
“Victory will be ours” – a slogan from inside a cell in the H Blocks. A circle of hands releases three doves: “freedom, justice, peace”. “We will be free.”
Whiterock Road, west Belfast
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Copyright © 1993 Peter Moloney
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1990 image showing a damaged version of Mo Chara’s Oppose Censorship opposite St Thomas’s school on the Whiterock Road, Belfast
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Copyright © 1990 Peter Moloney
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The Bloody Sunday Memorial in Rossville Street, Derry, in 1989. For the names inscribed, see the 1974 image. (There are also 1986 images.)
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Copyright © 1989 Peter Moloney
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1986 version of the Bloody Sunday memorial. The memorial was erected in 1974. Rossville Street, Derry
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Copyright © 1986 Peter Moloney
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“NICRA 1974”. “Their epitaph is in the continuing struggle for democracy.” “This monument was unveiled by Mrs. B. Bond of Derry CRA on the 26th January 1974 to the memory of Patrick J. Doherty (aged 31 years), Gerard V. Donaghey (17), John F. Duddy (17), Hugh P. Gilmour (17), Michael G. Kelly (17), Michael M. McDaid (20), Kevin G. McElhinney (17), Bernard McGuigan (41), James G. McKinney (27), William N. Nash (19), James J. Wray (22), John P. Young (17), and to John Johnston (59) who died later as a result of injuries received that day, who were murdered by British paratroopers on Bloody Sunday 30th January 1972.” RTÉ video of the unveiling.
Rossville Street, Derry
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Copyright © 1974 Peter Moloney
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