
2005 image of UDA/UFF funeral volley mural in Boyne Court, Belfast, seen previously in 1997 and 2001.
Click image to enlarge
Copyright © 2005 Peter Moloney
M02406 [M06428] [M06429] [M06430]

Here is the Dark Days mural – combining imagery of WWI battlefield with a quote from Deuteronomy (7.2) – towards the end of its life, in 2005. Previously seen in 2001.
Blythe Street, Sandy Row, south Belfast
Click image to enlarge
Copyright © 2005 Peter Moloney
M02404

South Belfast UDA commander Robert Dougan killed by the IRA on February 10th, 1998 while sitting in a car outside Balmoral Textiles in Dunmurry, two months before the Good Friday Agreement was signed. “Murdered by the enemies 10th February 1998. In memory of our fallen comrade – gone but not forgotten. Quis separabit.”
Blythe Street, Sandy Row, south Belfast
Click image to enlarge
Copyright © 2005 Peter Moloney
M02402



The King William III Prince of Orange mural is repainted and to it are added the UYM emblem and a set of flags of England, Scotland, and Northern Ireland. Most significantly, however, the modern-day gunman on the right has been replaced by another Williamite soldier. Seen previously in 1990 | 1991.
Blythe Street, Sandy Row, south Belfast
Click image to enlarge
Copyright © 2005 Peter Moloney
M02403 M02400 M02401

UDA “Brigadier John McMichael, murdered by the enemies 22nd December 1987. “We forget him not.”” McMichael was killed by a car bomb planted by the IRA, perhaps on intelligence received from inside the UDA. He was a Northern Ireland separatist and author of Beyond The Religious Divide and Common Sense.
Blythe Street, Sandy Row, south Belfast
Click image to enlarge
Copyright © 2005 Peter Moloney
M02399

This is an image of the 2002 repaint, with the addition of the Lindsay Street Arch, crown and bible, and lower border, of the King William III, prince of Orange, mural in Elm Street, south Belfast. The original was painted in 1989.
Click image to enlarge
Copyright © 2005 Peter Moloney
M02395
Copyright © 2014 Peter Moloney
[M11050] [M11051] [M11052]

The flag of the Orange Order has a St George’s Cross and an orange five-pointed star on a purple field. The reverse colours (orange star, purple background) are used here as a UVF and Ulster Volunteers (1912) flag.
Pine Street, Donegall Pass, south Belfast
Click image to enlarge
Copyright © 2005 Peter Moloney
M02394

This is the completed version of the Young Conquerors flute band (previously seen in progress) in Pine Street, Belfast. The flags are regimental flags of the 36th (Ulster) Division.
Click image to enlarge
Copyright © 2005 Peter Moloney
M02393


Glasgow Celtic football club (in Scotland/Albain) celebrated its centenary in 1988 and to celebrate the occasion it switched its badge for a season from the familiar four-leaf clover (shown in the second image) to a celtic cross, based on the club’s original badge, which was a cross against a red background (which can be seen at Re-brand Celtic).
Friendly Street, the Markets, south Belfast
Click image to enlarge
Copyright © 2005 Peter Moloney
M02389 M02391