McQuirt's memorial stone was erected in 1995 in an
Anglican graveyard in Donaghcloney, where McQuirt was born. But his remains are not in this graveyard. McQuirt died in Erney Street off the
Shankill Road,
Belfast, 5 October 1888, and no one knew where he was buried. In 1993, an employee of
Belfast City Council, Robert Burns, found McQuirt's registration and burial site in a Catholic plot of the
Belfast City Cemetery. As there was no gravestone Burns contacted the Sherwood Foresters Museum in England and they proposed to pay for a stone. When Burns asked for permission to erect the stone in the graveyard the Catholic Church refused permission, claiming the plot was a poor plot with many other remains in the grave. Bernard lived in obscurity at 72 Urney Street. Robert then approached the City Council for permission to erect the memorial stone on a wall in Urney Street (off Shankill Road) were Bernard McQuirt VC died in 1888. This was also rejected. Then Robert approached locals from Donaghcloney to erect the memorial stone in the local village square beside the
World War I and
World War II war memorial. This was also rejected. Finally a local
Church of Ireland Minister offered Burns access to the local Donaghcloney Church graveyard to erect the memorial stone. In 2000 a
British Army colour party from a regiment based in
Northern Ireland finally dedicated the stone in memory of Bernard McQuirt VC. The inscription on the stone states: ''Sacred to the memory of Private Bernard McQuirt VC 95th The Derbyshire Regiment who won the regiment's first VC at ROWA CENTRAL INDIA 6th January 1858 he died 5 October 1888 "NINETY – FIVE"'' ==References==