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Timeline of the Troubles in the Republic of Ireland

The following is a timeline of actions during The Troubles which took place in the Republic of Ireland between 1969 and 1998. It includes Ulster Volunteer Force bombings such as the Dublin and Monaghan bombings in May 1974, and other Loyalist bombings carried out in the 1970s, 80s & 90s, the last of which was in 1997. These attacks killed dozens of people and injured hundreds more. Also actions carried out by Irish Republicans including bombings, prison escapes, kidnappings, and gun battles between the Gardaí (police) and the Irish Defence Forces against Republican gunmen from the Irish National Liberation Army, the Provisional Irish Republican Army, and a socialist-revolutionary group, Saor Éire. These attacks killed a number of civilians, police, soldiers, and Republican paramilitaries.

Loyalist actions edit

1960s edit

  • 5 August 1969 – The Ulster Volunteer Force (the UVF) plant their first bomb in the Republic of Ireland, damaging the RTÉ Television Centre in Donnybrook with a relatively large bomb for its time. No injuries.[1][2]
  • 19 October 1969 - Thomas McDonnell, a member of the UVF, was injured and died a few days later when a bomb he was planting exploded prematurely at a power station near Ballyshannon in County Donegal. McDonnell was also a member of the Ulster Protestant Volunteers (UPV).[3][4]
  • 29 October 1969 - The UVF exploded a bomb at the gravestone of Wolfe Tone (the founding father of Irish Republicanism) in Bodenstown, Sallins, County Kildare, Republic of Ireland. The blast occurred at 5.00 am and destroyed a headstone.[5]
  • 26 December 1969 – The UVF plant a bomb at the Daniel O’Connell statue on O’Connell Street. Little damage was done to the statue but the blast smashed windows in a half-mile radius.[6][7]
  • 28 December 1969 – The UVF detonate a car bomb outside the Garda central detective bureau in Dublin. The nearby telephone exchange headquarters is suspected to have been the target.[8][9]

1970s edit

  • 18 February 1970 - The UVF exploded a bomb at a 240-foot radio mast on Mongorry Hill, near Raphoe in the Laggan district in the east of County Donegal. The explosion put the transmitter out of action. The mast had allowed RTÉ programmes to be received over a large part of Northern Ireland than had been the case. (The UVF claimed responsibility for this bomb in a statement issued on 19 February 1970.)[10]
  • 26 March 1970 – A bomb damages an electricity substation in Tallaght. An anonymous letter claimed responsibility on behalf of the UVF.[11]
  • 2 July 1970 – A bomb damages the main Dublin-Belfast railway line at Baldoyle. Gardaí believed it was the work of the UVF.[11]
  • 16 September 1970 - A Loyalist bomb exploded in a classroom of Trentaghmucklagh National School just outside St Johnston, a village in the Laggan district in the east of County Donegal. The school was empty at the time. It is believed the UVF were responsible.
  • 17 January 1971 – Daniel O’Connell's tomb in Glasnevin Cemetery is damaged by a Loyalist bomb. It's believed the UFV are behind the bombing. No injuries.[12][13]
  • 26 January 1971 - A bomb exploded at a Customs & Excise station in Lifford, East Donegal, at 5:07 am. It's believed the UVF was responsible.[14]
  • 8 February 1971 – The Wolfe Tone statue at St. Stephen's Green is destroyed by a Loyalist bomb. No injuries.[15][16]
  • 21 May 1972 - Several firebombs were discovered in Dublin. One of the incendiary devices detonated in Dunnes Stores on North Earl Street, Dublin causing around £60,000 worth of damage.[17]
  • September 1972 - The Littlejohn brothers carried out firebomb attacks at Castlebellingham & Louth Garda stations.[18] The brothers claimed to be working for MI6.
  • 16 October 1972 - A bomb exploded at Donegal Fertilisers Ltd in Carrigans, a village in the Laggan district of East Donegal. Nobody was injured but the store was badly damaged. The UDA said they carried it out.[19]
  • 16 October 1972 - At 11 pm a bomb exploded on Fermanagh Street in Clones, County Monaghan, at the side of The Creighton Hotel. The Gardaí said they believed the UVF linked Red Hand Commandos were behind the bombing.[20]
  • 28 – 29 October 1972 – A 12lbs bomb is planted in Connolly Station, Amiens Street by Loyalists but defused by the Irish Army before it went off. They are also responsible for leaving firebombs in bedrooms in four Dublin hotels (Wynns, The Gresham, The Skylon and The Crofton).[21]
  • 2 November 1972 - The UDA's Londonderry Brigade claimed responsibility for bombing The Hole In The Wall pub in St Johnston, in the Laggan district of East Donegal. UDA volunteers ordered everyone out of the pub and then destroyed it with a grenade.[22]
  • 19 November 1972 - The UDA's Londonderry Brigade claimed responsibility for bombing a car showroom in Bridgend, Inishowen, County Donegal.[23][24]
  • 26 November 1972 – Loyalists plant a bomb outside the rear exit door of the Film Centre Cinema, O'Connell Bridge House injuring 40 people.[25]
  • 1 December – See: 1972 and 1973 Dublin bombings - Bus driver George Bradshaw (30) and bus conductor Tommy Duffy (23) are killed and 127 injured in the first Loyalist car bomb that killed people in the Republic close to the CIÉ Depot at Sackville Place off O’Connell Street. A second car bomb exploded 7 minutes earlier causing massive damage to Liberty Hall and causing many injuries.
  • 16 December 1972 - A Loyalist bomb exploded at a lock-up garage in Manorcunningham, a village in the Laggan district of East Donegal.[26]
  • 28 December 1972 - See: Belturbet bombing - UVF car bomb exploded in Belturbet in County Cavan killing two teenagers and injuring several people. Two other UVF bombs exploded in at around the same time. One at Clones, County Monaghan, wounding a further two civilians and one at Pettigo, County Donegal, there was no injuries or deaths in this bomb.[27][28]
  • 1 January 1973 - A young Catholic couple, Breege Porter aged 21 and Oliver Boyce aged 25, were found shot and stabbed to death by Loyalists at Burnfoot, Inishowen, County Donegal. The Ulster Defence Association (UDA) claimed they carried out the killings. The UDA would use the name Ulster Freedom Fighters during The troubles when they wanted to claim killings.[29]
  • 10 January 1973 - A Loyalist bomb exploded at a builders providers in Stranorlar, a town in the Finn Valley of East Donegal. Nobody was injured.
  • 20 January 1973 – CIE bus conductor Thomas Douglas (25) is killed and 17 people injured in a Loyalist car bombing in Sackville Place off O’Connell Street. The car used in the bombing had been hijacked at Agnes Street, Belfast.[30][27]
  • 24 January 1973 - O'Connell St, Dublin is sealed off by the Gardai after the RUC informs them of that they received a warning that a car bomb is planted in O'Connell St. No bomb is found.[31]
  • 17 March 1973 - A UDA volunteer died when the car bomb he was transporting exploded prematurely as he parked outside Kirk's Bar, Cloughfin, County Donegal. 15 people were injured in the explosion.[32][33]
  • 29 June 1973 - Shortly before 3 a.m. a bomb exploded at the Vocational School at Kiltyclogher, County Leitrim. 15 people were injured in the attack.
  • 28 September 1973 - A car bomb exploded outside a grocery shop and house in Pettigo, County Donegal. No warning was given and a number of people were injured, two of them required hospital treatment. It is believed that loyalists associated with the UVF were to blame, and a Garda report suggested that British soldiers may have been involved. The bomb exploded just yards across the border. The British Army had been scheduled to patrol the border in the area that night but did not arrive.[28][34][35]
  • 17 May 1974 – See: Dublin and Monaghan bombings Three no-warning car bombs explode in Parnell Street, Talbot Street, and South Leinster Street during rush hour in Dublin, 90 minutes later another car bomb explodes in Monaghan. 27 people and an unborn child are killed in Dublin and seven more are killed in Monaghan bringing the death toll up to 34 killed altogether. Over 300 are injured. Italian restaurant owner Antonio Magliocco (37) and a French-born Jewish woman Simone Chetrit (30) are among those killed. The ages of those killed ranges from five months - 80 years. The attack is responsible for the highest number of casualties (civilian or combatant) in any one day of the Troubles.[36][37]
  • 11 September 1974 - There was an attempted car bomb attack in Blacklion, County Cavan. Three masked gunmen in British military uniform had hijacked the car, placed a time bomb inside and forced the owner to drive it into the village. They claimed to be from the UVF and threatened to attack his family if he did not comply. The driver parked the car in the middle of the village and alerted the Irish Army and Garda. The village was evacuated and the Army carried out a controlled explosion on the car. They estimated that the bomb would have destroyed most of the village.[38]
  • 8 December 1974 - Loyalists paramilitaries bombed a Catholic church St. Mary's in Swanlinbar in County Cavan. There were no injuries but the church was badly damaged. It's believed one of the main Loyalists paramilitaries either the UVF, UDA or Red Hand Commando was responsible.[39][40]
  • 10 January 1975 - The UVF claimed responsibility for shooting dead Provisional IRA volunteer John Francis Green at a farmhouse in Tullynageer, County Monaghan.[41]
  • 9 March 1975 - Loyalists firebombed a fleet of Fishing trawlers at Greencastle, Inishowen, in the far north of County Donegal. Fourteen boats were damaged. Both the UVF and UDA claimed responsibility, with the UDA making "the unlikely claim that the fleet had been used to ferry arms ashore for the IRA after a rendezvous with a Russian submarine".
  • 22 June 1975 – Christopher Phelan stabbed to death after he came upon the UVF attempting to place a bomb on the railway line near Sallins on 22 June 1975.[42]
  • 28 November 1975 – See: 1975 Dublin Airport bombing - Two Loyalist bombs planted by UDA at the arrival terminal at Dublin Airport injured eight civilians and killed John Hayes (30), an Airport employee.[43][44]
  • 19 December 1975 - See: Donnelly's Bar and Kay's Tavern attacks - A car bomb exploded outside a public house called Kay's Tavern along Crowe Street, in Dundalk, County Louth. The bombing killed two people and injured dozens. About three hours later a gun and bomb attack on a pub in Silverbridge, County Armagh, killed three more people. It's believed both attacks were carried out by the Glenanne gang and that both attacks were co-ordinated by the same unit.[45][46]
  • 14 February 1976 - A bomb exploded without warning on the main street of Swanlinbar, County Cavan. It is believed the UVF was responsible.[47]
  • 20 February 1976 – A 25 lbs. bomb explodes in the Shelbourne Hotel along with eight incendiary bombs in department stores and shops in the Grafton Street and Henry Street areas. There were no injuries. Loyalists were the main culprits.
  • 7 March 1976 - See: Castleblayney bombing - A car bomb exploded outside the Three Star Inn pub on Castleblayney in County Monaghan. The bomb killed one man and injured 17 people. The attack has been attributed to the Glenanne gang.[48][45]
  • 2 May 1976 - Seamus Ludlow (49) was killed in the early hours of the morning. His body was found near his home in Thistle Cross, Dundalk, County Louth. It's believed members of Red Hand Commando killed him.[49]
  • 3 July 1976 - the UFF claimed responsibility for bombing four hotels. There were explosions in Dublin, Rosslare, Limerick and Killarney but no fatalities.[50][51]
  • 8 July 1976 - the UFF bombed the Salthill Hotel in Galway, also without fatalities.[52][51]

