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Chronology of the Northern Ireland Troubles
Considering that the Province
of Northern Ireland was ravaged by conflict for over
30 years, it would be simply
impossible to include every single event that took
place during that time. Listed are the most important
incidents
of The Troubles and subsequent peace process.
1960 - 1969
-
1967, January: Northern Ireland
Civil Rights Association formed.
-
1968, October: Clashes between
NICRA and Royal Ulster Constabulary (RUC) in Derry,
during civil rights marches
putatively considered by many as the beginning
of the Troubles.
-
1969, March/April: Loyalist bombers
targeted local amenities, including water and electricity.
-
1969, July: 67 year old Francis McCloskey was killed
by an RUC officer. Many consider this the
first death of the Troubles. In the following
30 years, over
3500
people died as a result of the conflict.
-
1969, August: Serious rioting erupted in Bogside,
Derry on August 12-14. After two days
of continuous battle, British troops were deployed
on the streets of
Northern
Ireland for the first time. See Battle of the Bogside
-
1969, August, in response to
events in Derry, rioting breaks out in Belfast
and elsewhere from August 14-17.
Seven people are killed and hundreds
of homes are destroyed. The British Army is again
sent in to restore order. See
Northern Ireland riots of August 1969.
-
1969, October: 29 year old Victor
Arbuckle, an officer with the RUC, was killed (Whilst
on duty in the Loyalist
area of the Shankhill Road). He
is believed to be the first RUC officer to die
in the
Troubles.
-
1969, December: A split formed in the Irish Republican
Army, creating the Official IRA and Provisional
IRA.
1970 - 1979
-
1970, 27 June: Provisional IRA
and Loyalists fight major gun battle in Ardoyne
and Short Strand in Belfast.
Seven people were killed.
-
1970 3-5 July: Falls Curfew,
British Army imposed a three day curfew on the
Lower Falls area. Five civilians
are killed in gun battles
between the Army and the Official IRA in the
area. Another
60 civilians and 15 soldiers
are shot and injured. 300
people are arrested and over 100 illegal weapons
are seized
by the Army.
-
1970, August: Leading Nationalist
party, the Social Democratic and Labour Party (SDLP)
was formed.
-
1971, February: Gunner Robert
Curtis became the first British Soldier to die
in the Troubles when he was shot
by the IRA.
-
1971, March: Brian Faulkner became
the Prime Minister of Northern Ireland.
-
1971, August: Internment was
introduced in Northern Ireland.
-
1971, December: Fifteen people
were killed in the McGurk's Bar bombing in a Belfast
bar.
-
1972, January: Bloody Sunday
- Thirteen men were shot and killed by the British
Army, following protests
and riots in Derry.
-
1972, February: Funerals of eleven
of those killed on Bloody Sunday. Prayer services
held across Ireland.
In Dublin,
over 30,000 marched to the British Embassy, carrying
thirteen
replica coffins and black flags.
They attacked
the Embassy with stones and bottles, then petrol
bombs. The building was eventually burnt to the
ground.
-
Seven people were killed by
an IRA bomb at Aldershot Barracks, England.
It was thought to be in retaliation
for Bloody Sunday.
Six of those killed were
female ancillary workers. The seventh was a Roman Catholic
priest
-
1972, March: Stormont Government
was dissolved. Direct rule from Westminster
was introduced.
- 1972, May: The Official IRA announced
a ceasefire. This marked the end of
OIRA’s
military campaign. The Provisional
IRA continued its campaign
right up until
1997.
- 1972, July: Bloody Friday - nine people were
killed and one hundred thirty seriously injured when
the IRA
exploded twenty-two bombs in Belfast in the space
of seventy-five minutes.
- 1972, December: Two people
were killed and one hundred twenty-seven injured by
two IRA car bombs in Dublin,
Republic of Ireland.
- 1973, June: Northern Ireland Assembly
elections took place.
- 1974, February: Twelve people
were killed by an IRA bomb planted on a coach carrying
British soldiers and
their families. It exploded on the M62 Motorway.
- 1974,
May: Beginning of Ulster Workers Council strike.
- Ulster
Volunteer Force planted four bombs (three
in Dublin, one in Monaghan) in the Republic
of Ireland.
