1958 in Northern Ireland
Appearance
This article needs additional citations for verification. (May 2013) |
| |||||
Centuries: | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Decades: | |||||
See also: |
Events during the year 1958 in Northern Ireland.
Incumbents
Events
- 6 February – Jackie Blanchflower, capped 12 times for the Northern Ireland national football team, survives the Munich air disaster involving Manchester United on the return flight from a European Cup tie in Yugoslavia. Jackie (younger brother of Tottenham Hotspur's Danny Blanchflower) has won two league champions in England with United since his debut for them in 1951, but his injuries are severe and he is forced to abandon the game in the coming year.[1]
- 18 March – Taoiseach Éamon de Valera says he would be willing to have talks with the government of Northern Ireland on wider economic co-operation.
- 18 August – Regional postage stamps of Great Britain are first issued.
- 25 October – Northern Ireland-built Short SC.1 experimental VTOL aircraft makes its first free vertical flight.
Arts and literature
- 1 July – Release of the film A Night to Remember (about the sinking of the Titanic) produced by William MacQuitty.
Sport
Football
- FIFA World Cup
- Group stage
- Northern Ireland 1-1 Czechoslovakia
- Northern Ireland 1-1 Argentina
- Northern Ireland 1-1 West Germany
- Group play-off stage
- Northern Ireland 2-1 Czechoslovakia AET
- Quarter final stage
- Northern Ireland 0-4 France Northern Ireland knocked out
- Group stage
- Irish League
- Winners: Ards
- Irish Cup
- Winners: Ballymena United 2 - 0 Linfield
Births
- 21 February – Jake Burns, punk rock singer and guitarist.
- 14 March – Davy Francis, cartoonist.
- 25 March – Margaret Ritchie, SDLP MLA.
- 2 May – Jim Harvey, footballer and manager.
- 1 August – Adrian Dunbar, actor and screenwriter.
- 13 August – Feargal Sharkey, lead singer of The Undertones.
- 16 August – Diane Dodds, DUP MLA, MEP.
- 20 August – Nigel Dodds, DUP MP, MLA.
- 20 October – Dave Finlay, professional wrestler.
- 4 November – Pat Ramsey, SDLP MLA, Mayor of Derry.
- November - Bernadette Sands McKevitt, co-founder of the 32 County Sovereignty Movement.
- Brendan Cleary, poet.
- Jim Gray, UDA leader in East Belfast and publican (killed 2005).[2]
- Andre Stitt, performance artist.
Deaths
- 24 August – Paul Henry, artist (born 1876).
- 2 December – Alan McKibbin, businessman and Ulster Unionist Party MP (born 1892).
See also
References
- ^ "Busby Babe loses battle against cancer". BBC. 2 September 1998. Retrieved 19 January 2020.
- ^ McHardy, Anne (6 October 2005). "Obituary: Jim Gray". the Guardian. Retrieved 23 January 2018.