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Ulster Workers' Council strike

The Ulster Workers' Council (UWC) strike was a general strike that took place in Northern Ireland between 15 May and 28 May 1974, during "the Troubles". The strike was called by unionists who were against the Sunningdale Agreement, which had been signed in December 1973. Specifically, the strikers opposed the sharing of political power with Irish nationalists, and the proposed role for the Republic of Ireland's government in running Northern Ireland.

Ulster Workers' Council strike
Part of The Troubles
A 1974 poster by unionists opposed to the Sunningdale Agreement. It implied that the agreement would lead to "Dublin Rule" (that is, a united Ireland), to which unionists were opposed.
Date15–28 May 1974
Location
Throughout Northern Ireland
GoalsAbolition of the Sunningdale Agreement and Government of Northern Ireland
Methods
Resulted inGovernment of Northern Ireland prorogued; direct rule re-introduced
Parties to the civil conflict
Lead figures
Casualties and losses
  • 39 civilians killed and over 300 injured by loyalist paramilitaries
  • 2 civilians killed when they crashed into a loyalist roadblock
  • 1 UVF member killed

The strike was organised and overseen by the Ulster Workers' Council and Ulster Army Council, which were formed shortly after the Agreement's signing. Both of these groups included Ulster loyalist paramilitaries such as the Ulster Defence Association (UDA) and Ulster Volunteer Force (UVF).[1] These groups helped to enforce the strike by blocking roads and intimidating workers.[1][2][3][4] During the two-week strike, loyalist paramilitaries killed 39 civilians, of whom 33 died in the Dublin and Monaghan bombings.

The strike succeeded in bringing down the power-sharing Northern Ireland Assembly and Executive. Responsibility for the government of Northern Ireland then reverted to the Parliament of the United Kingdom at Westminster under the arrangements for 'Direct Rule'.

The successful strike was later described by the then Secretary of State for Northern Ireland, Merlyn Rees, as an "outbreak of Ulster nationalism".

Timeline

14 May

A debate was held in the Northern Ireland Assembly on a motion condemning power-sharing and the Council of Ireland, a group established under the terms of the Sunningdale Agreement to facilitate co-ordination between the governments of Northern Ireland, the Republic of Ireland and the United Kingdom. The motion was defeated by 44 votes to 28. Following the Assembly debate, Harland and Wolff shop steward and Ulster Workers Council (UWC) central organiser Harry Murray told a group of journalists that a general strike would begin the following day in response.[5] The date had been agreed by the UWC some time in advance as they wanted it to coincide with the vote, which they had expected to end in defeat for the hard-line unionist motion.[6]

15 May: Day one of the strike

 
Loyalist paramilitaries manning a roadblock

The strike had a slow start with many workers simply going to work anyway, but after a number of workplace meetings, workers began leaving their workplaces after lunchtime.[5] Murray would later admit that the start of the strike had been poorly organised to the extent that on the first day even his own wife asked him why he was not at work.[7] By the end of day one, the port of Larne was sealed off, with a significant UDA and UVF presence helping to ensure that no ships were allowed to enter or leave the harbour.[6] Elsewhere roadblocks were set up and manned by loyalist paramilitaries under the Ulster Army Council.[5] Hijacked vehicles were often used to block the streets.[5] Electricity supplies were also disrupted when workers at the Ballylumford power station went on strike.[5] The power cuts forced some factories to close and send workers home. The UWC issued a statement that it would ensure that essential services would continue.[5]

During the evening there was a meeting at Stormont Castle between Stanley Orme (then Minister of State at the Northern Ireland Office) and the representatives of the various groups active in UWC, namely Harry West, Bill Craig and Ian Paisley (the leaders of the three political parties – Ulster Unionist Party, Vanguard Unionist Progressive Party and Democratic Unionist Party – that formed the pro-strike United Ulster Unionist Council), Andy Tyrie and Tommy Lyttle of the UDA and the UVF's Ken Gibson. Orme attempted unsuccessfully to persuade the leaders to abandon the strike although it would not be until the 19th that West followed Craig and Paisley in publicly endorsing the strike.[8]

16 May: Day two of the strike

The strike began to impact upon agriculture as milk that had not been collected or processed had to be dumped whilst fresh food was similarly not transported to market.[5] However a group of essential services were defined by the UWC, who permitted these to continue as normal, issuing a phone number for anyone involved in these professions. The full list of services deemed essential by the UWC was as follows: bakeries, groceries, dairies, chemists, butchers, confectioners, electricity, gas, water, sewage, hospitals, animal feed, farmers, wages, banks, schools, medical services, hospital and school transport, solicitors, newspapers, normal recreational activities, coal supplies and postal service.[9] Bars were not included in this list, with the UWC ordering pub closures.[5] This decision, which was made in the evening of 16 May, several hours after the initial list had been published, was strongly influenced by the wives of striking workers, who had complained that many of their husbands were using the strike as an excuse for heavy drinking sessions.[10]

Attempts by significant sections of the workforce to carry on at leading Belfast factories such as Mackies on the Springfield Road and Gallahers on York Road were thwarted when loyalist paramilitaries turned up at the premises ordering everybody out and throwing petrol bombs.[11] Workers were largely untouched in predominantly Catholic towns such as Strabane as the loyalist paramilitaries had no structure in place to launch an intimidation campaign but even in these locations work was severely disrupted as electricity supplies proved highly unreliable.[9]

A political response to the strike began to develop slowly. In the British House of Commons at Westminster the UWC strike featured as the main subject of Northern Ireland 'question time'.[5] Merlyn Rees met with loyalists leaders at the Northern Ireland Parliament but insisted that he would not negotiate with the UWC.[5] Meanwhile, Executive member Paddy Devlin threatened to resign over the continuing use of internment.[5]

