What Happened At Aberfan? This Is The Full Story | The Crown

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  • čas přidán 6. 12. 2019
  • What happened at Aberfan? That is the question everyone is asking after watching The Crown season 3. This video is the full true story, giving you all the information and what happened and crucially why it happened.
    Disaster struck in Aberfan, Wales, the coal mining village of South Wales, on Friday 21 October 1966, leaving the country shocked.
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Komentáře • 1,5K

  • @mihindus.7605
    @mihindus.7605 Před 4 lety +6432

    Miners who dug for a living dug to find their children. Man, that scene was so hard

    • @gromit0299
      @gromit0299 Před 4 lety +186

      I can’t even imagine having been one of the people actually there in the disaster. I’m really glad they covered this (albeit, dramatically, of course) because so many of us born after this happened, weren’t taught about this in history class. What a horrific thing that whole community went through. Despite all of their fights to remove the mines. My hearts are with all of them.

    • @lytaquiroz1524
      @lytaquiroz1524 Před 4 lety +102

      This full episode was soo sad, i was not familiar with the real story of the tragedy and after watching it i had to take a little break for the next one

    • @reece680
      @reece680 Před 4 lety +11

      Mihindu S. OMFG it took me 3 tries to get through that part. I was a mess

    • @ef9303
      @ef9303 Před 4 lety +53

      My grandfather was a firefighter helping at the incident, and he never could speak about what happened as it was so horrific.

    • @DOCTORDROTT
      @DOCTORDROTT Před 4 lety +24

      My dad went over to help, over 2000 people went to help, so many, some had to turn back. Just think of this fact , lots got killed in the industry, but if it was not for the coal industry most of us valley people would not have existed. How ironic !

  • @kittybax5450
    @kittybax5450 Před 4 lety +4696

    it was also the last day before the holidays, one day later and the school would have been empty.

  • @carlgriffiths8482
    @carlgriffiths8482 Před 4 lety +4888

    It was filmed in my village Cwmaman I have to say the whole Netflix team and cast did it with total respect

    • @camo770
      @camo770 Před 4 lety +101

      This being such a sensitive topic to the whole country not just the valleys, they would have to be respectful

    • @carlgriffiths8482
      @carlgriffiths8482 Před 4 lety +6

      @Sam Bacon exactly

    • @philldavies7940
      @philldavies7940 Před 4 lety +25

      The chapel scene was filmed at Groeswen chapel, just outside Caerphilly.

    • @Fcutdlady
      @Fcutdlady Před 4 lety +11

      Glad to hear it.

    • @anhw3303
      @anhw3303 Před 4 lety +125

      Sad to see a film crew and production company showed more respect and dignity to this than the stinking British government ever did.

  • @LittleAngel5ooekcme
    @LittleAngel5ooekcme Před 4 lety +3869

    I grew up in Aberfan, so this episode hit hard. My primary school was visited by the Queen during her diamond jubilee. I now realise the significance of her visit.

    • @gnome5051
      @gnome5051 Před 4 lety +83

      Can I ask how the subject was approached and explained to you as a child? What was it like for you growing up somewhere where such a tragedy took place? I'm Scottish, born in 2004 and I first remember having the Dunblane massacre explained to me in my P2 (Year 1?) class. I'm from Edinburgh so it's obviously very different to growing up where it occurred, but we all knew and were taught that it happened from a very young age.

    • @tom-ch5ii
      @tom-ch5ii Před 4 lety +121

      @@gnome5051 I can't explain for Lola as it seems she experienced the aftermath of the tragedy. But during my time in school the lesson bell was changed every year, to signal a minute silence to remember those who perished. I do not live in Aberfan but living so close our school, and others, occasionally organised trips to visit the Aberfan memorial. It's a big deal here in South Wales, especially the valleys, and the students are always reminded, I learnt the subject in year 4 but my dull mind probably missed the hints of the disaster years before.

    • @LittleAngel5ooekcme
      @LittleAngel5ooekcme Před 4 lety +149

      @@gnome5051 hi, of course :) I'll be honest, I can't remember exactly how we were taught, I just feel like it's something I always knew about. The play park is next to the site of the old school which is now a memorial, and the graves of the deceased are large and white. It's just has a sort of presence in the village, all of the elderly were around when it happened, most would have lost someone. And my grandad helped with the digging efforts following the disaster. I'm sure we were probably taught about it, but that's not the part I remember.

    • @deejohnson4793
      @deejohnson4793 Před 4 lety +11

      @@LittleAngel5ooekcme Thank you.

    • @lyren.4652
      @lyren.4652 Před 4 lety +53

      I was crying when I learned more about it. I didn't know why...I am not even british...

  • @ilcampigiano5502
    @ilcampigiano5502 Před 4 lety +2306

    The parents of the children dead in Aberfan sent their clothes to the children of Florence hit by the flood on 4th November 1966

    • @philomena_def-not-malcolm
      @philomena_def-not-malcolm Před 4 lety +113

      Is it true? Wow, thinking about that finally brings me to tears. I don't know a thing about that flood, but I will try to find out.

    • @philomena_def-not-malcolm
      @philomena_def-not-malcolm Před 4 lety +17

      Thank you!

    • @love_agapi_m3976
      @love_agapi_m3976 Před 3 lety +161

      Thank you for the link. The fact that the parents in their grief could be so generous to give clothing and toys of their children to others in need speaks volumes of their kindness.

    • @sian2337
      @sian2337 Před 3 lety +10

      That’s fascinating, and very moving.

    • @RockyDave
      @RockyDave Před 3 lety +6

      Amazing.

  • @AmyAstridBeauty
    @AmyAstridBeauty Před 4 lety +3568

    I had never heard of this disaster before watching S3, so I had no idea what was coming at the beginning of the episode. How heartbreaking 💔

  • @pyramid_iremide
    @pyramid_iremide Před 4 lety +1902

    When you add the small details like the time events, when school started etc. It makes it even more painful

    • @DOCTORDROTT
      @DOCTORDROTT Před 4 lety +53

      Yes , I was in school just one mile away on that morning. School day.. was morning assembly then head back to your respective class rooms for lessons. The tip slide hit a 0913 am . Our teachers found out at around 0940, we were sent home around 1100. My father came home at 1200 and headed to Aberfan with friends and shovels. The last day before term was usually a short day .Home by 1200. So just three hours later and the death toll would have been drastically reduced. My question, why did God let this happen ?

    • @pyramid_iremide
      @pyramid_iremide Před 4 lety +9

      @@DOCTORDROTT I'm so sorry to hear that

    • @MoejiiOsmanTV
      @MoejiiOsmanTV Před 4 lety +10

      Had it been a day later the school would've been empty... Gut wrenching

    • @kayleighbrown459
      @kayleighbrown459 Před 3 lety +12

      @@MoejiiOsmanTV
      If it has been 20 minutes early the school would have been empty.

  • @hessaalqahtani1569
    @hessaalqahtani1569 Před 4 lety +1367

    Those children would’ve been between 60 and 74 years old now, if they had lived
    RIP children

    • @jackieblue1267
      @jackieblue1267 Před 4 lety +34

      Some would be late 50s also.

    • @steffanhoffmann8937
      @steffanhoffmann8937 Před 4 lety +24

      How 74 please? That would make them 20 in 1966.

    • @elisabethschmerzler963
      @elisabethschmerzler963 Před 3 lety +62

      Steffan Hoffmann No you’re right. The majority of children who perished were between ages 7-10, making them being born from 1956-1959, making them in 2020 61-64. I think it was a mistake by the original comment, however it could be applied to the teachers that died.

    • @STYLESBYLIFEBEAUTYNMORE
      @STYLESBYLIFEBEAUTYNMORE Před 3 lety +1

      This shatters me

    • @virgie4715
      @virgie4715 Před 3 lety +5

      Most of them at least would’ve lived full lives by now, probably still living, enjoying their grandchildren, maybe even great-grandchildren. Sad and not fair. ):

  • @uofc57
    @uofc57 Před 4 lety +2151

    It is shameful that all those members of the NCB kept their jobs

    • @ivandinsmore6217
      @ivandinsmore6217 Před 4 lety +24

      Socialism at it's best.

