Jock George Purdon

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Jock George Purdon

Birthdate:
Death: 1998 (72-73)
Immediate Family:

Son of Father of George "Jock" Purdon
Brother of Robert Purdon

Occupation: Poet Songwriter and Bevin Boy
Managed by: Terry Jackson (Switzer)
Last Updated:
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Immediate Family

About Jock George Purdon

Jock Purdon

From Wikipedia

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jock_Purdon

(November 16, 1925 - 1998), a poet and songwriter, was born George Purdon in the village of Nitshill near Glasgow. Although Nitshill had been a coal mining village, the mine had closed before Purdon grew up and it was a strange twist of fate that saw him spend most of his life as a coal miner in a pit in Chester-le-Street, County Durham in the North East of England.[citation needed] It was that occupation that shaped his poems and songs and made him the "miners' poet".

Purdon was 14 years old when World War II began and he saw his older brother, Robert, enlist in the Royal Scots regiment and serve as a Commando for several years[citation needed]. Robert was eventually killed in France after the Normandy Landings in 1944. When it was his turn to be drafted, Purdon's conscription number ended in 0, which meant that he would not be joining his brother in the army. He was bound for the pits (coal mines). Because of the labour shortage in 1943, 1 man in 10 was conscripted to make up the manpower needs of the coal mining industry and Purdon was one of the very first contingent designated for the mines on 14 December 1943, becoming a so-called "Bevin Boy". Ernest Bevin was the Minister for Labour and National Service in the war time cabinet.

Purdon married, stayed in Chester-le-Street after the war and worked in the pits digging coal in three foot seams with water up to his knees at times. He saw and shared the hardship of the miners; many of his songs reflect the sense of community that an embattled people develop. But it was not all doom and gloom. While the "Easington Explosion" laments the deaths of eighty one miners in one accident, "Hally's Piebald Gallowa" laments the loss of the Lumley pit banner, eaten by a Galloway pony. These ponies were used to haul coal carts underground.

Mining and politics are inseparable and Purdon's verses captured his contempt for those who put profit before people. He coined the word "Pitracide", meaning "to murder a pit for economic reasons". His commitment to his ideals and the mining community saw him performing his songs for the benefit of striking miners in the 1984-85 miners' strike and appearing at the Royal Albert Hall in the "Concert for Heroes" in 1985. He is reported to have said "For me there's three great generals - Geronimo, Alexander the Great and Arthur Scargill". Scargill was secretary general of the National Union of Mineworkers and led the miners' strike.

Purdon was featured on the Channel 4 Everyman TV series; six of his songs appear in Bert Lloyd's definitive collection of pit poems and songs, Come All Ye Bold Miners and he published a radical album of poems and songs entitled Pitworks, Politics & Poetry.

In 2004, the Cotia banner (subject of one of Purdon's songs) was remade and carried to the Durham Miners' Gala with pictures of Purdon and fellow miner and folksinger Jack Elliot of Birtley on the back. The banner was unfurled by Tony Benn, who is an admirer of Purdon's poetry and songs.

Further reading

Songs of the Durham Coalfield by Jock Purdon, Pit Lamp Press, Chester-le-Street, 1977

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Jock George Purdon's Timeline

1925
November 16, 1925
1998
1998
Age 72