Aggie
My father was a miner, we moved from Scotland when I was 4 . We moved to where the work was, that’s what you did.
I was used to miners striking , it was what I’d grown up with . We never had new clothes. I didn’t mind really. I once had passed on this beautiful winter coat, It had a velvet tie at the back, I loved that coat.
It made sense that I married a miner, it was the only world I knew. So when the strike came in ’84 we walked out. I say we because the whole family felt it.
I wasn’t the confrontational type - before.
I didn’t even swear - before.
I wasn’t really political - before
Then one day, there was nowt on telly, so I walked down to the club where the women were meeting - women against pit closures. They were all sat there, shouting out raising their hands, so I raised mine too. The lady on my left said “Aggie they’ve just voted you speaker”.
From then on I began to speak up and speak out. And stand up. And stand out. And I couldn’t go back to before. I couldn’t stay quiet when the wives walked their men across the picket line. I couldn’t stand still when the police kicked my mother. And I wouldn’t stay down when they knocked out my teeth.