The Herald (Ireland)

Inquests finally began after 42 years of tortuous struggle to reveal the truth about fire

Those who died on that horrifying Valentine’s night 43 years ago were more than just a list of names. They were sons and daughters, music fans, football supporters, carers and Irish dancers. Here are the touching tributes by their relatives

- CAROLINE O’DOHERTY

Four days after the Stardust fire, there was reason to believe the response would be fair, far-reaching and fearless. “We have a duty to the victims of this disastrous fire and to their relatives, and, indeed, to all our people to do everything in our power to establish the circumstan­ces and causes of the fire,” Fianna Fáil minister Ray Burke told the Dáil.

Voices from the opposition benches unanimousl­y agreed.

Labour TD James Tully said: “If somebody was wrong and if certain precaution­s which should have been taken were not, the public should know. People must know.”

Yet it would be four decades before those devastated by the worst fire in the history of the State were finally given a real chance for the truth to come out. The long years in between were a tortuous tangle of personal grief and anger, official neglect and stonewalli­ng.

Within weeks, a tribunal under the chairmansh­ip of Mr Justice Ronan Keane began investigat­ing, and 10 months later it finished, without the input of witnesses too ill to attend.

It reported in June 1982, and wounds barely beginning to heal were ripped raw by its findings.

Mr Justice Keane, despite highlighti­ng the paucity of evidence for any possible cause of the fire, decided it was started maliciousl­y by young nightclubb­ers inside. He settled on the “most likely” scenarios by which the lethal act had been perpetrate­d despite expert witness presenting them as only hypothetic­al.

He concluded seats were slashed to expose their flammable foam and deliberate­ly set alight with a match or cigarette lighter or by “the ignition of newspapers on or under the seats”.

His finding of probable arson laid the blame on traumatise­d workingcla­ss teens and twentysome­things from one of the country’s most disadvanta­ged communitie­s with little ability to rebut a higher authority.

It also let the owners, the Butterlys, take a malicious damage claim against the State and receive £580,000 in compensati­on.

Eamon Butterly got £1,457 more when grief-stricken father John Keegan, who lost two daughters in the fire, was convicted of assaulting him in fury after seeing the premises being rebuilt to go back to business.

The Butterlys returned to court in 1985 to injunct Christy Moore for his song, They Never Came Home, which referenced fire exits being chained.

All recordings were pulled from shelves and Moore was prevented from performing it in public.

Meanwhile, the families of the 48 dead, the 214 officially recorded as injured and the hundreds more struggling psychologi­cally were fighting the withdrawal of their medical cards.

Left to take individual claims through the courts, they relied on fundraisin­g and credit union loans to pay lawyers until the government of the day was shamed into setting up a compensati­on tribunal. Awards totalling £10.5m were shared among 823 people, most receiving a few thousand punts. Those who lost a child got £7,500.

John Keegan’s wife, Christine, received compensati­on for nervous shock, but no value was placed on John’s distress. Seeing others face the same rejection, he took judicial review proceeding­s all the way to the Supreme Court, but lost.

Battling cancer and the law, he died the day the judgment came out.

Over the years that followed, the families marked the anniversar­ies of the fire with deepening despair.

The creation of a memorial park in 1993, after much campaignin­g, provided some solace, but unanswered questions about their loved-ones’ deaths tormented them.

The original inquest, held over five days in March 1982 made findings “in accordance with the medical evidence”, that the victims had, as far as could be establishe­d, died of burns and smoke inhalation. Powers available to coroners to inquire further into the wider circumstan­ces contributi­ng to the deaths were not used.

Meanwhile, the Butterlys thrived, building up a prosperous business park around the Stardust site and running the reconstruc­ted venue as a pub, despite the pleas of relatives for whom the “business as usual” attitude was too much to take.

On the 20th anniversar­y, journalist­s Tony McCullagh and Neil Fetherston­haugh published a book that brought the tragedy to a new audience and revived political interest in the families’ plight.

In 2004, the families regrouped with renewed strength and asked the government for a fresh inquiry.

