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Cleary was born on 18 September 1950 in Northern Ireland, the second eldest of the 13 children of Hugh and Mary Cleary. [4] He was brought up in the Roman Catholic religion, and according to author Tony Geraghty he was originally from Newry; [3] although David McKittrick's book Lost Lives states he had lived in Magee Terrace, Belleeks, County Armagh. [5]
Margaret Perry was a 26-year-old woman from Portadown, County Armagh, Northern Ireland who was abducted on 21 June 1991. [1] After a tip from the IRA, her body was found buried across the border in a field in Mullaghmore, County Sligo, Ireland, on 30 June 1992. [2] She had been beaten to death. Her murder has never been solved. [3]
Oneilland (from Irish Uí Nialláin, meaning 'descendants of Nialláin') is the name of a former barony in County Armagh, present-day Northern Ireland. [2] It covers the northern area of the county bordering the south-eastern shoreline of Lough Neagh. At some stage the barony was divided into Oneilland East and Oneilland West.
The modern English spelling Aughanduff appears to have emerged during the 18th century, and the Northern Ireland Place-Names Project [7] records the following spellings being used in official documents or maps prior to Aughanduff being used in John Rocque's 1760 Map of County Armagh: View of Forkhill and the Doorbrin mountains at dusk, from ...