History Daily - Britain’s Working Class Finds Victory in the 1972 UK Miners’ Strike

Episode Date: February 28, 2025

February 28, 1972. The 1972 UK Miners’ Strike, led by Arthur Scargill, comes to an end. After six weeks of struggle, the miners secure a famous victory over Ted Heath’s government, and a new force... enters the British political arena. This episode originally aired in 2023. Support the show! Join Into History for ad-free listening and more.History Daily is a co-production of Airship and Noiser.Go to HistoryDaily.com for more history, daily.

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Starting point is 00:00:07 It's February 3rd, 1972, at the Keyed-B Power Station in Lincolnshire, England. Outside the station, Freddie Matthews joins a group of miners picketing the building's gates. Freddie is a coal miner from the nearby town of Doncaster, and like the other unionized workers protesting today, Freddie is on strike. Across the country, miners are unhappy with their pay and working conditions. But Britain's prime minister, Ted Heath, has resisted their calls for change. So the miners have had to turn to new acts of defiance to gain leverage and voice their discontent. Today, Freddie and his peers are here to block the delivery of coal to the power station. Freddie stares at the local policeman guarding the power station's gates.
Starting point is 00:00:49 As he sizes them up, he hears the rumbling of a nearby vehicle. Freddy watches the police step aside as the gates swing open for a truck carrying coal. As the vehicle approaches, Freddie and his fellow miners spark to life, shouting and berating the driver. Before the truck can make it to the open gates, a walled defense of angry miners surround the vehicle. But its driver refuses to succumb to the picketers' will. He is a non-union member and has no interest in helping the miners.
Starting point is 00:01:17 He just wants to deliver the coal. He revs the truck's engine, threatening to step on the gas if the picketers don't move. As the police pull miners from the road, the truck driver tries to roll forward, but the miners regroup and again obstruct his path. The truck jolts to a stop, and the driver shouts in frustration, urging the workers to get out of the way. Then he presses down on the accelerator. The truck surges forward, and protesters are forced to leap out of the way.
Starting point is 00:01:45 Amid the frenzy, Freddie finds himself pushed down onto the sidewalk and unable to get up. Around him screams erupt as the truck driver forces his vehicle through the backtracking miners, hitting Freddie in the process. Unaware of the collision, the driver continues forward as he makes it through the gate. of the power station. But as those gates close, lying in the street, is the lifeless body of Freddie Matthews. Since the 1950s, the increase of imported oil forced the closure of many British coal mines. This caused ongoing pay disputes between the miners and the National Coal Board. The miners felt entitled to pay increases, given the dangers of the job, but the board was running losses. On January 9, 1972, the miners called an official strike and the production
Starting point is 00:02:34 of coal ground to a halt. By February 3rd, stockpiles dwindled, and the U.K. face severe power outages. But it is the untimely death of Freddie Matthews that will prove the conflict's real turning point, igniting an uproar against the government. Prime Minister Ted Heath will stand firm against the miners' demands, but the mining community will rally, setting the stage for a showdown that will force Heath to address their grievances. After a month of picketing, the strike will finally come to an end, when the miners secure victory over the British government on February 28, 1972.
Starting point is 00:03:14 From Noisor and Airship, I'm Lindsay Graham, and this is History Daily. History is made every day. On this podcast, every day, we tell the true stories of the people and events that shaped our world. Today is February 28, 1972. Britain's working class finds victory in the 1972 U.K. minor strike. It's February 3, 1972 in Warsborough, South York Just a few hours after the death of Freddie Matthews, Arthur Scargill walks back home still reeling from the tragedy. Arthur is a little-known official of the National Union of Mine Workers, who are currently in the midst of one of their largest ever strikes. For five weeks, thousands of workers have gathered around the country to protest their poor pay in working conditions. But a month in, their calls for change have gone unanswered.
Starting point is 00:04:22 Arthur has been a key leader in the strike action in Yorkshire. But his primary tactic of picketing has garnered little success. He's been transporting workers to fuel depots where they can barricade the exit and prevent fuel transportation. And at first, Arthur thought this would ensure effective strike action. But the government fought back with a heightened police presence that has denied crone deadly. The strikes don't seem to be working. And Prime Minister Ted Heath is still firmly opposed to the miner's demands. Victory feels far from likely.