They killed thirty-three people and an
unborn child.
- The Northern Ireland Assembly
collapsed. As a
result, direct rule was re-introduced.
- 1974,
October: Five people were killed by an IRA
bomb in the Horse and Groom pub in Guildford,
Surrey,
England.
- 1974, November: Twenty-one people were killed
by IRA bombs in pubs in Birmingham, England.
- 1974,
December: IRA announced a Christmas ceasefire. Prior
to ceasefire, they carried out a bomb attack on
the home of former Prime Minister Edward Heath.
Mr Heath was not in the building at the time and
no one was injured.
- 1975, July: Three members
of the Miami Showband were shot and killed by
the UVF following a concert in County
Down.
- 1975, October: The UVF killed twelve people
in a series of attacks across Northern Ireland.
- 1975,
December: End of internment.
- The Red Hand Commandos,
a group associated with the UVF, killed five
people in a bomb attack in Dundalk,
Co. Louth, Republic
of Ireland.
- 1976, January: Ten Protestant
civilians were killed by the Republican Action
Force (believed to be
a cover name for the IRA).
- 1976, March: End of
Special Category Status for prisoners convicted
of terrorist crimes.
- 1976, July: 54 year old Christopher
Ewart Biggs, the British Ambassador to Ireland,
and his secretary
Judith Cook, 25, were killed by a bomb
planted in Mr Biggs’ car in Dublin.
- 1976, August:
Mairead Corrigan and Betty Williams formed the
Peace People, a group of Catholics and Protestants,
who joined forces on the streets of Northern
Ireland
to call for peace.
- 1976, September: Blanket protests
began in the Maze prison, in protest at the end
of special category status.
The term ‘blanket protest’ comes
from the protesters refusal to wear prison
uniforms, instead wrapping
blankets around themselves.
- 1977, October: Mairead
Corrigan and Betty Williams received the Nobel Peace
Prize.
- 1978, February: Twelve people were killed
by an IRA bomb at the La Mon Restaurant near Belfast.
- 1979,
February: Eleven loyalists known as the Shankill
Butchers were sentenced to life in prison for
nineteen
murders. The infamous group were named
for their practice of torturing and mutilating
their victims
with butcher’s
knives.
- 1979, March: Conservative shadow spokesman
on Northern Ireland, Airey Neave was killed by a bomb
planted in
his car by the Irish National Liberation Army
(INLA). If he had lived, he might have become Secretary
of State
for Northern Ireland, when the Conservatives
won the United Kingdom general election two months
later.
- 1979, August: Eighteen British soldiers
were killed by an IRA bomb at Warrenpoint,
County Down. A gun battle
ensued between the IRA and the British
Army, in which one innocent civilian was killed.
On the
same day, four
people, including the Queen’s cousin
Lord Louis Mountbatten, were killed by
an IRA bomb
on board a boat
off the coast of County Sligo.
- 1979, September: During
a visit to the Republic of Ireland, Pope John Paul
II appealed for an end to the
violence in Northern Ireland.
[back
to top] 1980 - 1989
- 1980, October: Republican prisoners in the
Maze began a hunger strike in protest against the
end of special
category status.
- 1980, December: Hunger strike
called off.
- 1981, March: Prisoners in the Maze
began a second hunger strike.
- 1981, April:
Hunger striker Bobby Sands won a by-election
to be elected as a Member of Parliament at
Westminster. The law was later changed to prevent
prisoners
standing
in elections.
- 1981, May: After 66 days on hunger
strike, 26 year old Bobby Sands MP died in the Maze.
Nine further hunger
strikers died in the following 3 months.
- 1981, June:
Eight IRA prisoners escaped from the Crumlin Road
Gaol in Belfast.
- 1981, September: Northern Ireland’s
first religiously integrated secondary school opened.
- 1981,
October: Hunger strike ended.
- 1982, July: Eleven
British soldiers and seven military horses died
in IRA bomb attacks on Regents Park and Hyde
Park, London. Many spectators were badly injured.
- 1982,
December: 17 people were killed by an INLA bomb at
the Droppin’ Well Bar, County Derry.
- 1983,
May: New Ireland Forum set up.