    • @kevink.7597
      @kevink.7597 Před 4 lety +248

      @@ivandinsmore6217 Respectfully disagree. This smacks of the worse examples of what pure greed will get you. That is a capitalist made and perpetuated problem of the worse kind and outcome.
      The working-class people of the world do not get a free pass in their daily labors for the same people of wealth and privilege that created this mess, covered it up, refused to take responsibility, attacked the victims and their families for wanting fair and just treatment, and they all kept their jobs. And all of those warnings went unanswered or acknowledged?
      Sorry, son of an old rock miner... ☮☯💖😎🙌

    • @lilyfuzz1
      @lilyfuzz1 Před 4 lety +7

      @Laura R Barrow yes trolls are everywhere.

    • @becsocsci621
      @becsocsci621 Před 4 lety +1

      uofc57 typical though.

    • @philldavies7940
      @philldavies7940 Před 4 lety +48

      @@kevink.7597 "Lord" Alf Robens was a Labour politician & minister prior to becoming chairman of the NCB. This happened in 1966, when a Labour government were in power - can't blame them for them tip collapsing, but they were also in charge when that £150k was pilfered from the appeal fund. You;re kidding yourself if you believe a Labour (socialist) government is really any different from a tory (capitalist ) government, ultimately they always prioritise looking after themselves.

  • @51WCDodge
    @51WCDodge Před 4 lety +849

    I can still remeber the look on my Mother's face when she told me what had happned. I lost 2 cousins.

    • @patriciamata7292
      @patriciamata7292 Před 4 lety +48

      So sorry to hear that..

    • @racheldemain1940
      @racheldemain1940 Před 3 lety +12

      I am so sorry , it's so close to you .

    • @51WCDodge
      @51WCDodge Před 3 lety +25

      @@racheldemain1940 it was many years ago. But I will never forget the look on my Mother's face when she told me.

    • @pugman8788
      @pugman8788 Před 3 lety

      51WCDodge how old are you now

    • @astraltae
      @astraltae Před 3 lety +1

      i’m so sorry to hear that.

  • @marielledominiquepasumbal380

    "the miners found themselves digging for their own children." God, that's just horrible.

  • @Eristhenes
    @Eristhenes Před 3 lety +958

    "Corporate negligence toward the working classes." Some things never change.

    • @eddiel7635
      @eddiel7635 Před 3 lety +34

      It was the national coal board, which was state owned so it wasn’t a corporation. Completely the opposite.

    • @Eristhenes
      @Eristhenes Před 3 lety +25

      @@eddiel7635 Point taken. But I might argue a government body is a corporation, of sorts. In this instance, they certainly did not behave any differently.

    • @eddiel7635
      @eddiel7635 Před 3 lety +15

      @@Eristhenes kinda, but corporate negligence usually implies profit before duty of care towards the work force. Corporate profits aren’t the issue here. It’s just negligence due to poor management and abdication of responsibility, which is the curse of state run services.

    • @Eristhenes
      @Eristhenes Před 3 lety +10

      @@eddiel7635 I see your point, as in a Battle of Blair Mountain scenario, but remember the government did confiscate monies from the fund meant for the victims to clean up their mess, literally.
      I guess what I am saying, is often there is little difference between a government and a corporation, as in this instance. Your definition could easily apply to government or corporation; they are often in league.

    • @eddiel7635
      @eddiel7635 Před 3 lety +2

      @@Eristhenes it was 100% negligence that’s for sure

  • @missybarbour6885
    @missybarbour6885 Před 4 lety +1130

    Every CZcams video about this tragedy now has its comments section filled with people just learning about the incident for the first time. As an American, thank you of educating me!

    • @anna_m59
      @anna_m59 Před 4 lety +7

      Missy Barbour agreed!

    • @yevgeniyaleshchenko849
      @yevgeniyaleshchenko849 Před 4 lety +10

      Ukrainian here, completely agree!

    • @marthaemery8402
      @marthaemery8402 Před 4 lety +10

      Look at the Johnstown Flood, similar situation in Pennsylvania in the 1800s.

    • @neilbuckley1613
      @neilbuckley1613 Před 4 lety +22

      I was 12 when this happened, even at that age I was so shocked and numbed , I remember my mum crying her eyes out. It is certainly remembered in the coal mining areas of England and Scotland as well as Wales. To those pushing their ideologies, it could happen in a capitalist or socialist country, corporate neglect occurs in all kinds of regimes. And though those at the top deserved to be prosecuted, the blame permeates further down to local managers as well who connive in doing nothing to save money for their organisation. Respect to those who died, those who lost their loved ones.

    • @CJ-im2uu
      @CJ-im2uu Před 4 lety +3

      I heard of Aberfan from a history magazine. I could not remember the name.

  • @flixchix95
    @flixchix95 Před 4 lety +1498

    I think I remember reading an article about when they were filming the scenes in the town, they had therapists on site to talk to the locals who were there as extras. There was a lot of underlying trauma in the locals and they finally had a chance to talk with a professional about it. It's kinda scary how long they held this tragedy over themselves.

    • @redbird9658
      @redbird9658 Před 4 lety +63

      Yes. I was a child when it happened and it still haunts me and i don't even live in wales. It was a major tragedy.

    • @DOCTORDROTT
      @DOCTORDROTT Před 4 lety +43

      I was in school a mile away when it happened. looking back we were all effected and just had to get on with it in those days. It still hurts 53 years later. Its burned in my memory till the day I die

    • @redbird9658
      @redbird9658 Před 4 lety +1

      @@DOCTORDROTT so true.

    • @AECSRQ
      @AECSRQ Před 4 lety +3

      Grief waits.

    • @51WCDodge
      @51WCDodge Před 4 lety +10

      Acidents and death are the cost of coal. My Farther lost his elder brother to a mining 'Acident' at Tredgar. Eighteen months later, my Grandmother was dead, probably of a brocken heart. The community knew how it felt, and coped within themslves , no need of proffesionals. Life was, what it was.

  • @danic9304
    @danic9304 Před 4 lety +1473

    So many parallels with Grenfell - ignoring the warnings, passing the blame, the insensitivity and broken promises in the aftermath, delay in official response and presence.

    • @2Sugarbears
      @2Sugarbears Před 4 lety +72

      And no one is being punished for that. Plus there are at least 200 other buildings in England covered in that same material as well as in Australia. Check it out. Disasters waiting to happen. And known about by the people in charge.

    • @Ettibridget
      @Ettibridget Před 4 lety +30

      And the Hillsborough disaster.

    • @TheGiantKillers
      @TheGiantKillers Před 4 lety +15

      You could be talking about Summerland, Princess Victoria, Moorgate, Harrow & Wealdstone, Kings Cross, Ibrox, Burnden Park....I bet most people born after 1980 have never heard of most of these.

    • @raydavison4288
      @raydavison4288 Před 4 lety +58

      ...and that has been the way the English upper class has always treated the working class of the British Isles. The working class do all the work & the toffs get the profits while the workers get a pittance & suffer all the consequences. What they (the rich) can't take in legally, they'll steal.

    • @therickpound
      @therickpound Před 4 lety +4

      Ray Davison I suggest think b4 u type, maybe read a bit...

  • @RspbyLmn
    @RspbyLmn Před 4 lety +983

    Everyone on set and at the screening was offered trauma counseling. Wow. Powerful.

    • @bustedfender
      @bustedfender Před 4 lety +108

      Shame the same wasn’t available to the local community at the time.

    • @MoejiiOsmanTV
      @MoejiiOsmanTV Před 4 lety +48

      Netflix is better then the British government...aint that a kick in the head

    • @chelseagirl278
      @chelseagirl278 Před 3 lety +15

      Busted Fender Therapy unfortunately was not common as it is now

    • @crystalawen
      @crystalawen Před 3 lety +5

      ? What ? people at the ‘screening’ were offered trauma counselling ? The world is indeed sick.

