as a 31 year old southen fairy obviously ive never been down a pit but i was when i look back on it doing a very hard grim site for 18 months dispite all the hardships i loved it i even forgot about just how grim it was but the team were like a family the firm we worked for looked after us to the point its was like having a strong union i need to get me drinking under control and ill go back to them i just can not risk burning that brige right now
I remember as a teenager working down the deep mines in Yorkshire . Finished my training, on Nights first shift after completing my mining training. The lads, mainly coal face worker's gave me a nice welcome, snap break at 4am. Took my piece of bread off me chucked it on the ground, took my coffee and water from me. Dragged me along the ground and pushed over on the blindside of the stage loader. When I tried to stand and was shoved over again. The men grabbed at me, pulling my overalls off me. They had a laugh at my expense. The thought crossing my Mind because I was not much older than their own children. Is this how they would treat their own child ? I was only a teenager but they did not care about me, one of the Miners. Working down the deep mines earning a living. Teamwork, nice welcome back then.
I work underground her in Eastern Kentucky. It breaks my heart for those men. Coal mining is in our blood. I come from generations of coal mining. I guess I'd be a 3rd gen coal miner. My gramp started underground hand loading at 17. Worked underground for 32 years. He pretty much got to work and change with the mines. He started when there was no machinery all the way up to when they had it and started bringing it underground. The stories is unreal, but hes also been covered up twice. Legs broke, ribs broke, both arms broke, etc. I've been covered up once trapped for 5 hours in 15 foot coal. We was doing pillar work. If it wasn't for the cab on the shuttle car it would have killed me. But coal miners are they're own bread lol. It's one of the best jobs I've ever had plus the men I work with are all family and willing to die for you, save you, etc. Its a brother hood. All coal miners stick together no matter what country, place! God bless y'all!
I went there today its a museum now and it was beautiful id love to thank these men for supplying our country. My grandfather was a miner in that mine before i was born, he didn't work last shift due to an injury but he still loved every moment
A sad report that makes me cry. I worked as a mining mechanic in German coal mining. Here, too, all mines are now closed. But ... coal mines will no longer exist (in Germany), but pride and honor will remain! I greet all of mates with a friendly 'Glück Auf!' (German miner's greeting)
@@MrSouzy yeah basically all that was lost was job security and camaraderie. You can have those things back if you organise to build a socialist society instead of believing everything the billionaire owned newspapers decide is the new scapegoat this week.
These are people are genuinely admire as heroes to me. I was born and raised in the north east of England. Mining was I wanted to do but leaving school in 1988 margret thatcher had butchered mining, steel making and ship building and railways. I never got to be miner instead I had to leave the north east to find work and I am now in the merchant navy so connected ship building. My best wished and hopes go to every last man in Kellingley and all the other pits maggie butchered.
@@joesmith8701 your right it was a dream job but it has changed a lot first restrictions after 9/11 and then covid restrictions. As it happens I ended up in the at sea by chance after having some other opportunities. But I started as merchant seaman which still has a lot manual labour so it's not all luxury travel, unless to work your way up to be captain or chief 😀 engineer.
My family were coal minors in my town for 400 years, my town is literally 400 years old. 😅😂😅 My dad was not a coal miner, he turned 20 in 1989 and he became a carpenter.
My old man was a miner he still talks to this day about the great times he says he always says he spent more time underground than a potato and the Camaraderie between the other miners and the stories I’ve heard some sad some hilarious it destroyed the towns and villages and still to this day you can see the after effects it had and that last bit was heartbreaking they weren’t just losing there jobs it’s like they where losing apart of themselves really do think if your not from in and around the old pit villiages and towns and the people the areas you could never really understand the working class mentally and what closing a industry it did to family’s split them and some to this day don’t talk and the effect on the local economy great to see they could move on with there lives in new jobs but like sheldon said he will always be a miner 👍🏼
Absolutely heartbreaking..... This country is a bloody disgrace. Hard, strong and dedicated professionals. I know in my lifetime this closing of the mines will bite us right on the ass...... Thank you one and all...... Yet another industry consigned to the history books.....
I'm an environmentalist but think the closure of this pit, & others in the UK a very short sighted decision. As one of the minors said in part 1 - " why us? ...... China & Germany are still mining coal" which is a fair point, especially when you take into account the events that have occurred after this was filmed ( I write in 2023). I'd like to add my sincere best wishes to all the men & their families. This is a very well done documentary, thanks for uploading & sharing.
