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Events from the year 1941 in Ireland.

Incumbents

  • President: Douglas Hyde
  • Taoiseach: Éamon de Valera (FF)
  • Tánaiste: Seán T. O'Kelly (FF)
  • Minister for Finance: Seán T. O'Kelly (FF)
  • Chief Justice: Timothy Sullivan
  • Dáil: 10th
  • Seanad: 3rd

Events

January

  • 2 January – Three Carlow women were killed in a night of German bombing in parts of Leinster.
  • 3 January – Further German bombing of Dublin.
  • 13 January – The novelist and poet James Joyce died in Zürich.
  • 24 January – Part of the old State Chambers in Dublin Castle were destroyed by fire.

February

  • 20 February – The emergency Scientific Research Bureau was set up to seek alternatives to raw materials in short supply.
  • 21 February – The first flight by a British Royal Air Force (RAF) flying boat took place through the "Donegal Corridor", Irish airspace between its base in Northern Ireland and the Atlantic Ocean, a concession secretly agreed by Éamon de Valera.

March

  • 6 March – 3,800 animals were slaughtered after the 50th case of foot-and-mouth disease was announced.
  • 20 March – Bread rationing was introduced.
  • 21 March – The Glencullen (Capt. T. Waldron) and Glencree (Capt. D. McLean) were machine-gunned by the Luftwaffe in the Bristol Channel.
  • 22 March: 16:00 hours – The collier St. Fintan (Capt. N. Hendry) was attacked by two Luftwaffe bombers off the coast of Pembrokeshire in Wales and sank with all hands – nine dead. got lost in bad weather and crashed on Black Hill (Kilbeg) above the village of Lacken, County Wicklow killing its entire crew of four.

May

  • 5 May – Belfast suffered its third bombing raid during World War II. The Dublin government authorised its emergency services to assist.
  • 7 May – Wages Standstill Order.

October

  • 12 October – Charles Stewart Parnell, "the uncrowned King of Ireland," was honoured in a huge pageant in Dublin.

November

  • November – Brendan Behan was released from Borstal in England and deported to Ireland.

December

  • 8 December – The day after the attack on Pearl Harbor in Hawaii, Winston Churchill cabled the Taoiseach inviting him to join the Allies of World War II.

Arts and literature

  • Myles na gCopaleen's parodic novel An Béal Bocht was published.
  • Donagh MacDonagh's Veterans, and other poems was published.
  • Louis MacNeice's poetry Plant and Phantom and study The Poetry of W. B. Yeats were published.
  • Kate O'Brien's novel The Land of Spices was published; it was prohibited in Ireland by the Censorship of Publications Board.
  • English poet John Betjeman became the British press attaché in Dublin, living in Clondalkin.
  • Opening of the new Dublin Airport passenger terminal, designed by Desmond FitzGerald, the first significant International Style building in Ireland.

Sport

Association football

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;League of Ireland

:Winners: Cork United

;FAI Cup

:Winners: Cork United 2–2, 3–1 Waterford.

Golf

  • The Irish Open was not played due to The Emergency (the second world war period in Ireland).

Births

  • 3 January – Derrick O'Connor, actor (died 2018).
  • 10 March – Pat Donnellan, Galway Gaelic footballer.
  • 31 March – Jim O'Keeffe, Fine Gael party Teachta Dála (TD) for Cork South-West.
  • 18 April – Michael D. Higgins, Labour Party TD, Cabinet Minister, and ninth President of Ireland.
  • 22 May – Caitlín Maude, poet, actress and traditional singer (died 1982).
  • 24 June – Gerard Clifford, Roman Catholic auxiliary bishop of the Archdiocese of Armagh.
  • 24 July – Tony Dunne, association football player.
  • 27 August – Paddy Barry, Cork hurler.
  • 15 September – Tommy Carberry, National Hunt jockey and trainer (died 2017).
  • 18 September – Michael Hartnett, poet (died 1999).
  • 2 October – Donal Moynihan, Fianna Fáil party TD.
  • 5 October – Phil Larkin, Kilkenny hurler.
  • 13 October – Mick Doyle, rugby player and coach (died in car crash 2004).
  • 20 October – Mike Murphy, television and radio broadcaster.
  • 11 November – Eddie Keher, Kilkenny hurler.
  • 23 November – Derek Mahon, poet (died 2020).
  • 1 December – Fiachra Trench, musician and composer.
  • 2 December – William Lee, Bishop of Waterford and Lismore (1993–2013).
  • 10 December – Fionnula Flanagan, actress. (Fionnghuala Manon Flanagan)
  • ;Full date unknown<!--This is a description list; please see Help:List before changing-->
  • :* Jonathan Bardon, historian and author.
  • :* James Coleman, installation and video artist.
  • :* Cyril Dunne, Galway Gaelic footballer.
  • :* Paddy Flanagan, cyclist (died 2000).
  • :* Eamon Grennan, poet.
  • :* Sean Matgamna, Trotskyist theorist.

Deaths

  • 6 January – F. R. Higgins, poet and theatre director (born 1896).
  • 10 January – John Lavery, artist (born 1856).
  • 13 January – James Joyce, novelist and poet (born 1882).
  • 15 February – Andrew Jameson, public servant, businessman and Seanad member (born 1855).
  • 19 February – Hamilton Harty, conductor and composer (born 1879).
  • 13 March – Finlay Jackson, cricketer and rugby player (born 1901).
  • 1 April – Jennie Wyse Power, member of the Seanad from 1922 to 1936.
  • 19 May – Lola Ridge, anarchist poet and editor (born 1873).
  • 4 July – William John English, recipient of the Victoria Cross for gallantry in 1901 at Vlakfontein, South Africa (born 1882).
  • 19 August – John T. Browne, Mayor of Houston, Texas (born 1845).
  • 9 September – William Gerard Barry, painter (born 1864).
  • 11 September – John MacLoughlin, elected for nine years to Seanad from 1922 as an independent.
  • 11 October – Mildred Anne Butler, painter (born 1858).
  • 26 November – James Jackman, recipient of the Victoria Cross for gallantry in 1941 at Tobruk, Libya; killed in action the next day (born 1916).
  • ;Full date unknown<!--This is a description list; please see Help:List before changing-->
  • :* Sidney Royse Lysaght, writer (born 1856).

References