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Ray Smallwoods

Raymond "Ray" Smallwoods (c. 1949[1] – 11 July 1994) was a Northern Ireland politician and sometime leader of the Ulster Democratic Party. A leading member of John McMichael's South Belfast Brigade of the Ulster Defence Association (UDA), Smallwoods later served as a leading adviser to the UDA's Inner Council. He was killed by the Provisional Irish Republican Army (IRA) outside his Lisburn home.

Ulster Defence Association edit

Smallwoods was a native of Lisburn and, as such, was a member of the Ulster Defence Association's South Belfast brigade, which also covered the nearby town.[1] In late 1979, John McMichael, a leading figure in the UDA and also a Lisburn native, set up a commando structure within the UDA and drew up a "shopping list" of leading targets for this group to kill.[2] Amongst the names on the list killed were Irish Independence Party member John Turnley, Irish National Liberation Army (INLA) prisoners' representative Miriam Daly and INLA and Irish Republican Socialist Party (IRSP) activists Ronnie Bunting and Noel Lyttle.[2] On 14 January 1981, Smallwoods, an associate of McMichael, was amongst those in attendance at a meeting above McMichael's pub in which it was decided that the next target would be former Irish republican politician Bernadette McAliskey.[2] According to Sammy Duddy, Smallwoods was one of only nine men that McMichael used for these operations.[3] Smallwoods and McMichael were close personally as well as professionally and both men and their families holidayed together on the Isle of Man.[4]

On 16 January 1981, Smallwoods participated in an attack on the Coalisland home of Michael McAliskey and his wife Bernadette, in which both were shot multiple times and seriously wounded. At the time, their house was being watched by a unit of the 3rd Battalion, The Parachute Regiment, resulting in the attackers all being arrested after the shooting.[1] As it subsequently transpired, Smallwoods had not fired any shots but had been the driver of the getaway car.[5] UDA men Thomas Graham (38) and Andrew Watson (25) had been the gunmen.[6] He was sentenced to fifteen years in prison for his involvement.[1] Following the arrests of McMichael's commando team and the leaking of the list to the press by his rival Tommy Lyttle, the "shopping list" was abandoned.[7]

Inner Council edit

During his time in prison, Smallwoods, who was described by other inmates as a deep-thinking introvert who struggled with being apart from his family for so long, spent a long time contemplating the UDA's weaknesses and considering other strategies, including political ones.[8] Following his release from prison in 1990, Smallwoods found the UDA to be greatly changed, with his ally McMichael dead and Andy Tyrie removed as leader and replaced by an Inner Council. Smallwoods was promptly attached to this body as an adviser and played a leading role in shaping UDA strategy over the next few years as a result.[9] At the time, Smallwoods was still advocating continued armed struggle by the UDA, arguing that their role was to ensure that the British government did not agree to a united Ireland, and was advising in the Inner Council in favour of the UDA's ongoing bombing campaign.[10] He also argued that the IRA's structure had changed to become subordinate to Sinn Féin and, as such, advocated a strategy of targeting Sinn Féin members, who were more vulnerable to assassination. Smallwoods' strategy was influenced by the "shopping list" idea of John McMichael.[11] Amongst those to be killed as a result of this strategy were Sinn Féin activists Tommy Casey,[12] Councillor Eddie Fullerton[13] and Thomas Donaghy,[14] as well as Robert Shaw, the father of an SF worker but not himself a member.[15]

During early 1992, Smallwoods, and others close to him in the Inner Council, held a series of meetings with Presbyterian ministers Jack Weir and Godfrey Browne. At these meetings, facilitated by Reverend Roy Magee, a former member of the Ulster Vanguard and campaigner against the Anglo-Irish Agreement who had become a peace advocate, the ministers pressed Smallwoods to lead the Inner Council towards a ceasefire.[16] The proposal was rejected by the Inner Council and Smallwoods ended the discussions in March after learning that Weir and Browne had also been negotiating with Sinn Féin, a fact that Smallwoods feared might lead to suggestions that he had been passing information to the IRA.[17]

