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Funeral services for three of the four people killed in a single-car crash near Armagh last weekend have taken place on Good Friday. Marina Crilly, 24, Emma Mallon, 22, Philip Mitchell, 27, and ...
A man has been charged after a father and son were killed in a crash in County Armagh. Peter and Loughlin Devlin died at the scene of the two-car collision outside the village of Killylea last Friday.
Owen Martin O'Hagan (23 June 1950 – 28 September 2001) [1] was an Irish investigative journalist from Lurgan, Northern Ireland.After leaving the Official Irish Republican Army (Official IRA) and serving time in prison, he began a 20-year journalism career, during which he reported on The Troubles in Northern Ireland before being murdered, allegedly by dissident Ulster Loyalist paramilitaries ...
9 July 1996 - Michael McGoldrick (31), a Catholic civilian, found in his cab in a remote lane at Aghagallon, near Lurgan, a day after having picked up a fare in the town. He had been shot five times in the head. Both the UVF and the UDA released statements emphatically denying involvement in McGoldrick's killing.
Kerr was born on 22 February 1948 to James William Kerr and Kathleen Rose Kerr (née Murray) of Lurgan in County Armagh. [2] He was educated at St Colman's College, Newry, and read law at Queen's University Belfast. He was called to the Bar of Northern Ireland in 1970, and to the Bar of England and Wales at Gray's Inn in 1975. [3]
The Lurgan Mail was founded in 1889 by Lewis Robert Richardson. The Lurgan Mail is a tabloid weekly newspaper based in Lurgan, County Armagh in Northern Ireland.It is published on Wednesday evenings, though each edition always bears the Thursday date [2] and reports not only news in Lurgan, but also in nearby towns such as Waringstown and others in Craigavon Borough area.
John Francis Green (18 December 1946 [1] – 10 January 1975), was a leading member of the North Armagh Brigade of the Provisional Irish Republican Army. [2] He was killed in a farmhouse outside Castleblayney, County Monaghan, by members of the Mid-Ulster Brigade of the Ulster Volunteer Force (UVF).
Billy Hanna served as a sergeant and permanent staff instructor in C (Lurgan) Company, 11 UDR. Hanna was born in Lurgan, County Armagh, Northern Ireland in about 1929, and brought up as a Protestant. [1] He was the son of William Armstrong Hanna and Anna Jane Lavery.