William McGrath

William McGrath (11 December 1916 – 1992) was a loyalist from Northern Ireland who founded the far-right organisation Tara in the 1960s, having also been prominent in the Orange Order until his expulsion due to his paedophilia. A house master in Kincora Boys' Home in East Belfast,[1] in 1981 he was jailed for four years for paedophile activities at the Home.[2]

William McGrath
William McGrath at an Orange walk
Born(1916-12-11)11 December 1916
Belfast, Ireland, UK
Died1991 or 1992
NationalityBritish
Other names"The Beast of Kincora"
OccupationPreacher
housemaster
EmployerKincora Boys' Home
OrganizationOrange Order
Known forLoyalist and anti-Catholic activist
Serial child molester
Political partyUlster Unionist Party
MovementTara
Ulster Constitution Defence Committee
Criminal charge(s)Gross indecency, buggery, indecent assault
Criminal penaltyFour years imprisonment
Spouse(s)Kathleen
ChildrenWorthington, Harvey Andrew, Elizabeth Jean Frances

Early years

McGrath was born on 11 December 1916 to a Methodist family living in Earl Street[3] in the Sailortown area of Belfast. McGrath married his English-born wife Kathleen, who served at the nearby Worldwide Evangelisation Crusade, and the two set up home on the Antrim Road before moving to Finaghy.[3] He was a member of the Orange Order and for a time acted as chaplain to the prestigious Fernhill Orange Lodge.[4] McGrath was also a branch member of the Ulster Unionist Party and for a time a delegate to the party, although he did not take a prominent role in party politics.[5]

Their house in Finaghy, a large mansion, was named Faith House and became the centre for the Christian Fellowship and Irish Emancipation Centre which they established in 1941, with rooms made available for young people to stay.[3] McGrath travelled widely throughout Northern Ireland preaching his religious message, which included hard-line Ulster loyalist principles. McGrath claimed that Northern Ireland was on the verge of chaos and blamed it on the Provisional Irish Republican Army's supposed turn to communism, which he saw as the enemy of Christianity.[6] According to the Royal Ulster Constabulary (RUC), as part of his virulent anti-communism, McGrath made contact with clandestine religious groups in Eastern Europe and smuggled in Bibles and religious tracts for their use.[7]

McGrath's message was also highly anti-Catholic, arguing for instance that the Pope had all nuns and priests as part of his private army and that the Society of Jesus was deliberately destroying Ulster Protestant culture.[8] McGrath argued that until the 12th century Ireland had adhered to a local form of Celtic Christianity until Pope Adrian IV had decreed that Henry II of England should invade and force out the native church in favour of what McGrath portrayed as the decadent Roman church. On this basis McGrath added an all-Ireland dimension to his thinking that was at odds with the wider political circles in which he was to move.[8] Amongst his early converts was Roy Garland, a young Shankill Road native, who claims that on their first meeting McGrath twice felt his leg and extolled to him the virtues of close relationships between men.[9]

Tara and loyalism

By the mid-1960s some of McGrath's closest followers, including Garland, had begun to meet at his 15 Wellington Park base (McGrath having shifted operations to the Malone Road in 1960) along with several senior Orangemen in a group known as the "Cell".[10] Clifford Smyth also became part of this cell and grew close to McGrath, stating that at the time he was attracted to his strong anti-Catholic rhetoric.[11] The cell spearheaded a campaign of speeches to Protestant audiences, more political than religious in tone than McGrath's earlier talks, encouraging unionists and loyalists to turn away from the moderate Terence O'Neill and to lend their support to his most vocal political opponent Ian Paisley.[12] McGrath and Paisley differed over the latter's regular attacks on mainstream Protestant churches for their liberalism but McGrath admired Paisley's mobilisation of men and became involved in his Ulster Constitution Defence Committee.[13] Despite their political collaboration, McGrath was not a member of Paisley's Free Presbyterian Church of Ulster[14] although two of his children were married in Paisley's Martyrs Memorial Church.[15]

In 1966, McGrath produced a series of leaflets in defence of Gusty Spence, the leader of the recently formed Ulster Volunteer Force (UVF), who was on remand for the murder of two young Catholics. McGrath's leaflets alleged that both victims were active communists and claimed that the UVF had been established by members of the Official Unionist Party, with Jim Kilfedder named specifically as being involved. The leaflet was an attempt to both smear the mainstream unionist party and to deflect criticism from Paisley, who was at the centre of speculation linking him with the UVF.[16] McGrath was not a member of any established branch of religion, with his evangelical group being independent, something Fraser Agnew put down to McGrath's unwillingness to be constrained by the rules of any organisation.[17]

