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SORROWING MOTHERS.—Lieutenant-Colonel David Anderson, Commander of the Royal Highland Fusiliers in Ulster, meeting a deputation of mothers outside the Girdwood Barracks, Belfast. The women expressed their sorrow for the three young Fusiliers who were murdered by I.R.A. gunmen, and presented a cheque for over £200 which had been collected for the soldiers’ relatives. The photograph shows the leader of the deputation, Mrs M. Cooly, breaking down after the presentation.

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https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/CHP19710324.2.115

Bibliographic details

Press, Volume CXI, Issue 32563, 24 March 1971, Page 21

Word Count
69

SORROWING MOTHERS.—Lieutenant-Colonel David Anderson, Commander of the Royal Highland Fusiliers in Ulster, meeting a deputation of mothers outside the Girdwood Barracks, Belfast. The women expressed their sorrow for the three young Fusiliers who were murdered by I.R.A. gunmen, and presented a cheque for over £200 which had been collected for the soldiers’ relatives. The photograph shows the leader of the deputation, Mrs M. Cooly, breaking down after the presentation. Press, Volume CXI, Issue 32563, 24 March 1971, Page 21

SORROWING MOTHERS.—Lieutenant-Colonel David Anderson, Commander of the Royal Highland Fusiliers in Ulster, meeting a deputation of mothers outside the Girdwood Barracks, Belfast. The women expressed their sorrow for the three young Fusiliers who were murdered by I.R.A. gunmen, and presented a cheque for over £200 which had been collected for the soldiers’ relatives. The photograph shows the leader of the deputation, Mrs M. Cooly, breaking down after the presentation. Press, Volume CXI, Issue 32563, 24 March 1971, Page 21