James Flanagan (RUC)

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Sir James Bernard Flanagan, CBE (15 January 19144 April 1999) was the first and only Roman Catholic Chief Constable of the Royal Ulster Constabulary (RUC). There was a Roman Catholic Deputy Chief Constable, Michael McAtamney. Jamie Flanagan was no relation to another, better known, Chief Constable, Ronnie Flanagan.

Known as "Jamie Flanagan", he was born in Derry. His father was a sergeant in the Royal Irish Constabulary. In 1934 Jamie Flanagan joined the RUC. In 1939 he was transferred from Downpatrick to Fermanagh and was made Sergeant. In the same year he married Florence Acheson, a Protestant. In 1941 he was appointed Head Constable in Londonderry. In 1942 he became a District Inspector and was transferred to the security control unit which had sensitive wartime responsibilities.

In 1945 he was seconded for duty with the British mission to Greece and served there until 1952. He also received an MBE. He returned to the RUC, working in B Division of West Belfast in the late 1950s.

In 1961 he was promoted to County Inspector and received an OBE just before the outbreak of the Troubles in June 1968. In June 1970 he was appointed Assistant Chief Constable and in July 1973 he received a CBE, becoming Chief Constable on 1 November 1973, replacing Graham Shillington.

In June 1975 he received a knighthood and retired in April 1976. Having been targeted by Republicans while attending mass, he was forced to retire to England[1].

Flanagan's period as Chief Constable was a highly controversial one. It coincided with the Ulster Workers' Council Strike of 1974 and the Provisional Irish Republican Army's (PIRA) temporary ceasefire in 1975. There were many, including senior members of the power-sharing executive forced out of office by the strike, who felt that the RUC did not act vigorously enough against the strikers[1].

His tenure (and his own life) were marked by a failed PIRA assassination attempt via a bomb placed on an airplane on the day he was known to be travelling as per J. Bowyer Bell's The Irish Troubles: A Generation of Violence, 1967-1992 (Dublin: Gill and Macmillan Call #: DA990.U46 B296 1993/New York: St. Martin's Press, 1993).

He died on 4 April 1999, aged 85.

Police Appointments
Preceded by
Graham Shillington
Chief Constable of the Royal Ulster Constabulary
1973 — 1976
Succeeded by
Kenneth Newman

[edit] References

  1. ^ a b The Independent 20 April 1999
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