1963 in Ireland

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

{{Use dmy dates|date=July 2022}}

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

{{YearInIrelandNav|1963}}

Events in the year 1963 in Ireland.

Incumbents

Events

| title = Bid to break TV strike deadlock

| date = 1963-03-03

| work = The Sunday Press

| issue = 698

| location = Dublin

| page = 1

| author =

| quote = The Labour Court, at its weekly meeting tomorrow, will try to break the deadlock in the strike of 30 Radio Éireann and Telefís Éireann journalists.

}}

  • 25 March – The Lord Mayor of Dublin, Jim "J.J." O'Keeffe, inaugurated Ireland's first escalator, in Roches Stores, a department store on Henry Street in Dublin.
  • {{cite book | last=O'Toole | first=Fintan | date=2023 | title=We Don't Know Ourselves: A Personal History of Modern Ireland | location=New York | publisher=Liveright Publishing Corporation | page=93 | isbn=978-1-324-09287-2}}
  • The Irish Times. 26 March 1963. p. 1.
  • The Evening Herald. 26 March 1963. p. 9.
  • The Irish Press. 27 March 1963. p. 8.

The first working escalator was built in New York City in 1896.

= Visit by John F Kennedy =

File:JFK-New Ross 1963.jpg addresses the people of New Ross.]]

:* 26 June – Following a three-day visit to West Germany which he concluded with his historic Cold War address in West Berlin earlier in the day, President Kennedy of the United States arrived in Ireland for a four-day state visit. He was greeted at Dublin Airport by President de{{nbsp}}Valera and Taoiseach Seán Lemass. His motorcade to the US Ambassador's residence in the Phoenix Park in Dublin was met by large crowds in O'Connell Street and Dame Street.[http://jfkhomecoming.com/timeline/introduction/ Timeline] JFK Homecoming website, 2013.{{cite book

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

|url = https://archive.org/details/jfkinireland0000tubr

|first = Ryan

|last = Tubridy

|publisher = Lyons Press

|year = 2011

|isbn = 978-0-7627-7257-5}}{{cite web

| url = https://history.state.gov/departmenthistory/travels/president/kennedy-john-f

| title = Presidential and Secretaries Travels Abroad: John F. Kennedy

| website = Office of the Historian

| publisher = U.S. Department of State

| access-date = 2024-01-06

}}

:* 27 June – Kennedy flew to New Ross by helicopter where he made a speech to a crowd. He drove to his ancestral home nearby in Dunganstown where he met extended family. Afterwards he flew to Wexford where he was given the freedom of the town. That evening, he attended a garden party at Áras an Uachtaráin, home of the Irish president, and afterwards attended a state dinner hosted by the Taoiseach in his honour at Iveagh House in Dublin.

:* 28 June – Kennedy flew to Cork by helicopter. Following a motorcade through the crowded city he was awarded the freedom of the city. Back in Dublin in the afternoon, he visited Arbour Hill where he laid a wreath at the graves of executed leaders of 1916 Rising. Afterwards, he visited Leinster House where he became the first statesman to address both Houses of the Oireachtas.[https://www.oireachtas.ie/en/press-centre/press-releases/20230405-president-of-the-united-states-joseph-r-biden-jr-to-address-joint-sitting-of-the-houses-of-the-oireachtas/ President of the United States, Joseph R Biden Jr to address joint sitting of the Houses of the Oireachtas] Houses of the Oireachtas, 2023-04-05. At Dublin Castle, he was conferred with degrees of Doctor of Laws by both the National University of Ireland and by Dublin University. He was also awarded the freedom of the city of Dublin.

:* 29 June – Kennedy flew by helicopter to Galway where a motorcade took him to City Hall where he was made a freeman of the city. He made a speech to a large crowd in Eyre Square before another motorcade took him to his helicopter in Salthill from where he flew to Limerick, where he landed at Greenpark Racecourse. He was conferred with the freedom of Limerick. After speaking to the crowd, he flew to Shannon Airport nearby where he made a farewell speech before flying to England on Air Force One for an informal meeting with British prime minister Harold Macmillan.

| url = https://www.beatlesbible.com/1963/11/07/live-adelphi-cinema-dublin-ireland/

| title = Live: Adelphi Cinema, Dublin, Ireland

| website = The Beatles Bible

| date = 2018-10-31

| access-date = 2024-01-06

}}{{cite web

| url = https://www.rte.ie/entertainment/2023/1107/1009351-the-beatles-in-dublin-from-abbey-road-to-abbey-street/

| title = The Beatles in Dublin - From Abbey Road to Abbey Street

| website = RTÉ

| date = 2023-11-07

| access-date = 2024-01-06

}}

= Death of John F Kennedy =

:* 22 November – President de{{nbsp}}Valera addressed the nation following the murder of U.S. president John Kennedy.

:* 24 November – De{{nbsp}}Valera left to attend Kennedy's funeral. He was accompanied by cadets who were invited by Jacqueline Kennedy to form a guard of honour.

:* 26 November – Ireland held a national day of mourning for President Kennedy.

Arts and literature

  • 2 June – Benjamin Britten's A Hymn of St Columba premièred at Gartan in County Donegal.{{cite book|first=Eric Walter|last=White|title=Benjamin Britten: his life and operas}}
  • Cork Opera House reopened after being fully rebuilt.
  • John McGahern's semi-autobiographical first novel, The Barracks, was published.
  • Seamus Heaney's poem Mid Term Break was published in Kilkenny Magazine

Sport

= Association football =

= Horse racing =

Births

= Full date unknown =

Deaths

= Full date unknown =

See also

References

{{reflist}}

{{Years in Ireland}}

{{Year in Europe|1963}}

{{DEFAULTSORT:1963 in Ireland}}

Category:1960s in Ireland

Ireland

Category:Years of the 20th century in Ireland