Nonetheless, Magee remained in regular contact with Smallwoods, whom he believed to be one of the main moderates on the Inner Council.[17] Around 1993, Smallwoods, following prompting from Magee, opened communication with Alec Reid and Gerry Reynolds, two priests from the Roman Catholic Clonard Monastery on the Falls Road whom he used to open communications with republicans. Smallwoods intimated to them that the UDA was hoping to see peace and was preparing for a ceasefire.[18] Father Reid had already built a relationship with Robert "Basher" Bates, one of the Shankill Butchers whose conversion to born-again Christianity had seen the two co-operate on ecumenical initiatives, but Smallwoods was the first active, high-ranking loyalist to hold regular dialogue with Catholic clergy.[19] The Greysteel massacre of October 1993 almost led to the initiative breaking down as a disgusted Magee decided to break off contact with the UDA altogether but he was dissuaded by Smallwoods, who convinced him that there was a growing willingness to embrace peace on the Inner Council. Magee would later state that, despite his endorsement of a policy of targeting Sinn Féin members, Smallwoods proved to be an important voice for moderation on the Inner Council and a prime architect of the eventual loyalist ceasefire.[20]

Political involvement edit

As well as his role with the Inner Council, Smallwoods was also made the public spokesman for the Ulster Democratic Party (UDP) following his release from prison.[21] He became party chairman in the early 1990s and around this time also became liaison officer for the UDA to the Combined Loyalist Military Command.[22] During the early 1990s, Smallwoods was in regular contact with the Progressive Unionist Party's Gusty Spence and took part in the so-called "kitchen cabinets" held in Spence's home in which leading loyalist politicians and paramilitaries met to discuss possible strategies for peace.[23]

Smallwoods was noted for his strong working class loyalist approach to Northern Irish politics, which was distinct from the more middle class unionism favoured by larger parties.[24] It was also noted by both Ian S. Wood and an Observer journalist that Smallwoods sometimes struggled with his dual role as politician and paramilitary director, often beginning interviews by calling the UDA "them" before eventually switching to "us".[24] Having come from a background in the UDA in the 1970s, Smallwoods was sympathetic to Ulster nationalism and, during his chairmanship, he placed the notion of an independent Northern Ireland at the heart of party policy. According to Gusty Spence, however, Ulster nationalism was a fallback position for Smallwoods, who also recognised the impracticalities of the idea, a plan that Spence had no truck with.[23]

Death edit

As UDP chair, Smallwoods became a prominent figure as the UDA moved towards a ceasefire and emerged as an articulate voice of loyalist politics.[25] Smallwoods, however, was not to see these developments as he was killed by the IRA in Lisburn on 11 July 1994.[26] The attack, which occurred in the garden of his house on Lisburn's Donard Drive, was witnessed by his wife Linda.[5][27][28]

Smallwoods' killing was one of a series of attacks by the IRA during the middle of 1994 in which top loyalists and other opponents, such as Martin Cahill, were targeted before the movement went on ceasefire.[29] Smallwoods' killing, as well as the killings of Joe Bratty and Raymond Elder twenty days later, were claimed at the time to be in revenge for the Loughinisland massacre.[30] The attack was condemned by his Progressive Unionist colleague David Ervine as a "totally cynical exercise" given Smallwoods' work towards peace.[18] For their part, the IRA stated that Smallwoods had actually been involved in directing UDA terror.[31] For the UDA, Smallwoods was a double loss as he was both an important director of their campaign of violence and also, increasingly, a moderating influence, who was seeking to move the UDA away from violence.[32] His funeral was held on 14 July, where Reynolds and Reid were amongst the mourners[32] whilst his pallbearers included Democratic Unionist Party politicians Peter Robinson and Sammy Wilson.[33]

