1975 in Ireland

Events in the year 1975 in Ireland.

Incumbents

 * President: Cearbhall Ó Dálaigh
 * Taoiseach: Liam Cosgrave (FG)
 * Tánaiste: Brendan Corish (Lab)
 * Minister for Finance: Richie Ryan (FG)
 * Chief Justice: Tom O'Higgins
 * Dáil: 20th
 * Seanad: 13th

Events

 * January–June – Ireland held Presidency of the Council of the European Union for the first time.
 * 7 January – Sinéad de Valera, wife of the former president, died in Dublin aged 96.
 * 30 January – Charles Haughey was brought back onto the Fianna Fáil party front bench.
 * 14 March – Pierre Trudeau, the prime minister of Canada, paid a brief visit to Ireland and held bilateral talks at Dublin Castle.
 * 17 April – Mary Immaculate College, Limerick, and Our Lady of Mercy College, Carysfort, became recognised colleges of the National University of Ireland.
 * 18 June – Danny O'Hare became acting director of the National Institute for Higher Education, Dublin; a day later, the governing body first met.
 * 31 July – Miami Showband killings: Three members of The Miami Showband and two paramilitaries were killed in an Ulster Volunteer Force ambush in County Down as they returned home to Dublin from playing at a dance in Banbridge, Northern Ireland.
 * 29 August – Former revolutionary, Taoiseach, and President of Ireland, Éamon de Valera died in Dublin aged 92. The government announced a day of mourning.
 * 3 October – Dutch industrialist and Limerick factory owner Tiede Herrema was kidnapped.
 * 12 October – Oliver Plunkett, the 17th-century Archbishop of Armagh, was canonised by Pope Paul VI in Rome.
 * 21 October – Tiede Herrema was located with his kidnappers in Monasterevin, County Kildare and a police siege began.
 * 18 November – The Tiede Herrema kidnap siege ended.
 * 28 December – George Best played a League of Ireland match for Cork Celtic against Drogheda.

Arts and literature

 * 14 May – Cork-born writer Patrick Galvin's We Do It For Love, a satire on The Troubles, opened at the Lyric Theatre, Belfast.
 * 7 October – Tom Murphy's play The Sanctuary Lamp opened at the Abbey Theatre, Dublin to religious controversy.
 * Leland Bardwell, Pearse Hutchinson, Eiléan Ní Chuilleanáin and Macdara Woods founded the literary publication Cyphers.
 * Garry Hynes, Mick Lally, and Marie Mullen founded the Druid Theatre Company in Galway.
 * Lillias Mitchell founded the Irish Guild of Weavers, Spinners, and Dyers.
 * Publications:
 * Eavan Boland's collection of poems The War Horse was published.
 * Paul Durcan's collection of poems O Westport in the Light of Asia Minor was published.
 * John McGahern's novel The Leavetaking was published.
 * John Ryan's memoir Remembering How We Stood was published.

Golf

 * The Carroll's Irish Open golf tournament was won by Irish player Christy O'Connor Jnr.

Births

 * 1 January – Lorraine Pilkington, actress.
 * 24 January – Marie McMahon, long-distance runner
 * 12 February – Andrew Myler, association football player.
 * 1 March – Tara Blaise, singer.
 * 17 April – Mark Foley, Limerick hurler.
 * 19 April – Hugh O'Conor, actor.
 * 25 April – Dara Ó Cinnéide, Kerry Gaelic footballer.
 * 10 May – Clodagh McKenna, cookery writer and presenter.
 * 10 June – Seánie McGrath, Cork hurler.
 * 6 August – Willie Boland, association football player.
 * 25 August – Pat Mulcahy, Cork hurler.
 * 28 August – Gareth Farrelly, association football player.
 * 15 September – Owen Butler, cricketer.
 * 2 October – Girvan Dempsey, rugby player.
 * 7 November – Ollie Moran, Limerick hurler.
 * 16 December – Graham Lee, jockey.
 * 18 December – David O'Doherty, comedian.
 * 20 December – Graham Hopkins, drummer.


 * Full date unknown
 * David Kitt, musician.
 * Paul Murray, novelist.

Deaths

 * 7 January – Sinéad de Valera, writer and wife of former president, Éamon de Valera (born 1878).
 * 23 February – Ernest Blythe, writer, journalist, and theatre manager, member of First Dáil, and Cabinet minister (born 1889).
 * 27 February – John Vincent Holland, soldier, recipient of the Victoria Cross for gallantry in 1916 at Guillemont, France (born 1889).
 * 21 April – James Kempster, cricketer (born 1892).
 * 23 April – Michael Carty, Fianna Fáil party Teachta Dála (TD) (born 1916).
 * 28 April – Tom Dreaper, horse trainer.
 * 29 April – Arthur Blair-White, cricketer (born 1891).
 * 10 May – Michael Tierney, Cumann na nGaedheal party TD, Fine Gael party member of Seanad Éireann (Senate) and President of University College Dublin (born 1894).
 * 27 May – Robert Collis, physician and writer (born 1900).
 * 24 June – Frank MacDermot, barrister, soldier, banker, and politician (born 1886).
 * 31 July – Dan "Sandow" O'Donovan, Irish Republican Army member during the Irish War of Independence (b. c1895).
 * 9 August – Maurice Gorham, journalist and broadcasting executive (born 1902).
 * 10 August – Robert Barton, Sinn Féin party Member of Parliament, Cabinet minister, and signatory of Anglo-Irish Treaty 1921 (born 1881).
 * 29 August – Éamon de Valera, former Taoiseach and President of Ireland (born 1882).
 * 2 October – Seamus Murphy, sculptor (born 1907).
 * 25 October – Padraig Marrinan, artist (born 1906).
 * 26 October – William Teeling, author, traveller and UK politician (born 1903).
 * 25 November – Moyna Macgill, stage and film actress, mother of Angela Lansbury (born 1895).
 * 14 December – George Harman, cricketer and rugby player (born 1874).