Beaumont Hospital: a Priority for Haughey

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Beaumont Hospital: a Priority for Haughey Beaumont Hospital: A priority for Haughey when he became Minister for Health in 1977 When Charlie Haughey became Minister for Health in 1977, he was keenly aware of the need for a new acute general hospital in Dublin and took action to make this a reality. This new hospital would replace Richmond Surgical Hospital and the Jervis Street Hospital. The “Richmond”, in Dublin City centre, was the collection of historic buildings of the Richmond, Whitworth and Hardwicke that became St Laurence’s Hospital in the 1940s. There was a consensus that these buildings were no longer fit for purpose, but decades passed without action to build a new hospital in the Capital. This changed when Charlie Haughey became Minister for Health in 1977. A site for this hospital had already been identified and the land was acquired from the Mercy Sisters in Beaumont. Haughey established the Beaumont Hospital Board in 1977, to build and equip an acute general hospital in his constituency. Rather than engage more architects to design a new hospital, which would involve a considerable amount of time and expense, Mr. Haughey decided to utilise the existing plans used for the construction of the Cork University Hospital (Wilton) in the early 70's. This inspired decision ensured that the hospital was built without any undue delay at a cost of €52.7 million. The hospital was built in 1983 but remained closed for a number of years because of a dispute between the Labour Minister for Health, Barry Desmond T.D., and the hospital consultants. In 1987 Fianna Fáil returned to power and in November of that year, Haughey as Taoiseach and the new Minister for Health, Dr. Rory O'Hanlon, formally welcomed the first patients to the hospital following the closure and transfer to Beaumont of the two city centre hospitals. Beaumont Hospital is one of the largest acute general hospitals in Ireland, providing 820 beds and employing approximately 3,000 staff. charlesjhaughey.ie 1 .
Recommended publications
  • Irish Labour Party Contents.Indd
    10. LABOUR AND THE MEDIA: THE PROMISE OF SOCIALISM, NEGATIVE CAMPAIGNING AND THE IRISH TIMES KEVIN RAFTER On 28 May 1969 – six days into that year’s general election campaign – Sir Frederick Sayers from Camlagh, Greystones in County Wicklow, wrote to The Irish Times. The correspondence, printed on the ‘Letters to the Editor’ page, was headed ‘Irish Labour’s Intellectuals’.1 Sir Frederick was concerned about the newspaper’s recent editorial direction and what he saw as a trend in favour of ‘any form of Government which is not F.F.’ The Wicklow voter wanted in particular to warn ‘the plain people of Ireland’ about the Labour Party’s ‘extreme socialism’ and ‘utopian doctrines’. Sir Frederick’s letter continued: ‘I regard those extreme socialists as people who want a job themselves in parliament in order that they may spend other people’s money, extracted from all grades in society, on people who, for the most part, do not want such help, but now find that they are better off sitting idle and, probably spending national assistance in the locals.’ 2 The 1969 contest was predicted as Labour’s breakthrough election. The party was not only running more candidates than it had done previously but it had also succeeded in recruiting several high-profile individuals including Conor Cruise O’Brien, David Thornley and Justin Keating. Many were well-known television figures, although the main political parties were still adapting to the new medium: the 1969 contest was only the second Dáil election since the arrival of a national television service. Newspapers remained the most influential news medium – possibly, however, the last time they held this position.
    [Show full text]
  • Irish Responses to Fascist Italy, 1919–1932 by Mark Phelan
    Provided by the author(s) and NUI Galway in accordance with publisher policies. Please cite the published version when available. Title Irish responses to Fascist Italy, 1919-1932 Author(s) Phelan, Mark Publication Date 2013-01-07 Item record http://hdl.handle.net/10379/3401 Downloaded 2021-09-27T09:47:44Z Some rights reserved. For more information, please see the item record link above. Irish responses to Fascist Italy, 1919–1932 by Mark Phelan A thesis submitted in fulfilment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy Supervisor: Prof. Gearóid Ó Tuathaigh Department of History School of Humanities National University of Ireland, Galway December 2012 ABSTRACT This project assesses the impact of the first fascist power, its ethos and propaganda, on key constituencies of opinion in the Irish Free State. Accordingly, it explores the attitudes, views and concerns expressed by members of religious organisations; prominent journalists and academics; government officials/supporters and other members of the political class in Ireland, including republican and labour activists. By contextualising the Irish response to Fascist Italy within the wider patterns of cultural, political and ecclesiastical life in the Free State, the project provides original insights into the configuration of ideology and social forces in post-independence Ireland. Structurally, the thesis begins with a two-chapter account of conflicting confessional responses to Italian Fascism, followed by an analysis of diplomatic intercourse between Ireland and Italy. Next, the thesis examines some controversial policies pursued by Cumann na nGaedheal, and assesses their links to similar Fascist initiatives. The penultimate chapter focuses upon the remarkably ambiguous attitude to Mussolini’s Italy demonstrated by early Fianna Fáil, whilst the final section recounts the intensely hostile response of the Irish labour movement, both to the Italian regime, and indeed to Mussolini’s Irish apologists.
