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Forewords by Mike Jackson and Sian James MP The film Pride has reignited interest in the struggles of the miners in the South Wales valleys in the strike of 1984-5. A new chapter in this re-issued book shows why the Welsh miners were in a unique position to forge an alliance with Lesbian and Gays Support the Miners Group. Hywel Francis, MP for Aberavon, as a historian and active participant in the strike, had a unique insight into the way in which the struggles for jobs and communities broadened out to become a powerful national movement in Wales, involving trade unions, political parties, churches, the Welsh Language Society, and community, peace and women's support groups, as well as their lesbian and gay supporters. This very personal history, which explains why the South Wales valleys were the strongest and most loyal of all the British coalfields, is based on the author's personal diaries, and his articles and essays in a number of Welsh and British journals.
It tells the story of the individual and collective courage and pain of Welsh miners, their families and their communities - and is an important contribution to our understanding of a defining moment in modern Welsh history.
Contents
Contents Learning from our past: forewords by Mike Jackson and Sian James MP Introduction: A Personal Testimony 1. History Invades the Valleys 2. How It All Began: 1947-84 3. The Strike as a New Kind of Politics? March-October 1984 4. The Coalfield Under Siege: November 1984 - March 1985 5. The NUM Fights for Wales: The Birth of the Wales Congress 6. The Experience of Defeat: 1985-92 7. Resources of Hope and Pride, 1992-2015 Note on Sources About the Author Acknowledgements