- Thomas Hepburn
Thomas Hepburn (c. 1795 –
9 December ,1864 ) was an Englishcoal miner andtrade union leader.Background
Hepburn was born in
Pelton, County Durham . He began employment as acoal miner as a child, aged just 8 years old at Fatfield Colliery. Despite economic circumstance forcing his employment in childhood, as was common forworking class children at the time, he was an intelligent child, able to read theBible from an early age, remaining interested in education all his life.Industrial Action
He moved to
Jarrow Colliery, and thenHetton Colliery before forming the "Northern Union of Pitmen" around 1830/31, which was colloquially known as "Hepburn's Union". Some of the first industrial action undertaken by this union, under Hepburn's guidance was to go on strike to seek improved conditions. In this aim the strike was largely successful, with working hours being reduced from around 18 hours a day to a 12 hour shift, and ensuring that payment for labour was always in money, ending the system of "Tommy Shops " whereby the miners had to purchase provisions from a shop either owned or preferred by the colliery owner, with wages being confiscated to pay off the shop owner before the employee could directly receive them.Conflict
Hepburn then had to quickly involve his union in further industrial action in 1832 to ensure that unionised workers were given employment as pit owners threatened to cease employment of them. This strike was more bitter than the previous one, and despite Hepburn's best efforts to ensure that all action was peaceful, violence broke out on a number of occasions, such as at Friar's Goose, where unionised lead miners attacked non-unionised miners from
Cumberland who had been brought in to replace them. In another action aSouth Shields magistrate,Nicholas Fairless was beaten so badly by a striking miner that he died from his wounds, and elsewhere a miner was shot by a police constable during a disorder.This strike withered and the union crumbled as the miners realised the necessity of employment and a wage to live was greater than the principle of
trade union solidarity. The strike leaders were scapegoated by the authorities, and Thomas Hepburn became unable to secure employment as a miner thereafter, being banned from the coalfield.Thereafter he attempted to sell tea at the mines to make a living, but in this venture he was largely unsuccessful.
Destitute, he was eventually re-employed at a colliery, at Felling, on the grounds that he did not get involved in trade union activity. He did not re-engage in any union activity but remained active in radical political circles. During 1838-39 he worked on behalf of the
Chartists . He continued to work at Felling until retiring due to ill health in 1859.Death
He continued to live in the area until the last few months of his life, when he moved to live with his son-in-law in Newcastle. He died on
December 9 ,1864 aged 69, after a career spanning 56 years and a retirement of just five years.Buried at Heworth Churchyard, there stands a headstone with a testimony to his trade union activity. The
Thomas Hepburn Community Comprehensive School in Felling is named in his honour.Notes
References
Further study
*Citation
last=Fynes
first=Richard
date=1873
title=The Miners of Northumberland and Durham
publisher=John Robinson, Jun.
publication-place=Blyth
publication-date=1873
url=http://books.google.com/books?id=qYIHAAAAQAAJ
access-date=2008-02-28
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