Remembering miners’ strike

Bristol Radical History Group (BRHG) is staging an exhibition about the 1984/85 Miners’ Strike at Bristol Central Library this month.

The exhibition celebrates the work of the Bristol Miners’ Support Campaign during the year-long dispute. Over the last 18 months  BRHG has sponsored a project to collect and preserve documents and other  materials from the campaign, one of many around the country.

Hundreds of thousands of people  contributed money, food and other kinds of support, the best known of  which may well be Lesbians and Gays Support the Miners, as depicted in  the 2014 film, Pride.

As we know, the NUM (National Union of Miners) were defeated in the  dispute and the Thatcher government proceeded with a series of pit  closures that marked the beginning of the end for the coal industry in the UK. The strike was marked by heavy and, at times, brutal policing: 11,000 miners were arrested. The exhibition coincides with the start of  a public inquiry to be held in Sheffield, announced by the government earlier this year, into police operations during the strike.

The exhibition does not mark the completion of BRHG’s project. The group is keen to hear from anyone who may have materials relating to  the Bristol Miners’ Support Campaign in their lofts. 

At the end of the exhibition’s run at the Library, all materials will be  deposited in the Bristol Archives in B Bond Warehouse (Create Centre)  where they will be open to the public and to future historians.

In addition to the exhibition, BRHG are publishing a new pamphlet, Coal  Not Dole, which examines Bristol’s support for the miners during the  1980s. It is written from first hand accounts, by the people who were  there and involved in the Miners’ Support Campaign. It is available to  pre-order now from the Bristol Radical History website at brh.org.uk. For more information about the pamphlet, the exhibition and BRHG in  general go to brh.org.uk