In November 1966, McGrath reconstituted the Cell as Tara, choosing the name to reflect his belief in the Irish heritage of his politico-religious mission.[18] The group, which endorsed British Israelism, sought to develop a network across unionism.[4] With the UVF under the command of Samuel McClelland in the late 1960s, McGrath sought to forge close links between it and Tara.[19] McGrath's link-up with the UVF saw his profile and that of Tara rise and by the summer of 1969 he had had to acquire a printing press to meet the demand for tracts, flyers and news-sheets.[20] Although initially the two groups co-operated closely, a number of people contacted McClelland to tell him that McGrath was gay and that he was using the Tara-UVF link as a way to pick up young men. McClelland confronted McGrath who fiercely denied the allegations. Nevertheless, the relationship between the UVF and Tara was terminated and McClelland burnt the Tara ledger in which the names of his UVF men had been entered.[21]

According to Martin Dillon, McGrath had influence over Charles Harding Smith and encouraged him to establish the Ulster Defence Association (UDA) in 1971, reasoning that the group could replace the recently disbanded Ulster Special Constabulary.[22] A leaflet distributed amongst loyalists calling for vigilante groups such as the Shankill Defence Association and the Woodvale Defence Association to form into one "army", a document that effectively brought the UDA to life, was actually written by McGrath, according to Chris Moore.[23] Moore further argues that McGrath's MI5 handlers had instructed him to write this document as they hoped to control loyalist counter-insurgency through the UDA.[24] His influence in the UDA in its early years was, according to Dillon, demonstrated by the fate of Ernie Elliott, a leading figure in the early days of the UDA West Belfast Brigade who eventually was killed by another UDA member. Dillon argues that McGrath's secret service handlers implored him to launch a whispering campaign against Elliott, who had flirted with communism and had been rumoured to be seeking a rapprochement with the Official IRA, and that as a result McGrath circulated rumours about Elliott enriching himself from racketeering and illegal drinking dens, rumours that helped to bring about Elliott's downfall.[25]

Although Tara was not active in paramilitary terms like the UDA and UVF, the group continued to exist during the 1970s and in 1974 McGrath even smuggled in a consignment of guns from the Netherlands for them to use in the event of a "doomsday" scenario, which he predicted was coming soon.[26] McGrath also sought to build links with Rhodesia and even sent two members of Tara to join the Rhodesian Army.[27] Further members were settled in South Africa where they would eventually become involved in securing a cache of weapons for the UDA and Ulster Resistance (although McGrath was not involved in this smuggling, which occurred after his imprisonment).[28]

Kincora House

In 1971 McGrath found employment as a housemaster at Kincora Boys' Home in east Belfast.[29] In this role McGrath established the home as a centre of child sex abuse in which he and invited friends, allegedly including John McKeague, regularly raped several of the boys at the home.[30] In the course of the investigation surrounding the scandal, McGrath was dubbed "the Beast of Kincora" and it was alleged he had contacts with prominent politicians and political personalities in England such as Sir Anthony Blunt, who was known to McGrath through their mutual friend Sir Knox Cunningham.[31]

The investigation into the abuse began on 24 January 1980.[32] During the investigations McGrath remained an important figure in his Orange Lodge, the "Ireland's Heritage" Lodge, and in October 1981 was re-elected as secretary, although by this stage membership of the Lodge, which McGrath himself had named as part of his drive for a Protestant all-Ireland, had declined significantly to the point that only three people were regularly attending monthly meetings.[33] McGrath's case came to trial in December 1981 and, represented by Desmond Boal QC, he asked to be rearraigned, after which McGrath pleaded guilty to five charges of gross indecency, two of buggery and eight indecent assault charges.[34] McGrath was sentenced to four years imprisonment.[35]

MI5 allegations

In his 1999 book The Dirty War, Martin Dillon claims that McGrath may have been employed by MI5 since the 1960s, having possessed an in-depth knowledge of loyalist paramilitarism in Northern Ireland.[36] According to Henry McDonald and Jim Cusack, McGrath provided information on fellow loyalists after being blackmailed by MI5, who were aware of his paedophilia but took no action regarding it.[37] Chris Moore argues that McGrath's trade in illicit religious tracts behind the Iron Curtain attracted the attention of MI6, who wanted him to smuggle propaganda into the Eastern Bloc inside the bibles. From this point on, Moore contends, McGrath was associated with various aspects of the British secret service, with MI5 becoming his sole group in the early 1970s.[38]

