Derrybeg: 7

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Patrick Hughes of Derrybeg was one of nine people killed when an IRA bomb exploded prematurely at the Customs Clearance Office on Dublin Road. Two other IRA men lost their lives along with three lorry drivers and three customs officials. 


Another IRA man from Derrybeg, Eddie Grant was killed in a bomb attack on Malachy Clarke’s pub on Monaghan Street on Christmas Eve. A young boy named Harshaw who had called to collect his father also died. 

 

On the brighter side Derrybeg made the world headlines as the focal point of the massive Civil Rights March the week after Bloody Sunday. 

 

Many leading figures including MPs, TDs and Irish Ministers took part and were accommodated overnight in case the British Army sealed off the area and prevented people from participating. One resident asked me to photograph his family with his guests, film star Vanessa Redgrave and Bernadette Devlin MP. 

 

Two students from Leicester University who came here for the March stayed in the ‘Beg with Dessie McGennity and his wife Brea. So impressed were they by the sportsman that they invited him to join a high-powered panel in addressing an audience of over 4000 on the conflict in the North. 

 

Later they secured employment for Dessie on the University campus!

 

…. more later …

Derrybeg: 6

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Some estates in the town, including Derrybeg were sealed off in the immediate aftermath of internment, and remained so for several days with no vehicles allowed to enter or leave.


Thus began a long anti-internment campaign with protest marches and pickets, many involving women and especially the relatives of the internees. 

 

One of the most controversial incidents was the shooting dead of local lad 12-year-old Kevin Heatley at the Derrybeg estate in February 1973. The schoolboy had been sitting on a wall about 50 metres from his own home when a British soldier fired the single shot which killed him. 

 

By coincidence a TV engineer, Frankie Finnegan who lived opposite was recording a television programme at the moment when the shot was fired. The recording proved beyond doubt that the Army story – that Kevin had been caught in the crossfire between soldiers and the IRA – was false.

 

Mrs Margot Haughey and her sister Mrs Mary Mathers happened to be in the vicinity when the army patrol came along. They described how one soldier had ‘strutted across’ from the shops, aimed his rifle towards Main Avenue and fired one shot.

 

The women ‘thought it was a plastic bullet’ and accused the soldier of ‘having drink taken’. 

 

When the MP for South Armagh Paddy O’Hanlon visited Mrs Mathers’ home to take a statement, he was dragged from the house by troops, put in a Land Rover and taken to the UDR Centre but later released. 

 

In the longer term a soldier was charged with the murder but acquitted. 

 

The funeral was the largest ever seen in the Frontier Town. Black flags were flown everywhere and photographs of the victim appeared in many windows. 

 

There is a small stone embedded in a garden boundary wall on Main Avenue to commemorate the innocent lad.

 

……. more later …

 

Derrybeg

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But as the political situation in the North worsened after 1969 with the burning of Bombay Street and the arrival in our town of refugees from Belfast, estates in Newry – such as Derrybeg – began to feel vulnerable from possible attack, not just from the British Army and the RUC but from loyalists from Bessbrook, Kilkeel and other parts. 


The Catholic Ex-Servicemen’s Association appeared and offered advice and support. Various Defence Associations appeared at the same time. Often barricades were erected at the entrances to our estate. 

 

I recall at one well-attended public meeting at the Community Centre the late Joe Henry addressed the audience giving instructions on how to prime a bomb and to assemble a Bren sub-machine gun!

 

Another night, arriving home from the night-desk at The Irish News where I worked I discovered a hijacked lorry, now manned by masked men, blocking the entrance to the estate. I parked by car above in Hospital Road and walked across the Camlough Road into the estate. I was very conscious that hidden British soldiers were probably at that moment training their rifles on me from the top of the Egyptian Arch – and also that the estate’s residents were keeping an eye on everything. 

 

On reaching the barrier, I offered a hearty ‘Good morning, gentlemen’ to the masked men and proceeded on my way to my home at Fifth Avenue, some 50 metres onwards. 

 

… more later ….

Derrybeg Sports

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The genesis of Derrybeg’s community success came when a group of sportsmen decided to raise funds in order to provide a strip for the local soccer team.

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Derrybeg: we move in

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‘It doesn’t seem like forty-five years since we stumbled over rubble outside our new home in Second Avenue. 



However we soon built up a close rapport with our neighbours Mona and Paddy Mallon, Rita and James McKeown, Derek O’Brien and his wife Margaret, Frankie and Bernadette Finnegan, Mary and Margot Carroll – later Mrs Colm Mathers as well as Barney Larkin and his wife Mary (Kelly). 

 

And there was great craic in the Community Centre especially with such personalities as Julie Murney, Susie Blair, Ellie Mulligan, Una Cregan, Teresa Preece, Margaret Cranney and Patsy McKeown.

 

The shop on the hill was taken by Peader Markey. Peader pointed out that ‘most residents came from strongly-nationalist and working-class backgrounds. They were a proud people who would not be pushed around or beholden to anyone.

 

They were very honest. Neither I, nor Leo McKenna the grocer ever had a bad debt. And if anyone was in trouble, the neighbours would all rally round. 

 

The open door and traditional hospitality was the norm,’ Peader concluded.

 

… more later …

Derrybeg Roll-of-Honour

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Fabian Boyle takes up the story of the Derrybeg Estate.


‘In addition to the men already named, I feel it necessary to include Mickey McCaul, Davey Morley, Billy Scott, Jim Gorman, Tommy McKeown, Oliver Markey, Jim Morgan, Derek O’Brien, Bobby McAleavey, Dominic McKevitt and Jack McKenna in the ‘Beg roll-of-honour.


Read moreDerrybeg Roll-of-Honour