1799 in Ireland

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1799
in
Ireland

Centuries:
  • 16th
  • 17th
  • 18th
  • 19th
  • 20th
Decades:
  • 1770s
  • 1780s
  • 1790s
  • 1800s
  • 1810s
See also:Other events of 1799
List of years in Ireland

Events from the year 1799 in Ireland.

Fenton Bridge over the Grand Canal in Robertstown, County Kildare bears the date 1799.

Incumbent[]

  • Monarch: George III

Events[]

  • 9 February – around 91 die when a barge capsizes at the bridge at Carrick-on-Suir.[1]
  • 15 February – the rebel guerilla leader Michael Dwyer escapes from a gun battle with British troops at Miley Connell's cottage, Dernamuck, in the Glen of Imaal, Wicklow. (today called the Dwyer–McAllister Cottage)[2]
  • River Shannon made navigable from Limerick to Killaloe.[3]

Births[]

  • 28 February – William Dargan, engineer and railway builder (died 1867).
  • 9 August – Henry Maxwell, 7th Baron Farnham, politician and peer (died 1868).
  • 12 August – Patrick MacDowell, sculptor (died 1870).
  • 22 December – Nicholas Callan, priest and scientist (died 1864).
  • 26 December – William Kennedy, Scottish poet, journalist and diplomat (died 1871 in France).
    Full date unknown
    • Henry Archer, barrister and entrepreneur in north Wales (died 1863 in France).
    • Joseph M. Hawkins, Alamo defender (died 1836 in the United States).

Deaths[]

  • 11 January – Thomas Bermingham, 1st Earl of Louth (born 1717)
  • 27 February – Sir John Blackwood, 2nd Baronet, politician (born 1722).
  • 29 March – Charles Bingham, 1st Earl of Lucan, High Sheriff of Mayo in 1756 (born 1735)
  • 4 June – Philip Woodroffe, surgeon
  • 4 August – James Caulfeild, 1st Earl of Charlemont, politician, first President of the Royal Irish Academy, president of the volunteer convention in Dublin, 1783 (born 1728).
  • 6 December – John Moore, participant in Irish Rebellion of 1798, proclaimed President of the Government of the Province of Connaught (born 1767).
  • 11 December – "Brave" Charles Edward Jennings de Kilmaine, soldier in France (born 1751; died in France).

References[]

  1. ^ Coady, Michael (1999). "The cries at the bridge". Full Tide: a miscellany. Nenagh: Relay Books. pp. 54-60. ISBN 9780946327270.
  2. ^ "Dwyer McAllister Cottage". Heritage Ireland. Archived from the original on 2008-08-24. Retrieved 2012-07-31.
  3. ^ Delany, Ruth (1988). A celebration of 250 years of Ireland's Inland Waterways. Belfast: Appletree Press. p. 51. ISBN 0-86281-200-3.
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