Visit to a Mine

Visit to a Mine (British Coal Video)

This video can only be viewed in libraries

Find your nearest library

Video cameras take us into the heart of a state-of-the-art colliery of the late 1980s.

“Coal puts the Great in Britain”. True once but certainly not true now, it was already becoming a desperate claim by the time this video programme’s narrator made it. It’s in the context of the mining industry’s history, and the history of its filmmaking that this film is fascinating – and melancholy. Made by the industry’s video unit, which produced all its moving image after the 1984 strike during which its film unit was closed, it has the cheesy trappings of the corporate video of its time yet is based on the same premise as films made as early as Edwardian times. The filmic trip down a mine was a sub-genre even then: A Day in the Life of a Coalminer (1910) is the most famous example.

This video production entirely lacks the romance and cinematic grandeur of its predecessors but is an instructive representation of the industry’s technological set-up in its final year: a world of shearers and coal-cutters, and conveyer-belts transporting the coal into the light, but also sophisticated computerised controls. The film uses an ancient format to try to make a case for a long future for an industry with a tragically short one ahead of it.

An introduction to a modern colliery and its safety procedures for visitors.


Tags

From the collection

Coal: The History of a National Industry

Dig deep and you’ll reach buried treasure: forgotten riches of moving image history. Video captured the final chapters of our most iconic national industry.
Ever since Edwardian times, cameras and screens have had a vast yet intricate, complex and fascinating relationship with coal, coalmining, coalminers and coal communities. This is an inherently cinematic industry, with its elemental basis, its visual contrasts, its human dangers and dramas, and an iconic – if contested – place in our national story, rooted in the industrial revolution. This story took on new dimensions as videotape production arose first to supplement then to supplant film’s generations-long fascination for the coal industry, itself entering its final decades - which were intense, troubled and tragic. The nationalised industry itself – the National Coal Board (later British Coal) – had been actively using film since its 1947 inception. Now a separate video unit emerged, producing tapes in parallel with the more prestigious film unit's celluloid production up until the 1984 miners strike. After the strike, the film unit having closed, it solely inherited the task of using moving image to communicate company information to colliery staff. Meanwhile, national and regional TV took an ever growing interest – from many angles, not least that of growing industrial strife. Last but not least, video enabled coalmining communities to project their own voice. All these media forms are represented in this richly engrossing collection.

13 videos in this collection

1

Handle with Care

2

Visit to a Mine

3

The Way Ahead

4

Illegal Manriding

5

Contraband Kills

6

The Self Rescuer

7

Rossington - A Pit with a Future

8

Selby Project

9

Join the Drive

10

It's a Good Morning

11

Peace in the Pits?

12

The Miners' Strike - A Fight to the Finish

13

The Miners' Strike: Settlement in Sight?

View full collection