Published online by Cambridge University Press: 04 February 2015
Between 13 and 15 August 1969 communal violence in Belfast saw seven people killed and over 400 treated for injuries. Nearly 2,000 families were forced from their homes. British troops were deployed on the streets to prevent further violence, events usually seen as the starting point of the modern Irish Troubles. In 1972 the Sunday Times Insight Team's Ulster set the tone for commentary on the role of the I.R.A. during this period. It claimed that the organisation had been ‘largely an irrelevance’ in Belfast during August 1969 and as a result ‘I.R.A. – I Ran Away was scrawled derisively over the walls of the Catholic Ghettos’. Conor Cruise O'Brien soon asserted in States of Ireland that when violence erupted ‘the I.R.A. had very few weapons and very few people trained and ready to use them. Their prestige in the Ghettos went sharply down. People wrote on walls I.R.A. I Ran Away.’ Echoing these statements twentythree years later Tim Pat Coogan in his book The Troubles stated that ‘the I.R.A. posed very little threat to anyone during those days. So little that the disgusted inhabitants of the area, used to regarding the I.R.A. in the traditional role of “the defenders” wrote up the letters I.R.A. on gable walls as Irish Ran Away.' Similar assertions are found in a wide variety of the literature, both popular and academic, dealing with the outbreak of the Troubles.
1 Irish Times, 16 Aug. 1969.
2 Government of Northern Ireland, Violence and civil disturbances in Northern Ireland in 1969: report of tribunal of inquiry [hereafter ‘Scarman report’] (Belfast, 1972), part XII, ‘Social cost’.Google Scholar
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17 United Irishman, June 1967; Irish News, 15 Jan. 1968.
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25 Irish News, 5 Aug. 1968.
26 R.U.C. report, 29 Aug. 1968, (P.R.O.N.I., CAB/9B/1205/7).
27 McMillen, , ‘The role of the I.R.A.’, p. 9; Gerry Adams, ‘A republican in the civil rights campaign’ in Farrell, Michael (ed.), Twenty years on (Dingle, 1988), pp 39–53; interview, Bobby McKnight, Belfast, 1 Sept. 2004.Google Scholar
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36 A play on the title of a republican song and the name of the supposed Marxist theorist within the I.R.A., Roy Johnston.
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43 Irish News, 21 Apr. 1969.
44 R.U.C., report, 10 Aug. 1969 (P.R.O.N.I, HA/32/2/28).
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53 Memorandum for government in relation to I.R.A., 14 July 1969 (N.A.I., DJ 2000/36/3).
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69 Curry interview.
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75 Irish News, 3 Nov. 1970.
76 Irish News, 14–16 Aug. 1969; Belfast Telegraph, 14–16 Aug. 1969.
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89 Irish Times, 18 Aug. 1969.
90 Irish Times, 19 Aug. 1969; United Irishman, Sept. 1969.
91 Belfast Newsletter, 18 Aug. 1969; Irish Times, 19 Aug. 1969.
92 Irish Press, 19 Aug. 1969.
93 Irish Press, 23 Aug. 1969.
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102 The monthly republican newspaper, published in Dublin.
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105 War Office and Ministry of Defence: Army Unit Historical Records and Reports, Headquarters, Northern Ireland Command, 2 and 12 Sept. 1969, (T.N.A., WO 305/3758).
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107 Belfast Newsletter, 8 Sept. 1969.
108 Belfast Telegraph, 21, 23 Aug. 1969; Irish News, 11 Sept. 1969; Irish Independent, 10 Sept. 1969; Belfast Newsletter, 17 Sept. 1969.
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123 Meaning the pre-split I.R.A. The term ‘Official’ did not come into use until after January 1970.
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131 Irish Times, 14 Aug. 1969.
132 Irish Press, 10 Aug. 1971.
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134 There is little evidence of any effort to interview veterans of the pre-1969 Belfast I.R.A.
135 Irish News, 30 Mar. 1970.
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143 This Week, 7 Aug. 1970.
144 Sunday Tribune, 2 Sept. 1984.
145 Goulding in ‘The sparks that lit the bonfire’, Timewatch, B.B.C.2, 27 Jan. 1992.