Monthly Archives: June 2013

STRIKE UP THE BAND

STRIKE UP THE BAND

 

In the coming weeks www.longkeshinsideout.co.uk will be presenting a new feature were we will be looking at some of the bands from around the province and indeed from further afield.  We hope to have new guest contributors to present short histories of their own chosen bands.  Marching bands—be they flute—accordion—silver or pipe form a huge part of our cultural identity and all too often are portrayed in the wrong light or given bad press for the most dubious of reasons.
The Protestant band culture go’s back a long, long way—Churchill from Londonderry can trace their origins back to the 1830’s—and there are many fascinating stories behind the formation of some.  We hope that this short series will inspire others to relate the history of “their” band.  All future entries will be welcomed.  The difficult task is to whittle a very long list down to a manageable short one…but we have to start somewhere!!  The series will contain historical précis’ of twelve bands—most of them household names.  Don’t be offended if your own particular favourite doesn’t appear—it may well do in the future.

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Loyalists In Last Chance Saloon: Dr. John Coulter

Loyalists in Last Chance Saloon

 

                                        (John Coulter, Irish Daily Star)

Loyalists have entered the Last Chance Saloon with the unveiling of the new liberal McUnionist Party fronted by Basil and wee Johnny.

Ex-UUP members McCrea and McCallister can put whatever spin they like on their new media-cuddly party, but unless they push their bucket-load of new exciting policies into the loyalist working class, their party will crash and burn in the next Stormont poll in 2016.

The secret of who speaks for Unionism will be decided by the Protestant working class as former MLA Billy Hutchinson’s Progressive Unionists seem to be enjoying a loyalist revival.

But the PUP cannot become a leading voice in Unionism without a strong Protestant middle class showing.

Look at how the Shinners politically gobbled up the Stoops’ traditional middle class Catholic support to become the North’s number one nationalist party.

Hutchinson has what the McUnionists need – a solid loyalist working class voice.

And McCrea and McCallister have what Hutchinson needs to become a major Stormont voice of opposition to the Robbo/McGuinness Executive partnership – clear middle class and media backing.

Provided the McUnionists can control their toffee-nosed Fur Coat Brigade, a sensible, realistic coalition would involve a new Gang of Three – Hutchinson, McCrea and McCallister.

The sceptics will say – such a merger will never work as earlier plans to form a partnership between the PUP and UUP floundered because of the former’s links with the loyalist death squads, the UVF and Red Hand Commando.

But look at what the PUP/McUnionists have to contend with; hardly a major mountain to climb.

The DUP is locked in a tight coalition with Sinn Féin.

The UUP is in meltdown and will probably only exist as a fringe movement by 2016 with no more than half a dozen MLAs.

Jim Allister’s TUV, in spite of winning the vote on Ann’s Law, is still a one-man band.

The Northern Tories have shot themselves in both feet by supporting gay marriage in a country where the Christian Church vote holds major influence.

The anti-European Union UKIP is a one-trick pony, simply wanting to take the North out of the EU.

Independent Unionism is a lone voice with East Derry MLA David McClarty.

The hardline Protestant Coalition party formed by the flag protestors lacks sensible policies.

Alliance, often viewed as a ‘soft u’ Unionist Party has committed political suicide with its disastrous Belfast City Council Union flag vote.

Basically, Unionism is in a real mess, so the PUP and McUnionists must strike while the iron is hot and get as many potential voters registered.

Expect mainstream Unionists to step up a very negative propaganda campaign that the McUnionists are going nowhere.

But establishment Unionists need to remember the old proverb, a new broom sweeps clean. Maybe what the Unionist voters want is a new start – and Hutchinson, McCrea and McCallister?

As for republicans, they must be banging the bin lids with joy at yet another split in the Unionist family.

Nationalist tactics will be simple – transfer to the McUnionists to keep Robbo’s DUP out.

But the key question is – do McCrea and McCallister have the political courage to invite Hutchinson’s working class loyalists into their overtly middle class fold?

June 11, 2013________________

 

This article appeared in the June 10, 2013 edition of the Irish Daily Star.

