Belfast calls them “black cab tours” and they’re one of the most sought-after tourist attractions in town, equal to the museum dedicated to Belfast’s shipping industry and construction of the Titanic.
Born Patrick Joseph O'Connor near the Falls Road in west Belfast, he moved to New York in 1929 when he was five. They settled in Hell's Kitchen, a neighbourhood troubled by social problems and gang ...
STAIR faoin spéir literally translates as history under the sky. Stair Faoin Spéir is a relatively new initiative involving ...
Images taken by Sean Allen show the street photography, political moments and glimpses of ‘everyday resilience’ during the pre-Good Friday Agreement years ...
A NEW digital archive of prison journals created in Long Kesh internment camp during the 1970s has been made available by ...
From 1968, the Troubles engulfed Belfast and fundamentally transformed the lives of residents of the city and beyond. In the 1970s the pervasive British military presence on the streets, army ...
The shooting of unarmed civilians in the 1972 Bloody Sunday massacre was "unjustified,"a prosecutor told a Belfast court on ...
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