Английская Википедия:1954 in Northern Ireland
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Шаблон:Use dmy dates Шаблон:Use British English Шаблон:YearInNorthernIrelandNav Events during the year 1954 in Northern Ireland.
Incumbents
Events
- 6 April – Flags and Emblems (Display) Act (Northern Ireland) is introduced, making it illegal to interfere with the display of a Union Flag and giving the Royal Ulster Constabulary the right to remove any other flag or emblem if it is thought that it might lead to a breach of peace.[1]
- 12 June – An Irish Republican Army unit carries out a successful arms raid on Gough Barracks in Armagh signalling the renewal of IRA activity following a long hiatus.
- 17 August – Ocean liner SS Southern Cross is launched by Harland and Wolff in Belfast.[2]
- The Republican political party Fianna Uladh is formed by Liam Kelly as the political wing of Saor Uladh.[3]
- Roselawn Cemetery opens in Belfast.[4]
Arts and literature
- John Hewitt's The Bloody Brae: A Dramatic Poem (1936) is first broadcast on the BBC Northern Ireland Home Service.Шаблон:Citation needed
Sport
Football
- Winners: Linfield
- Winners: Derry City 2 – 2, 0 – 0, 1 – 0 Glentoran
Births
- 9 March – Bobby Sands, Provisional Irish Republican Army volunteer and MP (died on hunger strike 1981).
- 8 April – Joe Kernan, Gaelic footballer and manager.
- 28 April – Monica McWilliams, Northern Ireland Women's Coalition MLA, later Chief Commissioner of the Northern Ireland Human Rights Commission.
- 11 May – Jane Morrice, Northern Ireland Women's Coalition MLA.
- 23 May – Gerry Armstrong, footballer.
- 23 June – Michael Copeland, Unionist politician.
- 2 August – Sammy McIlroy, footballer and football manager.
- 28 August – Clive Culbertson, mystic, musician and healer.
- 12 October – Kieran Deeny, medical doctor turned independent politician and MLA.
- 19 October – Angela Feeney, opera singer.
- Eamon Collins, Provisional Irish Republican Army activist and writer (died 1999).
- Martin O'Brien, journalist.
- Marian Price, Provisional Irish Republican Army volunteer.
Deaths
- 1 May – James Macmahon, civil servant and businessman, Under-Secretary for Ireland from 1918 to 1922 (born 1865).
- 11 October – Thomas Teevan, Unionist politician and lawyer (born 1927).
See also
References