Home What's On Guide 1911 Railway Strike Festivities
Remembering the 1911 railway strike PDF Print Email

Welcome to the official web page of the National Railway Strike Llanelli Festivities!

The National Railway Strike Llanelli 1911 - A Week long programme of events to remember this historic Llanelli event next August 2011.

The Llanelli Rail Strike Commemoration Committee together with support from the Llanelli Town, Llanelli Rural and Carmarthenshire County Councils, Llanelli Trades Council, Historical Society and many other local groups and individuals are arranging a week of festivities culminating on August 21st with a march from the Railway Station to the Box Cemetry where the 2 young men who were killed are buried. In 1911 an enquiry deemed their deaths "justifiable homicide" .A petition is currently being raised asking the government to appologise to the families of these men and to the town for this dreadful incident.

There will be a  full programme of events next August 2011 to make the 100 years since the strike, all the events to commemorate this historic event will be  highlighted on this page when they become available. Please come back to check soon.

Above, Troops camped near Llanelli.  Item reference: : GTJ69242.  This item comes from: Cardiff Central Library (Item reference: Astudiaethau Lleol / Local Studies S 8). 

 

Below, a brief outline of the events:

The deaths of two innocent men during the 1911 Llanelli rail strike and the historic strike itself are to be commemorated on the centenary August 2011. For the last time on the U.K mainland the riot act was read and also for the last time British Troops were ordered to fire on unarmed civillians.

A rifle shot rings out. The men by the garden wall stand their ground.

"It's OK," one shouts out. "It's only a blank!" There is laughter. "It's all right ? they've only got blank cartridges," someone else yells.

Suddenly a live round smashes into the throat of a man sitting on the wall, knocking him backwards onto the grass. Everybody runs. Three men are down, bleeding badly. Two of them are carried into a house and laid out on a table, where they die. On the nearby railway line, the major in charge of the detachment of soldiers orders his men to withdraw.

These events did not take place in Iraq, Afghanistan or some other beleaguered war zone. They happened nearly a 100 years ago Llanelli. The tinplate-producing town was also home to miners and 500 railway workers.

The men working on the railway had very poor wages and a 60 - 72 hour working week, often with compulsory overtime. When the first ever national railway strike happened, the railway workers were joined by their better paid friends from the Tin works and mines. Thousands of pickets blocked the railway lines with their own bodies. For two days and nights, pitched battles raged between pickets and troops for the line's control through the town. In a bungled intervention, the major in charge ordered his men to fire on the strikers. As news of the deaths spread, soldiers tried to restore order with fixed bayonets. Trucks of the railway company were attacked and set on fire. Detonators exploded, killing a further four townspeople.

John "Jac" John was 21 when he was killed. A mill worker at the Morewood Tinplate Works , he was a promising rugby player for the Oriental Stars.

He was, according to a local rugby reporter, "one of the most popular young men in the town". A photograph shows a youth with expressive features and dark hair, parted in the middle and rather stylish looking.

Scores of relatively well-paid tinplate workers like himself had come out on the streets in solidarity with the poorer rail workers. He was killed by a bullet through the lung.

The photo of Leonard Worsell shows a man in a dark coat with crewneck top, square-jawed, altogether more wary looking. Although younger than Jac, he looks older. He was a 19-year-old labourer, a Londoner from Penge. He was suffering from tuberculosis, an endemic disease of the urban poor, and was being treated at Alltymynydd sanatorium. He was spending his weekend leave in Llanelli, and had interrupted his shaving in the back kitchen to see what all the fuss was about. He was killed by a bullet to the heart.

Ironically, by the time the fatal shots were fired the strike had been settled. The Railway workers had won better pay and conditions. Similar workers protests on this period, "the Great Unrest", 1910-19 together with the Llanelli Strike, achieved the first basic legal rights for workers in the U.K.

Above, funeral of the two young men, Leonard Worsell and John John, who were shot down by soldiers at Llanelli during the Railway Strike Riots of 1911. Item reference: : GTJ69244.  This item comes from: Cardiff Central Library (Item reference: Astudiaethau Lleol / Local Studies S 10).



Add this page to your favorite Social Bookmarking websites
Reddit! Del.icio.us! Mixx! Free and Open Source Software News Google! Live! Facebook! StumbleUpon! TwitThis Joomla Free PHP
 

Comments  

 
0 #8 andrew davies 2012-01-15 09:42
hi could anybody tell me please was there a woman killed during the 1911 railway riots iam researching my family tree and my dad was told of a lady Margaret Ann Davies that died as a result of an explosion after the rioters set fire to the train carriages.
regards Andrew davies
Quote
 
 
0 #7 w00fdawg 2011-08-08 12:33
Quoting Amy Westcott:
Hey, I am a writing a dissertation on the Llanelli Rail Strikes would love to be involved in the weeks festivities. How do I do this and who could I contact for more information. Thank You.


Please visit 1911llanellirailwaystrike.org.uk/ for the programme of events.
Quote
 
 
0 #6 w00fdawg 2011-08-05 14:20
There is now a full programme of events for the 1911 Llanelli Railway Strike Commemoration at 1911llanellirailwaystrike.org.uk/
- should be a very exciting week.
Quote
 
 
+1 #5 Amy Westcott 2011-07-05 19:15
Hey, I am a writing a dissertation on the Llanelli Rail Strikes would love to be involved in the weeks festivities. How do I do this and who could I contact for more information. Thank You.
Quote
 
 
0 #4 JillC 2011-02-23 19:29
hi,
The 3rd man shot(who recovered) was my great uncle - John Francis. Family stories has it that he was on the railway embankment with my other great uncle- Thomas Francis. I have not been to Llanelli for many years but it is nice to think that their exploits have not been forgotten.
Quote
 
 
0 #3 Jon_Tal 2011-02-02 10:01
Hi Ellie, thanks for the comment. WE'll get some more info up on the site.
Quote
 
 
0 #2 Ellie 2011-02-01 13:58
Hi am 18 years old and im doing a presentation on this and i dont understand why they went on strike and what changed after it. If you know anything please let me know thank you
Quote
 
 
+4 #1 Liitle Richardjohn 2010-11-05 15:56
Along with the rest of working class resistance and sacrifice, this was another down-payment on a decent, fair, humane future. The balance has long been paid, but we are still waiting for delivery while our investment gathers interest for others. And we continue to make the payments not realising that we are now well in credit.
Change and progress are a birthright, earned with generations of injustice. There is no practical or ethical reason why we cannot be paid what we own in full. The only obstacle is the desperate neurosis of privilege.
Quote
 

Add comment


Security code
Refresh

Music Scene

Attention: open in a new window. PDFPrintEmail

Music Scene

 

Your Comments Latest

  • I agree with the sentiment of the above, the impre... More...
  • I would pay extra per week for the police if I act... More...
  • An appointment that would have had to be ratified ... More...
  • Just to note; Carmarthenshire County Council is ru... More...
  • hi could anybody tell me please was there a woman ... More...

News Feed Here

Subscribe to Our RSS Feed

Send Us Your News

Login Form