1995 in Ireland

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Template:Short description Template:Use Hiberno-English Template:Use dmy dates Template:More citations needed Template:YearInIrelandNav Events from the year 1995 in Ireland.

Incumbents

Events

January

February

  • 2 February – President Mary Robinson addressed a joint session of the Houses of the Oireachtas.
  • 15 February – English football hooligans rioted at Lansdowne Road stadium in Dublin during a friendly match between Ireland and England. The match was abandoned with Ireland 1–0 ahead. There were over 70 injuries, most of them English. The English fans were escorted out of Ireland by the Army.
  • 22 February – The British Prime Minister, John Major, and the Taoiseach, John Bruton, launched a peace framework document for Northern Ireland.

March

  • 7 March – Sir Patrick Mayhew, Northern Ireland Secretary, set out the conditions for Sinn Féin to join all-party peace talks, including "the actual decommissioning of some arms."
  • 19 March – Dublin boxer Steve Collins beat world champion Chris Eubank to win the World Boxing Organization super middleweight championship title.

May

  • 19 May – Elizabeth II and the Duke of Edinburgh made a visit to Northern Ireland. On the same day US President Bill Clinton approved a visa for Gerry Adams to enter the United States.
  • 23 May – President Robinson visited the Choctaw Nation of Oklahoma to express the thanks of the Irish people for a donation by the tribe to the starving people of Ireland during the Great Famine in April 1847.<ref>
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June

August

September

November

  • 2 November – A new blue-coloured £50 note featuring former president Douglas Hyde was issued.
  • 11 November – Neil Blaney, the longest serving member of the Dáil, was buried on the Fanad Peninsula in County Donegal.
  • 21 November – South Africa's deputy-President, F. W. de Klerk, addressed a Forum for Peace and Reconciliation at Dublin Castle.
  • 24 November – In the divorce referendum, citizens voted narrowly to allow divorce. A vote recount two days later confirmed the result.
  • 30 November – American President Bill Clinton and his wife Hillary spent the day in Northern Ireland.

December

Arts and literature

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Sport

Association football

  • 15 February – A match between Ireland and England was abandoned in the first half after some of the England fans ripped out seating in the West Stand of Lansdowne Road stadium and hurled it onto the pitch. Ireland had been leading 1–0 before the match was stopped.

Boxing

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Gaelic football

Golf

Hurling

Births

Deaths

February

March

April

June

July

August

  • 23 August – Johnny Carey, association footballer and manager (born 1919).

September

October

  • 16 October – Gus Martin, 59, literary academic, broadcaster, teacher, author, senator.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation

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November

December

  • 8 December – Philip Lawrence, London-based headmaster stabbed to death outside the gates of his school when he went to help a pupil being attacked by a gang (born 1947).
  • 18 December – Colville Deverell, cricketer and politician (born 1907).
  • 19 December – P. A. Ó Síocháin, journalist, author and lawyer (born 1905).
  • 25 December – James Boucher, cricketer (born 1910).

Full date unknown

See also

References

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