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The Books Have It-3 —by William

Your book articles have certainly brought back old memories Billy Joe and it would be great to hear of a few others commenting such as Charlie did given that there was an abundance of books passed through the jail and compounds about ‘everything under the sun’.  I have to say, I can’t argue with your recollections of you having lent many a book and never had them returned but I hope you are not including me in that category!  Just think, had you have operated a more organised lending service you could have made a fortune in people owing fines for late returns. Well I finally got round to writing this last week and have to start (reluctantly) by agreeing with you about Tarantula.  However, I should add that since it was written in the mid- sixties when the music drug scene was at its height I can forgive Dylan with writing only what can be described as a book about chaos.  That said, I have read it six times and currently have two different copies. As a genre, the book is hard to define but is filled with literary references to fictional and factual characters, such as Rain Man and President Plump or Ezra Pound and T. S. Eliot which always intrigued me and sent me on searches to find out more about what I’d read.  In an era before the internet, books (and for me the music of Dylan) was our font of learning which opened a new world inhabited by the likes of Wood Gutherie’s ‘Bound for Glory’ and Kerouac’s ‘On the Road’.  Likewise, it was music that directed me to a lot of books I would otherwise probably not have heard of or never have read, such as, William Blake’s ‘Songs of Innocence and Songs of Experience’ very influential in the music of Van Morrison and Arthur Rimbaud’s ‘Je est une autre’. A lot of the books you mentioned I now recall reading particularly those whose topics were of common interest to us all.  I’m thinking about the many Vietnam books (I bought Herr’s Dispatches last year), the prison ones of Jimmy Boyle (I still have both of those) and the boxing biographies with ‘The Sixteenth Round’ having a special interest for me for the connection between Dylan and Carter.  From the vast range of books you recall Billy Joe we could never be accused of limiting our reading, (even though yours was an acquired taste), but it’s hard to ignore the common interest we all had in certain topics such as you have mentioned about the Mossad as Charlie did about the general history of Israel.  In fact, the fascination we all seemed to have with The Six Day War meant many a book on the topic was well circulated and I recall reading Moshe Dayan’s ‘Story of my life’ in which it was well documented if memory serves me well. My dad was an avid reader and used to pass them in to me when he was finished.  In the ‘First Blood’ style, you may recall one he sent me called ‘Open Season’ by David Osborn which was adapted also into a film with William Holden and Peter Fonda.  A fascinating book he also got me was by Daniel P. Mannix called ‘Those about to die’.  It was a factual account of the Roman arena and the gladiators which gave a chilling description of the Roman’s thirst for blood sports.  In fact, it’s a collector’s item now and he paid seventy quid a few years back for a first copy.  It inspired me to learn more about ancient history and I sat an ‘O’ Level in the compounds on the subject. A number of books with a connection to incarceration I found interesting and memorable.  A novel by Jack London springs to mind – ‘The star rover’ was a work of fiction about a guy on death row but it still intrigues me how I’m able to recall the opening lines when the author writes, “All my life I had an awareness of other times and places.  I have been aware of other persons in me”.  I think this particularly resonated with my own experiences which ultimately led me to incarceration and was in fact a significant feature in me wanting to record the narratives of other prisoners, which you know I did at length.  In fact, this is also true of the previous work of Rimbaud which I mentioned as the French title means ‘When I is another’.  This fixation on prison is also found from a different point of view in the Albert Pierrepoint biography.  Britain’s infamous hangman, I have since learned, ironically was opposed to capital punishment.  More fascination with death and murder nudges me to Bugliosi’s ‘Helter Skelter’ or ‘In Cold Blood’ by Truman Capote.  Again, this is an example of literature which has ‘stuck’ with me as I can also recall in the inscription in Capote’s inside cover, two lines of  which reads “Freres humains qui apres nous vivez, N’ayez les cuers centre nous endurcis”.  Now I’m not well versed in French but again I have been directed through books to want to know more and this was from Francois Villon, the 16th Century poet who wrote this in prison before being executed, and translates into “Human brothers who live after us, Do not have your hearts hardened against us”.  How relevant is that today?

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People of the Arches by Bobby Cosgrove

Continuing the fascinating insight into the years gone by in East Belfast through the eyes of local historian Bobby Cosgrove.

PEOPLE OF THE ARCHES

 

Having written about the early days of Newbridge Village & The Holywood Arches and how the area was developed from a few cottages into one of the major industrial areas in Ireland. No story of districts like the Arches would not complete with out talking about the people and what life was like for them living in an industrial area like Connswater.

