Bloody Sunday
Bloody Sunday or the Bogside Massacre was a massacre on 30 January 1972 in the Bogside area of Derry Northern Ireland when British soldiers shot 26 unarmed civilians during a protest march against internment without trial. About 15000 people gathered in the Creggan area of Derry on the morning of 30 January 1972 to take part in a civil rights march.
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Thirteen were killed outright while the death of another man four months later was attributed to.
. Marchers marching from Brown Chapel AME. Five months earlier in. Directed by Paul Greengrass.
Thirteen people were killed and. The events leading to Bloody Sunday. Church to Edmund Pettus Bridge on Sunday March 7 1965 Bloody Sunday.
Bloody SundayBloody Sunday refers to the March 7 1965 civil rights march that was supposed to go from Selma to the capitol in Montgomery to protest the shooting death of activist Jimmie Lee Jackson. The early spring of 1965 became the turning point in the tensely-waged struggle for voting rights throughout Alabama and the deep South. Learn more about Bloody Sunday in this article.
A dramatization of the Irish civil rights protest march and subsequent massacre by British troops on January 30 1972. With James Nesbitt Allan Gildea Gerard Crossan Mary Moulds. Bloody Sunday demonstration in Londonderry Northern Ireland on Sunday January 30 1972 by Roman Catholic civil rights supporters that turned violent when British paratroopers opened fire killing 13 and injuring 14 others one of the injured later died.
1 day agoHundreds of people gathered Sunday in Northern Ireland to mark 50 years since Bloody Sunday one of the deadliest days in the conflict known as The Troubles. The roughly 600 marchers were violently driven back by Alabama State Troopers Dallas County Sheriffs deputies and a horse-mounted posse after they crossed the Edmund.
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