1900 in Ireland
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Events in the year 1900 in Ireland.
Events
- 16 January â Three lion cubs reared by an Irish red setter went on view at Dublin Zoo.
- 17 January â The different sections of the Nationalist Party met in the Dublin Mansion House's Oak Room to promote national unity.
- 6 February â The Irish National League and Irish National Federation re-united within the Irish Parliamentary Party, with John Redmond elected as compromise chairman.
- 28 February â Unofficial figures showed that the Royal Dublin Fusiliers suffered the most in the Second Boer War.
- 12 March â The 45th Company of the Imperial Yeomanry left Dublin for service in South Africa.
- 17 March â In celebration of Saint Patrick's Day, the Lord Lieutenant (Earl Cadogan), accompanied by his staff, reviewed a military display in the yard of Dublin Castle, followed by dinner and a ball in Saint Patrick's Hall that evening.
- 1 April â The Irish Guards regiment of the British Army was formed by order of Queen Victoria to honour the Irish troops fighting in the Boer War for the British Empire.[1][2]
- 4 April â Queen Victoria arrived at Kingstown and travelled to Dublin where she was greeted by the Lord Mayor and members of the corporation.
- 7 April â 52,000 children greeted Queen Victoria at the Phoenix Park in Dublin.
- 23 April â At a meeting in Loughrea, County Galway, Douglas Hyde complained of the rapid anglicisation of the country and the loss of the Irish language.
- 11 May â Edward Carson became Solicitor General for England and Wales and was knighted.[3]
- 13 May â The rift in the Irish Parliamentary Party was healed as John Dillon and John Redmond shared a platform for the first time in ten years.
- 5 July â The British War Office issued a list of Irish prisoners of the Boers from the 1st Battalion Royal Irish Fusiliers. It named 473 men from eight companies.
- 31 December â Ceremonies all over the country marked the closing of the 19th century and the dawning of the 20th.[citation needed]
- Richard J. Ussher and Robert Warren published The Birds of Ireland in London.[4]
Arts and literature
- The Irish Literary Theatre staged three plays at the Gaiety Theatre, Dublin with an English company: Edward Martyn's Maeve; Alice Milligan's The Last Feast of the Fianna; and George Moore's satirical The Bending of the Bough: a comedy in five acts (an adaptation of his cousin Martyn's The Tale of a Town).
- 'Moira O'Neill' published Songs of the Glens of Antrim.
Sport
Association football
- International
- 24 February Wales 2â0 Ireland (in Llandudno)[5]
- 3 March Ireland 0â2 Scotland (in Belfast)[5]
- 17 March Ireland 0â2 England (in Dublin: the first International match played here)[5]
- Irish League
- Winners: Belfast Celtic
- Irish Cup
- Winners: Cliftonville 2â1 Bohemians
- Derry Celtic was founded and joined the Irish Football League.
Births
- 10 January â Harry Kernoff, artist (died 1974)
- 19 January â Frank Devlin, badminton player (died 1988)
- January â Michael Donnellan, founder of the Clann na Talmhan party and TD (died 1964)
- 4 February â Robert Edgeworth-Johnstone, chemical engineer (died 1994 in France)
- 16 February â John Stewart Collis, writer and pioneer ecologist (died 1984) and his twin Robert Collis, physician and writer (died 1975)
- 22 February â Seán à Faoláin, short story writer (died 1991)
- 27 February â James Ennis, cricketer (died 1976)
- 1 March â Nano Reid, painter (died 1981)
- 6 March â Mark Deering, Fine Gael party TD (died 1972)
- 25 May â John Hunt, expert on mediaeval art (died 1976)
- 10 July â Paul Vincent Carroll, dramatist (died 1968)
- 17 July â Paddy Smith, Fianna Fáil party TD and longest-serving member of Dáil Ãireann (54 years) (died 1982)
- 22 July â Michael Davern, Fianna Fáil TD for Tipperary South 1948â1965 (died 1973)
- 20 August â Seosamh Mac Grianna, writer (died 1990)
- 26 August â Eudie Coughlan, Cork hurler (died 1987)
- 30 August â Martin King, Galway hurler (died 1969)
- 2 October â Hubert Butler, writer and historian (died 1991)
- 18 October â Sarah Makem, traditional singer (died 1983)
- 23 October
- Paddy Ahern, Cork hurler (died 1971)
- Hubert Butler, scholar, essayist and humanitarian (died 1991)
- 27 October â Peter Kerley, radiologist (died 1979)
- October â Frank Ryan, tenor (died 1965)
- 2 November â William Norton, Labour party leader, TD and Cabinet minister (died 1963)
- 19 November â Pamela Hinkson, writer (died 1982)
- 4 December â Tom Farquharson, association football player (died 1970)
- 23 December â Noel Purcell, actor (died 1985)[6]
- Full date unknown â John Doherty, fiddle player (died 1980)
Deaths


- 19 January â William Larminie, poet and folklorist (born 1849)
- 23 January â Abraham Boulger, soldier, recipient of the Victoria Cross for gallantry in 1857 at Lucknow, India (born 1835)
- 23 January â James Pearson, soldier, recipient of the Victoria Cross for gallantry in 1858 at Jhansi, India (born 1822)
- 7 March â Thomas Preston, scientist (born 1860)
- 16 March â Frederick William Burton, painter (born 1816)
- 22 March â Thomas Murphy, recipient of the Victoria Cross for bravery at sea in saving life in a storm off the Andaman Islands in 1867 (born 1839)
- 26 April â John Hawkins Hagarty, lawyer, teacher and judge in Canada (born 1816)
- 2 July â Thomas Farrell, sculptor (born 1827)
- 12 November â Marcus Daly, businessman in America (born 1841)
- 30 November â Oscar Wilde, playwright, novelist and poet, died in France (born 1854)[7]
- 14 December â Paddy Ryan, boxer (born 1851)
- Full date unknown â Thomas Workman, entomologist and arachnologist (born 1843)
