National Coal Board 1975 Training Film For New Miners (NCB)

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  • Опубликовано: 3 фев 2025

Комментарии • 146

  • @GateKommand
    @GateKommand 3 года назад +39

    I remember watching this film 40 years ago when I started my training!

  • @kevinbird9194
    @kevinbird9194 Год назад +7

    I was a mining craft apprentice and statedin 1979 at moorgreen training centre. I remember this video very well. Great memories

  • @briansaiditsoitmustbetrue4206
    @briansaiditsoitmustbetrue4206 4 года назад +16

    Good video... My late dad worked at Kellingley in the 1960's and 1970's. He would have loved this video as well.

    • @UKAbandonedMineExplores
      @UKAbandonedMineExplores  4 года назад +1

      Glad you enjoyed it

    • @briansaiditsoitmustbetrue4206
      @briansaiditsoitmustbetrue4206 4 года назад +10

      @@UKAbandonedMineExplores When he worked at Kellingley it had high-tec machinery .. They used fast spinning blades to cut the coal off the wall and the coal could be mined quickly and many tons could be collected at the same time..
      I suspect the vast majority of this coal mined here would have went to power the now closed Ferrybridge Power Station
      Kind regards Brian
      Our UK Career politicians want wind-powered this and plug in cars etc etc..
      The sad thing is our dumb "Career politicians" here in the UK don't understand that the pollution from coal mining from China and India also effects the climate and the UK closing all of it's coal mining and running it's cars on electric will have a LESS than 1% Effect on the global climate change..
      These career politicians we vote into power come and go and they grind the country further and further down into the ground... Then they vanish off into the sunset with all their millions, It makes my blood boil.
      Just look at the way they have handled the COVID-19 outbreak ..Shocking!

  • @yauwohn
    @yauwohn 5 лет назад +21

    I started my elec apprenticeship with the NCB in 1964 and remember this training film well , it and many others were shown to us during our first year of training, as well as safety films when we attended advanced apprentice training at the training centre.

    • @UKAbandonedMineExplores
      @UKAbandonedMineExplores  5 лет назад +6

      yauwohn Ahh, must bring back a lot of memories to see this again.

    • @yauwohn
      @yauwohn 5 лет назад +7

      @@UKAbandonedMineExplores I've seen it before, plus others that are on RUclips. I might add, I think the haulage chain had been phased out by 1975 in favour of the much safer rack and pinion haulage. Haulage chains breaking were no fun, highly dangerous too.

    • @UKAbandonedMineExplores
      @UKAbandonedMineExplores  5 лет назад +6

      Yes, bit of tension on them, bet they could whip around when that was released.

    • @0ldw3lshm4n
      @0ldw3lshm4n 5 лет назад +2

      @@yauwohn we were using haulage chains after 1975 I only started in 1979

    • @malbrake3313
      @malbrake3313 5 лет назад +2

      yauwohn, did you get to see Isolate & Check ? I have Winning The Coal and 40 other NCB films on 16mm. I did my electrical apprenticeship from 1969 on

  • @paularkell5589
    @paularkell5589 8 месяцев назад +13

    I now have so much respect for my Dad who did this for 50 years

  • @pauldegnan1982
    @pauldegnan1982 Месяц назад +13

    I can't comprehend what that must have been like? Imagine starting a job and that was your training video! Holy shit that's terrifying! Those guys were a different breed...

    • @johncaven8170
      @johncaven8170 29 дней назад +3

      They are showing the best places

    • @adrianparker-e9f
      @adrianparker-e9f 16 дней назад

      @@johncaven8170 I was wondering how many men became miners because their dad etc, were miners, and how many came to it without any connection ? ( as far as knowing what goes on before they started )

    • @neiloflongbeck5705
      @neiloflongbeck5705 9 дней назад +1

      Many of them were from mining families and so would have been aware that mining was dangerous.

  • @davidmaclean2239
    @davidmaclean2239 8 месяцев назад +7

    I saw this film when I started as a mining craft apprentice in 1975 at the Barony Colliery in Ayrshire. 20:12

  • @bobsbits8562
    @bobsbits8562 2 года назад +5

    Fantastic film. Thank you for sharing

  • @andrewbriggs6083
    @andrewbriggs6083 Год назад +11

    Welcome old friends, I was an app elec from Brodsworth colliery S,yorks in 75. I am too sad to have seen it all dissappear.