Such a shame to see such a proud industry bought to a close. Top blokes through and through, very glad to see Jack found work in the end. Comes across as a very wise head on young shoulders. All the best in your future careers!!
My grandad was a proud Irish miner who came over just after WW2. He worked in that many pits even he couldn't name them. The stories he could tell, but he always said no matter where you went the mining comunity always stayed togethor across the country. To see this again is heart breaking. I remember seeing it origionally and totally feeling for these guys as I did for my grandad when he was forced to leave. Then they brought out the open cast mining systems but by then the cards were pretty much stamped on the end as most is imported.
Was speaking to an ex miner of Kellingley this weekend at the yorkshire mining museum, they used to sell coal at 70 per ton to the power stations and still turn a profit, they are now buying it from abroad for 800 a ton
I’m sure with the energy crisis the government now realize they were wrong..Never rely on other countries to provide energy as we are seeing it doesn’t work
Having worked with a few ex miners in my working life can categorically say they seem to be very good at adapting to new careers. They had to be on time each day as once the train leaves for the coal seam that’s it so and they have to follow so many guidelines and safety aspects they always see a job out. No surprises they all seem to have found gainful employment after the pit closed.
Here in the blackcountry we're sitting on a 30 foot thick coking coal seam known as " the Staffordshire thick" just waiting to be mined. Our last coal mine shut in 1968 (Baggeridge colliery) the one before that shut in 1965 (Hampstead colliery) we also have New hawne colliery which has been left untouched since it closed in 1920, it frustrates and baffles me as to why we aren't making use of our readily available natural resources rather than importing cheap highly polluting shit from abroad. I'd be first in the queue for a job down a coal mine
Its amazing how much stuff was left down there - could easily have kept some of the miners on to take apart the gear and hoist it up for storage just in case
I started work at Bolsover 1980 age 17, It closed in 93. I spent the next 7 years as a welder/fabricator/steel erector and the following 22 years as a CAD draughtsman but I still consider myself a coal miner.
To see hard working grown men cry is heartbreaking, i was filling up watching it. Spliting up a working family and communities, maggie thatcher got a lot to answer for.
I worked at this pit kellingley for 20yrs my dad after leaving haig pit for 34 yrs..i am a parton lad who lives in knottingley 53 yrs..so sad this video...had some great times there..bloody hard...
I wish Britain was still like it was in the 40s and 50s they seemed free and indestructible in their works and people seemed happy and unique I could say the same about my home here in the USA
from what i understand usa had her best times in the 50s we had our best time in the 60s and what the united states is going through right now seems to be the horrers we went through in the late 70s early 80s the united states will get back on her feet agen just like we did
Such an important documentary. This industry should have been protected and then progressively phased out as Britain moved away from coal. Instead the rich 1% exploited foreign coal for their own huge profits creating an inequality society which has left us in economic ruins. What a shame policy makers cared more about the London financial sector than the UK economy and it's people. Failed again by politicians and look at our debt as a result of this indiscriminate murder of primary and secondary industry.
@@SGTmapleleaf coal should have been phased out, with power stations only allowed to buy coal mined in the UK. Thus making the use of it more expensive for companies and therefore incentivising its replacement whilst also supporting jobs and allowing a gradual transition out of an industry that propped up areas of the north and Midlands.
The first deep coal mine in 30 years is opening in Cumbria, Woodhouse colliery. It’s a bit like the shipyards, personally like you, I think they will reopen them on a mass scale.
Scargill was right, who would of thought that in just 31 years every last coal mine in the uk would be closed. I’m fully behind eco friendly environment etc, but while we’re still burning coal then why not mine it from the uk! 🇬🇧
I doubt there are many industries these days, where the idea of watching out for, or protecting your fellow co-worker, is important. You can tell that it is just part of the job. I admire that sense of responsibility to others.
My grandad used to say that no matter what every body had each others back. You could fall out with a bloke one minute and the next that same bloke would pull you back if he saw something about to happen. Family underground and family over ground.
@@martynrichardson1511 i have looked for Pt1 ... now I know what happened! Thanks a million for uploading this. I’ve watched it 3 times back to back. Brilliantly filmed. If you can get Pt.1 to me somehow then let me know
I finished at Ellington combine the big E 1994 my heart dropped 24 years a working miner shut he pits but I'm still a miner some people know me as the last coal miner at Dinnington village Newcastle upon Tyne a proud and sad thing to be tagged with been the last in generations in mining 💀😢👊
30.37 is that Pete who was or still is a tour guide at the mining museum near Wakefield? He was a brilliant guide and really engaging. It was a pleasure to have him lead the tour. I miss talking to my granddad about his mining days.
