1920 in Ireland

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Template:Short description Template:YearInIrelandNav Template:Use Hiberno-English Template:Use dmy dates Events from the year 1920 in Ireland.

Events

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  • 13–14 April – Irish Trades Union Congress staged a general strike in support of the Mountjoy hunger strikers, securing their release.
  • 15 April–8 June: Arthur Griffith established a Republican legal system (under Austin Stack) in areas under IRA control.<ref name=Cottrell/> The traditional summer assizes become virtually unworkable.
  • 2 May – Viscount Fitzalan was sworn in as Lord Lieutenant of Ireland, the first Catholic to hold the viceroyalty since the reign of King James II.
  • 10 May – Forty Irish republican prisoners on hunger strike at HM Prison Wormwood Scrubs in London were released.
  • 17 May – Sinn Féin supporters and Unionists engaged in pitched street battles in Derry.
  • 20 May – Dublin dock workers refused to handle British military material, and were soon joined in the boycott by members of the Irish Transport and General Workers Union.
  • 22 May – In Rome, Pope Benedict XV beatified Oliver Plunkett.
  • 4 June – The IRA ordered a boycott of the RIC and their families.<ref name=Cottrell/>
  • 17 June – "The Listowel Mutiny": RIC constables based at Listowel refused orders to assist the British Army.<ref name=Cottrell/> The RIC was ordered to shoot armed IRA men who did not surrender when challenged.<ref name=Cottrell/>
  • 20 June – Five died in severe rioting in Ulster.
  • 24 June – Troops were sent to reinforce the Derry garrison.
  • 29 June – Dáil Courts were established to hear civil cases.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation

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  • 23 July – Fourteen people died and one hundred were injured in fierce rioting in Belfast.
  • 27 July – The first recruits – former British Army officers – joined the RIC's Auxiliary Division.<ref name=Cottrell/>
  • 31 July – County Cork-born Australian Catholic Bishop Daniel Mannix was detained on board ship off Queenstown and prevented from landing in Ireland.
  • 3 August – Catholics rioted in Belfast in protest at the continuing British Army presence.
  • 13 August – The Restoration of Order in Ireland Act received royal assent, providing for Irish Republican Army activists to be tried by court-martial rather than by jury in criminal courts.<ref name=Cottrell/>
  • 15 August – The town hall at Templemore was burned down during the disturbances.
  • 19 August – Following his conviction by court martial for sedition, the Lord Mayor of Cork, Terence MacSwiney, went on hunger strike in Brixton Prison in London.
  • 24 August – Special constables were enrolled following rioting in Ulster.<ref name=Cottrell/>
  • 20 September – "Sack of Balbriggan" in County Dublin: Black and Tans destroyed more than fifty properties in the town.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation

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    • An 18-year-old medical student, Kevin Barry, was executed in Mountjoy Prison for participating in the killing of three young unarmed British soldiers.<ref name="Cottrell" />
  • 12 November – A hunger strike in Cork Prison was called off after the Sinn Féin President, Arthur Griffith, intervened.
  • 21 November – Bloody Sunday: The Irish Republican Army, on the instructions of Michael Collins, shot dead the "Cairo gang", fourteen British undercover agents in Dublin, most in their homes. Later that day, in retaliation, the Auxiliary Division of the Royal Irish Constabulary opened fire on a crowd at a Gaelic Athletic Association football match in Croke Park, killing thirteen spectators and one player, and wounding 60.<ref name=Cottrell/> Three men were shot that night in Dublin Castle "while trying to escape".
  • 22 November – IRA Captain Patrick McCarthy was shot dead during an ambush on Black and Tans at Millstreet.<ref>O'Halpin, Eunan (2020). The Dead of the Irish Revolution, Yale University Press, pg. 234, ISBN 978-0-300-12382-1.</ref>
  • 26 November – Acting President Arthur Griffith was arrested and jailed for seven months.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation

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Arts and literature

Sport

Association football

  • International matches
    14 February – Ireland 2–2 Wales (in Belfast).<ref name="DH">Template:Cite book</ref>
    13 March – Scotland 3–0 Ireland (in Glasgow).<ref name="DH"/>
    23 October – England 2–0 Ireland (in Sunderland).<ref name="DH"/>
  • Irish Cup
    Winners: Shelbourne (final not played). Disorder at the other semi-final, which was abandoned, meant that both potential opponents were excluded from the competition, and the Irish Football Association awarded the cup to Shelbourne.

Gaelic games

  • The All-Ireland Champions were Dublin (hurling) and Tipperary (football).

Golf

Births

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Deaths

References

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Sources

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