    • @chooseyourpoison5105
      @chooseyourpoison5105 Před 3 lety +26

      @@crystalawen No, not sick, just compassionate. Netflix isn't responsible for the lack of support offered to the parents of Aberfan in 1966, that's on the British government of the time. Shouldn't we just appreciate that today PTSD is recognised and help is available?

  • @milhouse14
    @milhouse14 Před 4 lety +775

    Tragedy. Negligence. Incompetence. Lies.
    HBO needs to do a mini-series about this. From the same creators of Chernobyl.

    • @marialuciacardoso6846
      @marialuciacardoso6846 Před 3 lety +2

      Infelizmente faz parte de muitos governos, em todas as épocas ......so sorry....
      What a shame....

    • @uglybetty8747
      @uglybetty8747 Před 3 lety +1

      Well said

    • @calw2939
      @calw2939 Před 3 lety

      If you found this really interesting. Check out the Cheenobyl Podcast. Which had an episode released following the TV episode coming out. It’s really interesting.

    • @fuqiu1591
      @fuqiu1591 Před 3 lety +4

      I think netflix should do it. We can’t get HBO here in the UK

    • @JuriAmari
      @JuriAmari Před 2 lety +2

      Absolutely. Stuff like what happened in Chernobyl and Aberfan can’t happen again

  • @NathTMcC
    @NathTMcC Před 4 lety +891

    I am from Merthyr Tydfil. Those poor children. I sobbed from the beginning of this episode. Health and Safety was simply not being followed and none of those at the top paid for it. Disgusting.

    • @MKPiatkowski
      @MKPiatkowski Před 4 lety +25

      @Kandy Kandy So you're telling someone who lives near Aberfan that they should "get a grip"? You're also discounting the strikes that coal miners had since the 1920s with safety being a primary issue. There were guidelines. The OP is correct in that they weren't followed - that's why the inquest could come to the conclusion they did.

    • @dianesilva1078
      @dianesilva1078 Před 4 lety +19

      Top brass passing the buck for their own selfish benefit. Treating the workers and their families with derision. Often non one takes responsibility, its happening with Grenfell.

    • @lindawoods8326
      @lindawoods8326 Před 4 lety +2

      Usually the case!☘🐾

    • @Elitist20
      @Elitist20 Před 4 lety +5

      My Dad's side of the family emigrated from Merthyr to Australia in the 19th century. I wonder if some of those in Aberfan might have been (admittedly distant) relatives? Mum and Dad visited Britain in 1978, and drove up to Merthyr from Cardiff - which meant going through Aberfan. Even then, she said the place 'gave me the creeps.' I went through there myself in 1989 - by then the hills behind had been cleaned up, and you wouldn't know such a terrible disaster had happened.

    • @christiem.schaefer1374
      @christiem.schaefer1374 Před 3 lety +4

      They never do. It's the same with mine disasters here in the States, and in Mexico.

  • @Ellis01234567890
    @Ellis01234567890 Před 4 lety +886

    I grew up in South Wales and have known about the Aberfan disaster for as long as I can remember, as has everyone else I've known. I was shocked to read so many comments from people saying they had no idea about Aberfan. The rest of the world may have forgotten, but Wales never will.

    • @gillianlazarus1997
      @gillianlazarus1997 Před 4 lety +87

      I don't think its a matter of the rest of the world forgetting but the rest of the world not knowing. In this age of technology yes any tragedy is easily shared. I never knew of this tragedy admittedly it was before my time. I am sorry for the families and the people of Wales that this took place. And its even more sad that after all these years Health and Safety still isn't totally practice all for greed.

    • @rltr6146
      @rltr6146 Před 4 lety +16

      I am also from South Wales. People haven't forgotten, a lot or people just don't know. South Walea have never forgotten and neither has our Queen.

    • @lisamo1013
      @lisamo1013 Před 4 lety +35

      I'm sure if I asked you about Kaprun (150 people dead) or Parndorf (70 people dead) you'd be able to tell me all about it. Should be much easier than Aberfan anyway since they are much more recent tragedies.
      Every country has its tagedies. It's impossible to keep up with every other country's tragedies as well. British tragedies arn't worse than any others either.

    • @crossemily
      @crossemily Před 4 lety +4

      I'm Irish and I remember my parents talking about it - they remembered it as teens

    • @andrewcharley1893
      @andrewcharley1893 Před 4 lety +1

      Ellis ,I remember years and years ago I used to be a fan of BBC’s rock and roll years where the music and news events of any given year were featured.
      1966 issue brought that tragedy to my attention.
      Very sad and shameful.

  • @camo770
    @camo770 Před 4 lety +470

    My great grandfather worked for the st John's ambulance. He went to Aberfan not to rescue the children, but to clean and dress the bodies of the children and teachers who were killed by the sludge. He never once spoke about it and although I never met him, I have so much respect for him

    • @bradhartliep879
      @bradhartliep879 Před 3 lety +21

      My mother is half Welsh and half Scot/Irish and Pict but from America [her family has been here in America for 350 years] and my dad is half Swede, 1/4 Welsh and 1/4 German. I experienced a similar incident with fire and hot metal and 70 dead and 500 injured at Ramstein Air Base, West Germany on 28 August 1988, where one of planes fell into the crowd and the other two crashed at the end of the runway - we spent, I don't know, 7 or 8 hours trying to help the victims that were burned but still alive, until the last one was carried off to the hospital, and moving the dead to a building where they could be identified and put into body bags and prepped for burial .. then we spent I don't know how many days walking the disaster area looking for and marking body parts .. I - some of the people had lost hands, fingers and toes - body parts that were unidentifiable .. I found out about Aberfan 20 years ago .. and every year on or near 21st October I spend a few hours watching the Documentaries about Aberfan and reading news stories about it and remembering all the children that died .. and as long as I'm alive it will never be forgotten by me either .. as long as I'm alive America will remember Aberfan and we will stand in solidarity with the People of Wales and the Families of Aberfan .. ~ Brad

    • @o-o2399
      @o-o2399 Před 3 lety +2

      @@bradhartliep879 kinda weird

    • @arianbyw3819
      @arianbyw3819 Před rokem +3

      My best friends dad was in the police. He had the unenviable task of matching fingerprints and body parts.

  • @solfeggietto8306
    @solfeggietto8306 Před 4 lety +509

    So glad, amidst this horror, that the money of Netflix went to something that was so sorely needed. Sometimes, when someone with money and power in Hollywood decides to tell a story, it can actually benefit something real, like this. All thoughts to the people of Aberfan and the nation of Wales.

    • @celiabarker
      @celiabarker Před 4 lety +25

      Credit to Netflix but also credit to the British. It was written by a Brit and the main producer, Robert Fox, comes from a long line of Thespians. Left Bank Pictures is British too.

    • @solfeggietto8306
      @solfeggietto8306 Před 4 lety +20

      @@celiabarker Oh 100%, was trying to evade crediting the company but moreso the fact that when someone decides to tell a story that a company supports monetarily, sometimes it ends up affecting something real.

    • @michaelhiggins7365
      @michaelhiggins7365 Před 4 lety +3

      What a wonderful comment, well done and thank you.

  • @filmfan4
    @filmfan4 Před 4 lety +641

    It’s just staggering. The sheer dishonesty, incompetence and lack of care of the government.

    • @brendanfoehr5086
      @brendanfoehr5086 Před 4 lety +11

      Sounds familiar

    • @Annie1962
      @Annie1962 Před 4 lety +9

      As it is today. History hasn't taught govt anything

    • @filmfan4
      @filmfan4 Před 4 lety +8

      @Black Sun To be fair to her majesty, I don't think there's a lot she can actually do. If she did, at best government might simply take away any remaining legal power she might have, and at worst it may cause another Civil War.

    • @filmfan4
      @filmfan4 Před 4 lety +8

      Black Sun Though I wouldn’t put it as strongly as you do, yes, we do have to put up with it.
      However, if the monarchy was abolished, as private citizens they would still have a huge amount of wealth and property. To some degree they might even enjoy living the high life but without the public’s sense of ownership and the unwelcome attention that goes with it.
      I feel sorry for Elizabeth, it must be so hard having children who go off the rails in spectacular fashion.