So sad. I’m from a colliery village which shut in 93. I was just lucky enough to see the village before the it was destroyed by the closure. Good luck lads
They didnt do enough for these guys when the last shift finished. Really a government representative should have been there and they should have had a type of celebration when they came up. I am an English guy who lives in Germany and and they recently closed their last pit here too. That was sad too. But when the guys came up the brass band was playing and they made a big thing of it.. Here they came up and had to face a barrage of photographers.
@@CymruEmergencyResponder well the difference here was that all of the German miners had the opportunity to train for something new. Instead of being thrown on the scrap heap.
Yep in all cases since Thatcher and her tory w@nkers were in power every time a pit closed all the men were thrown on the scrapheap along with their families and communities. This also applies to steelworks and shipbuilding, and the railways too.
@@MrSouzy I read that in Germany, any miner under 40 got funding for retraining in a career of their choice, and anyone over 40 got their full pension paid early. Not a single miner found themselves with no options. Whatever the realities around the future of coal for generating power, the way things were done here, and the way that hard working people and their communities were treated was a disgrace.
It's not just the pit's that are adversely effected, it's the auxiliary support services such as the companies that provide and service the intrinsically safe lights etc. This reminds we of the time we refurb'd the lights for one of those long-wall's. After it was back up and running they did one cut and then closed the pit.
“It is a shame we couldn’t have the same level of interest when we were trying to keep the mines open as the same level of interest now the mines are closing…..We should have been fighting to keep the pits open rather than celebrating the pits shutting.” Quote of the entire clip, IMO.
32:08-32:20 that's bit really poignant seeing the mine for the very last time, RIP British coal mining industry. My late grandad was coal miner albeit not at Kellingley
The UK has more than 150 heritage rail companies covering 560 miles of track that runs between 460 stations. These lines play a big role in UK tourism today. They are worth about half a billion pounds a year to the national economy. Millions of tourists take trips on these lines every year. In addition the bigger heritage railways provide both employment and apprenticeship schemes. Many of the UK’s heritage rail companies say they are already having to cut services just as they prepare for the Platinum Jubliee 2022. UK coal for steam trains has now gone and our next supply source was to be Russia, which is now off the table for totally understandable reasons. Our coal stocks are running out fast and the search is on to find alternative sources from overseas. However, there is no obvious source for the right quality of coal that we require and prices are fluctuating all over the place.
Wow, what a brilliant, but very sad story, this country is built on coal, but we import cheap rubbish from abroad, typical British government, these men were the last in a very long line of deep pit miners, who have seen things that will never be seen again. I salute you brave men, reopen the pits, we are brimming with coal.
what kind of coal came out of Kellingley Colliery was it House or steam coal and what happened to the last load of coal that came up? i understand that they saved a lump of coal that came from Kellingley
Thanks for putting this up. Both my grandads were miners, I can just about remember there still being headgear dotted around the place when I was very young but they'd all gone before I was 10 or so. Is part 1 available anywhere does anyone know?
The big K. I've just found this again as I randomly found myself talking about it the other day. Families built up around mining and single handedly destroyed by one woman in the early 80s (this one aside of course) causing a rapid decline.
Smile, lost your job. News people very patronising, making them rehearse how they feel for the camera!!! Felt for them as they said they wanted to one last shift to say goodbye. Like the managers comment, we've put the lid on the coffin, were here putting the nails in. Captain goes down with his ship as he switches the electrics off. 😢
Yes Harry Gration, what an absolute twat that bloke was, patronising preening prick. Making them appear 'devastated ' when they were but wanted to be alone in their thoughts.. The Manager of the put was right tho, they did love the camera, a few of them were revelling in the limelight🤣
Has anyone got a link to Pt 1 ? Part 2 was an immense shock, I left in 1985.... 8 years investment into University and a Career for a C Eng., The Manager's Ticket. Then I understood the Tories long game... close the pits with 300 more years and bank on Natural Gas for 60 years. In the end both demonized but with Money invested and support we could have been cleaner. In the end Britain lost, EU lost, China became the major growth country - Powered by coal. FT ! Why Why Why Delilah (God bless Stoke City, they keep this song alive) !