The loyalists decided not to retaliate for Smallwoods' murder and instead, on 15 July, released a statement that had been drafted by Smallwoods shortly before his murder in which the CLMC said it would go on ceasefire if the IRA did so.[34] He was succeeded as leader of the UDP by Gary McMichael, the son of John McMichael.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d Peter Taylor, Loyalists, London: Bloomsbury, 2000, p. 168
  2. ^ a b c H. McDonald & J. Cusack, UDA – Inside the Heart of Loyalist Terror, Dublin, Penguin Ireland, 2004, pp. 116–118
  3. ^ Ian S. Wood, Crimes of Loyalty: A History of the UDA, Edinburgh University Press, 2006, p. 119
  4. ^ Gary McMichael, Ulster Voice: In Search of Common Ground in Northern Ireland, Niwot Colorado: Roberts Rinehart, 1999, pp. 56–57
  5. ^ a b David Lister & Hugh Jordan, Mad Dog: The Rise and Fall of Johnny Adair and 'C' Company, Edinburgh: Mainstream, 2004, p. 221
  6. ^ Murray, Raymond (1990). The SAS in Ireland. Mercier Press. p.263
  7. ^ McDonald & Cusack, UDA, p. 118
  8. ^ McDonald & Cusack, UDA, p. 162
  9. ^ McDonald & Cusack, UDA, pp. 161–162
  10. ^ McDonald & Cusack, UDA, pp. 164–166
  11. ^ McDonald & Cusack, UDA, pp. 174–175
  12. ^ McDonald & Cusack, UDA, p. 186
  13. ^ McDonald & Cusack, UDA, p. 192
  14. ^ McDonald & Cusack, UDA, p. 200
  15. ^ McDonald & Cusack, UDA, p. 240
  16. ^ McDonald & Cusack, UDA, pp. 229–230
  17. ^ a b McDonald & Cusack, UDA, p. 230
  18. ^ a b Jim Cusack & Henry McDonald, UVF, Dublin: Poolbeg, 1997, p. 312
  19. ^ McDonald & Cusack, UDA, p. 231
  20. ^ McDonald & Cusack, UDA, p. 257
  21. ^ McDonald & Cusack, UDA, pp. 173–174
  22. ^ McDonald & Cusack, UDA, pp. 189–190
  23. ^ a b Roy Garland, Gusty Spence, Belfast: Blackstaff Press, 2001, p. 279
  24. ^ a b Wood, Crimes of Loyalty, p. 188
  25. ^ Lister & Jordan, Mad Dog, p. 222
  26. ^ A Draft Chronology of the Conflict – 1994
  27. ^ McMichael, Ulster Voice, p. 56
  28. ^ David McKittrick et al, Lost Lives, Mainstream Publishing, 2008, p. 1369
  29. ^ Brian Feeney, Sinn Féin: A Hundred Turbulent Years, Dublin: O'Brien Press, 2002, pp. 406–407
  30. ^ Taylor, Loyalists, p. 231
  31. ^ Cusack & McDonald, UVF, p. 313
  32. ^ a b McDonald & Cusack, UDA, p. 268
  33. ^ Sydney Elliott & William D. Flackes, Conflict in Northern Ireland: An Encyclopedia, ABC-CLIO, 1999, p. 226
  34. ^ Brendan O'Brien, The Long War: The IRA and Sinn Féin, 1985 to Today, Syracuse University Press, 1993, p. 314
Political offices
Preceded by Leader of the Ulster Democratic Party
c.1990 – 1994
Succeeded by