A Catholic civilian, Maureen Moore (21), was shot dead by a loyalist sniper as she stood at the corner of Stratheden Street and Edlingham Street in Belfast.[12] A witness said the gunman, believed to be from the UDA, emerged from the Protestant Tiger's Bay area. One woman said there had been sporadic trouble in the area that day and complained that the British Army had done little to stop UDA activity.[13] The army was also engaged in the New Lodge are of north Belfast, breaking up riots between Catholic residents and their Protestant neighbours in Tiger's Bay.[10]

17 May: Day three of the strike

Dublin and Monaghan bombings – the UVF exploded four car bombs in the Republic of Ireland. The attacks killed 33 civilians and wounded almost 300 – the highest number of casualties in any single day during "the Troubles". No warnings were given before the bombs were detonated. Three exploded in Dublin during rush hour (killing 26 people and an unborn child) and one exploded in Monaghan 90 minutes later (killing 7 people). Most of the victims were young women, although the ages of the dead ranged from five months to 80 years. There are allegations that British Intelligence colluded in the bombings. Sammy Smyth, then press officer of both the UDA and the UWC Strike Committee, said "I am very happy about the bombings in Dublin. There is a war with the [Republic of Ireland] and now we are laughing at them".[14]

In the strike itself postal delivery services were halted following intimidation of Royal Mail workers. However the Executive put in place arrangements to ensure that Social Security benefits were paid to claimants.[5]

18 May: Day four of the strike

 
Pass card issued by the UWC to members for use during the strike.

A statement was issued by the UWC indicating that they favoured escalating the strike, calling for an all-out stoppage to commence at midnight on Sunday 19 May.[5] There was still some scepticism about the chances of success for the strike at this point as it had yet to win much support amongst the Protestant middle classes and skilled workers.[5] Indeed, even Rev. Robert Bradford, a member of the Vanguard, had argued that morning that the strike should be ended as he believed the politicians could bring down the Executive on their own.[15] Nonetheless a note of caution was sounded when the Executive was informed that the British Army would not be able to run the power stations alone and attempts were made to open negotiations between the UWC and the Northern Ireland Labour Party.[5]

A member of the UDA shot dead UVF member Joseph Shaw during a fight in North Star Bar on North Queen Street, Belfast.[12]

19 May: Day five of the strike

Merlyn Rees declared a State of Emergency under Section Forty of the Northern Ireland Constitution Act 1973.[5] Rees then flew to Chequers for talks with British Prime Minister Harold Wilson.[5] Meanwhile, the United Ulster Unionist Council met and decided to publicly declare their support for the UWC, which in turn withdrew its earlier call for an all-out stoppage.[5]

20 May: Day six of the strike

With the public support of the UUUC now secured the UWC set up a co-ordinating committee to run the strike on more professional lines. Chaired by Glenn Barr, a leading figure in both the Vanguard and the UDA, the group consisted of around fifteen members including the three political party leaders, three UWC members and the heads of the loyalist paramilitaries.[16] The first meeting of the committee revealed some friction as Barr entered late and found Ian Paisley sitting at the head of the table. Barr told him "you might be chairman of the Democratic Unionist Party but I'm chairman of the co-ordinating committee, so move over". Paisley moved from the head of the table but carried the chair away with him and the two argued over the chair itself, with Paisley eventually allowed to retain it as he claimed to need a chair with arms due to his back pain.[17]

As a result of the strikes electricity generation had fallen to around one third of standard levels and telephone calls were to be restricted to emergency use only.[5] Meanwhile, the British government deployed an extra five hundred troops to Northern Ireland.[5] The United Ulster Unionist Council leaders meanwhile took out an advertisement in the Belfast News Letter declaring their support for the UWC.[5]

Catholic civilian Michael Mallon (20) was found shot dead by the side of Milltown Road in Belfast.[12] He had been beaten-up in a UDA club before being shot four times in the head and dumped by the roadside.[13] In the Falls district, a 28-year-old Catholic man was shot four times on a street corner. The gunman sped-off in a car and the victim was reported to be in a critical condition.[18]

21 May: Day seven of the strike

Len Murray, the then General Secretary of the Trades Union Congress (TUC), led a 'back-to-work' march but it drew only 200 people. The march was flanked by the Royal Ulster Constabulary (RUC) and British Army but a crowd of loyalists still managed to attack some of the marchers. A simultaneous march in Cregagh attracted only seventeen people.[19]

In a speech at Westminster, British Prime Minister Harold Wilson condemned the strike. He said that it was a "sectarian strike" and was "being done for sectarian purposes".

A 13-year-old Catholic girl lost both legs when she stepped on an Irish Republican Army land mine in the Andersonstown area of Belfast.[20] In Bangor a bomb wrecked the house of a Catholic family who were away on holiday. Another bomb wrecked seven shops in Castlederg.[21]

22 May: Day eight of the strike

In an attempt to bring the strike to an end the Executive agreed to postpone certain parts of the Sunningdale Agreement until 1977 and to reduce the size of the Council of Ireland. The UWC leaders rejected these proposals although the British Government reiterated their earlier position that they would not enter into negotiations with the UWC.[5]

A bomb damaged a section of the Belfast–Bangor railway line. It was believed to be the work of loyalists intent on halting all public transport.[22] Another bomb exploded in a shop in the Shankill area of Belfast after the owner defied UWC orders to stay open no more than four hours; there were no injuries.[23] Meanwhile, on Belfast's Newtownards Road, two civilians (one of them on a motorbike) were wounded by gunfire from an unknown source.[20]

23 May: Day nine of the strike

A number of barricades erected by loyalists were removed by the security forces but were quickly re-erected.[5] The strike also hit schools with some GCE exams being affected (although for the most part schools remained open for the duration of the strike).[5]

Politically, Gerry Fitt called for the British Army to be deployed to the power stations and the oil refineries whilst Northern Ireland Question Time again focused on the strike.[5] Wilson, on the advice of defence secretary Roy Mason, refused to deploy the Army.[24]

