17 May 1974: The Dublin and Monaghan Bombings on this day.
Three car bombs exploded in Dublin, immediately killing 23 people and injuring
more than 100 others during the rush hour. Five more people died and another 20
were hurt in a blast, which hit the town of Monaghan an hour later. The final
death toll was 34 people. The bombings were the work of a UVF gang that had
links to elements within the British Army Intelligence services. No one has
ever been charged with these attacks.
It was a hot day in early summer when the terrorists
launched their attacks. The City centre of Dublin was full of shoppers and
workers heading home that Friday afternoon, little suspecting that such a
murderous deed was about to be inflicted upon them.
In the North a huge Loyalist Strike was underway with the
aim of bringing down the Power Sharing Executive that had been formed in
January that year. Its aim was to allow both sides a share in the Government of
the North so that no side would feel excluded. It also had as one of its terms
the formation of an All Ireland Council. To many Unionists this was a step too
far and a possible 'foot in the door' to a United Ireland without their
consent.
The perpetrators of these bombings knew that the Executive
at Stormont was in grave danger of collapse. It was clear the British
Government under Harold Wilson was dithering with indecision as to what to do
in the face of such a massive level of civil disobedience by most of the
Unionist Community in Ulster. This was backed by widespread intimidation of
those who tried to go about their business regardless.
Only the Dublin Government under the Taoiseach Liam Cosgrave
stood firm against any collapse of what they had tried so hard in negotiations
to have set up and running. While the Troubles had claimed hundreds of lives
north of the Border the south had escaped relatively unscathed up until then -
but not entirely free of atrocities either.
Clearly the aim of the attackers was to jolt the people of
the South, and the Dublin Government in particular, out of any sense of
complacency that they could escape the consequences (as they saw it) of
unwarranted interference in Ulster.
At approximately 17:30 on Friday 17 May 1974, without prior
warning, three car bombs exploded almost simultaneously in Dublin's city centre
at Parnell Street, Talbot Street, and South Leinster Street during rush-hour.
According to one of the Irish Army's top bomb disposal officers, Commandant
Patrick Trears, the bombs were constructed so well that one hundred per cent of
each bomb exploded upon detonation.
The explosives used in the attacks were of the type used by
the Provisional IRA and were probably from a haul that members of the Crown
Forces had captured and that rogue elements had got their hands on to launch
these attacks.
The first of the three Dublin car bombs went off at
approximately 17:28, in a parking bay outside the Welcome Inn pub and Barry's
Supermarket and close to a petrol station, in Parnell Street near its
southwestern intersection with Marlborough Street. Ten people were killed in
this explosion, including two infant girls and their parents, and a World War I
veteran.
The second of the Dublin car bombs went off at approximately
17:30 at number 18 Talbot Street near the northwestern Lower Gardiner Street
intersection, outside O'Neill's shoe shop opposite Guineys department store. At
least four bodies were found on the pavement just outside Guineys.
The third bomb went off at approximately 17:32 in South
Leinster Street near the railings of Trinity College, Dublin. Two women were
killed instantly in that explosion; they had been very close to the epicentre
of the blast.
Ninety minutes later, at approximately 18:58, a fourth bomb
(weighing 150 pounds) exploded outside Greacen's pub in North Road, Monaghan.
This bomb killed five people initially, and another two died in the following
weeks.
On the evening of the bombings, the Taoiseach, Liam
Cosgrave, said in a TV and radio broadcast that he wanted to express 'the
revulsion and condemnation felt by every decent person in this island at these
unforgivable acts.' He said it would help 'to bring home to us here what the
people of NI have been suffering for five long years.' He added 'everyone who
has practised violence, or preached violence or condoned violence must bear a
share of responsibility for today's outrage'.
In Belfast, the UDA and the UVF denied responsibility for
the explosions and in Dublin a statement issued by the Provisional IRA called
the explosions 'vile murder'. Mr. Brian Faulkner, NI Chief Executive, sent a
message to Mr. Cosgrave expressing 'deepest regret' from himself and his
colleagues. The UDA Press Officer, Mr. Samuel Smyth, said: 'I am very happy
about the bombings in Dublin. There is a war with the Free State and now we are
laughing at them'.
But within days the official attitude had changed and the
feeling in Government ranks was to play down this huge atrocity to avoid
heightening tensions and giving credibility to the Provisional IRA. As the
weeks rolled by the Garda investigations were wound down and then effectively
stopped. It has been rumoured that names of the killers were known to the
police forces in both parts of Ireland even if it could never be proved. The
event was buried by the forces of Officialdom over the years and forgotten
about. No one has ever been charged with these crimes on that terrible day.
LOST LIVES
Dublin and Monaghan Bombings - 17th May 1974:
Patrick Askin (44) Co. Monaghan
Josie Bradley (21) Co. Offaly
Marie Butler (21) Co. Waterford
Anne Byrne (35) Dublin
Thomas Campbell (52) Co. Monaghan
Simone Chetrit (30) France
Thomas Croarkin (36) Co. Monaghan
John Dargle (80) Dublin
Concepta Dempsey (65) Co. Louth
Colette Doherty (20) Dublin
Baby Doherty (full term unborn) Dublin*
Patrick Fay (47), Dublin & Co. Louth
Elizabeth Fitzgerald (59) Dublin
Breda Bernadette Grace (34) Dublin and Co. Kerry
Archie Harper
(73) Co. Monaghan
Antonio
Magliocco, (37) Dublin & Italy
May McKenna (55) Co. Tyrone
Anne Marren (20) Co. Sligo
Anna Massey (21) Dublin
Dorothy Morris (57) Dublin
John (24), Anna (22), Jacqueline (17 months) &
Anne-Marie (5 months) O'Brien, Dublin
Christina O'Loughlin (51), Dublin
Edward John O'Neill (39), Dublin
Marie Phelan (20), Co. Waterford
Siobhán Roice (19), Wexford Town
Maureen Shields (46), Dublin
Jack Travers (28), Monaghan Town
Breda Turner (21), Co. Tipperary
John Walsh (27), Dublin
Peggy White (44), Monaghan Town
George Williamson (72), Co. Monaghan
*Baby Doherty was recognised as the 34th victim of the Bombings
by the Coroner for the City of Dublin during the course of the Inquests held in
April and May 2004
http://www.dublinmonaghanbombings.org/index2.html
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