Ulster Protestant Association

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The Ulster Protestant Association (UPA) were a loyalist paramilitary group organised in Belfast in August 1920 to prevent Northern Ireland being included in an independent Irish Free State. [1] [2]

In 1921, plumber and UPA Thomas Pentland was arrested for the murder of a Catholic named Murtagh McStocker, supposedly a member of the IRA, but was acquitted. [3]

The UPA were also associated with the 1922 murders of Catholic civilians in Ballymacarrett. John William Nixon was alleged to be associated with the UPA. [4]

In 1923 a police report described the Association as dominated by "the Protestant hooligan element [whose] whole aim and object was simply the extermination of Catholics by any and every means." Bomb attacks were made against children, crowds leaving Mass and onto crowded trains. [5] Their headquarters was in an East Belfast pub, with a flogging-horse upstairs to punish members who violated UPA rules. [6]

The UPA is said to have provided many members of the murder gangs active in Belfast during 1921–22. Other Protestant gangs active at that time were: the Imperial Guards, Crawford's Tigers and the Cromwell Clubs. [7] Many UPA members were recruited into the Ulster Special Constabulary, the infamous "B Specials." [8]

Although it is sometimes said to have dissolved in 1922, a hardcore remained active, murdering several Catholics in the mid-1930s. [4]

The UPA fought side-by-side with the IRA during the 1932 Outdoor Relief riots, swapping places in order to confuse Royal Ulster Constabulary policemen. [9]

The name was also used as a cover name by the loyalist group "Spirit of Drumcree" in 1998. [10]

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The Stag Inn attack was a sectarian gun attack, on 30 July 1976, carried out by a group of Belfast IRA Volunteers using the cover name Republican Action Force. Four Protestants, all civilians, the youngest being 48 years old and the eldest 70, were all killed in the attack with several others being injured. Three Catholics were killed the previous day in a Loyalish bomb, part of a string of sectarian attacks in Northern Ireland by different paramilitary organizations.

References

  1. Norton, Christopher (6 April 1996). "Worker Response to the 1920 Belfast Shipyard Expulsions : Solidarity or Sectarianism ?". Études irlandaises. 21 (1): 153–163. doi:10.3406/irlan.1996.1297 via www.persee.fr.
  2. Norton, Christopher (6 April 2019). "An Earnest Endeavour for Peace Unionist Opinion and the Craig/Collins Peace Pact of 30 March 1922". Études irlandaises. 32 (1): 91–108. doi:10.3406/irlan.2007.1787 via www.persee.fr.
  3. "'The Mad Dance of Death': The Ulster Protestant Association in Belfast, 1921-22". 15 February 2016.
  4. 1 2 "Dictionary of Irish Biography - Cambridge University Press". dib.cambridge.org.
  5. "CAIN: Issues: Sectarianism: Brewer, John D. 'Northern Ireland: 1921-1998'". cain.ulster.ac.uk.
  6. The Irish Times (Saturday, September 6, 1980), page 11.
  7. McDermott, Jim, (2001), Northern Divisions The Old IRA and the Belfast Pogroms 1920-22, BTP Publications, Belfast, pg 15, ISBN 1-900960-11-7
  8. The Irish Times (Saturday, November 24, 1979), page 13.
  9. The Irish Times (Wednesday, November 18, 1970), page 9.
  10. "Low-level ethnic cleansing in evidence". The Irish Times.