    • @yevgeniyaleshchenko849
      @yevgeniyaleshchenko849 Před 4 lety +15

      @Black Sun Oh fuck off, brainless brat. Way to turn this around just to shit all over 94-year-old woman and whine... I am from Ukraine but even I know that it's NOT the job of the monarchy and the Queen, they cover diplomatic and ceremonial missions!

  • @MackerelCat
    @MackerelCat Před 4 lety +271

    Worth remembering Aberfan every time someone says “it’s health and safety gone mad”.

    • @marthaanderson2656
      @marthaanderson2656 Před 4 lety +19

      @Kandy Kandy what MackerelCat means is today, people winge about OSHA and H&S but without them, workers and communities are exposed to situations like Aberfan

    • @jonl8509
      @jonl8509 Před 4 lety +13

      Well said, MackrelCat. It is easy to mock H&S, but the fact that industrial accident rates have plummeted (per 100k of workers) ever since H&S legislation was introduced, proves that it works.

    • @MsKathleenb
      @MsKathleenb Před 4 lety +14

      Every OSHA regulation was bought with blood.

    • @annieinwonderland
      @annieinwonderland Před 3 lety

      @@MsKathleenb yes and some hospital procedures..

  • @Georgia7Pap
    @Georgia7Pap Před 4 lety +466

    uhhh that scene where the queen goes to one of the survivor's houses and the guy tells her Mr whatever his name was lost 7 family members. 3 children and 4 nephews was it? can you even imagine? losing 3 children and then also your brother (maybe) losing 4 children. i can't imagine how those families kept going.

    • @ginajones1003
      @ginajones1003 Před 4 lety +36

      Georgia Papadopoulou Some relatives did commit suicide

    • @ginajones1003
      @ginajones1003 Před 4 lety +73

      Kandy Kandy It is expected that people will die during War therefore it is easier to cope with. People do not expect their children to die at school in Britain and therefore it was a unimaginable shock. Some villagers did fear that the tip would land on the school but no one could have possibly expected that so many children would die.

    • @trishayamada807
      @trishayamada807 Před 4 lety +5

      Gina Jones kandy sounds like the type that men are more important that everyone else.

    • @carlamarlene2927
      @carlamarlene2927 Před 4 lety +1

      Anger and resentment is terrific fuel under those circumstanses

    • @deblynn355
      @deblynn355 Před 4 lety +9

      Kandy Kandy stop yelling

  • @CymruJedi
    @CymruJedi Před 3 lety +238

    As a Welshman I have to say this episode was superb. It is not often we get to see Wales portrayed in any film or television and this was dealt with such care and attention that brought me and my family to tears. My work colleague lost family in this disaster and she watched the episode and she said it was dealt with very well

    • @AristoCat221
      @AristoCat221 Před rokem +3

      I am from Macedonia. And I am 30 years old never heard of this tragedy until I saw this episode.
      When I saw it I had to pause it at some point it was just too hard. It was the hardest thing I have watched on television so far. 116 children. Precious children died. As a father it killed me. I will go and pay my respect to those that died one day.

  • @kaylamiscellaneous1986
    @kaylamiscellaneous1986 Před 2 lety +123

    I’m from NZ and had never heard of the Aberfan disaster. As soon as I saw this episode of the Crown I vowed I would go to Aberfan one day to pay my respects. I visited the Memorial Garden today. It’s such a beautiful and tranquil place now, with trees, flowers, butterflies and a little playground. You would never know that such an awful tragedy had occurred there. It was a sobering experience walking around the garden. RIP xxx

    • @DangerousDavies2008
      @DangerousDavies2008 Před 2 lety +8

      That’s awesome what a nice thing to do. The Welsh are very fond of Kiwis.

    • @ClubSoda98
      @ClubSoda98 Před rokem +8

      This comment was posted so long ago but it really moved me. I'm a Welshman and to hear that you came from so far to pay your respects has put a tear in my eye. Diolch yn fawr iawn, Kayla. Thank you.

    • @matthewprice2626
      @matthewprice2626 Před 6 měsíci +1

      Bless you.

    • @MrKmd511
      @MrKmd511 Před 23 dny

      @@DangerousDavies2008 Who's not?

  • @kitm141
    @kitm141 Před 2 lety +102

    My grandfather was one of the survivors pulled out of the school. He wasn’t a child, he was a passerby heading home from his mining shift to his wife. He was a lovely, gentle man but even when I was small I knew something wasn’t right with him. He was anxious all the time and if any of us were late coming home, we would walk up the garden path to see him on the doorstep, waiting for us, wringing his hands. I didn’t know why he was like this under after his death, he was just Granda. Now, as an adult, I can recognise that he was carrying guilt and trauma with him all of his life. The fact nobody was prosecuted or even sacked for this is an insult to my family, their community and my grandfather Idris. I understand the Queen feels she should have visited earlier and yes, she probably should have, but my Grandad would never hear a bad word about her until the day he died.

  • @debramoss2267
    @debramoss2267 Před 2 lety +11

    One of my earliest memories was being little and my mum ironing watching the TV, seeing the black heap and rescuers with stretchers, she was sobbing and I went to hold her hand and ask what's wrong, mummy, she knelt down and said, "it's just sad, sweetheart, it's very sad for some mummies." I remember she had a handkerchief with orange around the edge, wiping her tears.
    Even at that very young age I knew something very big and very horrible had happened.
    I watched this episode, both my partner and I sobbed throughout.
    An unimaginable horror. Impossible to get my head around, I know some parents have gone to be with them and they all will be together again, but it must have been the longest life without them.

  • @jonnigerlach417
    @jonnigerlach417 Před 4 lety +147

    I am from aberfan, my nan still lives opposite the memorial garden. My grandfather never spoke much of the disaster but was nan told me it haunted him for years. He was helping and dealt with many children who had died...many he knew due to being friends of their parents. My nan could not watch this episode bringing back a lot of memories. The disaster has however brought Aberfan an even closer knit community as most families have been affected.

    • @bradhartliep879
      @bradhartliep879 Před 3 lety +4

      My mother is half Welsh and half Scot/Irish and Pict but from America [her family has been here in America for 350 years] and my dad is half Swede, 1/4 Welsh and 1/4 German. I experienced a similar incident with fire and hot metal and 70 dead and 500 injured at Ramstein Air Base, West Germany on 28 August 1988, where one of planes fell into the crowd and the other two crashed at the end of the runway - we spent, I don't know, 7 or 8 hours trying to help the victims that were burned but still alive, until the last one was carried off to the hospital, and moving the dead to a building where they could be identified and put into body bags and prepped for burial .. then we spent I don't know how many days walking the disaster area looking for and marking body parts .. I - some of the people had lost hands, fingers and toes - body parts that were unidentifiable .. I found out about Aberfan 20 years ago .. and every year on or near 21st October I spend a few hours watching the Documentaries about Aberfan and reading news stories about it and remembering all the children that died .. and as long as I'm alive it will never be forgotten by me either .. as long as I'm alive America will remember Aberfan and we will stand in solidarity with the People of Wales and the Families of Aberfan .. ~ Brad

    • @bernadettespeakman355
      @bernadettespeakman355 Před 3 lety +4

      @@bradhartliep879 thank you. Your experiences must have been terrible. Still you have the compassion for the suffering of others so far away. That episode brought it all back to me. I was a child at the time living in a mining town with a coal mining father and several uncles the same. It brought the danger to myself and my many cousins that our dads faced every shift they went down.

    • @kaylamiscellaneous1986
      @kaylamiscellaneous1986 Před 2 lety +5

      I’m from NZ and had never heard of the Aberfan disaster. As soon as I saw this episode of the Crown I vowed I would go to Aberfan one day to pay my respects. I visited the Memorial Garden today. It’s such a beautiful and tranquil place now, with trees, flowers, butterflies and a little playground. You would never know that such an awful tragedy had occurred there. It was a sobering experience walking around the garden. RIP xxx

  • @amiciprocul8501
    @amiciprocul8501 Před 4 lety +513

    I wouldn't wish this hell on anyone.

