Top of the Hill bar shooting

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LocationStrabane Old Road, Derry, Northern Ireland
Date20 December 1972
10:30 PM
Top of the Hill bar shooting
Part of The Troubles
Annie's Bar (left) in 2009
Top of the Hill bar shooting is located in Northern Ireland
Top of the Hill bar shooting
Top of the Hill bar shooting (Northern Ireland)
LocationStrabane Old Road, Derry, Northern Ireland
Date20 December 1972
10:30 PM
TargetIrish Catholics
Attack type
Mass shooting, massacre
WeaponsSterling submachine gun
Deaths5
Injured4
PerpetratorUlster Defence Association

The Top of the Hill bar shooting, or Annie's Bar massacre,[1] was a mass shooting in Derry, Northern Ireland on 20 December 1972, during the Troubles. Five civilians were killed when members of the Ulster Defence Association (UDA), a loyalist paramilitary group, opened fire on the customers in a pub frequented by Catholics.[2]

The UDA was formed in September 1971, during one of the most violent phases of the Troubles, after internment was introduced, when several loyalist vigilante "defence" groups combined. They began using the cover name "Ulster Freedom Fighters" (UFF) to claim responsibility for paramilitary attacks, allowing the UDA to remain legal.[3][4] The UDA carried out its first killing on 20 April 1972, shooting a Catholic taxi driver in Ardoyne, Belfast.[5][6] In October, the group was responsible for the deaths of two children when they detonated a car bomb outside a Catholic pub in Sailortown, Belfast.[7]

On 20 December 1972, (the same day as the bar shooting) Ulster Defence Regiment (UDR) soldier George Hamilton was killed by a Provisional IRA sniper a few miles outside Derry.[8]

Shooting

See also

References

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