1909 in Ireland

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1909
in
Ireland

Centuries:
  • 18th
  • 19th
  • 20th
  • 21st
Decades:
  • 1880s
  • 1890s
  • 1900s
  • 1910s
  • 1920s
See also:1909 in the United Kingdom
Other events of 1909
List of years in Ireland

Events in the year 1909 in Ireland.

Events[]

  • 31 October – The Royal University of Ireland was dissolved.
  • 14 December – Ernest Shackleton delivered a lecture entitled Nearest the South Pole in the large hall of the National University in Dublin.
  • 31 December – Harry Ferguson became the first person to fly an aircraft in Ireland, in a monoplane he designed and built himself.
  • The Mater Infirmorum Hospital in Belfast was officially recognised as a university teaching hospital.
  • Fieldwork for the multidisciplinary Clare Island Survey commenced under the direction of Robert Lloyd Praeger.

Arts and literature[]

  • 1 April – Lennox Robinson's first play, The Cross Roads, was performed at the Abbey Theatre in Dublin; he became the theatre manager later in the year.
  • 22 July – Widowed Irish painter John Lavery married Irish American painter Hazel Martyn.
  • 20 August – The tenor Enrico Caruso performed at the Theatre Royal in Dublin.
  • 20 December – The first dedicated cinema in Ireland, the Volta Cinematograph, opened in Dublin under the management of writer James Joyce.[1]
  • Herbert Hughes' collection of folk songs, Irish Country Songs, was published, including "She Moved Through the Fair" with words largely composed by Padraic Colum.
  • Ella Young's first work of Irish folklore, The Coming of Lugh, was published.

Sport[]

Association football[]

  • International
    • 13 February – England 4–0 Ireland (in Bradford)[2]
    • 15 March – Scotland 5–0 Ireland (in Glasgow)[2]
    • 20 March – Ireland 2–3 Wales (in Belfast)[2]
    Irish League
    Winners: Linfield F.C.
    Irish Cup
    Winners: Cliftonville F.C. 0–0 draw; replay result 2-1 Bohemian F.C.

Births[]

  • 9 January – Patrick Peyton, priest who promoted the Rosary (died 1992).
  • 30 January – George Crothers, cricketer (died 1982 in Northern Ireland).
  • 1 February – Timothy McAuliffe, Labour Party politician (died 1985).
  • 8 March – Francis MacManus, novelist (died 1965).
  • 3 April – Knox Cunningham, barrister, businessman, and Ulster Unionist politician (died 1976).
  • 19 April – Conel Hugh O'Donel Alexander, cryptanalyst, chess player, and chess writer (died 1974).
  • 24 April –
    • Robert Farren (Roibeárd Ó Faracháin), poet (died 1984).
    • David Beers Quinn, historian (died 2002).[3]
  • 30 April – F. E. McWilliam, sculptor (died 1992).
  • 4 June – Robert Dudley Edwards, historian (died 1988).
  • 7 July – Cecilia Thackaberry, Presentation Sisters nun, killed in Nigeria performing relief work (died 1969).
  • 24 July – Geoffrey Bing, lawyer and Labour politician in UK (died 1977 in Northern Ireland).
  • 31 July – Martin White, Kilkenny hurler (died 2011).
  • 1 August – W. R. Rodgers, writer, broadcaster, teacher, and Presbyterian minister (died 1969).
  • 4 October – Paddy Moore, association football player (died 1951).
  • 7 October – Michael O'Neill, nationalist politician and Member of Parliament (MP) (died 1976).
  • 20 October – James Patrick Scully, awarded George Cross for valour in 1941 in Liverpool in rescuing people from a bomb damaged building.
  • 28 October – Francis Bacon, painter (died 1992).
  • 4 November – Sir Basil Goulding, 3rd Baronet, cricketer, squash player, and art collector (died 1982).
  • 29 November – James Auchmuty, historian (died 1981).
    Full date unknown
    • Muriel Brandt, artist (died 1981 in Northern Ireland).
    • Jack Stanley Gibson, surgeon and writer (died 2005).
    • Gabriel Hayes, sculptor, designer of Irish coins (died 1978).
    • W. R. Rodgers, poet and writer (died 1969 in Northern Ireland).

Deaths[]

  • 10 January – John Conness, United States Senator from California 1863–1869 (born 1821).
  • 4 February – James Lynam Molloy, poet, songwriter, and composer (born 1837).
  • 3 March – Bishop Richard Owens, Bishop of Clogher 1894–1909 (born 1840).
  • 19 March – Charles Guilfoyle Doran, Clerk of Works at St Colman's Cathedral, Cobh (born 1835).
  • 24 March – William Lundon, Irish Parliamentary Party MP (born 1839).
  • 24 March – John Millington Synge, author and playwright (Hodgkin's disease).
  • 4 April – Sir Theobald Burke, 13th Baronet (born 1833).
  • 22 May – Sir Rowland Blennerhassett, 4th Baronet, Liberal Party MP (born 1839).
  • 3 June – Charlotte Grace O'Brien, political and social activist, writer, and plant collector (born 1845).
  • 15 July – George Tyrrell, expelled Jesuit priest and Modernist Catholic scholar (born 1861).
  • 1 December – William Joseph Corbet, nationalist politician and MP (born 1824).

References[]

  1. ^ Ellmann, Richard (1982) [1959]. James Joyce. New York: Oxford University Press. p. 303. ISBN 0-19-281465-6.
  2. ^ a b c Hayes, Dean (2006). Northern Ireland International Football Facts. Belfast: Appletree Press. p. 1. ISBN 0-86281-874-5.
  3. ^ Dutton, David (6 April 2002). "Obituary: David Quinn". The Guardian. Retrieved 11 January 2018.
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