Tuesday 30 January 2024

'Bread not Bayonets'

 ‘Bread not Bayonets’

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=i0UxMadnIEA


The story of Halifax in August 1842 when local workers downed tools to join a nationwide general strike for better pay and extended voting rights and found themselves ruthlessly suppressed with many killed and injured.

32 minutes long 


 Directed and edited by Francesca Platt and produced by Mark Metcalf.

Monday 29 January 2024

BOLSOVER TV coverage of forthcoming public meeting in Blackwell Colliery to remember local footballers and miners

Two famous footballers who worked at Blackwell Colliery, Derbyshire and 7 miners who were killed there in a pit disaster in 1895 are to be remembered at a special plaque unveiling on April 18th

https://markwritecouk.files.wordpress.com/2024/01/blackwell-plaques-cc.mp4


Wednesday 24 January 2024

Blackwell Colliery public meeting on 25 February at noon

 

FIND OUT HOW TO HELP BLACKWELL COLLIERY COMMEMORATE ITS MINERS’ AND TWO OF ITS FINEST FOOTBALLERS BY ATTENDING THE COMMUNITY HALL AT MIDDAY ON FEBRUARY 25TH


Two famous footballers who worked at Blackwell Colliery, Derbyshire and 7 miners who were killed there in a pit disaster in 1895 are to be remembered at a special plaque unveiling on April 18th

Bolsover TV coverage 

https://markwritecouk.files.wordpress.com/2024/01/blackwell-plaques-cc.mp4

On the afternoon of Thursday 18 April there will be unveiled three plaques in Blackwell Colliery that will commemorate two of its greatest footballers and seven miners who lost their lives in a mining disaster in 1895.

You can find out more & get involved by coming to Blackwell Community Hall at 12 noon onwards till 3pm on Sunday 25 February. Especially welcome would be any descendants of the miners killed.  

Billy Foulke, Willie Layton, James Fryer, John Gibson, John Jones, James Mee, Joseph Penshaw, Thomas Shaw and William Martin.

Blackwell colliers Billy ‘Fatty’ Foulke (1874-1916), a pupil at the local school, and Willie Layton (1875-1944) played for Blackwell Colliery Welfare FC and both won the top flight title and FA Cup with Sheffield United and Sheffield Wednesday respectively with Foulke playing for England and Layton for the Football League. Foulke also represented Derbyshire County Cricket Club. (DCCC)

Willie Layton was fortunate in that his football duties meant he took the night of 10/11th November off work at the colliery and avoided being caught up in an explosion that killed: James Fryer, John Gibson, John Jones, James Mee, Joseph Penshaw, Thomas Shaw and William Martin.

Plaques to the two footballers and the seven men are now to be mounted at the community hall and pit wheel respectively. Blackwell primary school children are to help out on this special occasion.   

Come along on 25 February to discover more

Are you a descendant of any of the seven miners? If so then we would welcome you getting in touch and hope you can come along on 25 February.

Are you a former miner at the colliery that closed in 1969? If so then we would welcome you getting in touch and hope you can come along on 25 February.

Are you a relative of a former footballer who lived in Blackwell Colliery and can tell us more as the Greater Creative Home Truths Heritage Project would like to interview you for its oral history project.

Two short documentary films on Foulke and Layton at:-https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1k1fcY5vtPo Layton – a tale of tragedy and triumph  https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zei3KpirqW0  The Biggest and Best: Billy Foulke

For more details contact football historian Mark Metcalf 07392 852561 metcalfmc@outlook.com and/or Cllr Tony Gascoyne on 07968 971015 gazzaddr@hotmail.co.uk

Friday 12 January 2024

BLACKWELL COLLIERY COMMEMORATION OF ITS MINERS AND TWO OF ITS FINEST FOOTBALLERS

 

BLACKWELL COLLIERY COMMEMORATION OF ITS MINERS AND TWO OF ITS FINEST FOOTBALLERS

On the afternoon of Thursday 18 April at 1.30pm, Blackwell Colliery will, by unveiling three plaques, be commemorating two of its greatest footballers and seven miners who lost their lives in a mining disaster in 1895.

