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Anne Harper

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177:, Newton-le-Willows, where they remained 2,000 feet below ground for four nights over the Easter weekend. Parkside was the last operational colliery in Lancashire at the time and was ultimately closed the same year. The women joined a group of teachers on an underground visit to the colliery in order to pass through security. Between fifteen and twenty protesters down the mine lived on a diet of water and sandwiches that the management sent down to them, and claimed that they did not sleep because the management kicked their feet to stop them from resting. The occupation at Parkside was the subject of press attention, as TV cameras were at the surface when Harper and the other women emerged. The Press Association published a profile of Harper following the incident. 145:
and 11 November, the National Women's Organisation was formed at a national conference of women's action groups. This splinter group within the NWAPC movement aimed to campaign for better education and political representation for working-class women; to develop ties with the NUM and support this organisation in its goals for and beyond the miners' strike to prevent pit closures and promote welfare through education and health in mining communities. The group also set out with a published plan to campaign for economic stability and peace within these communities.
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felt that women were out of place at these scenes, objected to the women's presence at picket lines. The four women were brought before a magistrate's court in Nottinghamshire for their picketing activities at Silverhill Colliery, which the prosecution claimed had caused an obstruction. They were ultimately cleared of this charge in October 1984, however the women were banned from picketing Nottinghamshire. Harper claims she was subject to intimidation tactics and rough treatment in police custody during this incident.
202:, rehabilitated the role of female activists in the miners' strike and community welfare action during and after this period. Harper is one of the women whose life is narrated in the production. Scholarship has also examined the relation between the reality and representations of the political identity of Anne Harper and other active members of the NWAPC in the media. 141:
and a point of first contact for women who went on to join the group. Women who ran the food kitchen also went on fund-raising trips to neighbouring towns and cities to help finance these initiatives. Over the course of the miners' strike, Harper and other women in the Barnsley group received a growing number of invitations to speak at other support groups nationwide.
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Heseltine to reconsider closure of the pit later in 1992. It was eventually shut in 1996. This incident was replicated at Houghton Main Colliery where members of the NWAPC campaign established a camp to protest the suggested closure of the mine. Following the occupation at Armthorpe, the same group of women attempted to occupy the mine at
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at collieries that were threatened with closure. Along with Lyn Hathaway, Liz Hollis and Audrey Moor, who was an organiser from the Nottinghamshire Women's Support Group, Harper often appeared at picket lines to support the miners' cause. Local authorities and even the miners themselves, some of whom
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and the political organisation of miners. Harper and Scargill both spoke at these events. Although Scargill's biographers claim that Harper eschewed direct involvement in politics and attended pickets in an auxiliary role as Scargill's spouse, Stead has documented her work as a political activist and
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Once Scargill was elected as President of the National Union of Mineworkers in 1981, Harper frequently accompanied him to rallies and picket lines to protest against the planned downsizing of the coal industry in Britain, especially in response to economic and social impact of this on individuals and
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for the BBC in 2018, Harper summarised the defining spirit of the miners' strike amongst women in the support group movement: "we are women, we are strong and we are fighting for our rights." She reflected on gender relations during the 1980s in the same interview: "they had to have their dinner on
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Markham Main Colliery was the last to return to work at the end of the 1984–1985 miners' strike and one of thirty-one pits earmarked for closure by Heseltine that year. Harper along with other women from the NWAPC movement occupied the mine after the announcement of closure in October 1992; this led
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She is best known for her role in the NWAPC movement, her prominence as a public speaker during the 1984–1985 miners' strike and due to her marriage to Scargill. More recently, Harper has been viewed as a pioneer of feminist community activism and discourse by scholars and within the media and arts.
