Derry: Past and Present

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Derry: Past and Present

description

Derry: Past and Present. Present day view of the Bogside and Creggan neighborhoods from the city walls…. Derelict houses in Catholic Derry outside the old city walls…. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of Derry: Past and Present

Page 1: Derry: Past and Present

Derry: Past and Present

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Present day view of the Bogside and Creggan neighborhoods from the city walls…

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Derelict houses in Catholic Derry outside the old city

walls…

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Northern Ireland Civil Rights Association met with members of the Derry Housing Action Committee

and planned a march for October 5, 1968

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The Northern Ireland Civil Rights Association (NICRA) formed in 1967 and

demanded…

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2. One man, one vote

• Those who paid rates(taxes) were allowed to vote

1. Repeal the Special Powers Act

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3. End to gerrymandering electoral districts

4. Anti-discrimination laws

5. Disbanding the RUC

6. Fair allocation of public housing

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The first civil rights march in Derry: the beginning of the modern phase of “the

Troubles,” October 5, 1968

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Police brutality was captured on film. The official report put the number of

casualties as 4 RUC officers and 77

civilians

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The Battle of the Bogside,

August 12-14 1969

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A full-scale riot erupted when the Apprentice Boys jeered and taunted Catholics at the Bogside during

their march to commemorate the siege of Derry

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Barricades were built to keep the RUC out of Catholic enclaves

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Catholics used petrol bombs, rocks and various debris to defend “Free Derry”

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Bernadette Devlin:

Youngest female MP ever elected

Imprisoned for resistance in Battle of the Bogside

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14 August 1969:British troops deployed in Northern Ireland

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British army barricade at the city walls…

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“Recreation”: Catholic children regularly pelted British military vehicles with stones

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The IRA declared the Bogside a “no go” zone for security forces

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The IRA set up checkpoints throughout “Free Derry” as Protestants demanded action from the

British Army

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4,000 extra British troops were brought into Northern Ireland to take part in the dismantling of barricades on the boundaries of 'no-

go' areas

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Present day Loyalist enclave just outside the Derry city wall …

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Entrance to the West Bank loyalist estate from further down the city wall…

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Surveillance Surveillance Cameras Cameras

<----Maroon flag of Derry<----Maroon flag of Derry

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Notice the red, white and blue curbs…

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Loyalists build the bonfire to celebrate the

Siege of Derry in 1689

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Apprentice Boys bonfire

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Observation barracks overlooking the Bogside due to be removed

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Paint Paint BombsBombs

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PSNI making an arrestPSNI making an arrest

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“Bad”

U2