1817 in Ireland

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1817
in
Ireland

Centuries:
  • 17th
  • 18th
  • 19th
  • 20th
  • 21st
Decades:
  • 1790s
  • 1800s
  • 1810s
  • 1820s
  • 1830s
See also:1817 in the United Kingdom
Other events of 1817
List of years in Ireland

Events from the year 1817 in Ireland.

Events[]

  • 26 May – completion of Royal Canal throughout from Dublin to the River Shannon at Tarmonbarry.[1]
  • 31 May – first stone of new pier at the port of Dunleary is laid.[2]
  • 16 June – Poor Law Employment Act empowers the Lord Lieutenant to appoint commissioners of public works to supervise construction of public works to relieve unemployment financed by mortgages of rates.[2]
  • 17 June – first stone of Wellington Testimonial, Dublin, is laid in Phoenix Park.[2]
  • 11 July – an act to provide for the establishment of asylums for the lunatic poor in Ireland.[2]
  • c. July – tradesman Jeffery Sedwards establishes the Skibbereen Abstinence Society, considered the first organisation devoted to teetotalism in Europe.[2]
  • 7 August – first stone of Wellington Column is laid in Trim, County Meath.
  • 30 September – national fever committee appointed to distribute government relief[2] to victims of the typhus epidemic (October 1816–December 1819).
  • Edward O'Reilly's Irish-English Dictionary is published.

Arts and literature[]

  • 19 April – Charles Wolfe's poem The Burial of Sir John Moore at Corunna is first published in the Newry Telegraph.[2]
  • 27 May – Thomas Moore's poem Lalla-Rookh: an Oriental romance is first published in London.[2]
  • June – Maria Edgeworth's novel Ormond: a tale is first published in London[2] together with Harrington.

Births[]

  • 6 January – J. J. McCarthy, architect (died 1882).
  • 10 March – Patrick Neeson Lynch, bishop of the Roman Catholic Diocese of Charleston (South Carolina) (died 1882 in the United States).
  • 26 May – Denis Florence MacCarthy, poet, translator and biographer (died 1882).
  • 3 June – Robert Warren, lawyer and politician (died 1897).
  • 12 July – William Henry Gregory, politician and writer (died 1892).
  • 26 August – John Willoughby Crawford, politician and third Lieutenant Governor of Ontario (died 1875 in Canada).
  • 19 September – Charles Joseph Alleyn, lawyer and political figure in Quebec (died 1890 in Canada).
  • 11 October – Walter Shanly, civil engineer, author, businessman and politician in Canada (died 1899 in Canada).
  • 12 November – John T. Mills, lawyer and Supreme Court Justice for the Republic of Texas (died 1871 in the United States).
  • 22 November – Sir William Ewart, 1st Baronet, manufacturer and politician (died 1889).
  • 7 December – William Keogh, lawyer and politician (died 1878).
  • 12 December – Patrick Talbot, British Army officer (died 1898)
    Full date unknown
    • James Anthony Lawson, lawyer (died 1887).
    • Frederick McCoy, palaeontologist and museum administrator in Australia (died 1899 in Australia).
    • Arthur McQuade, farmer and politician in Ontario (died 1884 in Canada).

Deaths[]

  • 23 May – John Prendergast Smyth, 1st Viscount Gort, politician (born 1742).
  • 13 June – Richard Lovell Edgeworth, politician, writer and inventor (born 1744).
  • 5 September – Charles Osborne, lawyer and politician (born 1759).
  • 14 October – John Philpot Curran, orator and wit, lawyer and MP (born 1750).
  • 13 November – John Keogh, merchant and political activist (born 1740).

References[]

  1. ^ Delany, Ruth (1988). A celebration of 250 years of Ireland's Inland Waterways. Belfast: Appletree Press. p. 103. ISBN 0-86281-200-3.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i Moody, T. W.; et al., eds. (1989). A New History of Ireland. 8: A Chronology of Irish History. Oxford University Press. p. 302. ISBN 978-0-19-821744-2.
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