Wesley Somerville

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Wesley Somerville
Birth name William Wesley Somerville
Born c. 1941
Moygashel, County Tyrone, Northern Ireland
Died 31 July 1975 (aged 3334)
Buskhill, County Down
Allegiance Ulster Volunteer Force
Ulster Defence Regiment
Rank Lieutenant
Unit Mid-Ulster Brigade
Conflict The Troubles

William Wesley Somerville (c. 1941 – 31 July 1975) was a Northern Irish loyalist, who held the rank of lieutenant in the illegal Ulster Volunteer Force's (UVF) Mid-Ulster Brigade during the period of conflict known as "the Troubles". He also served as a member of the British state's legal Ulster Defence Regiment (UDR). Somerville was part of the UVF unit that ambushed the Irish cabaret band The Miami Showband at Buskhill, County Down, which resulted in the deaths of three of the bandmembers. Somerville was killed, along with Harris Boyle, when the bomb they had loaded onto the band's minibus exploded prematurely. His brother, John James Somerville (a former UDR soldier) was one of the three men convicted of the murders of bandmembers Brian McCoy, Fran O'Toole and Tony Geraghty.

He was allegedly a part of the UVF team that exploded a car bomb in Monaghan on 17 May 1974 which killed seven people.

Ulster Volunteer Force

William Wesley Somerville was born in about 1941 in Moygashel, County Tyrone to a Protestant family. At some stage he moved to Dungannon where he henceforth made his home. He was a textile worker by trade but also a member of the Ulster Defence Regiment (UDR), which was a locally-recruited infantry regiment of the British Army in Northern Ireland.[1] On an unrecorded date he joined the illegal loyalist paramilitary organisation, the Ulster Volunteer Force (UVF); he was a member of the Portadown unit of the UVF Mid-Ulster Brigade. This brigade had been founded in 1972 by Billy Hanna, who appointed himself its first commander. Somerville was a close friend of senior UVF volunteer Robin Jackson,[2] who assumed command of the Mid-Ulster Brigade upon the shooting death of Hanna. Jackson was alleged by investigative journalists Joe Tiernan and Paul Larkin of having been the man who had shot Hanna outside his home in Lurgan on 27 July 1975.[3][4] Somerville was photographed alongside Jackson at Hanna's funeral.[5]

Somerville was a key player in the "Glenanne gang" a loose alliance of loyalist extremists comprising the Mid-Ulster UVF and allegedly rogue members of the security forces. This group mainly operated in the County Armagh and mid-Ulster areas. The Pat Finucane Centre in collaboration with an international panel of inquiry headed by Professor Douglass Cassel (formerly of the Northwestern University School of Law) has linked the "Glenanne gang" to 87 sectarian killings directed against the Catholic nationalist and republican community.[6][7] According to Martin Dillon Somerville's name was included on a Special Branch list of terrorism suspects but despite this no effort was made to remove him from the UDR.[8]

Alleged attacks

Together with his brother John James and another man, Somerville was charged with the kidnapping of two bread men. The kidnapping charge was connected with a bomb attack at Mourne Crescent in Dungannon.[9] Raymond Murray alleged that he had accompanied Robin Jackson when the latter shot Catholic trade unionist Patrick Campbell to death on his doorstep in Banbridge on 28 October 1973.[10] Although Campbell's widow picked Jackson out as the killer at an identity parade, murder charges were dropped against him at the Belfast Magistrates' Court on 4 January 1974.[11]

Former Royal Ulster Constabulary (RUC) Special Patrol Group officer John Weir stated in his affidavit that Somerville was part of the UVF team that exploded a no-warning car bomb in Monaghan on 17 May 1974. The blast killed a total of seven people. Ninety minutes before, units from the UVF's Belfast and Mid-Ulster brigades had detonated three car bombs in Dublin's crowded city centre during rush hour; Billy Hanna and Robin Jackson had allegedly led one of the bomb teams. A total of 26 people died in the three attacks. Weir's sworn affidavit was published in the 2003 Barron Report which was the findings of an official investigation commissioned by Irish Supreme Court Justice Henry Barron into the 1974 Dublin and Monaghan bombings. Weir claimed that Stewart Young, allegedly the leader of the Monaghan bombing team, had told him that Somerville and his brother John James had assisted in the attack.[12] Somerville's Special Branch file also included the claim that he had been involved in another bombing, a largely failed attack on a Catholic housing estate in Coalisland in 1974.[8]

Miami Showband attack

Site of the Miami Showband massacre at Buskhill, County Down, where Somerville was killed in a premature bomb explosion

Somerville was a member of the Mid-Ulster UVF unit which carried out the ambush of the popular Dublin-based cabaret band, The Miami Showband. In the early hours of 31 July 1975, UVF gunmen wearing British Army uniforms had set up a bogus military vehicle checkpoint on the main A1 road at the townland of Buskhill, seven miles north of Newry, County Down. According to journalist Martin Dillon, at least five of the gunmen were serving members of the UDR.[13] The band was driving back to Dublin after a performance at the Castle Ballroom in Banbridge when its minibus (driven by trumpeter Brian McCoy) was flagged-down by the armed men, who ordered the bandmembers to get out and line up beside a ditch facing a field. While a gunman took down their names and addresses, Somerville and Harris Boyle placed a ten pound time bomb in the rear of the minibus.[14] Martin Dillon suggested in his book, The Dirty War, that this was meant to explode across the border in the Republic of Ireland with the aim of portraying the band as Republican sympathisers smuggling bombs for the Provisional IRA.[15] As the rear door was closed, clumsy soldering on the clock used as timer caused the device to detonate prematurely, blowing the minibus apart and instantly killing Somerville and Boyle, who were hurled in opposite directions. Having taken the full force of the blast, both men's heads were blown to pieces and their limbs torn off. Burnt beyond recognition, one torso was completely charred. Bassist Stephen Travers was later shown a photograph of the body of one of the dead bombers and he described it: "It didn't have any head, just a black torso, no head, legs or arms".[14] What little that remained of Somerville was later found in a field one hundred yards away from the scene; the only identifiable body part was his severed arm bearing the tattoo "Portadown UVF".[16][17]

