[kj] Back to the Bogside ...Case Solved!

gingoblin at easynet.co.uk gingoblin at easynet.co.uk
Thu Apr 14 14:00:41 EDT 2016


Brilliant Paul, I love this sorta thing!

Maybe I'll go back to researching where the Punk's Not Dead wall is in 
Edinburgh... hmm, perhaps not...

Dave in Edinburgh

On 13/04/2016 21:32, Paul wrote:
> I'm not done yet ...lol
>
> I think I have it cracked. With the help of a friend in Derry, Google 
> Maps and perseverance! 😎
>
> I was not able to let it go, so I asked a lad I know, who is an 
> amature photograpeher and lives in Derry, where he thought it might 
> be. He immediately said "that's up at Little Diamond". We already knew 
> it was in the Bogside <https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bogside> area and 
> this is indeed in that area, on the way up to the Cregan and the 
> topography of the area matches. It's a small stretch of road at the 
> top of William Street, where the soldiers running picture was taken.
> I found this old picture online <http://i.imgur.com/SiZxO5B.jpg> and 
> was able to focus on the top right hand corner 
> <http://i.imgur.com/PF4Txvf.png>, bear in mind this picture is from a 
> year later and taken as part of the inquiry into Bloody Sunday 
> <https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bloody_Sunday_%281972%29>, which 
> happened August '72, but still shows a wasteland area. This turns out 
> to be the old sorting office. So today that area looks like this 
> <http://i.imgur.com/uPJrjx1.jpg> (very bottom on left is where City 
> Cabs is from other picture) and a little closer like this 
> <http://i.imgur.com/wGLMWKx.jpg>. I'm not sure when the swimming pool 
> was built, but it could be what was the old sorting office building, 
> which was burnt out.
>
> So fellow Gatherers, without further adieu, I present to you, what 
> will be from this day henceforth, known as The KILLING JOKE wall! 
> <http://i.imgur.com/OMHGpP0.jpg> or what's left of it ...lol Maybe 
> someone with better PhotoShop skills than I, can do an overlay of the 
> Killing Joke, album cover on to the picture, but to my mind it all 
> checks out.
>
> I shall still refrain from giving my own opinion on The Troubles, as 
> it's a pointless exercise, that just stirs up old grievances and 
> emotions. Not something that will go away, but let's just be thankful 
> for things as they are. There is peace in Ireland, for now and long 
> may it last.
>
> I too enjoyed the look back and to be honest was amazed at the amount 
> of photographs and videos online documenting a time in history, that 
> is still hard to believe happened in our lifetime. I'll be up that way 
> in June, as part of this <http://www.ventureoffshorecup.com/>, so will 
> try get a snap at the angle of the original and maybe get a gang of 
> lads to jump off it lol I've also asked the mate, to take a picture 
> too, so hopefully will have that soon, but in meantime Google Maps 
> <https://www.google.ie/maps/place/Westland+St,+Londonderry,+Derry+BT48+9EU,+UK/@54.9979733,-7.3274572,3a,15y,358.8h,91.08t/data=%213m6%211e1%213m4%211sNeOR_V2z-xp6GrppxRayGg%212e0%217i13312%218i6656%214m2%213m1%211s0x485fe179982200c1:0xa72a669f8224d865>, 
> will have to do.
>
> If you've not seen the rest of Don McCullin's, photos from Derry in 
> '71, try here 
> <https://www.nationalgalleries.org/collection/artists-a-z/m/artist/don-mccullin/object/the-bogside-londonderry-northern-ireland-ar01187>, 
> were picture 16/17, confirms the pictures location. Also you might 
> like Clive Limpkin's 
> <http://www.ucd.ie/photoconflict/gallery/northernireland-thebattleofbogside/>, 
> pictures from around the sametime. One of which ended up being a mural 
> on a gable down by the Free Derry Wall 
> <https://www.google.ie/maps/@54.9958896,-7.3269076,3a,75y,183.2h,89.59t/data=%213m6%211e1%213m4%211sowP1NQUYExn2NCCU0k8jHg%212e0%217i13312%218i6656%216m1%211e1>. 
> Which incidentally looked like this <http://i.imgur.com/jkLtLKb.jpg> 
> circa '71 (and this <http://i.imgur.com/kfsxITn.jpg>). Some other 
> blurb on them here <http://clivelimpkin.com/tag/londonderry/>. The 
> movie '71 <http://www.imdb.com/title/tt2614684/> too, gives a good 
> look at the north at that time and a different perspective, albeit 
> fiction.
>
>
> Anyway hope this helps you Alex, and rest of Gatherers enjoyed it. I'm 
> not going to bother put this on Facebook, but if anyone else wants 
> too, by all means do. Look forward to reading your blog too Alex 👍
>
>
>
>
>
> On 12 April 2016 at 18:27, Brendan Quinn <bq at soundgardener.co.nz 
> <mailto:bq at soundgardener.co.nz>> wrote:
>
>     Cheers Paul, enjoyed the stroll back in time. The seventies are
>     receding back into the past at quite a clip now innit, esp. with
>     the passing of Bowie and Lemmy, amongst others.
>
>     I’d heave a heavy sigh, but the old lungs aren’t up to it ;)
>
>     *From:* Gathering [mailto:gathering-bounces at misera.net
>     <mailto:gathering-bounces at misera.net>] *On Behalf Of *Paul
>     *Sent:* Monday, 11 April 2016 7:39 a.m.
>     *To:* Alex Smith <vassifer at earthlink.net
>     <mailto:vassifer at earthlink.net>>; A list about all things Killing
>     Joke (the band!) <gathering at misera.net <mailto:gathering at misera.net>>
>     *Subject:* Re: [kj] Back to the Bogside
>
>     Link to pic https://i.imgur.com/9EIxjph.jpg (To big to embed in
>     email on the list)
>
>     Not "the" picture, but from same series and quiet possibly same
>     riot, is this McCullin, photo.
