New play about the 1926 General Strike goes on tour across the region
Following the national success of Wor Bella (about WW1 women footballers), Tyneside-based playwright Ed Waugh will present his new work in November, which is about the Cramlington Train Wreckers.
Ed, who has the distinction for a local writer of having had a record five plays produced at Newcastle's prestigious Theatre Royal, writes about forgotten working class stories and his latest play is set during 1926 General Strike when striking miners uncoupled a rail on the mainline Edinburgh to London railway.
As we rapidly approach the centenary of Britain's only General Strike, the most notorious incident of that societal unrest in May 1926 happened when miners inadvertently derailed the Flying Scotsman on the mainline Edinburgh to London railway at Cramlington in Northumberland.
"The event happened on May 10, seven days into the nine-day General Strike, which was the biggest rupture in society since the civil war of the 1640s. The intention was to take up a rail then wave down and stop a blackleg coal train that the miners felt was undermining the strike," explained Ed, whose other hit plays include Hadaway Harry and Carrying David.
“Unfortunately for the perpetrators, they inadvertently derailed a passenger train carrying 281 passengers. It could have been mass murder!”
Ed continued: "Thankfully, the volunteer driver had been warned of trouble ahead and slowed down, meaning when the engine and five carriages were derailed no-one was killed. The only injury was minor, to a man's foot. Most people were treated for shock and bruises and continued their journey from Newcastle.”
Eight Cramlington miners were sentenced to a total of 48 years for their involvement in the highly controversial event that made national and international headlines.
The "Wreckers" were eventually released early due to pressure from the trade union rank and file, politicians and the judiciary itself, who saw the original sentences as too harsh.
Ed, who also penned The Great Joe Wilson and Mr Corvan's Music Hall, said: "Let's not forget, the General Strike started after the coal owners told the miners they had to take a 40 per cent cut in wages. Stanley Baldwin, the then Conservative prime minister, also said every other section of the working class had to take pay cuts "in the national interest".
"Like the rest of the British coalfields, all of the pits in Northumberland, and the North East as a whole, were solidly behind the strike, as were the railway workers, and other sections of the British workforce, like the engineers. The country came to a standstill.
“More than 10,000 strikers were arrested during the General Strike, some just for picketing. There is strong evidence that the Cramlington miners were used by the Government and judiciary as an example against working class resistance.”
Such is the interest in the subject, Ed and the Wisecrack Productions team have spoken to more than 2,000 people in the North East on the subject over the past 18 months. The Wisecrack team are working with a large number of community groups and schools to highlight why the General Strike happened, and its consequences.
Ed continued: "The story of The Cramlington Train Wreckers is one of high dramatic tension and has become an important part of North East folklore and British history, although largely forgotten today. With the centenary approaching, the new play is important to assess the events in an informed, dramatic and entertaining manner.”
He added: "Were the Cramlington Train Wreckers terrorists or workers trying to defend their livelihoods, family and community against an economic onslaught ("the carnival of reaction") that actually took place after the General Strike ended?"
The Cramlington Train Wreckers, which is supported by Arts Council England, will tour the North East in November. Venues are: Gosforth Civic Theatre, The Glasshouse Gateshead, Playhouse Whitley Bay, Alnwick Playhouse, Hexham Queen's Hall, Cramlington Learning Village Theatre, Bishop Auckland Town Hall, The Witham (Barnard Castle), Westovian Theatre (South Shields).
On The Web:
For further details visit www.cramlingtontrainwreckers. co.uk
Tickets:
CRAMLINGTON LEARNING VILLAGE
GLASSHOUSE GATESHEAD
BISHOP AUCKLAND TOWN HALL
HEXHAM
Barnard castle
PLAYHOUSE WHITLEY BAY
ANLNWICK
GOSFORTH CIVIC THEATRE
WESTOVIAN THEATRE
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