Age, Biography and Wiki

Anne Harper was born on 22 August, 1941, is a British political activist (born 1941). Discover Anne Harper's Biography, Age, Height, Physical Stats, Dating/Affairs, Family and career updates. Learn How rich is she in this year and how she spends money? Also learn how she earned most of networth at the age of 82 years old?

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Age 82 years old
Zodiac Sign Leo
Born 22 August, 1941
Birthday 22 August
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We recommend you to check the complete list of Famous People born on 22 August. She is a member of famous activist with the age 82 years old group.

Anne Harper Height, Weight & Measurements

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Anne Harper Net Worth

Her net worth has been growing significantly in 2023-2024. So, how much is Anne Harper worth at the age of 82 years old? Anne Harper’s income source is mostly from being a successful activist. She is from . We have estimated Anne Harper's net worth, money, salary, income, and assets.

Net Worth in 2024 $1 Million - $5 Million
Salary in 2024 Under Review
Net Worth in 2023 Pending
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Timeline

1941

Anne Harper (born 12 October 1941) is a British community organiser, activist and co-founder of the National Women Against Pit Closures (NWAPC) movement from Barnsley, South Yorkshire.

Anne Harper was born in Barnsley, South Yorkshire on 12 October 1941 to parents Mr and Mrs Elliot Harper.

Her father was a miner and member of the Trade Union branch committee at Woolley Colliery.

1960

For many years from the 1960s, Harper worked as a comptometer operator at the Barnsley Co-operative Society.

1961

Harper married Arthur Scargill, who was also an elected member of the Trade Union branch committee at Woolley Colliery, at Gawber Parish Church on 16 September 1961.

1962

The couple had a daughter together, Margaret Scargill, in 1962 who is now a practising GP.

1981

Once Scargill was elected as President of the National Union of Mineworkers in 1981, Harper frequently accompanied him to rallies and picket lines to protest against the planned downsizing of the coal industry in Britain, especially in response to economic and social impact of this on individuals and communities.

She travelled around the UK to picket lines, protests and political conferences under the remit of trade unionism and the political organisation of miners.

Harper and Scargill both spoke at these events.

Although Scargill's biographers claim that Harper eschewed direct involvement in politics and attended pickets in an auxiliary role as Scargill's spouse, Stead has documented her work as a political activist and community organiser.

1983

On 11 August 1983 the group organised a protest march through London that an estimated 23,000 people joined, including working class women from around the UK and female trade unionists.

Participants in the NWAPC movement went to Belgium, Holland and France on fund-raising trips and to speak to on trade unionists platforms about the UK miners' strike.

In the early days of the Barnsley group, women also began their organisational efforts with food kitchens that became community hubs and a point of first contact for women who went on to join the group.

Women who ran the food kitchen also went on fund-raising trips to neighbouring towns and cities to help finance these initiatives.

Over the course of the miners' strike, Harper and other women in the Barnsley group received a growing number of invitations to speak at other support groups nationwide.

1984

She was politically active during the 1984–85 miners' strike as an activist, community organiser and wife of the then President of the National Union of Mineworkers (NUM), Arthur Scargill.

Harper was integral to community organisation and activism efforts by women to provide welfare within mining communities and to prevent pit closures during the 1984-1985 miners' strike, which was a landmark event in the history of the British labour movement.

She is best known for her role in the NWAPC movement, her prominence as a public speaker during the 1984–1985 miners' strike and due to her marriage to Scargill.

More recently, Harper has been viewed as a pioneer of feminist community activism and discourse by scholars and within the media and arts.

During the 1984–1985 miners' strike, Anne Harper led women in picketing at collieries that were threatened with closure.

Along with Lyn Hathaway, Liz Hollis and Audrey Moor, who was an organiser from the Nottinghamshire Women's Support Group, Harper often appeared at picket lines to support the miners' cause.

Local authorities and even the miners themselves, some of whom felt that women were out of place at these scenes, objected to the women's presence at picket lines.

The four women were brought before a magistrate's court in Nottinghamshire for their picketing activities at Silverhill Colliery, which the prosecution claimed had caused an obstruction.

They were ultimately cleared of this charge in October 1984, however the women were banned from picketing Nottinghamshire.

Harper claims she was subject to intimidation tactics and rough treatment in police custody during this incident.

Harper continued to appear at picket lines throughout the 1984–1985 strike and to speak at rallies and protests against pit closures.

Following this incident, the NUM recognised that the presence female protesters could ameliorate the public image of the strike and held a meeting to discuss a possible new NWAPC office at the NUM headquarters in Sheffield.

As contentions amongst supporters of the strike towards the NUM grew, this association became increasingly controversial within the NWAPC.

At this time Harper also began community based activism activities that centred on fund raising and protests that became NWAPC movement.

In November 1984, Harper launched the striking miners' Christmas appeal, which was highly successful in terms of fundraising to cover welfare and legal costs for striking miners and their families.

Mr John Paul Getty Jr.., philanthropist and son of a renowned oil magnate, donated £100,000 to the campaign the week after it was launched.

Harper founded the Barnsley Women Against Pit Closures group along with other local women, which was the first such group in what became a national movement.

These groups brought together women from the coalfields to fund-raise for striking miners and their families, organise rallies and picketing activities to draw national and international attention, and eventually to engage with national and trade union politics.

The Barnsley group was formed when local women published an advertisement in a local paper, the Barnsley Chronicle, for a meeting to decide how to best support local striking miners.

This led to the first, very well attended, meeting of the group and to a national, all-women rally through Barnsley twenty days later on 12 May 1984.

The march was attended by an estimated 10,000 women.

The broader support group movement was particularly strong in Wales, where there were 106 groups that were organised from Cardiff, and resulted from exchanges at the first National Women Against Pit Closures conference held at the Northern College in Barnsley on 22 July 1984.

1990

She remained active through political activism and media appearances during the 1990s.

2001

The couple divorced in 2001.

2018

In 2018, Harper was the subject of a play about her life, Queens of the Coal Age, written by Maxine Peake and directed by Bryony Shanahan.