- 1984, October: The
IRA carried out a bomb attack on the Grand Hotel,
Brighton, which was being used as
a base for the Conservative Party Conference.
Five people, including MP Sir Anthony Berry, were
killed. Margaret
and Denis Thatcher narrowly escaped injury.
- 1984,
December: Ian Thain became the first British soldier
to be convicted of murdering a civilian during
the troubles.
- 1985, November: Margaret Thatcher and
Garret FitzGerald signed the Anglo-Irish Agreement.
- 1985,
December: All fifteen Unionist MPs at Westminster
resigned in protest against the Anglo-Irish agreement.
- 1986,
June : Northern Ireland Assembly was officially
dissolved.
- 1987, May: Eight IRA members killed
by the SAS in Loughall, Co. Armagh.
- 1987, November:
Eleven people were killed by an IRA bomb during
a Remembrance Day service in Enniskillen,
County Fermanagh. One of those killed was Marie
Wilson. In an emotional BBC interview, her
father Gordon Wilson
(who was injured in the attack) expressed forgiveness
towards his daughters killer, and asked Unionists
not to seek revenge. He became a leading peace
campaigner
and was later elected to the Irish Senate.
He died in 1995.
- 1988, January: SDLP leader John
Hume and Sinn Fein leader Gerry Adams held a
meeting. Many consider this
meeting as the beginning of the Peace Process.
- 1988,
March: Three IRA members were killed by the SAS in
Gibraltar. At the funeral of those killed
in Gibraltar, loyalist Michael Stone launched a grenade,
killing three.
Most of the action was filmed by Television
News crews.
- At the funeral of Michael Brady, killed
at the funeral by Michael Stone,
two British soldiers in plain clothes were killed after
being mistaken for loyalist gunmen.
- 1988,
June Six off-duty British soldiers were killed
by an IRA bomb on their minibus in Lisburn.
- 1988,
August: Eight British soldiers were killed by an
IRA bomb at Ballygawley, County Tyrone.
- October:
The British Government introduced the broadcasting
ban.
- 1989, February: Prominent Republican
solicitor Pat Finucane was shot and killed
by the Ulster Freedom
Fighters.
- 1989, September: Eleven military bandsmen
were killed by the IRA at Deal Barracks, Kent,
England.
1990 - 1999
- 1990, March: Charles Haughey became the first
serving Taoiseach (Irish Prime Minister) to visit Northern
Ireland
since 1965.
- 1990, July: The IRA bombed the Stock
Exchange, London.
- Conservative MP for Eastbourne,
Ian Gow, was killed by an IRA bomb planted in
his car.
- 1990, September: Two Catholic teenagers
were killed by British soldier in Belfast.
- 1990,
November: Margaret Thatcher resigned as British
Prime Minister.
- 1990, December: The IRA held its
first Christmas ceasefire for 15 years.
- 1991, February:
Three mortars were fired into gardens at 10 Downing
Street, the official residence of the British
Prime Minister.
- 1992, January: Eight people were killed
by an IRA bomb at Teebane, County Tyrone. Secretary
of State for
Northern Ireland, Peter Brooke was accused
by unionists of gross insensitivity, after he was persuaded
to sing ‘My
Darling Clemintine’ on RTE’s
Late Late Show.
- RUC officer Allen Moore
killed three Sinn Fein
members in Belfast. He later
shot himself.
- 1992, February: The UFF shot and
killed five Catholics at a bookmaker’s
shop on Belfast's Ormeau Road.
- 1992,
April: Three people were killed by
an IRA bomb at the Baltic Exchange,
London.
- 1993, March: The IRA exploded
two bombs in Warrington, Cheshire,
England, killing 3 year old Jonathan
Ball and
injuring fifty-six others. 12 year
old Tim Parry died of his injuries five
days later. There were widespread
protests in Britain and Ireland following
the deaths
of the two innocent boys.
- 1993, April: The IRA exploded
a large bomb at Bishopsgate, London. It killed one
person, injured thirty others,
and caused an estimated £350 million in damage.
- 1993, June: President of the Republic of Ireland,
Mary Robinson,
visited community groups in Belfast. She
publicly shook hands with Gerry Adams, provoking criticism.