Blackwell colliers Billy ‘Fatty’ Foulke (1874-1916), a pupil at the local school, and Willie Layton (1875-1944) played for Blackwell Colliery Welfare FC and both later won the top flight title (Division One) and FA Cup with Sheffield United and Sheffield Wednesday respectively with Foulke playing for England and Layton for the Football League. Foulke also represented Derbyshire County Cricket Club. (DCCC)

Plaques in honour of both men will be unveiled at Blackwell Community Centre. Family members will be centrally involved in the ceremony. David Griffin from DCCC also be speaking.

A plaque will also be unveiled at the nearby pit wheel in memory of the 71 colliers known to have been killed at Blackwell Colliery (1872 -1969) and listing the following seven who died very early on Monday 11th November 1895 in an explosion.

James Fryer

John Gibson

John Jones

James Mee

Joseph Penshaw

Thomas Shaw

William Martin

Attempts are being made to find descendants of these men so as to involve them in the ceremony.

Willie Layton himself was due to be at work on Sunday 10th/ Monday 11th but absented himself in order to play a big football match the following day. Layton is the great grandfather of artist Michael Knighton, a Manchester United director between 1989 and 1992, who is paying for the plaques.

A number of events and activities are being organised in the lead up to 17 April.

Two short documentary films have been made on Foulke and Layton and can be viewed at:-

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1k1fcY5vtPo Layton – a tale of tragedy and triumph

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zei3KpirqW0  Foulke

It is hoped to make a third on the seven miners.

More details can be provided by football historian Mark Metcalf

07392 852561 metcalfmc@outlook.com

Thursday 11 January 2024

The Biggest and Best: Billy Foulke short film

 The Biggest and Best: Billy Foulke 

View at:- 


It is eight minutes long and is part of a major project in Blackwell Colliery this year. 

MAXINE PEAKE BACKS APPEAL FOR A DOCUMENTARY FILM ON THE REMARKABLE BETTY TEBBS

 

MAXINE PEAKE BACKS BOLTON TRADES COUNCIL FUND RAISING APPEAL FOR A DOCUMENTARY FILM ON THE REMARKABLE BETTY TEBBS

Following the publication by Unite of a booklet on Betty Tebbs remarkable life, Bolton Trades Council are raising up to £6,000 to make a 30-minute documentary film on BETTY TEBBS – A radical working class hero.

Maxine Peake is backing the appeal – listen to what she has to say at:- https://markwritecouk.files.wordpress.com/2024/01/betty-tebbs-funding-appeal.m4a

I’d like to appeal to the trade union and labour movement to donate up to £6,000 towards a documentary film about the life of my great friend Betty Tebbs.

Betty was a life-long socialist of 98 years who’s indomitable fighting spirit and trade union organisational abilities helped to win improvements in pay and conditions everywhere – particularly at the East Lancashire Paper Mill – that she worked across the printing and retail sector.

Following the drop of nuclear bombs in Japan in 1945 she dedicated her life to  Peace by campaigning with CND.  She was resolved to improving women’s rights through organisations such as the National Assembly for Women.

In her later years, Betty, whose first husband Ernest, joined the war effort “to fight fascism” and  laid down his life doing so, took up the cause of the Palestinian people.

It was great that four years ago Unite published a biography on Betty compiled by Mark Metcalf who is now combining with film maker Francesca Platt to make a 30-minute documentary film on her life.

Funds are needed - £1500 has already been donated – and can be sent to Bolton and District United Trades Council, Account number 59020222 Sort code 089018

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------Production of the film will be undertaken by Francesca Platt, production manager of the Bolton arts project The Videobox at https://www.thevideobox.tv/contact-us/ alongside writer Mark Metcalf.

The pair recently collaborated on a well-received 30-minute documentary film BREAD NOT BAYONETS – Halifax 1842 on the uprising, part of the 1842 General Strike, in the West Yorkshire town in 1842. This can be viewed at: - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=i0UxMadnIEAt

Funds for this work were donated by a number of trade union branches.

The work will consist of additional research, on screen interviews, site visits, sourcing music, photography, editing and production. There will be a number of costs associated with the work.

There will be a public screening of the completed works and it will be available free to labour movement organisations & community groups. The work will go online.

Copies of the Unite publication on Betty Tebbs at:- https://markwritecouk.files.wordpress.com/2020/02/6328-betty-tebbs-web.pdf  Hard copies from Mark Metcalf on 07392 852561 or metcalfmc@outlook.com

Draft resolution This branch agrees to support the appeal by Bolton Trades Council towards the costs of a documentary film on Betty Tebbs. We agree to donate……………..