    • @starsfalldown1234567
      @starsfalldown1234567 Před 4 lety +11

      I would. Especially republicans and Trump supporters, Neo Nazis etc. Republicans don't believe in climate change and would put profits over safety.

    • @yevgeniyaleshchenko849
      @yevgeniyaleshchenko849 Před 4 lety +37

      @@starsfalldown1234567 So you wish their kids to suffer for their parents' lives? You are worse than all those people you mentioned, scumbag...💩💩💩

    • @harrison1430
      @harrison1430 Před 4 lety +13

      FlowerPower123 what a waste of blood and organs you are

    • @starsfalldown1234567
      @starsfalldown1234567 Před 4 lety +2

      @@yevgeniyaleshchenko849 lol ok incel be ignorant 👏

    • @starsfalldown1234567
      @starsfalldown1234567 Před 4 lety

      @@harrison1430 honey ... Just JUMP

  • @JessamynRising
    @JessamynRising Před rokem +14

    I'm a teacher in the US. The scene where the teacher looks up and sees the slurry about to collapse into the classroom hit really hard. I thought to myself, Jesus Christ. To see that coming and know there's nothing at all you can do to protect your students. We train for school shooter drills here, but never for something like THIS.
    Then I thought, for the millionth time: how messed up is it that we have to train for school shooters?
    Then later on, during the part about the NCB's culpability and dodging of responsibility, I was filled with the same rage against them that so, so many Americans feel against the National Rifle Association which functions similarly and exerts tremendous influence in politics.
    People and corporations who prioritize their own success over children's lives can go straight to Hell.

  • @joshfd1743
    @joshfd1743 Před 4 lety +211

    I Live in Cardiff, the capital of South Wales just 1 Hour drive from Aberfan. Couple of months back I visited PantGlas Primary school and all I could say is that the experience was spine-chilling to see all of the graves of the children and teachers, god bless to those who lost their lives that day.

  • @heaintloveu
    @heaintloveu Před 4 lety +81

    I live in the USA and was not aware such a thing had happened. I applaud The Crown for bringing to light to a wider audience such tragic events.

  • @demonhunter4423
    @demonhunter4423 Před 4 lety +198

    I grew up in Ireland, one of my history teachers touched on this and then never again. She said she couldn't because it brought her to tears. I never understood why. I was a kid after all. Years later, I watched this and I was in tears. I finally understood why. I am a parent myself so I can only image and maybe not imagine good enough the pain these families went through.

  • @nicolemcintosh4882
    @nicolemcintosh4882 Před 3 lety +30

    my mom called me after she watched this episode just sobbing and she said to me that she finally understood and realized why my grandfather (her dad) cried when this hit the news, she was about 13 years old and didn't understand why. My grandfather left Scotland after a terrible mining accident that left most of his friends dead, he had that day off and wasn't near the mine after that incident his parents sent him to Canada to live a better life then a coal miner and this just brought back all the memories of that day for him.

  • @SeddieWeddie
    @SeddieWeddie Před 4 lety +161

    I learned about this in a British history class. The second I saw the title of Aberfan I got a chill

  • @NiamhCreates
    @NiamhCreates Před 4 lety +112

    This was by far the best episode of the season. I was in tears.

    • @millennialfalcon8958
      @millennialfalcon8958 Před 4 lety +12

      As Prince Phillip said, when the village sang their hymn in unison, everyone wept. When the Queen listened to the recording and shed a single tear, it couldn't have been more powerful. That could be the episode that wins Olivia Colman an Emmy.

  • @hughgrection4205
    @hughgrection4205 Před 4 lety +40

    I was 15 and along with my family we watched the live broadcast. I doubt if there was one mother in all of the the UK who did not weep that night. I recall my mother sobbing and saying "oh those poor mothers".

    • @RockyDave
      @RockyDave Před 3 lety +1

      And parents are still devastated 54 years later.

  • @carucath97
    @carucath97 Před 4 lety +282

    It’s sad this reminds me of Grenfell (government insensitivity, ignoring years of complaints and the culpable evading responsibility).

    • @gigibeal
      @gigibeal Před 4 lety

      oh gosh, i completely forgot about that happening. I remember it was all anyone in america could talk about for some time

    • @lynne3124
      @lynne3124 Před 3 lety +2

      And nothing been done about Grenfell in Britain's richest council containing the uber rich the Duke of Westminster. But then it was all the Liverpool supporters fault in 1989. No one punished.

  • @isamcc1831
    @isamcc1831 Před 4 lety +25

    My grandfather, Dadci, was one of those miners who travelled to help. He had been badly injured in a coal mining accident 10 years previously, he had helped clear buildings & recoveries in London during the Blitz, but this he said was the worst incident he had encountered. It was heartbreaking & soul destroying. The NCB had never been well thought of but after Aberfan... fury doesn't come close...

  • @andresland182
    @andresland182 Před 4 lety +84

    The disaster is horrendous, it breaks my heart. But, God, the aftermath! The way families were treated, no one being hold accountable, the NCB not taking responsibility...the second disaster.

    • @maryhlad5277
      @maryhlad5277 Před 3 lety +2

      The NCB not taking responsibility for the Aberfan disaster is insult to injury to the families of the children and adults killed.

  • @daidai1625
    @daidai1625 Před 4 lety +62

    I can’t imagine the pain of those parents digging for their children’s body.. so hard for me to watch that episode. Can’t imagine it really happened.

  • @WhatsOccuring
    @WhatsOccuring Před 4 lety +41

    As a Welsh man I been living in America for 5 years. I watched this episode the other day and it broke my heart and hit home for me.

    • @bradhartliep879
      @bradhartliep879 Před 3 lety

      My mother is half Welsh and half Scot/Irish and Pict but from America [her family has been here in America for 350 years] and my dad is half Swede, 1/4 Welsh and 1/4 German. I experienced a similar incident with fire and hot metal and 70 dead and 500 injured at Ramstein Air Base, West Germany on 28 August 1988, where one of planes fell into the crowd and the other two crashed at the end of the runway - we spent, I don't know, 7 or 8 hours trying to help the victims that were burned but still alive, until the last one was carried off to the hospital, and moving the dead to a building where they could be identified and put into body bags and prepped for burial .. then we spent I don't know how many days walking the disaster area looking for and marking body parts .. I - some of the people had lost hands, fingers and toes - body parts that were unidentifiable .. I found out about Aberfan 20 years ago .. and every year on or near 21st October I spend a few hours watching the Documentaries about Aberfan and reading news stories about it and remembering all the children that died .. and as long as I'm alive it will never be forgotten by me either .. as long as I'm alive America will remember Aberfan and we will stand in solidarity with the People of Wales and the Families of Aberfan .. ~ Brad

  • @CymruEmergencyResponder
    @CymruEmergencyResponder Před 3 lety +16

    A dark day in our history. My family were miners at Llay Main in North Wales. They, with many from their shift, immediately stopped production and drove to Aberfan in the South to help dig. Miners responded from all over Wales and made their way to Aberfan by any means necessary: car, lorry, bus, barge and walking.

  • @silverstarlightproductions1292

    I couldn't finish this episode in one sitting. I was crying so bad I had to turn it off and wait to finish it when I was in a better frame of mind.

    • @Sabs2286
      @Sabs2286 Před 4 lety +18

      Same and to be honest I’d never heard of this tragedy before that episode. I have suffered 2 miscarriages and I’m soo sensitive to this my kids were also in the room and I was thinking image being in that position! Horrifying! 😭😭😭😭

    • @NostalgiCrazy
      @NostalgiCrazy Před 3 lety +3

      @@Sabs2286 So sorry for your losses 💔 It was my first time learning about it too, as well as the Great Smog of 1952. Such awful tragedies caused by human negligence 😞

    • @mehboobmundiya4483
      @mehboobmundiya4483 Před 3 lety +2

      Same. I’m crying from beginning to the end. So sad 😭 I need to to visit Aberfan

  • @MissAspka
    @MissAspka Před 4 lety +78

    I remember reading an article about Aberfan a few years ago. Then I saw the opening scene with the rain pouring and the classroom, and felt sick as I realised what was going to happen and that the episode was about this disaster. It took me a week before I could bring myself to continue watching.
    Watching, I felt as though I’d been kicked in the guts. It was horrific just as a viewer - I can’t even imagine the horror of being there at the time and experiencing it.
    My heart goes out so deeply to the children, their parents, their families and the villagers of Aberfan who were affected then and now.

