Remembering IRA Volunteer Billy Reid

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Remembering IRA Volunteer Billy Reid
Remembering IRA Volunteer Billy Reid who was killed during an ambush on British forces in Academy Street in the centre of Belfast, on the 15th May 1971.

Reid grew up in Regent Street in the Carrickhill area of North Belfast. Reid attended schools in the North Belfast area and then became a joiner by trade. Reid enjoyed cycling, art and music and played the trumpet as well as writing his own songs. Reid also boxed at an amateur level for the Holy Family Club in Belfast.
Reid is reported to have shot dead Gunner Robert Curtis of the British Army in Belfast on 6 February 1971, making Curtis the first British soldier to be killed in Ireland since the 1920s.
Gunner Curtis's shooting is seen as the beginning of the all-out war between the Provisional Irish Republican Army and British forces. The day after the shooting of Curtis, the Unionist Prime Minister, Major James Chichester-Clark stated that "Northern Ireland was at war with the Irish Republican Army Provisionals". The following week, following clashes at an IRA funeral in north Belfast, the Stormont government, which at that time was responsible for security in Northern Ireland banned the wearing of military style uniforms by "subversive organisations".
Reid is the subject of a well known song called "The Ballad of Billy Reid" which was written to tell the story of Reid and which has been recorded by a number of bands including Shebeen, Spirit of 67 and The Wolfe Tones.[6] The song was also included in the songbook "Songs of Resistance 1968-1982".
A mural of depicting Billy and other Irish republicans Sean McIlvenna, Rosemary Bleakley and Michael Kane is painted on the New Lodge Road in

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