Belfast Troubles Self Guided Walking Tour

New Tour
Cathedral Quarter, Belfast, UK
From: €9,99
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(0 review)
Duration

2 Hours

Tour Type

Daily Tour

Group Size

Unlimited

Languages

English, French, German, Spanish

About this tour

Walk through Belfast’s divided neighborhoods and discover the real stories behind The Troubles with this immersive self-guided audio tour. Experience Belfast’s most significant historical sites across 29 stops over 2-3 hours. Perfect for history enthusiasts and curious travelers wanting to understand Northe... Read more

Sample Tour Audio

Cathedral Quarter
St Patrick's Church
Carlisle Memorial Church

Highlights

  • See the famous hunger striker mural that became a global symbol of Irish resistance
  • Touch concrete barriers covered in messages from visitors like Clinton and Mandela
  • Explore the infamous prison where enemies shared cells then governed together later
  • Stand where Troubles began in 1969 when loyalist mobs burned down Catholic homes
  • Visit Europa Hotel attacked 30 times but never closed during the violent conflict
  • Walk through Europe's largest outdoor gallery of revolutionary murals and street art
  • Experience gates separating communities that still lock shut every evening at 10pm
  • Honor victims in peaceful garden where loyalist community remembers their fallen
  • Enter Clonard where priests held secret talks leading to the historic 1994 ceasefire
  • Touch real bullet holes from 1969 gun battles still visible in brick walls today
  • Finish at Ulster Museum with free Troubles exhibits and peaceful Botanic Gardens!

Included/Excluded

  • Access to the Explore Belfast Troubles Self Guided Walking Tour on our App
  • 25+ narration points of popular locations in Belfast
  • Detailed directions to both well-known attractions and hidden spots
  • Fully offline map – no need for Wi-Fi or data.
  • Audio Guide
  • In Person Guide
  • Entry fee of The CRUMLIN ROAD GAOL ($13.99)

Tour Stops

Cathedral Quarter

Begin at St. Anne's Cathedral beneath the 40m Spire of Hope. Introduction to Belfast's 30-year conflict between Unionists (British/Protestant) and Nationalists (Irish/Catholic). Two cities, one space.

St Patrick's Church

Belfast's oldest Catholic church (200+ years) lost 100 parishioners during Troubles. Prince Charles visited, calling for peace. Represents centuries of religious division dating to 1688 Protestant victory.

Carlisle Memorial Church

Former 'Methodist Cathedral' closed in 1980 due to violence. Located at crossroads of Catholic/Protestant areas. Built during Belfast's industrial peak, now restored as community hub after decades.

Crumlin Road Gaol

The Crum: 150-year prison housing 25,000 inmates. During Troubles, IRA and loyalist prisoners shared cells. Scene of escapes, bombings, executions. Now a wedding venue - transformation symbol.

Shankill Road - The Loyalist Heartland

Protestant working-class area with British flags and painted curbs. Built on shipyard/linen mill jobs. 1993 IRA fish shop bombing killed 9 civilians, becoming a Troubles turning point.

Shankill Memorial Garden

West Kirk Presbyterian Church built by displaced congregations. Memorial garden honors loyalist victims with wreaths, flags. July 12th Orange Order parades celebrate 1690 Protestant victory.

The Peace Wall

Built 1969 as temporary barrier, now 50+ years old. One of 100+ peace walls across Belfast. Gates close nightly. Covered in graffiti, messages from global visitors like Clinton, Mandela.

Peace Gates Belfast

Lanark Way Peace Gate: 4m tall, opens 6am-10:30pm daily. Built 1988 during peak violence. 2021 riots reminded that past tensions remain. Murals now cover steel with peace messages.

Bombay Street

Site of August 1969 destruction when loyalist mobs burned 7 homes. Families fled with only clothes. Quiet residential road today, but holds pivotal moment when Troubles truly began.

Clonard Martyrs Memorial Garden

Phoenix memorial rising from stone symbolizes community rebirth after Bombay Street destruction. Sacred ground for republicans honoring IRA volunteers and civilian victims of conflict.

Kashmir Road

End of Bombay Street where destruction spread in 1969. Turn toward Peace Wall shows how ordinary residential areas became battlegrounds during sectarian violence and community displacement.

Clonard Monastery

Red-brick Catholic landmark at crossroads of Falls/Shankill. 1969 sanctuary for fleeing families. Secret peace talks venue in 1980s-90s. Fr. Reid and Reynolds helped broker 1994 ceasefire.

Bloody Sunday

January 30, 1972: British Paras killed 13 unarmed civil rights protesters in Derry. Cover-up followed. Shattered faith in peaceful reform, drove hundreds to join IRA, escalated Troubles.

Bobby Sands Mural

Iconic portrait of IRA hunger striker who died 1981 protesting criminalization. Elected MP while starving. Mural shows phoenix, broken chains, quote: "Our revenge will be laughter of children."

 Falls Road - The Nationalist Heartland

Irish Belfast: tricolors, Gaelic signs, green/white/orange curbs. Working-class Catholic area excluded from jobs/housing/voting. Garden of Remembrance honors republican dead and civilians.

Solidarity Wall and Republican Murals

Europe's biggest open-air gallery. International solidarity murals support Palestine, Cuba, global liberation movements. Community-painted political art, education, and tribute to shared struggles.

 St. Comgall's School

Site of first major IRA gun battle, 1969. Bullet holes still visible in walls. Once defensive post during violence, now transformed into vibrant community hub serving local families.

Divis Tower

Concrete giant housing British Army observation post 1969-2005. Military surveillance over Catholic Falls Road created constant tension. Symbol of occupation now transformed to residential use.

 Escalation and Peak Violence

1970s war: 10,000+ bombs, 37,000 shootings, 3,700+ dead, 50,000 injured. IRA went global, loyalist paramilitaries responded. Shankill bombing, Greysteel pub attack examples of peak brutality.

The Path to Peace Begins

1980s-90s shift: Bobby Sands MP election, Enniskillen bombing backlash, secret Adams-Hume talks. 1994 IRA ceasefire after Warrington child deaths. Peace possible through politics discovered.

Europa Hotel

Europe's most bombed hotel (30+ attacks) never closed. Journalists' headquarters during Troubles. Clinton stayed 1995, legitimizing peace process. Symbol of resilience and international confidence.

An Incomplete Peace

Good Friday Agreement 1998: 70% NI, 90% Ireland voted yes. Power-sharing began but divisions remained. Schools, housing still segregated. 90% opposed removing peace walls in 2012 survey.

Walls Still Standing, New Challenges

Brexit disrupted fragile peace. Irish Sea border angered unionists, hard border threatened nationalists. 2023 attacks show tensions persist. Children still grow up in separate communities.

Final Reflection

Past Queen's University toward tour end. Belfast proves deepest hatreds can heal through courage, compromise. Former enemies now govern together. Walls stand but hearts/minds no longer divided.

Ulster Museum

Tour finale at Northern Ireland's largest museum. Edwardian-modern architecture houses ancient artifacts to Troubles footage. Free entry. Adjacent Botanic Gardens offer peaceful reflection space.

Durations

2- 3 hours

Languages

English
French
German
Spanish

Tour Type

Walking Tour

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