I live in a town built on coal mining deep in the heart of Yorkshire and the majority of the males in this town worked at cortonwood, a sinonimous name with miners as you've probably guest I'm from Wombwell, my dad was a miner at Elsecar and wouldn't hear a rong word about it :ut told us whilst growing up don't work at pit and lucky for me I finished school during the strike.
see the thing that annoys me is that there are still coal powerplants operating and a few of them have no plans to close (as of 3/19). they should be using BRITISH coal not some foreign shit that they can get slightly cheaper
Real men real jobs one of the most dangerous jobs on earth ,but these men were more than willing to carry on working the face providing coal for the country ,we had it all ,now we import it madness .the younger generation have missed out so so sad.
my grandad was jack longstaff union leader for nottingham and Derbyshire i remember having tea with arther scargill and joe gormley when i was a kid during the strikes.
COLE MINER COLE MINER🎶,SHINING YOUR LIGHT.🎶WORKING ON MINESHAFT DARK AS THE NITE🎶.WHATCHA GONNA Do BEFORE YA GO BACK IN?🎶IM GONNA ASK THE LORD TO LET ME COME OUT AGAIN.🎶AMEN🎶🎶🎶🎶GOD BLESS ALL WHO WE HAVE LOST & NOT FORGOTTEN.FOREVER LOVED
The technology is there to massively reduce carbon emissions from coal fired power stations. You either have coal or nuclear at the moment. Take your pick.
This is a sad video for me as an ex miner I cried all through this video has a miner of 25 years God bless lads 🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧
@Dr Wolfgang Chausser Im a spark, and im only 22 and feel robbed of a career & continuing what my family did for so many years.
Gayy
@@thomassbulivan6352 clearly not a clue on history an coal
You prick !
@@thomassbulivan6352 are you referring to yourself?
Any government that can start and end your lifestyle is far to fucking powerful
I had 10 years in mining. Loved it but it was hard work. The decimation of whole communities after closure should never be forgotten.
there is a need for government to step in an retrain miners and pay them while they're retraining into something else
as a 31 year old southen fairy obviously ive never been down a pit but i was when i look back on it doing a very hard grim site for 18 months dispite all the hardships i loved it i even forgot about just how grim it was but the team were like a family the firm we worked for looked after us to the point its was like having a strong union i need to get me drinking under control and ill go back to them i just can not risk burning that brige right now
I shed a few tears over this program. Once a coal miner always a coal miner . I’m proud to be a member of that brotherhood
I remember as a teenager working down the deep mines in Yorkshire .
Finished my training, on Nights first shift after completing my mining training.
The lads, mainly coal face worker's gave me a nice welcome, snap break at 4am.
Took my piece of bread off me chucked it on the ground, took my coffee and water from me.
Dragged me along the ground and pushed over on the blindside of the stage loader.
When I tried to stand and was shoved over again.
The men grabbed at me, pulling my overalls off me.
They had a laugh at my expense.
The thought crossing my Mind because I was not much older than their own children.
Is this how they would treat their own child ?
I was only a teenager but they did not care about me, one of the Miners.
Working down the deep mines earning a living.
Teamwork, nice welcome back then.
I work underground her in Eastern Kentucky. It breaks my heart for those men. Coal mining is in our blood. I come from generations of coal mining. I guess I'd be a 3rd gen coal miner. My gramp started underground hand loading at 17. Worked underground for 32 years. He pretty much got to work and change with the mines. He started when there was no machinery all the way up to when they had it and started bringing it underground. The stories is unreal, but hes also been covered up twice. Legs broke, ribs broke, both arms broke, etc. I've been covered up once trapped for 5 hours in 15 foot coal. We was doing pillar work. If it wasn't for the cab on the shuttle car it would have killed me. But coal miners are they're own bread lol. It's one of the best jobs I've ever had plus the men I work with are all family and willing to die for you, save you, etc. Its a brother hood. All coal miners stick together no matter what country, place! God bless y'all!
God bless you brother together we stand 🇬🇧🇺🇸
I went there today
its a museum now and it was beautiful id love to thank these men for supplying our country. My grandfather was a miner in that mine before i was born, he didn't work last shift due to an injury but he still loved every moment
A sad report that makes me cry. I worked as a mining mechanic in German coal mining. Here, too, all mines are now closed. But ... coal mines will no longer exist (in Germany), but pride and honor will remain! I greet all of mates with a friendly 'Glück Auf!' (German miner's greeting)
They’re relaunching the industry now, the first deep coal mine for 30 years is due to open in Cumbria.
Under a tory government,
@@andrewh5457 The labour party are also all conservatives
wont last long because it goes agains the climate politics. By 2030 it will close again
@@MrSouzy yeah basically all that was lost was job security and camaraderie. You can have those things back if you organise to build a socialist society instead of believing everything the billionaire owned newspapers decide is the new scapegoat this week.
