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The publican's son Michael Donnelly (14) was serving petrol to a customer. He noticed the strange speed of the cars. He tried to run towards the pub, but McConnell jumped out of one of the cars and shot the teenage boy dead with a Sten gun. [10] McConnell then shot the man Michael Donnelly had been serving petrol to in the head. [11]
The townland the village is in was formerly known as Ballydonnelly (Irish: Baile Uí Dhonnaíle [1]), and was the stronghold of the O'Donnelly (Uí Donnghaile) sept, [1] [4] who had held the role of marshalls to the O'Neills of Tyrone. According to Gaelic Irish tradition, the O'Donnellys were part of the Cenél nEoghain making them kin of the O ...
This land was previously owned by the O'Donnelly family, who were closely connected to the O'Neill clan in Dungannon. The O'Donnelly fort was a few miles west of the castle. There are substantial remains. The gatehouse was rebuilt at a later date, although one of the doorways may have been reused.
The Hillcrest Bar (now McAleer's) [11] on Dungannon's Donaghmore Road, was a pub frequented by Catholics and was jointly owned by a Catholic and a Protestant. An incendiary device had been planted inside the premises the year before. [12]
17 May 1976 - Robert Dobson (35) and Thomas Dobson (38), both Protestant civilians, were shot and killed by a non-specific republican group at their workplace, an egg packing factory in Dungannon Street, Moy. 1991. December 1991 - Robin Farmer (19) Protestant civilian was murdered in his father's shop by republicans. He had returned home from ...
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Parkanaur House is a Class A listed large Tudor Revival architecture house in the village of Castlecaulfield near Dungannon, County Tyrone, Northern Ireland. [ 1 ] The present house is a two-storey building constructed in the 1840s from block rubble.
Cabragh (from Irish An Chabrach, meaning 'the poor land') [1] is a townland in County Tyrone, Northern Ireland.It is in the historic barony of Dungannon Lower, the civil parish of Killeeshil and the poor law union of Dunngannon, and covers an area of 347 acres (140 ha) in the province of Ulster. [2]