Bury the Tories, not the miners! Poster, 1984 *Bury the Tories, not the miners! Poster, 1984

1984 1960-2000 "Bury the Tories, not the miners! Poster, 1984" [T0575.jpg], 1984 In March 1984, when the National Coal Board announced the closure of five pits without proper review, miners in Yorkshire and Scotland started official strike action. These were endorsed by the National Union...

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Bibliographic Details
Institution:TUC - Trade Union Congress Library
Language:English
Published: 1984
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Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10796/1BB529BF-9C1B-4670-B4D4-C7A5CF8049F4
http://hdl.handle.net/10796/9B2616A6-2DDA-418F-B428-B9E99F8FD2B6
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Summary:1984 1960-2000 "Bury the Tories, not the miners! Poster, 1984" [T0575.jpg], 1984 In March 1984, when the National Coal Board announced the closure of five pits without proper review, miners in Yorkshire and Scotland started official strike action. These were endorsed by the National Union of Mineworkers (NUM) executive which called on other areas to support them. The Conservative Government under Margaret Thatcher brought the full weight of the law down on the striking miners and the NUM's funds were seized on October 24, 1984 by order of the High Court. Several hundred miners were dismissed and never taken back. Miners were denied state benefits and the police were mobilised to deal with picket lines on the grounds that they represented illegal public disturbances. The biggest confrontation of pickets with police took place at Orgreave in Yorkshire on 18 June, 1984 when Arthur Scargill, the NUM President, was arrested. A huge support network sprang up across the country, led particularly by Women Against Pit Closures in the coal communities. The strike ended on March 3, 1985, nearly a year after it had begun, when the NUM conceded defeat. This poster was published by the Kent Area NUM.
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