Donations to:-  Bolton and District United Trades Council, Account no 59020222 Sort code 089018

Tuesday 9 January 2024

Hull to become the first UK city to give people the "right to grow" their own food on public land,

 

Charlie Clutterbuck has “warmly welcomed” news that Hull is set to become the first UK city to give people the "right to grow" their own food on public land, and now wants “the idea adopting nationally.”

Labour councillor Gill Kennett acted after a local resident’s vegetable patch, which provided wholesome food for neighbours on public land had to be dug up following a complaint by a newly-arrived householder. Working closely with Hull Food Partnership (HFP), Kennett proposed a motion that won unanimous support at the September full City council meeting backing the right to grow vegetables on land owned by the authority.

“I feel strongly that this ticks so many boxes for Hull. We are a deprived city and having access to good fresh food, enabling people to get together to grow it and encouraging skilled growers to pass on their skills to the less experienced can bring communities together, make places look better, help tackle social isolation and potentially improve the mental health of some people,” said Kennett. “Plus, at a time of a cost-of-living crisis it can help reduce food bills.”

Council officers are now working to bring to life Kennett’s proposal with a report to go before the Communities, Culture and Leisure Scrutiny Committee in January outlining possible locations, providing access to water at them and examining the finance required to relieve pressure on insurance costs. “It might take a few months to get officially started, but I am excited at what we are trying to achieve,” said Kennett, who for many years worked in children’s services and on retirement became a councillor in 2012.

“It is great to see what they are planning in Hull,” said Clutterbuck who has mapped many parts of the NW to show food can be extensively grown on wasteland and who was central to the establishment of the Incredible Edible Project, Todmorden, formed in 2008 by Pam Warhurst who has been passing on her experiences to HFP.

“Rubbish land in a valley in the middle of the Pennines, producing salad crops nearly all year round, several thousand pounds worth of fruit-tree cuttings, and supporting bees, ducks and cows shows we could stop transporting food half way around the world by better using our public realm and reconnecting people to growing food, which includes vegetables and fruits, often not stocked by supermarkets, for diverse communities,” says Charlie.

HFP development officer Anna Route is keen for communities to get the official go-ahead to grow food on disused public land. “There are people want to do so now. It will take time to attract others but the more sites there are across the city will mean they’ll get noticed and attract new people. It needs to be viewed as a long-term thing as that is how growing works. It takes determination and effort, trial and error and to keep trying. But the rewards are worth it.”

 

 

 

 

 

End fox hunting on our national parks.

 Unpublished article for uniteLANDWORKER Winter 2023/24 

A coalition of charities led by the League Against Cruel Sports (LACS) are campaigning to push National Park Authorities (NPA) in England and Wales to do all in their power to end fox hunting on our national parks.

When Labour did finally sweep away hunting with dogs in 2005 it needed the Commons Speaker Michael Martin to invoke the Parliament Act for only the fourth time since 1949, after Conservative peers in the Lords constantly refused to pass the legislation despite MPs support for it on a free vote. 

As the trade union for rural workers, the TGWU (now Unite) welcomed the legislation viewing fox hunting as unnecessary and cruel with foxes dying terrible deaths after being pursued over lengthy distances before being caught and ripped to death by the chasing pack. 

The Countryside Alliance (CA) was predictably hostile, predicted that the legislation would be unenforceable and threatened defiance. 

In the first two years there were just eight successful prosecutions under the Act but, thankfully, the numbers have risen consistently ever since. However, there is an overwhelming body of evidence – LACS recorded nearly 1,000 incidents in the last hunting season - showing fox hunting with dogs is still being pursued under the smokescreen of ‘trail hunting’, which involves a pack of hounds following an artificially laid scent.

LACS is calling on NPA to follow in the footsteps of the National Trust and Natural Resource Wales in banning trail hunting on their land. A petition to this effect is being handed into the NPA soon and other activities will follow.

Karen (*), (not her real name) a farmer with her husband in North Yorkshire who lives close to the North Yorkshire Moors and Yorkshire Dales National Parks. (NPs) supports LACS campaign.