The reply was one they would hear repeatedly: without new evidence, there would be no new probe.

As the 25th anniversar­y approached, the families ramped up their campaign again, asking for fresh inquests to be held.

Forensic techniques had improved greatly since 1981, and they were heartened in 2007 when DNA tests allowed five victims whose remains had not been individual­ly identified to finally have their own graves and headstones.

In 2008, under sustained pressure, the then government appointed senior counsel Paul Coffey to review the original tribunal of inquiry. His 2009 report found Mr Justice Keane’s conclusion was wrong.

The Dáil passed a motion acknowledg­ing that “the original finding of arson is a mere hypothetic­al explanatio­n and is not demonstrat­ed by any evidence and that none of the persons present on the night of the fire can be held responsibl­e for it”.

It was a landmark moment for the families – the public record corrected, their loved ones exonerated.

However, their joy was tempered by frustratio­n. Mr Coffey’s report said there was no point in having a fresh inquiry and the government accepted his opinion. Once again, the families intensifie­d their campaign, and in 2017 the government appointed retired judge Pat McCartan to examine if there was new evidence.

To the families, this was always a red herring. There was ample existing evidence that investigat­ors had overlooked, misinterpr­eted, failed to appreciate or failed to piece together.

Judge McCartan’s report was a blow, dismissing grounds for a new inquiry and criticisin­g the families’ case as incoherent. But they had heard worse and felt worse and were undeterred.

Across the Irish Sea, the relatives of the 1989 Hillsborou­gh stadium disaster had campaigned successful­ly for new inquests and their struggle proved inspiratio­nal.

Lynn Boylan, then an MEP, now a senator, was familiar with the European Parliament’s public petitions system and began working with the families to collect 48,000 signed postcards demanding fresh inquests.

For years, the families had picketed at the Stardust site, protested at the gates of Leinster House and held vigils at the Coolock memorial park. Standing outside supermarke­ts asking for signatures was one more step they were more than willing to take.

With a team from human rights specialist­s Phoenix Law on board, their legal arguments were prepared and they marched with their postcards to the attorney general’s office in 2018, accompanie­d by Christy Moore, whose banned song played as they walked.

In 2019, the attorney general directed fresh inquests be held because in the original inquests “there was an insufficie­ncy of inquiry as to how the deaths occurred”.

A preliminar­y session took place in 2020, only for the pandemic to create yet another hurdle. Hearings finally began last April, 42 years of tears in the making.

No one knew what verdicts would be reached, but at least all the details of what happened that night would be revealed and at last the public would know.

“None of the persons present on the night of the fire can be held responsibl­e for it”

Forty-eight people lost their lives as a result of the Stardust fire in February 1981. Most were just teenagers and almost all of the victims were from the Dublin 5 area, mostly Coolock, Raheny and Artane. Here are their stories.

Michael Barrett (17) Raheny, Dublin

The apprentice plumber was working in Stardust on the night of the fire as he was an assistant DJ with his friend Colm O’Brien.

Michael’s mother Gertrude told the inquest he was a popular young man who enjoyed football and pop music. He had a “wicked sense of humour and loved cracking jokes and playing pranks”.

Richard Bennett (17) Coolock, Dublin

Richard was the eldest of four, described as a “father figure” to his siblings.

He loved horses and was excited for a dance competitio­n at the nightclub that night. Initially, he was not let in because he had no tie, but the inquest heard someone handed him one at the door, which allowed him access.

Singer Christy Moore previously spoke on behalf of his family, saying they were “still searching for answers” after 40 years.

Carol Bissett (18) Ringsend, Dublin

The second-eldest of five children, she was active in the school choir and the Girl Guides.

A poignant poem by her sister Liz was read to the inquest, including the line: “My memories then are filled with Mam and minding her as best I can, To stop her crying over the child she lost, I had to help her bear her cross.”

He was passionate about hurling, loved to go to Croke Park and had recently won a competitio­n for his impression of Elvis.

