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Garvaghy Road History
"In no other democratic or western society would it be conceivable that the forces of the state would force a march or parade by one ethnic, political or religious group through that of another, especially one organised by an association whose members are required to oppose the religious and political beliefs of the resident community"


The Garvaghy Road Residents Coalition is an umbrella group set up by the residents of the Catholic/Nationalist Garvaghy Road area of the town of Portadown. The area has now achieved worldwide notoriety for its annual round of loyalist and Orange Order parades and counter-demonstrations, and for the violence which accompanies them. For many years, the community has been under constant siege by the Orange Order and its supporters. The residents continue to stand strong and struggle for their right to equality, freedom from sectarian discrimination and harassment.

With this site, we hope to bring you the truth of what happens in our community, and to scotch the myths and propaganda which have been circulated about our community and the annual torment we are forced to endure. As well as our own story, we have a list of other sites which you may wish to visit. Also on this site are fact-sheets, updates, pictures, a map of the area, and images which you can download to use to show your support of the Garvaghy Road Residents.

Others

Portadown has a conspicuous place in the history of Protestant militancy. The Orange Order was founded in the town of Portadown in 1795, an offshoot of a Protestant terrorist group known as the Peep O'Day Boys, named for their practice of attacking Catholics at dawn. The Orange Order professed loyalty to the memory of the English Protestant king William of Orange, but its main activities were "wrecking," a term for the often fatal attacks on Catholics and the wanton destruction of their homes and businesses. This campaign of sectarian violence was so widespread that in 1795 a British Parliamentarian warned of a "general extermination" of Catholics in the Portadown area, and Parliament tried to ban the Protestant vigilantes several times during the nineteenth century. Since then, the Orange Order has acquired a degree of respectability. Today, many leaders in unionist politics and in the RUC are members of the Orange Order.
                                                                                                                                                                                                                            In the confusion of religion and politics that marks the loyal orders, the Drumcree Church's significance derives from the role it played in the founding ceremonies of the Orange Order. For nearly two centuries, the Orange Order marched home from its pilgrimages to Drumcree by way of Obins Street, at the edge of Portadown's Catholic enclave. In fact, the loyal orders paraded through Obins Street dozens of times each marching season, sometimes several times a day. Murders, beatings, and the "wrecking" of Catholic homes and businesses were routine. Catholics lived in a ghetto with two main streets: Obins Street, narrow and old, and Garvaghy Road, a wider and newer thoroughfare bisecting the eight housing estates where most of the town's 6000 Catholics now live. Catholics remain a vulnerable minority in Portadown's overall population of about 18,000.
                                                                                                                            

After Obins Street residents succeeded in 1985 and 86 in moving orange marches away from their front doors after decades of struggle, the state continued to force marches along Garvaghy Road. It is no small irony that many Catholics moved to Garvaghy Road to escape the regular attacks on Obins Street, only to have the parade rerouted into their haven. On Easter Sunday in 1986, several thousand marchers, led by Democratic Unionist Party extremist and MP Ian Paisley, descended on the Garvaghy Road community with RUC escort at 1:30 am in the morning and engaged in an orgy of violence in the "wrecking" tradition. Residents have opposed the marches - and resisted them, often by non-violent means, always in the face of a brutal response by the security forces - ever since.

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This site in no way supports the REAL IRA , C.I.R.A or the I.N.L.A