofficial strike in 1969 about the pay of surface workers it was decided that the threshold for the ballot should be lowered 14 The NUM opposed membership of the European Economic Community beginning with a unanimous conference vote in 1971 During the 1975 referendum there was a debate within the NUM over the sponsorship giving to Labour MPs in coalfields given how many of them were campaigning in favour of membership and defying the NUM policy The Yorkshire Area passed a resolution that tightened the conditions for sponsorship of MPs 15 The Miners Strike 1984 85 EditMain article UK miners strike 1984 85 In the 1980s because many coal mines were overwhelmingly unprofitable the Conservative government headed by Margaret Thatcher sought to close them and privatise the rest 16 In some areas the NUM was militant 11 and threatened strikes in 1981 when the government raised the issue As the government was not ready for a confrontation it negotiated a settlement with the union and backed down from the closures In what the NUM considered a confrontational move Ian MacGregor who had overseen cutbacks and closures at British Steel Corporation was appointed head of the National Coal Board by Thatcher in 1983 In 1984 after secretly stockpiling coal at power stations the NCB announced the closure of 20 pits 16 Local regions organised strikes but NUM President Arthur Scargill without a national ballot of the union s membership declared a national strike in March 1984 which was ruled illegal in England making striking miners ineligible for benefits 17 Support for the strike was not universal in some areas such as North Wales support was small but great in others such as South Wales 18 Also Yorkshire was more enthusiastic about the strike than Nottinghamshire where many miners refused to strike Margaret Thatcher described the strikers as the enemy within but Scargill was equally confrontational Picket lines were stationed outside the pits and other industrial sites requiring coal and violent clashes with police were common Strikers had no source of income and some were forced by circumstances to cross the picket lines as reluctant scabs The strike ended on 3 March 1985 and the miners returned to work without agreement with the NCB The strike was unsuccessful and its failure was an era defining moment in British politics After the strike large numbers of collieries were closed 18 The strike s effectiveness was reduced because the NUM leaders refused to nationally ballot members on strike action and argued that it was an issue for each area to decide In some areas that held ballots the majority voted against striking but were subject to picketing from areas that had declared a strike The strike was deemed illegal by the courts on the basis that the NUM rulebook required a secret ballot for a national strike Although working miners had instigated the legal action the NUM leadership presented it as an attack on its right to conduct its own internal affairs The lack of a ballot reduced public support and made it easier for the government to use legal and police powers against the union without significant political consequences citation needed The closed shop in the state owned coal sector was ended when a breakaway union the Union of Democratic Mineworkers was formed mostly by miners in Nottinghamshire and South Derbyshire who felt betrayed by the NUM for insisting on a strike after their area ballot had rejected strike action In contrast the Leicestershire area stayed in the NUM as the area leader Jack Jones had kept good relations with the local miners by openly defying Scargill After the end of the strike the NUM took an active leadership role in working to align the labour movement in the UK more closely with LGBT rights issues Following the Lesbians and Gays Support the Miners campaign of 1984 85 the organisation s Welsh chapters became the first non LGBT organisation to participate in London s Lesbian and Gay Pride parade 19 and at the Labour Party s 1985 policy conference the NUM s unanimous block voting support contributed to the successful passage of Composite 26 a resolution which formally committed the party to an LGBT rights platform 20 Decline EditLong based in London Scargill commissioned a new headquarters building in Sheffield which was completed in 1988 However with membership declining the union relocated again in 1992 to share the Yorkshire Area offices in Barnsley 21 22 Although weakened by the strike the NUM was still a significant force into the early 1990s A major scheme of closures of deep mines was announced by the government in 1992 The NUM