Western Mail

‘It’s still raw’ – miner’s wife who ran soup kitchens recalls 1984

Here, ahead of tomorrow’s 40th anniversar­y of the start of the Miners’ Strike, Amanda Powell tells how Kath Morgan took her place alongside politician­s and miners’ leaders to give an emotive speech in 1984

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“IT’S still raw,” said Kath Morgan, speaking from the nursing home she moved to from her home town of Maesteg.

She was looking back at photograph­s of herself taken almost 40 years ago at Maesteg’s Old Parish rugby ground during the Miners’ Strike.

They’re photograph­s which haven’t been on public display since the yearlong dispute which saw more than 20,000 Welsh miners down tools in an attempt to stop pit closures.

The Old Parish ground had been the scene of many an historic sporting battle, and five months into the strike townspeopl­e flocked to the pitch in the midst of the biggest fight the community had faced since the Second World War.

My husband, former Western Mail photograph­er Richard Williams, was there that day too.

As a young freelancer, he’d gone along to capture the speeches and sideshows as communitie­s that were heavily reliant on the coal industry campaigned to save livelihood­s.

After appearing in the Glamorgan Gazette newspaper, the images he took had languished in our garage since then, but are now published in our book to mark the 40th anniversar­y of the strike, and also in a series of free exhibition­s.

The book includes many more of Richard’s vivid photograph­s which document the dying years of the industry in south Wales.

And I’ve spent the last year tracking down some of the people who appear in those photograph­s, to include their stories in our book, as a lasting record of what miners and their families went through during what turned out to be a lost cause.

Miner’s wife Kath Morgan had been a leading light in the Llynfi and Afan Miners’ Support Group, which had organised the fundraiser held on that fine July day in 1984.

As well as running soup kitchens and making up food parcels, groups like the one Mrs Morgan helped organise raised funds and campaigned in support of the miners.

In the photograph­s from the gala, we see Mrs Morgan taking her place and making a speech from the rugby stand alongside well-known miners’ leaders and politician­s including South Wales National Union of Mineworker­s (NUM) president Emlyn Wiliams and long-serving Bolsover MP Dennis Skinner, who was nicknamed the ‘Beast of Bolsover’ for his outspokenn­ess.

In the book, Kath Morgan says that she was nervous about addressing the rally.

“I didn’t make a long speech,” she recalled, as she looked at the photograph of her on the stand, “I just said we were against what the government and the coal board were doing to us and our children.”

Her two sons were small at the time, and she spoke about the hardships miners and their families suffered.

“We must have been living on £10 to £15 a week, and that’s being generous,” she said. “It was very much a struggle, but we coped. We didn’t starve,” she added, rememberin­g how she and other families were grateful for food parcels, which she also helped organise for the miners.

She wept as she thought back to the “best Christmas ever” in 1984, thanks to people who had donated gifts, food and money.

“It’s still raw,” Mrs Morgan added. But she remembered some good times they had too, and the support of the community.

“We had a laugh – we had to, or we’d have all gone nuts.”

Sitting behind Kath Morgan that day was Ian Isaac, an NUM South Wales Area Executive Council member and Lodge Secretary at St John’s Colliery. He was at the event to help spearhead the ‘Keep Mining in Maesteg’ campaign.

In his own book, When We Were Miners, Mr Isaac summarised the events on that hot summer’s day.

“Races were held. Rugby games were played and they were preceded by an appeal by me, Emlyn Williams and our guest speaker, Dennis Skinner MP, to stand firm and spread the word in support of the miners. Afterwards I took Dennis for a pint in the Sawyers pub in Maesteg.”

Photograph­er Richard Williams left the ground with his cameras as the speeches came to an end.

“At that stage the strike was only a few months old and it seemed to me that one side would soon crack and give way,” Richard recalls in our book.

“I had no idea I would still be photograph­ing the strike throughout that autumn and winter, and several months into the following year.”

The strike ended in early March 1985 with miners going back to work without an agreement over pit closures. By the end of that year, Maesteg’s St John’s Colliery had closed, bringing an end to deep mining in the Llynfi Valley.

■ Coal and Community in Wales: Images of the Miners’ Strike, before, during and after by Richard Williams and Amanda Powell is published by Y Lolfa, £14.99. Go to www.richardwil­liamsphoto.co.uk/miners-strike for details of events and the free exhibition­s.

 ?? ©RICHARD WILLIAMS PHOTOGRAPH­Y. ?? > Kath Morgan makes her speech at Maesteg’s Old Parish rugby ground in July 1984. Sitting just behind her is Ian Isaac, who was an NUM South Wales Area Executive Council member and Lodge Secretary at St John’s Colliery. Leaning forward just above the words ‘St Johns’ is former miner and long-serving Bolsover MP Dennis Skinner, nicknamed the ‘Beast of Bolsover’
©RICHARD WILLIAMS PHOTOGRAPH­Y. > Kath Morgan makes her speech at Maesteg’s Old Parish rugby ground in July 1984. Sitting just behind her is Ian Isaac, who was an NUM South Wales Area Executive Council member and Lodge Secretary at St John’s Colliery. Leaning forward just above the words ‘St Johns’ is former miner and long-serving Bolsover MP Dennis Skinner, nicknamed the ‘Beast of Bolsover’
 ?? ?? > Kath Morgan at the gala and sports day at Maesteg’s Old Parish rugby ground in July 1984
> Kath Morgan at the gala and sports day at Maesteg’s Old Parish rugby ground in July 1984
 ?? ?? > Kath outside the nursing home she moved to from Maesteg
> Kath outside the nursing home she moved to from Maesteg

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