In the summer of 1985, on a quiet stretch of English countryside near Stonehenge, a convoy of peace-loving hippies, families, and New Age travellers found themselves surrounded by a military-style police operation. What began as a journey to a free festival escalated into a shocking, brutal confrontation. This is the story of how the British state mobilized over 1,300 officers to stop a few hundred civilians, in a violent clash that one senior officer later called "a lesson in the use of force." This episode delves into the cultural and political war brewing in Thatcher's Britain. We explore the rise of the Peace Convoy and the "Festival of the Summer Solstice," seen by authorities as a lawless threat to social order. We'll reconstruct the tense standoff at the beanfield, the shattered glass, the overturned vehicles, and the controversial arrests that followed, piecing together testimonies from travellers, journalists, and police on the ground. Listeners will gain an understanding of a forgotten flashpoint in Britain's domestic history—a moment where the battle lines were drawn not between nations, but between visions of society. It's a case study in how a government can perceive a subculture as an existential threat, justifying a disproportionate response that left deep scars and a legacy of mistrust. Sometimes, the wars that shape us aren't fought on distant borders, but in the fields just down the road. #BattleOfTheBeanfield #NewAgeTravellers #ThatcherBritain #StonehengeFreeFestival #UKPoliceHistory #CulturalConflict #EnglishHistory Hosted by Ibnul Jaif Farabi. Produced by Light Knot Studios (lightknotstudios.com).
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