“Fox hunting takes place regularly locally and this disturbs lots of wildlife. There have been prosecutions but anyone speaking up takes a serious risk of being harassed.

“Older farmers hunt because they see it as a tradition and a social event. But others are quite vile and enjoy witnessing a fox or a minx, as they also hunt those defenceless animals, being ripped apart.

“I am pleased LACS and other bodies have a campaign to get NPs to do everything in their power to end fox hunting across their regions. This won’t be easy as they don’t own the land and there are some big, powerful landowners within these areas.”

Only 4% of land in the Lake District (LD) Park is owned by the LD National Park Authority.

The Duchy of Cornwall – now Prince William - is one of the largest private landowners in England with an estate of 135,000 acres of which 13% is in Cornwall and half of which is on Exmoor National Park in Devon and where animal rights campaigners are seeking to have the law vigorously upheld.

The future King and his wife are keen hunters and William has spoken out in support of trophy hunting in Africa.

It is apparent therefore that it is not going to be an easy task to push the NP Authorities, which are legal bodies charged with maintaining a National Park, to act to help finally end fox hunting.

To take action go to: -  https://takeaction.league.org.uk/page/131959/petition/1?locale=en-GB

MORE RURAL SOCIAL HOMES CALL

 

MORE RURAL SOCIAL HOMES CALL

Wait list length is just plain wrong says Defend Council Housing

UniteLANDWORKER Winter 2023/24

Housing campaigners Defend Council Housing (DCH) wishes to speak to rural households stuck on the ever-growing rural social housing waiting lists that has now reached 197,894/ The testimonies gathered would be fed into an All-Party Parliamentary Group enquiry into the need for council housing.

Lord Best, who led the Joseph Rowntree Foundation for many years, has written extensively and chaired many commissions on housing. “As the National Housing Federation (NHF) has revealed the national position for rural housing has worsened quite dramatically in recent years………….trends (include) pricing out locals… (and) a fall in availability of private rented accommodation. In Devon the County notes a 50% decline and in North Devon alone a 67% fall in just 2-3 years.”

The NHF figures show that 46,318 additional households were added to the national social housing waiting list in rural areas between 2019-2022. And with just 5,953 new social rent houses constructed rurally over the same period then the crisis is growing at a rate 10 times that of towns and cities.

Best sees the answers lying in national and local government action. “We need to enable councils to stop the loss of longer-term lettings to Airbnb-style lets through a planning consent requirement and we need to embark on a major programme of social housing, not least for rural communities where so much council housing has been sold under Right to Buy.”

Best chairs the Devon Housing Commission that has already had 170 submissions, mainly from rural and coastal communities, from those facing severe housing difficulties.

A similar national enquiry is now being organised by Best’s parliamentary colleagues that comprise the All-Party Parliamentary Group (APPG) Housing and Social Mobility whose purpose is ‘to champion social housing providers that support communities to secure sustainable livelihoods’ by ‘examining evidence led insights.’

DCH is providing secretariat (administrative) support to the APPG that is co-chaired by MPs Peter Aldous (Tory) and Liz Twist. (Labour)

DCH is keen to collate the experiences of rural households stuck on long waiting lists for social housing and would welcome the assistance of Unite members in rural communities to make this possible. The group has already set up meetings in urban areas including Rochdale but wants to reach out into countryside communities.

According to Eileen Short, “we are seeing the return to the slum, overcrowded, insecure living conditions of the 19th century that drove the mass council housing movement in the first place.

“Whether you are in housing need yourself or deeply concerned for future generations, help build a movement to address the housing crisis.

“This initiative could help reveal the facts about the present state of housing and detail how to mend the housing crisis. Please make contact if you can assist,” she added.

 

In conjunction with Homes for All, DCH has put forward a 5 Point Plan which aims to provide concrete proposals to help solve the housing crisis.

1. Government investment in a mass council housing building programme, including requisitioning of empty homes and abolition of ‘right to buy’
2. Rent controls and secure tenancies in the private rental sector. Robust regulation of housing associations
3. New funding to repair and refurbish existing council housing – do not demolish
4. Adequate funding for fire safety, and for retrofitting and thermal insulation
5. Planning for the people and the planet, and not for developers’ profits

To contact Defend Council Housing ring 07342 098440 and at info@defendcouncilhousing.org

See also Homes for All website at www.axethehousingact.org.uk