
Two small boards, to the “Official republican Movement” and “James Connolly 1868-1916” join the Liam McMillen board previously seen in 2001.
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Copyright © 2006 Peter Moloney
[M03105] [M03106] M03107

Two small boards, to the “Official republican Movement” and “James Connolly 1868-1916” join the Liam McMillen board previously seen in 2001.
Click image to enlarge
Copyright © 2006 Peter Moloney
[M03105] [M03106] M03107

“I ndıl gcuımhne [sic] oglach [sic] Sean McCaughey, Gaelgoır [sic] agus muınteıor [sic] [Irish-speaker and teacher]. Fuaır sé bás ar son saoırse na hÉıreann.” “Formerly of Duneden Park, Ardoyne. Died on hunger and thirst strike after 23 days in Portlaoise gaol on May 11th 1946.” “For those who believe no explanation is necessary; for those who don’t believe no explanation is possible.” McCaughey was convicted of kidnapping and torturing IRA chief of staff Sean Hayes, who was suspected of treason. His hunger and thirst strike was preceded by five years on the blanket. “NBCS” = North Belfast Cultural Society.
Brompton Park, north Belfast
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Copyright © 2006 Peter Moloney
M03103

For the 25th anniversary of the 1981 hunger strike, images from the period are reproduced in a mural sponsored by the “Ardoyne, Bone, Ligoniel 80/81 Commemoration Committee”: the funeral volley over Bobby Sands’s coffin, Derry women protesting conditions in Long Kesh by wearing blankets, women banging bin lids (see United Irishwomen) and protestors outside a polling station.
The frame is from the previous Érıu mural.
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Copyright © 2006 Peter Moloney
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Three UDA hooded gunmen from the [South East Antrim brigade] 1st battalion strike shooting poses in front of the (old) Whiteabbey viaducts.
Devenish Drive, Monkstown
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Copyright © 2006 Peter Moloney
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UVF volunteer Colin Caldwell died of injuries sustained in an IRA bombing inside the Crumlin Road jail in November 1991. A Rathcoole flute band was named in his honour (later merging with Sons Of KAI?).
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Copyright © 2006 Peter Moloney
M03044

Established in 2004, Cumann Na Fuıseoıge (The Lark) is “ag soláthar spórt Ghaelaıgh don phobal sa cheantar Coılın” [providing Gaelic games to the people in the Colin area]. The club is named after the image of the lark (and barbed wire) used by Bobby Sands in his 1979 article The Lark And The Freedom Fighter. The choice of emblem proved controversial – Slugger.
Previously: a fundraiser for the club.
Jasmine Corner, Belfast/Dunmurry
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Copyright © 2006 Peter Moloney
M03001