At 6.00 a.m this morning 14 October 1913, a series
of terrible explosions ripped through the Universal Coal Pit in the
village of Senghenydd, a town in the Aber Valley, four miles north west
of the town of Caerphilly, in South Wales ( U.K).
The cause of the disaster was thought to have been a 'firedamp', when a
spark ignites methane gas, and then explodes, this explosion sucks coal
dust on the floor into the air and causes a huge explosion. In
Senghenydd this spread even further underground of the mines, and was
followed by 'afterdamp', where deadly poisonous gases replaced the
missing air and oxygen.
The result was 439 miners and 1 rescuer being killed and it is now
considered to be the worst mining accident in the U.K and the most
serious in the terms of loss of life. It followed an earlier disaster in May 1901, three underground explosions at the colliery killed 81 miners.
The rescue operation in 1913 lasted for 3
weeks, although by then the chance of finding anyone left alive had long
faded.Fires in the workings hampered rescue efforts, and it took several days
before they were under control. It took six weeks for most of the bodies
to be recovered and the fire to be extinguished. The subsequent enquiry
pointed to errors made by the company and its management leading to
charges of negligence against Edward Shaw, the colliery manager, and the
owners.The report was critical of many aspects of the management's practices,
and considered it had breached the mining regulations in respect of
measuring and maintaining the air quality in the workings, and in the
removal of coal dust from the tracks and walkways.The report pointed out that because the management had not implemented
the changes needed to the ventilation fans as demanded by the Coal Mines
Act 1911, the fans were unable to reverse the direction of the airflow,
which would have blown the smoke out through the Lancaster shaft,
although Redmayne and his colleagues held differing opinions on the
advisability of reversing or stopping the airflow.Further criticism was directed toward the emergency procedures. The lack
of respirators at the mine was deemed to have cost lives.The lack of an adequate water supply for fire fighting was also criticized,
as it would have been thought that the
fact the colliery was such a gassy one, and it had already been devastated by an
explosion previously, that the management would have made arrangements for a
supply of water adequate to meet an emergency of the kind that actually
occurred. For his guilty role Shaw was fined just £24 – less than 6p per life
lost. Incredibly, the pit owners were fined only £10 on one charge – not
having a reversible fan, newspapers
calculated the cost of each miner lost was just 51 ⁄ pence.
It would send shockwaves throughout the world, reminding people
of the terrible cost of coal and capitalist greed and neglect that stole the lives of 440 men and boys. The sheer numbers working in the colliery indicate its importance, and
centrality, in the life of Senghenydd, and the wider area, and of the
terrible, generation toll it would take on the village. Mothers and
fathers mourned sons, wives lost husbands and children would never
know their fathers and young men their futures,
the deaths of of 440 men on a such a small community had a devastating effect; 60
victims were younger than 20, of whom 8 were 14 years old; 542 children
had lost their fathers and 205 women were widowed. The impact on
individual households was great: 12 homes lost both a father and son, 10
homes lost two sons each, while the death of one father and son left an
18-year-old daughter to raise her 6 siblings alone; another woman lost
her husband, 2 sons, a brother and her lodger.
The Universal Colliery would eventually close in 1928 but the impact of the
disaster has been carried through generations in the village which is
now in Caerphilly borough.
According the Carwyn Jones the Welsh first minister at the time of the 100th anniversary ' The Senghenydd
tragedy has come to symbolise the dangers and sacrifices made by those
who went underground in search of coal but never returned home. It is
fitting that this should be the location for a memorial dedicated to all
the miners that have died in mining disasters across our nations.'
In 1981 a memorial to the men who died in the disaster was unveiled by the National Coal Board
followed by a second in 2006, to honor the dead of both the 1901 and
1913 explosions. In October 2013, on the centenary of the tragedy, a
Welsh national memorial, commissioned by the local Aber Valley Heritage group, which had secured
Heritage Lottery Funding and undertook its own fundraising campaign, it
pays tribute to the victims of all 151 recognised disasters, when five
or more people died, to have occurred in Wales, was unveiled at the former pithead, depicting a rescue worker coming to
the aid of one of the survivors of the explosion.The memorial and gardens will not only provide a priceless and fitting
tribute to all the colliery workers who lost their lives in the mines,
but will act as a suitable and prominent reminder of the rich mining
heritage that is ingrained into our communities.
I have written about this disaster previously but I have always made it a point to remember my peoples history .On a personal note I can never forget the tales my own grandad told me,
who himself was a miner's boy in the valleys in the 1930's assisting his father. he taught me never to forget the
long list of tragedy, human grief and loss in our history, and the
sorrow of communities like Senghenyd who have lost their loved ones.
I remember the terrible loss, and also remember the greed and contempt for the lives of workers and their families which led to such suffering, which occurs when capitalism is free to pursue its basic principles in which some peoples lives are expendable in the pursuit of profiti.
Cofiwch Senghennydd
Remember Senghennydd
The statue, designed by sculptor Les Johnson, depicting a rescue worker coming to the aid of a survivor after a mining disaster, situated at Senghenydd..