1969 in Ireland

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

  • 1968
  • 1967
  • 1966
  • 1965
  • 1964
Blank Ireland.svg
1969
in
Ireland

  • 1970
  • 1971
  • 1972
  • 1973
  • 1974
Centuries:
  • 18th
  • 19th
  • 20th
  • 21st
Decades:
  • 1940s
  • 1950s
  • 1960s
  • 1970s
  • 1980s
See also:1969 in Northern Ireland
Other events of 1969
List of years in Ireland

Events in the year 1969 in Ireland.

Incumbents[]

Events[]

  • 1 January – The People's Democracy civil rights march left Belfast for Derry.
  • 4 January – Militant loyalists, including off-duty Ulster Special Constabulary ("B-Specials"), attacked civil rights marchers in County Londonderry.
  • 10 January – Protestors in Northern Ireland defied police orders to abandon a planned march.[1]
  • 27 January – Ian Paisley was jailed for three months for illegal assembly in Northern Ireland.
  • 4 March – The Lichfield Report was issued. It proposed the creation of a "University of Limerick" which would be "orientated towards technological subjects".
  • 19 March – Ireland received its first loan from the World Bank.
  • 22 March – Civil rights demonstrations took place all over Northern Ireland.
  • 17 April – Bernadette Devlin, the 21-year-old student and civil rights campaigner, won the Mid-Ulster by-election. She was the youngest-ever female Member of Parliament in the United Kingdom.
  • 20 April – British troops arrived in Northern Ireland as a back-up to the Royal Ulster Constabulary.[citation needed]
  • 28 April – The Prime Minister of Northern Ireland, Terence O'Neill, resigned.
  • 1 May – Major James Chichester-Clark succeeded Terence O'Neill as the Northern Irish Prime Minister.
  • 7 May – The Minister for Finance, Charles Haughey, announced tax exemptions for painters, sculptors, writers, and composers on earnings gained from works of cultural merit.
  • 18 June – The 1969 Irish general election for Dáil Éireann was held.
  • 20 July – Telefís Éireann departed from its usual nightly schedule to broadcast its first programme late into the following morning when the first men landed on the moon at 21:17, Irish time. The moonwalk began at 03:39 the next morning and ended at 06:11. The entire broadcast was hosted live by , working alone in front of the camera, and he won a Jacob's Award for his performance.[2]
  • 21 July – President de Valera sent U.S. President Richard Nixon a telegram of congratulations and admiration following the first manned moon landing by Americans Neil Armstrong and Buzz Aldrin.
  • 1 August
    • A huge protest rally over events in Northern Ireland was held outside the General Post Office, Dublin. The crowd demanded that the Irish Army cross the border.
    • The farthing and halfpenny coins were withdrawn from circulation as Ireland moved towards decimalisation.
  • 3 August – Taoiseach Jack Lynch made a state visit to the Lebanon.
  • 5 August – Belfast experienced the worst sectarian rioting since 1935.
  • 12 August – Rioting broke out in Derry in the Battle of the Bogside, the first major confrontation of The Troubles.
  • 13–17 August – Sectarian rioting took place in Northern Ireland.
  • 13 August – As the Battle of the Bogside continued, Taoiseach Jack Lynch made a speech on television saying that the Irish government "can no longer stand by" and demanded a United Nations peace-keeping force for Northern Ireland.[3]
  • 14 August – British troops were deployed for the first time in Northern Ireland to restore law and order. Their presence was welcomed at first by many in the Catholic population of Derry.[4]
  • 15 August – A night of shooting and burning took place in Belfast. In Dublin, a Sinn Féin party protest meeting called for the boycott of British goods, Irish government protection of the people of Northern Ireland, and United Nations intervention.
  • 16 August – British soldiers were deployed in particularly violent areas of Belfast.
  • 17 August – Members of the Garda Síochána (police) clashed with protesters on O'Connell Street, Dublin, as a march against the Northern Ireland situation headed for the British embassy.
  • 27 August – The B-Specials began to hand in their guns following a call by Lieutenant-General Ian Freeland to disband them.[5] British Home Secretary, James Callaghan, visited Belfast.
  • 30 August – Jack Lynch ordered the Irish Army Chief of Staff, General Seán Mac Eoin, to prepare a plan, called Exercise Armageddon, for possible incursions into Northern Ireland in defence of Catholic communities there.[6]
  • August – Andrew Boyd's historical work Holy War in Belfast was published in Tralee, going through six impressions in three years.
  • 10 September – The British Army started to construct the first of the Northern Ireland 'Peacelines' on the Falls-Shankill divide in Belfast, marking the first of many 'Peacewall'[7] constructions across the city.
  • 10 October – The Hunt Committee Report recommended an unarmed civil police force in Northern Ireland and abolition of the Ulster Special Constabulary.
  • 1 December – Fianna Fáil paid tribute to Seán Lemass as his forty-five years of public life came to an end.
  • December – The Irish Republican Army split into Official and Provisional wings.[8]
  • 31 December – The half crown coin was permanently withdrawn from circulation.
  • Undated
    • Date of full implementation of the 1967 policy of free secondary education for all in the Irish Republic.[9]
    • The last permanent residents left the island of Inis Cathaigh in the Shannon Estuary in County Clare.
    • The first Penney's store opened.

