Desano’s

“Aged 18, and against her parents’ wishes, Emily Gibson married Pasquali Desano, on 11 January, 1932. A taste of Italy: Pasquali was an Italian immigrant, a widower, and 25 years older than Emily. They lived at 147 Newtownards Road and ran an ice cream shop next door at No 145. A door hidden behind a bookcase connected the two properties. Pasquali, born in Cassino, Italy in 1887, came to Belfast around 1904-5. He became part of a small but substantial community of Italians already living here. Italian ice cream was a well-established tradition in Belfast since the start of the 20th century. Ice cream shops, owned by descendants of Italians such as Desano, Fusco, Morelli and Rossi, still exist over 100 years since first appearing on the streets of Belfast. You might even come across one on this trail. In 1940, once Italy declared war on Britain, Italians living here were sent to internment camps. It is believed that Pasquali obtained naturalisation and was able to remain. Living so close to the shipyard and docks, the family could not escape the Belfast Blitz (7th April – 6th May 1941). Wesbourne Presbyterian Church was badly hit and, like many of their neighbours, they evacuated to the Saintfield area. Pasquali died on 9th November 1951, aged 64. Emily died on 15 DEcember 2018 aged 105. She lived through two world wars, saw women gain equal voting rights, the partition of Ireland, the ‘Troubles’, and Belfast’s regeneration. Her secret to a long life? ‘Don’t drink, don’t smoke, eat salmon and soy sauce!’ Though I’m sure the Italian ice cream also played a part.”

The info sign is on the railings of Westbourne Presbyterian; the graphic is on a courtyard wall.

Other entries in the Eastside Lives Heritage Trail include Miss McMinn’s Girls’ Club | The Godfather Of Legal Betting | No Ordinary Woman | Two Smart Alecs. For a list of all fourteen, see the Trail’s pamphlet (pdf).

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Childhood Dreams

This painted box by Karl Fenz (web) is on Middlepath Street past the M3 and within sight of the Teenage Dreams.

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Tomorrow

Sydney-based artist Sophi Odling (web | ig) was in town for HTN24, painting this large piece in York Lane (behind the D block of the new UU building), showing a youngster dreaming of what they will get up to ‘tomorrow’.

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We Cannot Live Only For Ourselves

“Free Gazz” is corrected to “Free Gaza” – graffiti in Pacific Avenue, Newington’s “best kept street, 1981”.

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Westlife

“Another winter day/has come and gone away/In either Paris and [or] Rome/And I wanna go home” – words from the Michael Bublé-penned song ‘Home’ which boy-band Westlife released on its 2007 album, Back Home. For Egan, Feehily, and Filan, home is, or was, Sligo — the three went to Summerhill secondary school and were together in earlier bands; Byrne (and Bryan/Brian McFadden who was a member of the group from 1998 to 2004 but is not included in the mural) is from Dublin (WP).

“With a career spanning twenty years, Westlife are, Shane Filan, Nicky Byrne, Kian Egan and Mark Feehily. A true pop phenomenon with more number 1 hits than any other act apart from The Beatles and Elvis, Westlife have sold 50 million albums worldwide.”

The mural is behind Gilooly Hall, on Temple Street, Sligo. It was painted in 2015 by Kelan Curran (TAPA).

Previously from Sligo: Maud Gonne.

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In The Service Of Our Country

These are images of people collecting for Andy Allen Veterans Support (web) on the Shankill, Belfast. At its peak (in 1973) the UDR had more than 9,000 personnel (Statista). The UDR was amalgamated into the Royal Irish Regiment in 1992 and a 2005 estimate put the number of its veterans at about 58,000 (Veterans Services NI).

The title of the post comes from a UDR memorial in Carrickfergus.

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Tosaíonn An Domhan Ar Leac An Doraıs

“Think global, act local – [the world begins on the doorstep]”. This environmental message is by UV Arts (ig) at Buncrana Youth Club, Castle Avenue, Buncrana, Co. Donegal (Inish Live), painted for Children In Crossfire (web | see also Derry Lama, A Wall For All, and Break The Bias).

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Copyright © 2024 Andy McDonagh/Eclipso Pictures (ig | Fb)
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The Craigavon Two

“There is no lie big enough to cover the shame of jailing two innocent men #JFTC2”. Brendan McConville and John Paul Wootton were convicted of the 2009 murder of Constable Stephen Carroll (BBC), and sentenced to life with 25-year and 18-year minimums, respectively. The case is under review (Guardian | An Phoblacht).

This RNU (Fb) board also appeared on Northumberland Street in west Belfast.

Berwick Road, Ardoyne, north Belfast. For the Fıanna mural, see Gal Greıne. For the pro-Palestine board, see Old Is The New New. For the right-most board, see Óglach Sean McCaughey.

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Still Standing

The WHO and UNRWA now estimates that of the 34,000 Palestinians killed in Gaza, about 14,000 were children (Egypt Today). 18 were killed in a single explosion in Rafah yesterday (AP). This new board in west Belfast illustrates the disparity between Israeli forces and ordinary Palestinians by showing children in ragged clothing armed only with a single, odd-looking (AI hallucinated?), slingshot facing off against other children armed with assault rifles and wearing riot gear.

Of the RNU social-media handles along the bottom, only the Facebook and TikTok ones actually work.

Previously, from 2018: RNU Stands With Palestine.

Northumberland Street, west Belfast; later with a knotwork surround – see T08102.

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