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Leisure and Recreation in a Victorian Mining Community

The Social Economy of Leisure in North-East England, 1820-1914

By Alan Metcalfe

Series Editor: J A Mangan, Boria Majumdar

Published September 1st 2008 by Routledge – 224 pages

Series: Sport in the Global Society

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Description

'Amusements they must have, or life would hardly be worth living…' Newcastle Weekly Chronicle, 1895

This text explores life in the mining villages of the north-east of England in the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries - a time of massive social and industrial change. The sporting lives of these communities are often marginalized by historians, but this thoroughly researched account reveals how play as well as work were central to the lives of the working classes.

Miners contributed significantly to the economic success of the north-east during this time, yet living conditions in the mining villages were 'horrendous'. Sport and recreation were essential to bring meaning and pleasure to mining families, and were fundamental to the complex social relationships within and between communities.

Features of this extensive text include:

* analysis of the physical, social and economic structures that determined the leisure lives of the mining villages

* the role of 'traditional' and 'new' sports

* comparisons with other British regions.

Contents

Table of Contents

List of Plates

Acknowledgements

Map of East Northumberland

Introduction

Chapter 1 - The Social Context: East Northumberland, 1820-1914

Chapter 2 - Non-Sporting Leisure During the Nineteenth Century

Chapter 3 - The Strength of Tradition

Chapter 4 - The Transformation of Traditional Sports

Chapter 5 - New Sports for New Times

Chapter 6 - Football: A Symbol of Sport in East Northumberland

Conclusion

Bibliography

Notes