Belfast Telegraph

Others eulogise assassins, but Harry Gregg was a hero all people from NI can be proud of

I’ve no interest in football, but I’ve become a great admirer of this fine man, writes Ruth Dudley Edwards

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I’ve never had any interest in football, but I can still remember as a schoolgirl in Dublin in 1958 being appalled by the tragedy of Manchester United in the Munich air disaster. And so last week, when the news came about the death of a hero of Munich, I read on and learned about the great goalkeeper Harry Gregg, who I realised was another of those Northern Irish heroes I so admire: people who respond to terrible events with courage and selflessne­ss and remain modest about their achievemen­ts.

I never shared the enthusiasm of the nationalis­t tribe from which I come for celebrity heroes, many of whom were braggarts.

The enthusiast­ic assassin Dan Breen was one of a tiny group who sparked off what became known as the Irish War of Independen­ce by shooting dead two unarmed RIC men.

He bigged himself up about his guerrilla activities in his My Fight for Irish Freedom and then threw himself into fighting in the civil war against the democratic decision of the Irish people to accept the treaty.

He later became an enthusiast­ic supporter of the Nazis and had pictures of Adolf Hitler in his home even after the emergence of the hideous truth about mass exterminat­ion in the concentrat­ion camps.

Yet when he died in 1969 he had an enormous funeral in rural west Tipperary, with an estimated crowd of 10,000.

Last Friday, on a day of terrible wind and rain, there were many hundreds outside St Patrick’s Parish Church in Coleraine to honour Harry Gregg, who never went to charm school, hated the cult of celebrity and played down his achievemen­ts.

The product of a mixed marriage, this working-class young man grew up an intensely devout member of the Church of Ireland.

Reminiscen­ces last week painted a picture I recognised as very typical of many Ulster Protestant­s I’ve known: a plain speaker, a hard worker, stubborn, cantankero­us, principled, loyal, suspicious of adulation, uncompromi­sing, never a glad sufferer of fools and adept at being his own worst enemy by falling out with people whose support he needed.

As an outsider used to southern Irish charm and English politeness, it took me quite a while to see beyond rather intimidati­ng exteriors to the inner decency, integrity, kindness, courage and humour within.

As I discovered that many nationalis­ts were much less nice than they seemed, I learned that many unionists were much nicer.

Harry Gregg followed the instructio­ns of the captain of the burning plane to run away and leaped out of the plane, but then returned twice and rescued two teammates — including Bobby Charlton, who was at his funeral — and a pregnant woman and her daughter.

In a period when no one had any understand­ing of post-traumatic stress disorder and he was tormented by what he had been through as well as survivors’ guilt, he was back playing for United within two weeks. Within the next four years he would lose his wife to cancer and abandon his religion.

Gregg avoided talking about Munich for many years and when he did, he was typically unimpresse­d with himself.

He told his friend Jim Gracey that he had been a fool who was neither brave nor a hero.

He spent the rest of his life serving football with exceptiona­l distinctio­n as a player and a coach, using his charitable foundation to encourage young people to follow in his footsteps,

and as a devoted father, grandfathe­r and husband to his second wife.

He achieved neither riches nor the accolades he deserved but he never sought public recognitio­n.

True to form, his foundation has responded to a suggestion that a statue be erected to him outside Old Trafford by saying he never wanted anything like that.

He’s on the record as wanting to be remembered as “Harry Gregg from

34 Windsor Avenue in Coleraine who played football — I was useful on some days and rubbish on others… Not for something that happened on a spur of a moment”.

Perhaps a more fitting epitaph comes from sportswrit­er Henry Winter: “Harry Gregg has left this earth, but his legacy lives on in his family, in his foundation and in a reminder to all of the importance of courage. He went back in.”

 ??  ?? Harry Gregg hated the cult of celebrity and played down the many achievemen­ts of his life
Harry Gregg hated the cult of celebrity and played down the many achievemen­ts of his life
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