EPISODE · Oct 8, 2018 · 12 MIN
Grainne and Michael
from '68 · host BBC Radio Foyle
Grainne and Michael were students in Belfast and had travelled to Derry to join the march - they recall what they saw that day.Most historians agree that if the start of the Troubles can be traced to one time and place, it is the civil rights march on Duke Street in Londonderry on the 5th October 1968. The demonstration had been banned by the government and when it went ahead police turned water cannon on the protestors and beat them with batons. Footage was beamed around the world – and in the space of a few hours life in Northern Ireland changed utterly.To mark its 50th anniversary, BBC Radio Foyle captures eyewitness accounts from people who were on the march, those who were opposed, and those who remember conditions and the atmosphere in Derry in the weeks beforehand.Each episode tells a different story from a different perspective, providing an invaluable oral history archive of this key moment in our shared history.
What this episode covers
Grainne and Michael were students in Belfast and had travelled to Derry to join the march - they recall what they saw that day.Most historians agree that if the start of the Troubles can be traced to one time and place, it is the civil rights march on Duke Street in Londonderry on the 5th October 1968. The demonstration had been banned by the government and when it went ahead police turned water cannon on the protestors and beat them with batons. Footage was beamed around the world – and in the space of a few hours life in Northern Ireland changed utterly.To mark its 50th anniversary, BBC Radio Foyle captures eyewitness accounts from people who were on the march, those who were opposed, and those who remember conditions and the atmosphere in Derry in the weeks beforehand.Each episode tells a different story from a different perspective, providing an invaluable oral history archive of this key moment in our shared history.
NOW PLAYING
Grainne and Michael
No transcript for this episode yet