• 29 March – Ruby Johnson, a 38 year old Protestant civilian from Ballintemple near
Newtownhamilton in south Armagh, died seven weeks after suffering serious burns when the bus she was a passenger in was attacked by a gang of youths during trouble at the Ring Road area of the city. The inquest into her death heard that at least two
petrol bombs were thrown through the windows of the
Ulsterbus, setting her alight after the vehicle was engulfed in flames. Journalist
Sean O'Hagan, who grew up in Armagh and whose father witnessed the incident, 30 years later wrote a piece on her death for
the Guardian. • 26 April – Lawrence Jubb, a 22 year old soldier with the
Royal Engineers and from
Doncaster, England, died when the recovery lorry he was driving overturned and trapped him and two other soldiers after it was stoned by children near the entrance to the Drumarg estate. According to the book Lost Lives, which chronicles every death in the Troubles up until the year 1999, local people were reported as attempting to rescue the trapped soldiers, including a nurse whose husband was a republican prisoner in the
Long Kesh prison camp at the time. • 7 August – In the third incident of its kind to take place within a small area of the city that year, Geoffrey Knipe, a 24 year old soldier from
Bradford, England serving with the
Royal Dragoon Guards was killed when youths said to be between the ages of 10 and 17 attacked his vehicle with stones at the Ring Road flyover, with one brick smashing through the front windscreen of his vehicle and hitting him on the head, killing him instantly. • 25 October – John Michael Morrell, a 32 year old soldier from
Macclesfield, England died 10 days after being injured in a
Provisional IRA booby-trap explosion at a house in the heavily republican Drumarg estate which injured him and four other soldiers from the
South Staffordshire Regiment. Lost Lives, the chronology which attempts to list the name of everyone who died in the Troubles, mistakenly lists his death as having occurred in south Armagh. • 15 December – Frederick Greeves, a 40 year old member of the
Ulster Defence Regiment (UDR) was shot dead on the Moy Road by the
Official IRA outside the factory that he worked in. in 1974 a man was sentenced to life in prison for his killing. • 18 December – William Johnson, a 48 year old local elected councillor for the
Ulster Unionist Party and a member of the
Police Authority, is found shot dead near the
border after being taken by the
Provisional IRA from a house in the Drumarg estate, where he had been carrying out work. Another man who had been abducted with him but later released unharmed, told a court that the gunmen who were questioning them in a vacant house in
County Monaghan searched both men and found documents relating to the Police Authority on Johnston. According to Lost Lives, which chronicles the deaths of those who died in the Troubles, this is the likely reason that Johnston was shot dead. == 1973 ==