Arts and literature[]

  • 5 October – Samuel Beckett was awarded the Nobel Prize in Literature.
  • December – Rock band Thin Lizzy was formed in Dublin.
  • Donagh MacDonagh's poems A Warning to Conquerors are published in Dublin.

Sports[]

Gaelic Football Finals: Kerry 0–10 Offaly 0–7 Hurling Finals: Kilkenny 2–15 Cork 2–9

Births[]

  • 6 January – Jonathan Philbin Bowman, journalist and radio presenter (died 2000).
  • 19 January – Steve Staunton, former international association football player, former manager of the Republic of Ireland national football team.
  • 8 February – Earl McCarthy, freestyle swimmer
  • 15 March – Pat Fenlon, association football player and manager.
  • 26 March – Billy Dooley, Offaly hurler.
  • 31 March – Lawrence Patrick Parsons, Lord Oxmantown.
  • 2 April – Ann Leonard, former Fianna Fáil party politician.
  • 1 May – Mary Lou McDonald, Sinn Féin party Member of the European Parliament for Dublin.
  • 10 June – Breandán de Gallaí, Irish dancer.
  • 13 June – Abe Elkinson, businessman.
  • 16 June – Tommy Tiernan, comedian.
  • 1 July – Séamus Egan, musician.
  • 10 August – Arthur Edward Rory Guinness, 4th Earl of Iveagh.
  • 23 August – Brian Hayes, Fine Gael party Teachta Dála (TD) for Dublin South-West.
  • 7 September – Barry Ferguson, association football player.
  • 17 September – Ken Doherty, snooker player.
  • 22 October – Owen Casey, tennis player.
  • 24 October – Emma Donoghue, playwright, literary historian, and novelist.
  • 29 October – Anthony Daly, Clare hurler and manager.
  • 28 November – Sonia O'Sullivan, runner, World and European Championship gold medallist.
  • 30 November – Catherina McKiernan, athlete.
  • 16 December – Michelle Smith, swimmer and triple Olympic gold medallist.
Full date unknown
  • Liz Allen, journalist and writer.
  • Kevin Barry, fiction writer.
  • Ciarán Farrell, composer.

Deaths[]

  • 24 January – Patrick Hogan, Labour Party TD, Ceann Comhairle of Dáil Éireann (born 1885).
  • 30 March – James Foley, cricketer (born 1898).
  • 1 April – Francis de Groot, member of the right-wing New Guard of Australia (born 1888).
  • 8 April – James Duffy, soldier, recipient of the Victoria Cross for gallantry in 1917 at Kereina Peak, Palestine (born 1889).
  • 23 April – Florence Wycherley, independent TD (born 1908).
  • 23 May – Tom Barry, hurler (London-Irish) (born 1879).
  • 22 June – Thomas J. O'Connell, trade unionist, Labour Party leader, TD, and Senator (born 1882).
  • 4 August – Stanley Bergin, cricketer (born 1926).
  • 8 August – Bulmer Hobson, nationalist, an early leader of the Irish Republican Brotherhood (born 1883).
  • September – Cecilia Thackaberry, Presentation Sisters nun, killed in Nigeria performing relief work (born 1909).
  • 4 October – Cathal O'Shannon, politician, trade unionist and journalist (born 1893).
  • 8 August – Bulmer Hobson, member of Irish Volunteers, socialist and writer (born 1882).
  • 18 October – John "Pondoro" Taylor, hunter and writer (born 1904).
  • 18 November – Bridget Dowling, Adolf Hitler's sister-in-law by her marriage to Alois Hitler, Jr. (born 1891).
  • 27 November – Séamus Ó Grianna, writer (born 1889).

See also[]

References[]

  1. ^ "1969: Civil rights protesters defiant". BBC News. 10 January 1969. Archived from the original on 7 March 2008. Retrieved 11 February 2008.
  2. ^ Tom O'Dea (22 July 1969). "ITV stole the show". The Irish Press. Dublin. pp. 1, 3.
  3. ^ "Jack Lynch On The Situation In North". YouTube. 13 August 1969. Retrieved 1 September 2011.
  4. ^ "1969: British troops sent into Northern Ireland". BBC News. 14 August 1969. Retrieved 10 January 2008.
  5. ^ "Sir Ian Freeland – Testing time in Ulster". The Times (60482). London. 23 November 1979. p. IV (Obituaries).
  6. ^ Clonan, Tom (31 August 2009). "Operation Armageddon' would have been doomsday – for Irish aggressors". The Irish Times. Retrieved 3 September 2009.
  7. ^ [http://www.peacewall-archive.net
  8. ^ Edwards, Aaron (2011). The Northern Ireland Troubles. Oxford: Osprey. ISBN 978-1-84908-525-0.
  9. ^ "10 September 1967". Ireland in History Day by Day. 10 September 2012. Retrieved 18 January 2019.
Retrieved from ""