1881 in Ireland
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| See also: | 1881  in the United Kingdom Other events of 1881 List of years in Ireland  | ||||
Events from the year 1881 in Ireland.
Events
- 16 January – the lowest temperature ever recorded in Ireland, −19.1C (−2.4F) at Markree, County Sligo.[1]
 - 3 February – arrest of Michael Davitt.[2]
 - 2 March – Protection of Persons and Property (Ireland) Act 1881, a Coercion Act, is passed.[2]
 - June – the submarine "Fenian Ram" (Holland Boat No. II), designed by Irish-born John Philip Holland and financed by the American Fenian Brotherhood, is first submersion-tested in New York City.
 - 22 August – William Ewart Gladstone's Land Law (Ireland) Act 1881, the second of the Irish Land Acts, secures the three "f"s (fair rents, fixity of tenure and freedom of sale),[3] and gives the courts the authority to reconsider judicial rents every three years and to adjust them in line with shifts in agricultural prices.[4]
 - 13 October – arrest of Charles Stewart Parnell and other leaders.[2]
 - 18 October – No Rent Manifesto.[2]
 - 19 October – Irish National Land League proclaimed as an unlawful association.[2]
 
Date unknown
- Sirocco Works, an engineering firm was founded in Belfast by Samuel Cleland Davidson.[5]
 - Kilmacud Monastery established by Carmelite nuns.
 - Approximate date – St John Ambulance Ireland establishes its first centre, in Dublin.
 
Arts and literature
- June – Oscar Wilde's Poems published in London.[6]
 
Sport
Football
- Irish Cup
 - Winners: Moyola Park 1–0 Cliftonville (first ever Irish Cup winners)
 
Golf
- 9 November – Royal Belfast Golf Club founded, the oldest in Ireland.[7]
 
Births
- 23 January – William O'Brien, politician and trade unionist (died 1968).
 - 10 February – Ken McArthur, winner of the marathon race at the 1912 Summer Olympics for South Africa (died 1960).
 - 15 February – Piaras Béaslaí, member of the Irish Republican Brotherhood, member of Dáil Éireann, author, playwright, biographer and translator (died 1965).
 - 14 March – Robert Barton, Sinn Féin MP, Cabinet Minister and signatory of Anglo-Irish Treaty 1921 (died 1975).
 - 21 March – Seán O'Hegarty, Irish Republican Army member during the Irish War of Independence (died 1963).
 - 25 March – Moya Llewelyn Davies, born Mary Elizabeth O'Connor, Republican activist and Gaelic scholar (died 1943).
 - 28 March – Martin Sheridan, Olympic gold medallist for the United States (died 1918).
 - 10 April – William John Leech, painter (died 1968).
 - 24 April – John Joe O'Reilly, Cumann na nGaedheal and Fine Gael TD (died 1967).
 - 5 May – Horace de Vere Cole, prankster (died 1936 in France)
 - 20 May – Robert Gregory, cricketer, artist and airman (shot down 1918 in Italy).
 - 26 July – James Cecil Parke, international rugby player, tennis player, golfer and Olympic medallist (died 1946).
 - 21 September – Éamonn Ceannt, nationalist, rebel and Easter Rising leader (executed 1916).
 - 13 November 
- Con Collins, Sinn Féin MP (died 1937).
 - John Tudor Gwynn, cricketer (died 1956).
 
 - 8 December – Padraic Colum, poet, novelist and dramatist (died 1972).
 - 25 December – John Dill, British Army field marshal (died 1944 in the United States).
 - Full date unknown 
- William Conor, artist (died 1968).
 - Seumas O'Kelly, journalist and author (died 1918)
 
 
Deaths
- 30 January – Anna Maria Hall, novelist (born 1800).
 - January – Alfred Elmore, painter (born 1815).
 - 5 February – Richard Graves MacDonnell, lawyer, judge and colonial governor (born 1814).
 - 1 August – Nathaniel Thomas Hone, cricketer (born 1861).
 - 9 September – Robert Carew, 2nd Baron Carew, politician (born 1818).
 - 10 October – Richard Turner, iron-founder (born 1798).
 - 5 November – Robert Mallet, geologist, civil engineer and inventor (born 1810).
 - 7 November – John MacHale, Roman Catholic Archbishop of Tuam, Irish Nationalist and writer (born 1791).
 
See also
References
- ^ "Temperature in Ireland". Met Éireann. Archived from the original on 2019-01-07. Retrieved 2012-07-21.
 - ^ a b c d e Moody, T. W.; Martin, F. X., eds. (1967). The Course of Irish History. Cork: Mercier Press. p. 378.
 - ^ Stewart, A. T. Q. (1981). Edward Carson. Gill's Irish Lives. Dublin: Gill & Macmillan.
 - ^ Hill, Myrtle; Lynch, John. "Ireland: society & economy, 1870–1914". Multitext Project in Irish History. University College Cork. Archived from the original on 2010-09-10. Retrieved 2012-07-21.
 - ^ "Industrialist who ran a tea estate in India, then returned to found Sirocco". Belfast News Letter. 2021-11-24. Retrieved 2025-02-17.
 - ^ Cox, Michael, ed. (2004). The Concise Oxford Chronology of English Literature. Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19-860634-6.
 - ^ "Royal Belfast Golf Club". Coleraine: The Golf PA.com. Archived from the original on 2016-03-03. Retrieved 2012-12-30.
 