>
>     Just out of boredom, I was able to pinpoint it to William St,
>     Derry. The building the soldiers are running past, is gone, just a
>     market stall there now.
>
>     The open door is to a company that was called City Radio Cabs and
>     as can be seen in the picture, had a phone number 4466. The
>     company is still there just at the back of where the stall is in
>     the lower picture and called City Cabs now, but still has the same
>     last 4 digits in their number. The A D that can be seen, is
>     from Br*/ad/*ley & McLaughlin undertakers, who still trade on the
>     other corner of the street.
>
>     As you can see all the buildings are relatively new, possibly 80s.
>
>     So again, to try hunt down the exact position of the album cover
>     photo, would be next to impossible, unless you had been there as
>     such.
>
>     I do hope you have more luck though, if you follow it up Alex.
>
>
>>
>     On 8 April 2016 at 23:57, Paul <dubecho at gmail.com
>     <mailto:dubecho at gmail.com>> wrote:
>
>         On further examination of the picture, the wall itself, looks
>         like footings or foundations for a building.
>
>         You can see what looks like bent rebars, on the tops. So would
>         be a substantial building or most likely a block of low flats,
>         3 or 4 storeys.
>
>         A lot of these were built in the 70s, because in this
>         particular part of the city, large amounts of houses were
>         burnt out for one reason or another, will leave that aspect to
>         another day : )  Interesting and long history.
>
>         Also, the amount of building materials, particularly roof
>         ridge tiles, on the ground, would lead one to think it was a
>         building site anyway.
>
>         The only other identifying parts to buildings are the shutters
>         on the gable of one of the houses. This is possibly a shop,
>         but many such shops in that part of the Bogside, but again may
>         well be long gone. Or may not even be a shutter at all and
>         just a corrugated zinc panel/sheets, they would have been used
>         to shore up burnt out houses. I've looked at other pictures
>         taken by the photographer at around the same time and although
>         features recognisable, they are just other parts of the same
>         area and long since changed.
>
>         So sorry, I can be of no help. Best bet would be ask the
>         man Don McCullin, himself. He is 80 and lives in Somerset. He
>         still exhibits, so may well be contactable, a chance to use
>         your journalistic sleuthing skills : )
>
>         Only other thing I can think of is ask one of the Undertones,
>         a band formed in that very place, not to many years after : )
>
>         On 8 April 2016 at 22:51, Paul <dubecho at gmail.com
>         <mailto:dubecho at gmail.com>> wrote:
>
>             Bogside, Derry, County Derry : ) It comes from the Irish
>             for a line of oak trees, Doire.
>
>             Will have a look later and see if anything that stands out
>             and might be able to use Google maps, but to be honest, I
>             would not hold out much hope, as the original picture was
>             from sometime in the 70s, when the troubles were still
>             ongoing, but Derry, as with other cities in the north, has
>             had a huge amount of work done in building and
>             regeneration of areas hit hard, and the Bogside was one
>             place that did get it bad unfortunately. Looks like it was
>             in one of the housing estates (projects) too and them
>             streets are identical for huge parts of the city.
>
>             Nice full size of original
>             http://www.tate.org.uk/art/images/work/AR/AR01193_10.jpg
>
>             On 8 April 2016 at 22:39, Alex Smith
>             <vassifer at earthlink.net <mailto:vassifer at earthlink.net>>
>             wrote:
>
>                 Been attempting to compose a longer piece on my silly
>                 blog about Mike Coles' iconic artwork for the fist
>                 Killing Joke album, and it got me thinking ..... does
>                 that very spot (the wall depicted in the shot)....
>                 still exist today?
>
>                 As I understand it (and please jump in if you know
>                 more), the original photograph by revered war
>                 photographer Don McCullin was snapped circa 1971 in an
>                 area known as The Bogside in Londonderry, Northern
>                 Ireland. It depicts a "gang of boys" fleeing a CS gas
>                 attack .... as one would.
>
>                 I cannot help wondering if that wall is still
>                 standing, moreover if anyone has tracked it down to do
>                 a sort "then and now" juxtaposition.
>
>                 I first spotted the original McCullin photo in a huge
>                 book several years back in a photo book store in SoHo,
>                 NY (sadly long gone ... now a lingerie emporium) and
>                 letting out an audible gasp. I remember being
>                 disappointed that it did not, in fact, feature the
>                 words KILLING JOKE scrawled menacingly across the
>                 brickface.
>
>                 Are there any Irish Gatherers who might know more?
>
>                 -Alex in NYC
>
>
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