Sym,thanks for your kind comments,this was the way it was right up to the closure of the industry in the 1980-90's as we knew it. Even in the big, modern, fully mechanised pits like Bates, and Ellington,in Northumberland,the dangers we faced were just the same as in the old Coal-owner days before the war. There was a lot of strata above your head,and in Bates and Ellington's case,a LOT of seawater above your head also!! Bates was 12 miles out under the North Sea!...a long way to run home if you were easily scared when the roof started to "Lay-on"! "Laying-on" was a term used in mining,to describe the effect that the movement of the strata had,as it broke away during the extraction of the coal. I have been in 14feet wide -by- ten feet high arched girdered roadways,and watched as the roof pressure "Laying -on",made the whole roadway sway from side to side crazily,as the girders bent and twisted under tremendous un-calculable weight and stresses,with roof stones falling between the girders,all along the length of the road. This would go on for maybe a half an hour,or a few hours even,with the sound of thunderous evil crunching and creaking noises which would be better heard in some horror movie. When the roadway settled,it was eerily calm and quiet,and this was when the skilled miner had to be fully aware of any relapse...and not fall into a false sense of security. You never trusted "good stone"! The coal faces where Liisa's Dad,and myself,[as time went by,and I became a face-worker],really were inhuman places for a man to work,in the old days,but just like our lads out fighting in the desert heat,you got used to it,and accepted that no-one else was going to pay your rent for you,or put bread on your table,so you got on with it. In 1987 I was re-trained as a Cabinet-maker,and made very expensive hand-made furniture,[hand-cut dovetailed drawers etc..],working with exotic timbers. For the first time in my life,I was given thanks personally from satisfied customers who were delighted with their new furniture!! ........No-one ever came and thanked me for risking my life every day,so they could have nice warm fires in their houses....!! If you go to Google ,and type in.."High Pit Wima's Photostream" it will take you to "Flickr",where my photo's of Bates Colliery,underground,and on the surface,will help to give you an idea of what the roadways were like,and the conditions. Liisa,I hope you have toured the Bedlington Community site,and enjoyed all the interesting subjects and comments,by people like myself and Sym,"the wise old Owl!"!