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Bereavement

Remember Aberfan

(106 Posts)
Shinamae Mon 21-Oct-24 10:23:36

This day in 1966
My mother was Welsh and I still have some family in Wales..

rafichagran Mon 21-Oct-24 20:40:30

I was in primary school at the time and I remember my Mum and my Nan talking about it.
We also did a minutes silence at work a few years ago for this.
If my memory is correct I remember Annie bought flowers and laid them on behalf of us on Gransnet. I was very touched by this.

cornergran Mon 21-Oct-24 20:53:10

Mr C and a couple of friends went to offer help on the day. He prefers not to talk about what he experienced.

Anniebach Mon 21-Oct-24 22:29:29

Thank you all, Iam thank you for remembering me,
Rafichagran yes, the flowers have gone there every year since

Doodledog Mon 21-Oct-24 22:42:43

Annie, I wish you a peaceful night tonight, although I am sure it will be haunted by the ghosts of the past. x

Athrawes Tue 22-Oct-24 10:25:09

I remember it well. I was in digs and it came on the television and me and my friends and the family we were with just couldn't believe what we were seeing. It was horrendous.
Later on when I was working, one of my colleagues turned out that he was one of the camera operators at the scene and has never forgotten the horror of it.

pen50 Tue 22-Oct-24 12:09:53

I was ten and remember quite vividly the news. I think the whole country was in deep shock.

There is an article here:

www.freespeechbacklash.com/article/aberfan-disaster-21-october-1966

about the tragedy and also, regrettably, the foreknowledge, the culpability, and the cover-up. It seems like a lot of people had a lot to answer for.

Cateq Tue 22-Oct-24 12:18:22

I was 7years old and remember going to my grans house after school and being hugged by my gran, my aunties and my mum. They had been crying since the news broke and were so upset at the losses these families had to endure. I couldn’t sleep for several nights thinking about the poor families trying to come terms with their loss. There was a coal bing no far from our street, but I never went near it after that, was too scared.

IOMGran Tue 22-Oct-24 12:25:55

Doodledog

I was primary age, so the same age as the children, and I remember my mother being distraught.

Same here, it affected people across the countries of the UK. I was 8 at the time, my sister 5. I think everyone thought there but for the grace if God go I.

Nannee49 Tue 22-Oct-24 12:28:50

My dear Grandad was brought up in a village very close to Aberfan & the tragedy affected him very deeply. Thanks so much anniebach

Moth62 Tue 22-Oct-24 13:01:58

I was 9 years old and our headmaster came in to tell us of the tragedy. His friend was a headmaster in a neighbouring village to Aberfan. Our school was very near to our local pit and, though I couldn’t actually see the slag heaps from the high classroom windows, I remember in the following weeks staring up at the windows and being frightened, wondering if the same thing might happen to us.

amazonia Tue 22-Oct-24 13:20:31

I was only 3 when it happened so don't remember the day. We did, however, learn about it in school many years later. I'm still horrified and upset by it. It's one of those awful events that never leaves you.

Blinko Tue 22-Oct-24 13:52:34

Thank you Anniebach for your input to this thread, telling the real story. I have always wondered why no one was held accountable.

The flowers you give every year - such a beautiful gesture. Thank you so much flowers

Roddi3363 Tue 22-Oct-24 14:02:52

I was 10 when this tragedy occurred. My grandmother who was in the Red Cross was sent to help and manned the mortuary. It was only as an adult when I became a teacher that I really understood what had happened and how brave she was....RIP peace children and adults. We won't forget you.

Musicgirl Tue 22-Oct-24 14:08:44

I was not quite three at the time, so not old enough to remember it, but one of my cousins was born on that day. I saw a documentary about it a few years ago and the thing that struck me most was the interview with the headmaster. He had a photograph of the first eleven football team, who had won a trophy the previous day. Every single boy was killed. He also said that the following day was half term, so had it been just one day later, those children and teachers would have survived.

Musicgirl Tue 22-Oct-24 14:09:04

Not quite two

Anniebach Tue 22-Oct-24 14:17:43

Thank you, Thank you Blinko the link posted by pen50
is true, a year before the disaster Ann Jennings headmistress
of Pantglas school was given a signed petition from the village
regarding the slurry, she gave it to the council, it was on the front page of the local newspaper, a year later she died in the school.
Thank you pen50 for the link , it is the truth

Nannan2 Tue 22-Oct-24 14:22:12

I had never heard of this, i was only 3 then,and we lived in the west riding of yorkshire-but none of my family had ever spoken of it over the years, probably as we used to be from a mining family in barnsley, with my mothers father having died in the pit there.

amapo Tue 22-Oct-24 15:10:24

It is one of my earliest memories. I can remember seeing it on the news. I would have only been just over 4 years old at the time but it really stuck with me.

Retroladywriting Tue 22-Oct-24 15:23:41

I was 11 years old and had just started at Grammar School. My Primary school was near two coal tips - almost certainly not as near as Aberfan, but I remember being very worried for my friends who were still at that school. Since then those tips have had trees planted on them to stabilise them, which seems to have worked. Co-incidentally Aberfan was the same day as my former headteacher was killed in a car accident and I remember sobbing my heart out at both disasters - I guess I was also still navigating the transition from primary to secondary schooling, which made me more sensitive.

Picklesgranma Tue 22-Oct-24 15:52:39

I was living in Wales and the same age as the children of Aberfan and can vividly remember my Mum crying. It was so sad and living in a Welsh community made it more poignant. With the decline of the coal industry it should never happen again.

Susieq62 Tue 22-Oct-24 16:22:44

I was 16 and remember watching the awful scenes unfold on TV .
A very good book is “ A Terrible Kindness” by Jo Browning Wroe
which identifies the services used after the tragedy.
Yes it should have/ could have been avoided if assessments had been made and experts listened to.

grandtanteJE65 Tue 22-Oct-24 16:31:53

I was about the same age as the children who died in Aberfan on that day. I had grandparents living in Fife, so I knew very well what a coal bing looked like.

I can still see the expression on my mother's face when she told me what had happened.

I have been saddened by the fact that one other disasters concerning children occur and journalists are looking for comparisons that most of them seem to have forgotton (or never been told?) about Aberfan.

grandtanteJE65 Tue 22-Oct-24 16:32:37

when not one, sorry, clicked on post by mistake instead of review.

Diggingdoris Tue 22-Oct-24 16:33:24

I was 15 when I sat and cried with my parents when the news was on TV.
A few years ago I was on holiday in Wales and we made a special trip to the memorial garden at Aberfan. It's very moving and peaceful there.

Daffonanna Tue 22-Oct-24 17:21:32

It’s a news event we never forget
I agree with Susieq62 “ A terrible kindness “ is a beautiful book . I was nearly put off it by the tragedy of the initial storyline about a young mortuary technician whose life was changed after he volunteered following the Aberfan disaster . It doesn’t play down the sadness but is ultimately such an uplifting positive story .