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| See also: |  1858  in the United Kingdom Other events of 1858 List of years in Ireland  | ||||
Events from the year 1858 in Ireland.
Events
- 17 March – In Dublin, James Stephens founds the revolutionary organisation which becomes known as the Irish Republican Brotherhood.[1][2]
 - Edward Harland, at this time general manager, buys the small shipyard on Queen's Island, Belfast, from his employer Robert Hickson in conjunction with Gustav Wilhelm Wolff.[3]
 - Ballinacourty lighthouse at Dungarvan harbour built.
 
Arts and literature
- First free public library in Ireland opens in Dundalk.
 
Sport
Births
- 11 January – Mildred Anne Butler, painter (died 1941).
 - 13 February – James Murray Irwin, British Army doctor (died 1938).
 - 6 March – Coslett Herbert Waddell, priest and botanist (died 1919).
 - 11 March – Tom Clarke, republican (born in England; executed 1916).
 - 2 May – Edith Anna Somerville, novelist (died 1949).
 - 19 May – Mike Cleary, boxer (died 1893).
 - 5 October – Thomas Cusack, Democrat U.S. Representative from Illinois (died 1926).
- Full date unknown
 - Anne Marjorie Robinson, artist (died 1924).
 
 
Deaths
- 4 March – John Ryan, soldier, recipient of the Victoria Cross for gallantry in 1857 at Lucknow, India, killed in action (born 1823).
 - 26 April – Francis Murphy, first Roman Catholic bishop of Adelaide, South Australia (born 1795).
 - 22 July – Mary Aikenhead, founder of the Sisters of Charity (born 1787).
 - 28 July – Alexander Wright, soldier, recipient of the Victoria Cross for gallantry in 1855 at Sebastopol, in the Crimea (born 1826).
 - 17 August – Robert Cane, doctor, member of the Repeal Association and the Irish Confederation, Mayor of Kilkenny (born 1807).
- Full date unknown
 - John Hogan, sculptor (born 1800).
 - Benjamin Lett, bomber and arsonist in America and Canada (born 1813).
 - James Roche Verling, British Army surgeon, became personal surgeon to Napoleon Bonaparte on St Helena (born 1787).
 
 
See also
References
- ↑ Cronin, Seán (1972). The McGarrity Papers. Tralee: Anvil Books. p. 11.
 - ↑ Ryan, Desmond (1967). The Fenian Chief: A Biography of James Stephens. Dublin: Hely Thom. p. 1.
 - ↑ Moody, T. W.; et al., eds. (1989). A New History of Ireland. 8: A Chronology of Irish History. Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-821744-2.
 
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