Starting point is 00:04:52 The National Union of Mine Workers cannot afford to... to support the miners forever. Eventually, they will all have to return to work. But Arthur hasn't given up hope just yet. As he enters his home, the union leader receives news that could change the strike's entire trajectory. Before he can even place his coat on the hook, the phone rings. When Arthur answers, he's immediately given a stream of hurried information by a concerned voice. Arthur's told that the miners had begun to picket satley gas works in Birmingham, but the protesters have been overwhelmed by a vast police force and the stations gates remain very much open. The caller says urgent assistance is required. But immediately
Starting point is 00:05:31 thoughts of the recently deceased Freddie Matthews streamed through author's mind. He stirred by a sudden blend of justice and anger, and he reasons that a showdown in Birmingham could be an unexpected chance to ensure Freddie's death wasn't in vain. Birmingham is the UK's second largest city, and Sattley Gas Works hold one of the largest remaining stockpiles of coal in the country. With the frosty weather, people are in dire need of coal for heating and power. Closing the Birmingham stockpile would surely force the government's hand and steer the union toward victory. But Arthur will have to act fast, so he hangs up the foam, walks back out into the frosty Yorkshire evening, and heads straight for Birmingham. The next morning, Arthur and his band of Yorkshire miners arrive at the Sattley Gas Works.
Starting point is 00:06:18 As they approach the depot, Arthur surveys the scene in front of them. Things do not look promising. On the left-hand side of the road is a queue of coal trucks, stretching far beyond the foggy mist of Sattley Viaduct. To the right, a handful of delivery trucks, making a clean exit from the gates, thanks to a tunnel of linked armed policemen. The small pool of nearby miners shout and berate every truck driver that passes, but they can do little to stop them. The officers clearly outnumber the picketers, and there's no way the strikers could ever force a closure with their current numbers. The newspaper that Birmingham Mail predicts the queue of coal. trucks to be a mile long, with more joining every day. The picketers, even with the addition of
Starting point is 00:06:58 the Yorkshire miners, are overwhelmed. Arthur knows the movement needs more people. So he plans to look for solidarity from outside the mining community. During the day, he stands vigil on the picket line, but at night Arthur begins to attend meetings at non-mining workplaces. He visits the East Birmingham Amalgamated Engineering Union Committee. And there he delivers a famous rally cry, join the miners at Sattley Gate and beat the government. Many in the engineering union anticipate Arthur to ask for financial support, but instead he simply asks for their presence. Their strength, he believes, lies completely in numbers.
Starting point is 00:07:34 Arthur's rally and cry will strike a chord with other heavily unionized industries, and Birmingham's engineers and others will join those already picketing. The call will go out to workers from the city's large car manufacturing plants, and they will soon join the mass picket. The number of protesters at Sattley would begin to grow, turning the power plant into a pivotal site for working-class solidarity where the miners and their allies will have their final showdown. It's the morning of February 10, 1972, in Birmingham, England, one week after Freddie Matthews' death.
Starting point is 00:08:19 Near the gates of the Sattley Gas Works, Arthur Scargill stands and looks out at the crowd before him. It's the largest band of protesters he's seen yet. Today, the number of workers far outweighs the police force present. 800 officers are stationed at Sattley Gate, but the number of picketers seem somewhere in the tens of thousands. The workers from Birmingham and beyond have answered Arthur's call. Their desire to change the status quo is bound by a united sense of injustice, compounded by the lack of government action over the death of Freddie Matthews. To many, it feels like the government has no interest in or care for the working class.
Starting point is 00:08:55 So for the non-miners protesting today, this battle is about more than just pay disputes and work. working conditions. It is about a way of life. It is a class struggle. For a moment, Arthur allows a wry smile to edge across his face as he inspects the scene before him. Auto workers, engineers, shop stewards, miners from across the country, men and women, side by side, all marching in unison. As Arthur looks out into the distance, the stream of picketers seems never ending, stretching all the way to the horizon. This great display of solidarity is exactly what he hoped for. But the miners' battle is not yet one. The rise in numbers is just the first phase. Now they must stand their ground. Arthur readies to command the picket. He runs over and clamors onto the low, flat roof of a public
Starting point is 00:09:40 toilet building outside the gasworks. From there, he stands and begins to bellow instructions, and like a general directing his troops into battle, he orders the workers forward to the gates. In response, the police deploy the same tactic they've used the entirety of the Sattley Gate protest. They stand side by side, arms over and underlapping, forming an intimidating line coined the blue wall. This tactic has kept past picketers at bay and allowed the trucks to keep rolling. But now, completely outnumbered, the officer's thin blue line looks fragile. As the protesters march toward the gates, Arthur's directive remains the same, forward until they are face to face with the police officers.