Later years

From his prison cell in January 1982, McGrath wrote to the Secretary of Ireland's Heritage Lodge (LOL 1303) tendering his resignation, but at their next meeting this was rejected and instead they passed a motion of expulsion against him.[39] His son Worthington McGrath was present at the meeting, at which William McGrath's expulsion was passed unanimously.[40] The Lodge was disbanded the following month, with the membership deciding that its name was too tainted by its association with McGrath to continue.[41]

McGrath was released from prison in December 1983 after serving two years of his sentence, settling in Ballyhalbert.[42] He attempted to regain his membership of the Orange Order but was vetoed consistently in his attempts.[43]

McGrath died in either 1991[44] or 1992.[45] He left behind three children, his sons Worthington and Harvey Andrew and a daughter Elizabeth Jean Frances.[46]

gollark: Maybe make Donald Trump say weird but in-character things which he won't deny later for fear of looking stupid.
gollark: Oh, that's fun too.
gollark: If I found such an exploit and wanted to do moderately evil things, I would probably try and subtly influence Twitter's hive mind by fiddling with likes and such.
gollark: Is 100 kiloeuros "set for life" money, though?
gollark: But ideally somewhat seriously, as opposed to, what, funnily?

References

  1. "Any threat to the majority Is not welcome", Irish News, 8 September 2004. Retrieved 29 October 2009
  2. Dillon, Martin (1999). God and the gun: The church and Irish terrorism. Routledge. ISBN 978-0-415-92363-7.
  3. Chris Moore, The Kincora Scandal: Political Cover-Up and Intrigue in Northern Ireland, Marino Books, 1996, p. 21
  4. Moore, The Kincora Scandal, p. 47
  5. Moore, The Kincora Scandal, pp. 59–60
  6. Moore, The Kincora Scandal, pp. 22–23
  7. Moore, The Kincora Scandal, p. 29
  8. Moore, The Kincora Scandal, p. 24
  9. Moore, The Kincora Scandal, pp. 27–28
  10. Moore, The Kincora Scandal, p. 34
  11. Moore, The Kincora Scandal, pp. 34–38
  12. Moore, The Kincora Scandal, pp. 38–39
  13. Moore, The Kincora Scandal, p. 41
  14. Moore, The Kincora Scandal, pp. 186–187
  15. Moore, The Kincora Scandal, p. 211
  16. Moore, The Kincora Scandal, pp. 42–44
  17. Moore, The Kincora Scandal, p. 60
  18. Moore, The Kincora Scandal, p. 46
  19. Jim Cusack & Henry McDonald, UVF, Poolbeg, 1997, p. 21
  20. Moore, The Kincora Scandal, p. 65
  21. Cusack & McDonald, UVF, pp. 95–96
  22. Martin Dillon, The Trigger Men, Mainstream Publishing, 2003, pp. 173–174
  23. Moore, The Kincora Scandal,pp. 81–82
  24. Moore, The Kincora Scandal, p. 82
  25. Dillon, The Trigger Men, p. 181
  26. Moore, The Kincora Scandal, p. 121
  27. Moore, The Kincora Scandal, pp. 126–129
  28. Moore, The Kincora Scandal, pp. 131–135
  29. Moore, The Kincora Scandal,p. 80
  30. Moore, The Kincora Scandal, pp. 92–114
  31. Moore, The Kincora Scandal, pp. 87–91
  32. Moore, The Kincora Scandal, p. 146
  33. Moore, The Kincora Scandal, p. 176
  34. Moore, The Kincora Scandal, p. 180
  35. Moore, The Kincora Scandal, p. 181
  36. Dillon, Martin (1999). The Dirty War. Taylor & Francis. ISBN 0-415-92281-X.
  37. Henry McDonald and Jim Cusack, UVF The Endgame (ISBN 978-1-84223-326-9), page 379
  38. Moore, The Kincora Scandal, pp. 29–30
  39. Moore, The Kincora Scandal, pp. 182–183
  40. Moore, The Kincora Scandal, p. 184
  41. Moore, The Kincora Scandal, pp. 184–185
  42. Moore, The Kincora Scandal, p. 206
  43. Moore, The Kincora Scandal, p. 207
  44. Moore, The Kincora Scandal, p. 186
  45. Henry McDonald and Jim Cusack, UVF The Endgame (ISBN 978-1-84223-326-9), page 97
  46. Moore, The Kincora Scandal, p. 196
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