  • @lordcaptainvonthrust3rd
    @lordcaptainvonthrust3rd 7 месяцев назад +6

    Fantastic archive find
    Thanks for sharing 👍

  • @admiralcraddock464
    @admiralcraddock464 3 года назад +19

    I remember back in the early seventies regularly seeing adverts for trainee coal miners in the Daily Mirror saying it was a well paid job with a future. The best job to have in the future is one making candles, ad we're going to n ed them

    • @seansands424
      @seansands424 2 года назад +2

      Remember seeing jobs in the mines on the tele in the early 70s

    • @garethdavies2538
      @garethdavies2538 10 месяцев назад +1

      I remember those adverts in boys comics in the 1950's. "Coal Mining, A Career With A Future." Catch then young was the principle!

  • @Nalski2007
    @Nalski2007 9 месяцев назад +2

    Thanks, very informative. My Dad was an ironstone miner and later worked for British Steel making pit arches.

    • @UKAbandonedMineExplores
      @UKAbandonedMineExplores  9 месяцев назад +1

      You’re welcome, you may enjoy the series where we are looking for the underground Blacksmith’s shop as that is in a huge ironstone mine :). More ironstone videos to come too.

  • @jacklav1
    @jacklav1 11 дней назад +1

    I went for a guided tour round the 1980s coal mine replica at the Scottish Mining Museum near Loanhead (can’t recommend it enough). The guy said that the area unsupported behind the mining face might not collapse for several shifts, building up the tension. Each shift would ask the others coming up ‘has it gone yet?’. A job that must involve incredible care and trust.

    • @UKAbandonedMineExplores
      @UKAbandonedMineExplores  11 дней назад

      Yes, there are videos on RUclips of them collapsing worked areas, scary stuff.

  • @bigteno4597
    @bigteno4597 3 года назад +10

    I was a fitter and remember working on all the featuredmining equipment.

    • @UKAbandonedMineExplores
      @UKAbandonedMineExplores  3 года назад +3

      I bet you have a few tales to tell :)

    • @bigteno4597
      @bigteno4597 3 года назад +3

      @@UKAbandonedMineExplores On yes! Some of the things that happened coupled with some of the stories some of the old boys would tell made it a fascinating experience for a young fellow. I miss those times. Take care Dr Paul.

    • @davidclark1952
      @davidclark1952 4 месяца назад

      If you came across someone laying down 9 times out of ten it was a fitter lol used to say that was the first thing they were taught

    • @bigteno4597
      @bigteno4597 4 месяца назад

      @davidclark1952 not on the panels I worked on! Every shift something broke. When you got a minute it was great but as I said something happened every shift.

  • @carltonholmes8061
    @carltonholmes8061 18 дней назад +1

    How very interesting. I have talked to some Ex Coal Miners in my last job and found it interesting too. 😊

  • @MattyEngland
    @MattyEngland 4 года назад +4

    Really interesting film. Cheers for the upload.

  • @kipper.northernmonkey4505
    @kipper.northernmonkey4505 3 года назад +3

    I don't think I blinked...as good as your last one like this..it just makes me more gutted I'll never see one in action 😭

    • @UKAbandonedMineExplores
      @UKAbandonedMineExplores  3 года назад +1

      There is actually a working private colliery near Alston that takes tours down from tome to time.

  • @AndrewBooth-q8j
    @AndrewBooth-q8j 21 день назад

    Nice film, takes me back to my 22.5 years as an electrician for NCB then British Coal. Didn't realise how much I missed the camaraderie and friends I made there😢

  • @tonyhorsfield3821
    @tonyhorsfield3821 8 месяцев назад +10

    Not just the coal they lost it's the apprenticeship training from all the different underground trades which was largely regarded as one of the best in the country.

  • @davidmccabe3054
    @davidmccabe3054 4 года назад +64

    Interesting to hear it was the nationalisation that modernised the mines and improved efficiency. Politicians are never done telling us privatisation makes things more effective. I guess the problem is nobody can get filthy rich from a nationalised industry.