That’s for metallurgical coal - not the same industry
These are people are genuinely admire as heroes to me. I was born and raised in the north east of England. Mining was I wanted to do but leaving school in 1988 margret thatcher had butchered mining, steel making and ship building and railways. I never got to be miner instead I had to leave the north east to find work and I am now in the merchant navy so connected ship building.
My best wished and hopes go to every last man in Kellingley and all the other pits maggie butchered.
merchant navy that sounds like a dream to me hard manual labour yet ur travling the world
@@joesmith8701 your right it was a dream job but it has changed a lot first restrictions after 9/11 and then covid restrictions. As it happens I ended up in the at sea by chance after having some other opportunities. But I started as merchant seaman which still has a lot manual labour so it's not all luxury travel, unless to work your way up to be captain or chief 😀 engineer.
My family were coal minors in my town for 400 years, my town is literally 400 years old. 😅😂😅 My dad was not a coal miner, he turned 20 in 1989 and he became a carpenter.
We explore abandoned mines, never was an active miner, but this bought many tears to my eyes.
My old man was a miner he still talks to this day about the great times he says he always says he spent more time underground than a potato and the Camaraderie between the other miners and the stories I’ve heard some sad some hilarious it destroyed the towns and villages and still to this day you can see the after effects it had and that last bit was heartbreaking they weren’t just losing there jobs it’s like they where losing apart of themselves really do think if your not from in and around the old pit villiages and towns and the people the areas you could never really understand the working class mentally and what closing a industry it did to family’s split them and some to this day don’t talk and the effect on the local economy great to see they could move on with there lives in new jobs but like sheldon said he will always be a miner 👍🏼
A very important documentary of an industry that no longer exists. Thanks to whoever had the foresight to make it and to the uploader👍🏻
7 years ago Hope their all doing well.
Absolutely heartbreaking..... This country is a bloody disgrace. Hard, strong and dedicated professionals. I know in my lifetime this closing of the mines will bite us right on the ass...... Thank you one and all...... Yet another industry consigned to the history books.....
I'm an environmentalist but think the closure of this pit, & others in the UK a very short sighted decision. As one of the minors said in part 1 - " why us? ...... China & Germany are still mining coal" which is a fair point, especially when you take into account the events that have occurred after this was filmed ( I write in 2023). I'd like to add my sincere best wishes to all the men & their families.
This is a very well done documentary, thanks for uploading & sharing.
Such a shame to see such a proud industry bought to a close. Top blokes through and through, very glad to see Jack found work in the end. Comes across as a very wise head on young shoulders. All the best in your future careers!!
We still burn coal it never should have happened.
My grandad was a proud Irish miner who came over just after WW2. He worked in that many pits even he couldn't name them. The stories he could tell, but he always said no matter where you went the mining comunity always stayed togethor across the country. To see this again is heart breaking. I remember seeing it origionally and totally feeling for these guys as I did for my grandad when he was forced to leave. Then they brought out the open cast mining systems but by then the cards were pretty much stamped on the end as most is imported.
Respect to all miners
Was speaking to an ex miner of Kellingley this weekend at the yorkshire mining museum, they used to sell coal at 70 per ton to the power stations and still turn a profit, they are now buying it from abroad for 800 a ton
I’m sure with the energy crisis the government now realize they were wrong..Never rely on other countries to provide energy as we are seeing it doesn’t work
Cried at loads of parts of this !😪 especially were the lad went outside after talking about him mam
Real men you couldn’t break them
These men are real heroes!!!!!
Having worked with a few ex miners in my working life can categorically say they seem to be very good at adapting to new careers.
They had to be on time each day as once the train leaves for the coal seam that’s it so and they have to follow so many guidelines and safety aspects they always see a job out.
No surprises they all seem to have found gainful employment after the pit closed.
Here in the blackcountry we're sitting on a 30 foot thick coking coal seam known as " the Staffordshire thick" just waiting to be mined. Our last coal mine shut in 1968 (Baggeridge colliery) the one before that shut in 1965 (Hampstead colliery) we also have New hawne colliery which has been left untouched since it closed in 1920, it frustrates and baffles me as to why we aren't making use of our readily available natural resources rather than importing cheap highly polluting shit from abroad. I'd be first in the queue for a job down a coal mine
Its amazing how much stuff was left down there - could easily have kept some of the miners on to take apart the gear and hoist it up for storage just in case
Cheaper to leave it in situ' than salvage.
