6 March – 3,800 animals were slaughtered after the 50th case of foot-and-mouth disease was announced.
20 March – Bread rationing was introduced.
21 March – The Glencullen (Capt. T. Waldron) and Glencree (Capt. D. McLean) were machine-gunned by the Luftwaffe in the Bristol Channel.[3]
22 March: 16:00 hours – The collier St. Fintan (Capt. N. Hendry) was attacked by two Luftwaffe bombers off the coast of Pembrokeshire in Wales and sank with all hands – nine dead.[3]
26 March – The Edenvale (Capt. T. Tyrrell) was bombed and machine-gunned by the Luftwaffe in the Bristol Channel.[3]
27 March – The Lady Belle (Capt. T. Donohue) was bombed and machine-gunned by the Luftwaffe in the Irish Sea.[3]
April
2 April – The Edenvale (Capt. T. Tyrrell) was bombed and machine-gunned (again) by the Luftwaffe in the Bristol Channel.[3]
18 April – An RAF Handley Page Hampden aircraft (Registration AD730)[4][5] got lost in bad weather and crashed on Black Hill (Kilbeg)[6] above the village of Lacken, County Wicklow killing its entire crew of four.
May
5 May – Belfast suffered its third bombing raid during World War II. The Dublin government authorised its emergency services to assist.
Summer – 16,000 men and boys were employed on county council turf-cutting schemes.[1]
June
2 June – Arklow was bombed by the Luftwaffe, with no casualties.
July
24 July – Dundalk was bombed by the Luftwaffe, with no casualties.
August
22 August – The S.S. Clonlara (Capt. Joseph Reynolds) was torpedoed and sunk by U-564 in the North Atlantic while in Convoy OG 71 ("Nightmare Convoy"): 13 survivors and 11 dead.[3]
September
16 September – Sixteen soldiers were killed and 20 were injured – 10 of them terribly – in the Glen of Imaal military training area in County Wicklow when an anti-tank mine exploded while they were receiving instruction in its use. It was the worst loss of life in the Irish Army during peacetime.[7]
October
12 October – Charles Stewart Parnell, "the uncrowned King of Ireland," was honoured in a huge pageant in Dublin.
November
November – Brendan Behan was released from Borstal in England and deported to Ireland.
^"The Glen of Imaal disaster, 1941". HistoryIreland.com. Vol. 27, no. 2. History Ireland. March 2019. p. 44. Archived from the original on 6 March 2019. Retrieved 20 September 2024.