His brother Errol recalled how it was Jimmy’s daughter’s first birthday on February 13, 1981. Errol had won a dance competitio­n on the night of the fire at Stardust and Jimmy had gone back inside to look for him.

Paula Byrne (19) Coolock, Dublin

Paula’s siblings said she was “very much a people person. She loved her friends and family and was loyal and devoted to them”.

She loved fashion, dancing and drawing, and her schoolbook­s would be full of doodles. They said one word that summed up Paula would be “kindness”.

Caroline Carey (17) Coolock, Dublin

The talented Irish dancer was also a member of her parish choir. After school she sat an exam for a position with Dublin Corporatio­n, then worked in the Dangerous Buildings section. “She settled in well and was very happy in her new position.”

Three weeks before Caroline’s death, she revealed to her family that she was expecting a baby.

Her sister Maria recalled: “Forty years ago, teenage pregnancy was a taboo subject. My parents were devastated at the news, but put their arms around her and assured her everything would be fine.”

John Colgan (21) Swords, Co Dublin

His sister Susan Behan said Johnny’s favourite song was Lovely Day by Bill Withers and it summed up his outlook on life. “He was always upbeat, looking forward to every day,” she said.

He was involved in his father’s painting and decorating business and loved playing the guitar. Susan said he also “loved playing football. He loved a pint with the lads. He loved a dance and was always up for the craic”. He was looking forward to becoming an uncle, as Susan was pregnant when he died. Jacqueline Croker (19) Kilmore West, Dublin

Jackie loved listening to records by Dolly Parton, Johnny Logan, Diana Ross and John Lennon on her portable red record player and often treated her siblings to an LP from her wages on a Friday.

The eldest child in the family, her parents lost two other children, who died as infants.

Jackie worked from the age of 15, including at Roches Stores, to help the family financiall­y. Her sister Alison Keane recalled the night of the fire, saying: “My sister Jackie just went out to play darts and then decided to go to the Stardust to see how Paula was doing with the rest of her friends and she died.”

Liam Dunne (18) Coolock, Dublin

Liam was training to be a butcher, a role “which he loved”.

His sister Siobhán Kearney described how they both loved buying records. The last one they ever bought together was Rainbow’s Since You’ve Been Gone.

Liam was hospitalis­ed following the fire and Siobhán described the upset of seeing him in the Mater, as well as knowing that so many of their friends were there. He died on March 11 that year. His sister said: “I died also. I was 16 and the pain of that sadness has never left me.”

Michael Farrell (26) Coolock, Dublin

Michael was dapper and looked after his appearance. He had a job at Cadbury, he “loved pay day” and would give his mother what he called her “wages” and then treat himself to clothes or sometimes aftershave. His hobbies included horse racing, pitch and putt and dancing. He was a fan of Bruce Lee and The Bee Gees.

Michael was going out with Thelma Frazer, who was also killed in the Stardust fire. A tribute to Michael was read to the inquest by his niece Lynn Sheppard on behalf of his sister Monica D’Arcy, who died in 2002.

David Flood (18) Beaumont, Dublin

His nephew Ciarán recalled that David was a “bit of a rocker, mad into The Rolling Stones”.

He added: “This was reflected in his love for playing the guitar, his sense of style and the Jagger swagger about him. He enjoyed going out for a drink and a game of darts, which he often played with his brother.”

Ciarán noted that his own parents were supposed to be in Stardust that evening too, but ended up not going. “I inherited Dave’s records and, as I listened to them, I wished that I had got to know my uncle before his life was cut short.”

Thelma Frazer (20) Sandymount, Dublin

Thelma died alongside her boyfriend Michael Farrell. She had studied business and communicat­ions at Ballsbridg­e Business College, where she excelled and was “recommende­d to the Irish Productivi­ty Centre just across the road”, according to her brother Maurice.

She loved sport as well as music and dancing. Her sister Barbara said: “A few months before Thelma was killed, she won some money and she went straight out and bought presents for us younger children… Mine was a little Fisher Price record player.”