Most of what you will read is from my personal memories as a boy growing up at the Arches, and also those of others from the area as one told me we were not just neighbours but a large family “That tells all”

 

Early Memories.

 

One of the first and lasting memory is that of noise, and people on the move all the time, noises like the banging of the riveters hammers while they were building the great ships in the yards of H.W, or the wee shipyards of Workman Clarke. Then of course there was the wonderful sound, and sight, of steam engine trains travelling along the high embankments, on their way over the Hollywood Arches and on to places like Comber, Newtownards, & Donagadee, not forgetting the line to Ballygowan and on to Newcastle. Another series of noises that would bring back memories is the factory horns, each company had a different sounding horn, and some like the Rope works give two blasts, the first was called the minute’s horn giving their workers a two-minute warning to report for work. The second blast was the starting horn, and if you were not in through the gate when this horn sounded you were locked out and a days pay was lost.  These sounds along with the noise of the trams going along the Newtownards Road, and also the clatter of horses hoofs going over the square sets on the streets, meant that everyone looked forward to Sunday a day of not only rest but peace and quiet.

 

Hard Life / Wonderful People

 

Life even at this time was still very harsh, as wages were still very low, and the housing was no better than slums, but the people were wonderful and the comradeship and community spirit, that was shown at times of need were unbelievable, with the motto being “we have nothing but will share it with you”. One story often told was of two men who broke into a house in Oakdale St, but instead of stealing anything they left a 10 bob note on the mantle piece, with a message that stated, your are worst off than us this will help you put food on the table. My Great Grandmother Rowley lived at number 10 Manderson Street, which is off Townsley St, the last Street on the left hand side of the Newtownards Rd just before the Hollywood Arches, and I myself along with my parents also lived in this Street at no 16, these two streets even by Belfast standards was unique as they consisted of 19 houses, 3 stable yards, 1 boat yard, 1 bookies, and the rear entrance to 2 pubs, it also had a blacksmiths shop, with the N.I labour party rooms above it. This was what in Belfast terms was called a dead end Street, as there was only one way in and the same way out, today they would be called “cul- de-sacs” to-day.  The boat yard is still producing boats after 75yrs, and although Harland & Wolff and the Workman Clarke yards have now all but gone the art of boat building for so long the life blood of East Belfast workers and their families, is still carried on by the Duffin family in Manderson Street

The Toss, the Peelers, and the Lookouts.

 

The bookies which was owned by Clarke Groves, was a house to the front but inside it was large as an extension was build out the back of the house into Holland’s yard.   On a wet Sunday this became our indoor soccer pitch, as we would have helped Sammy Allen to clean the place and as a reward he would let us play football with a tennis ball in the bookies shop. Almost every Saturday afternoon there would be a “pitch & toss”, this was held on the embankment of the now defunct railway track and embankment at the rear of the houses, at times you would also have had the Crown & Anchor board man.  Both these forms of gambling were illegal, and the people that ran them paid the young lads from the street to keep a lookout for the peelers coming, if the Police came to make a raid it was usually along the railway line, the lookout job was to shout out a warning. When this happened they would lift the linen sheet, or newspapers with the money on them, and take off over the nearest yard wall, and through someone’s house into the street, sometimes there would be police in the street to catch them, but most times they would have got away, and the lookouts would then lift up the odds that were left lying, as they made their escape from the police. Many a fish supper or and ice cream was bought on a Saturday night when this happened, of course when people like Hughie Bowers did lookout, the shout of here comes the peelers was called every time, Hughie had it sussed out how to get extra money from the toss.

Drinking & Bare Knuckle Fist Fights.

 

Manderson Street was notorious on a Friday & Saturday night for its bare knuckle fist fights at the rear of the Bloomfield Bar, and quite a sight it was to see two hard men striped to the waist fighting with bare fists only, as the use of anything else, i.e. feet, head, or weapons were not excepted. When it was over they shook hands and went back into the bar were the loser bought the drink. There was many a bet placed on these fights and some of the fighters made a name for themselves as a hard men. One of the hardest men associated with the fighting was Walter Cunningham a brother of Hard Screw Cunningham one of the most famous characters in the Area.

