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Battle of Orgreave recreated for art 18/6/01
EVAN DAVIS:
It was the showdown of the great
1984 war, the battle of Orgreave.
In this small village between
Rotherham and Sheffield, built
around mining and a coking plant.
The pickets were trying to stop
coke getting out of the plant.
Thousands of police outnumbered
them, the scars of the beatings
and strife have far from healed.
And now, a re-enactment of the
event. We are here to film the
filming of it. It's Labour history
meets the southern arts
establishment. Real participants
in the conflict join battle
re-enactment hobbyists. The
real showdown anticipated huge
changes to the community here.
HAZEL PEDELTY:
There is a lot of crime, because
people have got no money. There's
no jobs. What are the young ones
supposed to do? Hang about street
corners. That's all they can do, isn't
it?
DAVIS:
In the years after the battle, the
coal jobs all but disappeared, just
as Arthur Scargill said they would.
The jobs went, and with astonishing
speed. The real battle of Orgreave
actually took place closer to where
I am standing now. Indeed, the bridge
behind me was a key point in that
battle in the jostling for position
between the police and the pickets.
Much of the battle also took place
off a road that ran up somewhere
behind me. Clearly, quite a lot has
changed. There is no road, the works
have all gone, there is an open-cast
mine, and there is a free mountain
to boot. Clearly, the physical
environment has changed very
substantially, but what about the
economic environment? With most
of the coal jobs gone, how successfully
has the area found life beyond coal?
At this opportune moment of everyone
thinking about a great event of the
past, what about the future?
MARK EDGELL:
(Leader, Rotherham Borough Council)
We are standing on a site which we
expect to become a basis for an
advanced manufacturing technology
and research location. Boeing have
joined with Sheffield University, and
they have said this is the place they
want to move to. Also, the large Corus
company have said that they want a
world centre for research and development
here.
DAVIS:
This is in sight of the battle re-enactment,
on ground reclaimed from coal. There is
some room for optimism. In this and the
neighbouring council ward, the number
of people on unemployment benefit is
not much above 4%. The jobs that are
created at a Boeing or a Corus research
centre, are those jobs that ex-miners
could get?
EDGELL:
We are trying to develop a diverse
economy in this part of the country.
We recognise that ex-coal miners and
steel workers can work in modern
industrial centres. They may need
some training or they may have the
skills already. Some of the other
jobs that we are trying to develop here
will attract graduates, who in the past
might have gone to Leeds or Manchester,
or down to London. We hope that we
can hold on to them here, so they can
spend their money here, and help create
other jobs in other sorts of industries
as well.
DAVIS:
Signs of regeneration abound. A mile
from the battle scene, Sheffield's young
airport. A few miles further down the
road, the Meadowhall shopping centre.
It's work, Jim, but not as they knew it.
Coal and steel it ain't. And the old
Orgreave site itself is being reclaimed,
just as soon as the opencast mine project
finishes. And here's a novel traffic
scheme, a roundabout to mark a bend
in a road. There is no junction, no
point in the roundabout. But it signifies
the promise of a road to come.
EDGELL:
It's taken time to transform these
sites, to take away the contamination,
to change and develop the infrastructure.
Then it takes some time to encourage
more jobs to come in.
VIV LONG:
All these lads are real miners, by the
way. The majority are actors.
DAVIS:
But for those living through change,
it is not always easy. Viv Long was
at the real Battle of Orgreave. He was
a miner from another part of
Rotherham. His acting debut at the
battle re-enactment was a success.
Viv lost his mining job in 1994,
he has worked almost continuously
since then, but with less fulfilment
and money than in the old days. Far
from being loath to adapt from coal,
he's been adapting too much.
LONG:
I had a go in the pub trade as a
landlord. A short spell. It didn't
work out for me. Then I had a go
at lorry driving. I didn't enjoy it very
much, too long hours. Packed that in.
Tried to get something else while I
was driving, ended up getting a little
job down Rowmarsh
at the industrial estate.
Ten happy months there, quite enjoyed
it, but not enough work to keep me
fully employed there for the long term,
which I were looking for. Got made
redundant about three week ago. Just
trying to get another job. Now I think
I've got settled into one.
DAVIS:
It's not just that the area has had to
move out of coal. The employers
round here have changed their shape
as well. Most people think that big
corporations are taking over the world.
But here, it seems to be the opposite
concern that bothers people. There is
no big paternalistic employer like the
old Coal Board. No, this is the new
industrial architecture. Units, not
factories. Even the buildings somehow
don't quite exude the permanence of
the old jobs.
LONG:
On the right-hand side, the old baths,
where the men, when they came out of
the pit, used to get showered off.
DAVIS:
This is the site of Viv's old colliery. It
once employed 800 people. Now it's a
small industrial estate employing about
40.
LONG:
There is all brand new industrial estates
coming up. All types of different jobs,
but for a person like me, they're not jobs
for me.
DAVIS:
At least no-one can any longer say that
this area is overly dependent on any one
employer or industry. Economic
development here has been slow, it's
been stumbling, it's been painful. Getting
all the pieces to fit, the land, the
infrastructure, the people, is an
annoyingly laborious task. But,
surprisingly, getting the economy
to improve is the easy bit, compared
to dealing with some of the social
changes. Dave White has been involved
in the parish council of Orgreave for
decades.
DAVE WHITE:
(Vice-Chairman, Orgreave Parish Council)
The youngsters around here, they've
got a good future, I would think.
The environment is certainly
changing for the better. Once we've
got the open-cast finished, that
will be tremendous there. 50-plus,
many of those have never had a job
since. They've just been on the
scrap heap. They had no skills, only
coal mining, unfortunately. That,
I suppose, is how life went.
DAVIS:
Dave shows me a new housing
estate, built over the old Treeton
Colliery. This was
linked to Orgreave by a tunnel. Nice
houses, but where's the community
gone?
WHITE:
In Orgreave, we used to have
functions. We had barn dances on
the playing fields. Closed roads
down for Silver Jubilees. Ran a
civil bonfire every year, with
discos and barbecues with that.
That all went, or seemed to go,
about the time that Thatcherism
came in. The community spirit
seemed to die totally around that
time. One time, you could say,
"Oh, we are going to have a barn
dance", and there would be thirty
people helping you run it. If I
said that now, I would be lucky
if I got another one!
DAVIS:
I wonder why that's changed?
WHITE:
I just cannot understand it. Is it
life that's gone on, moved on? I
just do not know.
DAVIS:
For now, the battle re-enactment
is the nearest thing there is to a
barn dance, being a celebration of
the village's heritage.
LONG:
As you see now, you get older in
life, you see things has come to an
end. The pits obviously had to
come to an end. They couldn't keep
running them, with running a loss.
Some collieries were running a loss.
But there were that many collieries
going, they could have all mucked
in together and made it pay. I am
sure they could, to this day.
DAVIS:
The reconstruction has an added
finale of hugging that did not occur
on the day. Reality was never as
sweet. But for Orgreave, the reconstructed
battle of old is just a day's distraction
from the real battle for the new.