24 May: Day ten of the strike

Harold Wilson, Brian Faulkner (the Chief Executive), Gerry Fitt (the Deputy Chief Executive) and Oliver Napier (the Legal Minister and Head of the Office of Law Reform) met at Chequers to discuss the strike. Following the meeting a statement was issued affirming the earlier British government position that any group operating outside constitutional politics could not be negotiated with.[5]

Loyalists shot dead two Catholic civilians, Sean Byrne and his brother Brendan Byrne, at their pub The Wayside Halt near Ballymena, County Antrim.[12] The UDA and UVF members, travelling in minibuses, had wrecked three other pubs around Ballymena and attacked the owners for staying open during the strike.[25] Twenty people were arrested over the killings. Meanwhile, a petrol station in Belfast was bombed for staying open during the strike; there were no injuries.[26] Elsewhere a teenage boy and girl were killed when their car crashed into a loyalist roadblock near Dungannon. The roadblock had been made from a tree felled across the road.[26]

25 May: Day eleven of the strike

Harold Wilson made a broadcast on television. Wilson controversially referred to the strikers and the strike's leaders as "spongers".[27] The speech was interpreted by many Northern Irish Protestants as an attack on them as a whole rather than the UWC and galvanised support for the strike, with a small sponge worn on the lapel appearing as a sign of support for the UWC the following morning.[5]

A Catholic civilian, Alfred Stilges (52), was found beaten to death in an empty house on Forthriver Road in the Glencairn area Belfast. The attack was blamed on loyalists.[12]

26 May: Day twelve of the strike

The British Army launched a series of raids on loyalists areas around Belfast, taking more than thirty suspected activists into custody.[5]

The UWC declared its system of permits a success and argued that it was ensuring maintenance of the previously defined 'essential services', especially the supply of petrol.[5]

Police reported that–over the past few days–two petrol stations had been bombed, three pubs and a café had been wrecked and three more pubs had been burnt-down after their owners refused to shut.[28]

27 May: Day thirteen of the strike

The army took over twenty petrol stations across the region to supply petrol to those drivers deemed essential and in receipt of a Ministry of Commerce permit. In response to this development the UWC announced that it would no longer oversee the 'essential services' and declared that the army could now look after even the most basic of provisions. They further announced that at midnight Ballylumford power station would be closed down with its workers joining the strike.[5] The energy crisis deepened when a pressure drop in the system hit gas supplies in Belfast and surrounding areas, resulting in a warning that gas users would have to switch their supplies off at the mains.[5]

A car bomb exploded in the underground car-park of the Russell Court Hotel in Belfast, forcing it to shut.[29]

28 May: Day fourteen of the strike

Rees' continuing refusal to meet with the UWC representatives saw Brian Faulkner tender his resignation as chief executive. When Faulkner's Pro-Assembly Unionist supporters followed him in resigning the Northern Ireland Executive was for all intents and purposes brought to a conclusion.[5] In his final speech in the Executive meeting room Faulkner said "after five months of being able to work together, Catholic and Protestant, I hope that one thing can remain – that we do not attack each other on a sectarian basis ever again".[30]

In a final show of support for the strike the Upper Newtownards Road in East Belfast was lined by farmers in their tractors with the convoy continuing all the way to the front entrance of the Stormont parliament, blocking the entrance.[5] Before long news about the collapse of the Executive spread across Northern Ireland, sparking uproarious scenes in Protestant areas.[5]

Aftermath

 
A mural commemorating the strike, Ballysillan Road, Belfast, January 2012

Many people returned to work on 29 May, with the UWC announcing a formal end to the strike on that day. The Assembly itself was officially prorogued the following day, although it was not officially abolished until 29 March 1975.[5] In the immediate aftermath of the strike the dichotomy between the political and worker leaders was thrown into sharp contrast. Ian Paisley addressed a rally in Rathcoole at which he claimed a personal victory before a crowd of 5,000 people whilst Harry Murray returned to the anonymity of his work at the shipyard.[31] Very soon the three political leaders also ended their relationship with Andy Tyrie, despite his leading role in the strike.[32]

Merlyn Rees had interpreted the strike, in which avowed loyalists had openly defied the British government, as an outbreak of Ulster nationalism.[33] Journalist Robert Fisk endorsed this view by arguing that:

The fifteen unprecedented, historic days in which a million British citizens, the Protestants of Northern Ireland, staged what amounted to a rebellion against the Crown and won... During those fifteen days, for the first time in over fifty years... a section of the realm became totally ungovernable. A self-elected provisional government of Protestant power workers, well-armed private armies and extreme politicians organized a strike which almost broke up the fabric of civilized life in Ulster. They deprived most of the population for much of the time of food, water, electricity, gas, transport, money and any form of livelihood.[34]

T. E. Utley also recognised the fact that the UWC's apparatus had become almost a shadow government for the duration of the strike although he did not develop this point, instead concentrating on praising the strike and its aims thus:

Here was an instance of a working-class movement which had resolved to achieve a political objective by means of a general strike. ... By the beginning of the second week of the strike, support for it had spread throughout all classes of the Protestant community. Bank managers and suburban golf club secretaries cheered the strikers on. The atmosphere recalled that of Britain in 1940. ... The whole operation was conducted...with the utmost discipline and efficiency. The strikers virtually took over the task of government. They enforced a petrol rationing scheme and issued passes to those permitted to go to work. They collected and distributed food, carrying with them the farmers who willingly bore severe financial losses in the process. Their public service announcements were read out on the BBC's Ulster Service each morning. Inevitably, there were instances of brutality, theft and peculation, but the prevailing spirit was one of dignified patriotic protest.[35]