    [Show full text]
  • Transformative Illegality: How Condoms 'Became Legal' in Ireland
    Feminist Legal Studies (2018) 26:261–284 https://doi.org/10.1007/s10691-018-9392-1 Transformative Illegality: How Condoms ‘Became Legal’ in Ireland, 1991–1993 Máiréad Enright1 · Emilie Cloatre2 Published online: 20 November 2018 © The Author(s) 2018 Abstract This paper examines Irish campaigns for condom access in the early 1990s. Against the backdrop of the AIDS crisis, activists campaigned against a law which would not allow condoms to be sold from ordinary commercial spaces or vending machines, and restricted sale to young people. Advancing a conception of ‘transformative ille- gality’, we show that illegal action was fundamental to the eventual legalisation of commercial condom sale. However, rather than foregrounding illegal condom sale as a mode of spectacular direct action, we show that tactics of illegal sale in the 1990s built on 20 years of everyday illegal sale within the Irish family planning movement. Everyday illegal sale was a long-term world-making practice, which gradually trans- formed condoms’ legal meanings, eventually enabling new forms of provocative and irreverent protest. Condoms ‘became legal’ when the state recognised modes of con- dom sale, gradually built up over many years and publicised in direct action and in the courts. Keywords Activism · Condoms · Contraceptives · Family planning · Illegality · Ireland · Law · Social movements The Case of the Virgin Condom On Saturday January 6, 1990, Detective-Sergeant John McKeown of Pearse Street Garda (police) Station entered the Virgin Megastore record shop on Aston Quay, near Temple Bar, in Dublin together with a female colleague. They watched as a young woman sold condoms to a young man from a black, semi-circular counter on * Emilie Cloatre [email protected] Máiréad Enright [email protected] 1 Birmingham Law School, University of Birmingham, Birmingham, UK 2 Kent Law School, University of Kent, Canterbury, UK Vol.:(0123456789)1 3 262 M.
    [Show full text]
  • Five Days in Labour Party History by Brendan
    SNAPSHOTS: FIVE DAYS IN LABOUR PARTY HISTORY Essays originally published in The Irish Times, 1978 By Brendan Halligan 1 SNAPSHOTS: FIVE DAYS OF LABOUR PARTY HISTORY By Brendan Halligan Essays originally published in The Irish Times, 1978 1. The Triumph of the Green Flag: Friday, 1 November 1918 2. The Day Labour almost came to Power: Tuesday, 16 August 1927 3. Why Labout Put DeValera in Power: 9 March 1932 4. Giving the Kiss of Life to Fine Gael: Wednesday, 18 February 1948 5. The Day the Party Died: Sunday, 13th December 1970 2 No. 1 The Triumph of the Green Flag: Friday, 1 November 1918 William O’Brien Fifteen hundred delegates jammed the Mansion House. It was a congress unprecedented in the history of the Labour Movement in Ireland. Or, in the mind of one Labour leader, in the history of the Labour movement in any country in Europe. The euphoria was forgivable. The Special Conference of the Irish Labour Party and Trade Union Congress (to give it its full name) was truly impressive, both in terms of its size and the vehemence with which it opposed the conscription a British government was about to impose on Ireland. But it was nothing compared to what happened four days later. Responding to the resolution passed by the Conference, Irish workers brought the economic life of the country to a standstill. It was the first General Strike in Ireland. Its success was total, except for Belfast. Nothing moved. Factories and shops were closed. No newspapers were printed. Even the pubs were shut.