1980s edit

  • 25 November 1981 - The UFF claimed responsibility for firing shots into the Dublin offices of An Phoblacht. No injuries were reported.[53]
  • 7 November 1986 – Two bombs planted by the UFF exploded in litter bins on Dublin's main street but caused no deaths or injuries, and two others were found and defused. The following day a UFF spokesman said the UFF had "the potential to cause death and destruction" and that "the warning should not go on unheeded".[54][55]
  • 11 November 1986 - Eleven hoax bomb warnings at various businesses in Dublin's Grafton Street and Dawson Street caused large disruption in Dublin city. The UFF is believed to be behind the hoaxes.[56]
  • 7 and 8 February 1987 – The UFF exploded incendiary devices in County Donegal in the west of Ulster (including attacks on premises in Ballybofey, Letterkenny and Castlefin) and in Dublin. No injuries. It was alleged that these attacks had been approved by UFF leader John McMichael, who was planning a large bombing campaign in the Republic of Ireland, but McMichael was killed a few months later by the Provisional IRA.[57][58]

1990s edit

  • February 1991 – Two crude incendiary bombs in an O’Connell Street department store failed to go off. They were planted by the Loyalists, Gardaí believe it was the work of the UFF.[59]
  • 25 May 1991 - Eddie Fullerton, a Sinn Féin councillor in Buncrana, Inishowen, County Donegal, is shot dead in his home by a unit from the UFF in nearby Derry.[60]
  • 27 - 28 July 1991 - UFF exploded seven incendiary devices in a number of shops in the Republic of Ireland. No injuries.[61]
  • 29 March 1992 - In Dublin, Garda confirm incendiary device started fire in city centre store. It is believed either the UVF or UFF are responsible[62]
  • 28 September 1992 - A blast bomb left outside a Dublin-based bank nearby was defused. The "Red Branch Knights" (believed to be a cover name for the Red Hand Commando) claimed responsibility.[63][64]
  • 10 December 1992 - The UFF carried out seven firebomb attacks on shops in Moville and Buncrana, both towns in Inishowen, County Donegal, and in Dublin.[65]
  • 15 July 1993 - The UVF issued a statement in which they claimed sole responsibility for the Dublin and Monaghan bombings which killed 34 people and injured 300 others on 17 May 1974, when three car bombs exploded in the centre of Dublin city and one in Monaghan town.[66]
  • 18 September 1993 – On the day of the All-Ireland hurling final, Loyalists claim responsibility for planting a small bomb and cutting communication cables near to Store Street Garda station.
  • 5 January 1994 – Two members of the Irish Army bomb disposal unit were injured when a parcel bomb sent by the UVF to the Sinn Féin offices in Dublin exploded during examination at Cathal Brugha barracks.[67]
  • 24 January 1994 - Incendiary devices that had been planted by the UFF, were found at a school in Dundalk in County Louth and at a postal sorting office in Dublin.[67]
  • 21 May 1994 - Martin "Doco" Doherty (35), a member of the IRA Dublin Brigade, was shot dead by the Ulster Volunteer Force (UVF) as he attempted to stop a bomb attack on The Widow Scallans Bar, Pearse Street, Dublin, where a Sinn Féin (SF) function was taking place. Another man was seriously wounded in the attack.[68]
  • 8 June 1994 - A small incendiary device was found in a snooker hall in Trim in County Meath, which was planted by the UFF, the device was found after the UDA issued a statement saying firebombs had been planted in the Republic of Ireland.[69]
  • 12 September 1994 - The UVF planted a bomb on the Belfast-Dublin train. At Connolly station in Dublin the bomb only partially exploded slightly injuring two women.[70][71]
  • 3 March 1997 - A 2.5kg bomb partially detonated behind the Sinn Féin office in Monaghan Town. The device was later made safe by the Irish Army.[72] It is thought members of the Mount Vernon UVF were to blame.[73]
  • 25 May 1997 - a small bomb was found and defused in Dundalk. It is believed it was planted by a dissident Loyalist paramilitary like the Loyalist Volunteer Force (LVF).[74]
  • 23 February 1998 - The LVF claimed responsibility for planting a small car bomb outside a Garda station in Dromad, County Louth, Republic of Ireland. It was spotted and defused by the security forces. The LVF threatened further attacks in the Republic.[75]
  • 8 May 1998 - A pipe bomb which was hidden in a package was sent to a Dublin tourist office. The device was discovered and defused. It is believed the LVF was behind the failed attack.[76]
  • 15 July 1998 - A package addressed to a Dublin hotel, which was believed to have been sent by the LVF, exploded while it was being examined at the Garda Technical Bureau in Dublin. Two were injured in the blast.[77]

