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In 1984, the National Coal Board (the UK Government department which controlled coal mining in that country) announced that an agreement reached after the 1974 miners' strike had become obsolete, and that they intended to close 20 coal mines. 20,000 jobs would be lost, and many communities in the North of England and in Wales would lose their primary source of employment.
Sensitive to the impact of the proposed closures in their own areas, miners in various coal fields began strike action (industrial inaction). In the Yorkshire coal field strike action began on March 5, following a local ballot, and on the next day pickets from the Yorkshire area appeared at pits in the Nottinghamshire coal field (one of those least threatened by pit closures). On March 12, 1984 Arthur Scargill, President of the National Union of Mineworkers (NUM) declared that the strikes in the various coal fields were to be a national strike and called for strike action from NUM members in all coal fields.
Scargill did not call a ballot for national strike action, perhaps because of uncertainty over the level of support from the workforce, since polls showed that more than 60% of the miners intended to continue working. This mistake (or deliberate omission) allowed the Conservative government under Margaret Thatcher to use new laws which required unions to ballot members on strike action. The strike was found to be illegal, and the NUM's funds were seized on October 24, 1984 by order of the High Court. Miners were denied state benefits and their wages.
The government mobilised the police in huge numbers to deal with picket lines on the grounds that they represented illegal intimidation and sometimes illegal violence against the miners who wanted to go to work. During the industrial action 11,291 people were arrested and 8,392 charged with offences such as breach of the peace and obstructing the highway.
The striking miners split in various groups, such as that from Nottinghamshire, which formed the Union of Democratic Mineworkers (UDM).
A widely reported clash during the Miners' Strike took place at Orgreave near Rotherham on June 18 1984. This confrontation between striking miners and police, dubbed by some as the Battle of OrgreaveThe Battle of Orgreave is the name given to a confrontation between police and picketing miners at a British Steel coking plant in Orgreave, South Yorkshire, in 1984, during the UK miners' strike. In 2001 it was the subject of a historical reenactment., was the subject of a TV re-enactmentHistorical reenactment is an activity in which participants recreate some aspects of a historical event or period. It may be a narrowly-defined time period, such as a specific war or other event, or it may be more broadly defined. Activities related to "r in 20012001 is a common year starting on Monday (see link for calendar), and also: The International Year of the Volunteer The United Nations Year of Dialogue Among Civilizations Events January January 1 A black monolith measuring approximately nine feet tall ap, conceived and organized by artist Jeremy Deller and recorded by Mike Figgis for the TV Channel 4Channel 4 is a television broadcaster in the United Kingdom (see British television), launched on November 2, 1982. Like the BBC, it has a public service remit and is operated by a non-profit corporation, Channel 4 Television Corporation. Unlike the BBC,.
The strike ended on March 3March 3 is the 62nd day of the year in the Gregorian Calendar (63rd in leap years). There are 303 days remaining. Events 1400-1899 1431 Eugenius IV becomes Pope. 1791 The United States Mint is created by the United States Congress. 1820 The United States, 19851985 is a common year starting on Tuesday. Events January events January 1 Creation of the Internet's Domain Name System. January 17 British Telecom annouces they are going to abolish the famous red telephone boxes. January 23 A debate in the House of Lor, nearly a year after it had begun. Workers were beginning to return to work of their own accord and in order to save the union, the NUM voted, by a tiny margin, to return to work without a new agreement with management.
During the strike many pits permanently lost their customers. Much of the immediate problem facing the industry was due to the economic recession in the early 1980s. However, there was also extensive competition within the world coal market plus a concerted move towards oil and gas for energy production. The government's own policy, known as the Ridley Plan (from it's author Nicholas Ridley ) was to reduce Britain's reliance on coal. In the end the unwanted result of the strike allowed the government to accelerate the closure of many pits on economic grounds.
Dame Stella Rimmington ( MI5 Director General, 1992– 1996) published an autobiography in 2001 in which she revealed MI5 'counter-subversion' exercises against the NUM and the striking miners, which included the tapping of union leaders' phones.