    [Show full text]
  • 2001-; Joshua B
    The Irish Labour History Society College, Dublin, 1979- ; Francis Devine, SIPTU College, 1998- ; David Fitzpat- rick, Trinity College, Dublin, 2001-; Joshua B. Freeman, Queen’s College, City Honorary Presidents - Mary Clancy, 2004-; Catriona Crowe, 2013-; Fergus A. University of New York, 2001-; John Horne, Trinity College, Dublin, 1982-; D’Arcy, 1994-; Joseph Deasy, 2001-2012; Barry Desmond, 2013-; Francis Joseph Lee, University College, Cork, 1979-; Dónal Nevin, Dublin, 1979- ; Cor- Devine, 2004-; Ken Hannigan, 1994-; Dónal Nevin, 1989-2012; Theresa Mori- mac Ó Gráda, University College, Dublin, 2001-; Bryan Palmer, Queen’s Uni- arty, 2008 -; Emmet O’Connor, 2005-; Gréagóir Ó Dúill, 2001-; Norah O’Neill, versity, Kingston, Canada, 2000-; Henry Patterson, University Of Ulster, 2001-; 1992-2001 Bryan Palmer, Trent University, Canada, 2007- ; Bob Purdie, Ruskin College, Oxford, 1982- ; Dorothy Thompson, Worcester, 1982-; Marcel van der Linden, Presidents - Francis Devine, 1988-1992, 1999-2000; Jack McGinley, 2001-2004; International Institute For Social History, Amsterdam, 2001-; Margaret Ward, Hugh Geraghty, 2005-2007; Brendan Byrne, 2007-2013; Jack McGinley, 2013- Bath Spa University, 1982-2000. Vice Presidents - Joseph Deasy, 1999-2000; Francis Devine, 2001-2004; Hugh Geraghty, 2004-2005; Niamh Puirséil, 2005-2008; Catriona Crowe, 2009-2013; Fionnuala Richardson, 2013- An Index to Saothar, Secretaries - Charles Callan, 1987-2000; Fionnuala Richardson, 2001-2010; Journal of the Irish Labour History Society Kevin Murphy, 2011- & Assistant Secretaries - Hugh Geraghty, 1998-2004; Séamus Moriarty, 2014-; Theresa Moriarty, 2006-2007; Séan Redmond, 2004-2005; Fionnuala Richardson, Other ILHS Publications, 2001-2016 2011-2012; Denise Rogers, 1995-2007; Eddie Soye, 2008- Treasurers - Jack McGinley, 1996-2001; Charles Callan, 2001-2002; Brendan In September, 2000, with the support of MSF (Manufacturing, Science, Finance – Byrne, 2003-2007; Ed.
    [Show full text]
  • Haughey and Fitzgerald| A1 Sample Answer
    Haughey and FitzGerald| A1 Sample answer What were the contributions of Charles Haughey and Garret FitzGerald to Irish Affairs? Charles Haughey and Garret FitzGerald were the two dominant men of Irish politic in the 1980s. In many ways they were polar opposites, Haughey was a working-class Northsider who craved power, while Fitzgerald was a privileged, idealistic Southsider. Both were forced to make huge decisions which would set the course of the country, sometimes for better, sometimes for worse. Haughey had a huge influence on Irish affairs even before he became Taoiseach. He entered his father-in-law Séan Lemass’ cabinet in 1961 as Minister for Justice, as part of a new breed of young, dynamic ministers who would help reinvent Ireland. He introduced the Succession Act which guaranteed financial entitlement and stability for widows. He brought similar reform to the Department for Agriculture from 1964 to 1966. Under Jack Lynch he served as Minister for Finance, and in that position he introduced tax exemptions for artists, free travel for the elderly and free electricity allowance for pensioners also. However, in 1970, along with Minister Neil Blaney he was accused of using public monies to smuggle illegal arms to nationalists in the North. As a result of this ‘Arms Crisis’ Haughey was dismissed from cabinet and would spent most of the 1970s slowly working his way back up the Fianna Fáil ranks. When Fianna Fáil next came to power in 1977 he was appointed Minister for health and Social Welfare. In this position he introduced the first anti-smoking campaign and a controversial family planning bill.
