100 Years Of Conflict

2014-12-18 BallysillanMilitary+

The three-storey mural above is in Ballysillan and replaced a UVF mural when it was added in 2011. The mural is the work of Jim Russell, shown below at Arts For All where he is artist-in-residence. The information below was provided by Arts For All.

The Great War: The first panel commemorates the Great War that ravaged Europe from 1914 to 1918 and shows troops advancing into battle, the Ulster Tower at Thiepval commemorating the sacrifice at the Somme and an image showing one of the war cemeteries and highlighting the true cost of war.

Second World War: The second panel features some of the devastation visited upon Belfast during a series of Luftwaffe raids during the early years of the Second World War. Belfast suffered greatly with over 1,000 people dying in four nights of bombing in April and May of 1941.

The Troubles: In the third panel highlight the dark history known as the Troubles. It features two events from the years of that time – the murder of the three young off-duty Scottish soldiers in 1971 [the monument depicted was featured in The Highland] and the Bloody Friday bombings of July 1972. In the midst of the horror that accompanied the early years of the Troubles these events still caused many to struggle to understand how people could carry out such atrocities.

Present Day Conflict: Panel four brings us up to the present day. Military service is a tradition for many in Northern Ireland and for many their first overseas trip came on the back of an overseas posting whilst serving in one of the Armed Forces. From times past, through the World Wars, the Korean War, to more recent conflicts in Iraq and Afghanistan soldiers and regiments drawn from Norther Ireland continue to play a role.

2014-12-17 JimRussell+

Click image to enlarge
Copyright © 2014 Seosamh Mac Coılle
X02445 X02428 royal highland fusiliers wolfhound high street 4th 5th may blitz lest we forget

Show No Mercy

2015-02-05 CastlemaraEddie+

“Show no mercy and expect none”. Iron Maiden’s Eddie the trooper, armed with an assault rifle and carrying a UDA flag, leads the grim reaper over the graves of “G. Adams”, “McGuinness” and “A. Maskey”. UDA/UFF mural in Carrickfergus.

For more on Eddie, see his Visual History page.

Click image to enlarge
Copyright © 2014 Seosamh Mac Coılle
X02496 south east antrum UDA b coy quis separabit

At The Pass

2014-08-11 UVFDonegallPass+

South Belfast Ulster Volunteer Force 2nd Battalion “A” Company Donegall Pass, with the flag of England (St. George’s Cross) in one corner and in the other an orange star with “1912” written below, the year the Ulster Volunteers were founded. The colour-scheme is the reverse of the Orange Order’s: its flag has the purple star of the Williamites on an orange field.

Click image to enlarge
Copyright © 2014 Seosamh Mac Coılle
X02073

Age Shall Not Weary Them

2014-12-17 ShoreRdMem+

This new roadside memorial to the 36th (Ulster) Division in WWI, of wooden crosses on white stone along with a board on the wall above, has appeared on the Shore Road, across from Seaview, home of Crusaders FC, the Hatchet Men.

2014-12-17 ShoreRdMemWide+

Click image to enlarge
Copyright © 2014 Seosamh Mac Coılle
X02431 X02432

Machine Guns & Mortars

2014-08-28 36thUlster+

Monkstown WWI mural in four quadrants showing the emblem of the 36th (Ulster) Division, a soldier at the cross in the Thiepval Cemetery, soldiers feeding a belt of ammunition into a Vicker’s machine gun, and others loading a Stokes mortar.

Click image to enlarge
Copyright © 2014 Seosamh Mac Coılle
X02129 red hand union jack shamrock lest we forget

Better Days

2014-10-03 FallswaterIRA+

Here are three “nail-ups” from west Belfast, all showing their age.

The first is “IRA – Brits out, not sell out. Join RSF” in Fallswater Street.

The second is a “Lower Shankill UFF C Coy” board high above the “Shankill Protestant Boys UVF” mural at the junction of Northemberland Street and the Shankill.

The third is the phoenix in the apex above the mural in AMCOMRI Street.

The images were taken in late 2014; the phoenix goes back at least to 2003 and the others are at least six years old.

