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The Heist Under the High Street
A Botched Robbery, a Town’s Secret, and the Long Arm of Patience
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Narrado por:
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Robert Orzechowski
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De:
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Rowan Hale
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Port Talbot, 1958. A town of smoke and steel, sea air and shift work, terraced streets and quiet watchfulness. It is the kind of place where people do not simply live alongside one another, they notice one another. They notice who is tired, who is drinking more than usual, who has started keeping strange hours, and who is carrying the kind of tension that does not belong to ordinary life. In a town like this, privacy is never absolute. The streets are close, the routines are known, and the town itself behaves like a witness—silent, patient, and rarely fooled for long.
Then a rumour begins to form. A light on too late. A door that opens when it shouldn’t. Men moving with purpose at odd hours. Nothing anyone can name, but enough to make the atmosphere shift. Because beneath the everyday life of the high street, something extraordinary is happening—an audacious attempt to rob a bank not with a gun or a smash-and-grab, but with a tunnel dug in darkness, inch by inch, night after night, beneath the feet of an unsuspecting town.
The Heist Under the High Street tells the gripping true-crime story of a botched robbery that has lived in Port Talbot’s memory for decades. It sounds too cinematic to be real: a secret premises near the bank, a hidden entrance, tools carried quietly, earth removed in sacks, timbers bracing damp ground, and men crawling forward through filth and fear toward the promise of sudden money. Yet what makes this story unforgettable is not only the method, but what it reveals about the era and the people inside it. Post-war Britain was changing, but not evenly. For many working men, life remained narrow and heavy with repetition. Respectability mattered. Pride mattered. Money came in and went out with little left to spare. In such a climate, the fantasy of escape can begin to feel like salvation, and a bank can become more than a building. It becomes a symbol—solid, silent, and full of what ordinary life withholds.
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