    • @UKAbandonedMineExplores
      @UKAbandonedMineExplores  4 года назад +10

      That is true!

    • @danyalullah5856
      @danyalullah5856 Год назад +4

      well considering the industrys now extinct

    • @Conquer..-
      @Conquer..- Год назад +2

      Samme is happening in India, Current Government is doing privatisation of all Nationalised ( Government handled) mines.

    • @BlackRose-vi2yg
      @BlackRose-vi2yg Год назад +6

      I don't know about that just look at British Leyland

    • @bluebukkitdev8069
      @bluebukkitdev8069 7 месяцев назад

      @@danyalullah5856 It's really not at all

  • @Bobt98
    @Bobt98 24 дня назад +2

    We went down a local coal mine in Derbyshire when they were actually coaling we helped to move the big jacks forward after a cut as they moved forward there was a low rumble and a cloud of dust came as the roof collapsed behind a bit scary fair play to the men who did this everyday

  • @malbrake3313
    @malbrake3313 3 года назад +11

    I have this one (plus a quite a few more) on 16mm film. Most of my collection was saved from a skip. I am a former mining electrician

    • @UKAbandonedMineExplores
      @UKAbandonedMineExplores  3 года назад +3

      Yep, I have quite a few 16mm stuff from the second world war I rescued that was being sent to a skip.

    • @bobsbits8562
      @bobsbits8562 2 года назад +2

      Please share more films . Thank you

  • @neilfurby555
    @neilfurby555 Год назад +2

    Fantastic video, made in the days that coal was not a dirty word!

  • @punkers1
    @punkers1 17 дней назад +2

    My late Grandfather was a coal miner starting when he was 15 in late 40s just near end of the war before and after the pits were nationalised at Little Mill and the Killick pits in Ayrshire Scotland .

    • @UKAbandonedMineExplores
      @UKAbandonedMineExplores  16 дней назад +1

      It was a hard life but lots of friends for life made down them.

    • @punkers1
      @punkers1 16 дней назад

      @UKAbandonedMineExplores Aye it's a shame they are all gone I did time in the open cast had good times

  • @martincowling6562
    @martincowling6562 Год назад +7

    Will always remember the true experience of a deep coal mine as it was my favorite interest when growing up as my Dad as a shafts man working 7 days a week down the pit, and watching video by the NCB, Then NUM of telling kids not to play on pit tops,
    now all this spectacular industry has gone, as life will never be or feel the same again,
    kids today don't even know what a coalmine looks like, or a piece of coal,
    UK in it day employed over 3 MILLON miners as it was a job for life, as to the best year of 1984-85 when everyone got out and met up in pubs and social clubs in the strike, as I remember that year big style when in my days of going up playing on the streets,
    still can't take our memories away and dignity that the men works in dangerous conditions,
    now they blame everything on coal because of this rubbish of climate change,
    haven't seen life these people,

  • @allenhanley2359
    @allenhanley2359 4 месяца назад +2

    Took part in an NCB training film in 1964 at Norton Colliery in Stoke on Trent. Only ever saw the finished film once and always wondered what happened to it. I know it was used at the Kemball traing centre for a number of years but after that, no idea.

    • @UKAbandonedMineExplores
      @UKAbandonedMineExplores  4 месяца назад

      This is the only one I’ve seen so far, and this was after quite a bit of work on it as it was in a right state

  • @sheilawalker7190
    @sheilawalker7190 2 года назад +3

    Amazing

  • @5thnorth
    @5thnorth 3 года назад +12

    King Coal, I'll be back.

  • @philglover2973
    @philglover2973 Год назад +3

    I did my training at Kemble in heroncross in Stoke on Trent happy days 😅😊 all gone now 😊😅😢

    • @davidbostock4145
      @davidbostock4145 Год назад +1

      Same here Phil in 1963. I’m 77 tomorrow, no better men than miners.