For a time the UDA looked to this spirit of Ulster nationalism for its own policy, with Glenn Barr, Andy Tyrie, Tommy Lyttle and Harry Chicken spearheading an initiative in this direction which culminated in the production of the 1979 New Ulster Political Research Group document Beyond the Religious Divide, which drew up a blueprint for a negotiated independence for Northern Ireland, as well as a framework constitution for the new state.[36] The idea however failed to take off as the UDA was unable to challenge the hegemony of the political parties and it was only in the Vanguard Progressive Unionist Party that there existed any sympathy for the notion of independence.[37] The UVF formed a Volunteer Political Party soon after the strike and this group, which rejected Ulster nationalism, suffered similar problems to the politicising UDA as it too failed to make any inroads into the support of the established unionist parties.[38]

For Harold Wilson the success of the UWC strike convinced him that it was no longer worthwhile to attempt to impose a settlement on Northern Ireland from Westminster. As a result, the next attempt at devolution undertaken by Wilson's government was the Northern Ireland Constitutional Convention of 1975. Based on the principle of "rolling devolution" it elected a body of politicians and left it up to them to decide the future structure of devolved institutions. The body was dominated by UUUC and collapsed without reaching any conclusions, although it did precipitate a split in the Vanguard after Craig suggested power-sharing with the Social Democratic and Labour Party and the majority of his party broke away in protest to form the United Ulster Unionist Party.[39]

The UWC would organise a second strike in 1977 although this time without the support of the Ulster Unionists, the Vanguard, the UVF or Glenn Barr. With confused aims and a lack of widespread support this strike collapsed and brought about a permanent rift in the relationship between the Democratic Unionist Party and the UDA.[40]

See also

References

  1. ^ a b Bloomfield, Ken. A tragedy of errors: the government and misgovernment of Northern Ireland. Liverpool University Press, 2007. Page 46.
  2. ^ David George Boyce and Alan O'Day. Defenders of the Union: a survey of British and Irish unionism since 1801. Routledge, 2001. Page 255.
  3. ^ Tonge, Jonathan. Northern Ireland: Conflict and Change. Pearson Education, 2002. Page 119.
  4. ^ "CAIN: Events: UWC Strike: Anderson, Don. - Chapter from '14 May Days'". cain.ulster.ac.uk. from the original on 7 July 2020. Retrieved 9 February 2020.
  5. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag ah ai "CAIN: Events: Ulster Workers' Council Strike - Chronology". cain.ulster.ac.uk. from the original on 7 July 2020. Retrieved 9 February 2020.
  6. ^ a b McDonald & Cusack, UDA, p. 75
  7. ^ Anderson, 14 May Days, p. 27
  8. ^ McDonald & Cusack, UDA,p. 79
  9. ^ a b Anderson, 14 May Days, p. 41
  10. ^ a b Anderson, 14 May Days, p. 42
  11. ^ Anderson, 14 May Days, p. 40
  12. ^ a b c d e Malcolm Sutton's Index of Deaths from the Conflict in Ireland: 1974 14 May 2011 at the Wayback Machine. Conflict Archive on the Internet (CAIN)
  13. ^ a b McKittrick, David. Lost Lives. Mainstream Publishing, 1999. p.447
  14. ^ "A Chronology of the Conflict – 1974". from the original on 30 December 2010. Retrieved 16 March 2012.
  15. ^ Anderson, 14 May Days, p. 60
  16. ^ Anderson, 14 May Days, pp. 73–74
  17. ^ Anderson, 14 May Days, p. 75
  18. ^ "Britain airlifts troops into Northern Ireland". Bangor Daily News, 21 May 1974.
  19. ^ McDonald & Cusack, UDA, p. 80
  20. ^ a b "Ulster violence flares as barricades return". The Pittsburgh Press, 22 May 1974.
  21. ^ "British troops to protect non-strikers in Ireland". The Daily Telegraph, 21 May 1974.
  22. ^ "Strike tightens grip on Northern Ireland". Eugene Register-Guard, 23 May 1974.
  23. ^ "British seek to avert civil war in Ireland". The Dispatch, 23 May 1974.
  24. ^ McHardy, Anne (20 April 2015). "Lord Mason of Barnsley obituary". The Guardian. from the original on 16 December 2016. Retrieved 18 December 2016 – via www.theguardian.com.
  25. ^ McKittrick, p.455
  26. ^ a b "Four killed as violence erupts again in Ulster". The News and Courier, 25 May 1974.
  27. ^ . Archived from the original on 24 July 2008.
  28. ^ "Showdown Looms in Northern Ireland". Rome News-Tribune, 26 May 1974.
  29. ^ "Ulster: There's No Middle Ground". St Petersburg Times, 27 May 1974.
  30. ^ Anderson, 14 May Days, p. 145
  31. ^ McDonald & Cusack, UDA, p. 82
  32. ^ McDonald & Cusack, UDA, p. 83
  33. ^ Ian S. Wood, Crimes of Loyalty: A History of the UDA, Edinburgh University Press, 2006, p. 50
  34. ^ Robert Fisk, The Point of No Return: The Strike Which Broke the British in Ulster
  35. ^ T. E. Utley, Lessons of Ulster (1975)
  36. ^ McDonald & Cusack, UDA, p. 103
  37. ^ Kennedy Lindsay, Dominion of Ulster 14 April 2012 at the Wayback Machine, 1972
  38. ^ Jim Cusack & Henry McDonald, UVF, Poolbeg, 1997, pp. 151–152
  39. ^ McDonald & Cusack, UDA, pp. 88–89
  40. ^ McDonald & Cusack, UDA, pp. 101–102

Bibliography

  • Anderson, Don, 14 May Days, Dublin: Gill and Macmillan, 1994, ISBN 0-7171-2177-1
  • Fisk, Robert S, Point of No Return: the Strike which Broke the British in Ulster, Harper Collins, 1975, ISBN 023396682X
  • McDonald, Henry and Cusack, Jim, UDA: Inside the Heart of Loyalist Terror, Mainstream Publishing, Edinburgh, 2004.
  • McKittrick, David, D, Kelters, S, Feeney, B and Thornton, C. Lost Lives. Mainstream Publishing, Edinburgh, 1999.