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The broader support group movement was particularly strong in Wales, where there were 106 groups that were organised from Cardiff, and resulted from exchanges at the first National Women Against Pit Closures conference held at the Northern College in Barnsley on 22 July 1984. Later that year, on 10
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Participants in the NWAPC movement went to Belgium, Holland and France on fund-raising trips and to speak to on trade unionists platforms about the UK miners' strike. In the early days of the Barnsley group, women also began their organisational efforts with food kitchens that became community hubs
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Harper founded the Barnsley Women Against Pit Closures group along with other local women, which was the first such group in what became a national movement. These groups brought together women from the coalfields to fund-raise for striking miners and their families, organise rallies and picketing
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At this time Harper also began community based activism activities that centred on fund raising and protests that became NWAPC movement. In November 1984, Harper launched the striking miners' Christmas appeal, which was highly successful in terms of fundraising to cover welfare and legal costs for
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for a meeting to decide how to best support local striking miners. This led to the first, very well attended, meeting of the group and to a national, all-women rally through Barnsley twenty days later on 12 May 1984. The march was attended by an estimated 10,000 women. On 11 August 1983 the group
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Harper was integral to community organisation and activism efforts by women to provide welfare within mining communities and to prevent pit closures during the 1984-1985 miners' strike, which was a landmark event in the history of the British labour movement. She remained active through political
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Harper continued to appear at picket lines throughout the 1984–1985 strike and to speak at rallies and protests against pit closures. Following this incident, the NUM recognised that the presence female protesters could ameliorate the public image of the strike and held a meeting to discuss a
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the table when they came in and they were really male chauvinists." Recent scholarship has problematised the autonomy of NWAPC groups, the relation of the movement to the male-led NUM and to Arthur Scargill at the level of day-to-day operations. A 2018 play,
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activities to draw national and international attention, and eventually to engage with national and trade union politics. The Barnsley group was formed when local women published an advertisement in a local paper, the Barnsley
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Harper is a member of the Anti-Fascist League. She has also spoken publicly about the development female activism during the period of the 1983–1984 miners' strike and the following decades. In an interview with
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possible new NWAPC office at the NUM headquarters in Sheffield. As contentions amongst supporters of the strike towards the NUM grew, this association became increasingly controversial within the NWAPC.
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Parish Church on 16 September 1961. The couple had a daughter together, Margaret Scargill, in 1962 who is now a practising GP. For many years from the 1960s, Harper worked as a
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whom they met in 1992 and the suggestion to occupy the pits came from a woman from Doncaster at this meeting, although the Markham Main Colliery occupation preceded this.
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organised a protest march through London that an estimated 23,000 people joined, including working class women from around the UK and female trade unionists.
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Harper married Arthur Scargill, who was also an elected member of the Trade Union branch committee at Woolley Colliery, at
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activism and media appearances during the 1990s. In 2018, Harper was the subject of a play about her life,
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Joannou, Maroula. (2018). "'Fill a bag and feed a family': The miners' strike and its supporters." In
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The Women Against Pit Closures took the idea of camping outside mines from protesters at
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On 9 April 1993, Harper and three other members of Women Against Pit Closures entered
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Marching to the Fault Line: The Miners' Strike and the Battle for Industrial Britain
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Marching to the Fault Line: The Miners' Strike and the Battle for Industrial Britain
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1992–1993: Mine occupations with the women against pit closures and Greenham Common
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We are Women, We Are Strong: The Stories of Northumberland Miners' Wives 1984-1985
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The Trade Union Question in British Politics: Government and Unions since 1945
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Sutcliffe-Braithwaite, Florence and Thomlinson, Nathalie (11 January 2018).
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as an activist, community organiser and wife of the then President of the
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During the 1984–1985 miners' strike, Anne Harper led women in
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The Enemies Within: The Story of the Miners' Strike, 1984-5
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You Can't Kill the Spirit: Women in a Welsh mining valley.
