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Duke Street- 5th October 1968.

Poster advertising the first Civil
rights march in Derry City, October 1968
The date that is most commonly referred to
as the beginning of the ‘Troubles’ is October 5th 1968. On this day
the Northern Ireland Civil Rights Association had intended to march from Duke
Street in Derry’s Waterside to the city centre. As the march assembled the
Royal Ulster Constabulary attacked the demonstrators in full view of the
world’s media. Within hours of the event pictures of police brutality were
transmitted around the globe.
The origins of the Duke Street march lay in
an invitation that was issued to the NICRA by the Derry Housing Action
Committee (DHAC). The DHAC was established in March 1968 by members of the
Derry Labour Party and the James Connolly Republican Club. This group
immediately embarked on a series of direct action protests to highlight the
housing problems in Derry that was the human cost of political gerrymandering.
The meetings of Derry Corporation were disrupted from March onwards and other
actions included house squatting and road blockages, with the DHAC gradually
earning themselves a reputation for colourful and effective protests. Following
the first Civil Rights march from Coalisland to Dungannon on the 24th
August 1968, which several members of the DHAC attended, the DHAC decided to
invite the NICRA to march in Derry City.
Following the invitation to the NICRA the
proposed march was banned by William Craig, the Northern Ireland Minister of
Home affairs, on the 3rd October. When the ban was announced, as a
result of the Apprentice Boys of Derry’s stated intention to hold a march along
the route at the same time, representatives of NICRA visited Derry on the 4th
October in an attempt to have the march called off. The DHAC refused and plans
for the march went ahead.
Reports on the numbers who gathered in Duke
Street to participate in the march vary from 400 to 3,000 but there exists no
confusion as to the events on the day. As the assembled crowd set off along
Duke Street, led by the march organisers and joined by Eddie McAteer,
Nationalist MP for Derry, Gerry Fitt, the Republican Labour MP for West Belfast
and three British Labour MPs they encountered a RUC blockade. The head of the
march clashed with the RUC and a number of injuries were inflicted by the RUC.
As the demonstrators held an impromptu
public meeting the RUC moved into position behind them, blocking the only other
exit from Duke Street. Then, as Betty Sinclair, a NICRA organiser from Belfast,
addressed the crowd and advised them to go home, the RUC launched the assault.
Within minutes Duke Street was the scene of
unrestrained violence as the RUC cleared the street with the use of boots and
batons. The demonstrators were unprepared for this assault and with the RUC in
control of both exits from Duke Street there was no chance of escaping
unscathed. Two water cannons were introduced to finish the job of clearing the
street and drove the demonstrators across Craigavon Bridge. It is estimated
that 90-100 demonstrators had to be treated for their injuries. There are no
reports of RUC injuries.

A demonstrator is arrested following
the NICRA demonstration, Duke Street.
The first attempt by the NICRA, and their
local supporters, to mobilise support in Derry City had been brutally
suppressed but the reaction to events in Duke Street was unlike that of
previous RUC actions. Whereas in 1951 and 1952, when St Patrick Day parades in
Derry City were batoned off the streets by the RUC and quickly forgotten the
events on Duke Street on Saturday 5th October were recorded by the
international media. Pictures of RUC brutality were flashed around the world
but the real impact was made by the footage recorded by an enterprising RTE
cameraman, who vividly recorded the panic and fear that the actions of the RUC
provoked in Derry.
In Derry later the same day there were
clashes between the RUC and nationalist youths on the edge of the Bogside that
continued into the small hours. The following day an estimated 1,000 people
were involved in daylong clashes with the RUC in and around the Bogside and the
first petrol bombs were thrown in Derry. Similar scenes, although involving smaller
numbers, were also recorded on the 7th October and more petrol bombs
were thrown.
In Belfast reaction to events in Duke
Street amongst the student population of Queens University Belfast saw
2,000-3,000 people march on the 9th October in protest against RUC
brutality in Derry. Following the protest at a meeting in Queen’s the People’s
Democracy, a small, radical but soon to be influential collection of students
and their supporters was established.
In Derry, following the violence that
marked the weekend a public meeting was held on the 9th October at
which the Derry Citizens Action Committee (DCAC) was formed. A steering
committee of 11 were elected, with Ivan Cooper as Chair and John Hume as the
Vice Chair. Other members included Paddy Doherty, Michael Canavan, Claude
Wilton and Campbell Austin.
It is generally believed that the DCAC were
a moderating influence on the Civil Rights campaign in Derry City and it also,
with the inclusion of such respectable and well known figures as John Hume and
Ivan Cooper, helped to widen the Civil rights campaign in Derry.
On the 19th October 1968 5,000
people attended a peaceful sit down protest organised by the DCAC in Guildhall
Square.

Sitdown protest in Guildhall Square,
October 1968.
On the 16th November 15,000
people participated in a re-enactment of the 5th October march. The
march was blocked by the RUC at the cityside end of Craigavon bridge but unlike
October the demonstrators had an unblocked alternative which they used, John
Street. As the demonstrators moved along John Street there were clashes with
loyalists who had gathered to protest at the march. Following a brief clash the
loyalists withdrew and the demonstrators gathered in the Diamond.

The Committee of the DCAC led the
demonstration across Craigavon Bridge, 16th November 1968.
On the 23rd November 1968 the Government at
Stormont announced the abolition of the Derry Corporation and the appointment
of a special commission to replace it. This, together with other reforms
announced the previous day, governing housing and local government reforms and
an appeal by the Northern Ireland Prime Minister Terence O’Neill for calm, led
both the NICRA and the DCAC to announce a ban on marches.
This self-imposed ban on marches was to end when the
People’s Democracy set out on a march from Belfast to Derry on New Year’s Day
1969.
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