I started work at Bolsover 1980 age 17, It closed in 93. I spent the next 7 years as a welder/fabricator/steel erector and the following 22 years as a CAD draughtsman but I still consider myself a coal miner.
To see hard working grown men cry is heartbreaking, i was filling up watching it. Spliting up a working family and communities, maggie thatcher got a lot to answer for.
feel like crying after watching this documentary....why the world has to be brutal ?
I worked in mining 32 years did some time at big k all top lads . It’s 5 years since I left the industry sad video but life does move on
I hope they find work at the new woodhouse colliery in west Cumbria
I worked at this pit kellingley for 20yrs my dad after leaving haig pit for 34 yrs..i am a parton lad who lives in knottingley 53 yrs..so sad this video...had some great times there..bloody hard...
Lads every one of you lives in my heart and soul. Whether you believe or not: God Bless and keep all of you.
I wish Britain was still like it was in the 40s and 50s they seemed free and indestructible in their works and people seemed happy and unique I could say the same about my home here in the USA
from what i understand usa had her best times in the 50s we had our best time in the 60s and what the united states is going through right now seems to be the horrers we went through in the late 70s early 80s the united states will get back on her feet agen just like we did
@@joesmith8701we are related after all thanks for the explanation by the way I like hearing from others like you shared.
Such an important documentary. This industry should have been protected and then progressively phased out as Britain moved away from coal. Instead the rich 1% exploited foreign coal for their own huge profits creating an inequality society which has left us in economic ruins. What a shame policy makers cared more about the London financial sector than the UK economy and it's people. Failed again by politicians and look at our debt as a result of this indiscriminate murder of primary and secondary industry.
EU and it's Immigrants fault..... After Brexit, it will start again!
Eco-Friendliness?
@@SGTmapleleaf coal should have been phased out, with power stations only allowed to buy coal mined in the UK. Thus making the use of it more expensive for companies and therefore incentivising its replacement whilst also supporting jobs and allowing a gradual transition out of an industry that propped up areas of the north and Midlands.
@@nickmageebrown1981 Where's your great Brexit prosperity now? Fool
One day we'll have reopen the Pits. There's still millions of tons down there. Trouble is, there'll be no Miners left to go down and get it :(
The first deep coal mine in 30 years is opening in Cumbria, Woodhouse colliery. It’s a bit like the shipyards, personally like you, I think they will reopen them on a mass scale.
@@bendobbing9239 bloody hopefuly
We defiantly won’t, haven’t heard of climate change?
@@jamiejosh96 pick your lip up lad
More characters underground than any other places on earth. I laughed so hard I would be sick .
On my first day underground, 1975, I saw a man having his hair cut, so many characters.
@@andrewh5457 A man having his hair cut? Wow you guys really were crazy!
Scargill was right, who would of thought that in just 31 years every last coal mine in the uk would be closed. I’m fully behind eco friendly environment etc, but while we’re still burning coal then why not mine it from the uk! 🇬🇧
I doubt there are many industries these days, where the idea of watching out for, or protecting your fellow co-worker, is important. You can tell that it is just part of the job. I admire that sense of responsibility to others.
My grandad used to say that no matter what every body had each others back. You could fall out with a bloke one minute and the next that same bloke would pull you back if he saw something about to happen. Family underground and family over ground.
Thanks for uploading this. Brilliant documentary
edd4875 welcome - I loaded the first episode up too but it got taken down for Copyright on some music.
@@martynrichardson1511 i have looked for Pt1 ... now I know what happened! Thanks a million for uploading this. I’ve watched it 3 times back to back. Brilliantly filmed. If you can get Pt.1 to me somehow then let me know
@@martynrichardson1511can you reupload the first part with the copyright music removed ?
I finished at Ellington combine the big E 1994 my heart dropped 24 years a working miner shut he pits but I'm still a miner some people know me as the last coal miner at Dinnington village Newcastle upon Tyne a proud and sad thing to be tagged with been the last in generations in mining 💀😢👊
30.37 is that Pete who was or still is a tour guide at the mining museum near Wakefield? He was a brilliant guide and really engaging. It was a pleasure to have him lead the tour. I miss talking to my granddad about his mining days.
Yes you are correct
"this country isn't ready to take up this gap in the energy market"
I don't think he could have hit the nail on the head any harder
I was part of all this as a Barnsley lad at Brodsworth, and also worked here, this brings it all back. Crying, sorry guys. See ya you next time.
