When the Lights Went Out: Britain in the Seventies

Home > Other > When the Lights Went Out: Britain in the Seventies > Page 62
When the Lights Went Out: Britain in the Seventies Page 62

by Andy Beckett


  After we got on, Jay’s son went and sat on his own with his guitar case. He seemed quite content to end the history lesson.

  Acknowledgements

  First, I would like to thank everyone who agreed to be interviewed. I hope I have represented each of their versions of the seventies fairly. I would like to thank the people who helped make three of the most important interviews possible: Peter Walker, Dan Hillman and Rebecca Stone. I would like to thank the staff of the Science 2 reading room at the British Library, and Kathleen Dixon at the British Film Institute. I would like to thank the friends who listened to me going on about the seventies and gave me ideas: Adam Curtis, Andrew Bagley, Stuart Kerr, Conrad Leach, Charlotte Higgins, Alex Butterworth, Paul Laity, James Meek, Sarah Walsh and John Dugdale. For specific pieces of assistance, I would like to thank Larry Elliott, William Keegan, Michael White, Richard Holloway, Rebecca Carter, Mariam Yamin, Robin Christian and Mark Bygraves; and for tolerating my absences from the Guardian and giving me seventies-related commissions, Ian Katz, Katharine Viner, Claire Armitstead and Merope Mills. At Faber, I am grateful to Walter Donohue, Neil Belton, Anna Pallai, Stephen Page and Rachel Alexander for their constant enthusiasm and occasional reality checks. Jon Riley helped the book into being when it was only a vague idea; Ian Bahrami expertly improved the manuscript. I would also like to thank Sinead and Tim Marsh and Tina Muller for enabling me to write on Thursday afternoons, and Jean and Richard Holloway and Elizabeth Beckett and Robert Milnes for helping so much at other times. And, most importantly, I would like to thank Sara for being this book’s ideal reader, reviewer and editor; and Lorna and Gillen for distracting me so deliciously during the half-decade it has taken me to understand a whole one.

  Chronology

  1970

  February: First National Women’s Liberation Conference held in Oxford

  June: Edward Heath wins general election with majority of thirty

  July: First issue of The Ecologist published in London

  October: Gay Liberation Front founded in London

  1971

  January: First British soldier killed in Ulster for half a century

  November: National Union of Mineworkers begins overtime ban

  1972

  January: Miners begin national strike. British soldiers kill fourteen unarmed people during Bloody Sunday in Derry

  February: Thousands of miners and other pickets, led by Arthur Scargill, force closure of Saltley coke depot in Birmingham, despite the efforts of hundreds of police. Miners’ strike ends in total union victory

  March: British government takes direct political control of Ulster

  July: Abortive secret talks between British government and IRA leadership. First issue of Spare Rib published in London

  1973

  January: Britain admitted to EEC. Foundation of the PEOPLE Party, later the Green Party

  October: Egypt invades Israeli-occupied Sinai Peninsula, sparking the oil crisis

  November: Miners begin another overtime ban

  1974

  January: Three-day week to ration electricity consumption imposed by Heath government

  February: Miners begin national strike. Heath calls early general election. Loses

  March: Harold Wilson becomes prime minister without a majority. Ends three-day week

  October: Wilson calls general election to win a majority. Wins majority of three. Scottish National Party (SNP) wins 30 per cent of Scottish vote

  November: IRA kills twenty-one civilians in Birmingham pub bombings

  1975

  February: Margaret Thatcher defeats Heath in Conservative Party leadership contest

  June: Referendum on whether Britain should remain in EEC. Pro-Europeans win by 67 per cent to 33 per cent

  August: Watchfield free festival jointly staged by hippy anarchists and Wilson government. British inflation rate peaks at 26.9 per cent

  November: Wilson and the Queen attend official opening of first British North Sea oil pipeline

  1976

  March: Wilson resigns as prime minister

  April: Jim Callaghan wins Labour leadership contest and replaces Wilson as prime minister

  August: Strike begins at Grunwick photo processing plant in London over employees’ wish to be represented by a union

  September: Sterling plunges against the dollar on the currency markets. Chancellor Denis Healey, on his way to a meeting of the International Monetary Fund (IMF), turns back from Heathrow. Callaghan tells Labour Party conference: ‘The cosy world is gone.’ Healey tells Labour conference Britain will ask the IMF for the biggest loan it has ever granted

  November: IMF negotiators arrive in London demanding huge cuts in public spending in return for loan. Callaghan and Healey argue for smaller cuts. Majority of Callaghan’s Cabinet want no cuts at all

