A pub bombing or a public house bombing is an attack on a pub or public house using explosives and other bombing making material like nails, bolts, screws and similar objects which can cause horrific injuries when the bomb detonates. The Provisional IRA's Balcombe Street Gang used bolts and screws in many of their bomb attacks in the mid-1970s. Neo-nazi David Copeland used nails in his bombs.
History
editThe vast majority of pub bombings were carried out during Northern Ireland's "Troubles" conflict. The attacks were carried out by Irish republican and Ulster loyalist paramilitary groups, such as the Republican Provisional Irish Republican Army (IRA), Irish National Liberation Army (INLA) and the Loyalist Ulster Volunteer Force (UVF) and Ulster Freedom Fighters (UFF). There were some pub bombings carried out by other European urban guerrilla movements around the same period.
One of the first pub bombings of the Troubles in Northern Ireland was the IRA bombing of the Bluebell Bar in the Sandy Row area of Belfast a staunchly loyalist, Protestant area of Belfast. Almost 30 people were injured in this bombing which occurred on the 20 September 1971.[1] A few weeks later the Loyalists carried out their first pub bombing when the UVF bombed what they believed to be a Republican owned pub called the Fiddler's House Bar on the 9 October 1971, to were hoping to hurt Catholics but instead killed a middle aged Protestant women & injured several others.[2]
The worst pub bombing in Northern Ireland happened early on in the conflict. The McGurk's Bar bombing which was carried out by the UVF claimed the lives of 15 civilians and 17 others were badly injured.[3] At the time it was the highest death toll from any attack in the North, until the IRA's Warrenpoint ambush which killed 18 people in August 1979.
The worst pub bombing in the UK was the Birmingham pub bombings of the 21 November 1974. 21 people were killed and 182 others were injured many of the seriously. It was the IRA's deadliest attack of the conflict in terms of civilian deaths and it was the highest death toll from a pub bombing during the conflict.[4]
The worst pub bombing attack in the Republic of Ireland during the conflict was the bombing at Kay's Tavern which occurred in Dundalk in County Louth. Two people were killed in this attack and 20 more injured. The Red Hand Commando, a UVF linked group, claimed they carried out the attack.[5]
During the 1970s, loyalists stepped up their bombing campaign against pubs and it was said they were helped allegedly by the security forces, in an alliance of UVF, UDR, UDA, RUC, RUC Special Branch, RUC Special Patrol Group and a small number of British soldiers. Between 1973 and 1977 they bombed a long list of pubs and other places.
Journalist Anne Cadwallader described some of the attacks in the 1974–75 period as being "the height of their campaign" which also included not just bomb attacks but shootings as well, known as "spray jobs" in Northern Ireland. The group these people belonged to was the Glenanne gang.
- 1 – 17 January 1974: Daniel Hughes was shot dead in a UVF gun attack on Boyle's Bar, Cappagh.
- 2 – 14 February 1974: The Glenanne Gang attack Traynors bar.
- 3 – 29 November 1974 – A loyalist bomb explodes at a bar called Hughe's Bar in Newry, fatally injuring John Mallon, and in another bomb attack on McArdles Bar, near Crossmaglen injuring Thomas McNamme who died less than a year later.
- 4 – 10 February 1975 – The UVF attack Haydebs Bar and they killed Eugene Doyle and Arthur Mullholland.
- 5 – 27 April 1975 – a loyalist gang attacked Bleary Dart's club and kill three people, Joe Toman, Brendan O'Hara and John Feeney were all killed playing a game of darts.
- 6 – 4 September 1975 – The UVF attacked McCann's bar near Ballyagan killing Margaret Hale in the attack.
- 7 – 22 August 1975 – The UVF destroys the "McGleenan's Bar". Many were injured and some lost legs and limbs in the attack, John McGleenan, Patrick Hughes and Thomas Morris were all killed.
- 8 – 19 December 1976 – The UVF planted a car bomb outside a pub in Dundalk and it exploded killing 2 people and injured 22 others.
- 9 – 17 March 1976 – The UVF planted a large car bomb outside a bar called the Hillcrest Bar, on St. Patrick's Day. The UVF car bomb explodes, and killed Andrew Small, Patrick Baranard, Joe Kelly, James McChauey. Many more were injured.
