From nationalisation to Bevin Boys: Confronting the UK’s fuel crisis in the 1940s

During the Second World War, reliance on coal, interrupted supply chains and a shortage of miners resulted in an energy crisis in Great Britain.

Daily Herald Photograph: Coal trucks Daily Herald Photograph: Coal trucks (1946-12-29) by Brindley, FrankNational Science and Media Museum

Problems in the coal industry had been brewing for years. Gluts in supply during the 1930s saw pits close and workers chronically underemployed. Investments in new technologies and improving safety standards also stagnated. 

A photographic print of Industry, Fuel & Power - Coal, Depots & DumpsNational Science and Media Museum

The outbreak of war became an opportunity for young miners to find new opportunities in the armed services and war industries. By the 1940s, these factors laid the foundation for an energy crisis that could only be addressed by nationalising the coal industry.

Daily Herald Photograph: Coal dump in LondonNational Science and Media Museum

Delivering coal to a nation under siege

In the early years of the war, the problem was getting the coal where it needed to go. Transportation links were under threat, as were established distribution points. London, hard hit by the Blitz, set up coal dumps in bombed sites to enable residents to access their rations.

Daily Herald Photograph: Soldier delivers emergency coalNational Science and Media Museum

Military assistance

The military assisted distribution. Here Gunner Jack Morrison, once a Newcastle grocer, helps unload sacks of coal directly into the homes of Londoners. But this didn’t solve the supply problem.

Daily Herald Photograph: Queuing at a coal dumpNational Science and Media Museum

Supply crisis

The Fuel and Lighting Order came into effect in January 1942, imposing strict coal rations. Londoners could purchase sixpenny tickets worth 14lbs of coal from the depots. The women at this Bethnal Green depot use bags, sacks and prams to carry their maximum 56lbs of coal home.

Daily Herald Photograph: Queuing for fuelNational Science and Media Museum

Rationing continued well beyond the war as supply issues continued to plague the country. Accessing fuel was even a problem in places with nearby coal fields. This depot in Manchester is distributing coke, a coal derivative, to help ‘keep the home fires burning’.

Daily Herald Photograph: Ministry of Fuel and PowerNational Science and Media Museum

Nationalising the coal supply

With the objective of ensuring the coal supply, in 1942 the newly formed Ministry of Fuel and Power assumed operational control of Britain’s mines. Their lights often burned late into the night as the new Ministry tried to deal with the ongoing crisis.

Daily Herald Photograph: Coal minersNational Science and Media Museum

The crux of the supply problem

By 1943, more than 36,000 men had left the coal industry to join the armed services or take better paid (and less risky) work in the war industries. The British government estimated 40,000 men were needed to meet civilian and military demands for coal.

This industry is not attractive. Everybody gets away from it. Fathers and sons get away from it, and no colliery manager wants his son to be in the industry. He wants him to be a doctor or an engineer or a civil servant. We have to try to find some way by which we can retain our people.

Lieut.-Colonel Lancaster, Ministry of Fuel and Power, June 1943

Daily Herald Photograph: Coalminers on trial for striking, From the collection of: National Science and Media Museum
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Daily Herald Photograph: Coalminers on trial for striking, From the collection of: National Science and Media Museum
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Poor working conditions, low pay, and long hours meant potential work stoppages—something the new Ministry sought to control through defence regulations. The coal supply had to be assured regardless of worker conditions.

Daily Herald Photograph: Ministry of Fuel and Power's Experimental training centreNational Science and Media Museum

Recruiting young miners

Mining was a rapidly aging industry. Training a new generation of skilled miners was essential. Here, a cohort of 120 teenage boys from County Durham arrive at the Ministry of Fuel & Power’s experimental training centre for juvenile entrants at New Kyo.

Daily Herald Photograph: Ministry of Fuel and Power's Experimental training centreNational Science and Media Museum

The new arrivals were issued leather helmets to help keep them safe when they descended into Morrison Pit. 

Daily Herald Photograph: Volunteer coal minersNational Science and Media Museum

At this training programme in Armthorpe, near Doncaster, boys could access free studies up to university-degree standard. They also received practical instruction under the supervision of older miners and safety officers.

Daily Herald Photograph: Ernest Bevin campaigning for electionNational Science and Media Museum

Bevin Boys

Ernest Bevin, Wartime Minister of Labour and National Service, provided another solution to the labour shortage: a portion of military conscripts were sent into the mining industry. Between 1943 and 1948, 48,000 young men from across Britain became ‘Bevin Boys’.

Daily Herald Photograph: Bevin Boys Daily Herald Photograph: Bevin Boys (1943-1947)National Science and Media Museum

Though they were issued matching overalls, safety helmets and work boots, Bevin Boys—unlike other servicemen—had to purchase their own tools. 19-year-old William Page of Grange Town, Middlesborough, was a fitter’s apprentice. He seems less than impressed with his new gear!

Daily Herald Photograph: Bevin mine trainees, Askern CollieryNational Science and Media Museum

These men have just arrived at the Askern Colliery, Doncaster, where they are undertaking their training. Most were assigned unskilled labour roles, enabling experienced miners to continue working on the coal face.

We had to join, we had to join,
We had to join old Bevin’s Army,
Three quid a week and bugger all to eat,
Hob-nailed boots and blisters on our feet.

Bevin Boys’ Song (sung to the tune of ‘Way Down Dixie’)

Daily Herald Photograph: Bevin Boys make a lunch of fish and chips after strike meetingNational Science and Media Museum

Patriotism questioned

Bevin Boys faced discrimination from the public and police because they didn’t wear military uniforms—people assumed they were deserters, dodgers or spies! These men are on their way back from a strike meeting, something else that made them unpopular with a coal-starved public.

The last of the Bevin Boys were released from service in 1948. Unlike other conscripts, they did not have the right to resume their previous professions, nor did they receive service medals, ‘demob’ suits, or thanks for their service. Their service records were lost during the 1950s. It was only in 1998 that their contributions received official recognition; for the first time Bevin Boys were allowed to participate in the Remembrance Day Parade at the Cenotaph.

Daily Herald Photograph: Nationalisation of Cinder Hill PitNational Science and Media Museum

E tenebris lux—Light out of darkness

In a move aimed at stabilising coal production—and celebrated by miners—the wartime nationalisation of coal was extended through the establishment of the National Coal Board in 1947. The state purchased approximately 1,500 collieries operated by 800 private companies.

Credits: Story

All images are from the Science Museum Group collection. Copyright Mirrorpix, Hulton Archive/Getty Images, and TopFoto.

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