2014-10-03 ShankillUFFNorthumb2

2014-10-03 AMCOMRIPhoenix+

Click image to enlarge
Copyright © 2014 Seosamh Mac Coılle
X02259 X02267 X02258 republican sinn féin ulster volunteer force

Glenfield Community Association

2015-02-11 JoinTheUDAFull+

The 2010 work of Jade, Andi, Katie, Leigh, Ellen, Lyndsay, Shannon, and Hannah on the substation at the top of the Glenfield estate’s Oakfield Road has been replaced this week by a new UDA mural sporting a hooded gunman facing the viewer with a slogan borrowed from Mexican revolutionary Emiliano Zapata: “Better to die on your feet than live on your knees in an Irish republic. Join the UDA.”. The two wide shots below allow you to compare the scene this week with last week.

The mural has been criticized by both DUP and Alliance councillors (Newsletter). The final words – Join the UDA – have drawn particular ire, as in other respects it is similar to other murals in featuring hooded gunmen, such as these two other Carrickfergus murals: InclusionEternal Vigilance

Nolan Show discussion of the mural on 2015-02-11: Part 1Part 2

2015-02-11 JoinTheUDA+

2015-02-11 JoinTheUDAWide+

2015-02-06 GlenfieldBurglars+

Click image to enlarge
Copyright © 2015 Seosamh Mac Coılle
X02515 X02514 X02516 X02503 quis separabit uff burglars beware UDA

The Flag That’s Never Furled

2014-08-25 BallyduffMemorial+

Translations of Psalm 60.4 vary, but it is something like “You (the Lord) have given those who fear you a banner so that they will not flee before your arrows”, which might work quite well alongside a Union jack. But in fact, only one source claims the poetic lines on the side of this Ballyduff electrical sub-station come from Psalm 60.4; they are rather the first stanza of a 1902 poem (earliest found mention)The Union Jack, by Edward Shirley, in Little Poems For Little People: 

‘Tis thy flag and my flag, the best of flags on earth;

Oh, cherish it my children, for ’tis yours by right of birth.

Your fathers fought, your fathers died, to rear it to the skies;

And we like them will never yield, but keep it flying high.

For the other three sides of the structure see Absent Friends | The Ultimate Sacrifice. For the mural in the distance (of the wide shot, below), see 1st East Antrim Ballyduff

2014-08-25 BallyduffMemorialWide+

Click image to enlarge
Copyright © 2014 Seosamh Mac Coılle
X02110 X02113 at the going down of the sun 1914 1918 uvf ycv rir ulster volunteer force young citizen royal irish rifles so cherish it my children it’s yours by right of birth to raise it to the skies must never yield john stewart

Eternal Vigilance

2015-01-23 EternalVigilenceFull+

“Audemus jura nostra defendere – We dare to defend our rights”. The UDA/UFF/UYM/LPA mural above shows hooded gunmen standing either side of a view of Carrickfergus castle. The phrase “The price of peace is eternal vigilance” is associated with British politician Leonard Courtney (who also said “Lies – damned lies – and statistics) though it probably goes further back. As can be seen from the second image, the mural watches over Woodlawn primary school. The third image shows the memorial garden off to the right-hand side; the plaque is shown fourth: “This memorial is dedicated to the memory of the officers and members of our organisation who were murdered by the enemies of Ulster and to those who paid the supreme sacrifice whilst on active service during the present conflict. Quis separabit.”

For the previous mural (Ulster’s Call 1893 – Boer War), see Murals Irlande du Nord.

2015-01-23 EternalVigilenceSchool+

2015-01-23 EternalVigilenceWide+

2015-01-23 EternalVigilencePlaque+

Click image to enlarge
Copyright © 2015 Seosamh Mac Coılle
X02481 X02483 X02484 X02482 the price of freedom south east antrim none shall divide us ulster defence association ulster freedom fighters feriens tego ulster young militants filius terrae

Long To Reign Over Us

2015-01-24 QEII50th+

The Queen’s golden jubilee (50th anniversary 1952 – 2002) is celebrated in this long-lasting UFF/UDA mural in Rathcoole. It originally included a (painted) “plaque” at the bottom, which has been painted out. On September 10th, 2015, Elizabeth II will surpass Victoria as the longest reigning British monarch.

Diamond jubilee mural in the Village: Looking Back; board on the Shankill: For Those About To March | Ulster Girl | A Full House.

2015-01-24 QEIIWide+

Click image to enlarge
Copyright © 2015 Seosamh Mac Coılle
X02489 X02490 flags of england scotland wales norther ireland union jack crown quis separabit red fist hand