Events during the year 1963 in Northern Ireland.
| |||||
Centuries: | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Decades: | |||||
See also: |
Incumbents edit
- Governor - The Lord Wakehurst
- Prime Minister - Basil Brooke (until 25 March), Terence O'Neill (from 25 March)
Events edit
- 17 January – Prototype Short SC.7 Skyvan short-haul freighter first flies.
- 25 March – Terence O'Neill succeeds Viscount Brookeborough as Prime Minister of Northern Ireland.
- 23 September – British Enkalon synthetic fibre factory opens in Antrim.
- 2 October – Second Short SC.1 VTOL research aircraft (XG905), flying from Belfast Harbour Airport, crashes due to a control malfunction, killing the pilot, J. R. Green.[1]
- 28 October – Belfast Aldergrove opened as the principal airport for Northern Ireland, civilian facilities transferring from Nutts Corner.
Arts and literature edit
This section is empty. You can help by adding to it. (July 2010) |
Sport edit
Football edit
- Winners: Distillery
- Winners: Linfield 2 – 1 Distillery
Golf edit
- British Ladies Amateur Golf Championship is held at Royal County Down Golf Club, (winner: Brigitte Varangot).
Births edit
- 10 July – Conor Murphy, Sinn Féin MP and MLA.
- 30 July – Thomas Buchanan, Democratic Unionist Party MLA.
- 9 August – Sam Storey, boxer.
- 25 August – Candida Doyle, keyboard player.
- 12 October – Alan McDonald, footballer and football manager.
- 27 October – Johnny Adair, loyalist paramilitary.
- 11 December
- 15 December – Christopher "Crip" McWilliams, Chief of Staff of the Irish National Liberation Army.
- Richard English, historian.
- Siobhán O'Hanlon, Sinn Féin official (died 2006).
Deaths edit
- 22 November – C. S. Lewis, novelist and author of The Chronicles of Narnia (born 1898).
- 30 November – Dehra Parker, longest serving woman MP in Northern Ireland and first woman to serve in the Northern Ireland Cabinet.
- December – Andy Kennedy, footballer (born 1897).
See also edit
References edit
- ^ "Test Flying Memorial site of British test pilots and engineers who died while test-flying (1946–1970 page)". Testflyingmemorial.com. Archived from the original on 18 June 2009.