    • @carlamarlene2927
      @carlamarlene2927 Před 4 lety +2

      Ya those guys on the hill? Seeing it happen is the worst thing imaginable

    • @claudetteh67
      @claudetteh67 Před 3 lety

      I saw the title "Aberfan" and thought how familiar the word sounded. I was told about this terrible loss of life by an English friend, many, many years ago. As the camera pulled out to show the small country town beneath a mountainous coal tip, I knew exactly why the town name rang a bell in my mind. I had to stop watching at that moment, the events of that day just too horrible to contemplate. It took me days to resume watching. So very sad - and worse - need never have happened.

    • @cobbler9113
      @cobbler9113 Před rokem

      Same, I remember hearing about it although the name kept alluding me. When I was watching this with my then girlfriend (now wife), she didn’t know about the disaster but I knew what was going to happen. Such a sad but fantastic episode.

  • @Boudicca165
    @Boudicca165 Před 4 lety +124

    I remember the horror of that day so clearly and 'The Crown' replicated that sense of utter catastrophe and appalling heartbreak so perfectly I cried most of the way through it.
    I grew up in a mining community and felt an affinity with those poor families. Their loss and grief was still unimaginable - how they survived is beyond me. It stands as testament to the strength and determination of the Welsh people. Their loss just cannot be calculated, the sadness is beyond comprehension.
    Everyone involved in the making of the episode is to be congratulated, but I have to admit, I would not wish to watch it again.

  • @indiana146
    @indiana146 Před 3 lety +15

    I spoke to a miner freind of my parents who was one of first on scene he told me i did not ask
    He said he dug and handed cold limp little bodies out of the school
    As he spoke i started to cry i was 36 at time im 56 now im crying as i write im very emotional
    He said adrian its ok lad to cry
    Worst part he said was knowing it shouldnt have happened
    When hed finished speaking i gave him a hug and as he sat there i could see the empty haunted look in his face
    He said memories of that day never go away

  • @DRM1891
    @DRM1891 Před rokem +7

    As a Welshman watching The Crown - and knowing the Aberfan episode was there - I was so shocked at the number of my friends/ work colleagues who also watched it that had never even heard of the tragedy.
    As a child growing up in South Wales - in Barry, which isn’t all that far away - I always knew what it was. Just the word ‘Aberfan’ alone was enough to know what someone was referring to.
    I couldn’t believe that some people I knew, aged in their twenties and thirties, just didn’t know about it at all.

  • @KristynDodge
    @KristynDodge Před rokem +7

    Easily the most haunting episode of any television show I've ever seen. The fact that counseling was offered to the survivors and their relatives during the making of this episode makes it also one of the best episodes.

  • @clolyn06x95
    @clolyn06x95 Před 4 lety +280

    it’s not the “rains fault or the ppls fault” it’s the governments fault for not listening to the public’s!!!

    • @crystalawen
      @crystalawen Před 3 lety +10

      Exactly - it was that bastard Robens fault. It was his responsibility ; he should have been charged with manslaughter.

    • @chrissyart7984
      @chrissyart7984 Před 2 lety

      The coal miners& Government should've at least paid for the funerals& compensation to families, Its DISCUSTING! 🌹🕊R.I.P to all the precious children🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏

  • @Ettibridget
    @Ettibridget Před 4 lety +74

    I had never heard of Aberfan either. However, there was a similar tragedy in Denmark that I guess no one outside Denmark have heard of either. In 1945 the British Royal Air Force accidentally bombed the Institute Jeanne d'Arc (The French School) in Copenhagen, causing the death of 86 children and 18 adults. And wounding 102. There were similar scenes with parents in disbelief and distress - crying, screaming, panicking and digging with their bare hands.
    Sadly, we live in a non-perfect world, where accidents and tragedies like these do happen.
    Edit: This disaster was called Operation Carthage, google it.

    • @becsocsci621
      @becsocsci621 Před 4 lety +5

      Ettibridget oh gosh that’s a hideous thought. Those poor parents. How very sad. 😢

    • @helenadasilva9371
      @helenadasilva9371 Před 4 lety +3

      I'm from Denmark, and lived 8 km from Copenhagen
      Even I haven't heard about it, that is so awful!

    • @mogznwaz
      @mogznwaz Před 4 lety +3

      Sometimes liberating countries from fascism erupts in innocents being caught in the crossfire. I imagine the pilots were traumatised when they realised what they'd done. But it was a war, I'm sure most Danes understand that.

    • @luisalemus
      @luisalemus Před 4 lety +2

      That is so sad, I did not know about this

    • @Cityheart221
      @Cityheart221 Před 4 lety

      How horrible! I wonder how many other such cover ups exist. Thank you for sharing

  • @fjs5059
    @fjs5059 Před 3 lety +19

    I'm German, I don't watch the show, and heart from that tragedy for the first time. I can't describe how deeply shook I am. I can't Express how deeply sorry I am for the loss.
    I don't know how to feel for learning about this tragedy this way. But thank you so much for that video nonetheless, for I know now finally!

    • @RockyDave
      @RockyDave Před 3 lety +1

      Those are lovely expressions. Thank you.

  • @brontewcat
    @brontewcat Před 4 lety +39

    I think in many ways this documentary was even more moving than the episode in The Crown. Very well done.

  • @MakedaPhillips
    @MakedaPhillips Před 4 lety +57

    I'm American so I'd never heard of this and dsmn did it make me cry. Austerity kills. I can't believe the board basically got away with it.

    • @halimboy9130
      @halimboy9130 Před 4 lety +2

      Makeda Phillips as for me who didn’t live in UK also unaware of this until i watch the series. I cried most of the time, especially when Peter call princess Margaret telling a story of what happen. It is unfair those bloody money sucker get away with murder

    • @MakedaPhillips
      @MakedaPhillips Před 4 lety

      @@halimboy9130 yes that part with Margaret and lord Snowden made me so sad.

    • @meeeka
      @meeeka Před 4 lety +1

      Makeda Phillips Why? US corporations get away with worse all the time!

    • @yewisemountaingoat528
      @yewisemountaingoat528 Před 4 lety

      @@firstnamett4656 Ask India and other colonies how well they were treated under the British East India Company and later the British Raj. And if India was the only example but the colonies were stripped clean. Do you honestly think which government was in power had anything to do with this disaster or how it was handled. Hundreds of thousands lost their jobs and ability to sustain themselves economically during the Thatcher years but you don't call *that* a disaster which made hundreds of thousands suffer for decades??

  • @candabrel62
    @candabrel62 Před 4 lety +7

    I was at school in England when this happened. We all prayed for the lost children and I remember so clearly being really disturbed by the tragedy. It was on the news a lot, and the images of crying miners sitting helplessly when nothing more could be done will haunt me forever.

  • @elliotttalksf1825
    @elliotttalksf1825 Před 4 lety +46

    Thanks for this Netflix! Such an important issue to raise. The disaster isn’t recognised as much as it should..

  • @deathbycheese850
    @deathbycheese850 Před 3 lety +6

    My mum taught me about Aberfan when I was a child. She was 12yo at the time, and remembers it clearly. We are from Scotland. My mother's family were from Ayrshire, in particular, a mining villiage called Muirkirk. My mum's family lost a few people to colliery accidents, and the graveyard is full of graves marked "death in colliery accident". I guess that's why Aberfan always stood out for her.

  • @gracielovesskz
    @gracielovesskz Před 3 lety +18

    I live kind of near Aberfan and it is horrible to think of how so many innocent children and adults were killed after the coal board had already been warned.

  • @heatherphillips3270
    @heatherphillips3270 Před 4 lety +68

    The Welsh remember and it will never never been forgotten. The coal broad knew it was not safe but money talk...every year on 21 October we stop and think of the village and wonder what dreams the children never fulfilled.

