Wikipedia

1979 in Ireland

Blank Ireland.svg
1979
in
Ireland

Centuries:
Decades:
See also:1979 in Northern Ireland
Other events of 1979
List of years in Ireland

Events from the year 1979 in Ireland.

Incumbents

Events

  • 2 January – the lowest temperature recorded in Ireland in the 20th century, −18.8 °C (−1.8 °F) at Lullymore, County Kildare. (The lowest on record in 1881 was −19.1 °C.)[1]
  • 8 January – Whiddy Island Disaster: fifty people were killed when an explosion destroyed the French oil tanker Betelgeuse at the Gulf Oil terminal on Whiddy Island in Bantry Bay.
  • 4 March – legendary hurler Christy Ring was buried in Cork.
  • 9 March – PAYE workers across the country took to the streets to protest against the tax system.
  • 20 March – a huge anti-PAYE demonstration was held in Dublin.
  • 30 March – Ireland ended Irish pound parity with sterling on joining the European Monetary System.
  • 12 April – Patrick McGilligan, the last surviving member of the first government, celebrated his 90th birthday in Dublin. He died seven months later, on 15 November.
  • 10 May – petrol shortages due to a crisis in the Middle East caused long delays at petrol stations in Ireland.
  • 2 June – protesters opposed to the building of civic offices on the site of Viking excavations in Wood Quay, Dublin, occupied the area.
  • 7 June – European Parliament election, the first direct election to the European Parliament, in the Republic of Ireland and Northern Ireland.
  • 15 June – Aer Lingus's first female pilot, Gráinne Cronin, received her wings.
  • 14 July – in Crossmaglen, County Armagh, Gaelic Athletic Association (GAA) supporters paraded silently in protest against the British Army's commandeering of part of the local football pitch. Former GAA president Con Murphy addressed the crowd.
  • 9 August – the first group of Vietnamese refugees arrived in Ireland.
  • 27 August
  • 29 September – Pope John Paul II arrived at Dublin Airport for a three-day visit to Ireland. 1.25 million people, just over one-quarter of the population, welcomed him at a special mass in the Phoenix Park. Later in the day he spoke to 200,000 people at Drogheda, County Louth. He returned to Dublin in the evening where 750,000 people witnessed his motorcade passing through the city.
  • 30 September – the Pope addressed 285,000 people at a youth rally in Galway, before travelling to Knock, County Mayo where a further 300,000 people heard him speak. He also visited Clonmacnoise.
  • 1 October – on the final day of his visit, the Pope visited the Nunciature at Maynooth College and celebrated mass before 400,000 people in Limerick. He then left Shannon Airport for Boston in the United States.
  • 23 November – in Dublin, IRA member Thomas McMahon was sentenced to life imprisonment for the assassination of Lord Mountbatten.
  • 29 November – Taoiseach Jack Lynch greeted European Economic Community heads of government as they arrived for a summit meeting at Dublin Castle.
  • 5 December – Jack Lynch announced his resignation as Taoiseach and leader of Fianna Fáil. He led the party for thirteen years, spending nine as Taoiseach.
  • 7 December
    • Charles Haughey was elected leader of the Fianna Fáil.
    • The new headquarters of the Central Bank of Ireland were officially opened on Dame Street.[2]
  • 11 December
  • 31 December – 1979 has been the worst year ever for industrial disputes in Ireland, costing the economy over 1,460,000 working days.
  • Undated
    • Central Bank of Ireland postponed to issue the new £20 note blue in colour with William Butler Yeats until January 1980 due to Financial Problems.

Arts and literature

Sport

Athletics

  • John Treacy won the world cross-country championship for the second time.

Golf

Births

Full date unknown
  • Raymond Daniels, Wicklow Gaelic footballer (died 2008).
  • Neil Delamere, comedian.
  • Liam McCormack, television presenter.

Deaths

See also

  • 1979 in Irish television

References

  1. ^ "Temperature in Ireland". met.ie. Met Éireann. Retrieved 24 April 2012.
  2. ^ A Chronology of Main Developments in the Central Bank of Ireland, 1943–2013 Central Bank of Ireland, 2013.
  3. ^ "Writer and editor Kate Cruise O'Brien dies in Dublin aged 49". The Irish Times. 27 March 1997.
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