    [Show full text]
  • P29 John De Courcy Ireland Papers
    John de Courcy Ireland Papers P29 UCD Archives School of History and Archives archives @ucd.ie www.ucd.ie/archives T + 353 1 716 7555 F + 353 1 716 1146 © 1977 University College Dublin. All rights reserved ii CONTENTS Introduction iv A. LABOUR PARTY 1942-74 I Secretary of Central Branch, Dublin, 1942-3 1 II General Labour Party Business, 1966-74 1 III Local Matters 8 IV Newspapers 11 V Pamphlets 11 B. EDUCATION 1949-74 I Vocational Education Committee 12 II Teaching Career 15 C. CONTEMPORARY ISSUES AND ORGANISATIONS, 1945-74 24 D. JOURNALISM, 1945-74 I Articles 37 II Correspondence 40 E. MARITIME 1964-74 44 F. PRINTED MATERIAL 1937-74 46 G. PERSONAL MATERIAL 1939-75 50 iii Introduction John de Courcy Ireland, the only child of a British army officer, was born in India on 19 October 1911. His father was killed fighting in World War One. The de Courcy Ireland family was formerly of Robertstown, Co. Kildare. John de Courcy Ireland was educated at a Church of Ireland school in London and at Marlborough College. Both school experiences proved unhappy and at the age of seventeen, John de Courcy Ireland left school in search of adventure. He obtained a job as a steward on a cargo-ship bound for South America and did not return to England until c. 1930. It was this experience which stirred the forces which were to dominate his life –the sea, socialism and a feeling of internationalism with its allied interest in history, culture and languages. John de Courcy Ireland speaks six languages.
    [Show full text]
  • Finance Accounts
    FINANCE ACCOUNTS Audited Financial Statements of the Exchequer For the Financial Year 1st January 2004 to 31st December 2004 Presented to both Houses of the Oireachtas pursuant to Section 4 of the Comptroller and Auditor General (Amendment) Act, 1993. BAILE ÁTHA CLIATH ARNA FHOILSIÚ AG OIFIG AN tSOLÁTHAIR Le ceannach díreach ón OIFIG DHÍOLTA FOILSEACHÁN RIALTAIS TEACH SUN ALLIANCE, SRÁID THEACH LAIGHEAN, BAILE ÁTHA CLIATH 2, nó tríd an bpost ó FOILSEACHÁIN RIALTAIS, AN RANNÓG POST-TRÁCHTA, 51 FAICHE STIABHNA, BAILE ÁTHA CLIATH 2, (Teil: 01 - 6476834/35/36/37: Fax: 01 - 6476843) nó trí aon díoltóir leabhar. ______ DUBLIN PUBLISHED BY THE STATIONERY OFFICE To be purchased directly from the GOVERNMENT PUBLICATIONS SALE OFFICE, SUN ALLIANCE HOUSE, MOLESWORTH STREET, DUBLIN 2. or by mail order from GOVERNMENT PUBLICATIONS, POSTAL TRADE SECTION, 51 ST. STEPHEN'S GREEN, DUBLIN 2, (Tel: 01 - 6476834/35/36/37; Fax: 01 - 6476843) or through any bookseller. ______ (Prn. XXXX) Price €XXX © Copyright Government of Ireland 2005. Catalogue Number F/xxx/xxxx ISBN xxxxxx Contents Foreword 5 AUDIT REPORT 6 EXCHEQUER ACCOUNT 7 PART 1 FINANCIAL STATEMENTS OF EXCHEQUER RECEIPTS AND ISSUES AND GUARANTEED LIABILITIES CURRENT : Tax Revenue 11 Non-Tax Revenue 12 Issues for Current Voted Expenditure 14 Payments charged to Central Fund in respect of Salaries, Allowances, Pensions etc. (a) 15 Payments to the European Union Budget 15 Other Non-Voted Current Expenditure 16 CAPITAL : Issues for Capital Voted Expenditure 17 Loan Transactions 18 Share Capital acquired in State-sponsored Bodies 19 Investments in International Bodies under International Agreements 20 Investments - Shares of Sundry Undertakings 20 Receipts from the European Union 21 Payments to the European Union 21 Other Capital Receipts 22 Other Capital Payments 22 OTHER : Guaranteed Liabilities 23 Further Breakdown of Payments charged to Central Fund in respect of Salaries, Allowances, Pensions etc.