  November–December: Callaghan and Healey persuade Cabinet and IMF to accept more moderate cuts in public spending. Britain obtains IMF loan

  1977

  March: Callaghan negotiates Lib–Lab pact to shore up government’s position in the Commons

  June: First mass picket at Grunwick. Battles between pickets and police

  June–July: Boycott of Grunwick mail by postal workers brings strikers to verge of victory

  July: The National Association for Freedom, a radical right-wing group close to Thatcher, secretly collects and distributes the Grunwick mail. Possibility of strike victory recedes

  1978

  January: Inflation drops below 10 per cent for the first time since the oil crisis

  March: Jack Jones, Callaghan’s most powerful union ally, retires

  April: Rock Against Racism campaign holds mass rally and festival in London

  July: Lib–Lab pact ends. Grunwick strikers concede defeat

  August: Conservatives and Saatchi and Saatchi launch ‘Labour Isn’t Working’ poster campaign

  Autumn: Labour overtakes Conservatives in opinion polls

  September: Callaghan decides against calling widely expected autumn general election

  November: Jack Jones’s union goes on strike for higher pay. Other unions do the same. The Winter of Discontent begins

  1979

  January: Callaghan travels to the Caribbean for international summit and holiday. Probed by reporters on his return. The Sun summarizes his response: ‘Crisis? What Crisis?’

  January–February: Peak of the country-wide strike wave. Exceptionally cold weather

  March: Winter of Discontent ends. Government’s devolution proposals for Scotland and Wales rejected in referendums. SNP stops supporting Labour in the Commons. Government loses vote of confidence in the Commons. Callaghan calls May general election

  April: General-election campaign. Large Conservative opinion-poll lead steadily narrows

  May: Thatcher wins general election with majority of forty-three. Liberal vote collapses. Labour vote increases slightly

  Sources

  This is a selection of the sources I have found most useful. Those with a broad relevance to my book I have listed beside the first chapter to which they contribute. The abbreviation PRO is for the Public Record Office; HMSO for Her Majesty’s Stationery Office.

  INTRODUCTION: OUR WEIMAR?

  Blair, Tony, Labour Party Conference speech, 27 September 2005

  Cameron, David, ‘Modern Conservatism’, Demos, 30 January 2006

  McIntosh, Ronald, Challenge to Democracy: Politics, Trade Union Power and Economic Failure in the 1970s, Politico’s, 2006

  New Economics Foundation, Chasing Progress Beyond Measuring Economic Growth, 2004

  New Musical Express, 23 December 1978

  Time Out, 24 January 1970

  1 CHAMPAGNE AND RUST

  Benn, Tony, Office Without Power: Diaries 1968–72, Arrow, 1989

  Brittan, Samuel, Steering the Economy: The Role of the Treasury, Secker & Warburg, 1969

  Butler, David, The British General Election of 1970, Macmillan, 1971

&n
bsp; Campbell, John, Edward Heath: A Biography, Cape, 1993

  Cobden, R., England, Ireland, and America by a Manchester Manufacturer, Ridgway & Sons, 1835

  Coleman, Terry, Movers & Shakers: Conversations with Uncommon Men, Deutsch, 1987

  Critchley, R. A., The British Household in the Seventies, International Publishing Corporation, 1975

  Economist, The, 13 June 1970

  Heath, Edward, The Course of My Life: My Autobiography, Hodder & Stoughton, 1998

  Hurd, Douglas, An End to Promises: Sketch of a Government, 1970–1974, Collins, 1979

  Koestler, Arthur, Suicide of a Nation?, Hutchinson, 1963

  Middlemas, Keith, Politics in Industrial Society: The Experience of the British System since 1911, Deutsch, 1979

  Middlemas, Keith, Power, Competition, and the State, Vol. 1, Britain in Search of Balance 1940–61, Hoover Press, 1986

  Pimlott, Ben, Harold Wilson, HarperCollins, 1992

  Prior, James, A Balance of Power, Hamilton, 1986

  Shanks, Michael, The Stagnant Society: A Warning, Penguin, 1961

  Stewart, Michael, The Jekyll and Hyde Years: Politics and Economic Policy since 1964, Dent, 1977

  Thatcher, Margaret, The Path to Power, HarperCollins, 1995

  2 THE GREAT WHITE GHOST

  Alan Clark’s History of the Tory Party, ‘From Estate Owners to Estate Agents’ (Part 3), BBC2, 28 September 1997