ran a national ballot on possible strike action and this was passed by members It worked with the National Association of Colliery Overmen Deputies and Shotfirers to challenge the closures in the High Court the court imposed an emergency injunction against the closures and the strike action was called off However from mid 1993 the mines started closing 23 the number of working miners and therefore also the membership of the union continued to fall In 2011 the union had 1 855 members 24 In 2012 the union s general secretary Chris Kitchen admitted it was in decline after the investigative website Exaro 25 revealed that in 2011 the Derbyshire branch had just one member who was not a paid official Filings with the Trades Union Certification Officer showed that the NUM s Derbyshire branch had just four members three of whom were paid officials 26 In 2012 it emerged in court cases between the NUM and its former president Arthur Scargill that a substantial proportion of union members subscriptions was being spent on expenses for Scargill including unauthorised rent payments for a flat in London s Barbican Estate 27 A further 540 miners job losses were announced in January 2013 28 Areas EditAs of 2016 the following area unions are affiliated to the NUM 29 Cokemen Colliery Officials and Staffs North East Northumberland Scotland South WalesLandmark events Edit1947 nationalisation of 958 coal mines under state control 400 small mines were left in private hands 30 1969 a widespread unofficial strike over the pay of surface workers leads to a change in the rules on authorising a national strike the threshold in a ballot is reduced from two thirds to 55 31 1972 Official national strike This ended in success after the Battle of Saltley Gate where the miners pickets were supported by solidarity strikes by engineering workers in the Birmingham area 1973 74 Three Day Week results from an overtime ban from December 1973 A vote by the NUM to strike at the end of January led Prime Minister Ted Heath to call a general election in which he was defeated The new government of Harold Wilson accepted the pay demand 1984 85 National strike which divided the union after the strike motion was rejected in several local ballots and the executive refused to hold a national ballot After almost a year the NUM returned to work having won almost no concessions End of the closed shop with the establishment of the UDM 1994 privatisation of the fifteen state owned coal mines still in operation with ownership transferred to the company RJB Mining 32 Officers EditPresidents 1945 Will Lawther 1954 Ernest Jones 1960 Alwyn Machen 1960 Sidney Ford 1971 Joe Gormley 1982 Arthur Scargill Honorary President from 2002 2002 Ian Lavery 2010 Nicky Wilson Vice Presidents 1945 Jim Bowman 1950 Ernest Jones 1954 Ted Jones 1960 Fred Collindridge 1962 Sid Schofield 1972 Mick McGahey 1987 Sammy Thompson 1989 Vacant 1992 Frank Cave 2002 Keith Stanley 2010 Nicky Wilson 2010 Wayne Thomas General Secretaries 1945 Ebby Edwards 1946 Arthur Horner 1959 Will Paynter 1968 Lawrence Daly 1984 Peter Heathfield 1992 Arthur Scargill 2002 Steve Kemp 2007 Chris KitchenNotable people EditDave Feickert Industrial Relations Officer then Head of Research 1983 to 1993 later Mines Safety advisor NZ and China 33 See also Edit Organised Labour portalHistory of coal mining in Britain Members of Parliament sponsored by mining unions Trades Union CongressReferences EditCitations Edit Labour Party Report of the Forty Fifth Annual Conference of the Labour Party p 77 Trade Union Certification Officer Annual return for a trade union National Union of Mineworkers 2016 https assets publishing service gov uk government uploads system uploads attachment data file 811570 199T 2018 pdf bare URL PDF TULO s member unions Unions Together Archived from the original on 11 March 2012 Retrieved 14 February 2012 Michael Crick 4 October 2012 Scargill s fight to remain in his NUM Barbican flat Channel 4 News Retrieved 13 March 2016 James McCarthy 26 December 2015 Now down to just 100 active members the decline of the once mighty NUM Wales Online Retrieved 13 March 2016 National Union of Mineworkers 1989 p 7 a b National Union of Mineworkers 1989 p 67 Lewis E D The Rhondda Valleys Phoenix House London 1959 pg 172 The Welsh Academy Encyclopaedia of Wales John Davies Nigel Jenkins Menna Baines and Peredur Lynch 2008 pg827 ISBN 978 0 7083 1953 6 a b Pierre Francois GOUIFFES MARGARET THATCHER amp THE MINERS PDF Retrieved 28 February 2015 Arthur Marsh and Victoria Ryan Historical Directory of Trade Unions vol 2 pp 198 199 Membership figures are from immediately