1940 in Ireland

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1940
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See also:1940 in Northern Ireland
Other events of 1940
List of years in Ireland

Events from the year 1940 in Ireland.

Incumbents

Events

  • January – the Irish Naval Service acquires the first of its six Motor Torpedo Boats, M1.
  • 3 January – Tomás Óg Mac Curtain shoots and mortally wounds Detective Garda Síochána John Roche in Cork city centre. He had been disarmed by Garda Pat Malone in 1935. On this occasion he is spared the death penalty in view of his father's history.
  • 17 January – Enid (Captain Wibe) of neutral Norway sailing from Steinkjer to Dublin, 10 miles north of Shetland, goes to assist SS Polzella which has been torpedoed by German submarine U-25 which then shells and sinks Enid.
  • 7 February – Munster (Capt. R. Paisley) mined and sunk in Irish Sea entering Liverpool.[1]
  • 9 February – State (Burke) v. Lennon decided in the Supreme Court of Ireland, vonfirms internment without trial under the Offences against the State Act 1939 to be unconstitutional. The government has to bring in the Offences Against the State (Amendment) Act, 1940 to reinstate the provisions.
  • 3 March
  • 9 March – trawler Leukos sunk by gunfire from U-38, north west of Tory Island – 11 dead.[1] (She may have moved between the surfacing U-boat and English trawlers, in the hope that the tricolour would protect her while the English escaped.)
  • 10 March – City of Bremen rescues 33 crew of Amor (Dutch) in the North Sea.
  • 29 March – fire destroys the roof and upper rooms of St. Patrick's College, Maynooth.
  • 20–24 April – Plan Kathleen, an Irish Republican Army plan for a Nazi German invasion of Northern Ireland, is presented to the Abwehr.[2]
  • April – two men die on hunger strike for political status in Mountjoy Jail (Dublin).[3]
  • 4 May – Operation Mainau: German agent Hermann Görtz is parachuted into Ireland to make contact with the IRA.
  • 24 May – first secret meeting to formulate 'Plan W', joint action in the event of a German invasion of Ireland, is held between Irish officials and British military in London.
  • 27 May
    • The Churchill war ministry in London agrees to seek co-operation from de Valera and creation of an All-Ireland Council during "the present emergency".[4]
    • Uruguay of neutral Argentina sailing from Rosario to Limerick with 6,000 tons of maize, sinks with scuttling charges by U-37 160 miles from Cape Villano: 15 die, 13 survive.
  • 10 June – Violando N Goulandris of neutral (at this time) Greece sailing from Santa Fe, Argentina to Waterford with a cargo of wheat is torpedoed by U-48 off Cape Finisterre: 6 die, 22 survive.
  • 12 June – U-38 lands a German spy, Karl Simon, in Dingle. He is promptly arrested and interned for the duration.
  • 19 June – Dublin Institute for Advanced Studies established.
  • 23 June – Minister Frank Aiken encourages everyone to store food and water and to prepare a shelter in case of a direct hit.
  • 2 July – British-owned SS Arandora Star, carrying civilian internees and POWs of Italian and German origin from Liverpool to Canada, is torpedoed and sunk by German submarine U-47 off northwest Ireland with the loss of around 865 lives.
  • 4 July – Taoiseach Éamon de Valera announces that the policy of neutrality adopted the previous September will not be reversed.
  • 7 July – Operation Lobster I: three German agents are infiltrated into Ireland.
  • 11 July – Moyalla rescues twenty survivors from Athellaird (British) off Cape Clear Island.
  • 15 July
    • City of Limerick (Capt. R. Ferguson) bombed by aircraft and sinks in Bay of Biscay, 700 miles west of Ushant – 2 dead.[1]
    • Republican Frank Ryan is released by the authorities of Francoist Spain from Burgos prison into the hands of the German Abwehr.
  • 20 July – City of Waterford (Capt. T. Freehill) shelled by submarine in North Atlantic but escapes.
  • 30 July – Kyleclare rescues 52 survivors from Clan Menzies (British) off County Mayo coast.
  • 1 August – collier Kerry Head bombed off Kinsale; she survives this attack, but see 22 October.
  • 8 August
    • Operation Dove: Republicans Seán Russell and Frank Ryan embark from Nazi Germany on U-boat U-65 for infiltration into Ireland, but Russell will fall ill and die on the passage and the operation is abandoned.
    • Operation Green (Unternehmen Grün), a proposed German invasion of the south of Ireland, is presented to Nazi German High Command as a diversion for Operation Sea Lion, the invasion of Britain planned at this time.[5]
  • 10 August – British armed merchantman HMS Transylvania (F56) is torpedoed off Malin Head by German submarine U-56.
  • 15 August – Meath (Capt. T. MacFariane) mined and sunk off the South Stack, Holy Island, Anglesey;[1] crew rescued by a local fishing trawler but 700 cattle lost.
  • 16 August – Loch Ryan (Capt. J. Nolan) bombed off Land's End but survives.[1]
  • 24 August – City of Waterford (Capt. T. Freehill) bombed in Irish Sea but survives.
  • 26 August – five German bombs are dropped on County Wexford in a daylight raid. One hits the Shelbourne Co-operative Creamery in Campile killing three women.[6]
  • 27 August – Lanahrone rescues 18 survivors from Goathland (British) off County Kerry coast.
  • 4 September
    • Luimneach (Capt. E. Jones) sunk by gunfire from U-46 in Bay of Biscay.[1]
    • Edenvale (Capt. N. Gillespie) machine-gunned by German plane off Waterford coast.[1]
  • 27 September – Manchester Brigade torpedoed off the Aran Islands.
  • 3 October – the German news agency announces that the German government is willing to pay compensation for dropping bombs on Dublin.[7]
  • 22 October – Kerry Head (Capt. C. Drummond) bombed again: all twelve hands lost, in full view of watchers on Cape Clear Island.[1]
  • 26–28 October – RMS Empress of Britain, serving as a troopship under the British flag, is bombed, torpedoed and sunk off the Donegal coast with the loss of 45 lives. At 42,348 GRT she is the war's largest merchant ship loss.
  • 7 November – Éamon de Valera, speaking in response to Winston Churchill's statement, says that there can be no question of handing over Irish ports for use by British forces while they retain control of Northern Ireland.
  • 11 November – Ardmore (Capt. T. Ford) strikes a mine off the Saltee Islands – 24 die.
  • 22 November – the 'Murder of Marlhill' takes place in Knockgraffon near New Inn, County Tipperary.[8]
  • 24 November – James Craig, the first Prime Minister of Northern Ireland, dies suddenly. He has been the longest continually serving Prime Minister in Europe.
  • 19 December – lightship tender Isolda (Capt. A. Bestic) is sunk by German bombers within sight of Carnsore Point: six killed, seven wounded.[1]
  • 20 December – this evening two German bombs fall on Sandycove near Dún Laoghaire, injuring three, and a third bomb falls near Carrickmacross in County Monaghan.[9]
  • 21 December – Innisfallen (Capt. G. Firth) hits a mine off the Wirral Peninsula near New Brighton, Merseyside while leaving Liverpool and sinks; four die.[1]
  • 27 December – Dr. John McQuaid is consecrated as Roman Catholic Archbishop of Dublin and Primate of Ireland, an office he will hold for more than thirty years.

