1924 in Northern Ireland
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Events
- 24 March - Ballycastle Railway closes due to financial difficulties.[1]
- 24 April - No agreement is reached at the Boundary Conference in London. The Irish Boundary Commission is now set up to examine the border between the Irish Free State and Northern Ireland.
- 6 May - James Craig refuses to nominate a Northern Ireland representative to the Boundary Commission.
- 11 August - Ballycastle Railway reopens under Northern Counties Committee ownership.[1]
- 14 September - First BBC broadcast from Belfast (station 2BE).
- 24 October - Éamon de Valera is arrested at Newry Town Hall after defying an order preventing him from speaking in Northern Ireland.
Sport
Football
- International
- Winners: Queen's Island
- Winners: Queen's Island 1 - 0 Willowfield
Births
- 12 January - Arthur Armstrong, painter (died 1996).
- 15 April - Padraic Fiacc, poet.
- 18 April - Roy Mason, fourth Secretary of State for Northern Ireland.
- 26 May - Sheelagh Murnaghan, only Ulster Liberal Party Member of Parliament at Stormont (died 1993).
- 11 July - Charlie Tully, footballer (died 1971).
- 2 December - William Craig, former Unionist MP and founder of the Ulster Vanguard movement.
- 14 December - Andy Thompson, former Canadian politician.
- 17 December - Cecil Walker, Ulster Unionist Party MP for North Belfast from 1983 to 2001 (died 2007).
Deaths
- 6 June - William Pirrie, 1st Viscount Pirrie, shipbuilder and businessman (born 1847)
Full date unknown
- Marjorie Robinson, artist (born 1858)
References
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