- 10 – 16 August 1976 – The Step Inn pub in Keady, Armagh is bombed by members of the Glenanne gang, killing Betty McDonald and Gerard McGleenan.[6]
Notable pub bombings
edit| Year | Event | Location | Perpetrator(s) | Deaths | Injuries | Comments |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1971 | Red Lion Pub bombing | Belfast, Northern Ireland | Provisional IRA | 3 | 30 | Part of IRA campaign |
| 1971 | McGurk's Bar bombing | Belfast, Northern Ireland | Ulster Volunteer Force | 15 | 17 | Part of UVF campaign |
| 1972 | Benny's Bar bombing | Belfast, Northern Ireland | Ulster Freedom Fighters | 2 | 12 | Part of UFF/UDA campaign |
| 1974 | Rose & Crown Bar bombing | Belfast, Northern Ireland | Ulster Volunteer Force | 6 | 18 | Part of UVF campaign |
| 1974 | Guildford pub bombings | Surrey, England | Provisional IRA | 5 | 65 | Part of IRA England campaign. First attack carried out by the IRA's Balcombe Street Gang between October 1974 - December 1975 |
| 1974 | Woolwich pub bombing | London, England | Provisional IRA | 2 | 40 | Part of IRA England campaign |
| 1974 | Talbot Arms pub bombing | London, England | Provisional IRA | 0 | 8 | Part of IRA England campaign |
| 1974 | Birmingham pub bombings | Birmingham, England | Provisional IRA | 21 | 182 | Part of IRA England campaign |
| 1975 | Mountainview Tavern bombing 1975 | Belfast, Northern Ireland | Provisional IRA | 5 | 50 - 60 | Part of IRA campaign |
| 1975 | 1975 Conway's Bar attack | Belfast, Northern Ireland | Ulster Volunteer Force | 2 | 15 | Part of UVF campaign |
| 1975 | Bayardo Bar attack | Belfast, Northern Ireland | Provisional IRA | 5 | 50 - 60 | Part of IRA campaign |
| 1975 | Strand Bar bombing | Belfast, Northern Ireland | Ulster Volunteer Force | 6 | 50 | Part of UVF campaign |
| 1975 | Caterham Arms pub bombing | Surrey, England | Provisional IRA | 0 | 33 | Part of IRA England campaign |
| 1975 | Biddy Mulligan's pub bombing | London, England | Ulster Freedom Fighters | 0 | 5 | Part of UDA/UFF campaign |
| 1975 | Donnelly's Bar and Kay's Tavern attacks | Dundalk, Republic of Ireland | Ulster Volunteer Force | 2 | 21 | Part of UVF campaign (1st part of double attack) |
| 1975 | 1975 Central Bar bombing | County Down, Northern Ireland | Irish National Liberation Army (INLA) | 3 | 30 | Carried out by INLA members using the covername "People's Republican Army" |
| 1976 | 1976 Step Inn pub bombing | County Armagh, Northern Ireland | Ulster Volunteer Force | 2 | 20 | Part of UVF campaign. One of a number attacks carried out by the Glenanne Gang around the Irish border between 1972 - 1977 |
| 1976 | Hillcrest Bar bombing | County Tyrone, Northern Ireland | Ulster Volunteer Force | 4 | 50 | Part of UVF campaign |
| 1976 | Castleblayney bombing | County Monaghan, Ireland | Ulster Volunteer Force | 1 | 17 | A car bomb exploded outside the Three Star Inn pub, Part UVF campaign |
| 1979 | Glasgow pub bombings | Glasgow, Scotland | Ulster Volunteer Force | 0 | 8 | Part of UVF campaign |
| 1982 | Droppin Well bombing | Ballykelly, County Londonderry, Northern Ireland | Irish National Liberation Army | 17 | 30 | Bombing against British soldiers |
| 1992 | Sussex Arms pub bombing | London, England | Provisional IRA | 1 | 7 | Part of IRA England campaign |
| 1999 | Nail bombing at Admiral Duncan | Soho, London, England | David Copeland | 3 | 70 | Neo-Nazi terrorist hate campaign, many people injured badly from shrapnel & nails, some lost limbs. |
| 2003 | Mike's Place suicide bombing | Tel Aviv, Israel | Hamas and Al Aqsa Martyrs Brigades affiliated British citizens | 3 | 50 | Part of Second Intifada |
See also
editFurther reading
edit- Peter Taylor - Provo's: The IRA & Sinn Fein
- Alan F Parkinson - 1972 And The Ulster Troubles
- Aaron Edwards - UVF: Behind The Mask
- Anne Cadwallader - Lethal Allies: British Collusion In Ireland
- Ed Moloney - A Secret History of the IRA A Secret History of the IRA
- Henry McDonald & Jack Holland - INLA - Deadly Divisions
- Henry McDonald & Jim Cusack - UVF: Endgame
References
edit- ↑ "The Troubles 7". Issuu. 22 August 2011.
- ↑ "CAIN: Sutton Index of Deaths". cain.ulster.ac.uk.
- ↑ Joe Graham, Rushlight Magazine. "McGurk's Bar Massacre". Retrieved 30 January 2015.
- ↑ "1974: Birmingham pub blasts remembered". BBC News. 21 November 1974.
- ↑ "43 years ago today since bombing in Dundalk". Talk of the Town. Archived from the original on 5 April 2019.
- ↑ Anne Cadwallader – Lethal Allies: British Collusion in Ireland p.13, 14