1893 in Ireland
Events from the year 1893 in Ireland.
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| See also: |  1893  in the United Kingdom Other events of 1893 List of years in Ireland  | ||||
Events
    
- January – the National Labour League, a predecessor of the Irish Land and Labour Association, is founded in Kanturk, County Cork.[1]
 - 19 January – Michael Logue is created a cardinal, the first Archbishop of Armagh to be so elevated.
 - February – Prime Minister of the United Kingdom W. E. Gladstone introduces his second Home Rule Bill to the House of Commons of the United Kingdom, where it is passed.[2] The biggest opposition to Home Rule manifests itself in Ulster, particularly amongst Protestants.
 - 26 April – Edward Carson is called to the English Bar at the Middle Temple[2]
 - 19 May – the neoclassical Roman Catholic St Mel's cathedral, Longford (foundation stone laid 1840 and opened for worship in 1856), is consecrated.[3]
 - 31 July – Douglas Hyde, Eoin MacNeill, Eugene O'Growney and Thomas O'Neill Russell establish the Gaelic League to encourage the preservation of Irish culture, with Hyde becoming its first president.[4]
 - 8 September – Gladstone's second Home Rule Bill is rejected by the House of Lords.[2]
 - The Girls' Brigade is founded in Dublin, origin of the international Christian youth organisation.[5]
 
Arts and literature
    
- 19 April – Oscar Wilde stages A Woman of No Importance in London.
 - December – William Butler Yeats publishes The Celtic Twilight, giving a popular name to the Irish Literary Revival.[6]
 - Douglas Hyde publishes Love Songs of Connacht.
 
Sport
    
    Football
    
- Irish League
 - Winners: Linfield
 
- Irish Cup
 - Winners: Linfield 5–1 Cliftonville
 
- Derry Olympic becomes defunct after only one season in the Irish Football League.
 
Golf
    
- Ormeau Golf Club in Belfast and Ballybunion Golf Club are formed.
 
Hockey
    
- Irish Hockey Union was formed on 6 February.
 
Births
    
- 26 January – Kitty Kiernan, fiancée of Michael Collins (died 1945)
 - 5 February – John Lymbrick Esmonde, soldier, Fine Gael TD (died 1958).
 - 22 February – Peadar O'Donnell, Irish Republican socialist, Marxist activist and writer (died 1986).
 - 6 March – Denis Rolleston Gwynn, journalist, author and professor of modern Irish history (died 1973).
 - 4 April – Dick McKee, Irish Republican Army member in Easter Rising (shot by Crown forces 1920).
 - 14 May – George McElroy, Royal Flying Corps and Royal Air Force pilot during World War I (killed in action 1918).
 - 9 June – Cathal O'Shannon, politician, trade unionist and journalist (died 1969).
 - 14 June – Séamus Burke, Sinn Féin TD, a founder-member of Cumann na nGaedheal and later Fine Gael (died 1967).
 - 26 July – E. R. Dodds, classical scholar (died 1973).
 - 10 August – Mick O'Brien, soccer player and manager (died 1940).
 - 30 September – Seán MacEoin, major general, Fine Gael TD and Cabinet Minister (died 1973).
 - 13 October – Seán Russell, Irish republican and a chief of staff of the Irish Republican Army (died 1940 at sea).
 - 26 October – Thomas MacGreevy, poet and director of the National Gallery of Ireland (died 1967).
 - 1 November – Neal Blaney, Fianna Fáil TD, Seanad member (died 1948).
 - 9 November – Liam Lynch, commanding general of the anti-Treaty Irish Republican Army during the Irish Civil War (shot and killed 1923).
 - 20 December
- Eddie Duffy, traditional Irish musician (died 1986).
 - Billy McCandless, footballer and football manager (died 1955).
 
- Full date unknown
 - Tomás Bairéad, journalist and author (died 1973).
 - Frank Gallagher, Irish Volunteer and author (died 1962).
 - Mick Kenny, Galway hurler (died 1959).
 - Harry Midgley, Northern Ireland Labour Party member of the Parliament of Northern Ireland and alderman of Belfast (died 1957).
 
 
Deaths
    
- 3 March – Hugh Nelson, politician in Canada and Lieutenant-Governor of British Columbia (born 1830).
 - 16 April – William Davis Ardagh, lawyer, judge and politician in Canada (born 1828).
 - 27 April – John Ballance, 14th Premier of New Zealand (born 1839).
 - 5 September – Mike Cleary, boxer (born 1858).
 - 8 November – Arnaud-Michel d'Abbadie, geographer (born 1815).
 - 28 December – James Donnelly, Bishop of the Diocese of Clogher (born 1823).
 
See also
    
    
References
    
- Lane, Pádraig G. (1993). "The Land and Labour Association 1894–1914". Journal of the Cork Historical and Archaeological Society. 98: 91, 109.
 - Stewart, A. T. Q. (1981). Edward Carson. Gill's Irish Lives. Dublin: Gill & Macmillan.
 - "St. Mel's Cathedral destroyed by fire". Longford Leader. 25 December 2009. Archived from the original on 17 January 2010. Retrieved 2009-12-25.
 - "Cultural Revival". A Short History of Ireland. BBC. Retrieved 2013-03-27.
 - "History". The Girls' Brigade International Council. Archived from the original on 2007-02-07. Retrieved 2023-03-16.
 - Yeats' collected editions feature a section titled The Rose, which is dated 1893, but Yeats never published a book titled "The Rose".
 - Hayes, Dean (2006). Northern Ireland International Football Facts. Belfast: Appletree Press. p. 153. ISBN 0-86281-874-5.
 
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