  Heath, Edward, author interview, 27 July 2004

  Heath, Edward, Travels: People and Places in My Life, Sidgwick & Jackson, 1977

  Macmillan, Harold, The Middle Way: A Study of the Problem of Economic and Social Progress in a Free and Democratic Society, Macmillan, 1938

  Sampson, Anthony, The New Anatomy of Britain, Hodder & Stoughton, 1971

  Sewill, Brendon, author interview, 8 December 2004

  Walker, Peter, author interview, 1 June 2004

  Walker, Peter, Staying Power: An Autobiography, Bloomsbury, 1991

  York, Peter, author interview, 7 February 2006

  3 HEATHOGRAD

  Arnold, P., ‘The Maplin Sands’, Essex County Archive (Southend), February 1970

  Ball, Stuart, and Anthony Seldon (eds), The Heath Government 1970–1974: A Reappraisal, Longman, 1996

  BBC News, BBC1, 13 November 1969

  Bromhead, Peter, The Great White Elephant of Maplin Sands: The Neglect of Comprehensive Transport Planning in Government Decision-Making, Elek, 1973

  Buchanan, Colin, ‘Note of Dissent by Colin Buchanan in the Report of the Commission on the Third London Airport’, HMSO, 1971

  Cashinella, Brian, and Keith Thompson, Permission to Land: The Battle for London’s Third Airport and How the Whitehall Planners were Beaten to their Stripe-Trousered Knees, Arlington Books, 1971

  Crick, Michael, Michael Heseltine: A Biography, Penguin, 1997

  Defenders of Essex Association, Accounts and Newsletters, Essex County Archive (Southend), 1969–1990

  Department of the Environment, ‘Maplin Population Projections’, PRO CM 33/14, 1973

  Department of the Environment, ‘Maplin: Preliminary Design of Sea Wall’, PRO CM 33/13, 1973

  Department of the Environment, ‘The Maplin Project: Designation Area for the New Town’, PRO AT 25/175 1973

  Department of the Environment, ‘Public Consultation on Motorway and High Speed Rail Link Routes’, HMSO, 1973

  Department of Trade, ‘Maplin: Review of Airport Project’, HMSO, 1974

  Dobson, John S., ‘Fowlness’: The Mystery Isle, 1914–1939, Baron, 1996

  Fenton, James, ‘The Last Chance for Foulness’, New Statesman, 2 February 1973

  Hansard (Commons), 4 March 1971, 9 August 1972, 8 February 1973, 13 June 1973, 23 October 1973, 16 January 1974; (Lords) 22 February 1971

  Heseltine, Michael, Life in the Jungle: My Autobiography, Hodder & Stoughton, 2000

  Hunt, Donald, The Tunnel: The Story of the Channel Tunnel 1802–1994, Images, 1994

  ‘Maplin Development Act’, HMSO, 1973

  ‘Maplin Development Authority (Dissolution) Act’, HMSO, 1976

  Maplin Development Authority, ‘Maplin Trial Bank Report’, PRO CM 33/40, 1974

  ‘Maplin Development: Plan and Section and Plan of Location of Runways’, HMSO, 1972

  Maplin Movement, Accounts, Essex County Archive (Southend), 1973

  McKie, David, A Sadly Mismanaged Affair: A Political History of the Third London Airport, Croom Helm, 1973

  Roskill, Eustace Wentworth, ‘Report of the Commission on the Third London Airport’, HMSO, 1971

  Tebbit, Norman, Upwardly Mobile, Weidenfeld & Nicolson, 1988

  Thames Estuary Development Corporation, ‘Maplin (Foulness): The British Air Gateway of the Future for Western Europe, with Deep-Water Docks, Oil and Industrial Facilities’, Essex County Archive (Southend), 1971

  Town Committee on Maplin, Minutes of Meeting of 27 March 1973, Essex County Archive (Southend)

  Walker, Peter, The Ascent of Britain, Sidgwick & Jackson, 1977

  Walters, Alan, Maplin: The End?, Bow Publications, 1974

  Wentworth-Day, James, ‘The Headland of Birds’, Sunday Times magazine, 17 December 1972

  4 CLOSE THE GATES!

  A Force to Reckon With, Yorkshire Television, February 1983

  Allen, V. L., The Militancy of British Miners, Moor, 1981

  Ashworth, William, The History of the British Coal Industry. Vol. 5, 1946–1982: The Nationalized Industry, Clarendon, 1986

