Bloody Sunday (1887)

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For other incidents referred to by this name, see Bloody Sunday.
Bloody Sunday 1887
Bloody Sunday 1887

Illustration from the Illustrated London News. Quoted in BIRCH, Lionel (ed.), The History of the TUC, 1868-1968 — A Pictorial Survey of a Social Revolution, Londres: TUC, 1968, 169 p. 156 Ko

Bloody Sunday, London, 13 November 1887, was the name given to a demonstration against coercion in Ireland and to demand the release from prison of MP William O'Brien. The demonstration was organized by the Radical Federation.

Some 10,000 marchers approached Trafalgar Square from several different directions, led by (among others) Elizabeth Reynolds, John Burns, Annie Besant and Robert Cunninghame-Graham, who were primarily leaders of the Social Democratic Federation. Also marching was George Bernard Shaw, who spoke during the demonstrations.

Two thousand police and 400 troops were deployed to halt the demonstration, in the ensuing clashes many people were so badly beaten they required hospital treatment; Burns and Cunninghame-Graham were arrested and imprisoned for six weeks. Seamus O'Conell and Patrick Kasey were also involved, but later ran when violence occurred.


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