Nationalist actions edit

1970s edit

  • 3 April 1970 – at three in the morning, three armed members of Saor Éire were in the process of robbing the Royal Bank of Ireland at Arran Quay, Dublin, when Gardaí Paul Firth and Richard Fallon arrived by car. Confronting the three at the front of the bank, Firth and Fallon were repeatedly fired at. Firth, "who was behind Garda Fallon, called back to the patrol car driver to summon assistance before he dived to the ground. As he reached out to seize the gunman nearest to him, Garda Fallon was hit by fire from one of the others, and fell mortally wounded. He had been shot twice, in the shoulder and, fatally, in the neck. He died instantly. He was also a father of children[78][79]
  • 13 October 1970 – Saor Éire member Liam Walsh (35) is killed in a premature explosion when himself and another member Martin Casey were planting a device at a railway line at the rear of McKee army base off Blackhorse Avenue in Dublin. His funeral was attended by over 3,000 people.
  • 6 July 1971 - An Official IRA Volunteer Martin O'Leary was killed in a premature bomb explosion in Silvermines, County Tipperary.
  • 25 October 1971 – Saor Éire member Peter Graham (26) is shot dead in his flat at 110 Stephen's Green in an internal feud.
  • 30 December 1971 – PIRA member Jack McCabe (55) is killed in a premature bomb explosion in a garage, Swords Road, Santry. McCabe had been active in the IRA since the 1930s.
  • 2 February 1972 – The British Embassy on Merrion Square is burned down in response to Bloody Sunday 1972. A British-owned insurance office in Dún Laoghaire and Austin Reed outfitters on Grafton Street are also petrol bombed. The Thomas Cook travel agency along with the offices of British Airlines and the RAF club on Earlsfort Terrace were also attacked.[80]
  • 8 June 1972 - Inspector Samuel Donegan, a member of the Garda Síochána, was killed on the County Cavan side of the cross-border Drumboghangh Road, near the village of Redhills, by a roadside bomb on the border with County Fermanagh. The bomb exploded very near the South Fermanagh hamlet of Wattlebridge.
  • 19 November 1972 - A week after giving a controversial interview to RTÉ radio, IRA Chief of Staff Seán Mac Stíofáin was sentenced to six months imprisonment by the Special Criminal Court in Dublin. Mac Stíofáin immediately began a hunger strike.[80]
  • 26 November - A Garda, two civilians and two Provisional IRA volunteers were injured during an exchange of shots after a foiled attempt to free IRA Chief of Staff Seán Mac Stíofáin when an 8-man IRA unit embarked on a rescue attempt, two members of the IRA unit were disguised as priests during the unsuccessful attempt.[81]
  • 29 December 1972 - Sinn Féin President Ruairí Ó Brádaigh was arrested in Dublin and sentenced to six months in the Curragh Military Prison.[80]
  • 31 December 1972 - Provisional IRA Derry Brigade Commander Martin McGuinness was arrested in County Donegal after police found explosives and thousands of rounds of ammunition in his car. At his court hearing McGuinness declared his membership of the Provisional IRA without equivocation: "We have fought against the killing of our people... I am a member of Óglaigh na hÉireann and very, very proud of it"[80]
  • 3 August 1973 – A cashier James Farrell (54) is killed by the IRA during an armed robbery while delivering wages to British Leyland factory, Cashel Road, Crumlin.
  • 28 October 1973 - Detective Constable John Doherty, a serving member of the RUC, was shot dead by the IRA at the entrance to his mother's house in Ardsool, a townland just outside Ballindrait, a village near Lifford in East Donegal. DC Doherty was aged 31, and was a detective based at Omagh RUC Barracks. He was from Ballindrait.
  • 31 October 1973 – The IRA use a hijacked helicopter to free three of their members from the exercise yard of Mountjoy Prison, Dublin. One of those who escaped was Séamus Twomey, then Chief of Staff of the IRA who wasn't recaptured until December 1977.
  • 12 March 1974 - Murder of Senator Billy Fox, a Fine Gael member of Oireachtas Éireann (the parliament of the Republic of Ireland). Senator Fox, a Protestant from Ballybay, was shot dead by the IRA at the home of Marjorie Coulson, his girlfriend, in the townland of Tircooney, between Clones and Smithborough in County Monaghan.
  • 26 April 1974 - Rose Dugdale and 3 other IRA volunteers took part in a raid on Russborough House in County Wicklow, the home of Sir Alfred Beit.[82][83] They forced their way into the house, and pistol-whipped Sir Alfred and his wife before tying and gagging the couple.[84] The volunteers then stole nineteen old masters valued at IR£8 million, including paintings by Gainsborough, Rubens, Vermeer and Goya.[83][84] The IRA volunteers sent a ransom note offering to exchange the stolen paintings for IR£500,000 and the release of Dolours and Marian Price, two sisters convicted of the Old Bailey bombing who were on hunger strike in Brixton Prison attempting to secure repatriation to Ireland.[83][84]
  • 8 December 1974 - The Irish National Liberation Army, along with its political wing, the Irish Republican Socialist Party (IRSP), was founded at the Spa Hotel in Lucan, South Dublin.[85]
  • 22 March 1975 – The funeral of IRA member Tom Smith, shot dead during an escape attempt from Portlaoise Prison on St. Patrick's Day, is attacked by Gardaí. Three people, including a press photographer, are injured.
  • 16 October 1976 - A house that was booby-trapped by the Provisional IRA exploded at Garryhinch on the Laois-Offaly border. The bomb exploded while Garda Michael Clerkin was inside, the blast killing him instantly as the house collapsed in on top of him and seriously injuring four other garda officers.[86][87]
  • 5 May 1977 - Captain Robert Nairac (29), a member of the British Army, was abducted by the IRA outside The Three Step Inn in Dromintee, County Armagh. At around 11.45 p.m., he was abducted following a struggle in the pub's car park and taken across the border into County Louth in the Republic of Ireland to a field in the Ravensdale Woods, just north of Dundalk. Following a violent interrogation during which Nairac was allegedly punched, kicked, pistol-whipped and hit with a wooden post, he was shot dead in a field.[88][89]
  • 7 September 1977 – John Lawlor (38), a suspected informer, is killed by the IRA in Timmons Bar (later called Leonard's), on the corner of Watling Street and Victoria Quay.
  • 5 October – INLA Chief of Staff and leader of the IRSP Seamus Costello (38) is shot dead in his car on North Strand Road by OIRA member James Flynn.[90]
  • 28 January 1979 – English salesman Arthur Lockett (29) is found dead in Ticknock in the Dublin mountains. He had been beaten with clubs by a number of men and left for dead. Lockett had been boasting in a pub that he had connections in the British Army. It emerged he had worked in West Germany for a time where he had business deals with both American and British army personnel at NATO bases.
  • 7 August 1979 - A civilian was shot dead by the IRA during a bank robbery in Strand Street, Tramore, County Waterford. IRA volunteers Eamonn Nolan and Aaron O'Connell were later charged with the murder and robbery.[91][92][93]
  • 27 August 1979 - An IRA bomb killed Admiral of the Fleet The 1st Earl Mountbatten of Burma at Mullaghmore, County Sligo, the British Queen's first cousin, as well as The Dowager Baroness Brabourne, Lord Mountbatten's elder daughter's mother-in-law (aged 83), The Hon. Nicholas Knatchbull, Mountbatten's elder daughter's fourth son (aged 14) and Paul Maxwell, a 15‑year-old Protestant youth from County Fermanagh who was working as a crew member.[94]
  • 22 December 1979: Stanley Hazelton (48), an off-duty RUC officer traveling in his car, was shot dead by a PIRA sniper in Glaslough, County Monaghan.[95]

