UFF Manoeuvres

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UFF/UDA/LPA/UDF emblems in the four fields of an Ulster banner on a shield, flanked by Union flag and Saltire, with gunmen on manoeuvres in the countryside.

Crumlin Road, Belfast. To the left, and out of view to the left, are a pair of UVF murals.

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Copyright © 1988 LC
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Ulster Volunteer Force

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The Ulster Banner, Union flag, St Andrew’s Saltire and the UVF’s own flag stand around the UVF red hand emblem (For God and Ulster, 1912), next to an LPOW hand in barbed wire.

The wide shot shows the accompanying YCV shamrock and an in-progress painting of the emblem of the 36th (Ulster) Division. For the completed version, see 1993.

Crumlin Road, Belfast, at Queensland and Tasmania streets.

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Copyright © 1988 LC
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Loyalist Triptych

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Three loyalist murals side-by-side: the Union jack in the shape of Northern Ireland, a red hand of Ulster and crown on the six-pointed star, between St Andrew’s Saltire and the Union flag, and a (UDA?) volunteer with rifle.

Location unknown — perhaps the old Shankill Parade?

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Copyright © 1988 LC
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The UVF Reserve The Right

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The yellow triangle of the PAF (Protestant Action Force, a cover for the UVF) with the words”The UVF reserve the right to strike at republican targets where and when the opportunity arises.” with adjacent UVF/YCV hooded gunmen mural in Ohio Street, Belfast.

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Copyright © 1988 LC
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UVF 75th Anniversary

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This mural celebrates the 75th anniversary of the Ulster Volunteers, 1912 – 1987, with a portrait of Edward Carson and a rifle mounted on the back of a car (based on a photograph from 1914).

Shankill Road (on the wall of (what is now) the PUP offices, just west of the current Bayardo memorial), west Belfast.

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Copyright © 1988 LC
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Shutting The Gates Of Derry

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“West Belfast Brigade UDA C Company”. UDA/UDF/LPA/UFF mural on the Shankill. (For a similar quartet of names and explanation of “UDF”, see Sans Peur.)

The title “First Ulster Defence Assoc.” is an attempt to tie together the defenders of Derry in 1688 (300th anniversary) with the modern Ulster Defence Association. This is an early attempt to give the UDA historical roots, beyond the Shankill and Woodvale Defence Associations. To this end, the group would adopt Cú Chulaınn (beginning in 1992 – see the Visual History page) and (beginning in 2007 – see UDU-UFF-UDA) the 1893 Ulster Defence Union as ancestors.

Canmore Street, west Belfast

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Copyright © 1988 LC
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