Neil Rafeek and Hilary Young in conversation with Fife miners Robert Clelland and Duncan Porterfield, 12 January 2005.
- Sound recording (1 hour 4 minutes 8 seconds) and transcript
Interview C22.
Sin títuloNeil Rafeek and Hilary Young in conversation with Fife miners Robert Clelland and Duncan Porterfield, 12 January 2005.
Interview C22.
Sin títuloArthur McIvor and Ronald Johnston in conversation with South Wales miner Les Higgon, Gorseinon, 10 May 2004.
Interview C30.
Sin títuloArthur McIvor and Ronald Johnston in conversation with South Wales miners Howard Jones and Gareth Gower, 11 May 2004.
Interview C25.
Sin títuloArthur McIvor and Ronald Johnston in conversation with South Wales miners Tom Bowden, Colin ('Nati') Thomas, Gerald Hawkins and Derek Charles, Gelligaer, 12 May 2004.
Interview C26.
Sin títuloArthur McIvor and Ronald Johnston in conversation with a nurse / health visitor in Wales, 29 June 2004.
Interview not coded.
Sin títuloNeil Rafeek and Hilary Young in conversation with Clackmannanshire miners George Bolton and David Carruthers, Culross, Fife, 12 January 2005.
Interview C23.
Sin títuloNeil Rafeek and Hilary Young in conversation with Fife miners Colin Peebles and John Gillon, Culross, Fife, 15 January 2005.
Interview C24.
Sin títuloNeil Rafeek and Hilary Young in conversation with Lanarkshire, Stirling and Fife miner Tommy Coulter, Miners Convalescent Home, Culross, 12 January 2005.
Interview C21.
Sin títuloArthur McIvor in conversation with a Welsh miner, 2004x2005.
No code assigned.
Sin títuloArthur McIvor in conversation with Jean Davies, wife of a South Wales miner, 14 May 2004.
Interview C33.
Sin títuloArthur McIvor in conversation with the wife of a South Wales miner (C31), 14 May 2004.
Arthur McIvor in conversation with the wife of a South Wales miner (C32), 14 May 2004.
Oral history project "Coal miners and dust-related disease" aimed to reconstruct the story of the human tragedy of coal miners' respiratory disease. It sought to "write the history of 'black spit' from its early discovery by Scottish physicians in the 19th century, through to the official recognition of coal workers' pneumoconiosis in 1942 and on to the campaigns to recognise bronchitis and emphysima as industrial diseases in the second half of the twentieth century that culminated in the landmark legal judgement in January 1998".
Of a reported number of 52 interviews undertaken, 27 survive as sound recording and transcript (14) or transcript only (13).
Sin título