1980s edit

  • 7 July 1980 - See: Murder of Henry Byrne and John Morley - Henry Byrne and John Morley, two officers of the Garda Síochána, were shot dead by alleged members of the INLA during a pursuit in the aftermath of a bank robbery near Loughglynn, County Roscommon.[96]
  • 13 October 1980 - Garda Síochána officer Seamus Quaid was shot dead by the IRA during an exchange of gunfire, shortly after stopping a vehicle containing an IRA unit while on Garda mobile patrol at Ballyconnick, near Cleariestown, County Wexford.
  • 20 February 1982 - The INLA shot dead a Garda Síochána, Patrick Reynolds, at a house in Avonbeg Gardens, Tallaght, in Dublin.[97]
  • 4 June 1982 - the INLA shot dead Official IRA volunteer James Flynn on North Strand Road, Dublin; part of a republican feud.(The INLA later claimed that Flynn was responsible for the killing of Seamus Costello, who had been leader of the Irish Republican Socialist Party (IRSP), on 5 October 1977 in Dublin.)[98]
  • 20 September 1982 - The INLA claimed responsibility for bombing a radar station on Mount Gabriel, County Cork. Five INLA volunteers hijacked a car carrying an engineer to the station. They forced their way inside, tied-up several workers and planted the bombs. The INLA claimed it attacked the station because it was linked to NATO.[99]
  • 25 March 1983 - Shooting of Brian Stack - Brian Stack, an officer at Portlaoise Prison, was shot in the neck on South Circular Road, Dublin after leaving the National Stadium. He was hospitalised with severe brain damage and died on 29 September 1984
  • 16 December 1983 - Irish Army soldier (Patrick Kelly) and a Garda officer (Gary Sheehan) were both shot dead during a gun battle with the Provisional Irish Republican Army in an attempt to secure the release of businessman Don Tidey, taken hostage by the IRA, near Ballinamore, County Leitrim.[100][101]
  • 10 August 1984 - Garda officer Francis Hand was shot dead by the IRA in Drumcree, County Meath during an attempted armed robbery of a post office.
  • 23 March 1985 - An alleged Garda informant (John Corcoran) was shot dead by the IRA at Ballincollig, County Cork.
  • 20 April 1985 - The INLA planted two bombs in Dunnes Stores along Dublin's Henry Street, one bomb exploded and the other was defused by the Irish Army. The INLA planted the bombs in protest at Dunnes Stores support for apartheid in South Africa. At the time 12 Dunnes employees were on strike, refusing to handle goods.[102][103]
  • 27 June 1985 - A Garda officer, Sergeant Patrick Joseph Morrissey, a native of Belturbet, was killed during the robbery of a post office in Ardee, County Louth; CAIN lists the INLA as responsible.[104]
  • 9 August 1985 - A train travelling from Belfast to Dublin was severely damaged after the INLA planted 4 bombs in the carriages.
  • 20 August 1985 - shot and killed Seamus McAvoy (46) at his home in Dublin, Republic of Ireland. McAvoy had sold portable buildings to the Royal Ulster Constabulary (RUC) and was the first person to be killed for providing goods or services to the security forces in Northern Ireland. (This killing marked the beginning of a campaign against what the IRA termed 'legitimate targets'.)[105]
  • 20 January 1987 - Volunteers from the Irish People's Liberation Organization (IPLO) shot dead two Volunteers of the INLA in Rosnaree hotel in Drogheda in an IPLO/INLA feud.[106]
  • 31 January 1987 - Mary McGlinchey, an INLA activist and wife of INLA leader Dominic McGlinchey, was shot dead at her home in Dundalk, County Louth. It has never been established who was responsible or why.
  • 2 June 1987 - An off-duty RUC officer, Constable Samuel McClean, was shot dead by the IRA just outside Drumkeen, a village in the east of County Donegal. Constable McClean was shot while visiting his parents farm in the townland of Callan by two IRA men using a shotgun and a revolver.[107] He was buried afterwards in the cemetery attached to Stranorlar Church of Ireland Church. Sir Jack Hermon, the Chief Constable of the RUC, attended the funeral, as did Lawrence Wren, the Commissioner of the Garda Síochána. Constable McClean was from Drumkeen and was stationed at Coalisland RUC Barracks in East Tyrone.
  • 8 December 1987 - A civilian, Patrick Cunningham, was found shot dead in an outbuilding at an unoccupied farm, Errybane, near Castleblayney, County Monaghan on 8 December 1987. He had been abducted in May 1987; it is believed the killing was related to the INLA/IPLO feud.[108]
  • 6 May 1988 - IRA volunteer Hugh Hehir was shot and killed by the Garda Special Branch following a bank raid in County Clare

1990s edit

  • 19 July 1991 - Thomas Oliver (43) a civilian from Dundalk in County Louth was shot dead by the IRA who claimed he was a police informer. Oliver's body was found in Bellek in County Armagh.[109]
  • 10 February 1994 - Dominic McGlinchey, the INLA's former Chief of Staff, was shot dead in Drogheda. It has never been established who was responsible or why.[110]
  • August 1995 - INLA Hunger Strike 5 August – 1 September - four INLA Volunteers in Portlaoise Prison went on hunger strike to demand for "parity of treatment" with IRA inmates regarding compassionate parole, stating that they were regularly denied compassionate parole regardless of circumstances, while IRA prisoners were granted regularly. After 26 days the Department of Justice finally entered into negotiations with the IRSP (through intermediary Father Alex Reid of Clonard Monastery in Belfast), and hours later the three remaining prisoners (one James Gorman had to go off the striker over an ulcer) ended their strike after being promised talks with the government on the issue of "parity of treatment". Michael "Mickey" McCartney was on hunger strike for 26 days and both Tony McNeill and Paddy Walls for 19 days.[111][112]
  • 5 March 1996 - INLA volunteer John Fennell was beaten to death by other INLA volunteers in Bundoran, County Donegal, in the course of an internal dispute.[113]
  • 7 June 1996 - Jerry McCabe, then a Detective in Garda Síochána (the Irish police service), was shot dead during a post office robbery in Adare, County Limerick. The Provisional IRA was believed to be responsible.[114]
  • 4 June 1997 - INLA volunteer John Morris was shot dead by the Gardaí during an armed robbery in Inchicore, Dublin.[115][116]
  • 1 May 1998 - Ronan MacLochlainn (28), a dissident Irish Republican Army (IRA) member, was shot dead when the Garda Síochána (the Irish police) foiled a raid by six armed men on a security van near Ashford, County Wicklow. The raid was believed to be carried out by the Real IRA.[117]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Melaugh, Dr Martin. "CAIN: Chronology of the Conflict 1969". cain.ulst.ac.uk.
  2. ^ "Bomb Blast at RTÉ". rte.ie.
  3. ^ Melaugh, Dr Martin. "CAIN: Chronology of the Conflict 1969". cain.ulst.ac.uk.
  4. ^ Sutton, Malcolm. "CAIN: Sutton Index of Deaths". cain.ulst.ac.uk.
  5. ^ Melaugh, Dr Martin. "CAIN: Chronology of the Conflict 1969". cain.ulst.ac.uk.
  6. ^ Melaugh, Dr Martin. "CAIN: Chronology of the Conflict 1969". cain.ulst.ac.uk.
  7. ^ Telegraph Herald, 26 December 1969
  8. ^ "February - 2014 - Come Here To Me!". comeheretome.com.
  9. ^ "The Lewiston Daily Sun - Google News Archive Search". news.google.com.
  10. ^ Melaugh, Dr Martin. "CAIN: Chronology of the Conflict 1970". cain.ulst.ac.uk.
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Sources edit

  • CAIN Web Service - Conflict and Politics in Northern Ireland (The CAIN Project: Conflict Archive on the Internet), Ulster University.
  • Out of the Ashes: An Oral History of the Provisional Irish Republican Movement – Robert White (2017), Merrion Press. ISBN 978-1785370939.
  • INLA: Deadly Divisions – Jack Holland and Henry McDonald (1995), Poolbeg Press. ISBN 978-1853714740.
  • The Dublin and Monaghan Bombings and The Murder Triangle – Joe Tiernan (2004), Published by the Author. ISBN 978-1856353205.

