The Blantyre Disaster (Part
One)
For some pitworkers in the coalmining community of Blantyre,
the morning of Monday the 22nd of October 1877 began hours before
dawn struggled to reveal a cold, wet wintery day to the nine and
a half thousand residents of the town. Through breaks in the clouds,
the full moon provided little light to see the smoke begin to
curl from chimneys as coals were poked into life to brew tea or
heat porridge for breakfast, and chase away the bitter cold and
dampness that had crept into the homes like the nocturnal murderer
it was.
A spectral figure made its way along the row of darkened houses,
then stopped at one showing a dim glow in the fogged up window.
"House" was a rather generous term for the miners' rows: large
families of up to a dozen souls crammed into "single-end" or two-room
buildings, neither bathroom nor inside toilet, but still luxurious
compared to the nearby tenements.

Big Joe Gilmour twisted the doorknob and stuck his head inside
the doorway and called
"Are ye right Rab?"
From the back of the room that constituted exactly half his home,
Robert Eadie swore softly as he stubbed his toe and replied,
"Aye, Joe, jist pitting ma buits on!"
Joe pulled the door shut, to keep what little warmth there was
within, but flattened himself into the doorway to keep out of
the worst of the murderous wind and icy rain. Joe was in a dark
mood, he had things on his mind, and the bleak, damp weather did
nothing to help change it.
At 35, Joe was a big man for a miner, wide across the shoulders
and solid muscle. His build sat well on him and had no small part
in helping him attain the position he held in the pit as overman.
Across the road he dimly made out another shadowy figure clumping
down the street towards Dixon's pit. Pulling his watch out and
peering at it he saw it was just after 3.30am: "Probably Wullie
Black" he murmured to himself.
"C'mon Rab!" he called, just as the sound of heavy footsteps
thumped behind the door and Rab Eadie emerged, pulling his bunnet
hard down on his head. Immediately he hit the cold air he started
coughing. He stood by the doorway for a couple of minutes, racked
by coughing then hawking and spitting into the roadway, before
finally regaining his breath, "C'mon then, we best be on oor wey!"
"Still no well then Rab?" Joe enquired, head down, hands in
pockets, as they turned the corner and headed towards the lights
in the distance. "Och, I'm fine, just this bloody cough ye ken!"
(50 year old Rab had only returned to work a few weeks previously
after some weeks in bed dangerously ill, and only the fact that
the rent had to be paid, and that the parish hardly gave him enough
to survive, motivated him.)
"How was your day aff then, Joe?" Rab tentatively asked. "Ach,
dinnae ask, she's been at me again, I'm fair scunnered wae it
a', she's driving me up the bloody wa', she is!" "Oh, so she's
still at ye tae move back up tae Motherwell or Wishaw is she?
Joe answered grimly "Aye Ah'm gaun tae have tae sort somethin
oot. She's makin ma life hell wi' it aw".
For some time now, Joe's wife Martha had been nagging him to
quit working in Blantyre and find work closer to home.
Home for Joe and his family was in Wishaw, which was almost seven
miles away, which meant that Joe and his oldest son Joseph (13),
who also worked in Dixon's pit, could only go home one day a week,
the rest of the time living in "digs' in Blantyre. Joe missed
the comforts of home and his other bairns, but his job as undermanager
in the Blantyre colliery brought an element of prestige as well
as higher wages and less strenuous work.
He had mixed feelings therefore, about moving closer to home,
as it might well mean going back on to the pick and shovel as
there weren't many jobs going for overmen like himself.
But perhaps his cousin Robert who was also an overman, and worked
in the Hamilton pits, might be able to put a word in for him.
Robert had informed him that he'd heard a whisper that there were
new pits about to be sunk up that way in the Spring.
The two men continued on their way in silence, for the few hundred
yards towards the pit, which was already sounding busy as a locomotive
started shunting wagons around with loud squeals and crashes.
From various directions men converged on the pit to begin their
working week at the colliery.
Joe and Rab crossed the railway tracks crunching their way across
the cinders, hurrying now as the rain intensified, eager to get
inside the colliery office. As they neared the low brick building
that was the pithead office, they saw John Pickering, Joe's counterpart
from the number three pit, strike a match by the doorway and lit
his pipe before entering the building.
Inside the dimly lit room they found the rest of the early gang,
the firemen, overmen and pitheadman, drinking hot black tea and
smoking almost to a man, standing around the blazing fire, a fire
which was fuelled by the very coal they hewed out from the earth
800 feet or more below them.
The reason these men began work so early was that they were employed
as "firemen" or 'fire inspectors", it was their job was to descend
into the pits before the main workforce and ensure that the mine
workings were free of dangerous gases and safe to be worked.
For some of these men however, this would be the last time they
would go down into Dixon's pits to carry out their often dangerous
work. Dangers were always present in the mines, but one of the
worst was "firedamp", this highly explosive gas was present in
all the mines in the Lanarkshire coalfields, and particularly
so in Blantyre.
Just two months earlier in Dixon's number 2 pit, young Joe McInulty
had died of severe burns after an explosion of "firedamp" which
had also injured his two younger brothers Robert and Andrew, leaving
them also badly burnt. Despite this tragic occurrence and the
concerns of the miners themselves, Dixon's pits were not considered
by the management to be particularly dangerous, all the pits in
this area were subject to "firedamp" and it was accepted as being
part of everyday mining life.
In fact naked lights were used throughout the pits and the only
place in Dixon's number 2 pit considered dangerous was the "stoopings"
where gauze lamps were used to replace the otherwise universal
"tally" lamps the miners wore on their "bunnets"
In the pithead building Rabbie Kirkland, dour as ever, knocked
the ash out of his pipe, drained his tea and flicked the leaves
out of his can to hiss in the back of the fire. He then took an
oil lamp from a number sat on a trestle bench, lit it and went
out through the doorway to take up station at his workplace as
the pitheadman.
The remaining men stood around in silence, the early hour of
the morning and the weather leaving the men isolated in their
own company. Outside, the locomotive chuffed by in great blasts
of steam blowing its whistle with total disregard to the sleeping
populace of Blantyre, it pushed a row of empty wagons towards
the pithead ready for the day's spoils to appear from below.
As if motivated by the clamour, the men began to move out of
the office, heading towards another building by the pithead. The
rain had ceased when the wind dropped, but the icy cold remained,
turning the men's breath into instant fog. At number two pit,
Joe Gilmour and his crew entered the cage having assembled their
equipment together, pulled the gate shut and began their fateful
descent. And so began the day of October 22nd 1877 in Dixon's
number 2 pit in Blantyre.
©
Jim Rouse 1998 - Scottish Mines