    • @manmaje3596
      @manmaje3596 Před 3 lety

      So unbelievably sad.

    • @bradhartliep879
      @bradhartliep879 Před 3 lety

      My mother is half Welsh and half Scot/Irish and Pict but from America [her family has been here in America for 350 years] and my dad is half Swede, 1/4 Welsh and 1/4 German. I experienced a similar incident with fire and hot metal and 70 dead and 500 injured at Ramstein Air Base, West Germany on 28 August 1988, where one of planes fell into the crowd and the other two crashed at the end of the runway - we spent, I don't know, 7 or 8 hours trying to help the victims that were burned but still alive, until the last one was carried off to the hospital, and moving the dead to a building where they could be identified and put into body bags and prepped for burial .. then we spent I don't know how many days walking the disaster area looking for and marking body parts .. I - some of the people had lost hands, fingers and toes - body parts that were unidentifiable .. I found out about Aberfan 20 years ago .. and every year on or near 21st October I spend a few hours watching the Documentaries about Aberfan and reading news stories about it and remembering all the children that died .. and as long as I'm alive it will never be forgotten by me either .. as long as I'm alive America will remember Aberfan and we will stand in solidarity with the People of Wales and the Families of Aberfan .. ~ Brad

  • @trfreitas1983
    @trfreitas1983 Před 4 lety +22

    You know, Brazil recently went through two of this kind of disaster (both in my state, Minas Gerais; Mariana and Brumadinho cities). And watching this episode I could understand how corporations, since always, don't care about civilians who died in these tragedies. Tragedies provoked, inducted by their greed, irresponsibility, imprudence or just lack of humanity. It doesn't matter where you are: May people from Aberfan, Mariana and Brumadinho find one day some justice.

  • @eoghannp8619
    @eoghannp8619 Před 4 lety +180

    Thought-provoking. Aberfan in 1966 - somewhat similarly to Lockerbie over twenty years later in 1988 - is one of those scars on British society that has never quite healed. An unexpected and sudden event that took many lives, and affected many others. There is a well-known press photo from the Queen’s visit to Aberfan eight days after the event - interestingly, not shown here - with a deeply pained expression on her face. It is one of the very few times when Her Majesty has shown this degree of emotion in public. If Aberfan is indeed is one of the Queen’s biggest regrets of her reign, then that it is entirely believable.

    • @kateramsay4380
      @kateramsay4380 Před 4 lety +5

      Eoghann P. It’s hardly surprising that this tragedy hit her hard, as the children who died were the same ages as her own children. She was well able to put herself in the parents’ places and empathise with them.

    • @jeilou171
      @jeilou171 Před 4 lety +2

      I’m amazed that she didn’t use her influence to give some peace to those people and ask for responsibilities 🤬

    • @janetbailey7115
      @janetbailey7115 Před 3 lety

      Thus was a tradegy that affected the whole country and is possibly one of the most well known along with Lovkerbie and Dunblane.The Stockport plane crash is another disaster rarely mentioned so not as well known, or the Bradford football ground fire.

    • @racheldemain1940
      @racheldemain1940 Před 3 lety +1

      I remember Lockerbie. It was so close to Christmas. Such a horrendous Tragedy for you all.

    • @MPbmfm
      @MPbmfm Před 3 lety +1

      She might be a queen but British royals don't have that kind of power, I think she did her very best (and still does) showing the people of Aberfan that she remembers them and their pain

  • @silviagajsak9432
    @silviagajsak9432 Před 4 lety +18

    I'm studying to be a primary school teacher - seeing this whole episode left me sobbing and crying throughout the whole episode. It is so hard to watch and deal with, I can't imagine how it must be for the people affected

  • @v4y2k.x34
    @v4y2k.x34 Před 3 lety +9

    Sadly,one of my relatives sadly died in the attack,she was only 9 and I have never met her before.
    My great aunt (her sister) is an MBE and she’s done interviews about the loss of her sister,she was only 11..

  • @aloponce1677
    @aloponce1677 Před 4 lety +50

    I cried so bad, I didn't know something like that happened (I'm from Mexico) that part of the series was so sad.

  • @Vesnicie
    @Vesnicie Před 4 lety +52

    I knew the history of Aberfan so I was prepared, at least in theory, when I saw the episode title. But it was still like being clubbed in the gut. Those poor parents.

    • @carlamarlene2927
      @carlamarlene2927 Před 4 lety +2

      I didn't know about it til I watched it, but as soon as I saw working class I knew it was something terrible about to happen.

  • @keepmurmuring
    @keepmurmuring Před 3 lety +8

    I cried during the episode, but watching this and knowing the details make me cry even harder. So heartbreaking.

  • @judithcotton79
    @judithcotton79 Před 3 lety +10

    This was the saddest thing I’ve seen in the history of British royal family. I do agree when the queen said “the last thing they want at this time is a queen to be there” can you imagine so much work force would get diverted just to take care of the royal protocols

  • @joeya5147
    @joeya5147 Před 4 lety +98

    This was really well made, I love these videos

  • @berlinocelot
    @berlinocelot Před 2 lety +4

    I visited the memorial garden for the children of Aberfan with my mum and my sister. The gravestones were in their own way, quite beautiful as I recall. I think I was too young to really understand where I was but I remember looking back to see my mum crying. She was a young girl when it happened and remembers watching the people trying to did the children out.

  • @maxr5799
    @maxr5799 Před 4 lety +9

    I’m an American, but my ancestor were coal miners from Pennsylvania. My grandfather’s father died in a mine collapse. With the help of my grandmother who’s grandfather was also a coal miner and was born in Wrexham, he wrote a letter to the people of Aberfan.

  • @cian2802
    @cian2802 Před 2 lety +5

    As someone from South Wales I’m very grateful more people are learning about this tragedy ❤️

  • @valproton3841
    @valproton3841 Před rokem +3

    It traumatised the entire country. My family was an ordinary working class family living in Kent. I was a little 10 year old kid at the time. It was the first news story that shocked me to my core that such a terrible thing could happen in my country to little kids my age while in school. My whole family were shocked, my dad stood up with his mouth open, my mum went white as a sheet her hands over her mouth and crying her eyes out, my sister ran upstairs screaming and hid herself under her bed blankets and wouldn't come out for hours. I just sat there watching the news report in horror, my mum said I went white as a sheet and acted like a rabbit caught in the headlights. I've never forgotten and I never will.

  • @Nintendosa
    @Nintendosa Před 3 lety +5

    I am just now learning and binge watching this series for the first time. This episode from Season 3 is why I’m even here...
    This episode was so heart wrenching and impactful that it made viewers like me want to learn more about the tragedy and look up clips like this one on CZcams. Thank you all so much for sharing.

  • @marikotrue3488
    @marikotrue3488 Před 4 lety +24

    I never knew about this tragedy until I saw it dramatized on The Crown. I assumed that those responsible had been punished, or at least removed. This is a text book case of incompetence leading to tragedy. As we (humans) never seem to remember such things, I am glad that even a service dedicated to entertainment is around to remind all of us where stupidity, plus arrogance, plus power can lead us.

    • @heatherphillips3270
      @heatherphillips3270 Před 4 lety

      No nothing what done to the people in charged stayed in their jobs. After all only working class children were killed and Welsh at that too.

  • @zoltan902
    @zoltan902 Před 4 lety +6

    Possibly my favourite episode from S3 - told with such poignancy, but without any cheap emotional indulgences. Was worth the price of the Netflix subscription alone.

  • @happycommuter3523
    @happycommuter3523 Před 4 lety +24

    Wonderful episode, fantastic video. Episode 3 is among the best hours of television I've ever watched. The callow, unfeeling response by the government, their refusal to take responsibility, is infuriating, even decades later. The poor people of that town. What a staggering, heartbreaking, and entirely preventable loss of young life.

  • @wasdwasd609
    @wasdwasd609 Před 2 lety +4

    10 friends and family we knew died. I only live nearby and it hits so hard. I can't imagine what its like for those living there. Tragedies really do hit differently when they're local.