smallwoods, raymond, smallwoods, 1949, july, 1994, northern, ireland, politician, sometime, leader, ulster, democratic, party, leading, member, john, mcmichael, south, belfast, brigade, ulster, defence, association, smallwoods, later, served, leading, adviser,. Raymond Ray Smallwoods c 1949 1 11 July 1994 was a Northern Ireland politician and sometime leader of the Ulster Democratic Party A leading member of John McMichael s South Belfast Brigade of the Ulster Defence Association UDA Smallwoods later served as a leading adviser to the UDA s Inner Council He was killed by the Provisional Irish Republican Army IRA outside his Lisburn home Contents 1 Ulster Defence Association 2 Inner Council 3 Political involvement 4 Death 5 See also 6 ReferencesUlster Defence Association editSmallwoods was a native of Lisburn and as such was a member of the Ulster Defence Association s South Belfast brigade which also covered the nearby town 1 In late 1979 John McMichael a leading figure in the UDA and also a Lisburn native set up a commando structure within the UDA and drew up a shopping list of leading targets for this group to kill 2 Amongst the names on the list killed were Irish Independence Party member John Turnley Irish National Liberation Army INLA prisoners representative Miriam Daly and INLA and Irish Republican Socialist Party IRSP activists Ronnie Bunting and Noel Lyttle 2 On 14 January 1981 Smallwoods an associate of McMichael was amongst those in attendance at a meeting above McMichael s pub in which it was decided that the next target would be former Irish republican politician Bernadette McAliskey 2 According to Sammy Duddy Smallwoods was one of only nine men that McMichael used for these operations 3 Smallwoods and McMichael were close personally as well as professionally and both men and their families holidayed together on the Isle of Man 4 On 16 January 1981 Smallwoods participated in an attack on the Coalisland home of Michael McAliskey and his wife Bernadette in which both were shot multiple times and seriously wounded At the time their house was being watched by a unit of the 3rd Battalion The Parachute Regiment resulting in the attackers all being arrested after the shooting 1 As it subsequently transpired Smallwoods had not fired any shots but had been the driver of the getaway car 5 UDA men Thomas Graham 38 and Andrew Watson 25 had been the gunmen 6 He was sentenced to fifteen years in prison for his involvement 1 Following the arrests of McMichael s commando team and the leaking of the list to the press by his rival Tommy Lyttle the shopping list was abandoned 7 Inner Council editDuring his time in prison Smallwoods who was described by other inmates as a deep thinking introvert who struggled with being apart from his family for so long spent a long time contemplating the UDA s weaknesses and considering other strategies including political ones 8 Following his release from prison in 1990 Smallwoods found the UDA to be greatly changed with his ally McMichael dead and Andy Tyrie removed as leader and replaced by an Inner Council Smallwoods was promptly attached to this body as an adviser and played a leading role in shaping UDA strategy over the next few years as a result 9 At the time Smallwoods was still advocating continued armed struggle by the UDA arguing that their role was to ensure that the British government did not agree to a united Ireland and was advising in the Inner Council in favour of the UDA s ongoing bombing campaign 10 He also argued that the IRA s structure had changed to become subordinate to Sinn Fein and as such advocated a strategy of targeting Sinn Fein members who were more vulnerable to assassination Smallwoods strategy was influenced by the shopping list idea of John McMichael 11 Amongst those to be killed as a result of this strategy were Sinn Fein activists Tommy Casey 12 Councillor Eddie Fullerton 13 and Thomas Donaghy 14 as well as Robert Shaw the father of an SF worker but not himself a member 15 During early 1992 Smallwoods and others close to him in the Inner Council held a series of meetings with Presbyterian ministers Jack Weir and Godfrey Browne At these meetings facilitated by Reverend Roy Magee a former member of the Ulster Vanguard and campaigner against the Anglo Irish Agreement who had become a peace advocate the ministers pressed Smallwoods to lead the Inner Council towards a ceasefire 16 The proposal was rejected by the Inner Council and Smallwoods ended the discussions in March after learning that Weir and Browne had also been negotiating with Sinn Fein a fact that Smallwoods feared might lead to suggestions that he had been passing information to the IRA 17 Nonetheless Magee remained in regular contact with Smallwoods whom he believed to be one of the main moderates on the Inner Council 17 Around 1993 Smallwoods following prompting from Magee opened communication with Alec Reid and Gerry Reynolds two priests from the Roman Catholic Clonard Monastery on the Falls Road whom he used to open communications with republicans Smallwoods intimated to them that the UDA was hoping to see peace and was preparing for a ceasefire 18 Father Reid had already built a relationship with Robert Basher Bates one of the Shankill Butchers whose conversion to born again Christianity had seen the two co operate on ecumenical initiatives but Smallwoods was the first active high ranking loyalist to hold regular dialogue with Catholic clergy 19 The Greysteel massacre of October 1993 almost led to the initiative breaking down as a disgusted Magee decided to break off contact with the UDA altogether but he