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The price of coal

 

The children were attending, or not attending, interested or bored, on the terrible day of the slip. They may have been thinking about Halloween, but unlikely  given the date 21 October 1966.

Americana was still at a distance from these south Wales valleys.

More likely the boys would be planning to collect firewood for Bonfire night.

The unforgettable  truth was that 144 people wouldn’t see another day,

Including 116 children, who may have played upon the colliery spoil tip and never seen it as a threat;

They would certainly know it from their collier fathers who had worked at the pit,

And piled up the tip, for decades. The mining engineers certsinly knew that the coal tip,

Above this Welsh village of Aberfan, near Merthyr Tydfil, overlaid a natural spring.

This it was that caused the slippage after the autumn rains had built-up water within the tip.

This it was that caused the slurry to so suddenly slide

Slap bang into and over the classrooms which were packed full

Of happy children, only seconds before the deluge. The black and white

Images of disaster soon spread, including into my mam’s front room,

Where, I remember, my socialist father saying: “little kids, pay the price of coal.”

 

 

 

◄ A rose garden, at altitude, under occupation

Warmer than blood ►

Comments

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kJ Walker

Sun 5th Sep 2021 09:57

One of Britain's most tragic disasters, and totally avoidable if it weren't for the greed of the wealthy.

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Telboy

Sun 5th Sep 2021 08:30

Aberfan was truly terrible. Britain was built on coal, South Wales literally so.
Mining is a hazardous business. But let's look forward to harnessing the natural resources - wind, sun, water.

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