The caption on a variant of this picture read: The Boy Who Wants to be a Miner. His father and his grandfather were miners. It's his ambition to be a miner, too. He does not read the Ministry of Labour statistics of unemployment. He does not know how many pits have been closed. He does not even know that, of 19 houses in Greenhough Row, where he lives, often only four families have work |
The original Picture Post caption read: The Men Who Stand and Wait. Our cameraman photographed these Wiganers standing outside a Labour Exchange. The authorities asked to have all pictures left with them to be checked up. When the batch was forwarded on to us, this and other pictures on these pages were missing. They were considered unsuitable. We made new prints of some of those missing pictures |
A woman looks longingly at the array of bread and cakes in the window of a baker's shop |
The original caption read: THE FACES OF WIGAN'S WORKERS – Men Whose Fate is Linked with Coal and Cotton. Early in the 19th century their great-grandfathers went down to the pits and their women found work in the mills. Today, 10 out of 15 mills, 17 out of 40 pits, are closed. In a town of 85,000 people, 9,500 men and women are unemployed. But the man in the pub is still friendly, still confident that pits and mills will open again - perhaps after the war |
Women attending an evening class in embroidery and needlework |
Children take a rest from playing games on the street |
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