Marching to the Fault Line: The 1984 Miners' Stirke and the Death of Industrial Britain First Edition

Marching to the Fault Line: The 1984 Miners' Stirke and the Death of Industrial Britain First Edition book cover

Marching to the Fault Line: The 1984 Miners' Stirke and the Death of Industrial Britain First Edition

Author(s): Francis Beckett (Author), David Hencke (Author)

  • Publisher: Constable
  • Publication Date: 26 Feb. 2009
  • Edition: First Edition
  • Language: English
  • Print length: 420 pages
  • ISBN-10: 9781845296148
  • ISBN-13: 1845296141

Book Description

The 1984 Miners’ strike was one of the defining moments in modern British history. Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher was determined to transform Britain and break the power of the Unions. On March 5, steered by the leader of the NUM, Arthur Scargill, the miners decided to protest the closures and called for industrial action. Over the next eleven months, Britain would be dragged to the precipice of civil war as violence and resentment spilled out along the picket lines and on the streets. Thatcher was convinced to the end that the government might fall. However, the final defeat of the protest would mark the end of a way of life for hundreds of thousands as Attlee’s vision of a welfare state, trade unions and strong government was replaced by Thatcher’s Britain. In “Marching to the Fault Line” leading journalists Francis Beckett and David Hencke have unrivalled access to key government and union players at the heart of the story; they have also uncovered material that the powerful would have liked to remain secret, including ‘dirty tricks’ and secret payments, jaw dropping incompetence, back biting, and double dealing. From Downing Street to the picket lines, this book will reveal the true story behind the strike. Praise for “The Blairs and their Court” ‘Hugely entertaining’ – Roy Hattersley. ‘A fascinating book’ – “Daily Mail”. ‘An exceptional and well-researched piece of work’ – “Tribune”. ‘A fascinating read’ – “TES”.

Editorial Reviews

Review

`A lively, popular and informed account of the strike’ –BBC History Magazine

The first attempt since its immediate aftermath to offer a full account of the strike itself. . . . [breaks] some useful new ground by exploiting the Freedom of Information Act and winkled out cabinet papers and Coal Board minutes to throw light on behind-the-scenes government manoeuvring. –The Guardian

‘An accurate historical account of the political significance of [the NUM s] struggle … It demonstrates in fine detail how a political party can wreak vengeance on a large important workforce from villages and small communities and their families – Ian Gibson MP, Total Politics magazine ‘Well researched, full of vital insights and written with a sense of pace that does justice to the tragic drama.’ –Neil Kinnock

Meticulously researched . . the roles of Thatcher and Scargill and the striking miners themselves are questioned in a deeper way than ever before, and a secret history of espionage and dirty tricks is revealed. –Waterstone’s Books Quarterly

Only the dogmatic partisans of Margaret Thatcher or Arthur Scargill will find serious fault with [this] account of the bitterly divided struggle. –Times Literary Supplement

Review

`Meticulously researched . . the roles of Thatcher and Scargill and the striking miners themselves are questioned in a deeper way than ever before, and a secret history of espionage and dirty tricks is revealed.

Review

`A fascinating read’

Review

` More a civil war than an industrial dispute, this bitter conflict radically changed the balance of political power in this country. . . .[a] fascinating book.’

Book Description

`A laudable attempt to restore labour’s greatest defeat to history, not myth.’

From the Publisher

The Miners’ strike was a dividing line in Modern British history. Before 1984, Britain was an industrial nation, reborn from the ashes of the Second World War by Clement Atlee’s vision of a welfare state. Most of the great industries were nationalised and the trade unions was one of the major forces in the land. After the strike, which ended in defeat, Thatcher’s Britain was born. It is still an event that causes huge contoversy.

Marching to the Faultline tells the full story of the strike from confidential cabinet meetings at Downing Street to backroom negotiations, and life on the picket line. The book draws on previously unseen sources from interviews with the major figures, private archives and documents obtained under the FOI to set the record straight.

It conclusively reveals for the first time:

* That Thatcher’s government had prepared for the strike in advance,

* the strike was started by a misunderstanding: that Cortonwood pit was to close; it wasn’t.
* that there would have been widespread support if a ballot had been taken

* The Battle of Orgreave was a decoy planned to draw the miners away from Nottinghamshire

* Scargill personally blocked a number of deals, including one involving his own deputy Mick McGahey

About the Author

Francis Beckett is a distinguished journalist who regularly writes for the Guardian and other national papers. He is the author of amongst others Enemy Within: The Rise and Fall of the British Communist Party, biographies of Clement Attlee and Gordon Brown and co-authored The Blairs and their Court with David Hencke. David Hencke has worked on the Guardian as their Westminster correspondent since 1986. He has won numerous awards including ‘Scoop of the Year’ and ‘Journalist of the Year’ three times and memorably has scooped Neil Hamilton, Peter Mandelson and John Prescott amongst others. He is described by Andrew Marr as the leading parliamentary journalist of our era.

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