The Troubles had been ongoing in
Northern Ireland and to a lesser extent in the
Republic of Ireland since the late 1960s. Rioting, protests, gun battles, sniper attacks, bombings and
punishment beatings became part of everyday life in many places in Northern Ireland, especially in the poorer working class areas of
Belfast and
Derry. These events and others helped to heighten sectarianism and boosted recruitment into
Irish republican and
Ulster loyalist paramilitary groups and the
security forces; mainly the newly created
Ulster Defence Regiment. England had been relatively untouched from the violence up until the beginning of 1973, but the
IRA Army Council had drawn up plans for a bombing campaign to take place in England some time early in 1973. In the late 1960s and early 1970s, loyalist paramilitaries had bombed
Dublin and other parts of the Republic of Ireland a number of times before the IRA began its bombing campaign in England. Following
the Dublin bombings in late 1972 and in January 1973 carried out by Loyalists which killed three people and injured over 150, the media attention these bombings received helped the IRA decide to take its campaign to Britain in return.
Billy McKee explained to journalist Peter Taylor that another reason the IRA brought their campaign to England was that the IRA had decided to bomb England early if there was an emergency in the IRA and it began to weaken in Ireland. The arrest of top IRA personnel in both the Republic and Northern Ireland like
Máire Drumm,
Seán Mac Stíofáin,
Ruairí Ó Brádaigh and
Martin McGuinness in late 1972 helped to convince the IRA to bomb England to take the heat off of the IRA in Ireland. The IRA selected the
volunteers who would constitute the ASU for the England bombing operation, which was scheduled to take place on 8 March 1973, the same day that a
border poll – boycotted by Nationalists and Roman Catholics – was being held in Belfast. Volunteers from all three of the IRA's Belfast Brigade Battalions were selected for the bombing mission, the team included 19-year-old
Gerry Kelly (a future Sinn Féin MLA), 24-year-old
Robert "Roy" Walsh (an expert bomb maker from Belfast),
Hugh Feeney (a Belfast-born IRA volunteer and explosives expert), and two sisters,
Marian, 19, and
Dolours Price, 22, from Belfast who were from a staunchly Republican family, along with five other lesser-known volunteers from Belfast: Martin Brady, 22, William Armstrong, 29, Paul Holmes, 19, William McLarnon, 19, and Roisin McNearney, 18. ==Bombing==