timeline, troubles, republic, ireland, following, timeline, actions, during, troubles, which, took, place, republic, ireland, between, 1969, 1998, includes, ulster, volunteer, force, bombings, such, dublin, monaghan, bombings, 1974, other, loyalist, bombings, . The following is a timeline of actions during The Troubles which took place in the Republic of Ireland between 1969 and 1998 It includes Ulster Volunteer Force bombings such as the Dublin and Monaghan bombings in May 1974 and other Loyalist bombings carried out in the 1970s 80s amp 90s the last of which was in 1997 These attacks killed dozens of people and injured hundreds more Also actions carried out by Irish Republicans including bombings prison escapes kidnappings and gun battles between the Gardai police and the Irish Defence Forces against Republican gunmen from the Irish National Liberation Army the Provisional Irish Republican Army and a socialist revolutionary group Saor Eire These attacks killed a number of civilians police soldiers and Republican paramilitaries Contents 1 Loyalist actions 1 1 1960s 1 2 1970s 1 3 1980s 1 4 1990s 2 Nationalist actions 2 1 1970s 2 2 1980s 2 3 1990s 3 See also 4 References 4 1 SourcesLoyalist actions edit1960s edit 5 August 1969 The Ulster Volunteer Force the UVF plant their first bomb in the Republic of Ireland damaging the RTE Television Centre in Donnybrook with a relatively large bomb for its time No injuries 1 2 19 October 1969 Thomas McDonnell a member of the UVF was injured and died a few days later when a bomb he was planting exploded prematurely at a power station near Ballyshannon in County Donegal McDonnell was also a member of the Ulster Protestant Volunteers UPV 3 4 29 October 1969 The UVF exploded a bomb at the gravestone of Wolfe Tone the founding father of Irish Republicanism in Bodenstown Sallins County Kildare Republic of Ireland The blast occurred at 5 00 am and destroyed a headstone 5 26 December 1969 The UVF plant a bomb at the Daniel O Connell statue on O Connell Street Little damage was done to the statue but the blast smashed windows in a half mile radius 6 7 28 December 1969 The UVF detonate a car bomb outside the Garda central detective bureau in Dublin The nearby telephone exchange headquarters is suspected to have been the target 8 9 1970s edit 18 February 1970 The UVF exploded a bomb at a 240 foot radio mast on Mongorry Hill near Raphoe in the Laggan district in the east of County Donegal The explosion put the transmitter out of action The mast had allowed RTE programmes to be received over a large part of Northern Ireland than had been the case The UVF claimed responsibility for this bomb in a statement issued on 19 February 1970 10 26 March 1970 A bomb damages an electricity substation in Tallaght An anonymous letter claimed responsibility on behalf of the UVF 11 2 July 1970 A bomb damages the main Dublin Belfast railway line at Baldoyle Gardai believed it was the work of the UVF 11 16 September 1970 A Loyalist bomb exploded in a classroom of Trentaghmucklagh National School just outside St Johnston a village in the Laggan district in the east of County Donegal The school was empty at the time It is believed the UVF were responsible 17 January 1971 Daniel O Connell s tomb in Glasnevin Cemetery is damaged by a Loyalist bomb It s believed the UFV are behind the bombing No injuries 12 13 26 January 1971 A bomb exploded at a Customs amp Excise station in Lifford East Donegal at 5 07 am It s believed the UVF was responsible 14 8 February 1971 The Wolfe Tone statue at St Stephen s Green is destroyed by a Loyalist bomb No injuries 15 16 21 May 1972 Several firebombs were discovered in Dublin One of the incendiary devices detonated in Dunnes Stores on North Earl Street Dublin causing around 60 000 worth of damage 17 September 1972 The Littlejohn brothers carried out firebomb attacks at Castlebellingham amp Louth Garda stations 18 The brothers claimed to be working for MI6 16 October 1972 A bomb exploded at Donegal Fertilisers Ltd in Carrigans a village in the Laggan district of East Donegal Nobody was injured but the store was badly damaged The UDA said they carried it out 19 16 October 1972 At 11 pm a bomb exploded on Fermanagh Street in Clones County Monaghan at the side of The Creighton Hotel The Gardai said they believed the UVF linked Red Hand Commandos were behind the bombing 20 28 29 October 1972 A 12lbs bomb is planted in Connolly Station Amiens Street by Loyalists but defused by the Irish Army before it went off They are also responsible for leaving firebombs in bedrooms in four Dublin hotels Wynns The Gresham The Skylon and The Crofton 21 2 November 1972 The UDA s Londonderry Brigade claimed responsibility for bombing The Hole In The Wall pub in St Johnston in the Laggan district of East Donegal UDA volunteers ordered everyone out of the pub and then destroyed it with a grenade 22 19 November 1972 The UDA s Londonderry Brigade claimed responsibility for bombing a car showroom in Bridgend Inishowen County Donegal 23 24 26 November 1972 Loyalists plant a bomb outside the rear exit door of the Film Centre Cinema O Connell Bridge House injuring 40 people 25 1 December See 1972 and 1973 Dublin bombings Bus driver George Bradshaw 30 and bus conductor Tommy Duffy 23 are killed and 127 injured in the first Loyalist car bomb that killed people in the Republic close to the CIE Depot at Sackville Place off O Connell Street A second car bomb exploded 7 minutes earlier causing massive damage to Liberty Hall and causing many injuries 16 December 1972 A Loyalist bomb exploded at a lock up garage in Manorcunningham a village in the Laggan district of East Donegal 26 28 December 1972 See Belturbet bombing UVF car bomb exploded in Belturbet in County Cavan killing two teenagers and injuring several people Two other UVF bombs exploded in at around the same time One at Clones County Monaghan wounding a further two civilians and one at Pettigo County Donegal there was no injuries or deaths in this bomb 27 28 1 January 1973 A young Catholic couple Breege Porter aged 21 and Oliver Boyce aged 25 were found shot and stabbed to death by Loyalists at Burnfoot Inishowen County Donegal The Ulster Defence Association UDA claimed they carried out the killings The UDA would use the name Ulster Freedom Fighters during The troubles when they wanted to claim killings 29 10 January 1973 A Loyalist bomb exploded at a builders providers in Stranorlar a town in the Finn Valley of East Donegal Nobody was injured 20 January 1973 CIE bus conductor Thomas Douglas 25 is killed and 17 people injured in a Loyalist car bombing in Sackville Place off O Connell Street The car used in the bombing had been hijacked at Agnes Street Belfast 30 27 24 January 1973 O Connell St Dublin is sealed off by the Gardai after the RUC informs them of that they received a warning that a car bomb is planted in O Connell St No bomb is found 31 17 March 1973 A UDA volunteer died when the car bomb he was transporting exploded prematurely as he parked outside Kirk s Bar Cloughfin County Donegal 15 people were injured in the explosion 32 33 29 June 1973 Shortly before 3 a m a bomb exploded at the Vocational School at Kiltyclogher County Leitrim 15 people were injured in the attack 28 September 1973 A car bomb exploded outside a grocery shop and house in Pettigo County Donegal No warning was given and a number of people were injured two of them required hospital treatment It is believed that loyalists associated with the UVF were to blame and a Garda report suggested that British soldiers may have been involved The bomb exploded just yards across the border The British Army had been scheduled to patrol the border in the area that night but did not arrive 28 34 35 17 May 1974 See Dublin and Monaghan bombings Three no warning car bombs explode in Parnell Street Talbot Street and South Leinster Street during rush hour in Dublin 90 minutes later another car bomb explodes in Monaghan 27 people and an unborn child are killed in Dublin and seven more are killed in Monaghan bringing the death toll up to 34 killed altogether Over 300 are injured Italian restaurant owner Antonio Magliocco 37 and a French born Jewish woman Simone Chetrit 30 are among those killed The ages of those killed ranges from five months 80 years The attack is responsible for the highest number of casualties civilian or combatant in any one day of the Troubles 36 37 11 September 1974 There was an attempted car bomb attack in Blacklion County Cavan Three masked gunmen in British military uniform had hijacked the car placed a time bomb inside and forced the owner to drive it into the village They claimed to be from the UVF and threatened to attack his family if he did not comply The driver parked the car in the middle of the village and alerted the Irish Army and Garda The village was evacuated and the Army carried out a controlled explosion on the car They estimated that the bomb would have destroyed most of the village 38 8 December 1974 Loyalists paramilitaries bombed a Catholic church St Mary s in Swanlinbar in County Cavan There were no injuries but the church was badly damaged It s believed one of the main Loyalists paramilitaries either the UVF UDA or Red Hand Commando was responsible 39 40 10 January 1975 The UVF claimed responsibility for shooting dead Provisional IRA volunteer John Francis Green at a farmhouse in Tullynageer County Monaghan 41 9 March 1975 Loyalists firebombed a fleet of Fishing trawlers at Greencastle Inishowen in the far north of County Donegal Fourteen boats were damaged Both the UVF and