1953 in Ireland

{{short description|none}}

{{Use dmy dates|date=April 2021}}

{{Use Hiberno-English|date=August 2022}}

{{More citations needed|date=January 2013}}

{{YearInIrelandNav|1953}}

Events from the year 1953 in Ireland.

Incumbents

Events

  • 18 January – The Sinn Féin party decided to contest all twelve constituencies in the next Westminster elections in Northern Ireland.
  • 31 January - The ferry MV Princess Victoria sank during a storm in the North Channel with the loss of 135 lives.
  • 15 March – Up to ten thousand civil servants marched on O'Connell Street in Dublin demanding a just wage.
  • 16 March – Franklin Delano Roosevelt, Jr. asked the United States Congress to support a United Ireland.
  • 27 April – Republican revolutionary, suffragette, and actress Maud Gonne MacBride died at her home in Dublin aged 88.
  • 1 May – The first television transmitter in Ireland was brought into service by the BBC at Glencairn.{{cite book|editor=Moody, T. W.|title=A New History of Ireland. 8: A Chronology of Irish History|publisher=Oxford University Press|year=1989|isbn=978-0-19-821744-2|display-editors=etal}}
  • 3 June – Five hundred unemployed men marched to Kildare Street in Dublin demanding employment, not dole.
  • 6 July – A thousand unemployed people sat on O'Connell Bridge in Dublin for fifteen minutes of protest.
  • 2 August – Murlough Bay in the Glens of Antrim was chosen as the future grave of executed diplomat and nationalist Roger Casement. Taoiseach Éamon de Valera called for the return of his remains from Britain.
  • 29 August – Kilmainham Gaol was chosen to be preserved as a national monument.
  • 30 August – A new synagogue was dedicated at Terenure in Dublin, designed by Wilfrid Cantwell.{{cite web|title=A Short history of the Dublin Hebrew Congregation|url=http://www.jewishireland.org/irish-jewish-communities/dublin-hebrew-congregation/|publisher=Irish Jewish Community|access-date=2013-01-05}}
  • 1 September – The Great Northern Railway was sold to the governments of the Republic and Northern Ireland and managed by a joint board.
  • 21 September – The Irish ploughing team left Dublin for the world ploughing championships in Canada.
  • 20 October – The Busáras bus station opened in Dublin. It was designed by Michael Scott in the International Style.{{cite web

| title = 100 Buildings: Busáras - Michael Scott's modernist masterwork

| last = Gilleece

| first = Emma

| date = 2021-11-20

| website = RTÉ

| url = https://www.rte.ie/culture/2021/1120/1262046-100-buildings-busaras-michael-scotts-modernist-masterwork/

}}

Arts and literature

  • 5 January – Samuel Beckett's play Waiting For Godot had its first public stage première in French as En attendant Godot in Paris. His novel The Unnamable was also published in French this year.
  • 5–26 April – The first An Tóstal festivals of national culture (devised by Seán Lemass) were held.
  • 8 August – Chester Beatty Library in Dublin opened to the public.
  • Writer Brian O'Nolan was obliged to retire from his senior post in the Civil Service.{{cite news|last=O'Toole|first=Fintan|author-link=Fintan O'Toole|url=http://www.irishtimes.com/newspaper/ireland/2011/1001/1224305062073.html|title=The Fantastic Flann O'Brien|newspaper=The Irish Times|date=2011-01-01|access-date=2011-10-02|quote=A combination of his gradually deepening alcoholism and his habit of making derogatory remarks about senior politicians in his newspaper columns led to his forced retirement from the civil service in 1953. (He departed, recalled a colleague, "in a final fanfare of f***s".)}}

Sport

=Association football=

=Golf=

Births

:* Patrick Deeley, poet.

:* Rita Kelly, poet.

:* Sheila O'Donnell, architect.

Deaths

References

{{reflist}}

{{Years in Ireland}}

{{Year in Europe|1953}}

{{DEFAULTSORT:1953 in Ireland}}

Category:1950s in Ireland

Ireland

Category:Years of the 20th century in Ireland