1939 in Ireland


Events from the year 1939 in Ireland.

Incumbents

January

  • 11 January – The Congress of the Irish National Teachers' Organisation in Galway called on the Government to abolish the ban on married women teachers.
  • 28 January – The Irish poet, dramatist, and Nobel prize winner for literature, W. B. Yeats, died at the Hôtel Idéal Beauséjour in Roquebrune-Cap-Martin in France. He was buried according to his own wishes in Roquebrune. Also at his own wishes, his remains were later moved to Ireland, in 1948.

    February

  • 12 February – The Department of External Affairs announced that it recognised the government of Francisco Franco in Spain.
  • February – In his Lenten pastoral, Bishop Daniel Mageean referred to "A Protestant Parliament for a Protestant People".

    March

  • 12 March – Taoiseach Éamon de Valera attended the coronation of Pope Pius XII in Rome.
  • 16 March – Éamon de Valera was greeted by Benito Mussolini in Rome and a luncheon was held in his honour.
  • 22 March – Irish neutrality was discussed during a Dáil Éireann debate on defence estimates. The Government considered the implications for the export market to Britain if a neutral stand was taken.
  • 30 March – The Treason Bill passed its fifth and final stage in Dáil Éireann.

    April

  • 9 April – The Gaelic Athletic Association voted to keep the name of the President of Ireland, Douglas Hyde, off its list of patrons. The situation arose because Hyde attended an international association football game.
  • 15 April – Boxer Jack Doyle married Mexican-American film actress Movita Castaneda in a civil ceremony in Ensenada, Baja California, Mexico.
  • 17 April – The Prime Minister of Northern Ireland, Lord Craigavon, dismissed as cowardly the Irish Government's position of neutrality.
  • 19 April – In a speech to Seanad Éireann Taoiseach Éamon de Valera referred to the dropping of all references to the King and Great Britain from new Irish passports.
  • 30 April – The 1939 New York World's Fair opened with an Ireland pavilion designed by Michael Scott.

    May

  • 4 May – The Prime Minister of Northern Ireland announced that conscription would not be extended to Northern Ireland.
  • 18 May – The Earl of Iveagh presented the Government with his townhouse in Dublin.

    June

  • 2 June – The Treason Act 1939 became law: a sentence of death could be passed on anyone convicted of "levying war against the State."
  • 29 June – Clann na Talmhan, the National Agricultural Party, was founded in Athenry.

    July

  • 1 July – The Irish Red Cross Society was established.

    September

  • 1 September – A state of emergency was declared by the Irish government when Germany invaded Poland.
  • 2 September – Taoiseach Éamon de Valera told the Dáil that Ireland would remain neutral in the European War.
  • 3 September
  • * The Emergency Powers Act 1939 came into force as Britain and France declared war on Nazi Germany.
  • * The Marine and Coastwatching Service was set up.
  • * British liner became the first civilian casualty of the war when she was torpedoed and sunk by German submarine between Rockall and Tory Island; the Knut Nelson landed 450 of the survivors in Galway.
  • 18 September – John F. Kennedy flew from Foynes, County Limerick for his first transatlantic flight, to Port Washington, New York, after helping with arrangements for survivors of the SS Athenia.
  • 9 September – Billed as "The Last Race in Europe" until after World War II, the Irish Motor Racing Club held its Phoenix Park Race; this included motorcycle and car races.
  • 11 September – The Irish-flagged tanker Inverliffey was shelled and sunk by the Nazi submarine,. The U-boat towed the lifeboats away from the blazing oil.
  • 13 September – The Minister for Supplies, Seán Lemass, introduced petrol rationing.

    October

  • 6 October – Austrian theoretical physicist Erwin Schrödinger took up residence in Dublin at the invitation of Éamon de Valera.
  • 30 October – More than two dozen air-raid sirens, acquired by Dublin Corporation, were tested across Dublin.

    November

  • November – The teenage Brendan Behan, at this time a member of the Irish Republican Army, was arrested in Liverpool for possession of explosives.

    December

  • December – The Supreme Court of Ireland declared the detention without trial of Irish Republican Army members to be illegal.
  • 10 December – The German Nazi propaganda radio station Irland-Redaktion began broadcasting to Ireland in the Irish language.
  • 23 December – A million rounds of ammunition were stolen from the national arsenal at the Phoenix Park by the Irish Republican Army.

    Arts and literature

  • 31 January – Lord Longford began a series of Chekhov productions at the Gate Theatre in Dublin with The Cherry Orchard.
  • February – English novelist T. H. White settled at Doolistown in County Meath; he lived in Ireland until 1946.
  • 13 March – Flann O'Brien's At Swim-Two-Birds was published in London.
  • 4 May – James Joyce's Finnegans Wake was published complete in London.
  • 18 May – Louis MacNeice's Autumn Journal: a poem was published in London.
  • July – W. B. Yeats' Last Poems and Two Plays were published posthumously in London.
  • 10 October – Robert Collis's play Marrowbone Lane was premiered at the Gate Theatre, Dublin, starring Wilfrid Brambell.
  • Autumn
  • * English painters Kenneth Hall and his lover Basil Rakoczi of The White Stag group moved from London to Ireland.
  • * English novelist Ethel Mannin settled in Connemara.
  • English-born Irish composer Elizabeth Maconchy returned to Ireland from England, living in Dublin for a brief period, during which she composed her Fifth String Quartet.
  • Peig Sayers' stories and anecdotes about life on Great Blasket Island were published as Maċtnaṁ seana-ṁná in Dublin.

    Sport

Association football

;League of Ireland
;FAI Cup

Golf