  Barratt, J., ‘Coal Stocks Memorandum’, PRO, 7 January 1972

  Barratt, J., ‘Situation Report at the End of Week Five’, PRO, 11 February 1972

  BBC News, BBC1, 8 February 1972, 10 February 1972

  Beckett, Francis, Enemy Within: The Rise and Fall of the British Communist Party, John Murray, 1995

  Bellingham, Richard, author interview, 24 August 2004

  Birmingham Evening Mail, 10 January 1972–11 February 1972

  Birmingham Post, 8–11 February 1972

  Birmingham Sunday Mercury, 9 January–13 February 1972

  Blue Peter, BBC1, 21 February 1972

  Cabinet Minutes, 6 January 1972, PRO CAB 130/533

  Cabinet Minutes, 10 February 1972, PRO CAB 128/50/7

  Carrington, Peter, Reflect on Things Past: The Memoirs of Lord Carrington, Collins, 1988

  Clutterbuck, Richard, Britain in Agony: The Growth of Political Violence, Faber, 1978

  Crick, Michael, Scargill and the Miners, Penguin, 1985

  Department of Employment and Productivity, ‘In Place of Strife: A Policy for Industrial Relations’, HMSO, 1969

  Ffoulkes, F. L., ‘The “Saltley” Incident: A Report’, British Gas, 1985

  Geary, Roger, Policing Industrial Disputes: 1893 to 1985, Cambridge University Press, 1985

  Gormley, Joe, Battered Cherub: The Autobiography of Joe Gormley, Hamilton, 1982

  Hansard (Commons), 18 January 1972, 3 February 1972, 11 February 1972, 14 February 1972

  Harper, Roger, author interview, 27 September 2004

  Howe, Geoffrey, A Giant’s Strength, Inns of Court Society, 1958

  Industrial Relations Act, HMSO, 1971

  Jeffery, Keith, and Peter Hennessy, States of Emergency: British

  Governments and Strikebreaking since 1919, Routledge, 1983

  Ledger, Frank, and Howard Sallis, Crisis Management in the Power Industry, Routledge, 1995

  Maudling, Reginald, Memoirs, Sidgwick & Jackson, 1978

  McLaren, Charlie, author interview, 1 September 2005

  Memorandum on ‘Police Views’, PRO FV 38/119, 16 February 1972

  Milligan, Stephen, The New Barons: Union Power in the 1970s, Temple Smith, 1976

  Miner, The, October/November 1971, December 1971/January 1972

  Miners’ Last Stand, The, Thames Television, 20 January 1972

  Morning Star, 10 February 1982

  Robens, Alfred, Ten Year Stint, Cassell, 1972

  Routledge, Paul, Scargill: The Unauthoriz
ed Biography, HarperCollins, 1993

  Samuel, Raphael, ‘The Lost World of British Communism’, New Left Review, September/October 1987

  Scargill, Arthur, author interview, 17 September 2006

  Scargill, Arthur, and Robin Blackburn, ‘The New Unionism’, New Left Review, August 1975

  Taylor, Robert, The Fifth Estate: Britain’s Unions in the Seventies, Routledge, 1978

  Times, The, 10–21 February 1972

  True Spies: Subversive My Arse, BBC1, 27 October 2002

  Watters, Frank, Being Frank: The Memoirs of Frank Watters, Monkspring, 1992

  Webb, Richard, author interview, 27 September 2004

  Who Likes Arthur Scargill?, Yorkshire Television, 21 November 1974

  Wilberforce, Richard, ‘Report on the Miners’ Wage Claim’, PRO COAL 26/1110, 18 February 1972

  Yorkshire Matters, Yorkshire Television, 10 June 1970

  5 QUESTIONS OF SOVEREIGNTY

  Adams, Gerry, Before the Dawn: An Autobiography, Heinemann, 1996

  Army in Ulster – Men in the Middle, The, Thames Television, 18 September 1969

  Asher, Michael, Shoot to Kill: A Soldier’s Journey through Violence, Viking, 1990

  Bardon, Jonathan, A History of Ulster, Blackstaff Press, 2001

  Bardon, Jonathan, A Shorter Illustrated History of Ulster, Blackstaff Press, 1996

  Barzilay, David, The British Army in Ulster Vol. 1, Century, 1973

  Bew, Paul, and Henry Patterson, The British State and the Ulster Crisis: From Wilson to Thatcher, Verso, 1985

  Brenton, Howard, The Paradise Run, Thames Television, 6 April 1976

 

‹ Prev