  • @bluekitty3731
    @bluekitty3731 Před 4 lety +10

    I'm a American and was only six when this happened, but for some reason I knew the story, so when this episode of The Crown started I knew what was to come, but it was still a gut wrenching thing to watch.

  • @majestical15
    @majestical15 Před 3 lety +4

    When i first saw the children practicing their singing, I had an ominous feeling. I just couldn't help but feel the suspense...
    Once I saw the slurry hit the classroom, I just yelled "NOOOO!!!!".....
    I always shut up when the whistle blows. The silence is heartbreaking. When the town sang the hymn....i cried 😞💔

  • @nickinportland
    @nickinportland Před rokem +3

    I’m so glad this show was so popular. As an American I never heard of this and a lot of other things on the show.

  • @katydidiy
    @katydidiy Před 4 lety +11

    I was 17 at the time and remember how I felt upon hearing the news that evening. It was a similar feeling when JFK was assassinated. I watched my childhood fade each time.

  • @cassieoz1702
    @cassieoz1702 Před 2 lety +1

    I was seven years old, living in the north-east of England (coal mine country) and have never forgotten

  • @lilgit9969
    @lilgit9969 Před rokem +2

    My Dad was a driller back then and at that time was working checking land between Swindon and Bristol as the M4 was being extended. His job was to drill into the 4 corners of where bridges would cross the motorway to make sure there were no cavities that would make the bridges collapse at some point in the future. His team received a telegram from London urging them to be ready to go to Aberfan that same day. He and his team had no idea of what had happened but were ready to go. The helicopter came and picked them up and they arrived in the evening. He described it as extremely damp and misty, so damp you could see water droplets hanging in the air from the arc lights that were lighting the area for rescue workers to dig in. A rig was airlifted into place at the top corner of the tip the following morning and it was his job to drill down to see if there had been any more water build up inside the slag heap. He said it was an intensely sad and very spooky time and it has stayed with him all these years and he's 75 years old now.

  • @stervma8029
    @stervma8029 Před 4 lety +19

    This is fantastic, thank you for explaining this awful tragedy, like most of the younger generation I didn't know about this before I saw it in the crown. These kind of videos are great as they explain the full accurate story without the drama of the show.

  • @donnaheard24
    @donnaheard24 Před 4 lety +13

    Those poor miners having to go to work daily in fear knowing the dangers but had no choice as they had to make a living to feed their family's...awful that their voices and concerns were just ignored....shocking ♥️♥️

  • @Holly-bj9bd
    @Holly-bj9bd Před 3 lety +2

    I only just watched this episode and as a Welsh girl, what really hit home with me is the sense of community in South Wales towns that is incomparable to anywhere else. Through anything, we always pull together and look after one another. ♥️🏴󠁧󠁢󠁷󠁬󠁳󠁿

  • @sumame47
    @sumame47 Před rokem +2

    I read about Aberfan some time ago and was amazed as to the insensitivity shown, by the NCB, towards the mourning. They tried to lie their way out of taking responsibility. Reminds me of so many tragedies that have happened in my 61 years of life. As a mom, I know the feeling of losing your child suddenly and tragically. I'm glad they have a memorial garden honoring the victims.

  • @bturner331
    @bturner331 Před 4 lety +10

    I’ve never heard about this tragedy until watching the crown, but it amazes me that the ncb refused to take blame when the tip was over 5 times higher then it should’ve been... So many warning signs were there, not to mention the people of Aberfan sending warnings... And for the ncb to take money from the fund that was raised, disgusting

  • @hera7884
    @hera7884 Před 3 lety +3

    116 Beautiful souls. Souls that could have changed the world. All lost because of negligence and lack of precautions. I hope something like this never happens again

  • @mimimualdn5419
    @mimimualdn5419 Před 4 lety +30

    This is heartbreaking , it’s amazing how these companies get away with negligence.....Grenfell comes to mind

    • @johngalt2880
      @johngalt2880 Před 4 lety +4

      Yes. State-owned companies never get held to account. ...

    • @johngalt2880
      @johngalt2880 Před 4 lety

      Yes.... consider the billion dollar fines handed down to BP, SCB, BNP Paribas, UBS, BAE.... the list is endless...
      Doubtless more could be done but compare this with the public sector where noone has ever lost a job...

    • @yewisemountaingoat528
      @yewisemountaingoat528 Před 4 lety

      @@johngalt2880 What about Boeing?? Listen. I don't know what world you live in but most American corporations have some serious government protection even though they're private companies. Fact is they dictate much of the government politics - especially foreign politics - than the government dictates theirs. You have the roles of master and slave mixed up.
      And what about the GM government bailout? The Detroit auto industry enjoyed government protection for decades which is why they kept producing their models as if it was still the 1960's.
      And the Army? Who holds them responsible? As long as they win they can shoot up whoever they want provided the war doesn't drag on for too long. The army is a "state company" paid by tax dollars. But thanks to them you even have your "wealth" because without the state you'd find it a good deal more difficult to privately finance "protection".
      Your false dichotomy view of reality and world politics is unfit for anybody above the age of 14.
      State = evil
      Free market = good
      The world is more gray than you think.

    • @johngalt2880
      @johngalt2880 Před 4 lety

      @@yewisemountaingoat528 you seem to miss the point, or seem to agree with me. The closer you get to the state, the less accountable you are.
      The ineptitude at the national coal board caused this disaster. And noone was held to account. Had this been a privately owned company, directors would have been slaughtered. But because they were bureaucrats looking after their own, nothing happened....
      See the NHS staffs trust where 300-odd patients died of negligence. What happened to the boss? Prison? Disgrace? No, sideways move to a similar job...
      As a standalone private job, 300 negligent homocides means prison...

  • @yvettejones5323
    @yvettejones5323 Před 4 lety +6

    I cannot imagine the horror of knowing your child is buried alone and being so desperate to find them that you use your bare hands to dig through the Earth and sludge to get them out. Ugh. I just can't. This is so heartbreaking 💔💔💔

  • @elahebassak903
    @elahebassak903 Před 3 lety +7

    I just found out about this tragedy, it happened 53 years ago and im glad people remember it still
    I am from iran and tragedies this size happen 3 or 4 times a year here...its sad really

  • @birbiiee
    @birbiiee Před 4 lety +9

    I cried so much during this episode because I just cant imagine the pain of those parents

  • @elijahcarr4137
    @elijahcarr4137 Před 3 lety +6

    I used to live here in the former Mackintosh hotel/pub, as a kid. I remember the BBC or whoever, making a 40th anniversary documentary, in which they filmed a short snippet inside our house.
    The area surrounding this village is actually quite pretty, apart from the frequent mountain fires we used to get which scorched part of the landscape. I really enjoyed the cycle rides and walks. It's sad to see that such a terrible tragedy once happened here and still haunts the neighborhood.

  • @matthewprice2626
    @matthewprice2626 Před 3 lety +2

    There was another massive tip collapse in Tylorstown in South Wales last year. Luckily it was in the one area of the valley with no buildings but it was 30ft and redirected the river. The absolutely huge one in Wattstiwn just down the road had a 'minor' slip a few months later. If that comes down many could be killed. It needs sorting out.

  • @superstarcommunicator
    @superstarcommunicator Před 4 lety +18

    These brave people; there are Welsh people that still talk about it. This was corporate manslaughter on a massive scale yet the powers that be got away with it. Tragic.

  • @macsmiffy2197
    @macsmiffy2197 Před 3 lety +3

    I was 10 when this happened, but it still remains vivid in my memory. The whole country was in mourning for those children and their families.

  • @grizzfan08
    @grizzfan08 Před 3 lety +3

    Of all the episodes throughout "The Crown", the Aberfan episode ranks up there as both the most heartfelt and best recreated event.

  • @Gerriston1
    @Gerriston1 Před 2 lety +2

    As a 21 year old I visited Britain in 1971. Someone in Wales told me the story of Aberfan and I visited there. I took photos and gave my respects becoming overcome with grief at the high loss of life of so many mostly children. I titled my photo essay “Aberfan Revisited”. I also wrote a song about the event. I simply cannot fathom the depth of the loss those people withstood.