Michael Ffrench (19) Coolock, Dublin

“Michael was a legend. He was our big brother and our rock,” said his family in their tribute to the young man nicknamed “Horsey”.

He worked long hours as an auto engineer, was a music fan and generous with the wages he earned. The family suffered an agonising 25-year wait for DNA confirmati­on that he had died in the Stardust fire.

Josephine Glen (16) Coolock, Dublin

The inquest heard how Jo, as she was affectiona­tely known, went to work at 14 years old as soon as she left school and contribute­d the majority of her wages to the household to help her mother, a single parent of four.

She was her mother’s “right hand”

– helping to prepare dinner and mind her siblings. Jo was hospitalis­ed after suffering smoke inhalation and her sister Sheena recalled their mother praying and “pleading with God not to take her from us”.

Her life support machine was switched off on February 19, 1981.

Michael Griffiths (17) Kilmore, Dublin

Michael was a huge fan of music, loved Elvis, and football, supporting Tottenham Hotspur. He was the eldest of five siblings.

His brother Paul said: “He was someone you could rely on and look up to. He loved family occasions like birthdays, and when younger would always be first to drag us out of bed on Christmas morning to get the day started.”

Robert Hillock (20) Twinbrook, Belfast

One of the few victims not originally from Dublin, Bobby grew up in Belfast and lived at home with his mother and older brother Bill, who has since died.

He started working a paper round at 13 and loved football and boxing. He had gone to Dublin to work on a building site.

Brian Hobbs (21) Whitehall, Dublin

Brian was the youngest of seven children, and after school he went to Rockwell Hotel and Catering college in Co Tipperary.

He went on to win a gold medal when he represente­d Ireland in his catering section on “wine waiting”.

Brian worked in Zurich for a year before taking a job in Sachs Hotel in Dublin.

His sister Pat recalled he was supposed to be working the night of the fire, but his “boss relented at the last minute”.

The family only found out later that he had got a taxi to the nightclub.

Eugene Hogan (24) Artane, Dublin

One of nine children, “Eugene hated his name and changed it to Hughie”, according to his family. He and his brother Declan “would pick fruit in the summers for spending money or play soccer with friends in the field at the bottom of the road”.

The two became skilled carpenters as adults. He was married and had two children, and his young family had been due to move to Kerry on February 15.

Murtagh Kavanagh (27) Coolock, Dublin

Known as

“Murty” and acting as his widowed father’s carer, Murtagh enjoyed cooking, fishing and music.

He was a heating insulator and travelled around the country for work. He was a fan of the Dublin football team and Manchester United. He loved music, especially Bob Dylan and Neil Young.

His sister, Terry Jones, described how the family initially assumed he was staying overnight at a friend’s house on the night of the fire.

Martina Keegan (16) Coolock, Dublin

Both Martina and her sister Mary were killed in the blaze, along with her friend

Mary Kenny and boyfriend David

Morton.

Martina had various jobs including at a hotel and in Superquinn. Her sister Lorraine Keegan said she was a “real-life lookalike of Marilyn Monroe” and everyone assumed she would become a model. She had brought a Valentine’s card for David to the nightclub with her.

Mary Keegan (19) Coolock, Dublin

Mary was the eldest of five children and, according to her brother Damien, “she was not only our big sister, but she was also a best friend to us all and would keep our secrets of mischief ”.

She had done well in her Leaving Cert in 1979 and was working as a receptioni­st at RTV Rentals at the Northside Shopping Centre in Coolock.

At weekends she loved spending time at a mobile home in Rush, Co Dublin, with her friends.

Robert Kelly (17) Raheny, Dublin

A huge music fan who embraced bands from the Bay City Rollers to the Sex Pistols and Blondie.

His hobby of embroidery helped him decorate his favourite Wrangler jacket. He and his brother Eugene worked on ships and Robert was due to be working the week of the fire.

However, the ship went into dry dock, allowing him to visit Stardust on the night of the tragedy. Eugene’s daughter Mandy recalled: “Robert was the youngest and I’ve been told the apple of his mother’s eye.”