UDA claimed responsibility with the UDA making the unlikely claim that the fleet had been used to ferry arms ashore for the IRA after a rendezvous with a Russian submarine 22 June 1975 Christopher Phelan stabbed to death after he came upon the UVF attempting to place a bomb on the railway line near Sallins on 22 June 1975 42 28 November 1975 See 1975 Dublin Airport bombing Two Loyalist bombs planted by UDA at the arrival terminal at Dublin Airport injured eight civilians and killed John Hayes 30 an Airport employee 43 44 19 December 1975 See Donnelly s Bar and Kay s Tavern attacks A car bomb exploded outside a public house called Kay s Tavern along Crowe Street in Dundalk County Louth The bombing killed two people and injured dozens About three hours later a gun and bomb attack on a pub in Silverbridge County Armagh killed three more people It s believed both attacks were carried out by the Glenanne gang and that both attacks were co ordinated by the same unit 45 46 14 February 1976 A bomb exploded without warning on the main street of Swanlinbar County Cavan It is believed the UVF was responsible 47 20 February 1976 A 25 lbs bomb explodes in the Shelbourne Hotel along with eight incendiary bombs in department stores and shops in the Grafton Street and Henry Street areas There were no injuries Loyalists were the main culprits 7 March 1976 See Castleblayney bombing A car bomb exploded outside the Three Star Inn pub on Castleblayney in County Monaghan The bomb killed one man and injured 17 people The attack has been attributed to the Glenanne gang 48 45 2 May 1976 Seamus Ludlow 49 was killed in the early hours of the morning His body was found near his home in Thistle Cross Dundalk County Louth It s believed members of Red Hand Commando killed him 49 3 July 1976 the UFF claimed responsibility for bombing four hotels There were explosions in Dublin Rosslare Limerick and Killarney but no fatalities 50 51 8 July 1976 the UFF bombed the Salthill Hotel in Galway also without fatalities 52 51 1980s edit 25 November 1981 The UFF claimed responsibility for firing shots into the Dublin offices of An Phoblacht No injuries were reported 53 7 November 1986 Two bombs planted by the UFF exploded in litter bins on Dublin s main street but caused no deaths or injuries and two others were found and defused The following day a UFF spokesman said the UFF had the potential to cause death and destruction and that the warning should not go on unheeded 54 55 11 November 1986 Eleven hoax bomb warnings at various businesses in Dublin s Grafton Street and Dawson Street caused large disruption in Dublin city The UFF is believed to be behind the hoaxes 56 7 and 8 February 1987 The UFF exploded incendiary devices in County Donegal in the west of Ulster including attacks on premises in Ballybofey Letterkenny and Castlefin and in Dublin No injuries It was alleged that these attacks had been approved by UFF leader John McMichael who was planning a large bombing campaign in the Republic of Ireland but McMichael was killed a few months later by the Provisional IRA 57 58 1990s edit February 1991 Two crude incendiary bombs in an O Connell Street department store failed to go off They were planted by the Loyalists Gardai believe it was the work of the UFF 59 25 May 1991 Eddie Fullerton a Sinn Fein councillor in Buncrana Inishowen County Donegal is shot dead in his home by a unit from the UFF in nearby Derry 60 27 28 July 1991 UFF exploded seven incendiary devices in a number of shops in the Republic of Ireland No injuries 61 29 March 1992 In Dublin Garda confirm incendiary device started fire in city centre store It is believed either the UVF or UFF are responsible 62 28 September 1992 A blast bomb left outside a Dublin based bank nearby was defused The Red Branch Knights believed to be a cover name for the Red Hand Commando claimed responsibility 63 64 10 December 1992 The UFF carried out seven firebomb attacks on shops in Moville and Buncrana both towns in Inishowen County Donegal and in Dublin 65 15 July 1993 The UVF issued a statement in which they claimed sole responsibility for the Dublin and Monaghan bombings which killed 34 people and injured 300 others on 17 May 1974 when three car bombs exploded in the centre of Dublin city and one in Monaghan town 66 18 September 1993 On the day of the All Ireland hurling final Loyalists claim responsibility for planting a small bomb and cutting communication cables near to Store Street Garda station 5 January 1994 Two members of the Irish Army bomb disposal unit were injured when a parcel bomb sent by the UVF to the Sinn Fein offices in Dublin exploded during examination at Cathal Brugha barracks 67 24 January 1994 Incendiary devices that had been planted by the UFF were found at a school in Dundalk in County Louth and at a postal sorting office in Dublin 67 21 May 1994 Martin Doco Doherty 35 a member of the IRA Dublin Brigade was shot dead by the Ulster Volunteer Force UVF as he attempted to stop a bomb attack on The Widow Scallans Bar Pearse Street Dublin where a Sinn Fein SF function was taking place Another man was seriously wounded in the attack 68 8 June 1994 A small incendiary device was found in a snooker hall in Trim in County Meath which was planted by the UFF the device was found after the UDA issued a statement saying firebombs had been planted in the Republic of Ireland 69 12 September 1994 The UVF planted a bomb on the Belfast Dublin train At Connolly station in Dublin the bomb only partially exploded slightly injuring two women 70 71 3 March 1997 A 2 5kg bomb partially detonated behind the Sinn Fein office in Monaghan Town The device was later made safe by the Irish Army 72 It is thought members of the Mount Vernon UVF were to blame 73 25 May 1997 a small bomb was found and defused in Dundalk It is believed it was planted by a dissident Loyalist paramilitary like the Loyalist Volunteer Force LVF 74 23 February 1998 The LVF claimed responsibility for planting a small car bomb outside a Garda station in Dromad County Louth Republic of Ireland It was spotted and defused by the security forces The LVF threatened further attacks in the Republic 75 8 May 1998 A pipe bomb which was hidden in a package was sent to a Dublin tourist office The device was discovered and defused It is believed the LVF was behind the failed attack 76 15 July 1998 A package addressed to a Dublin hotel which was believed to have been sent by the LVF exploded while it was being examined at the Garda Technical Bureau in Dublin Two were injured in the blast 77 Nationalist actions edit1970s edit 3 April 1970 at three in the morning three armed members of Saor Eire were in the process of robbing the Royal Bank of Ireland at Arran Quay Dublin when Gardai Paul Firth and Richard Fallon arrived by car Confronting the three at the front of the bank Firth and Fallon were repeatedly fired at Firth who was behind Garda Fallon called back to the patrol car driver to summon assistance before he dived to the ground As he reached out to seize the gunman nearest to him Garda Fallon was hit by fire from one of the others and fell mortally wounded He had been shot twice in the shoulder and fatally in the neck He died instantly He was also a father of children 78 79 13 October 1970 Saor Eire member Liam Walsh 35 is killed in a premature explosion when himself and another member Martin Casey were planting a device at a railway line at the rear of McKee army base off Blackhorse Avenue in Dublin His funeral was attended by over 3 000 people 6 July 1971 An Official IRA Volunteer Martin O Leary was killed in a premature bomb explosion in Silvermines County Tipperary 25 October 1971 Saor Eire member Peter Graham 26 is shot dead in his flat at 110 Stephen s Green in an internal feud 30 December 1971 PIRA member Jack McCabe 55 is killed in a premature bomb explosion in a garage Swords Road Santry McCabe had been active in the IRA since the 1930s 2 February 1972 The British Embassy on Merrion Square is burned down in response to Bloody Sunday 1972 A British owned insurance office in Dun Laoghaire and Austin Reed outfitters on Grafton Street are also petrol bombed The Thomas Cook travel agency along with the offices of British Airlines and the RAF club on Earlsfort Terrace were also attacked 80 8 June 1972 Inspector Samuel Donegan a member of the Garda Siochana was killed on the County Cavan side of the cross border Drumboghangh Road near the village of Redhills by a roadside bomb on the border with County Fermanagh The bomb exploded very near the South Fermanagh hamlet of Wattlebridge 19 November 1972 A week after giving a controversial interview to RTE radio IRA Chief of Staff Sean Mac Stiofain was sentenced to six months imprisonment by the Special Criminal Court in Dublin Mac Stiofain immediately began a hunger strike 80 26 November A Garda two civilians and two Provisional IRA volunteers were injured during an exchange of shots after a foiled attempt to free IRA Chief of Staff Sean Mac Stiofain when an 8 man IRA unit embarked on a rescue attempt two members of the IRA unit were disguised as priests during the unsuccessful attempt 81 29 December 1972 Sinn Fein President Ruairi o Bradaigh was arrested in Dublin and sentenced to six months in the Curragh Military Prison 80 31 December 1972 Provisional IRA Derry Brigade Commander Martin McGuinness was arrested in County Donegal after police found explosives and thousands of rounds of ammunition in his car At his court hearing McGuinness declared his membership of the Provisional IRA without equivocation We have fought against