External links

  • Key Events – Ulster Workers' Council (UWC) Strike — from the CAIN project at the University of Ulster

ulster, workers, council, strike, ulster, workers, council, strike, general, strike, that, took, place, northern, ireland, between, 1974, during, troubles, strike, called, unionists, were, against, sunningdale, agreement, which, been, signed, december, 1973, s. The Ulster Workers Council UWC strike was a general strike that took place in Northern Ireland between 15 May and 28 May 1974 during the Troubles The strike was called by unionists who were against the Sunningdale Agreement which had been signed in December 1973 Specifically the strikers opposed the sharing of political power with Irish nationalists and the proposed role for the Republic of Ireland s government in running Northern Ireland Ulster Workers Council strikePart of The TroublesA 1974 poster by unionists opposed to the Sunningdale Agreement It implied that the agreement would lead to Dublin Rule that is a united Ireland to which unionists were opposed Date15 28 May 1974LocationThroughout Northern IrelandGoalsAbolition of the Sunningdale Agreement and Government of Northern IrelandMethodsGeneral strike Roadblocks Paramilitary violenceResulted inGovernment of Northern Ireland prorogued direct rule re introducedParties to the civil conflictUlster Workers Council Ulster Army Council United Ulster Unionist Council Government of Northern Ireland Government of the United KingdomLead figuresGlenn Barr Andy Tyrie Brian Faulkner Gerry Fitt Merlyn Rees Harold WilsonCasualties and losses39 civilians killed and over 300 injured by loyalist paramilitaries 2 civilians killed when they crashed into a loyalist roadblock 1 UVF member killed The strike was organised and overseen by the Ulster Workers Council and Ulster Army Council which were formed shortly after the Agreement s signing Both of these groups included Ulster loyalist paramilitaries such as the Ulster Defence Association UDA and Ulster Volunteer Force UVF 1 These groups helped to enforce the strike by blocking roads and intimidating workers 1 2 3 4 During the two week strike loyalist paramilitaries killed 39 civilians of whom 33 died in the Dublin and Monaghan bombings The strike succeeded in bringing down the power sharing Northern Ireland Assembly and Executive Responsibility for the government of Northern Ireland then reverted to the Parliament of the United Kingdom at Westminster under the arrangements for Direct Rule The successful strike was later described by the then Secretary of State for Northern Ireland Merlyn Rees as an outbreak of Ulster nationalism Contents 1 Timeline 1 1 14 May 1 2 15 May Day one of the strike 1 3 16 May Day two of the strike 1 4 17 May Day three of the strike 1 5 18 May Day four of the strike 1 6 19 May Day five of the strike 1 7 20 May Day six of the strike 1 8 21 May Day seven of the strike 1 9 22 May Day eight of the strike 1 10 23 May Day nine of the strike 1 11 24 May Day ten of the strike 1 12 25 May Day eleven of the strike 1 13 26 May Day twelve of the strike 1 14 27 May Day thirteen of the strike 1 15 28 May Day fourteen of the strike 2 Aftermath 3 See also 4 References 5 Bibliography 6 External linksTimeline Edit14 May Edit A debate was held in the Northern Ireland Assembly on a motion condemning power sharing and the Council of Ireland a group established under the terms of the Sunningdale Agreement to facilitate co ordination between the governments of Northern Ireland the Republic of Ireland and the United Kingdom The motion was defeated by 44 votes to 28 Following the Assembly debate Harland and Wolff shop steward and Ulster Workers Council UWC central organiser Harry Murray told a group of journalists that a general strike would begin the following day in response 5 The date had been agreed by the UWC some time in advance as they wanted it to coincide with the vote which they had expected to end in defeat for the hard line unionist motion 6 15 May Day one of the strike Edit Loyalist paramilitaries manning a roadblock The strike had a slow start with many workers simply going to work anyway but after a number of workplace meetings workers began leaving their workplaces after lunchtime 5 Murray would later admit that the start of the strike had been poorly organised to the extent that on the first day even his own wife asked him why he was not at work 7 By the end of day one the port of Larne was sealed off with a significant UDA and UVF presence helping to ensure that no ships were allowed to enter or leave the harbour 6 Elsewhere roadblocks were set up and manned by loyalist paramilitaries under the Ulster Army Council 5 Hijacked vehicles were often used to block the streets 5 Electricity supplies were also disrupted when workers at the Ballylumford power station went on strike 5 The power cuts forced some factories to close and send workers home The UWC issued a statement that it would ensure that essential services would continue 5 During the evening there was a meeting at Stormont Castle between Stanley Orme then Minister of State at the Northern Ireland Office and the representatives of the various groups active in UWC namely Harry West Bill Craig and Ian Paisley the leaders of the three political parties Ulster Unionist Party Vanguard Unionist Progressive Party and Democratic Unionist Party that formed the pro strike United Ulster Unionist Council Andy Tyrie and Tommy Lyttle of the UDA and the UVF s Ken Gibson Orme attempted unsuccessfully to persuade the leaders to abandon the strike although it would not be until the 19th that West followed Craig and Paisley in publicly endorsing the strike 8 16 May Day two of the strike Edit The strike began to impact upon agriculture as milk that had not been collected or processed had to be dumped whilst fresh food was similarly not transported to market 5 However a group of essential services were defined by the UWC who permitted these to continue as normal issuing a phone number for anyone involved in these professions The full list of services deemed essential by the UWC was as follows bakeries groceries dairies chemists butchers confectioners electricity gas water sewage hospitals animal feed farmers wages banks schools medical services hospital and school transport solicitors newspapers normal recreational activities coal supplies and postal service 9 Bars were not included in this list with the UWC ordering pub closures 5 This decision which was made in the evening of 16 May several hours after the initial list had been published was strongly influenced by the wives of striking workers who had complained that many of their husbands were using the strike as an excuse