Northern Ireland 1965-1969: reform, civil rights and crisis
The years 1965 to 1969 were transformative for Northern Ireland. A reforming unionist Prime Minister, a civil rights movement inspired by America, and a loyalist backlash combined to bring Northern Ireland to the edge of civil war by August 1969. CCEA examiners expect you to understand the causes of the civil rights movement, its key events, and why reform collapsed into violence.
Background: Northern Ireland since Partition
Since the partition of Ireland in 1921, Northern Ireland had been governed exclusively by the Ulster Unionist Party (UUP). The Stormont parliament at Belfast was dominated by Protestants and unionists; Catholics and nationalists were a permanent minority with little political power.
Catholics faced systematic disadvantage:
- Housing: local councils (controlled by unionists) allocated public housing in ways that favoured Protestants and maintained electoral boundaries (gerrymandering).
- Employment: discrimination in both public and private sector employment meant Catholics had disproportionately high unemployment rates.
- Voting: the local government franchise was based on property — "one house, one vote" — which disadvantaged Catholics who were more likely to be in rented accommodation. Many Catholics had no vote in local elections. Some businessmen had multiple votes.
- The B-Specials: the Ulster Special Constabulary, a part-time police force that was almost entirely Protestant and associated with intimidation of Catholics.
Terence O'Neill's reforms 1963-1969
Terence O'Neill became Prime Minister of Northern Ireland in 1963. He was a modernising unionist who believed that improving the economic and social position of Catholics would stabilise Northern Ireland and reduce the appeal of Irish nationalism.
His key initiatives:
- Met Taoiseach Sean Lemass in Belfast (1965) — the first meeting between the two heads of government since partition. Hugely symbolic; deeply alarming to hardline unionists.
- Announced a programme of economic reform and new university expansion.
- Made gestures of community relations — visiting Catholic schools, sympathising publicly with Catholics.
O'Neill's problem: his reforms were too slow and too cautious to satisfy nationalists and Catholics, but too radical for hardline unionists (notably Ian Paisley and William Craig) who saw any concession to Catholics as a betrayal of Ulster Protestant identity.
The Northern Ireland Civil Rights Association (NICRA)
Inspired by the American civil rights movement and Martin Luther King's non-violent tactics, the Northern Ireland Civil Rights Association (NICRA) was founded in 1967. Its demands were modest and civic:
- One man, one vote in local government elections.
- An end to gerrymandering of electoral boundaries.
- Fair allocation of public housing.
- Disbanding of the B-Specials.
- Repeal of the Special Powers Act (which allowed internment without trial).
- A complaints procedure against the police.
These were not demands for a united Ireland — they were demands for equal citizenship within Northern Ireland. This distinction was important but often lost in the polarised atmosphere.
Key events 1968-1969
5 October 1968 — Derry civil rights march: A NICRA march in Derry was banned by Home Affairs Minister William Craig. When marchers proceeded, the RUC used batons and water cannon. Brutal scenes were broadcast internationally — the moment NI's internal problem became an international story. Gerry Fitt MP was beaten; footage shocked a global audience.
People's Democracy march — Burntollet (January 1969): A student march from Belfast to Derry was ambushed at Burntollet Bridge by loyalist counter-demonstrators, some of whom were off-duty members of the B-Specials. Police protection was inadequate. Marchers were beaten with iron bars and stones; some were pushed into the river. The Burntollet ambush radicalised opinion on both sides.
The Battle of the Bogside (12-14 August 1969): Following loyalist marches in Derry, intense rioting erupted in the nationalist Bogside area. For three days, residents fought the RUC behind barricades, declaring "Free Derry" — a no-go zone for police. Simultaneously, violence erupted across Belfast. The RUC was overwhelmed.
Deployment of the British Army (14-15 August 1969): The Stormont government requested and the Westminster government deployed the British Army to restore order. Soldiers initially received a cautious welcome from some nationalists, who saw them as preferable to the RUC and B-Specials.
O'Neill's fall
The violence destroyed O'Neill's position. He had called a general election in February 1969 to seek a mandate for reform — a gamble that failed. He resigned in April 1969. His successor, James Chichester-Clark, faced an impossible position: defending a reformed Northern Ireland that had already descended into communal violence.
Why did reform fail?
- Too slow, too late: O'Neill's reforms were insufficient and unaccompanied by enforcement against discriminatory practices.
- Loyalist resistance: Paisley and hardline unionists mobilised against any concession, applying pressure from within and outside the UUP.
- Civil rights radicalisation: some within the movement moved beyond NICRA's moderate demands; the People's Democracy group (influenced by socialist politics) was more confrontational.
- RUC and B-Specials: police violence against peaceful marchers destroyed any nationalist trust in state institutions.
- The re-emergence of the IRA: as violence escalated, a new Provisional IRA began to organise, changing the dynamic entirely.
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