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Events in the year 1911 in Ireland.

Events

  • 5 January – Protestant church leaders condemned the Papal decree on mixed marriages.
  • 2 April – The national population census was taken.
  • 16 May – The Cunard Line's struck a rock on entering Queenstown harbour.
  • 27 May – The first issue of the Irish Worker was published. The paper was the official organ of the Irish Transport and General Workers' Union (ITGWU) and was edited by James Larkin.
  • 31 May – The RMS Titanic's hull was launched at the Harland & Wolff shipyard in Belfast. It was the largest ship afloat. Her sister sailed for Liverpool the same day to take up transatlantic service.
  • 22 June – As George V was crowned King in London a Sinn Féin meeting at the Customs House in Dublin condemned Irish participation in the coronation ceremonies.
  • 8&ndash;12 July – King George V and Queen Mary made a five-day royal visit to Dublin which was the last to the city this century. On 8 July, they officially open the College of Science in Merrion Square and on 10 July they visited St Patrick's College, Maynooth.
  • 9 August – A statue of Charles Stewart Parnell was hoisted onto its pedestal in Sackville Street, Dublin.
  • 17 August – Dublin County Council voted in favour of using Greenwich Mean Time. The councillors heard that Irish time, being 25 minutes behind Greenwich, was a great handicap for trade.
  • 18 August – The Parliament Act removed the House of Lords' power regarding budgets and restricted their power over other bills to a two-year suspensive veto. This made Irish Home Rule a possibility in the future.
  • 21 August – The Irish Women's Suffrage Federation was founded.
  • 26 August – Wexford foundry workers were locked out for attempting to join the ITGWU. The lockout continued until February 1912.
  • 23 September – 70,000 Unionists and Orangemen marched from Belfast to Craigavon House to protest against Home Rule.
  • 1 October – The monument to Parnell was officially unveiled in Upper Sackville Street, Dublin.
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  • A strike of women workers at Jacob's biscuit factory in Dublin was organised by Rosie Hackett.
  • The organisation Royal Arch Purple was formed, closely linked to the Orange Institution.
  • Bellevue Pleasure Gardens, a public park and recreational area, was opened on the slopes of Cavehill in Belfast.
  • Sir Samuel Kelly founded his family coal merchant business as a limited company with a capital of £50,000, as John Kelly Limited.

Arts and literature

  • 16 April – St. John Greer Ervine's play Mixed Marriage premiered at the Abbey Theatre in Dublin.
  • 16 December – The Imperial Copyright Act (coming into effect in 1912) confirmed the library of Trinity College Dublin as one of the six in the UK entitled to be given by legal deposit a copy of every British publication.
  • The Kalem Company of New York shot a film based on the play The Colleen Bawn on location in Ireland with Canadian Irish director Sidney Olcott. (Another version was shot this year in Australia.)
  • Patrick MacGill's Songs of a Navvy was published.
  • Adam Lynn's Ulster Scots dialect Random Rhymes frae Cullybackey was published.
  • W. F. Marshall's poems Ulster Sails West, including "Hi Uncle Sam!", was published.
  • The first volume, Ave, of novelist George Moore's three-volume autobiographical Hail and Farewell was published in the same year that he left Dublin to settle in London.
  • Katharine Tynan Hinkson's New Poems was published.
  • 11 February – England 2–2 Ireland (in Derby)