for heavy drinking sessions 10 Attempts by significant sections of the workforce to carry on at leading Belfast factories such as Mackies on the Springfield Road and Gallahers on York Road were thwarted when loyalist paramilitaries turned up at the premises ordering everybody out and throwing petrol bombs 11 Workers were largely untouched in predominantly Catholic towns such as Strabane as the loyalist paramilitaries had no structure in place to launch an intimidation campaign but even in these locations work was severely disrupted as electricity supplies proved highly unreliable 9 A political response to the strike began to develop slowly In the British House of Commons at Westminster the UWC strike featured as the main subject of Northern Ireland question time 5 Merlyn Rees met with loyalists leaders at the Northern Ireland Parliament but insisted that he would not negotiate with the UWC 5 Meanwhile Executive member Paddy Devlin threatened to resign over the continuing use of internment 5 A Catholic civilian Maureen Moore 21 was shot dead by a loyalist sniper as she stood at the corner of Stratheden Street and Edlingham Street in Belfast 12 A witness said the gunman believed to be from the UDA emerged from the Protestant Tiger s Bay area One woman said there had been sporadic trouble in the area that day and complained that the British Army had done little to stop UDA activity 13 The army was also engaged in the New Lodge are of north Belfast breaking up riots between Catholic residents and their Protestant neighbours in Tiger s Bay 10 17 May Day three of the strike Edit Dublin and Monaghan bombings the UVF exploded four car bombs in the Republic of Ireland The attacks killed 33 civilians and wounded almost 300 the highest number of casualties in any single day during the Troubles No warnings were given before the bombs were detonated Three exploded in Dublin during rush hour killing 26 people and an unborn child and one exploded in Monaghan 90 minutes later killing 7 people Most of the victims were young women although the ages of the dead ranged from five months to 80 years There are allegations that British Intelligence colluded in the bombings Sammy Smyth then press officer of both the UDA and the UWC Strike Committee said I am very happy about the bombings in Dublin There is a war with the Republic of Ireland and now we are laughing at them 14 In the strike itself postal delivery services were halted following intimidation of Royal Mail workers However the Executive put in place arrangements to ensure that Social Security benefits were paid to claimants 5 18 May Day four of the strike Edit Pass card issued by the UWC to members for use during the strike A statement was issued by the UWC indicating that they favoured escalating the strike calling for an all out stoppage to commence at midnight on Sunday 19 May 5 There was still some scepticism about the chances of success for the strike at this point as it had yet to win much support amongst the Protestant middle classes and skilled workers 5 Indeed even Rev Robert Bradford a member of the Vanguard had argued that morning that the strike should be ended as he believed the politicians could bring down the Executive on their own 15 Nonetheless a note of caution was sounded when the Executive was informed that the British Army would not be able to run the power stations alone and attempts were made to open negotiations between the UWC and the Northern Ireland Labour Party 5 A member of the UDA shot dead UVF member Joseph Shaw during a fight in North Star Bar on North Queen Street Belfast 12 19 May Day five of the strike Edit Merlyn Rees declared a State of Emergency under Section Forty of the Northern Ireland Constitution Act 1973 5 Rees then flew to Chequers for talks with British Prime Minister Harold Wilson 5 Meanwhile the United Ulster Unionist Council met and decided to publicly declare their support for the UWC which in turn withdrew its earlier call for an all out stoppage 5 20 May Day six of the strike Edit With the public support of the UUUC now secured the UWC set up a co ordinating committee to run the strike on more professional lines Chaired by Glenn Barr a leading figure in both the Vanguard and the UDA the group consisted of around fifteen members including the three political party leaders three UWC members and the heads of the loyalist paramilitaries 16 The first meeting of the committee revealed some friction as Barr entered late and found Ian Paisley sitting at the head of the table Barr told him you might be chairman of the Democratic Unionist Party but I m chairman of the co ordinating committee so move over Paisley moved from the head of the table but carried the chair away with him and the two argued over the chair itself with Paisley eventually allowed to retain it as he claimed to need a chair with arms due to his back pain 17 As a result of the strikes electricity generation had fallen to around one third of standard levels and telephone calls were to be restricted to emergency use only 5 Meanwhile the British government deployed an extra five hundred troops to Northern Ireland 5 The United Ulster Unionist Council leaders meanwhile took out an advertisement in the Belfast News Letter declaring their support for the UWC 5 Catholic civilian Michael Mallon 20 was found shot dead by the side of Milltown Road in Belfast 12 He had been beaten up in a UDA club before being shot four times in the head and dumped by the roadside 13 In the Falls district a 28 year old Catholic man was shot four times on a street corner The gunman sped off in a car and the victim was reported to be in a critical condition 18 21 May Day seven of the strike Edit Len Murray the then General Secretary of the Trades Union Congress TUC led a back to work march but it drew only 200 people The march was flanked by the Royal Ulster Constabulary RUC and British Army but a crowd of loyalists still managed to attack some of the marchers A simultaneous march in Cregagh attracted only seventeen people 19 In a speech at Westminster British Prime Minister Harold Wilson condemned the strike He said that it was a sectarian strike and was being done for sectarian purposes A 13 year old Catholic girl lost both legs when she stepped on an Irish Republican Army land mine in the Andersonstown area of Belfast 20 In Bangor a bomb wrecked the house of a Catholic family who were away on holiday Another bomb wrecked seven shops in Castlederg 21 22 May Day eight of the strike Edit In an attempt to bring the strike to an end the Executive agreed to postpone certain parts of the Sunningdale Agreement until 1977 and to reduce the size of the Council of Ireland The UWC