Aberfan disaster

Rubytuesday
Rubytuesday Forum Participant Posts: 952

it's coming up to 50yrs since the horrific disaster at Aberfan on the 21st of October , preparations are well under way for rememberance , but the atmosphere is already clouding over here in Wales 

Im sure many on here will have some memories like me I was just in my teens when it happened such a black clouded time over Wales and schools for a very long time Sad

Comments

  • DSB
    DSB Club Member Posts: 5,666 ✭✭✭
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    edited October 2016 #2

    I was also in my teens Ruby - remember it well.  Very sad.

    David 

  • ValDa
    ValDa Forum Participant Posts: 3,004
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    edited October 2016 #3

    It was particularly affecting for me, as a teenager, because we have family in South Wales and my Uncle John and one of my cousins (ex-miners both of them) helped with clearing debris and rescue attempts.  I don't think either of them were ever the same again afterwards. It was a tragedy which affected everyone.

    You could say, though, that some good came about as a result of Aberfan, in that lots of Welsh valleys were cleared of the huge tips which had blighted them for years, and much of South Wales was greener as a result.

     

  • moulesy
    moulesy Forum Participant Posts: 9,402 ✭✭✭✭✭
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    edited October 2016 #4

    I was 13 at the time and just starting to get interested in news stories. I can distinctly remember the reporter - I think it might have been Cliff Michelmore - reporting from the scene unable to stop the tears as he was speaking. Very moving and such a
    sad event.

  • brue
    brue Forum Participant Posts: 21,176 ✭✭✭✭✭
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    edited October 2016 #5

    I was in my late teens, the announcement spurred many to drive to Wales and help with the desperate digging that had to be done. The valleys are so different now but in the old days people rushed to help each other. Very tragic day.

  • SELL
    SELL Forum Participant Posts: 398
    edited October 2016 #6

    There is a programme on ITV tonight at 9pm about this tragic event.

  • Takethedogalong
    Takethedogalong Forum Participant Posts: 17,038 ✭✭✭
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    edited October 2016 #7

    Gosh, where have those 50 years gone! I was a very small child, but can remember my Mum crying while watching the TV. A terrible tragedy, all those young lives ended far too early, and the heartbreak left behind. 

  • jimd
    jimd Forum Participant Posts: 37
    edited October 2016 #8

    I was 14 at the time.  I remember taking some coats and things to the Red Cross in Newport in answer to an appeal for extra/changes of clothes for the men digging; looking for survivors.

     

    I still fill up when I'm reminded of it

  • volvoman9
    volvoman9 Forum Participant Posts: 1,053
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    edited October 2016 #9

    Most people over the age of 60 will have vivid memories of that awful day.I well remember the black an white newsreel on the tv and the reports from the village and here we are nearly fifty years on.

    peter.

  • ABM
    ABM Forum Participant Posts: 14,578
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    edited October 2016 #10

    It was particularly affecting for me, as a teenager, because we have family in South Wales and my Uncle John and one of my cousins (ex-miners both of them) helped with clearing debris and rescue attempts.  I don't think either of them were ever the same again afterwards. It was a tragedy which affected everyone.

    You could say, though, that some good came about as a result of Aberfan, in that lots of Welsh valleys were cleared of the huge tips which had blighted them for years, and much of South Wales was greener as a result.

     

    The  Slag  heaps  &  the  damage  wrought  were  pretty  well  foretold  in  Richard  Llewellyn's  pre-WW2  book  "How  Green  Was  My  Valley"  although  this  tragedy  could  not  have  been  forecast  by  him.

  • Rubytuesday
    Rubytuesday Forum Participant Posts: 952
    edited October 2016 #11

    Of course this disaster at Aberfan was covered on the news world wide, and unsurprisingly im sorry to say for many tourists to South Wales the cemetery at Aberfan is on there to visit list who are all genuinely moved 

    I myself have been three times in 50yrs once with school not long before I left , again after the renovations and about 6 yrs ago with relatives from Malta , each time many men and women with tears,

    seeing the newsreels from that time and the photos of all those coffins in the ground all over again has certainaly not eased the sadness even after 50 yrs 

  • Wherenext
    Wherenext Club Member Posts: 10,586 ✭✭✭
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    edited October 2016 #12

    I remember the schoolteacher at the school I was attending in North Wales asking for all the children to bring in a piece  of their clothing and any pocket money to be given to the relief effort. Every single child in our class gave up their pocket money
    and the Assembly the following morning was just a hall full of tears. I still well up now and still remember the tales of teachers trying to protect the children with their own bodies from the slag heap. A dreadful tragedy.

  • ABM
    ABM Forum Participant Posts: 14,578
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    edited October 2016 #13

    I  am,  now,  by  any  standards  an  old  man  &  have  seen  &  been  involved  in  many  sad  things.

    Never  the  less  to  see,  again,  the  tragedy  reviewed  on  T.V.  today  &  to  hear  the  stories ,  so  simply  &  clearly  told,  of  some  of  those  'children'  at  the  Aberfan  Memorial  Garden  still  choked  me  up .

    Nothing  more  I  can  say.

    Brian  A B M

  • SELL
    SELL Forum Participant Posts: 398
    edited October 2016 #14

    Agree ABM i watched the programme last week where they showed footage of the rescue and talking to the parents who lost their children plus some of the surviors brought a tear to my eye.

  • Kerry Watkins
    Kerry Watkins Forum Participant Posts: 325
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    edited October 2016 #15

    I remember the event but was only 9 at the time. Such a terrible disaster. The memories still linger.

  • taffyY
    taffyY Forum Participant Posts: 326
    edited October 2016 #16

    I can't bear to watch much of the footage of it.  As a child, I was brought up in the valleys and I wasn't aware of the dangers of the slag heaps as they were considered the 'norm' in those days.  Thank God we have moved on since then but it was such a shame
    that this terrible disaster had to happen before something was done! 

  • KASTARIS
    KASTARIS Forum Participant Posts: 410
    edited October 2016 #17

    I remember it clearly. I was only10 at the time and remember sitting in our back room watching it on tv and felt sad that they were around the same age as myself and that tragedy cut their lives short. We've passed through Aberfan over the years many times
    and still feel sad when I think of what happened and what could have been avoided if only they had listened. I for one have never forgotten and don't think I ever will.