- Source: 1912 United Kingdom national coal strike
- Daftar film Universal Pictures
- 1912 United Kingdom national coal strike
- UK miners' strike
- 1984–1985 United Kingdom miners' strike
- 1926 United Kingdom general strike
- 1969 United Kingdom miners' strike
- 1972 United Kingdom miners' strike
- 1912 in the United Kingdom
- List of miners' strikes
- History of coal mining
- Ludlow Massacre
The 1912 United Kingdom national coal strike was the first national strike by coal miners in the United Kingdom. Its main goal was securing a minimum wage. After 37 days, the government intervened and ended the strike by passing the Coal Mines Act, extending minimum wage provisions to the mining industry and certain other industries with many manual jobs.
The dispute centred upon an attempt by the Miners Federation of Great Britain, the main trade union representing coal miners, to secure a minimum wage for miners in their district and replace the complicated wage structure then in place which often made it difficult for a miner to earn a fair day's wage. The same issues had caused a major dispute the previous year in South Wales and had become a national issue. The strike was a repeat of the unsuccessful strike of 1894 which also sought a minimum wage.
The strike began at the end of February in Alfreton, Derbyshire and spread nationwide. Nearly one million miners took part. It ended on 6 April after 37 days. The strike caused considerable disruption to train and shipping schedules.
This also caused ships to be cancelled and people were transferred on the RMS Titanic where it struck an iceberg and sank in the North Atlantic Ocean near Canada. 1,500 people perished while leaving only 705 survivors.
See also
West Virginia coal wars & strikes (1912-1921)
1926 United Kingdom general strike
References
Further reading
Sires, Ronald V. "Labor Unrest in England, 1910–1914." Journal of Economic History 15.3 (1955): 246-266. online
External links
Peter Gill. "National coal strike".
Michael Kelly. "Nostalgia: 100th anniversary of the national miners' strike". The Journal.