prior to the formation of the NUM Allen V L 1981 The Militancy of British Miners Shipley The Moor Press p 268 ISBN 0907698018 a b Douglas David John 1994 Pit Sense versus the State A history of militant miners in the Doncaster area London Phoenic Press pp 10 13 ISBN 0 948984 26 0 Taylor Andrew 1984 The Politics of the Yorkshire Miners Beckenham Croom Helm pp 153 155 ISBN 0 7099 2447 X a b The Miner s Strike British Broadcasting Corporation 15 August 2008 Retrieved 28 February 2015 Hutton Guthrie 2005 Coal Not Dole Memories of the 1984 85 miners strike Catrine Ayrshire Stenlake Publishing p 8 ISBN 9781840333299 a b The miners strike The BBC retrieved 3 December 2011 When miners and gay activists united the real story of the film Pride The Guardian London 31 August 2014 Stephen Brooke Sexuality Family Planning and the British Left from the 1880s to the Present Day Oxford University Press 2012 ISBN 9780199562541 pp 245 246 Hatherley Owen November 2010 A Guide to the New Ruins of Great Britain New York Verso Books pp 104 5 Sheffield casino plan approved for ex NUM headquarters BBC 19 December 2011 Retrieved 19 April 2012 Lorenzo Bosi Marco Giugni and Katrin Uba The consequences of social movements pp 54 55 Documents lodged on the website of the Trades Union Certification Officer The website of the Trades Union Certification Officer retrieved 8 January 2013 NUM branch with 4 members pays 80k per year to top officials Exaro news Retrieved 8 January 2013 Documents lodged on the website of the Trades Union Certification Officer The website of the Trades Union Certification Officer retrieved 8 January 2013 Arthur Scargill loses London flat case BBC News 21 December 2012 Retrieved 6 February 2014 Barnard Stephanie 18 December 2012 Maltby miners face Christmas gloom BBC News retrieved 8 January 2013 Trade Union Certification Officer Trade unions the current list and schedule gov uk UK Government Retrieved 14 July 2016 Strike 358 Days that Shook the Nation London Sunday Times 1985 p 5 ISBN 0 340 38445 X Douglas David John 1994 Pit Sense versus the State A history of militant miners in the Doncaster area London Phoenic Press pp 11 12 ISBN 0 948984 26 0 Hudson Ray November 2001 The Changing Geography of the British Coal Industry Nationalisation Privatisation and the Political Economy of Energy Supply 1947 1997 University of Sunderland Archived from the original on 3 December 2005 Retrieved 6 March 2009 France Duncan 5 May 2015 Dave Feickert Champion for Workers Safety a Short Biography Bibliography Edit National Union of Mineworkers 1989 A Century of Struggle Britain s Miners in Pictures 1889 1989 National Union of Mineworkers ISBN 0 901959 06 5Further reading EditArnot Robert Page The Miners a History of the Miners Federation of Great Britain 1889 1910 London Allen and Unwin 1949 Arnot Robert Page South Wales Miners Glowyr de Cymru a History of the South Wales Miners Federation 1914 1926 Cardiff Cymric Federation Press 1975 Arnot Robert Page The Miners One Union One Industry a History of the National Union of Mineworkers 1939 46 London Allen and Unwin 1979 Ashworth William and Mark Pegg History of the British Coal Industry Volume 5 1946 1982 The Nationalized Industry 1986 Baylies Carolyn The History of the Yorkshire Miners 1881 1918 Routledge 1993 Beckett Francis and David Hencke Marching to the fault line The Miners Strike and the battle for industrial Britain 2009 on 1980s Benson John Coalmining in Chris Wrigley ed A History of British industrial relations 1875 1914 Univ of Massachusetts Press 1982 pp 187 208 Benson John British Coal Miners in the Nineteenth Century A Social History Holmes amp Meier 1980 online Rowe J W F Wages In the coal industry 1923 Supple Barry The History of the British Coal Industry Volume 4 1913 1946 The Political Economy of Decline 1988 excerpt and text search Towers Brian Running the gauntlet British trade unions under Thatcher 1979 1988 Industrial amp Labor Relations Review 42 2 1989 163 188 Waller Robert The Dukeries Transformed A history of the development of the Dukeries coal field after 1920 Oxford U P 1983 on the Dukeries Williams Chris Capitalism community and conflict The south Wales coalfield 1898 1947 U of Wales Press 1998 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to National Union of Mineworkers Official website BBC Miners strike 1984 Spartacus Educational Catalogue of NUM archives held at the Modern Records Centre University of Warwick Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title National Union of Mineworkers Great Britain amp oldid 1120091701, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.