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Political, community organisation and activism activities
30:, South Yorkshire. She was politically active during the 93:, protests and political conferences under the remit of 470:. London: The Women's Press. pp. 18–22, 59–63. 560:Sutcliffe-Braithwaite, Florence (11 January 2018). 653:Never the Same Again: Women and the Miners' Strike 468:Never the Same Again: Women and the Miners' Strike 515:Anne and Betty - United by the struggle - Page 1 249:Anne and Betty - United by the struggle - Page 1 85:operator at the Barnsley Co-operative Society. 170:, South Yorkshire, but could not gain access. 8: 655:. London: The Women's Press. pp. xiii. 493:Digging Deeper: Issues in the Miners' Strike 286:: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list ( 89:communities. She travelled around the UK to 233:31, 1:86 - via Taylor & Francis Online. 215:. Manchester: Manchester University Press. 62:Early life and marriage to Arthur Scargill 630:. Northumberland: The People Themselves. 424:(Interview). Interviewed by Foster, Anna 262:Beckett, Francis, Hencke, David (2008). 305:. Oxford: Blackwell. pp. 292–298. 242: 153:In 1992, Conservative Party politician 119:striking miners and their families. Mr 279: 16:British political activist (born 1941) 596: 594: 555: 553: 551: 549: 532:. London: Constable. pp. 85–87. 523: 521: 461: 459: 411: 349:. London: HarperCollins. p. 41. 266:. London: Constable. pp. 85–86. 7: 495:. London: Verso. pp. 169–1179. 457: 455: 453: 451: 449: 447: 445: 443: 441: 439: 418:"Eye of the Storm with Emma Barnett" 409: 407: 405: 403: 401: 399: 397: 395: 393: 391: 372: 370: 368: 366: 347:Scargill: The Unauthorized Biography 340: 338: 336: 334: 332: 330: 328: 326: 324: 322: 257: 255: 182:Greenham Common Women's Peace Camp 66:Anne Harper was born in Barnsley, 14: 54:and directed by Bryony Shanahan. 605:. London: Collins. p. 230. 213:Labour and the Left in the 1980s 42:. The couple divorced in 2001. 416:Anne Scargill (26 July 2018). 1: 577:10.1080/13619462.2017.1408540 231:Contemporary British History. 36:National Union of Mineworkers 569:Contemporary British History 163:Doncaster, South Yorkshire. 708: 222:London: The Women's Press. 157:announced the closure of 127:Women against pit closures 24:Women Against Pit Closures 528:Beckett, Francis (2009). 491:Benyon, Huw, ed. (1985). 378:"Queens of the Coal Age" 345:Routledge, Paul (1993). 68:West Riding of Yorkshire 601:MacGregor, Ian (1986). 301:Taylor, Robert (1993). 48:Queens of the Coal Age, 382:Royal Exchange Theatre 218:Miller, Jill. (1986). 200:Queens of the Coal Age 32:1984–85 miners' strike 26:(NWAPC) movement from 626:Newton, Gwen (1985). 159:Markham Main Colliery 98:community organiser. 651:Stead, Jean (1987). 466:Stead, Jean (1987). 121:John Paul Getty Jr. 161:at Armthorpe near 692:British activists 273:978-1-84901-025-2 175:Parkside Colliery 155:Michael Heseltine 699: 667: 666: 648: 642: 641: 623: 617: 616: 598: 589: 588: 571:. 31, 1: 86–94. 