Following the explosion, the remaining UVF gunmen opened fire on the five bandmembers, who had been blown down into the field below the road's level. Three were shot dead: trumpeter Brian McCoy, lead singer Fran O'Toole and guitarist Tony Geraghty.[14] Bassist Stephen Travers survived, but was gravely wounded by a dum dum bullet,[14] and saxophone player Des McAlea had received only slight injuries therefore he was able to alert the RUC in Newry about the attack.

Aftermath

A banner commemorating Somerville on Moygashel's Main Street in 2013

Twelve hours after the attack UVF leadership issued a statement identifying the dead men and justifying the killings. Both Somerville and Boyle were given UVF paramilitary funerals with gun volleys; eight women dressed in black preceded the cortége.[18] Free Presbyterian minister William McCrea, a Democratic Unionist Party (DUP) politician, officiated at the services. The popularity of the Miami Showband across the religious divide and the revulsion at the nature of their murders had initially raised questions about whether Somerville and Boyle should receive the full paramilitary treatment but ultimately they did and both funerals attracted crowds of around 3,000 mourners and supporters.[19]

James McDowell, Thomas Crozier, and John James Somerville (brother of Wesley) were convicted of the murders and sentenced to life imprisonment inside the Maze Prison. McDowell and Crozier were serving UDR soldiers at the time of the murders and John James Somerville was a former UDR member.[14] The international panel of inquiry commissioned by the Pat Finucane Centre concluded that the principal perpetrator of the Miami Showband attack had been Robin Jackson. Although Jackson had been taken in and questioned by the RUC following the attack, he was released without having been charged.[20] Loyalist Volunteer Force leader Billy Wright, who had succeeded Jackson as Mid-Ulster brigadier in the early 1990s, claimed that Somerville and Boyle had served as his role models and that their violent deaths had inspired him to join the UVF at the age of 15.[21]

On 30 July 2005, a mural and memorial plaque commemorating Somerville and Boyle was unveiled in the Killycomaine estate of Portadown, where the latter had grown up. One hundred people, 16 loyalist bands, and a UVF military guard of honour were present at the unveiling following a parade through the estate. The plaque reads that the two men were "killed in action".[22]

In his hometown of Moygashel, Somerville is honoured by a memorial plaque on the gable wall of a house in Moygashel Park.The plaque states "He died for Ulster".[23]

See also

References

  1. Report of the Independent International Panel on Sectarian Killings in Northern Ireland, October 2006. pp.110, 112 Retrieved 24 October 2011
  2. Interim Report on the Report of the Independent Commission of Inquiry into the Bombing of Kays Tavern, Dundalk. p.99
  3. Tiernan, Joe (2000). The Dublin Bombings and the Murder Triangle. Ireland: Mercier Press. pp.110-111
  4. Larkin, Paul (2004). A Very British Jihad: collusion, conspiracy and cover-up in Northern Ireland. Belfast: Beyond the Pale publications. p.182
  5. McPhilemy, Sean (1998). The Committee: Political Assassination in Northern Ireland. Boulder, Colorado:Roberts Rinehart Publishers. p.316 ISBN 978-1-57098-211-8
  6. Report of the Independent International Panel on Sectarian Killings in Northern Ireland, October 2006 Retrieved 24 October 2011
  7. Collusion in the South Armagh/Mid-Ulster areas in the mid-1970s. Retrieved 24 October 2011
  8. 8.0 8.1 Martin Dillon, The Trigger Men, Mainstream, 2003, p. 25
  9. Report of the Independent International Panel on Sectarian Killings in Northern Ireland, October 2006. p.112. Retrieved 24 October 2011
  10. Murray, Raymond (1990). The SAS in Ireland. Ireland: Mercier Press. p.133
  11. The Barron Report (2003). p.259
  12. Houses of the Oirachtas, Joint Committee on Justice, Equality, Defence and Women's Rights, Interim Report on the Report of the Independent Commission of Inquiry into the Dublin and Monaghan Bombings (The Barron Report). December 2003. pp.145-146
  13. Dillon, Martin (1991). The Dirty War. London: Arrow. p.217
  14. 14.0 14.1 14.2 14.3 14.4 Taylor, Peter (1999). Loyalists. London: Bloomsbury Publishing, plc. pp.147-149
  15. Dillon, Martin (1991). The Dirty War. London: Arrow Books. pp.198-199
  16. Dillon, Martin (1999). God and the Gun: the Church and Irish Terrorism. New York: Routledge. p.59
  17. "The Mail on Sunday confronts the smirking monster who massacred the Miami Showband to ask if he feels any remorse. His response? Mate..no interest". The Mail on Sunday. Michael Browne. 3 December 2006. Retrieved 24 October 2011
  18. McKittrick, David (2001). Lost Lives. Edinburgh: Mainstream publishers. p.557
  19. Jim Cusack & Henry McDonald, UVF, Poolbeg, 1997, p. 163
  20. Report of the Independent International Panel on Sectarian Killings in Northern Ireland, October 2006. p.68 Retrieved 24 October 2011
  21. Dillon, Martin (1999). God and the Gun: the Church and Irish terrorism.pp.58-60
  22. Mural Directory by Jonathan McCormick
  23. Google Maps
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