leaders rejected these proposals although the British Government reiterated their earlier position that they would not enter into negotiations with the UWC 5 A bomb damaged a section of the Belfast Bangor railway line It was believed to be the work of loyalists intent on halting all public transport 22 Another bomb exploded in a shop in the Shankill area of Belfast after the owner defied UWC orders to stay open no more than four hours there were no injuries 23 Meanwhile on Belfast s Newtownards Road two civilians one of them on a motorbike were wounded by gunfire from an unknown source 20 23 May Day nine of the strike Edit A number of barricades erected by loyalists were removed by the security forces but were quickly re erected 5 The strike also hit schools with some GCE exams being affected although for the most part schools remained open for the duration of the strike 5 Politically Gerry Fitt called for the British Army to be deployed to the power stations and the oil refineries whilst Northern Ireland Question Time again focused on the strike 5 Wilson on the advice of defence secretary Roy Mason refused to deploy the Army 24 24 May Day ten of the strike Edit Harold Wilson Brian Faulkner the Chief Executive Gerry Fitt the Deputy Chief Executive and Oliver Napier the Legal Minister and Head of the Office of Law Reform met at Chequers to discuss the strike Following the meeting a statement was issued affirming the earlier British government position that any group operating outside constitutional politics could not be negotiated with 5 Loyalists shot dead two Catholic civilians Sean Byrne and his brother Brendan Byrne at their pub The Wayside Halt near Ballymena County Antrim 12 The UDA and UVF members travelling in minibuses had wrecked three other pubs around Ballymena and attacked the owners for staying open during the strike 25 Twenty people were arrested over the killings Meanwhile a petrol station in Belfast was bombed for staying open during the strike there were no injuries 26 Elsewhere a teenage boy and girl were killed when their car crashed into a loyalist roadblock near Dungannon The roadblock had been made from a tree felled across the road 26 25 May Day eleven of the strike Edit Harold Wilson made a broadcast on television Wilson controversially referred to the strikers and the strike s leaders as spongers 27 The speech was interpreted by many Northern Irish Protestants as an attack on them as a whole rather than the UWC and galvanised support for the strike with a small sponge worn on the lapel appearing as a sign of support for the UWC the following morning 5 A Catholic civilian Alfred Stilges 52 was found beaten to death in an empty house on Forthriver Road in the Glencairn area Belfast The attack was blamed on loyalists 12 26 May Day twelve of the strike Edit The British Army launched a series of raids on loyalists areas around Belfast taking more than thirty suspected activists into custody 5 The UWC declared its system of permits a success and argued that it was ensuring maintenance of the previously defined essential services especially the supply of petrol 5 Police reported that over the past few days two petrol stations had been bombed three pubs and a cafe had been wrecked and three more pubs had been burnt down after their owners refused to shut 28 27 May Day thirteen of the strike Edit The army took over twenty petrol stations across the region to supply petrol to those drivers deemed essential and in receipt of a Ministry of Commerce permit In response to this development the UWC announced that it would no longer oversee the essential services and declared that the army could now look after even the most basic of provisions They further announced that at midnight Ballylumford power station would be closed down with its workers joining the strike 5 The energy crisis deepened when a pressure drop in the system hit gas supplies in Belfast and surrounding areas resulting in a warning that gas users would have to switch their supplies off at the mains 5 A car bomb exploded in the underground car park of the Russell Court Hotel in Belfast forcing it to shut 29 28 May Day fourteen of the strike Edit Rees continuing refusal to meet with the UWC representatives saw Brian Faulkner tender his resignation as chief executive When Faulkner s Pro Assembly Unionist supporters followed him in resigning the Northern Ireland Executive was for all intents and purposes brought to a conclusion 5 In his final speech in the Executive meeting room Faulkner said after five months of being able to work together Catholic and Protestant I hope that one thing can remain that we do not attack each other on a sectarian basis ever again 30 In a final show of support for the strike the Upper Newtownards Road in East Belfast was lined by farmers in their tractors with the convoy continuing all the way to the front entrance of the Stormont parliament blocking the entrance 5 Before long news about the collapse of the Executive spread across Northern Ireland sparking uproarious scenes in Protestant areas 5 Aftermath Edit A mural commemorating the strike Ballysillan Road Belfast January 2012 Many people returned to work on 29 May with the UWC announcing a formal end to the strike on that day The Assembly itself was officially prorogued the following day although it was not officially abolished until 29 March 1975 5 In the immediate aftermath of the strike the dichotomy between the political and worker leaders was thrown into sharp contrast Ian Paisley addressed a rally in Rathcoole at which he claimed a personal victory before a crowd of 5 000 people whilst Harry Murray returned to the anonymity of his work at the shipyard 31 Very soon the three political leaders also ended their relationship with Andy Tyrie despite his leading role in the strike 32 Merlyn Rees had interpreted the strike in which avowed loyalists had openly defied the British government as an outbreak of Ulster nationalism 33 Journalist Robert Fisk endorsed this view by arguing that The fifteen unprecedented historic days in which a million British citizens the Protestants of Northern Ireland staged what amounted to a rebellion against the Crown and won During those fifteen days for the first time in over fifty years a section of the realm became totally ungovernable A self elected provisional government of Protestant power workers well armed private armies and extreme politicians organized a strike which almost broke up the fabric of civilized life in Ulster They deprived most of the population for much of the time of food water electricity gas transport money and any form of livelihood 34 T E Utley also recognised the fact that the UWC