Two images related to the SDLP in Derry: party leader Mark Durkan became MP for Foyle in 2005, while Pat Ramsey was mayor of Derry in 1999-2000 and MLA for Foyle from 2003 onward. Both are from Derry. Ramsey’s offices are in Creggan Road; the Durkan hoarding is in ?William Street?
These paste-ups are part of the Bloody Sunday 35th anniversary commemoration and Bluebell Arts ‘Unsung Heroes’ project. (See also Lecky Road Underpass.) First is Rosemary Nelson, the Lurgan solicitor killed by the Red Hand Defenders in 1999. Second is Paddy Doherty, killed on Bloody Sunday. (Both in Lone Moor Road.) Third (in Creggan Road) is Kate Nash, “In the midst of her own grief she kept everybody happy. Nominated by the Bloody Sunday Trust”. Kate’s brother William Nash was killed on Bloody Sunday and their father Alexander injured while trying to help him. Fourth is Jim Wray, killed on Bloody Sunday (in Westland Street). Fifth is Michael McDaid, killed on Bloody Sunday (in Lone Moor Rd).
Derry civil rights campaigner and long-time activist Eamonn McCann stood for the Socialist Environmental Alliance in the 2007 Assembly elections (ARK). Water charges were due to be introduced in March, 2007 (BBC-NI). McCann secured 5% of the first preference vote and was not elected. From 2004: McCann’s The Man.
The impetus for this 2007 graffiti in Rossville Street is unknown. The Gardaí and PSNI rugby squads joined forces in 2003 (compare Shame on You, St Brigid’s) and the Derry City team goes back to the 19th century. Get in touch if you know the reference. Signed “JC”.
London-/Derry artist Eamonn O’Doherty‘s 1990 sculpture ‘The Emigrants’ is in Waterloo Place, Derry (until 2010 when it would be moved to the quayside).
2007 version of the UFF LPOW [Loyalist prisoners of war] mural in Ebrington Terrace, Waterside, Londonderry, seen previously in 1997 and 2005. The Ulster [Northern Ireland] nationalist flag is on the left.
An information plaque is added to the “Breaking the boom” mural by Attitude Artwork in Roulston Avenue, Londonderry. This mural shows the Mountjoy in full sail. She was one of the ships which broke the timber boom across the Foyle to relieve the siege in 1689. This is one of a number of murals commemorating the 1689 siege in the Waterside and Fountain areas of the city. The mural was painted by local community artists Dee Logan, Mark Logan and Marty Edwards.” Seen previously in 2003.
The hunger strikers memorial in Rossville Street, Derry, gets a new centre-piece: the dove (or lark?) and barbed wire are now mounted on a fist (or at least, curled fingers). See previously 2001 which has close-ups of the side stones, and 2004 which has a shot taken from the same spot.
Information boards with photographs from the early Troubles are added along Rossville Street, Derry, for the benefit of tourists, supplementing the People’s Gallery. These three are to Free Derry Corner, Bloody Sunday, and Aggro Corner.