- 1993, September: The IRA observed a ceasefire to
coincide with a visit to Northern Ireland by prominent
Irish Americans.
- 1993, October: Ten people were killed
by an IRA bomb at a fish shop on Shankill Road, Belfast.
- The
UFF shot and killed eight people at the Rising Sun
bar, Greysteel, County Londonderry.
One gunman was
heard to
say ‘trick or treat’ before
he fired into the crowded room, a reference to the
Halloween party taking place.
- 1994 January: The broadcasting
ban lifted in the Republic of Ireland.
- U.S. President
Bill Clinton granted a ‘limited duration’ visa
to see Gerry Adams.
- 1994, March: The IRA carried
out a mortar attack on Heathrow Airport, London.
Further
attacks were carried out later in the month, but on
each occasion, the mortars
failed to explode.
- 1994, June: Twenty-nine people,
including ten senior RUC officers, died when their
Chinook
helicopter crashed at Mull of Kintyre, Scotland. They
were travelling from
Belfast to a security conference
in Inverness.
- Six men were shot and killed by the UVF
at a bar in Loughinisland, County
Down.
- 1994, August: The IRA issued a statement
which announced a complete cessation of military
activities. This ceasefire was broken less than two
years later.
- 1994, September: John Major lifted
the broadcasting ban in the UK.
- 1994, October:
Loyalist groups announced a ceasefire.
- 1994,
December: Former US Senator (Democrat-Maine), George
Mitchell, GBE, was appointed by Bill Clinton as special
economic
advisor
on Ireland. In effect, Mitchell
was the ‘peace
envoy’ promised by Clinton in 1992.
- 1995, January:
A delegation from Sinn Fein met with officials from
the Northern Ireland Office.
- 1995, February: The
British and Irish governments released the Joint
Framework document.
- 1995, March: Gerry Adams attended
a reception held by Bill Clinton at the White House.
- 1995, July: Lee Clegg, a British Army paratrooper
, was
released from prison on the orders of Secretary
of State Patrick Mayhew. Clegg
had been jailed in 1993, for the murder of Catholic
teenager Karen Reilly.
- 1995, September: David
Trimble was elected as the leader of the Ulster
Unionist Party, following the resignation
of James Molyneaux.
- 1995, November: Bill Clinton
became the first serving US President to visit Northern
Ireland.
- 1996, February: The IRA bombed South Quay,
Docklands, London. The bomb killed two people,
and brought to an
end the ceasefire after 17 months and 9 days.
- 1996,
June: Detective Jerry McCabe of Garda Siochana (Irish
police force) was killed
by the IRA in County Limerick.
- Talks at Stormont began
without Sinn Féin.
- The IRA exploded a bomb
in Manchester. It destroyed a large part of the
city centre
and injured
over 200 people. To date, it is the largest
bomb to be
planted on the British mainland. The devastation
was so great,
that several buildings
were damaged beyond repair, and had
to be demolished. It’s estimated
that Manchester lost a third of all
its retail space in the blast. Re-building took
many
years.
- 1996, October: 31 people were injured by
an IRA bomb at the British Army HQ in Thiepval
Barracks, Lisburn. 43 year old Warrant Officer James
Bradwell died of his
injuries four days later in hospital.
- 1997, February:
Lance Bombardier Stephen Restorick was shot and killed
by the IRA at Bessbrook, Co. Armagh.
He was the last British soldier to die in the Troubles.
- 1997,
April: The Grand National horse race was cancelled,
and
Aintree Racecourse evacuated following a hoax bomb
warning from the IRA. It was
one of a number of events that proved how easily the
IRA could disrupt the lives
of the British public with
minimum effort, and minimum risk to IRA members.
- 1997,
May: Labour won the UK general election. Dr. Marjorie ’Mo’ Mowlam
was appointed as Secretary of
State for Northern Ireland.
- 1997, June: Sinn Fein
won its first ever seats in the Dail (Irish Parliament)
- Two
RUC officers were shot and killed by the IRA.
- 1997,
July: The IRA renewed its ceasefire.
- 1997, August:
There was a debate on BBC’s Newsnight
between Sinn Féin and
the UUP. This was the first
television debate between the two parties.
