3 January – An Anglo-Irish Coal-Cattle Pact was signed between the governments of Britain and the Irish Free State.[1]
20 January – Forty men from the ConnemaraGaeltacht travelled to County Meath to inspect the area which was to be settled by residents of the Gaeltacht.[2]
20 March – After 17 days of a bus strike, the army intervened at the request of the Minister for Industry and Commerce by providing lorries for transport.
26 March – Seventy-two Republicans were arrested and held at the Bridewell Garda station.
27 October – Leni Riefenstahl's Nazi propaganda film Triumph of the Will (Triumph des Willens) was presented at the Olympia Theatre in Dublin. The event was organised by the German Legation and was attended by about 200 people. Gardaí Síochána, who feared the screening would be disrupted by communists, provided heavy protection inside and outside the theatre, and noted the attendance of the minister for lands and fisheries, Senator Joseph Connolly, as well as diplomats from Belgium, France, Germany, and Poland. Another Nazi film, Hitlerjunge Quex, was also shown about a teenage Hitler Youth, Herbert "Quex" Norkus, who was murdered by communists.[3][4]
November
9 November – Arranmore boat tragedy: 19 of 20 onboard were killed when a yawl ran aground on the crossing from Burtonport.[5]
December
7 December – The Ireland national rugby union team was beaten by New Zealand and the Irish association football team was beaten by the Netherlands.
In the first major investigation into political corruption in Ireland since the formation of the Free State, the "Wicklow Gold Inquiry" cleared the Minister for Industry and Commerce Seán Lemass of wrongdoing in the granting of mining licences in County Wicklow to Fianna Fáil party politicians.[6]
^Lee, Joseph (1989). Ireland, 1912–1985: politics and society. Cambridge University Press. p. 201. ISBN978-0-521-37741-6.
^ abPegley, Suzanne M., ed. (2011). The Land Commission and the making of Ráth Cairn, the first Gaeltacht colony. Maynooth Studies in Local History. Dublin: Four Courts Press. ISBN978-1-84682-297-1.