Arts and literature

  • 10 June – Christine Longford's historical play Lord Edward is premiered at the Gate Theatre, Dublin.[10]
  • 5 August – George Shiels' play The Rugged Path is premiered at the Abbey Theatre, Dublin.[10]
  • 4 October – Brian O'Nolan's first "Cruiskeen Lawn" humorous column is published in The Irish Times; from the second column he uses the pseudonym 'Myles na gCopaleen'. The original columns are composed in Irish. He continues writing the column until the year of his death, 1966.
  • October – The Bell, a liberal monthly magazine of literature and social comment, is established in Dublin by Peadar O'Donnell under the editorship of Seán Ó Faoláin.
  • Seán Ó Faoláin publishes his travelogue An Irish Journey and novel Come Back to Erin.
  • Cecil Day-Lewis publishes Poems in Wartime and his translation of The Georgics of Virgil.[11]
  • Louis MacNeice's poetry collection The Last Ditch (including "The Coming of War" sequence) is published by Cuala Press in Dublin.[11]
  • Ewart Milne's poetry collection Letter from Ireland is published in Dublin.

Sport

Football

League of Ireland
Winners: St James' Gate
FAI Cup
Winners: Shamrock Rovers 3–0 Sligo Rovers.

Golf

  • Irish Open is not played due to The Emergency.

Births

Deaths

References

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Forde, Frank (2000). "Appendix 3: Beligerent Action against Irish Ships". The Long Watch: World War Two and the Irish Mercantile Marine (rev ed.). Dublin: New Island. ISBN 1-902602-42-0.
  2. ^ Hull, Mark M. (2002). Irish Secrets. German Espionage in Ireland 1939–1945. Dublin: Irish Academic Press. ISBN 0-7165-2756-1.
  3. ^ Wills, Clair (2007). That Neutral Island. London: Faber. ISBN 9780571221059.
  4. ^ "This Union". The Long View. 13 July 2021. BBC Radio 4.
  5. ^ Militärgeographische Angaben über Irland. Berlin: Generalstab des Heeres, Abt. für Kriegskarten und Vermessungswesen (IV. Mil.-Geo.), 1940. OCLC 10934333.
  6. ^ "Three Irish Girls Killed By German Bombs". The Irish Times. 27 August 1940.
  7. ^ "German Compensation for Bombing at Campile". The Irish Times. 14 February 1946.
  8. ^ Bourke, Marcus (1993). Murder at Marlhill: Was Harry Gleeson innocent?. Dublin: Geography Publications. ISBN 0-906602-23-8.
  9. ^ "Bombs Fall in County Dublin". The Irish Times. 21 December 1940.
  10. ^ a b "Playography Ireland". Dublin: Irish Theatre Institute. Retrieved 5 April 2015.
  11. ^ a b Cox, Michael, ed. (2004). The Concise Oxford Chronology of English Literature. Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19-860634-6.
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