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Cruse Bereavement Support is the UK's largest charity for bereaved people in England, Wales and Northern Ireland, with a sister organisation in Scotland. Cruse offers face-to-face, group, telephone, email and website support to people after someone close to them has died and works to enhance society's care of bereaved people.
Enniskillen has hosted the Happy Days arts festival since 2012, which celebrates "the work and influence of Nobel Prize-winning writer Samuel Beckett" and is the "first annual, international, multi-arts festival to be held in Northern Ireland since the launch of the Ulster Bank Belfast Festival at Queen's in 1962".
By 1987 Torrie was noting that the support work supplied by Cruse was moving away from practical and spiritual support into a main influence on psychological support. [3] The causes of this trend was said to be women's liberation, reduced religious belief and general affluence. [3] In that year she published her memoir "My Years with Cruse". [5]
The facility has its origins in the Enniskillen Union Workhouse which was designed by George Wilkinson and was completed in March 1844. [1] After joining the National Health Service as Erne Hospital in 1948, [2] most of the workhouse buildings were demolished in the late 1950s and a modern health facility was completed in 1964. [1]
Gordon Wilson (25 September 1927 – 27 June 1995) was a draper in Enniskillen, County Fermanagh, who became known internationally as a peace campaigner during the Troubles in Northern Ireland. On 8 November 1987 a bomb planted by the Provisional IRA exploded during Enniskillen's Remembrance Day parade, injuring Wilson and fatally injuring his ...
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