    • @philglover2973
      @philglover2973 Год назад

      @@davidbostock4145 happy birthday to you sir have a great day

    • @philglover2973
      @philglover2973 Год назад +1

      Hope you have a great birthday 🎂🎂

    • @davidbostock7326
      @davidbostock7326 Год назад +1

      Cheers Phil

  • @SaranganiBob
    @SaranganiBob 3 года назад +3

    I started in the pits In Australia in 1962 when I was 19y/o as a clipper changing the coal skips from one steel rope to another and on Friday afternoon I'd go get the pit ponies and take them to the surface for the weekend. It was only in 1977 about the time I got my Deputies ticket that there was a big push to wear safety glasses at all places on the minesite and deputies were less popular for enforcing the mine managers rules.

  • @kevjones3632
    @kevjones3632 10 месяцев назад +4

    Saw this in 78 at moorgreen training centre

  • @scifidesign2
    @scifidesign2 Год назад +3

    I work on the factory floor. Have to admit these men had guts. I couldn't do it.

    • @UKAbandonedMineExplores
      @UKAbandonedMineExplores  Год назад +1

      No, nor I, I know a guy who did it, says working conditions were bad.

    • @philglover2973
      @philglover2973 Год назад

      @@UKAbandonedMineExplores the job had to be done 👍

  • @cameron1975williams
    @cameron1975williams 16 дней назад +1

    Amazingly brave and strong men. Not the snowflakes we have today. All that effort should have been spent building nuclear reactors though.

  • @windymiller6908
    @windymiller6908 7 месяцев назад +3

    I was working underground around this time. No serious accidents but was off work for 6 weeks with, of all things, a nasty dose of bacterial jaundice thanks to having worked for a week in a district infested with mice!

    • @UKAbandonedMineExplores
      @UKAbandonedMineExplores  7 месяцев назад

      Oh, not nice.

    • @windymiller6908
      @windymiller6908 7 месяцев назад +1

      @@UKAbandonedMineExplores Not nice at all...I lost almost 2 stone in weight. I hated those meeces to pieces!

  • @РАССЛЕДОВАНИЕАВИАКАТАСТРОФ-в5с

    Это. Наши. Герои. !!!

    • @UKAbandonedMineExplores
      @UKAbandonedMineExplores  2 года назад

      Да, безусловно, тяжелая и опасная работа, которая, вероятно, резко сократит вашу жизнь.

  • @billmmckelvie5188
    @billmmckelvie5188 21 день назад +2

    Just to think nine years after this video the start of the NCB reduction or whatever else you want to call it started!

  • @terryhart643
    @terryhart643 2 месяца назад +1

    Did my Underground Training here Training for work and Life in a oner

  • @TheGhost-gx5vd
    @TheGhost-gx5vd 15 дней назад +2

    My farther wanted me to go into mines I chose the RAF instead

  • @mutley23able
    @mutley23able 5 месяцев назад +1

    I wonder if all those machines, and trains etc have just been left down there, or were taken out and scrapped?

  • @golfr604
    @golfr604 2 года назад

    My dad spent his working life in the mines , I was destined to be there until they closed.

  • @eliotreader8220
    @eliotreader8220 4 года назад +2

    how was lump bituminous (steam coal) dug up for the heritage steam market exactly?

    • @UKAbandonedMineExplores
      @UKAbandonedMineExplores  3 года назад

      Sorry, don't know the answer to that.

    • @dedgeroo4665
      @dedgeroo4665 3 года назад

      Only certain types of coal were suitable for steam customers. The cobbles would have been screened out depending on size, calorific value, etc. The coal was often blended with higher or lower quality coal to suit the customers needs as some coals burned hotter than others.

    • @eliotreader8220
      @eliotreader8220 3 года назад

      @@dedgeroo4665 I don't know what Cobbles are exactly are they the actual lumps of coal. last year I decided to learn about steam coal due to whats happening with the steam heritage movement.

    • @Rockdoc2174
      @Rockdoc2174 Год назад

      Shearers produced mostly small coal suitable for power stations. When house coal was still a thing trepanners were used in suitable seams because they produced larger pieces. When steam was at its height I’d imagine a lot of that was hand got to make sure they didn’t produce small stuff. Remember they mined the older put heaps towards the end of the NCB/British Coal to extract all the small coal dumped there because, at the time, it was unsaleable.