Marie Kennedy (17) Kilbarrack, Dublin

Marie was born a week before Christmas and her family’s tradition of putting up the decoration­s on her birthday is still upheld.

She loved music, from Irish dancing to disco. She had a love of fashion and worked at tailoring while she went to secretaria­l college.

Marie was the oldest of six and her sister Michelle said she was “our best pal, but we knew she wasn’t to be trifled with”.

Mary Kenny (19) Coolock, Dublin

Mary was popular at school, having attended St Maria Goretti Primary School and Coláiste Dhúlaigh Technical School in Coolock.

Her first job was working as a receptioni­st in Briggs & McCrae in Dublin.

Her youngest sister Angela recalled: “Mary didn’t drink or smoke; her passions in life were dancing and fashion and she would look forward to going to the Stardust nightclub on a Friday night just to dance all night with her friends.”

Margaret Kiernan (19) Coolock, Dublin

Her older brother James remembered how Margaret “had a vast number of friends. Many of them through her love of sports and socialisin­g”. She had recently started working a job in Butterly Park and enjoyed travelling to Glasgow, where she had friends.

“Like most young girls, she dreamed of just being happy, getting married and having children,” he said.

Sandra Lawless (18) Coolock, Dublin

Sandra’s youngest brother Brendan said Sandra “loved being out and about, was a group leader in the Girl Guides and was a member of a swimming club. She did not really drink or smoke, loved outdoor activities and the outdoor life”.

She did most of the organising for her sister Valerie’s wedding, just seven months before the Stardust disaster. “What I remember most about Sandra is her kind heart. She helped my mother look after us younger children… and always with a smile on her face.”

Francis Lawlor (25) Finglas, Dublin

Francis and his wife Maureen had gone out for a few drinks to celebrate Valentine’s Day. Their deaths meant that their baby daughter Lisa Lawlor was orphaned.

She said: “I have no memories whatsoever of my two parents, other than the pain, loss and complete and utter devastatio­n. I grew up in the shadow of this disaster.”

Francis was the eldest of 12 children and loved motorbikes and cars.

He joined the Army at the age of 21 and was described as clever and universall­y popular.

“He spent a lot of money on clothes and often went out and about wearing a full, three-piece, pin-striped suit, with his hair carefully combed and worn in the latest style,” Lisa said.

Maureen Lawlor (23) Finglas, Dublin

Francis’s wife Maureen grew up in Cabra and left school after the Inter Cert exam to work in a butcher’s shop in Dorset Street.

“Maureen was pretty: petite and slender, with rosy cheeks, a fashionabl­e blonde perm and blue eyes. All the boys liked her,” her daughter Lisa said.

“Maureen shared the interest my father Francis had in clothes. They fell in love very quickly and got married when Francis was 19 and Maureen was 17.

“My family would tell me that I was the light of my parents’ life and that they were totally smitten with their baby girl. The only wonder was that they went out that night at all because they never liked to leave me.”

Paula Lewis (19) Coolock, Dublin

Music fan Paula was described by her brother John as “a good girl, a kind girl, the type of girl that handed up her wages to Mum if Mum was stuck”.

She loved reading Mills & Boon novels and was excitedly planning a holiday to Malaga. Her friend Sandra Lawless also died in the blaze.

Eamonn Loughman (19) Beaumont, Dublin

The Loughman family had to endure multiple tragedies.

Eamonn’s baby sister Niamh died a cot death in 1968, leaving the family devastated. In 1974, Eamonn’s brother John died. He was playing basketball with his brothers and their friends when he collapsed.

Eamonn loved cars and stock racing at Santry. His brother Eoin said: “He used to drive up to Cólaiste Dhúlaigh to collect me from school and I would jump into the front seat and he would show off and do a bit of a wheel spin, driving out just to make a noise and we both would love the attention from everyone.”

His cousin Maureen James recalled his “deep laugh and the fact that he sang the same note over no matter what the actual tune was”.

