David Hopper, General Secretary of the Durham Miners Association, looks back at the remarkable life of ‘Bob’ Smillie as he reviews a new book on this pioneer of the movement.
David Hopper, General Secretary of the Durham Miners Association, looks back at the remarkable life of ‘Bob’ Smillie as he reviews a new book on this pioneer of the movement.
As a lifelong coalminer myself, I was aware of Robert Smillie and when his great grandson Blair Smillie forwarded to me a proof copy of this book, I thought I would be reading another typical story of a miners leader. How wrong I was.
Because of my own history I have read many books, leaflets, magazines and pamphlets on mining, mining communities and mining men, indeed I hold a collection of hundreds of books which one day I hope to finish reading.
I knew of ‘Bob’ Smillie also because his portrait adorns the banners of Sacriston Handen Hold and Easington Colliery’s in the Durham Coalfield. It is a great honour to be recognised by your fellow men and to have your portrait on a miner’s banner is the ultimate accolade.
Not only that but Smillie was selected to address the famous Durham miner’s Gala in 1911, 1914, 1919 and 1924, periods of enormous struggle for Britain’s mineworkers and indeed the nation.
Poverty
Bob Smillie was born in 1857 in Belfast and, as a young man, to escape the poverty and try to find a new and better life, moved to join his brother in Britain. Shortly afterwards he made the move to coal mining in the Lanarkshire coalfield in Scotland.
He explains vividly his thoughts and tribulations as a young coalminer, the dangers faced every day in the collieries, the squalid living conditions in the mineowners tied cottages, the long hours being worked and the extremely low wages. These were among the things I am sure which made him a lifelong socialist. He relates his rise through the ranks of the Miner’s Federation of Great Britain from branch to area level and eventually the Presidency of the Union with over a million members.
During this rise through the ranks he made friends with a fellow Scottish mineworker whose name and deeds are known throughout the world. James Keir Hardy, the first Labour MP and first leader of the Parliamentary Party in 1906. These two shared a great friendship until Hardy’s death in 1915. I wonder what they would of made of ‘New Labour’? No prizes for the correct answer!
Nationalisation
My late father who was a coal miner for 49 years, thought the two greatest achievements for the miners were the establishment of the National Health Service and the nationalisation of the mining industry in 1947.
Smillie did not live to see the creation of the NHS but he advocated the nationalisation of the mines and gave evidence at the Coal Industry Commission in 1919 when the Sankey report was adopted which recommended a number of improvements in wages and conditions for mineworkers but crucially recommended the nationalisation of the mines. The then Liberal Government reneged on this promise and Smillie personally blamed himself for this, it was to be another twenty-eight years before this was achieved, but Bob Smillie gave very forceful and skilful advocacy at the Commission and played a major part in this achievement.
His time in National Office in the miners union also saw him play a major role in the first ever National Miners Strike in 1912 when over a million miners commenced a strike on wages which ended with the Liberal Government passing legislation to give local boards the power to set minimum wage levels in the districts thereby taking the decisions on wages out of the sole control of the mine owners.
These decisions on nationalisation and the minimum wage were great achievements but there was much more achieved for Smillie’s beloved miners in the tireless years he represented his fellow workers.
He was instrumental in forming the Triple Alliance of Miners, Rail and Transport workers and remained loyal to its principles.
He was a convinced pacifist and openly opposed capitalist wars where workers killed and maimed other workers from other nations in the bosses quest for profits and markets.
Legacy
His legacy is in the achievements he was instrumental in founding: the Scottish Trade Union Congress, the Independent Labour Party, the National Council for Civil Liberties. These achievements were and still are a measure of the man and his desire to make life better for his fellow man.
After serving the mineworkers so well, even in ill health, his remarkable talents were still wanted by the miners of Northumberland who persuaded him to become their Member of Parliament for Morpeth.
The book is a remarkable journey through a remarkable man’s life and times in the turmoil of the early twentieth century. Serious industrial conflicts, the First World War, the Easter Rising, the Russian Revolution, gigantic events in world history which all occurred during Smillie’s watch.
He was also a devoted family man who liked nothing better than to relax with his wife and family back in the mining village of Larkhall.
After reading this book, I now know a tremendous amount of what Robert Smillie stood for: Justice, Equality, Humanitarism, Peace and Socialism. He cared for all people, not only those he represented. His dedication and effort changed society for the better, he sought no reward just a better society.
The book has inspired me to greater effort to try and change society today. When Robert Smillie was in office the struggle to effect change was very much more difficult than now. His efforts made life much more bearable for future generations. I would recommend it to anyone interested in social history.
Robert Smillie I salute you.
Labour of Love: The Story of Robert Smillie
byTorquil Cowan
(Neil Wilson Publishing)
ISBN 13: 9781906476618