By Michael V. Conlin, Lee Jolliffe

Pt. 1. creation -- pt. 2. Routledge advances in tourism -- pt. three. reworking mines into historical past sights -- pt. four. conventional mining appeal locations -- pt. five. Globalization and the way forward for mining appeal locations -- pt. 6. classes discovered

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Work in the ‘occupational community’ lent form and rhythm and value to everyday life and a powerful sense of role and identity to the individual. In Durham, as Jack Lawson (1932) has pointed out, a man was not a man until he attended the coal face. The social structure and constraints of the occupational community also conditioned the making of the formal institutions of the regional working class. In the industrial villages of the Durham Coalfield the masters demanded deference in exchange for economic and social patronage.

Hence, this chapter seeks to look at the problems involved in preserving, presenting and interpreting community mining heritages and identities through these sites. The North East historical context For much of the Victorian era the North East of England housed a very small but vociferous middle-­class concentrated, almost exclusively, in the suburbs of Newcastle and Sunderland. This group followed the self-­improving cultural agenda of the nineteenth century middle-­class as a whole, but some of its number also indulged in the construction of a mythical regional history based upon a romantic vision of Northumbria and Northumbrianess.

E. (1922) To the Trustees of the Bowes Museum. 1 September. W. (1954) North Eastern England : Population Movements and the Landscape Since the Early 19th Century. Durham: University of Durham. Howard, S. (1999) Interview with John Gall. Beamish Museum. Howey, P. (1971) The Geordie Cook Book. Newcastle: Frank Graham. Johnson, N. (1999) ‘Framing the past: time, space and the politics of heritage tourism in Ireland’, Political Geography, 18: 187–207. Kane, S. (1995) ‘Greedy parsons: goose pies, drunken servants: the correspondence of John Bowes, 1860–1880’, In Lancaster, B.

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