'Our wedding days began with a visit to dad's grave'
![Family handout A black and white photo of Brian McCrory on his wedding day. He is sitting in the back of a car wearing a suit and tie beside his wife, who is wearing a white wedding dress and veil pulled back from her face.](https://ichef.bbci.co.uk/news/480/cpsprodpb/b73c/live/28775ad0-e3d3-11ef-a70f-83e80e6dc0b1.jpg.webp)
The children of a man who was killed in the Omagh bomb each began their wedding days with a visit to his grave, a public inquiry has been told.
Brian McCrory, 54, was described by his daughter as "gentle giant" whose loss was impossible to convey.
The Real IRA bomb killed 29 people in the County Tyrone town in August 1998, including a woman who was pregnant with twins.
"My dad Brian McCrory was not just a name on a list or an image in a collage of beautiful faces that were lost that day," Louise McCrory told the inquiry.
"He was a loving husband, and an amazing father, brother, uncle, colleague, neighbour and a good friend to many."
![Family handout Brian McCrory from the shoulders up. He has grey hair, is wearing a grey suit jacket and white shirt](https://ichef.bbci.co.uk/news/480/cpsprodpb/d422/live/5833f760-e3d3-11ef-a70f-83e80e6dc0b1.jpg.webp)
In a statement read to the inquiry, his daughter said that since his death, all their family occasions had been "overshadowed" by his "immeasurable loss".
She said he missed the big events, but his absence was also felt in the small day to day things such as "the simple enjoyment of just being together, eating family dinners, or even something as simple as having a cup of tea".
Mr McCrory was a keen photographer and was in Omagh on the day of the bombing to get some photos developed while picking up a prescription.
He was described by his daughter as an unassuming, good-natured, quiet and much-loved man.
She said he was "beyond patient" and she could not recall him ever raising his voice to his children.
'I knew in my heart she was gone'
![LOGUE FAMILY A grainy photograph of a brown haired girl with brown eyes. She has red lipstick on as she smiles with her teeth showing. She is wearing a black shirt.](https://ichef.bbci.co.uk/news/480/cpsprodpb/b680/live/f68fdf20-e2fa-11ef-bf72-232dd6212056.jpg.webp)
The inquiry also heard that the death of 17-year-old Brenda Logue has "defined her family's existence" since the bombing.
The teenager was in the town centre with her mother Mary Logue when they were both caught up in the explosion.
Mary survived the blast but died from cancer last November.
She had prepared a statement before her death and it was read to the inquiry by her son, Cathal Logue.
Mary's statement recalled that the day had begun like "any normal Saturday" and she was in a shop with Brenda when the bomb detonated.
'Like a scene from a disaster movie'
"The last thing I remember of Brenda was her ponytail swishing as she walked out of the door," she wrote.
"The blast threw me back into a wall and I would be knocked unconscious, or so I was told.
"When I came around I knew in my heart she was gone.
"But I got up and went to look for her, it was like a scene from a disaster movie.
"I won't go into detail but the things I saw that day are the things that haunt my dreams - the sounds, the screams."
Brenda was a talented Gaelic footballer and fought - and won - the right for girls at her school to wear trousers.
After the bombing, Mrs Logue never set foot in the middle of Omagh town centre again.
When she was diagnosed with cancer, she said her consultants were "baffled" when she replied it was not the worst news she had ever received.
"Losing a child is every parent's worst nightmare and I have lived with that nightmare every day for the last 26 years."
Brenda's exam results arrived two days after her death - she had been planning to study leisure and tourism at college.
'Denied all of her hopes and her dreams of her bright future'
![Marlow family A young woman wears gold earrings and necklace. She has dark brown hair and brown eyes. She smiles at the camera, white teeth showing. Behind her is the face of a boy half hidden by shadow. He wears a white shirt.](https://ichef.bbci.co.uk/news/480/cpsprodpb/a733/live/1f813b80-e3ba-11ef-a990-7962565c5313.jpg.webp)
Jolene Marlow, who was the same age as Brenda, was also among the victims.
Her mother, Bridie Marlow, said she had always "secretly dreaded" her Jolene leaving home to study in Belfast in case the Troubles flared up again.
But in a terrible twist of fate, she was instead killed in her home town of Omagh.
Bridie Marlow's statement, read on her behalf to the inquiry, said her daughter was denied the chance to accomplish her life's full potential.
An academic child, Jolene sat her Eleven Plus exam at only 10 years of age and was a year younger than most of her classmates in Loreto Convent in Omagh.
She was also a talented gaelic football player who played for Macartan Ladies GFC.
Just a week before the Omagh bomb, she had been a key player in the team which won their first ever county final.
Jolene had been planning to study physiotherapy at university in Belfast.
"Little did we know then that our home town of Omagh where Jolene had attended school, had a part-time job, was learning to drive, socialised and shopped, would be the actual place where she would be denied all of her hopes and her dreams of her bright future," Bridie's statement said.
Inquiry chairman Lord Turnbull said the inquiry had heard "so many times" the heartbreak of a mother whose child was killed in the bombing.
He said Jolene was on the cusp of a new exciting life, with so much ahead of her.
Who carried out the Omagh bombing?
Three days after the 1998 attack, the Real IRA released a statement claiming responsibility for the explosion.
It apologised to "civilian" victims and said its targets had been commercial.
Almost 27 years on, no-one has been convicted of carrying out the murders by a criminal court.
In 2009, the judge in that case ruled four of the men - Michael McKevitt, Liam Campbell, Colm Murphy and Seamus Daly were all liable for the Omagh bomb.
The four men were ordered to pay a total of £1.6m in damages to the relatives, but appeals against the ruling delayed the compensation process.
A fifth man, Seamus McKenna, was acquitted in the civil action and later died in a roofing accident in 2013.
The public inquiry
After years of campaigning by relatives, the public inquiry was set to up examine if the Real IRA attack could have been prevented by UK authorities.
This phase of the inquiry is in its second week and is continuing to hear powerful individual testimonies from relatives who lost loved ones in the explosion.
Taking place at Strule Arts Centre in Omagh, the phase will last four weeks and will also hear evidence from first responders.
The bombers planned and launched the attack from the Republic of Ireland and the Irish government has promised to co-operate with the inquiry.
However, the victims' relatives wanted the Irish government to order its own separate public inquiry.
Dublin previously indicated there was no new evidence to merit such a move.