seamus dubhghaill

Promoting Irish Culture and History from Little Rock, Arkansas, USA


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The Woolwich Pub Bombing

The Woolwich pub bombing is an attack by the Provisional Irish Republican Army (IRA) on the Kings Arms, a public house in Woolwich in southeast London, on November 7, 1974. Two people are killed in the explosion.

Standing at 1 Frances Street to the south of Woolwich Dockyard and the Royal Marine Barracks, and northwest of the Royal Artillery Barracks, the Kings Arms was built in the 19th century. In the 1881 census it is listed as the Kings Arms Hotel.

The pub is attacked by the Provisional Irish Republican Army on November 7, 1974, and two people are killed: Gunner Richard Dunne (aged 42), of the Royal Artillery (whose barracks are just 100 yards away), and Alan Horsley (aged 20), a sales clerk. A further 35 people, including the landlady, Margaret Nash, are injured. Echoing similar attacks in Guildford the previous month, a bomb, made of 6 lbs. of gelignite plus shrapnel, is thrown through a window into the pub.

Initially a left-wing extremist group called Red Flag 74 says it had placed the bomb, but responsibility is subsequently claimed by the Provisional Irish Republican Army and specifically by part of the Active Service Unit apprehended in December 1975 at the Balcombe Street siege. Two of the Guildford Four are wrongfully charged in December 1974 with involvement in the Woolwich pub bombing, and their convictions in October 1975 are eventually quashed in 1989 after a long campaign for justice.

The bombing is most likely the work of the Balcombe Street ASU, which claims sole responsibility during the 1977 trial of four members apprehended at the siege and include Joe O’Connell, who states from the dock: 

“We have instructed our lawyers to draw the attention of the court to the fact that four totally innocent people – Carole Richardson, Gerry Conlon, Paul Hill and Paddy Armstrong – are serving massive sentences for three bombings, two in Guildford and one in Woolwich, which three of us and another man now imprisoned, have admitted that we did.”

The other three members apprehended at the siege are Hugh DohertyEddie Butler and Harry DugganLiam Quinn (a US-born member) and Brendan Dowd are also active within the unit. Sentenced to life imprisonment, the “Balcombe Street four” serve 23 years in English prisons until transferred to Portlaoise PrisonCounty Laois, in early 1998. They are then released in 1999 under the terms of the Good Friday Agreement.

Neither the Woolwich bombing nor the wrongful imprisonments result in further charges or convictions. Three British police officers—Thomas Style, John Donaldson and Vernon Attwell—are charged in 1993 with conspiracy to pervert the course of justice, but each is found not guilty.

In continuation of a “troubles” overseas offensive, the Royal Artillery Barracks in Woolwich are bombed by the IRA in December 1983.

On April 17, 2018, P2P Residential Limited obtains full planning permission to demolish the pub and redevelop it as 19 residential units, nine parking spaces and a replacement pub across the ground floor and basement.

Similar plans had been proposed in 2013. Permission was granted in 2015 for 12 residential units and a pub, but the then owner did not implement the consent. The pub is demolished for redevelopment in 2020. Following a 2022 planning application, a Tesco Express supermarket is opened on the ground floor of the building.


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The 1974 Houses of Parliament Bombing

The Provisional Irish Republican Army bomb the British Houses of Parliament on June 17, 1974, causing extensive damage and injuring eleven people.

The Provisional IRA begins a bombing campaign in England in March 1973 when they bomb the Old Bailey courthouse, injuring over two hundred people. The following year is the worst year of the Troubles outside of Northern Ireland. At the beginning of 1974, the IRA explodes a bomb on a coach carrying soldiers and some family members on the M62, killing twelve people, including four civilians. A month before the Houses of Parliament bombing, thirty-four people are killed in the Republic of Ireland in the Dublin and Monaghan bombings of May 1974 carried out by the Ulster Volunteer Force, an Ulster loyalist paramilitary group based in Northern Ireland, the worst single incident of the conflict.

A man with an Irish accent telephones the Press Association with a warning given just six minutes before the device explodes. London police say a recognised IRA codeword is given. The bomb explodes in a corner of Westminster Hall at about 8:30 a.m. on June 17, 1974. The IRA in a telephoned warning says it planted the bomb that weighed approximately 20 lbs. (9.1 kg). The explosion is suspected to have damaged a gas main and a fire spreads quickly through the centuries-old hall in one of Britain’s most security-tight buildings. An annex housing a canteen and a number of offices is destroyed, but the great hall itself receives only light damage. The attack signals the start of a renewed IRA bombing campaign in England that is to last until late 1975 and is to claim the lives of dozens of people. The most notorious attacks of the bombing campaign are the Guildford pub bombings on October 5, 1974, that kill five and injure sixty, and the Birmingham pub bombings on November 21, 1974, which kill twenty-one people and injured one hundred eighty.

The year 1974 ends with the IRA killing twenty-eight people (twenty-three civilians and five British soldiers) in bombing operations in England. Twenty-one people are killed in the Birmingham pub bombings and a further seven are killed in the Guildford and Woolwich Pub bombings. Nearly three hundred people are injured from these bombings alone. The IRA calls off their bombing campaign in February 1975 but restarts it on August 27, 1975, with the Caterham Arms pub bombing which injures over thirty people. A week later, the IRA carries out the London Hilton bombing which kills two and injures over sixty.