Photos of hero found at city building site
Builders had moved into the Belfast Metropolitan College building on College Square East with the job of converting it into student accommodation.
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Hide AdInstead, they discovered a memento from a long-passed wartime era.
Photographs of teachers and students in uniform who had enlisted to fight in World War One were found.
These photos, discovered covered in dust in a box, shed light on a chapter of the college’s history indelibly tied to the events of 100 years ago.
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Hide AdFormer staff member and historian of the college Henry Bell said: “I think those photos are there so relatives could come into this college as a kind of memorial and look at them.
“You’ve officers, you’ve people who have medals and honours and you’ve just got the ordinary boys who lost their lives maybe in a ship in the Battle of Jutland.
“You’ve got the strange case of somebody who ended up in the Italian Army, somebody who ended up in the Australian Camel Corps.”
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Hide AdAmong the young men captured in the photographs is Billy McFadzean, the first soldier from the 36th Ulster Division to die at the Somme on the morning of 1 July, 1916.
The Lurgan soldier was posthumously awarded the Victoria Cross.
“He had been assigned to bomb distribution,” said David Brown, a Somme history researcher. “His job was to distribute bombs to other men in the trenches who were going to use them in attacking the enemy.
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Hide Ad“He lifted a box, which were secured by ropes, and one of the ropes broke off.
“Two of the bombs fell out of the box, the pins came off the bombs and dropped to the floor.
“There was over 600 men in the trench.
“He hadn’t time to think about it. He had about four seconds of his life and all that was left that he could do was to throw himself on top of them and he was blown to smithereens.”
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Hide AdAccording to Henry Bell, it was the political situation at the time, combined with the enthusiasm of some at the college, that would have convinced so many to join the fighting.
“The principal of the college at the time, Frances Forth, was very heavily involved with the military.
“He would’ve probably held meetings in this hall encouraging boys in those heady days of 1914 to go off and fight for their king and country.
“So, in a way, it (the photos) is part very much of the history not just of the war but what was happening here politically between 1912 and 1914.”