  • @waverleyrocker
    @waverleyrocker 13 дней назад +2

    Not an ear defender in sight. These guys must have all gone deaf.

  • @lewisner
    @lewisner 3 года назад +6

    All of the investment in machines and buildings was thrown away when the mines were closed.

  • @aredi8955
    @aredi8955 3 года назад

    What is the best explosive types to use in coal u.g mines?..

    • @UKAbandonedMineExplores
      @UKAbandonedMineExplores  3 года назад

      I'm no expert on that sorry, but found this: pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/2130507/

    • @stevewilkin3977
      @stevewilkin3977 Год назад

      I remember we used 3 different types but the best one by far was called Ajax if my memory serves me correctly. - early eighties.

  • @coalfacechris1336
    @coalfacechris1336 3 месяца назад +1

    Was most longwall mining in the UK advancing face? Aussie here, all retreating face.

    • @UKAbandonedMineExplores
      @UKAbandonedMineExplores  2 месяца назад +1

      I couldn’t say myself, but plenty of uk miners watch this so maybe one will know.

    • @metalworker007
      @metalworker007 20 дней назад

      They were all retreat faces when i started in 1980, those advance faces looked like a lot of work and the roads leading to them would be constantly under stress and crushed, another perhaps 10 or 12 years later, we, stopped retreat faces and mined USA style, we were then mining "piller and stall" with USA made "Joy Continuous Miners", they stopped using girders to hold the roof and were using your Aussie made Wombat machines to to drill and roof bolt.

  • @bespoke500
    @bespoke500 9 месяцев назад +3

    I really enjoyed watching this 😆

    • @UKAbandonedMineExplores
      @UKAbandonedMineExplores  9 месяцев назад +1

      Glad you enjoyed it :)

    • @bespoke500
      @bespoke500 9 месяцев назад

      @@UKAbandonedMineExplores if we still had these mines open and apprentices on offer maybe we wouldn’t have the generation we have now ….

  • @peterrear2864
    @peterrear2864 2 месяца назад +1

    First day ar seaham colliery training centre we watched this

    • @UKAbandonedMineExplores
      @UKAbandonedMineExplores  2 месяца назад

      Bet that brings back memories then. We also have a documentary on seaman on the channel from 1989.

  • @MobileNakhaei-kd7jx
    @MobileNakhaei-kd7jx Год назад

    بعدازسی وسه سال تدریس در دانشگاه دیدن فیلم برایم سرشار از خاطره بود

  • @adrianneill5014
    @adrianneill5014 19 дней назад +1

    There is still millions of tons just sitting there...
    Leaving money on the table IMHO..

  • @JonathanRoberts-u7y
    @JonathanRoberts-u7y 5 месяцев назад +1

    Polar ajax and penobel if i remember correctly

  • @PhilHarvey-yg3jf
    @PhilHarvey-yg3jf 10 дней назад

    I’m told that even the preserved steam railways have to use imported coal and all that black gold beneath us. Surely a just few pits should have remained for our own use.

    • @UKAbandonedMineExplores
      @UKAbandonedMineExplores  10 дней назад

      @@PhilHarvey-yg3jf There is an active colliery at Alston with a deep coal mine opening too.

    • @PhilHarvey-yg3jf
      @PhilHarvey-yg3jf 10 дней назад

      @ Thanks for the info, I’ll look that up.

  • @marcnews75
    @marcnews75 3 года назад +12

    A lost world and lost skills

  • @seaham3d695
    @seaham3d695 3 года назад +2

    pERFECT!!!!

  • @seaham3d695
    @seaham3d695 3 года назад +3

    Thats not seaham colliery

  • @derekgourney
    @derekgourney 29 дней назад +1

    Grass more train ING centre,1980,1991,, UK for miners, for good job we, do not have to day,2025,, Shafer Gurney MTB Cross country 😮😮😂

  • @papabits5721
    @papabits5721 2 года назад +2

    Just hotter chicks on the subway

  • @mikewatt8706
    @mikewatt8706 13 дней назад +1

    you wouldn't get me donwn there for £1000 a day