was dissuaded by Smallwoods who convinced him that there was a growing willingness to embrace peace on the Inner Council Magee would later state that despite his endorsement of a policy of targeting Sinn Fein members Smallwoods proved to be an important voice for moderation on the Inner Council and a prime architect of the eventual loyalist ceasefire 20 Political involvement editAs well as his role with the Inner Council Smallwoods was also made the public spokesman for the Ulster Democratic Party UDP following his release from prison 21 He became party chairman in the early 1990s and around this time also became liaison officer for the UDA to the Combined Loyalist Military Command 22 During the early 1990s Smallwoods was in regular contact with the Progressive Unionist Party s Gusty Spence and took part in the so called kitchen cabinets held in Spence s home in which leading loyalist politicians and paramilitaries met to discuss possible strategies for peace 23 Smallwoods was noted for his strong working class loyalist approach to Northern Irish politics which was distinct from the more middle class unionism favoured by larger parties 24 It was also noted by both Ian S Wood and an Observer journalist that Smallwoods sometimes struggled with his dual role as politician and paramilitary director often beginning interviews by calling the UDA them before eventually switching to us 24 Having come from a background in the UDA in the 1970s Smallwoods was sympathetic to Ulster nationalism and during his chairmanship he placed the notion of an independent Northern Ireland at the heart of party policy According to Gusty Spence however Ulster nationalism was a fallback position for Smallwoods who also recognised the impracticalities of the idea a plan that Spence had no truck with 23 Death editAs UDP chair Smallwoods became a prominent figure as the UDA moved towards a ceasefire and emerged as an articulate voice of loyalist politics 25 Smallwoods however was not to see these developments as he was killed by the IRA in Lisburn on 11 July 1994 26 The attack which occurred in the garden of his house on Lisburn s Donard Drive was witnessed by his wife Linda 5 27 28 Smallwoods killing was one of a series of attacks by the IRA during the middle of 1994 in which top loyalists and other opponents such as Martin Cahill were targeted before the movement went on ceasefire 29 Smallwoods killing as well as the killings of Joe Bratty and Raymond Elder twenty days later were claimed at the time to be in revenge for the Loughinisland massacre 30 The attack was condemned by his Progressive Unionist colleague David Ervine as a totally cynical exercise given Smallwoods work towards peace 18 For their part the IRA stated that Smallwoods had actually been involved in directing UDA terror 31 For the UDA Smallwoods was a double loss as he was both an important director of their campaign of violence and also increasingly a moderating influence who was seeking to move the UDA away from violence 32 His funeral was held on 14 July where Reynolds and Reid were amongst the mourners 32 whilst his pallbearers included Democratic Unionist Party politicians Peter Robinson and Sammy Wilson 33 The loyalists decided not to retaliate for Smallwoods murder and instead on 15 July released a statement that had been drafted by Smallwoods shortly before his murder in which the CLMC said it would go on ceasefire if the IRA did so 34 He was succeeded as leader of the UDP by Gary McMichael the son of John McMichael See also edit1994 Shankill Road killingsReferences edit a b c d Peter Taylor Loyalists London Bloomsbury 2000 p 168 a b c H McDonald amp J Cusack UDA Inside the Heart of Loyalist Terror Dublin Penguin Ireland 2004 pp 116 118 Ian S Wood Crimes of Loyalty A History of the UDA Edinburgh University Press 2006 p 119 Gary McMichael Ulster Voice In Search of Common Ground in Northern Ireland Niwot Colorado Roberts Rinehart 1999 pp 56 57 a b David Lister amp Hugh Jordan Mad Dog The Rise and Fall of Johnny Adair and C Company Edinburgh Mainstream 2004 p 221 Murray Raymond 1990 The SAS in Ireland Mercier Press p 263 McDonald amp Cusack UDA p 118 McDonald amp Cusack UDA p 162 McDonald amp Cusack UDA pp 161 162 McDonald amp Cusack UDA pp 164 166 McDonald amp Cusack UDA pp 174 175 McDonald amp Cusack UDA p 186 McDonald amp Cusack UDA p 192 McDonald amp Cusack UDA p 200 McDonald amp Cusack UDA p 240 McDonald amp Cusack UDA pp 229 230 a b McDonald amp Cusack UDA p 230 a b Jim Cusack amp Henry McDonald UVF Dublin Poolbeg 1997 p 312 McDonald amp Cusack UDA p 231 McDonald amp Cusack UDA p 257 McDonald amp Cusack UDA pp 173 174 McDonald amp Cusack UDA pp 189 190 a b Roy Garland Gusty Spence Belfast Blackstaff Press 2001 p 279 a b Wood Crimes of Loyalty p 188 Lister amp Jordan Mad Dog p 222 A Draft Chronology of the Conflict 1994 McMichael Ulster Voice p 56 David McKittrick et al Lost Lives Mainstream Publishing 2008 p 1369 Brian Feeney Sinn Fein A Hundred Turbulent Years Dublin O Brien Press 2002 pp 406 407 Taylor Loyalists p 231 Cusack amp McDonald UVF p 313 a b McDonald amp Cusack UDA p 268 Sydney Elliott amp William D Flackes Conflict in Northern Ireland An Encyclopedia ABC CLIO 1999 p 226 Brendan O Brien The Long War The IRA and Sinn Fein 1985 to Today Syracuse University Press 1993 p 314 Political officesPreceded byKen Kerr Leader of the Ulster Democratic Partyc 1990 1994 Succeeded byGary McMichael Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Ray Smallwoods amp oldid 1159521884, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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