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I’ve heard it described as a battle, but for a battle both sides had to be armed. They had riot gear, helmets, padding, gauntlets, shields, three-foot batons. There was only one side armed.

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  25 April 2023

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Summary

When the miners’ strike started in March 1984, I was 35 and had been working at Barnburgh colliery for seven years. My arrest at the Battle of Orgreave on 18th June that year has led me and my family to not trust the law ever since.

At Orgreave there must’ve been five or six thousand police marching up and down in ranks. As we got closer we could see lots of police without numbers. My mate said to me, ‘That’s army’, and I said, ‘How do you know?’ He replied, ‘Because I’ve just come out of the army.’

I’ve heard it described as a battle, but for a battle both sides had to be armed. They had riot gear, helmets, padding, gauntlets, shields, three-foot batons. There was only one side armed.

We were locked up in Snig Hill police station in Sheffield and then transferred to Rotherham later in the day. That’s when we saw all the injuries. There were so many policemen wearing overalls and no numbers. Some were wearing overcoats and that day was probably the hottest day of the year. The pickets were shirtless and the police had overcoats on – what’s all that about?

At the Orgreave Truth and Justice campaign, we’ve had photographs sent to us and testimony from people who think they saw their sons on the picket line who were in the army, or miners that saw their brothers. Although there were 18 police forces there, we don’t think they could’ve accumulated that many police. We think the soldiers were there and some of the police were army people dressed up.

There’s a lot of questions that need answering. Who was in charge? Why were there police without numbers? Why did they let us in that day? I know that the Association of Chief Police Officers (ACPO) files are in the University of Hull library and they’re embargoed until 2066.

Now, every miner will be well dead by then. We need to get to the bottom of it while some of the miners are still alive.

We were criminalised. There were 11,000 men arrested; these men who have never had a blemish on their police record suddenly became criminals.

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Invisible Britain
Portraits of Hope and Resilience
, pp. 81 - 83
Publisher: Bristol University Press
Print publication year: 2018

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