Starting point is 00:10:21 Impassioned and angered, the miners and their allies are unrelenting. The picketers shouts and berating increase, and there is real worry within the police ranks that the tension could mount into violence. Alarmed by the demonstration, Sir Derek Kapper, the chief constable of the Birmingham police, arrived at the scene. As his driver opens the rear door and Kapper steps into the chilly Birmingham air, the miners direct their attention toward him. Aggressive booze and jeers follow the chief constable as he walks over and calls to Arthur. The two men speak for a few moments. Then Chief Constable Capper hands Arthur a megaphone. A hush falls over the picket as Arthur begins by greeting his comrades.
Starting point is 00:11:02 Then he details who the man he has just spoken with is. The booze loud and once more, as he says the constable's name. But Arthur continues speaking over the jeers. He explains that everyone should let the Chief Constable pass because he's going to shut and lock the gates of Sattley Gasworks. Arthur tells the picketers that it's time for them to disperse because victory is theirs. Sir Derek Kapper and the UK government's decision to close the gates at Sattley Gas Works will become a watershed moment in the minor strike of 1972.
Starting point is 00:11:36 The government will cite endangering public safety as the reason for the closure, but Arthur and his picketers will maintain that their stand in solidarity was the true cause. Just over two weeks after the Battle of Sattley Gate, as this showdown will come to be known, the minor strike will come to an end on February 28, 1972, and workers will return to work. successful in earning a wage increase. But the workers' victory will not only be a turning point from the miners, but for Prime Minister Ted Heath as well, initiating lasting political repercussions that will threaten his power and tarnish his reputation. It's February 28, 1974,
Starting point is 00:12:25 in Warsborough, South Yorkshire, exactly two years after the UK minor strike of 1972 came to an end. Arthur Scargill sits on a sofa inside his sitting room, watching TV. As news of the nation's general election results begin to stream in, Arthur leans forward, staring intently at the screen and praying that Ted Heath's time as Prime Minister is finally up. After the Battle of Sattley Gate, the miners received a pay increase. But bad blood remained between Prime Minister Heath and the working class. The optics of the strike were bad for Heath and led to increasing distrust in his ability to govern, especially mid-times of high unemployment and rising inflation. But still, Heath continues to demonize the miners. Even two years after the strike, he sees them as too powerful, part of an aging industry with an unjust monopoly.
Starting point is 00:13:14 This notion formed part of his election campaign, which turned out to be a vastly unpopular decision. Today, the public has voted in a general election to decide whether Heath will remain prime minister or if the labor candidate Harold Wilson will replace him. A victory for labor would vindicate the collective efforts of the working class over the last few years, toppling an entrenched conservative government and ushering in a new era of of worker-led reform. So as news filters through that Heath will no longer be in charge, a jubilant Arthur leaps from his sofa and beats his fists into the air. Another victory for the miners, perhaps their biggest yet. But this will not be the end of Arthur's battle with the
Starting point is 00:13:54 Conservative Party. The divisions between the trade unions and government will only grow deeper as the Labor Party will struggle to make progress. And in just five years, Margaret Thatcher will enter the fray to take on Arthur and the miners. Her stringent policies of deregulation and privatization will try to curb the power of the trade unions. And with these uncompromising measures, the Iron Lady will become Arthur and the miners' greatest enemy yet. It will become clear that their fight with the government is far from over,
Starting point is 00:14:24 but pushing them forward will be the miners' memory of their successful strike that ended in victory on February 28, 1972. Next, on History Daily, March 3rd, 1910, John D. Rockefeller, the wealthiest man in America, commits to donating his vast fortune to charity. For Noisor and Ayrship, this is History Daily, hosted, edited and executive produced by me, Lindsay Graham, audio editing by Muhammad Shazib, music and sound design by Lindsay Graham. This episode is written and research by Luke Lonergan, produced by Alexandra Curry Buckner. Executive producers are Stephen Walters for Ayrship and Pascal Hughes for Noisor.

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