
The “old model” RUC is a combination of policeman, Orangeman, and (loyalist) paramilitary, affiliations the “new model” lacks.
Divis Street, Belfast
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Copyright © 2001 Peter Moloney
M01500



In 1690, William III defeated James II at the Battle Of The Boyne, securing Ireland for England. And in legend, Ulster was won in a race by an O’Neill tossing his severed hand ahead of his competitor. Similar battle is needed to preserve Northern Ireland, the mural suggests. “Quis separabit” is the motto of the UDA, and “Terrae filius” (“Son of the land”) is the motto of the Ulster Young Militants, its youth branch. Lord Street, Belfast.
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Copyright © 2000 Peter Moloney
M02295 M02296 M02297

Iron Maiden’s Eddie The Trooper becomes a South East Antrim UDA/UFF gunman, striding over the graves of “G. Adams”, “A. Maskey”, and “McGuinness”.
For more information on Eddie and a full list of Eddie murals, see Eddie’s Visual History page.
Castlemara Drive, Carrickfergus
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Copyright © 2000 Peter Moloney
M03319

The mural shows people being hanged, speared, and drawn behind a horse, and houses in flames.” The persecution of the Protestant people by the church of Rome, 1600 – the ethnic cleansing still goes on today.”
Hopewell Crescent, lower Shankill, Belfast.
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Copyright © 2000 Peter Moloney
M03316
Copyright © 2000 Peter Moloney


Six INLA volunteers are remembered on a memorial stone in the City Cemetery, Derry. The other memorial is to the ten deceased 1981 hunger strikers (“They were ordinary men in extraordinary circumstances whose steadfast resolve, discipline, and unity of purpose prevailed”) and five local “comrades and friends”.
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Copyright © 2000 Peter Moloney
M01557 M01555 [M01556a]

Completed version of the Annette McGavigan mural in Rossville Street, Derry.
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Copyright © 1999?/2000?/2001? Peter Moloney
M01421

“Britain’s genocide by starvation”, “Ireland’s holocaust 1845-1849”, “Over 1,500,000 deaths”. Completed version of the Great Hunger mural on the Whiterock Road, Belfast, previously seen twice in development: 1995 | 1997. The images used are from Illustrated London Newses of the time (see the Visual History page on an gorta mór).
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Copyright © 1999 Peter Moloney
M02750

The fourth mural by the Bogside Artists shows the faces of the fourteen people who died on or as a result of Bloody Sunday, January 30th, 1972, shot by the “gun-happy louts” (as described by the Belfast UDA; Vanguard also called for their removal – see the entry for Robert McKinnie in Lost Lives) of the 1st Parachute Regiment; 15 more people were injured.
By row, the victims portrayed are:
Michael McDaid, John Young, Paddy Doherty
John Johnston (d. June 16th), Hugh Gilmour, Gerry Donaghy, Barney McGuigan
Gerry McKinney, William Nash, Kevin McElhinney, Jackie Duddy
Jim Wray, Michael Kelly, William McKinney
The portraits are presented within a circle of oak leaves – symbol of Derry – one for each person.
Westland Street, Bogside, Derry
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Copyright © 1999 Peter Moloney
M02496





A dolmen (neolithic tomb) and standing stone (with Ogham inscription) in Lecky Road, Derry, in honour of IRA volunteers.
“This plaque was presented by the republican movement, Derry, on 22nd October 1999 in recognition of those who erected and maintain the monument. Buíoch ó ghluaıseacht na poblachta.”
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Copyright © 1999 Peter Moloney
M02080 M02074 M02075 M02076 [M04443]
Copyright © 2011 Peter Moloney