April 15

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Today is the 13 the anniversary of the Hillsbrough disaster. A very sad day for all football fans and thought that it was worth a mention here.

-- Anonymous, April 15, 2002

Answers

Thanks Kegs. Important to never forget that dreadful day.

-- Anonymous, April 15, 2002

too easy to forget

it is very hard to try and explain to Ben what it was all about as he wasn't even born at the time. He has never been to a game where he has had to stand, has only once seen police out of control, has no sense of match day crush, it luckily seems like a different world to him

-- Anonymous, April 15, 2002


an appropriate reason for a minute's silence

-- Anonymous, April 15, 2002

Unless my memory is faulty, think we were playing Arsenal that afternoon. I was there and, like many others, had a little radio. The game at Highbury, obviously, meant nothing as the terrible news spread around the ground.

BBC anniversary report from 1999:

BBC Radio 5 Live's Mark Jones reported from Liverpool on the tenth anniversary of the Hillsborough disaster. Every year on 15 April, thousands of people converge on Liverpool's Kop. They come to stand and remember the 96 football fans who died at Hillsborough.

1999 marked the tenth anniversary of the disaster which changed the face of football in Britain.

In 1989, thousands of football fans, young and old, men and women, made the journey from Liverpool and from Nottingham to watch their respective teams.

Ninety-six of them never returned home.

Exactly why South Yorkshire Police officers opened the gates and allowed fans into the Leppings Lane end terraces minutes before kick- off has been debated ever since by the families of those who died.

But the facts are plain: the fans, desperate to see their heroes tried to get inside. A gate was opened and the fans moved towards a central section of the terrace which was already full to bursting point.

In the crush that followed, 96 people were killed. As the full horror became apparent, the referee stopped the game and ordered the players off the pitch.

The time was six minutes past three.

On Thursday 15 April 1999, families, friends and supporters alike gathered at the home of Liverpool Football Club, Anfield, to mark the tenth anniversary of the Hillsborough tragedy. Since the disaster, the victims have been remembered at Anfield with an eternal flame at a memorial alongside the Shankly gates.

Now their memory will also be kept in mind at the scene of the tragedy itself after the unveiling of a memorial plaque bearing each of their names.

You only get a full image of the tragedy when you see the list of names. Ten-year-old Jon-Paul Gilhooley - he would be 20.

And then there were the families where more than one person died. Gary and Stephen Harrison, Carl and Nick Hewitt, Thomas and Tommy Howard, Christopher and Martin Traynor and two sisters, Sarah and Victoria Hicks.

The memorial service was led by the Rt Rev James Jones, the Bishop of Liverpool who invited the audience them to sing Abide With Me.

Clergy from the Liverpool area read out the names of those that died. As they do so a candle was lit in memory of that person.

At 1506 BST a minute's silence was held and thousands of people throughout the city, unable to attend the service, also observed the moment of quiet reflection.

The service was concluded with an impassioned plea from Trevor Hicks, Chairman of the Hillsborough Family Support Group, asking for justice for the victims of the disaster.

A joint statement issued by the Rt Rev Jones and other Merseyside and Region church leaders - the Rev Keith Hobbs, Moderator of the Free Churches, and the Most Rev Patrick Kelly, the Archbishop of Liverpool - called upon the whole community of Liverpool to pray for the bereaved.

It said: "This important occasion provides a time for reflection on what has happened since that tragedy.

"Nothing can ever make up for the loss of people near and dear to us. The greatest memorial to those who died is to ensure that such an incident will never be repeated."

Father Desmond Power, Parish Priest of the St Paschal Baylon Roman Catholic Church, conducted the funerals of James Aspinall and Graham Wright.

He said: "My earnest prayer is that someone will at long last admit responsibility for a tragedy that should not have invited the slander of the press but the honest confession of mistakes.

"Only with this can the grief of so many families be assuaged."

Just as Americans can remember where they were when Kennedy was shot, football fans from around the globe can remember when they heard about Hillsborough.

But for the bereaved, the tenth anniversary was just a date like any other - they still wake up every day and have to deal with the loss of a loved one.

They had gone to watch a game of football on a bright spring day and they never came back.



-- Anonymous, April 15, 2002


Remember it well - big queues at Highbury, turnstyles closed but just jump over lads, I just can't take anymore money - great we thought. Half time & does anyone know the score, Everton & Luton I think, Everton were winning but no score between Forest & Liverpool. Some sort of trouble someone said, bloody scousers I thought, got us kicked out of Europe at Heysel and they're at it again. I felt guilty for thinking it when we got back, it could have been us but in those days Highbury was a rareity in that it didn't have fences, ironically that was a reason for the FA not to use Highbury for the semis.

-- Anonymous, April 15, 2002


Dave, your "bloody scousers" remark struck a chord because that is exactly what I thought when I first heard the news. I was actually in a rickety old stand at Chesterfield at the time [had just walked to the ground with Tony Benn and had a natter to him about identity cards for fans - name dropper!]. When I got home that night and saw the full horror of it all on the news I just sat and cried.

-- Anonymous, April 15, 2002

Wasn't Bradford just a couple of weeks before?

-- Anonymous, April 15, 2002

Bradford was 11 May 1985 - 4 years before! Norwich 0 Toon 0 - last match of the season - garbage. I had on more than one occasion, sat in that stand at Bradford and looked onto the open area under the seats where everyone threw their rubbish and thought - I hope they don't have a fire here. Everyone knew that was a disaster waiting to happen. It's a scandal the club did nowt about it for years.

-- Anonymous, April 15, 2002

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