the killing of our people I am a member of oglaigh na hEireann and very very proud of it 80 3 August 1973 A cashier James Farrell 54 is killed by the IRA during an armed robbery while delivering wages to British Leyland factory Cashel Road Crumlin 28 October 1973 Detective Constable John Doherty a serving member of the RUC was shot dead by the IRA at the entrance to his mother s house in Ardsool a townland just outside Ballindrait a village near Lifford in East Donegal DC Doherty was aged 31 and was a detective based at Omagh RUC Barracks He was from Ballindrait 31 October 1973 The IRA use a hijacked helicopter to free three of their members from the exercise yard of Mountjoy Prison Dublin One of those who escaped was Seamus Twomey then Chief of Staff of the IRA who wasn t recaptured until December 1977 12 March 1974 Murder of Senator Billy Fox a Fine Gael member of Oireachtas Eireann the parliament of the Republic of Ireland Senator Fox a Protestant from Ballybay was shot dead by the IRA at the home of Marjorie Coulson his girlfriend in the townland of Tircooney between Clones and Smithborough in County Monaghan 26 April 1974 Rose Dugdale and 3 other IRA volunteers took part in a raid on Russborough House in County Wicklow the home of Sir Alfred Beit 82 83 They forced their way into the house and pistol whipped Sir Alfred and his wife before tying and gagging the couple 84 The volunteers then stole nineteen old masters valued at IR 8 million including paintings by Gainsborough Rubens Vermeer and Goya 83 84 The IRA volunteers sent a ransom note offering to exchange the stolen paintings for IR 500 000 and the release of Dolours and Marian Price two sisters convicted of the Old Bailey bombing who were on hunger strike in Brixton Prison attempting to secure repatriation to Ireland 83 84 8 December 1974 The Irish National Liberation Army along with its political wing the Irish Republican Socialist Party IRSP was founded at the Spa Hotel in Lucan South Dublin 85 22 March 1975 The funeral of IRA member Tom Smith shot dead during an escape attempt from Portlaoise Prison on St Patrick s Day is attacked by Gardai Three people including a press photographer are injured 16 October 1976 A house that was booby trapped by the Provisional IRA exploded at Garryhinch on the Laois Offaly border The bomb exploded while Garda Michael Clerkin was inside the blast killing him instantly as the house collapsed in on top of him and seriously injuring four other garda officers 86 87 5 May 1977 Captain Robert Nairac 29 a member of the British Army was abducted by the IRA outside The Three Step Inn in Dromintee County Armagh At around 11 45 p m he was abducted following a struggle in the pub s car park and taken across the border into County Louth in the Republic of Ireland to a field in the Ravensdale Woods just north of Dundalk Following a violent interrogation during which Nairac was allegedly punched kicked pistol whipped and hit with a wooden post he was shot dead in a field 88 89 7 September 1977 John Lawlor 38 a suspected informer is killed by the IRA in Timmons Bar later called Leonard s on the corner of Watling Street and Victoria Quay 5 October INLA Chief of Staff and leader of the IRSP Seamus Costello 38 is shot dead in his car on North Strand Road by OIRA member James Flynn 90 28 January 1979 English salesman Arthur Lockett 29 is found dead in Ticknock in the Dublin mountains He had been beaten with clubs by a number of men and left for dead Lockett had been boasting in a pub that he had connections in the British Army It emerged he had worked in West Germany for a time where he had business deals with both American and British army personnel at NATO bases 7 August 1979 A civilian was shot dead by the IRA during a bank robbery in Strand Street Tramore County Waterford IRA volunteers Eamonn Nolan and Aaron O Connell were later charged with the murder and robbery 91 92 93 27 August 1979 An IRA bomb killed Admiral of the Fleet The 1st Earl Mountbatten of Burma at Mullaghmore County Sligo the British Queen s first cousin as well as The Dowager Baroness Brabourne Lord Mountbatten s elder daughter s mother in law aged 83 The Hon Nicholas Knatchbull Mountbatten s elder daughter s fourth son aged 14 and Paul Maxwell a 15 year old Protestant youth from County Fermanagh who was working as a crew member 94 22 December 1979 Stanley Hazelton 48 an off duty RUC officer traveling in his car was shot dead by a PIRA sniper in Glaslough County Monaghan 95 1980s edit 7 July 1980 See Murder of Henry Byrne and John Morley Henry Byrne and John Morley two officers of the Garda Siochana were shot dead by alleged members of the INLA during a pursuit in the aftermath of a bank robbery near Loughglynn County Roscommon 96 13 October 1980 Garda Siochana officer Seamus Quaid was shot dead by the IRA during an exchange of gunfire shortly after stopping a vehicle containing an IRA unit while on Garda mobile patrol at Ballyconnick near Cleariestown County Wexford 20 February 1982 The INLA shot dead a Garda Siochana Patrick Reynolds at a house in Avonbeg Gardens Tallaght in Dublin 97 4 June 1982 the INLA shot dead Official IRA volunteer James Flynn on North Strand Road Dublin part of a republican feud The INLA later claimed that Flynn was responsible for the killing of Seamus Costello who had been leader of the Irish Republican Socialist Party IRSP on 5 October 1977 in Dublin 98 20 September 1982 The INLA claimed responsibility for bombing a radar station on Mount Gabriel County Cork Five INLA volunteers hijacked a car carrying an engineer to the station They forced their way inside tied up several workers and planted the bombs The INLA claimed it attacked the station because it was linked to NATO 99 25 March 1983 Shooting of Brian Stack Brian Stack an officer at Portlaoise Prison was shot in the neck on South Circular Road Dublin after leaving the National Stadium He was hospitalised with severe brain damage and died on 29 September 1984 16 December 1983 Irish Army soldier Patrick Kelly and a Garda officer Gary Sheehan were both shot dead during a gun battle with the Provisional Irish Republican Army in an attempt to secure the release of businessman Don Tidey taken hostage by the IRA near Ballinamore County Leitrim 100 101 10 August 1984 Garda officer Francis Hand was shot dead by the IRA in Drumcree County Meath during an attempted armed robbery of a post office 23 March 1985 An alleged Garda informant John Corcoran was shot dead by the IRA at Ballincollig County Cork 20 April 1985 The INLA planted two bombs in Dunnes Stores along Dublin s Henry Street one bomb exploded and the other was defused by the Irish Army The INLA planted the bombs in protest at Dunnes Stores support for apartheid in South Africa At the time 12 Dunnes employees were on strike refusing to handle goods 102 103 27 June 1985 A Garda officer Sergeant Patrick Joseph Morrissey a native of Belturbet was killed during the robbery of a post office in Ardee County Louth CAIN lists the INLA as responsible 104 9 August 1985 A train travelling from Belfast to Dublin was severely damaged after the INLA planted 4 bombs in the carriages 20 August 1985 shot and killed Seamus McAvoy 46 at his home in Dublin Republic of Ireland McAvoy had sold portable buildings to the Royal Ulster Constabulary RUC and was the first person to be killed for providing goods or services to the security forces in Northern Ireland This killing marked the beginning of a campaign against what the IRA termed legitimate targets 105 20 January 1987 Volunteers from the Irish People s Liberation Organization IPLO shot dead two Volunteers of the INLA in Rosnaree hotel in Drogheda in an IPLO INLA feud 106 31 January 1987 Mary McGlinchey an INLA activist and wife of INLA leader Dominic McGlinchey was shot dead at her home in Dundalk County Louth It has never been established who was responsible or why 2 June 1987 An off duty RUC officer Constable Samuel McClean was shot dead by the IRA just outside Drumkeen a village in the east of County Donegal Constable McClean was shot while visiting his parents farm in the townland of Callan by two IRA men using a shotgun and a revolver 107 He was buried afterwards in the cemetery attached to Stranorlar Church of Ireland Church Sir Jack Hermon the Chief Constable of the RUC attended the funeral as did Lawrence Wren the Commissioner of the Garda Siochana Constable McClean was from Drumkeen and was stationed at Coalisland RUC Barracks in East Tyrone 8 December 1987 A civilian Patrick Cunningham was found shot dead in an outbuilding at an unoccupied farm Errybane near Castleblayney County Monaghan on 8 December 1987 He had been abducted in May 1987 it is believed the killing was related to the INLA IPLO feud 108 6 May 1988 IRA volunteer Hugh Hehir was shot and killed by the Garda Special Branch following a bank raid in County Clare1990s edit 19 July 1991 Thomas Oliver 43 a civilian from Dundalk in County Louth was shot dead by the IRA who claimed he was a police informer Oliver s body was found in Bellek in County Armagh 109 10 February 1994 Dominic McGlinchey the INLA s former Chief of Staff was shot dead in Drogheda It has never been established who was responsible or why 110 August 1995 INLA Hunger Strike 5 August 1 September four INLA Volunteers in Portlaoise Prison went on hunger strike to demand for parity of treatment with IRA inmates regarding compassionate parole stating that they were regularly denied compassionate parole regardless of circumstances while IRA prisoners were granted regularly After 26 days the