Well Known Characters

 

Pastor Joe Glover was a well known character in the east end of the city, he worked as a bag filler in the coal quays and enjoyed his drink at the weekends he had a family of 5 and his wife Martha was born in the street he also had a small stable and kept a donkey and trap. There are two different stories as to how he got the name Pastor, the first is that it was because of the wide brimmed hat he wore when he got dressed up in his Sunday best clothes this was the same as that worn by Pastors. The other story is that every now and again Joe would get religious, he had joined the Coalman’s Mission and would along with Martha be seen standing outside the Clock & Bloomfield bars handing out tracks and was giving the nickname Pastor by the locals. But the truth is that Joe was the son of a Pastor.

 

Others that were well known in the area would have been Winkie Bowers, Rocky Burton, Freddie (Blowie up) Robinson—he was a big man who cried at the simplest thing, one day he called at our house to see my budgie and on hearing that the cat had killed it he cried like a baby, and every time he passed my house on his way to his brothers house, down the street he cried for Joey the budgie. The reason he was nicked named blowie up was because he drank cheap wine called blowie up wine.

From Ashdale Street there was a man called Hardscrew Cunningham you could fill a book with what this man did but one story is about a wake for an uncle of mine called Co Magill of Oakdale St, it seems that Hardscrew visited the house to wake the deceased with a few drinks in him and brought in fish & chips he sat on the stairs beside the coffin he asked for salt & vinegar but was only given the vinegar and on being told there was no salt he said that’s alright. He then reached over and took some salt out of the bowl of salt that had been placed in the coffin to ward of evil spirits; he then sprinkled the salt on his chips and eats away at them.

Another great story is that while attending a funeral of a relative of Winkie Bowers and as the procession moved through Ballyhackmore, and on towards the green fields of Knock, on its way to Dundonald Cemetary, Hard screw suggested to Winkie that they should have a farewell drink with the deceased, as he would not be coming back with them, so they all retired to Paddy Lambs Pub with the coffin and had a farewell drink

The last story about Winkie again relates to a friend of his that died, and when he went round to the house of the deceased there was only the brother of the deceased in. Winkie then decided to play a trick on the mourners. Once again the coffin was placed beside the stairs and he placed a piece of thread around the little finger of the corpse, he then worked it up into the front bedroom where he lay in wait as the house filled up with family and an friends. When someone said he looks so peaceful and happy hardscrew pulled the thread and as the arm of the deceased was raised the room emptied in two seconds flat, these are just a few of the many stories that can be told about him.

We cannot leave this part without mentioning the hobby horse man, William “Bull” Ellison, this man was running hobby horses for years before the late Mickey Marley got on the road. The bull was a veteran of the bore war, and kept stables in the street that housed many horses, and a number of carts, traps, and of course the famous Hobby Horses.

Ghosts, Food, & Entertainment.

 

Millen’s supper saloon at the bridge was our fast food outlet, and a penny worth of broken biscuits from the Inglis biscuit factory shop, or the Home & Colonial Stores was our treat, ice cream or hot peas from Fuscos, “boy how the Italians could make ice cream” this was our heaven. Sweets from Maureen’s newsagents, and toys from Barlow’s fancy goods & toys shop. Our meat was from Thompson’s, the largest butchers shop in Belfast. Carryouts of the cheap wine came from Courtney’s off license at Westminster Ave at the bottom of which was a number of aluminium bungalows. As I was saying earlier about noise the same can be said about smells, and if anyone ever smelt the connswater on a summer day at low tide the stink was revolting, but the sweet smells from the biscuit factory made up for it we, also had a resident ghost in the building that housed Irvines Shoe shop at the bottom of Bloomfield Avenue this lady was seen on a number of occasions walking round the upper rooms of the building.

Pigs feet and bacon ribs were another Friday & Saturday night favourite and a man used to go round the bars on a bike with a basket on the front selling them to the patrons, Our escape was the Saturday morning minors club with Uncle Mac in the A.B.C. Strand or the New Princess with its wooden seats and of course Costa Victoria with its outdoor swimming pool and boating lake once you had a swim in the pool at Victoria you could have swam in the Artic in the Autumn was up to the big houses in Strand town to collect the windfall apples falling in the orchards (sounds better than raiding the orcies) and of course in July collecting for the bonfire took up a lot of our time. The 1st of July was always a great night with the Orange Parade coming down through the Arches on its way back to Templemore Ave the music from the bands the wonderful colours on the banners, families out together in a carnival mood sucking on ice creams from Fuscos and eating Fish & Chips from Millen’s this was utopia.

