1969 in Ireland

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Template:Short description Template:More citations needed Template:Use Hiberno-English Template:Use dmy dates Template:YearInIrelandNav Events in the year 1969 in Ireland.

IncumbentsEdit

EventsEdit

JanuaryEdit

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  • 27 January – Ian Paisley was jailed for three months for illegal assembly in Northern Ireland.

MarchEdit

  • 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.

AprilEdit

MayEdit

JuneEdit

  • June – Penneys department store in Dublin, predecessor of multinational fast fashion retailer Primark, was established by Arthur Ryan on behalf of the Weston family at 47 Mary Street.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation

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JulyEdit

  • 20 July – Telefís Éireann, which normally stopped broadcasting by midnight during the 1960s, transmitted its first all-night programme when the first men landed on the Moon at 9.17 pm, Irish time. The moonwalk began at 3.39 the next morning and ended at 6.11. The entire broadcast was hosted live by Kevin O'Kelly, working alone in front of the camera, and he won a Jacob's Television Award for his performance.<ref>
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  • 21 July –
    • A message of goodwill from President Éamon De Valera, along with messages from 72 other heads of state, was placed on the surface of the moon by astronaut Buzz Aldrin during the first moonwalk, performed during the Apollo 11 mission. De Valera's message read: "May God grant that the skill and courage which have enabled man to alight upon the Moon will enable him, also, to secure peace and happiness upon the Earth and avoid the danger of self-destruction." The messages of world leaders were photographed and micro-reduced in size 200 times, then inscribed on a half-dollar-coin-sized silicon disc which was encased in an aluminium capsule to protect it. The messages are readable through a microscope.<ref>* {{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation

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AugustEdit

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  • 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.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation

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SeptemberEdit

  • 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'<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation

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OctoberEdit

DecemberEdit

  • 1 December – The Fianna Fáil party paid tribute to former taoiseach and party leader Seán Lemass as his forty-five years of public life came to an end.
  • 26 December – One of the winged statues at the base of the O'Connell Monument in Dublin was destroyed in the early hours of the morning by a time-bomb that had been placed behind it the previous day by the UVF. No injuries were reported.<ref name= BN>Template:Cite news</ref><ref name= II>Template:Cite news</ref>
  • 28 December – In the early hours of the morning, a car bomb exploded near the entrance to the Central Detective Bureau in Ship Street, near Dublin Castle. Nobody was injured.<ref name= IP>Template:Cite news</ref>
  • 31 December – The half crown coin was permanently withdrawn from circulation.
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    • The 1967 policy of free secondary education for all was fully implemented.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation

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Arts and literatureEdit

  • August – Andrew Boyd's historical work Holy War in Belfast was published in Tralee, going through six impressions in three years.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation

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SportsEdit

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

BirthsEdit

Full date unknown

DeathsEdit

See alsoEdit

ReferencesEdit

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