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1820 in Ireland

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Events from the year 1820 in Ireland.

Events

  • 30 January – Irish-born Royal Navy captain Edward Bransfield in the Williams is the first person positively to identify Antarctica as a land mass.
  • 12 February – the East Indian and Fanny set sail from Cork with settlers for the Cape Colony.
  • 6 May – failure of Newport's Bank in Waterford.
  • 25 May – failure of Roche's Bank and stoppage of Leslie's Bank in Cork.
  • 3 June – the Roman Catholic Cathedral of St Mary and St Anne in Cork is largely destroyed by arson.
  • 8 July – act for lighting the city and suburbs of Dublin with gas.
  • 20 July – Saint Cronan's Boys' National School opens in Bray, County Wicklow, as the Bray Male School.
  • December – Lough Allen Canal, giving through navigation between Carrick-on-Shannon and Lough Allen, opens.
  • The Royal Dublin Society adopts its "Royal" prefix when the new king George IV of the United Kingdom becomes its patron.
  • Suspension of construction of the Wellington Testimonial, Dublin, in Phoenix Park to the design of Robert Smirke.
  • First steamship on the Irish Sea crossing from Dublin to Liverpool, the Waterloo, introduced by George Langtry of Belfast.
  • Frederick Bourne begins to create the village of Ashbourne, County Meath.
  • Publication of James Hardiman's The History of the Town and County of the Town of Galway, from the earliest period to the present time in Dublin.
  • Denny Meats are founded.
  • St. John's Church is built in Ballymore Eustace, County Kildare.

Arts and literature

  • Charles Maturin (anonymously) publishes Melmoth the Wanderer.
  • Regina Maria Roche publishes The Munster Cottage Boy: a Tale.

Births

  • 19 February – John Tuigg, third Roman Catholic Bishop of Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania (died 1889 in the United States).
  • 31 May – Timothy Burns, Lieutenant Governor of Wisconsin from 1851 to 1853 (died 1853).
  • 3 June – Thomas William Moffett, scholar, educationalist and president of Queen's College Galway (died 1908).
  • 4 June – John Kean, businessman and politician in Ontario (died 1892).
  • 2 August – John Tyndall, physicist (died 1893).
  • 6 October – James Travers, soldier, recipient of the Victoria Cross for gallantry in 1857 at Indore, India (died 1884).
  • 22 November – Katherine Plunket, botanical artist and longest-lived Irish person ever (died 1932).
  • 30 December – Mary Anne Sadlier, novelist (died 1903).
  • ;Full date unknown
  • :*Thomas Bellew, Galway landowner and politician (died 1863).
  • :* John F. Kennedy's great-grandfather was born in the village of Dunganstown in County Wexford.
  • :*Johnston Drummond, early settler of Western Australia, botanical and zoological collector (died 1845).
  • :*Ambrose Madden, recipient of the Victoria Cross for gallantry in 1854 in the Crimea, at Little Inkerman (died 1863).
  • :*Patrick Mylott, soldier, recipient of the Victoria Cross for gallantry in 1857 in India (died 1878).
  • :*Henry Hamilton O'Hara "Mad O'hara", "The Mad Squire of Craigbilly" (died 1875).
  • :*Kivas Tully, architect (died 1905).

Deaths

  • 29 January – George III of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland (born 1738).
  • 5 February – William Drennan, physician, poet, educationalist and co-founder of the Society of United Irishmen (born 1754).
  • 13 February – Leonard McNally, informant against members of the Society of United Irishmen (born 1752).
  • 20 March – Eaton Stannard Barrett, poet and author (born 1786).
  • 6 June – Henry Grattan, member of Irish House of Commons and campaigner for legislative freedom for the Irish Parliament (born 1746).
  • Undated – Anthony Daly, a leader of the Whiteboy movement, hanged for attempted murder.

References

References

  1. Jones, A. G. E.. (1982). "Antarctica Observed: who discovered the Antarctic Continent?". Caedmon of Whitby.
  2. (1989). "A New History of Ireland. '''8''': A Chronology of Irish History". Oxford University Press.
  3. Grogan, Patrick. (2017). "A failed bank of Waterford in the eighteen-hundreds". Decies.
  4. (February 2019). "Rebuilding". Cathedral Parish.
  5. Delany, Ruth. (1988). "A celebration of 250 years of Ireland's Inland Waterways". Appletree Press.
  6. Royal Dublin Society, The. (1981). "RDS: The Royal Dublin Society, 1731–1981". Gill & Macmillan.
  7. (6 January 2003). "Saint John's Church (Ballymore Eustace), BALLYMORE EUSTACE EAST (B'MORE EUST. ED), Ballymore Eustace, KILDARE". [[National Inventory of Architectural Heritage]].
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