We also had our own all year round toboggan run as we would sit on tin sheets, and go sliding down the railway embankment, of course on going home we would get told off for having ripped the arse out of our pants. Their was no ice cream that night, other lasting memories were the site of thousands of bicycles on the Roads and Streets, as men made their way to work in the shipyards, Shorts men went by bus or car.  The Rope works produced many characters and one of the most famous was a man known to one and all as Daft Eddie, famed for wearing safety pins all over clothes— it was claimed he would do anything for a pin. The Ropeworks employed most of the women from the area and without there income many people would have even in the 50s starved.

I hope you have enjoyed this trip around the Arches of yesteryear to those who lived around the Arches it is a living memory and to those others who did not, I hope it has given an insight into life in Belfast Streets in the 50s & 60s and I also hope that any names given will not cause offence to any living relatives.

Bobby Cosgrove

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SOUTH BELFAST ACT INITIATIIVE

South Belfast Action for Community Transformation

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I want to inform readers that SBACT are currently engaged in active work throughout South Belfast. This work includes the positive re-imaging of communities assisting local artists to display culturally acceptable murals and paintings. Other work includes engaging with ther communities on interface areas to reduce the tension and explore community problems and issues. This work is ignored by our friends in the media who unfortunately want to highlight brazen lies in an attempt to damage lifelong relationships. Its not working.

This week South Belfast ACT (a fully constituted part the the ACT Initiative) will invite residents of Donegall Pass to share their concerns about housing issues and to inform each other of those persons not able to get a tenancy. Other local housing issues will be heard and a plan developed of how this disadvantaged community can address te housing issues that impact upon them. Volunteers from ACT delivered 500 leaflets on a door to door basis to inform residents. The meeting will take place in Donegall Pass Community Centre on Wed 05 June at 7pm. Its important we encourage residents to come along and air their views. Well done to the organisers of this meeting. A report will follow the meeting so watch this space.

South Belfast ACT

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Where Is The Loyalist Rebellion Going?–Dr. John Coulter

WHERE IS THE LOYALIST REBELLION GOING?

The Union flag dispute has sparked a Loyalist Rebellion. Former Blanket columnist and Radical Unionist commentator, DR JOHN COULTER, maintains that this Loyalist Rebellion must follow a democratic path to avoid the creation and eruption of a violent dissident loyalist movement. In this exclusive article for Long Kesh Inside Out, Dr Coulter outlines the political routes for the Loyalist Rebellion.

This year will be crucial in the direction which the Loyalist Rebellion takes, and the burden of responsibility could fall on the shoulders of three Unionists – Billy Hutchinson, leader of the Progressive Unionists; Lagan Valley MLA Basil McCrea, and South Down MLA, both leaders of the so-called McUnionist Party.

This unlikely Gang of Three will have a key role in persuading those involved in the Loyalist Rebellion to pursue an entirely democratic route. The Loyalist Rebellion erupted last December with the totally crazy vote of Belfast City Council to remove the Union flag over City Hall from all-year round to designated days.

Since the signing of the Good Friday Agreement in 1998 and the subsequent St Andrews Agreement in 2006, the loyalist community has watched as year after year, the republican movement has scored concession after concession for the Catholic community.

While mainstream Unionism argues over which party represents the natural successor to Edward Carson and James Craig, Provisional Sinn Fein worked tirelessly to secure considerable financial benefits for its people.

In the late 1960s, the Catholic community took to the streets using the ethos ‘enough is enough’, taking part in the so-called Caledon Squat, then forming the Civil Rights Movement, which was later hijacked by the Official and fledgling Provisional republican movements.

A generation later in 2012, the loyalist community uttered the same sentiments of ‘enough is enough’ when the Union flag was removed from City Hall. Perhaps the analogy facing the loyalist community could be best summed up from the classic war film about the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbour in 1941, entitled ‘Tora, Tora, Tora’.

At the end of the film, rather than being jubilant about the success of the Japanese air attack on the American fleet, one of the Japanese commanders laments that all the raid accomplished was to awaken a sleeping giant. How right he was following the total defeat of Japan four years later after the atomic attacks on two Japanese cities.

 

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