Events in the year 1906 in Ireland.
Events
- 4 January â Irish Parliamentary Party member of parliament William O'Brien called on nationalists to extract the maximum concessions for Ireland from every British government.
- 16 May â Temperance reformers met with the Lord-Lieutenant to seek Sunday closing for all public houses, earlier closing on Saturdays, and a reduction of public house licences throughout the country.
- 6 June â The Iveagh Baths opened in Dublin.
- 1 August â The Catholic Hierarchy ruled out any scheme for mixed religious education at Trinity College Dublin.
- 7 August â Douglas Hyde was awarded the freedom of Dublin.
- 8 August â A Parisian court granted a separation to Maud Gonne and John MacBride; Gonne was given custody of their son, Seán MacBride.
Full date unknown
Arts and literature
Sport
Association football
- ;International
- : 17 February â Ireland 0âÂÂ5 England (in Belfast) (25th annual match with no Irish wins) Val Harris became the first Dubliner to play for Ireland.
- : 17 March â Ireland 0âÂÂ1 Scotland (in Dublin)
- : 2 April â Wales 4âÂÂ4 Ireland (in Wrexham)
Athletics
Births
- 4 February â Letitia Dunbar-Harrison, librarian (died 1994 in Northern Ireland).
- 13 February â MáirtÃÂn àCadhain, Irish language writer (died 1970).
- 13 April â Samuel Beckett, Nobel Prize in Literature, playwright, novelist, and poet (died 1989).
- 24 May â John Joseph Scanlan, second Bishop of the Roman Catholic Diocese of Honolulu (died 1997).
- 1 July â Ivan Neill, major and Unionist politician (died 2001 in Northern Ireland).
- 19 July â Hugh T. Baker, cricketer (died 1989).
- 11 August â James Graham, cricketer (died 1942).
- 28 September â William Hare, 5th Earl of Listowel, peer and Labour party politician (died 1997).
- 28 September â Lawrence Parsons, 6th Earl of Rosse (d. c.1979).
- 22 October â Charles Lynch, pianist (died 1984).
- 10 December â Padraig Marrinan, artist (died 1975 in Northern Ireland).
Deaths
- 2 March â Ellen Mary Clerke, author, journalist, poet, and science writer (born 1840).
- 30 May â Michael Davitt, republican, nationalist agrarian agitator, social campaigner, labour leader, and Irish National Land League founder (born 1846).
- 7 July â John Drummond, early settler and explorer in Western Australia, first Inspector of Native Police there (born 1816).
- 21 October â Edward James Saunderson, leader of the Irish Unionist Party in the British House of Commons (born 1837).
- 10 November â John Richardson Wigham, lighting engineer (born 1829 in Scotland).
- 27 November â Michael Cusack, founder of the Gaelic Athletic Association (born 1847).
See also
References