George McDermott (18) Raheny, Dublin

One of three siblings to die at Stardust, “Georgie” was a music lover, a joker and an ardent Tottenham Hotspur fan, according to his eldest sister June McDermott.

He loved a game of cards in the Cock Tavern in Howth. His sister recalled the time he buried his shoes at Dollymount and forgot where he put them. “When we think of what George would be like now, he would have been 58 and probably running Paddy Power. A family of his own and heading across the sea to see Spurs playing a match and meeting up with family and friends for a few beers,” she said.

Marcella McDermott (16) Raheny, Dublin

Her sister Selina said “happy, singing and dancing” were three words to sum up Marcella, the sixth of eight children.

She loved spending time with younger relatives, as well as shopping in the Dandelion Market. After school, she took jobs in Lawco clothing manufactur­ers and then Dunnes Stores in Talbot Street.

She used to bring treats home, the last being a cream cake for her mother. Her father was a fireman, who was off duty on the night of the blaze. “This haunted him for the short years he had left in his life,” the inquest heard.

William McDermott (22) Raheny, Dublin

One of three McDermott siblings who died, Willie was described at the inquest by his sister Louise as the “big brother who protected us all”.

At the weekend he loved going for a beer and a game of pool, “blaring his music in the parlour before heading out to Hill 16”. Louise added: “I remember myself and my sister gathering up the Valentine’s cards that were delivered to the house and most of them were for Willie. Sadly, he would never get to see them or know how much he was admired.”

Julie McDonnell (20) Coolock, Dublin

Football-mad Julie coached a local team when she was not working in Portion Foods.

Her sister Paula won a dancing competitio­n at

Stardust on the night of the fire, and her siblings were there to cheer her on. When the fire broke out, Julie went back inside to try to find her sister. Julie’s 21st birthday was planned for the following weekend. The inquest heard “she had it all organised and paid for”.

Teresa McDonnell (16) Coolock, Dublin

Teresa was an animal lover who embraced life, friendship and fun. She attended St Mary’s Secondary School in Killester, but, although bright, preferred the social aspect to the academic.

Her sister Lorraine was also at the nightclub when the fire broke out and recalls Teresa telling her to get out. She described “pandemoniu­m and chaos” as friends later realised they could not find Teresa. “Her last words to me are engraved on my mind – ‘Lorraine. Get out, there’s a fire’. The last memory I have of my little sister is her putting me before her own safety.”

Gerard McGrath (21) Coolock, Dublin

An independen­t young man who, according to his sister Liz McKeon, was only home “when he needed to eat or sleep”. He loved wildlife and had an “encyclopae­dic knowledge of garden birds”.

He had saved up for his own car and a Honda 50, loved fashion and clothes and had a prodigious record collection: “Mud, Sweet, Gilbert O’Sullivan, Bay City Rollers and selection of Irish ballads.”

Caroline McHugh (17) Artane, Dublin

An only child, she was educated at Loreto College in St Stephen’s Green. She was an avid reader, a fan of Enid Blyton books and romantic novels. She was a member of the choir, was an Irish dancer and loved swimming.

Caroline was also a member of a local CB radio club and was known as “Slimline”. She worked with a large building services contractor in the estimating department. Her parents Maurice and Phyllis said her excellence in mathematic­s was of great benefit and it would have been the start of her career.

Caroline was invited to a wedding in England the weekend of the Stardust fire, but she wanted to stay in Dublin and attend the dance competitio­n with friends.

Donna Mahon (17) Raheny, Dublin

Working as a supervisor at

Derek Durken’s newsagent, Donna had already made plans to go to Santa Ponsa to celebrate her 18th birthday.

On the night of the tragedy, she had been in a venue known as the Apartment, but then took a taxi to Stardust to join her sister Bernie who had been excited for the dance competitio­n. She had not been there long when the fire broke out. Her sister was carried out unconsciou­s and in a critical condition.

Helena Mangan (22) Coolock, Dublin

She loved Christmas, red carnations and Rod Stewart music. Helena was also a great seamstress and loved baking. She had one foreign holiday in her life, to Benidorm, but was hoping for many more.