s apparatus had become almost a shadow government for the duration of the strike although he did not develop this point instead concentrating on praising the strike and its aims thus Here was an instance of a working class movement which had resolved to achieve a political objective by means of a general strike By the beginning of the second week of the strike support for it had spread throughout all classes of the Protestant community Bank managers and suburban golf club secretaries cheered the strikers on The atmosphere recalled that of Britain in 1940 The whole operation was conducted with the utmost discipline and efficiency The strikers virtually took over the task of government They enforced a petrol rationing scheme and issued passes to those permitted to go to work They collected and distributed food carrying with them the farmers who willingly bore severe financial losses in the process Their public service announcements were read out on the BBC s Ulster Service each morning Inevitably there were instances of brutality theft and peculation but the prevailing spirit was one of dignified patriotic protest 35 For a time the UDA looked to this spirit of Ulster nationalism for its own policy with Glenn Barr Andy Tyrie Tommy Lyttle and Harry Chicken spearheading an initiative in this direction which culminated in the production of the 1979 New Ulster Political Research Group document Beyond the Religious Divide which drew up a blueprint for a negotiated independence for Northern Ireland as well as a framework constitution for the new state 36 The idea however failed to take off as the UDA was unable to challenge the hegemony of the political parties and it was only in the Vanguard Progressive Unionist Party that there existed any sympathy for the notion of independence 37 The UVF formed a Volunteer Political Party soon after the strike and this group which rejected Ulster nationalism suffered similar problems to the politicising UDA as it too failed to make any inroads into the support of the established unionist parties 38 For Harold Wilson the success of the UWC strike convinced him that it was no longer worthwhile to attempt to impose a settlement on Northern Ireland from Westminster As a result the next attempt at devolution undertaken by Wilson s government was the Northern Ireland Constitutional Convention of 1975 Based on the principle of rolling devolution it elected a body of politicians and left it up to them to decide the future structure of devolved institutions The body was dominated by UUUC and collapsed without reaching any conclusions although it did precipitate a split in the Vanguard after Craig suggested power sharing with the Social Democratic and Labour Party and the majority of his party broke away in protest to form the United Ulster Unionist Party 39 The UWC would organise a second strike in 1977 although this time without the support of the Ulster Unionists the Vanguard the UVF or Glenn Barr With confused aims and a lack of widespread support this strike collapsed and brought about a permanent rift in the relationship between the Democratic Unionist Party and the UDA 40 See also EditUlster Says No Timeline of Ulster Defence Association actions Timeline of Ulster Volunteer Force actionsReferences Edit a b Bloomfield Ken A tragedy of errors the government and misgovernment of Northern Ireland Liverpool University Press 2007 Page 46 David George Boyce and Alan O Day Defenders of the Union a survey of British and Irish unionism since 1801 Routledge 2001 Page 255 Tonge Jonathan Northern Ireland Conflict and Change Pearson Education 2002 Page 119 CAIN Events UWC Strike Anderson Don Chapter from 14 May Days cain ulster ac uk Archived from the original on 7 July 2020 Retrieved 9 February 2020 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag ah ai CAIN Events Ulster Workers Council Strike Chronology cain ulster ac uk Archived from the original on 7 July 2020 Retrieved 9 February 2020 a b McDonald amp Cusack UDA p 75 Anderson 14 May Days p 27 McDonald amp Cusack UDA p 79 a b Anderson 14 May Days p 41 a b Anderson 14 May Days p 42 Anderson 14 May Days p 40 a b c d e Malcolm Sutton s Index of Deaths from the Conflict in Ireland 1974 Archived 14 May 2011 at the Wayback Machine Conflict Archive on the Internet CAIN a b McKittrick David Lost Lives Mainstream Publishing 1999 p 447 A Chronology of the Conflict 1974 Archived from the original on 30 December 2010 Retrieved 16 March 2012 Anderson 14 May Days p 60 Anderson 14 May Days pp 73 74 Anderson 14 May Days p 75 Britain airlifts troops into Northern Ireland Bangor Daily News 21 May 1974 McDonald amp Cusack UDA p 80 a b Ulster violence flares as barricades return The Pittsburgh Press 22 May 1974 British troops to protect non strikers in Ireland The Daily Telegraph 21 May 1974 Strike tightens grip on Northern Ireland Eugene Register Guard 23 May 1974 British seek to avert civil war in Ireland The Dispatch 23 May 1974 McHardy Anne 20 April 2015 Lord Mason of Barnsley obituary The Guardian Archived from the original on 16 December 2016 Retrieved 18 December 2016 via www theguardian com McKittrick p 455 a b Four killed as violence erupts again in Ulster The News and Courier 25 May 1974 Belfast Cathedral 1971 To 1980 Archived from the original on 24 July 2008 Showdown Looms in Northern Ireland Rome News Tribune 26 May 1974 Ulster There s No Middle Ground St Petersburg Times 27 May 1974 Anderson 14 May Days p 145 McDonald amp Cusack UDA p 82 McDonald amp Cusack UDA p 83 Ian S Wood Crimes of Loyalty A History of the UDA Edinburgh University Press 2006 p 50 Robert Fisk The Point of No Return The Strike Which Broke the British in Ulster T E Utley Lessons of Ulster 1975 McDonald amp Cusack UDA p 103 Kennedy Lindsay Dominion of Ulster Archived 14 April 2012 at the Wayback Machine 1972 Jim Cusack amp Henry McDonald UVF Poolbeg 1997 pp 151 152 McDonald amp Cusack UDA pp 88 89 McDonald amp Cusack UDA pp 101 102Bibliography EditAnderson Don 14 May Days Dublin Gill and Macmillan 1994 ISBN 0 7171 2177 1 Fisk Robert S Point of No Return the Strike which Broke the British in Ulster Harper Collins 1975 ISBN 023396682X McDonald Henry and Cusack Jim UDA Inside the Heart of Loyalist Terror Mainstream Publishing Edinburgh 2004 McKittrick David D Kelters S Feeney B and Thornton C Lost Lives Mainstream Publishing Edinburgh 1999 External links EditKey Events Ulster Workers Council UWC Strike from the CAIN project at the University of Ulster Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Ulster Workers 27 Council strike amp oldid 1094001302, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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