Aberfan
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Aberfan (X-SAMPA: /abErvan/, approximately abervan) is a small village five miles (8 km) south of Merthyr Tydfil in South Wales, United Kingdom.
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[edit] Aberfan disaster
On Friday, October 21, 1966, at 09:15, colliery waste tip number 7 (containing unwanted rock from the local mine) slid down Merthyr Mountain. As it collapsed, it destroyed 20 houses and a farm before going on to demolish virtually all of Pantglas Junior School and part of the separate senior school. The pupils had just left the assembly hall, where they had been singing "All Things Bright and Beautiful", when a great noise was heard outside. Had they left for their classrooms a few minutes later, the loss of life would have been significantly greater, as the classrooms were on the side of the building nearest the landslide.
In total, 144 people were killed, 116 of whom were children, most of them between the ages of 7 and 10. Five teachers were also killed in the accident. Only a handful of children were rescued from the rubble.
Lord Robens of Woldingham, chairman of the National Coal Board (NCB), did not rush to the scene; he instead went to accept an appointment as chancellor of the University of Surrey. Subsequently, he controversially claimed that nothing could have been done to prevent the slide.
At the Tribunal of Inquiry into the Aberfan Disaster, the NCB was found responsible for the disaster, due to "ignorance, ineptitude and a failure of communication". The collapse was found to have been caused by a build-up of water in the pile and, when a small rotational slip occurred, the disturbance caused the saturated, fine material of the tip to liquefy (thixotropy) and flow down the mountain. In 1958, the tip had been sited on a known stream (as shown on earlier Ordnance Survey maps) and had previously suffered several minor slips. Its instability was known, both to colliery management and to tip workers, but very little was done about it. Merthyr Tydfil Borough Council and the National Union of Mineworkers were cleared of any wrongdoing. No NCB employee was fired, demoted or even disciplined.
The NCB was ordered to pay compensation to the families at the rate of £500 per child.
After lengthy appeals, part of the fund was used to make the remainder of the waste tip safe and the Coal Board avoided the costs of doing the whole job from its own resources. The Labour government paid back the £150,000 in 1997, although taking account of inflation this should have been £1.5M.
Merthyr Vale Colliery was closed in 1989.
In February 2007 the Welsh Assembly announced the donation of £2M to the Aberfan Disaster Memorial Fund, in part as recompense for the money requisitioned by the government in the immediate aftermath of the disaster.
[edit] Precognition
London psychiatrist John Barker collected details of over 70 apparent predictions of the disaster, mostly in dreams, that people from Aberfan and elsewhere had had prior to it. Of these 24 were corroborated, and some had been from children who were subsequently killed in the disaster. [1]
[edit] References
- The Bee Gees song New York Mining Disaster 1941 is based on this event.
- Archives Network Wales - Glamorgan Record Office - Aberfan Disaster Inquiry, Chief Surveyor's Papers
- ^ British Journal of the Society for Psychic Research (vol. 44), 1967
[edit] See also
[edit] External links
- Aberfan Disaster
- BBC News - Private service remembers Aberfan - memorial section 21/10/06
- BBC – On This Day
- BBC Wales South East - Your Memories
- Corporatism and Regulatory Failure: Government Response to the Aberfan Disaster
- Digital Journalist - Aberfan: The Days After - by I.C. Rapoport
- Rapo.com - Photographs of the Aftermath
- Pictures of the Aberfan Disaster
- South Wales Police - The Aberfan Disaster 21st October 1966
- The Tribunal of Inquiry into the Aberfan Disaster
- Wales on the Web - Aberfan Disaster Archive
- Income from Aberfan's £2m will be for memorials and children
- www.geograph.co.uk : photos of Aberfan and surrounding area

