Siege of Derry The Siege of Derry was the first major conflict that occurred during the
Williamite War in Ireland. It began when
13 apprentices took the keys for the city's gates and locked them against the advancing forces of the
Earl of Antrim who were loyal to
James II. As Antrim did not have enough men to lay siege to the city, he retreated to
Coleraine. On 18 April 1689, the siege would begin in earnest when forces loyal to the king arrived and ordered the city to surrender. Soon James himself would also arrive and ask the city to surrender, but the city refused. The siege would continue until 1 August when ships carrying food and supplies broke through the boom across the River Foyle and relieved the city. The fact that the city's walls have never been breached gave rise to one of its nicknames; the Maiden City.
The Troubles When the Apprentice Boys March that commemorated the closing of the gates passed through the city in August 1969, some threw pennies from the city walls towards the Catholic majority
Bogside. The march was already seen as provocative to many of the city's Catholic population and, along with the tension that had already been building, rioting broke out that turned into the
Battle of the Bogside. For most of the Troubles, the walls were closed off to the general public. However, in August 1973 an
IRA bomb was detonated on the walls in a successful effort to destroy the Walker Monument. The monument was a 100 ft column and statue of siege hero,
Governor George Walker that had been erected in 1828. Especially given its prominence facing the Bogside, many nationalists found it an offensive symbol of Protestant ascendancy, hence why the IRA targeted it for destruction. The section of the wall that contained the monument remained closed, until it was reopened in 2010 (although the column and statue have never been rebuilt). ==Layout==