HomeMy WebLinkAboutPage 57
Aberfan Disaster Description
http://w\vw.nuff.ox.ac.uk/politics/aberfan/desc.htm
The Aberfan Disaster
Brief Description
At 9.15 am on Friday, October 21, 1966 a waste tip slid down a mountainside into the mining village
of Aberfan, near Merthyr Tydfil in South Wales. It first destroyed a farm cottage in its path, killing all
the occupants. At Pantglas Junior School, just below, the children had just returned to their classes
after singing All Things Bright and Beaut~ful at their assembly. It was sunny on the mountain but
foggy in the village, with visibility about 50 yards. The tipping gang up the mountain had seen the slide
start, but could not raise the alarm because their telephone cable had been repeatedly stolen. (The
Tribunal of Inquiry later established that the disaster happened so quickly that a telephone warning
would not have saved lives.) Down in the village, nobody saw anything, but everybody heard the noise.
Gaynor Minett, an eight-year-old at the school, remembered four years later:
It was a tremendous rumbling sound and all the school \vent dead. You could hear a pin drop. Everyone just froze in
their seats. I just managed to get up and I reached the end of my desk \vhen the SOllild got louder and nearer, lliltil I
could see the black out of the windo\v. I can't remember any more but I \voke up to find that a horrible nightmare had
just beglID in front of my eyes.
The slide engulfed the school and about 20 houses in the village before coming to rest. Then there was
total silence. George Williams, who was trapped in the wreckage, remembered that 'In that silence you
couldn't hear a bird or a child'.
144 people died in the Aberfan disaster: 116 of thelTI were school children. About half of the children
at Pantglas Junior School, and five of their teachers, were killed.
~"
LU
::;;;~
1,..."-':;1
::::-.:'
~
~./
LU
" "',
,-If
W:
u:
~j
;::: r1
.J!
lof2
11/19/20036:30 AM
Aberfan Disaster Description
http://w\vw.nuff.ox.ac.uk/politics/aberfanJdesc.htm
The Aberfan Disaster
Brief Description
At 9.15 am on Friday, October 21, 1966 a waste tip slid down a mountainside into the mining village
of Aberfan, near Merthyr Tydfil in South Wales. It first destroyed a farm cottage in its path, killing all
the occupants. At Pantglas Junior School, just below, the children had just returned to their classes
after singing All Things Bright and Beaut?/id at their assembly. It was sunny on the mountain but
foggy in the village, with visibility about 50 yards. The tipping gang up the mountain had seen the slide
start, but could not raise the alarm because their telephone cable had been repeatedly stolen. (The
Tribunal of Inquiry later established that the disaster happened so quickly that a telephone warning
would not have saved lives.) Down in the village, nobody saw anything, but everybody heard the noise.
Gaynor Minett, an eight-year-old at the school, remembered four years later:
It was a tremendous rumbling sound and all the school went dead. You could hear a pin drop. Everyone just froze in
their seats. I just managed to get up and I reached the end of my desk when the sound got louder and nearer, until I
could see the black out of the w-indow. I can't remember any more but I woke up to find that a horrible nightmare had
just begun in front of my eyes.
The slide engulfed the school and about 20 houses in the village before coming to rest. Then there was
total silence. George Williams, who was trapped in the wreckage, remembered that 'In that silence you
couldn't hear a bird or a child'.
144 people died in the Aberfan disaster: 116 of thetn were school children. About half of the children
at Pantglas Junior School, and five of their teachers, were killed.
,...
f' ;.
- -- ..
:
1-
-.,- ,
:.}
-~-
0
W .,;~
=
> c:::;,
~
- en
W ~
t) ~
:.u ~
C!
10f2
57
11/19/2003 6:30 AM