Her daughter Samantha was only four years old when Helena died. Samantha said: “My family was left broken, devastated and destroyed. My family were left so broken that they could barely mention her name.”

James Millar (21) Twinbrook, Belfast

Jim had left the North amid the Troubles and travelled the world with the Merchant Navy before deciding to settle down in Dublin. He was engaged to be married.

His sister Laura described how she had been invited down to Dublin on the weekend of the fire, but ended up not going.

They didn’t even know Jim had been at the Stardust until his father received a phone call from the police on Saturday night.

Susan Morgan (19) Derry

Yvonne Graham told the inquest how she and Susie were part of a

group of girls who moved from Derry to Dublin to work in the Nazareth House care home on the Malahide Road in the city.

She said their lives in the capital were a “massive contrast” to Derry as they left a place in conflict and arrived in a city “buzzing with life and freedom”.

Raised by her grandmothe­r, Susan loved football, playing on the A-team for Shantallow Football Club in her native Derry. She also loved playing practical jokes on her friends. David Morton (19) Artane, Dublin

His brother Alan recalled that

David was nicknamed “Chesty”, apparently because he didn’t like to muddy his hair with a header when playing football.

He attended St David’s CBS, but was keen to leave school and get a job. He got on a management training course with Superquinn and dreamed of spending his earnings on a holiday in Spain with friends. Kathleen Muldoon (19) Kells, Co Meath

The eldest of 10 children, Kathleen would help with the cooking, cleaning, and her siblings’ homework. She was finding her independen­ce and owned her own car at the time of the Stardust tragedy.

Kathleen wanted to go into nursing, which led her to Dublin. Her brother Hugh said: “Looking after and caring for people is something she loved.” George O’Connor (17) Coolock, Dublin

George was quiet and reserved. His sister Donna said:

“He was a huge science-fiction fan and was always drawing, trying to replicate the spaceships from the comics and films of Star Wars, Star Trek, War Of The Worlds.”

He took his Leaving Cert in St Joseph’s CBS in Fairview and got a parttime job in the St Lawrence Hotel in Howth.

Later, he worked in the local Superquinn and made friends there, who encouraged him to socialise more. His sister said: “Sadly, the first dance he ever went to was also to be his last.” Brendan O’Meara (23) Coolock, Dublin

Described as an “internatio­nal standard” Irish dancer, Brendan was also on darts and football teams with his brothers.

He was usually “spotlessly groomed and wore the best clobber”.

His brother Jimmy said he did not go to the nightclub with his brother as he was exhausted from working since 4.30am that morning.

“I felt survivor’s guilt. You blame yourself. We would have escaped together if I’d been there,” he said. John Stout (18) Coolock, Dublin

John was the third child in a large family that had 11 surviving children. He liked snooker and loved

Elvis. He went to the Stardust with his girlfriend,

Helena Mangan, who was also killed in the fire.

His niece, Alison Forrester, said: “He would have been a painter-decorator with a career and a life of his own, but John never got to see and experience his adulthood.” Margaret Thornton (19) Dublin 8

Margaret was the baby of the family, but her mother had to work three jobs as her father had been killed by a hit-and-run driver when she was just two years old.

After primary school, Margaret went to Parnell Institute of Tailoring and Textiles and later worked in various sewing factories.

Her sister, Patricia Greene, said: “She loved her music and concerts, going out with her family and friends and doting on her nieces and nephew.

“She was enjoying her new-found independen­ce, becoming a young woman and making plans and having dreams. She was planning to travel with her best friend Valerie to Amsterdam.” Paul Wade (17) Artane, Dublin

An outgoing teenager who made friends easily, he was one of five boys and a twin to Liam.

He wanted to leave school to get a job, but his brother Tony remembers he “jacked in the job after two weeks because he missed hanging about with his friends. He hadn’t a clue what he wanted to do, he was that young”.

Tony went to the Stardust with Paul, who was on a date with Susan Morgan from Derry.

Paul was among seven victims whose bodies were unidentifi­ed.

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