Pure hard graft from
These men! It’s just mad how all
The stuff was left down the mines and the shafts blocked up 😦
So sad. I’m from a colliery village which shut in 93. I was just lucky enough to see the village before the it was destroyed by the closure. Good luck lads
Thanks for posting this, good watch
They didnt do enough for these guys when the last shift finished. Really a government representative should have been there and they should have had a type of celebration when they came up. I am an English guy who lives in Germany and and they recently closed their last pit here too. That was sad too. But when the guys came up the brass band was playing and they made a big thing of it.. Here they came up and had to face a barrage of photographers.
True. The vulture media wankers were there to get a peice of ‘the story’....
A government rep would have been lynched.
@@CymruEmergencyResponder well the difference here was that all of the German miners had the opportunity to train for something new. Instead of being thrown on the scrap heap.
Yep in all cases since Thatcher and her tory w@nkers were in power every time a pit closed all the men were thrown on the scrapheap along with their families and communities. This also applies to steelworks and shipbuilding, and the railways too.
@@MrSouzy I read that in Germany, any miner under 40 got funding for retraining in a career of their choice, and anyone over 40 got their full pension paid early. Not a single miner found themselves with no options. Whatever the realities around the future of coal for generating power, the way things were done here, and the way that hard working people and their communities were treated was a disgrace.
Onsetter Darren Elseworth, (Ticker) was the last man out of Kellingley. The last man out of the last pit!
It's not just the pit's that are adversely effected, it's the auxiliary support services such as the companies that provide and service the intrinsically safe lights etc. This reminds we of the time we refurb'd the lights for one of those long-wall's. After it was back up and running they did one cut and then closed the pit.
Should make it a tourist attraction.
Totally fascinating piece of human engineering
“It is a shame we couldn’t have the same level of interest when we were trying to keep the mines open as the same level of interest now the mines are closing…..We should have been fighting to keep the pits open rather than celebrating the pits shutting.” Quote of the entire clip, IMO.
Agreed
32:08-32:20 that's bit really poignant seeing the mine for the very last time, RIP British coal mining industry. My late grandad was coal miner albeit not at Kellingley
I had a drink with Sheldon down in Corydon 14 1 20 top man
Does anyone know where i can see episode one?
Love ❤️ and Respect to These Miner's!!! ⛏️💪😎
Still burning coal but not mining it,fucking scandalous, know how to feel lads,ex miner fae Scotland 👍
i wanna know who the first person was that thought lets shut the last mine down i would beat some sense into em
Great documentaryThank you
The UK has more than 150 heritage rail companies covering 560 miles of track that runs between 460 stations. These lines play a big role in UK tourism today. They are worth about half a billion pounds a year to the national economy. Millions of tourists take trips on these lines every year. In addition the bigger heritage railways provide both employment and apprenticeship schemes.
Many of the UK’s heritage rail companies say they are already having to cut services just as they prepare for the Platinum Jubliee 2022. UK coal for steam trains has now gone and our next supply source was to be Russia, which is now off the table for totally understandable reasons. Our coal stocks are running out fast and the search is on to find alternative sources from overseas. However, there is no obvious source for the right quality of coal that we require and prices are fluctuating all over the place.
No episode 1? Great documentary, would love to see episode 1
been looking for it myself 264 hem heath
ua-cam.com/video/LpjNfJkmO7E/v-deo.html pt1
@@gaz1tinsley that's been blocked already, why allow part 2 but part 1 keeps getting blocked? Don't really see what the problem can be,
@@gaz1tinsley My old man was at Hem Heath (on the bank as he called it) and many of my good friends.
33 years underground, 2 years at the big k. Life does go on.
I work with Kev now he’s a sound bloke
how's he doing?
Awesome hope you and kev are safe and well.
Wow, what a brilliant, but very sad story, this country is built on coal, but we import cheap rubbish from abroad, typical British government, these men were the last in a very long line of deep pit miners, who have seen things that will never be seen again.
I salute you brave men, reopen the pits, we are brimming with coal.
Always burst into tears at 35minutes,heartbreaking
what kind of coal came out of Kellingley Colliery was it House or steam coal and what happened to the last load of coal that came up? i understand that they saved a lump of coal that came from Kellingley
I used to be an undermanager In North Staffordshire, I miss the crack but not the stress and pressure!
Which pit was that?
What gets me is they closed this pit down and a couple years later they decided to open another deep mine
Wow that was emotional
My dad worked there in the 70's and early 80's as an electrician. Is there a part 1 anywhere??!!
