^Buscher, p. 32: "Máiread left school at the age of fourteen. She went to business school for a year, taking baby-sitting jobs to earn money. That year she also joined the Legion of Mary, a Catholic lay organization dedicated to helping the very poor in the Catholic community."
^“Resistance” (PDF). Resistance (Irish Republican Support Group (C.P.G.B.)) (3). (1986). http://cedarlounge.files.wordpress.com/2010/04/irepsupgrp-cpgb-binder.pdf2016年8月31日閲覧. "In August, Belfast IRA Volunteers Danny Lennon and John Chillingworth were moving a broken Armalite rifle in a car through Andersonstown when they were pursued by British soldiers. Without any provocation, the Brits opened fire. Danny, who was driving the car, was killed instantly and his comrade was seriously wounded. The soldiers continued shooting and the car, now out of control, mounted the footpath at Finaghy Road North and crashed into Mrs Annie Maguire who was going to the shops with her children, Joanna, John and Andrew, who all died of their injuries."
^Gilchrist, Jim (2006年7月28日). “A woman of peace”. The Scotsman (Edinburgh). オリジナルの2011年2月23日時点におけるアーカイブ。. http://www.yasni.co.uk/ext.php?url=http%3A%2F%2Fliving.scotsman.com%2Ffeatures%2FA-woman-of-peace.2796109.jp&name=Christopher+Beardshaw+Christopher+Ewart+Beardshaw+Ewart&cat=other&showads=12011年2月23日閲覧. "Eight-and-a-half-year-old Joanne, who was cycling alongside, and her six-week-old brother, Andrew, in his pram, were killed instantly; their brother, John, just two-and-a-half, died in hospital the following day. On August 10th Mairead Corrigan accompanied her stricken brother-in-law Jackie Maguire to the hospital, for the formal identification of his dead children. Afterwards, she went down to the television studio and asked to go on the UTV programme to make an appeal for an end to the violence in Northern Ireland from all sides, the appeal also appeared on the BBC and moved people around the world."
^“Tragedy of a Broken Heart”. TIME. (1980年2月4日). http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,954520,00.html2011年3月21日閲覧. "But for Mrs Maguire herself there was no consolation. She emigrated to New Zealand with her husband Jack in 1977 and there gave birth to a second daughter. She suffered a nervous breakdown, and the homesick family returned to Belfast in less than a year. Perpetual grief led to even more breakdowns-ever deeper mental depression. Last week Anne Maguire finally gave up. She took her own life, slashing her wrists and throat with an electric carving knife."
^“The Nobel Peace Prize 1976”. ノーベル財団 (2009年). 2014年10月11日閲覧。 “The Nobel Peace Prize 1976 was awarded jointly to Betty Williams and Mairead Corrigan. Betty Williams and Mairead Corrigan received their Nobel Prize one year later, in 1977.”
^Dear, John (2008). A Persistent Peace. Lolyola Press. p. 298