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We apologise that Gallery Two will be closed from 2.30pm on 26, 27, and 28 June.  Gallery One and the On The Line exhibition are both open to visit until 5.00pm.

"1984 No Cruise poster" [Temp.2024.4.1]



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Catalogue Number
Temp.2024.4.1

Object Name
flyer

Title
1984 NO CRUISE - GREENHAM WOMEN ARE EVERYWHERE. Come and talk about supporting Greenham in Manchester - VIDEOS, DISCUSSION, EXHIBITION

Place
RAF Greenham Common

People
No Cruise

Events
Greenham Common Women’s Peace Camp

Date
1984

Description
Black and white printed flyer reading "1984 NO CRUISE" with a "GREENHAM WOMEN ARE EVERYWHERE" logo at the bottom left. It advertises an event at Manchester Town Hall to discuss support for Greenham.


Greenham Common Women's Peace Camp protested against nuclear weapons between 1981 and 2000. Thousands of women, many from the lesbian or wider LGBTQIA community, travelled from all over the UK to live at the site for weeks, months or years.


The RAF base at Greenham Common was one of three sites within the UK chosen to deploy US Cruise missiles during the Cold War. The protest started in 1981 when a group of mainly Welsh women chained themselves to the fences that surrounded the base. Shortly after, in 1982, a women's-only protest camp was established in order to resist further deployment of nuclear weapons. Cruise missiles were removed from Greenham Common in 1987, following the signing of the Intermediate-Range Nuclear Forces (INF) Treaty, shortly before the end of the Cold War in 1991. Despite multiple eviction attempts, the camp remained standing until 2000 to oppose the UK government's nuclear deterrent Trident Programme

Multimedia
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