The young lad saying that he'd of worked there forever just goes to show theres still some decent grafting lads about in this generation.
I cried when he went out after talking about his mums cancer
Thanks for putting this up. Both my grandads were miners, I can just about remember there still being headgear dotted around the place when I was very young but they'd all gone before I was 10 or so. Is part 1 available anywhere does anyone know?
im the first bloke in my family to have not mined coal its heart breaking
The big K. I've just found this again as I randomly found myself talking about it the other day. Families built up around mining and single handedly destroyed by one woman in the early 80s (this one aside of course) causing a rapid decline.
Thanks Margret Thacher
What an absolute waste of an industry,shame on government.I feel for these hard working men
my great great grandfather was a miner and lived in leeds
Anyone know where we can catch part 1 ???
ua-cam.com/video/UwySJ7PaGS8/v-deo.html 1080 p as well
@@mat-mat420 top man 👍🏻👍🏻
Anyone know where I can watch part 1
It’s on naked science
Does anyone know the song which starts at around 17:50
Delilah originally by tom jones
Smile, lost your job. News people very patronising, making them rehearse how they feel for the camera!!! Felt for them as they said they wanted to one last shift to say goodbye. Like the managers comment, we've put the lid on the coffin, were here putting the nails in. Captain goes down with his ship as he switches the electrics off. 😢
Yes Harry Gration, what an absolute twat that bloke was, patronising preening prick. Making them appear 'devastated ' when they were but wanted to be alone in their thoughts..
The Manager of the put was right tho, they did love the camera, a few of them were revelling in the limelight🤣
Think i'm missing something here.......WHERE is "part 1"?.
Has anyone got a link to Pt 1 ? Part 2 was an immense shock, I left in 1985.... 8 years investment into University and a Career for a C Eng., The Manager's Ticket.
Then I understood the Tories long game... close the pits with 300 more years and bank on Natural Gas for 60 years. In the end both demonized but with Money invested and support we could have been cleaner. In the end Britain lost, EU lost, China became the major growth country - Powered by coal. FT ! Why Why Why Delilah (God bless Stoke City, they keep this song alive) !
Where can i find episode 1, its really interesting, its no longer available on the bbc iplayer
It’s on naked science
Makes me sick to my core thinking about the yuppies and their spreadsheets that made this possible. We still burn coal the pits should be open.
34:45 such a sad moment.. to think this happened in communities all over northern England :-(
and south Wales
My Grandad was a Coal Miner ❤️💪 😎 ⚒
great job lads
great job lads
I live in a town built on coal mining deep in the heart of Yorkshire and the majority of the males in this town worked at cortonwood, a sinonimous name with miners as you've probably guest I'm from Wombwell, my dad was a miner at Elsecar and wouldn't hear a rong word about it :ut told us whilst growing up don't work at pit and lucky for me I finished school during the strike.
OMG! The dust in that mine was horrendous. 😢
The last mine shut here in the Netherlands back in 74. The gouvernment fucked our whole region.
Take my hat off to the miners ❤️
Wheres part one
see the thing that annoys me is that there are still coal powerplants operating and a few of them have no plans to close (as of 3/19). they should be using BRITISH coal not some foreign shit that they can get slightly cheaper
Real men real jobs one of the most dangerous jobs on earth ,but these men were more than willing to carry on working the face providing coal for the country ,we had it all ,now we import it madness .the younger generation have missed out so so sad.
And the ending to this film made me genuinely happy
my grandad was jack longstaff union leader for nottingham and Derbyshire i remember having tea with arther scargill and joe gormley when i was a kid during the strikes.
COLE MINER COLE MINER🎶,SHINING YOUR LIGHT.🎶WORKING ON MINESHAFT DARK AS THE NITE🎶.WHATCHA GONNA Do BEFORE YA GO BACK IN?🎶IM GONNA ASK THE LORD TO LET ME COME OUT AGAIN.🎶AMEN🎶🎶🎶🎶GOD BLESS ALL WHO WE HAVE LOST & NOT FORGOTTEN.FOREVER LOVED
The technology is there to massively reduce carbon emissions from coal fired power stations.
You either have coal or nuclear at the moment.
Take your pick.
Smile you've lost your job.
still looking for part 1
UA-cam keep taking it down due to a copyright claim for some music in the episode.
@@martynrichardson1511 Please reupload and mute the music if possible. A badly needed documentary.
This was amazing..and sad ..but in the end it was a new start..
best job i ever had
Well done to Sheldon I'm sure he lives near me!
Seaham?