The Troubles in Aghagallon
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The Troubles in Aghagallon recounts incidents during, and the effects of, The Troubles in Aghagallon, County Antrim, Northern Ireland.
Incidents in Aghagallon during the Troubles resulting in two or more fatalities:
1973
- 27 February 1973 - Constable Raymond Wylie (25) and Reserve Constable Ronald Macauley (42), both Protestant members of the Royal Ulster Constabulary, were shot dead during a Provisional Irish Republican Army gun attack on their mobile patrol, Aghagallon.[1] The policemen had stopped their vehicle at Cranagh Bridge to examine a suspicious car when gunmen inside it opened fire. Constable Wylie was shot in the thigh, returned fire, but was hit again and died. Although shot in the chest Constable Macauley engaged the gunmen for 15 minutes until they withdrew. He died a month later in hospital. In December 1973, two men from Lurgan and one from County Tipperary were convicted of the murders and given life sentences, another was given seven years for arms offences. In May 1975 both policemen were posthumously awarded the Queen's Police Medal for Gallantry.[2]
[edit] References
- ^ NI Conflict Archive on the Internet
- ^ McKittrick, D, Kelters, S, Feeney, B and Thornton, C. Lost Lives. Mainstream Publishing, Edinburgh, 1999, p334 and 345