Department of Justice finally entered into negotiations with the IRSP through intermediary Father Alex Reid of Clonard Monastery in Belfast and hours later the three remaining prisoners one James Gorman had to go off the striker over an ulcer ended their strike after being promised talks with the government on the issue of parity of treatment Michael Mickey McCartney was on hunger strike for 26 days and both Tony McNeill and Paddy Walls for 19 days 111 112 5 March 1996 INLA volunteer John Fennell was beaten to death by other INLA volunteers in Bundoran County Donegal in the course of an internal dispute 113 7 June 1996 Jerry McCabe then a Detective in Garda Siochana the Irish police service was shot dead during a post office robbery in Adare County Limerick The Provisional IRA was believed to be responsible 114 4 June 1997 INLA volunteer John Morris was shot dead by the Gardai during an armed robbery in Inchicore Dublin 115 116 1 May 1998 Ronan MacLochlainn 28 a dissident Irish Republican Army IRA member was shot dead when the Garda Siochana the Irish police foiled a raid by six armed men on a security van near Ashford County Wicklow The raid was believed to be carried out by the Real IRA 117 See also editList of terrorist incidents in London List of terrorist incidents in Great Britain Timeline of Real Irish Republican Army actions Timeline of Irish National Liberation Army actions Timeline of Ulster Volunteer Force actions Timeline of Ulster Defence Association actions Timeline of the Northern Ireland Troubles Provisional IRA in the Republic of Ireland List of chronologies of Provisional Irish Republican Army actions Timeline of Saor Eire actions 1967 1975 References edit Melaugh Dr Martin CAIN Chronology of the Conflict 1969 cain ulst ac uk Bomb Blast at RTE rte ie Melaugh Dr Martin CAIN Chronology of the Conflict 1969 cain ulst ac uk Sutton Malcolm CAIN Sutton Index of Deaths cain ulst ac uk Melaugh Dr Martin CAIN Chronology of the Conflict 1969 cain ulst ac uk Melaugh Dr Martin CAIN Chronology of the Conflict 1969 cain ulst ac uk Telegraph Herald 26 December 1969 February 2014 Come Here To Me comeheretome com The Lewiston Daily Sun Google News Archive Search news google com Melaugh Dr Martin CAIN Chronology of the Conflict 1970 cain ulst ac uk a b Truth Justice and Reconciliation Part 3 by Jessica McGrann Jude Collins judecollins com 27 December 2015 Daly Susan 26 December 2013 Bombed staircase in O Connell Tower at Glasnevin to be rebuilt thejournal ie Melaugh Dr Martin CAIN Chronology of the Conflict 1971 cain ulst ac uk 130 Melaugh Dr Martin CAIN Chronology of the Conflict 1971 cain ulst ac uk February 8th 1971 irishtimes com McCaughren Tom City Centre Store Destroyed1972 RTE Archives RTE Retrieved 8 September 2023 p 13 p 131 p 135 Incidents in Dublin during the Troubles 1969 1994 comeheretome com 26 February 2014 p 6 The Troubles A Chronology of the Northern Ireland Conflict Issue 18 Glenravel Publications p 29 p 133 Melaugh Dr Martin CAIN Chronology of the Conflict 1972 cain ulst ac uk p 138 a b Report out on Dublin and Cavan bombings rte ie 17 November 2004 a b Microsoft Word Interim Report Dec 04 Title Pagefinal doc PDF Retrieved 26 November 2019 Sutton Malcolm CAIN Sutton Index of Deaths cain ulst ac uk Sutton Malcolm CAIN Sutton Index of Deaths cain ulst ac uk O Connell Street Closed1973 RTE Archives RTE Retrieved 8 September 2023 CAIN Victims Memorials Search Results Page cain ulster ac uk p 137 The Troubles 23 Issuu p 140 Sutton Malcolm CAIN Sutton Index of Deaths cain ulst ac uk Melaugh Dr Martin CAIN Chronology of the Conflict 1974 cain ulst ac uk Interim Fourth Barron Report 2006 p 167 Parish of Kinawley Killesher About the Parish www kinawleykillesherparish com Brian Hanley The impact of the Troubles on the Republic of Ireland 1968 79 Boiling volcano pp 30 Anne Cadwallader Lethal Allies British Collusion In Ireland p 13 Sutton Malcolm CAIN Sutton Index of Deaths cain ulst ac uk Sutton Malcolm CAIN Sutton Index of Deaths cain ulst ac uk UDA Bombs Dublin Airport rte ie a b JFF JFF 1975 and 1976 incidents www dublinmonaghanbombings org Sutton Malcolm CAIN Sutton Index of Deaths cain ulst ac uk Microsoft Word Part A doc PDF Retrieved 26 November 2019 JFF JFF Bombing Incidents www dublinmonaghanbombings org CAIN Sutton Index of Deaths cain ulster ac uk The Windsor Star 10 July 1976 a b Info archive advertiser ie Retrieved 26 November 2019 Barfield Salthill Galway humphrysfamilytree com Record Journal 27 November 1981 Ken Wharton Another Bloody Chapter In An Endless Civil War Volume 1 Northern Ireland p 277 CAIN Chronology of the Conflict 1986 cain ulster ac uk Bomb Hoaxes in Dublin rte ie Melaugh Dr Martin CAIN Chronology of the Conflict 1987 cain ulst ac uk Tribunal data PDF www justice ie 2012 Retrieved 26 November 2019 Loyalists leave fire bomb in Dublin shopping centre Sutton Malcolm CAIN Sutton Index of Deaths cain ulst ac uk CAIN Chronology of the Conflict 1991 cain ulster ac uk CAIN Peter Heathwood Collection of Television Programmes Search Page cain ulster ac uk Conflict Archive in Northern Ireland Archived from the original on 6 December 2010 Retrieved 22 November 2008 Aberdeen Press and Journal 29 September 1992 Loyalist UFF has admitted fire bombs attacks in Donegal and Dublin Film report on Buncrana and Moville damage Garda comments UFF refers to Dublin interference in Northern Ireland H Annesley RUC Chief comments CAIN Chronology of the Conflict 1993 cain ulster ac uk a b CAIN Chronology of the Conflict 1994 cain ulster ac uk Sutton Malcolm CAIN Sutton Index of Deaths cain ulst ac uk CAIN Chronology of the Conflict 1994 cain ulster ac uk Two injured by loyalist shoebox bomb on train Serious casualties independent co uk 13 September 1994 Archived from the original on 21 June 2022 Melaugh Dr Martin CAIN Chronology of the Conflict 1994 cain ulst ac uk Bomb attack blamed on loyalists The Irish Times 4 March 1997 RUC colluded in UVF bombing of Monaghan Sinn Fein office agent an Phoblacht 7 January 2014 Bomb discovery raises fears of attacks in Republic by extreme loyalists irishtimes com Cross border alert as LVF threatens further attacks Irish Independent 24 February 1998 CAIN Chronology of the Conflict 1998 cain ulster ac uk Incident Summary for GTDID 199807150003 Retrieved 30 January 2015 Garda Fallon first on the force killed in modern Troubles irishtimes com Sutton Malcolm CAIN Sutton Index of Deaths cain ulst ac uk a b c d CAIN Chronology of the Conflict 1972 cain ulster ac uk I r a Rescue Bid Foiled in Dublin The New York Times 27 November 1972 No regrets for renegade IRA art robber Rose Dugdale Irish Independent a b c McQuillan Deirdre 20 November 1995 Adventures of a mobile masterpiece Insight on the News Archived from the original on 2 August 2008 Retrieved 6 November 2007 a b c MacCarthy 2007 p 257 CAIN Chronology of the Conflict 1974 Cain ulst ac uk Retrieved 26 November 2019 Gardai blown up in IRA attack in Offaly that killed a colleague to be honoured for bravery today www offalyexpress ie Garda Killed By Bomb RTE Archives IRA did not put soldier Nairac s body through food mincer says head of search for Disappeared Belfasttelegraph via www belfasttelegraph co uk CAIN Sutton Index of Deaths cain ulster ac uk CAIN Sutton Index of Deaths cain ulster ac uk CAIN Sutton Index of Deaths cain ulster ac uk Archived from the original on 23 July 2019 Retrieved 26 November 2019 CAIN Chronology of the Conflict 1979 cain ulster ac uk McGuinness s IRA showed no mercy as they shot a Dublin civil servant Independent ie 15 October 2011 CAIN Sutton Index of Deaths cain ulster ac uk CAIN Sutton Index of Deaths cain ulster ac uk Two garda killers who faced death penalty have been freed from prison Independent ie 14 October 2013 CAIN Sutton Index of Deaths cain ulster ac uk CAIN Sutton Index of Deaths cain ulster ac uk Diary of Events Fortnight 189 17 21 1982 JSTOR 25547075 CAIN Sutton Index of Deaths cain ulster ac uk Error www garda ie Dunnes Stores Bomb Attack rte ie Brennan Cianan 30 December 2015 30 years ago Dunnes Stores was involved in ANOTHER workers dispute one that shook the world thejournal ie Sutton Malcolm CAIN Sutton Index of Deaths cain ulst ac uk CAIN Sutton Index of Deaths cain ulster ac uk CAIN Sutton Index of Deaths cain ulster ac uk CAIN Sutton Index of Deaths cain ulster ac uk Sutton Malcolm CAIN Sutton Index of Deaths cain ulst ac uk CAIN Sutton Index of Deaths cain ulster ac uk Sutton Malcolm CAIN Sutton Index of Deaths cain ulst ac uk The Forgotten Hunger Strikes www hungerstrikes org LISTSERV 16 5 IRISHLAW Archives listserv heanet ie Sutton Malcolm CAIN Sutton Index of Deaths cain ulst ac uk Sutton Malcolm CAIN Sutton Index of Deaths cain ulst ac uk CAIN Sutton Index of Deaths cain ulster ac uk CAIN Sutton Index of Deaths cain ulster ac uk Sutton Malcolm CAIN Sutton Index of Deaths cain ulst ac uk Sources edit CAIN Web Service Conflict and Politics in Northern Ireland The CAIN Project Conflict Archive on the Internet Ulster University Out of the Ashes An Oral History of the Provisional Irish Republican Movement Robert White 2017 Merrion Press ISBN 978 1785370939 INLA Deadly Divisions Jack Holland and Henry McDonald 1995 Poolbeg Press ISBN 978 1853714740 The Dublin and Monaghan Bombings and The Murder Triangle Joe Tiernan 2004 Published by the Author ISBN 978 1856353205 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Timeline of the Troubles in the Republic of Ireland amp oldid 1186847199, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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