- 1997, September:
Sinn Féin
signed the Mitchell Principles.
- General John de Chastelain
was appointed as the chair of the body to oversee
decommissioning.
- Multi-party talks resumed
- 1997, December: Billy
Wright, the leader of the Loyalist Volunteer Force
within the Maze was shot and killed.
- 1998, January:
Against the advice of the British government, Mo
Mowlam visited
UDA and UFF prisoners in the Maze to encourage them
to support the peace talks.
- The Ulster Democratic Party
were suspended from talks following UDA and UFF
violence.
- 1998, March: Two men were shot and killed
by the LVF at Poyntzpass, County
Armagh.
- George Mitchell set a deadline of 9th April
for the parties to reach an agreement.
- 1998, April:
George Mitchell’s 9 April deadline
passed, but the talks continued
well into the night. Then at 5:35 p.m., on Good
Friday, 10th April, after
thirty years of violence,
and two years of intensive talks, George Mitchell
made the historic announcement: ‘I
am happy to announce that
the governments, and political parties of Northern
Ireland have reached an agreement.’ The
agreement, officially called
the Belfast Agreement,
would become better known
as the Good Friday Agreement.
- 1998, May: The people
of Ireland, North and South, voted overwhelmingly in
favour of the Good Friday Agreement.
- 1998, June:
Northern Ireland Assembly elections were held. David
Trimble was elected First Minister. Seamus
Mallon was elected deputy.
- 1998, August: A dissident
Republican splinter group, calling itself the Real
IRA, exploded a bomb in Omagh,
County Tyrone. It killed
twenty-nine people, making it the worst single bombing
of the Troubles, in terms of
life lost.
- 1998, December: David Trimble of the Ulster
Unionist Party (UUP) and John Hume from the SDLP
were awarded
the Nobel Peace Prize
for their efforts to bring peace to Northern Ireland.
- 1999, January: Former IRA member Eamon Collins was
found
dead near Newry, County Down.
- 1999, March: Solicitor
Rosemary Nelson, who had represented Republicans
in several high profile cases, was killed
by a booby trap car bomb
in Lurgan, County Armagh. A loyalist group, Red
Hand Defenders, admitted responsibility.
- 1999, July:
22 year old Charles Bennett was shot and killed by
the IRA in Belfast.
- 1999, October: Peter Mandelson
replaced Mo Mowlam as Secretary of State for Northern
Ireland.
[back
to top]
2000 -
- 2000, February: Peter Mandelson suspended the
Northern Ireland Assembly, citing insufficient progress
on decommissioning.
- 2000, March: The Bloody Sunday
Inquiry begins in Derry.
- 2000, May: Devolution
was restored.
- 2000, June: A Real IRA bomb caused
minor damage to Hammersmith Bridge, London.
- 2000,
July: The final prisoners were release from
the Maze, under the conditions of the Good Friday
Agreement.
- 2000, December: Bill Clinton began
a visit to Northern Ireland.
- 2001, January:
Dissident Republicans launched a mortar
attack on a British Army
base in Derry.
- Dr. John Reid replaced Peter Mandelson.
- 2001,
March: A Real IRA bomb exploded outside BBC Television
Centre, causing
some damage to the building.
- 2001, April: A Real
IRA bomb exploded at a Post Office depot in North
London.
- 2001, June: RUC officers had to protect pupils
and parents at Holy Cross Catholic Girls’ School
in Belfast, following
attacks from loyalist
protesters.
The attacks resumed in
September, following
the school summer holidays.
- 2001, July: David Trimble
resigned as First Minister.
- Catholic teenager Ciaran
Cummings was shot and killed by the UDA in Co.
Antrim.
- The worst rioting for several years took
place in Belfast.
- 2001, August: Army bomb disposal
teams diffused a bomb in the main car park at
Belfast Airport.
- A Real IRA car bomb injured seven
people in Ealing, West London
- 2001, October:
The IRA began decommissioning.
- 2001,
November: The RUC was replaced by the
Police Service of Northern
Ireland. Recruits were recruited on the basis of 50%
Catholic, 50% non catholic.
- David Trimble was re-elected
as First Minister.
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