
Erection of barricade at junction of William Street, Rossville
Street, 12th August.
On
August 12, as the Apprentice Boys began their parade tension filled
the air and reports of the day speak of a great sense of foreboding
throughout the city. As thousands of Apprentice Boys and their
supporters marched past Waterloo Place on the edge of the Bogside,
lines of RUC men faced Nationalist youths. Stewards and Nationalist
leaders, including John Hume and Eddie McAteer, attempted to control
the crowd but their efforts ended in failure; inevitably, it appears
with hindsight, confrontation began with jeering and cat calling
and within a short space of time the first stones were thrown
at the RUC.

Apprentice Boys march in Waterloo Place. 12th August.
The
RUC remained in their positions at Waterloo Place for some hours
without responding but serious rioting also broke out at Sackville
Street, further along the Strand Road between the RUC, supported
by Unionists, and Nationalists. After approximately three hours
the order was given for the RUC to charge from Little James Street
and Waterloo Place towards Rossville Street, with the intention
of driving the Nationalists back into the Bogside. This initial
onslaught was repulsed at a barricade at the mouth of William
Street and a stand off commenced.

RUC advance up William Street, 12th August.
This
stalemate is broken at 7.00 p.m. that evening when the RUC, supported
by Unionists, breach the barricade and rampage up Rossville Street
breaking house windows as they go. The Bogsiders retreat, then
turn, and drive the RUC back down to the mouth of Rossville Street.

RUC and Unionist supporters advance up Rossville Street, 12th
August.
Under
pressure to contain the situation the RUC begin using CS gas,
the first occasion such an indiscriminate weapon has been used
in the United Kingdom jurisdiction. Prior to authorising the use
of CS gas the Stormont Minister of Home Affairs, Robert Porter,
is alleged to have administered a dose to himself.
Over the next 2 days 1,091 canisters, and 14 grenades of gas were
fired into the Bogside. Local people responded, after receiving
advice from Red Mole in London, by soaking handkerchiefs in vinegar
& water. Reports are divided as to the effectiveness of this antidote.
The RUC also use stones, and on occasion petrol bombs.
Within
the Bogside first-aid posts are set up by Drs Donal McDermott
and Raymond McClean. They are staffed by Knights of Malta volunteers.
During the Battle of the Bogside local first aid facilities dealt
with almost 1,000 casualties. Local doctors, nurses, first aid
volunteers and the Knights of Malta based themselves at the Candy
Corner shop in Westland Street. This shop, which lacked running
water and the most basic medical supplies, served as the medical
headquarters for the Bogside until it was evacuated in the early
hours of 14th August as CS gas began to make the centre intolerable.
Staff
at this centre coped with injuries including; exposure to CS gas,
lacerations, impact injuries from gas canisters and gun shot injuries.
Many
of the more seriously injured, refused to visit Altnagelvin Hospital
through fear of the RUC and were transferred across the border
for further treatment.
That
night over 500 women and children are evacuated from the Bogside
to Donegal.
During
the night young men and women knock on doors in the Bogside, Brandywell
and Creggan areas asking for empty bottles, washing powder and
sugar to help make petrol bombs.
The
next morning nationalist youths, girls and children have taken
up position on top of the Rossville Street flats, thus ensuring
that any further RUC advance into the Bogside will be met with
an aerial bombardment of petrol bombs and other missiles. The
Irish Tricolour and Starry Plough are hoisted on top of the flats.

The scene in Rossville Street, 13th August.
A
news-sheet, the Barricade Bulletin, appeared and kept people up
to date on developments from the front line and instructions on
how to throw petrol bombs to best effect and minimise the effects
of CS gas.
The
DCDA held a press conference at which Paddy Doherty and Dr McDermott
appeal for 'able-bodied men' to come to Derry to assist in the
fighting. Appeals were also made for protests to be organized
in other cities and towns across the north. In response demonstrations
were held in Belfast, Newry, Armagh, Lurgan, strabane, Dungiven
and other towns and violence erupted throughout the north.
An
Taoiseach, Jack Lynch, addressed the people of Ireland. He calls
on the British government to request an UN Peacekeeping Force,
announces the setting up of field hospitals on the border and
declares that the Irish government will 'no longer stand by and
see innocent people injured or even worse'.
The
reaction to this announcement was mixed. Within the Bogside the
news that Irish troops were moving towards the border was greeted
with delight. It is clear from the rumours that swept the Bogside,
as well as Unionist areas of the city, that not everyone expected
them to stop there.
According
to Eamon McCann this speech, " Put new heart into the fight."
Raymond
McClean wrote of the speech, " It made a great impact at the
time. I have no doubt that this speech came at exactly the right
time for the people of the Bogside that evening. Weary, battered
and blood stained, Jack Lynch's statement gave an added impetus
to everyone, and we all set about our work in the knowledge that
we were not entirely alone."
In
response to the rumours regarding the Irish Army several hundred
unionists from the city and surrounding district gathered behind
RUC lines in Great James Street. Many wore crash helmets and carried
wooden staves. This combined force then marched up Great James
Street towards St Eugene's Roman Catholic Cathedral. Rumours spread
like wildfire that they intended burning the Cathedral and uncommitted
nationalists now came out in defence of their area.
During
this confrontation the RUC wound three nationalists with live
rounds. This was the first occasion that live ammunition has been
used and angry nationalists in the Bogside demanded that Republicans
should respond in kind. The DCDA, however, insisted that no guns
were to be used at that stage, not least because there were no
weapons at their disposal.
Later that night Unionist rioters, frustrated by their inability
to force their way into the Bogside, withdrew and attempted to
burn the City Hotel on their way through the city centre.
On
the morning of the next day, 14th August, the B-Specials were
mobilised in the Fountain, a predominately Unionist area that
was situated on a hill above the Bogside. Fearing the incursion
of the B Specials into the Bogside from the Fountain Nationalists
also gather in this area and serious rioting erupted.
The
B-Specials were established in December 1920 as part of the restructuring
of policing in the north of Ireland, with a membership of approximately
12,000. As a force the B-Specials were provided with basic weapons
training and were mobilised only when the Stormont Government
felt under threat. The Specials were an almost exclusively Protestant
body. Few Catholics ever applied for membership, since this was
discouraged by both the B-Specials and the Nationalist community.
At
its formation the B-Specials absorbed many UVF units en masse
and this helped ensure that relations with the nationalist community
were never good.
At
4.00 p.m. a public call went out for the general mobilisation
of the B-Specials. Shortly afterwards B-Specials were seen at
Waterloo Place, on the edge of the Fountain and on the city walls.
Within the Bogside there was panic as rumours swept the area that
'the B-Specials are coming in'.
For
their part the RUC, clearly exhausted and demoralised after 3
days of violence, were slowly being driven back down William Street
and towards the city centre, where the B-Specials were gathered.
Unknown to the people of the Bogside, however, the Unionist Government
at Stormont had already requested that the British Government
send in British troops 'to restore law and order'.
Shortly
after 4.00 p.m., the British Army marched into Waterloo Place
and the Battle of the Bogside had ended.

British troops erect a barricade in William Street, 14th August.