566: 557: 544: 543: 525: 516: 513: 507: 506: 488: 482: 481: 463: 434: 433: 431: 429: 413: 386: 385: 374: 361: 360: 342: 317: 316: 298: 292: 291: 285: 277: 259: 250: 247: 72:Woolley Colliery 707: 706: 702: 701: 700: 698: 697: 696: 672: 671: 670: 663: 650: 649: 645: 638: 625: 624: 620: 613: 600: 599: 592: 564: 559: 558: 547: 540: 527: 526: 519: 514: 510: 503: 490: 489: 485: 478: 465: 464: 437: 427: 425: 415: 414: 389: 376: 375: 364: 357: 344: 343: 320: 313: 300: 299: 295: 278: 274: 261: 260: 253: 248: 244: 240: 208: 206:Further reading 190: 151: 129: 104: 64: 40:Arthur Scargill 17: 12: 11: 5: 705: 703: 695: 694: 689: 684: 674: 673: 669: 668: 661: 643: 636: 618: 611: 590: 545: 538: 517: 508: 501: 483: 476: 435: 387: 384:. 31 May 2021. 362: 355: 318: 311: 293: 272: 251: 241: 239: 236: 235: 234: 223: 216: 207: 204: 189: 186: 150: 147: 128: 125: 103: 100: 95:trade unionism 63: 60: 15: 13: 10: 9: 6: 4: 3: 2: 704: 693: 690: 688: 687:Living people 685: 683: 680: 679: 677: 664: 658: 654: 647: 644: 639: 633: 629: 622: 619: 614: 608: 604: 597: 595: 591: 586: 582: 578: 574: 570: 563: 556: 554: 552: 550: 546: 541: 539:9781849010252 535: 531: 524: 522: 518: 512: 509: 504: 498: 494: 487: 484: 479: 473: 469: 462: 460: 458: 456: 454: 452: 450: 448: 446: 444: 442: 440: 436: 423: 419: 412: 410: 408: 406: 404: 402: 400: 398: 396: 394: 392: 388: 383: 379: 373: 371: 369: 367: 363: 358: 352: 348: 341: 339: 337: 335: 333: 331: 329: 327: 325: 323: 319: 314: 308: 304: 297: 294: 289: 283: 275: 269: 265: 258: 256: 252: 246: 243: 237: 232: 228: 224: 221: 217: 214: 210: 209: 205: 203: 201: 196: 187: 185: 183: 178: 176: 171: 169: 164: 160: 156: 148: 146: 142: 138: 135: 126: 124: 122: 116: 112: 109: 101: 99: 96: 92: 86: 84: 80: 75: 73: 69: 61: 59: 55: 53: 49: 43: 41: 37: 33: 29: 25: 21: 652: 646: 627: 621: 602: 568: 529: 511: 492: 486: 467: 426:. Retrieved 421: 381: 346: 302: 296: 263: 245: 230: 219: 212: 199: 195:Emma Barnett 191: 179: 172: 152: 143: 139: 133: 130: 117: 113: 105: 91:picket lines 87: 76: 65: 56: 52:Maxine Peake 47: 44: 19: 18: 682:1941 births 188:Later years 168:Grimethorpe 83:comptometer 50:written by 20:Anne Harper 676:Categories 662:0704339838 637:1869873009 612:0002177064 502:0860918203 477:0704339838 422:BBC Sounds 356:0002552604 312:0631166262 238:References 134:Chronicle, 585:149192204 282:cite book 108:picketing 28:Barnsley 428:11 June 38:(NUM), 659:  634:  609:  583:  536:  499:  474:  353:  309:  270:  79:Gawber 581:S2CID 565:(PDF) 657:ISBN 632:ISBN 607:ISBN 534:ISBN 497:ISBN 472:ISBN 430:2021 351:ISBN 307:ISBN 288:link 268:ISBN 573:doi 74:. 678:: 593:^ 579:. 567:. 548:^ 520:^ 438:^ 420:. 390:^ 380:. 365:^ 321:^ 284:}} 280:{{ 254:^ 229:. 665:. 640:. 615:. 587:. 575:: 542:. 505:. 480:. 432:. 359:. 315:. 290:) 276:.

Index

Women Against Pit Closures
Barnsley
1984–85 miners' strike
National Union of Mineworkers
Arthur Scargill
Maxine Peake
West Riding of Yorkshire
Woolley Colliery
Gawber
comptometer
picket lines
trade unionism
picketing
John Paul Getty Jr.
Michael Heseltine
Markham Main Colliery
Doncaster, South Yorkshire.
Grimethorpe
Parkside Colliery
Greenham Common Women's Peace Camp
Emma Barnett
"National Women Against Pit Closures: gender, trade unionism and community activism in the miners' strike, 1984-5"


ISBN
978-1-84901-025-2
cite book
link
ISBN
0631166262

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