View from our stateroom; we were docked about 2.5 miles from the city center of Belfast, Northern Ireland |
Beacon of Hope (2007, by Andy Scott) holds a "ring of thanksgiving" that gives rise to the nickname of "Nuala with the Hula [hoop]" |
Waterfront Hall (1995-1997, by Peter McGuckin of the firm Robinson McIlwaine) is a conference and entertainment center |
Richardson & Owden's Warehouse (1869, by William H Lynn, in Ruskinian-Venetian Italian Palazzo style), a linen warehouse mentioned by Oscar Wilde as one beautiful building |
Titanic Memorial (1913-1920, by Sir Thomas Brock) memorialized the 22 men from Belfast involved in the building and maintenance of the RMS Titanic, who lost their lives when the ship sank in 1912 |
23 Bedford Street (1871) was another linen warehouse (KSS) |
University Road Methodist Church (1865, by William J Barre) with its "Lombard-Venetian- Romanesque" campanile/bell tower (KSS) |
Former Elmwood Presbyterian Church (1860-1862, by John Corry in eclectic Italianate style) is now a concert hall at Queen's University (KSS) |
Malone Road upscale terraced housing |
Ulster Bank Building with Flying Figures (1964, by Dame Elisabeth Frink) |
We drove by block after block of the peace lines or peace walls in West Belfast; covered with protest murals (KSS) |
The murals began about 2000, and are constantly being covered by new ones; they include protests from around the globe (2021 murals) (KSS) |
From Divis Street and then Northumberland Street with its Solidarity Wall (KSS) |
Mural with Nelson Mandela (KSS) |
Solidarity Wall mural (KSS) |
The Socialists don't want division along religious lines (KSS) |
Solidarity between Nationalists and Palestinians (2012) (KSS) |
Frederick Douglass Mural "In Progress" (Myanmar’s Aung San Suu Kyi has been crossed out to protest persecution of the Rohingya in the country) (KSS) |
On Northumberland Street we pass through a gate to the Unionist side, then turn on Beverly Street |
Now on Cupar Way, with more graffiti |
Peace Wall Stories (2021, by Stephen Wilson) can be heard through a smartphone app |
Another Ulster Volunteer Force mural |
Rex Bar (1865) was frequented by members of the Ulster Volunteer Force (perhaps both iterations!) |
Bayardo Bar Memorial to the victims of the bombing of the bar by the Provisional Irish Republican Army/IRA in 1975 (KSS) |
Anti-Sinn Féin (political party of the IRA) mural (KSS) |
Former Crumlin Road Courthouse (1850, by Charles Lanyon in Neoclassical style) is across the road from the jail and is connected by an underground passage (KSS) |
Entrance to the former Crumlin Road Goal/Jail (1843-1845, by Charles Lanyon; with an execution chamber added in 1901 and used until 1961) |
The officially named HM Prison Belfast housed prisoners from both sides of "The Troubles" that lasted essentially from 1968-1998 |
Next: Belfast II.
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