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Miners at War 1914-1919 - South Wales Miners in the Tunneling Companies on the Western Front (Hardcover)
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Miners at War 1914-1919 - South Wales Miners in the Tunneling Companies on the Western Front (Hardcover)
Series: Wolverhampton Military Studies
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The author's compilation of a unique register identifying those
individual South Wales miners who served in the tunnelling
companies has allowed a remarkable story to be told. For the first
time, the lives of individual South Wales miners are highlighted
from pre-war mining days: their very personal contribution within
the tunnelling companies, to the resting places of those who did
not survive the war - and, for the survivors, their ultimate
despatch home. The underlying theme is of an indefatigable band of
men, together with like-minded miners from other British
coalfields, asked to carry out multi-tasked duties associated with
a form of military mining not foreseen prior to the outbreak of
war. Before a major battle, these men constructed large underground
dugouts to house troops away from enemy shell fire. In exploding
huge mines under German lines immediately before the British
attack, they aided the advancing infantry in causing death and
confusion in the German lines. During the British advance in 1918,
they became experts in the dangerous work of defusing enemy
booby-traps, delay-action and landmines in front of the advancing
troops. They showed all the resolution, fortitude and determination
- if not sheer bloody-mindedness - to see the job through; so
reminiscent of the miner at home struggling to earn a decent rate
of pay in the most arduous of conditions. There was a price to
pay... Details are given of the 207 miners who died whilst on
active service and of how many others were repatriated after
gunshot wounds, gas poisoning or ill-health. Accounts are given of
miners entombed underground as a result of enemy explosions; medals
awarded for acts of bravery when attempting to free trapped miners;
and of those taken as prisoners of war when the enemy broke into
British workings. Old men and young boys lied about their ages to
gain acceptance into the tunnelling companies - and suffered the
harsh consequences. A unique investigation such as this not only
acknowledges the miners' personal contribution as tunnellers, but
also serves as a scholarly and novel addition to the existing
literature concerning the history of the Great War, its tunnelling
companies, South Wales, its coalfield and the lives of its miners.
There can be little doubt that this work will, in years to come,
establish itself as a standard text in the history of military
mining not only in a specific sense, but also as a work on the
Great War in general.
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