1945 in Ireland

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Events from the year 1945 in Ireland.

Incumbents

Events

  • 1 January – Most public transport came under the control of Córas Iompair Éireann.
  • 12 January – The people of Ireland donated £1,000,000 to the starving people of Italy.
  • 13 April – Dáil Éireann sat for 20 minutes to express sympathy and pay tribute to US President Franklin Delano Roosevelt, who died the previous day. The House was then adjourned.
  • 2 May
  • In one of the most controversial episodes of his premiership, Taoiseach Éamon de Valera called to the German Ambassador to express his sympathy following the death of Adolf Hitler.
  • In the last Irish shipping loss due to World War II, motor fishing trawler Naom Garvan caught a naval mine in her trawl off Helvick Head, Dungarvan; all three crew were lost.
  • 7 May – Reports of a German surrender brought students of Trinity College Dublin onto the roof of the university singing the English and French national anthems. A riot ensued following the burning of the Irish tricolour.
  • 11 May – Government wartime censorship of the media was lifted.{{cite book|first=Clair|last=Wills|title=That Neutral Island|location=London|publisher=Faber|year=2007|isbn=9780571221059}}
  • 16 May – Éamon de Valera replied in a radio broadcast to British prime minister Winston Churchill's criticism of Irish neutrality.
  • 18 May – Éamon de Valera announced £12 million food and clothing aid programmed for Europe.
  • 22 May – The Irish Legal Terms Act was signed into law, providing support for greater use of Irish in the legal system.[https://www.irishstatutebook.ie/eli/1945/act/18/enacted/en/print.html Irish Legal Terms Act, 1945] Irish Statute Book, 1945-05-22.
  • 14 June – In the 1945 presidential election, Fianna Fáil party candidate Seán T. O'Kelly beat Fine Gael party candidate Seán Mac Eoin and Independent candidate Patrick McCartan. O'Kelly was inaugurated on June 20 as Ireland's second president.{{cite web

| url = https://electionsireland.org/result.cfm?election=1945P&cons=194

| title = Presidential Election 14 June 1945

| last1 = Took

| first1 = Christopher

| last2 = Donnelly

| first2 = Seán

| access-date = 2024-05-07

| website = ElectionsIreland.org

}}

  • July – {{lang|ga|Rannóg an Aistriúcháin}}, the Oireachtas translation service, published {{lang|ga|Litriú na Gaeilge: Lámhleabhar an Chaighdeáin Oifigiúil}} ("Irish orthography: a handbook of the official standard").
  • 24 July – Following visits to England, France, and Germany, future American president John F. Kennedy arrived in Dublin for a two-day visit as a cub reporter for the Hearst newspaper group.{{cite book

|title = JFK in Ireland: Four Days That Changed a President

|last = Tubridy

|first = Ryan

|date = 2010

|location = London

|publisher = HarperCollins

|pages = 24–28

|isbn = 978-0-00-731759-2

|url = https://archive.org/details/jfkinireland0000tubr}}[http://elppsummer2013.blogspot.com/2013/07/an-inspirational-trip-to-jfk-museum-of.html An Inspirational Trip to the JFK Museum Of Exhibition in Dublin] ELPP Summer 2013, 2 July 2013.

  • 25 July – John Kennedy interviewed the Taoiseach, Éamon de Valera, on the subject of Irish Partition. He filed a story for the New York Journal-American on 29 July entitled, "Eamon de Valera Seeks to Unite All Ireland: Eire Premier Answers Dillon on Constitutional Rights".[http://www.jfklibrary.org/Asset-Viewer/Archives/JFKPOF-129-004.aspx Articles: By John F. Kennedy on Ireland, 29 July 1945] John F. Kennedy Presidential Library and Museum. Retrieved: 14 May 2014.
  • 21 August – Two nationalist Members of Parliament took the Oath of Allegiance and entered the Parliament of the United Kingdom at Westminster.
  • 3 December – Oranges went on sale in Ireland for the first time since the end of World War II.
  • 14 December – The Nuremberg Trials heard the story of German plans to create a revolution in Ireland during World War II.
  • 25 December – In a presidential address, Seán T. O'Kelly asked the youth of Ireland to make a particular effort to restore the Irish language.
  • A "popular edition" of the Constitution of Ireland was published by the Government's Stationery Office, amending the Irish language text.

Arts and literature

Sport

=Association football=

=Golf=

Births

File:Brenda Fricker March 1990.jpg

File:Christy-liverpool-philh-oct-08-crop.jpg

:* Richie Bennis, Limerick hurling manager.

:* Justin McCarthy, Cork hurler, Waterford hurling manager.

:* Philip Pettit, philosopher and political theorist.

:* Kieran Purcell, Kilkenny hurler.

:* Pad Joe Whelehan, Offaly hurler, manager.

Deaths

File:Eoin MacNeill.jpg

References

{{Reflist}}

{{Years in Ireland}}

{{Year in Europe|1945}}

{{DEFAULTSORT:1945 In Ireland}}

Category:1940s in Ireland

Ireland

Category:Independent Ireland in World War II

Category:Years of the 20th century in Ireland