Green Park Tube Station Bombing

Green Park Tube Station Bombing
Part of the Troubles
Location Green Park, Piccadilly, London
Date 9 October 1975
21:00 (GMT)
Attack type
Time Bomb
Weapons gelignite bomb
Deaths 1
Non-fatal injuries
20
Perpetrators Provisional IRA

The Green Park Tube Station Bombing was a bomb attack which occurred on 9 October 1975 in Green Park, London and was carried out by the IRA's "Balcombe Street Gang". The attack left one man dead (23-year-old Graham Ronald Tuck) and injured 20 others. The attack occurred during a period of heightend activity by the IRA in England and in particular London.

Background

The Irish Troubles the religious & political conflict in the North of Ireland had been ongoing since the late 1960s. The conflict greatly intensified after January 1972 when British Paratroopers shot dead 14 Irish nationalists and injured 14 others on what became known as Bloody Sunday. After Bloody Sunday recruits flooded in to join mostly the Provisional IRA but also the less active Official IRA as well. Up until February 1972 the conflict largely remained in Northern Ireland with the violence sometimes spilling into the Republic of Ireland but in revenge for Bloody Sunday the Official IRA bombed the headquarters of the British Parachute Regiment killing seven civilian workers. In March 1973 the Provisional IRA bombed England for the first time when they bombed the Old Bailey courthouse in the center of London killing one person & injuring over 200. During the summer of 1974 the IRA launched a string of attacks in England which included a letter bomb campaign and the bombing of Westminster Hall.[1][2] In October 1974 a new more intense bombing campaign was launched in England by the IRA ASU known as the Balcombe Street gang. This new bombing offensive began on 5 October 1974 when the IRA bombed two pubs in Guildford killing 5 people & injuring 65 others.[3] A month later in November 1974 they bombed a pub in Woolwich often used by soldiers killing 2 people & injuring 40.[4] In February 1975 the IRA agreed to a long term truce with the British government.[5] The truce officially lasted until January 1976 but the IRA in London broke the truce on 27 August 1975 when they bombed a pub Caterham injuring over 30 people.[6] A month before the Green Park bombing the IRA unit bombed the Hilton Hotel in London on 5 September 1975 which killed 2 people and injured over 60 others.[7]

Bombing

At around 21:00 GMT on 9 October 1975 a bomb planted at a bus stop just outside Green Park tube station exploded killing a homeless man, who died of a heart attack after receiving severe head and chest injuries. 20 other people, including two children, were injured, the majority of the injuries were the result of flying glass hitting passers-by. The force of the blast threw pedestrians off their feet, shattered shop windows across the road and blew cars onto the pavement. The attack occurred almost exactly one year after Guildfor pub bombings of October 1974. The force of the explosion threw cutlery and glassware from the tables of diners in the Ritz Hotel across the road, customers escaped injury because the main restaurant bore the brunt of the blast had been emptied to make way for an earlier wedding reception during the day.[8][9][10]

Aftermath

The IRA's bombing campaign in London would continue their campaign killing several more people and injuring dozens more in bomb and gun attacks. The worst of these was the bombing at Walton's restaurant in November which killed 2 people and injured over 20 others.[11] The active service unit was caught at the siege of Balcombe Street in December 1975 ending its campaign in London.[12]

See also

References

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