McMahon killings | |
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Part of the Irish War of Independence and The Troubles (1920–1922) | |
Location | Kinnaird Terrace, Belfast, Northern Ireland |
Coordinates | 54°36′40″N 05°56′16″W / 54.61111°N 5.93778°W |
Date | 24 March 1922 01:20 (GMT) |
Target | Catholic civilians |
Attack type | Mass shooting |
Weapons | Revolvers |
Deaths | 6 |
Injured | 2 |
Perpetrators | Ulster Special Constabulary (alleged) |
The McMahon killings or the McMahon murders occurred on 24 March 1922 when six Catholic civilians were shot dead at the home of the McMahon family in Belfast, Northern Ireland.[1] A group of police officers broke into their house at night and shot all eight males inside, in an apparent sectarian attack. The victims were businessman Owen McMahon, four of his sons, and one of his employees. Two others were shot but survived, and a female family member was assaulted. The survivors said most of the gunmen wore police uniform and it is suspected they were members of the Ulster Special Constabulary (USC). It is believed to have been a reprisal for the Irish Republican Army's (IRA) killing of two policemen on May Street, Belfast the day before.[2]
Northern Ireland had been created ten months before, in the midst of the Irish War of Independence. A truce ended the war in most of Ireland; but sectarian conflict in Belfast, and fighting in border areas, continued. Northern Ireland's police – especially the USC, which was almost wholly Protestant and unionist – were implicated in a number of attacks on Catholic and Irish nationalist civilians as reprisal for IRA actions. A week later, six more Catholics were killed in another reprisal attack.