    [Show full text]
  • Tony Heffernan Papers P180 Ucd Archives
    TONY HEFFERNAN PAPERS P180 UCD ARCHIVES [email protected] www.ucd.ie/archives T + 353 1 716 7555 F + 353 1 716 1146 © 2013 University College Dublin. All rights reserved ii CONTENTS CONTEXT Administrative History iv Archival History v CONTENT AND STRUCTURE Scope and Content vi System of Arrangement viii CONDITIONS OF ACCESS AND USE Access x Language x Finding Aid x DESCRIPTION CONTROL Archivist’s Note x ALLIED MATERIALS Published Material x iii CONTEXT Administrative History The Tony Heffernan Papers represent his long association with the Workers’ Party, from his appointment as the party’s press officer in July 1982 to his appointment as Assistant Government Press Secretary, as the Democratic Left nominee in the Rainbow Coalition government between 1994 and 1997. The papers provide a significant source for the history of the development of the party and its policies through the comprehensive series of press statements issued over many years. In January 1977 during the annual Sinn Féin Árd Fheis members voted for a name change and the party became known as Sinn Féin the Workers’ Party. A concerted effort was made in the late 1970s to increase the profile and political representation of the party. In 1979 Tomás MacGiolla won a seat in Ballyfermot in the local elections in Dublin. Two years later in 1981 the party saw its first success at national level with the election of Joe Sherlock in Cork East as the party’s first TD. In 1982 Sherlock, Paddy Gallagher and Proinsias de Rossa all won seats in the general election. In 1981 the Árd Fheis voted in favour of another name change to the Workers’ Party.
    [Show full text]
  • Referendum and the Family (Divorce) Act of 1996*
    CEAD MiLE FAILTE? IRELAND WELCOMES DIVORCE: THE 1995 IRISH DIVORCE REFERENDUM AND THE FAMILY (DIVORCE) ACT OF 1996* Ideas and beliefs die out, but only when whatever they held of truth and usefulness to society have been corruptedor diminished, and they will do so even in a theocracy. -Marcel Proust (1903) I. INTRODUCTION On November 24, 1995, the citizens of tire (the Republic of Ireland) voted in favor of legislation allowing divorce for the first time since the country gained independence from Great Britain in 1922. Divorce had been illegal not through any legislative act, but through an explicit ban in the Irish Constitution itself, necessitating the country-wide referendum. The margin of victory was a razor-thin 0.6%, and the social ramifications of the referendum and the provi- sions of its enabling legislation are still hotly debated. The Novem- ber referendum's success was the culmination of a decades-long se- ries of attempts to liberalize the restrictive family law of the country, and the victory for the proponents of divorce, by however slim a margin, is a significant indication of the extent to which the social role of the Roman Catholic Church is being redefined and dimin- ished in Ireland. An examination of the reasons for the constitutional establish- ment of the prohibition of divorce, the history of the struggle for pro- divorce legislation, the trends in family law beginning in the 1970s, and the circumstances surrounding the November 1995 referendum and resulting legislation will reveal an Ireland that is being trans- formed socially through a deliberate long-term liberalization of fam- *Cad Mile FdHilte is Irish for "one hundred thousand welcomes," a common expression of the generous hospitality of the Irish.
    [Show full text]
  • Reflections on 40 Years of Irish Membership of the EU
    The newsletter for Department of Government students and staff Volume 5, No. 6 –Monday 2 December 2013 - ISSUE 53 Reflections on 40 Years of Irish Membership of the EU Last week, the Department of Government hosted a major two-day multi-disciplinary conference exploring Ireland’s relationship with the European Union over the 40 years since Ireland joined the community. The event was organised by Dr Mary C. Murphy (Department of Government, UCC) and Dr John O’Brennan (National University of Ireland, Maynooth). The conference attracted a fantastic range of speakers from the worlds of politics, the media, and academia. The above picture shows (from left to right) Dick Spring (former Minister for Foreign Affairs and Tánaiste), Alan Dukes (former Minister for Finance and Fine Gael leader), Dr John O’Brennan, Micheál Martin (former Minister for Foreign Affairs and current Fianna Fáil leader), and Dr Mary C. Murphy. See more on pages 2, 4 and 5 1 | P a g e Editorial Page Wishing everyone a happy, healthy and safe Christmas In some ways it’s hard to believe that the first semester is nearly at an end but what better way to celebrate than with a bumper 14-page issue of your favourite newsletter! Our lead story in Issue 53 is the highly successful EU conference held last week. The conference attracted a tremendous group of distinguished speakers and it was a great opportunity for Government students to hear first-hand accounts of Ireland’s relationship with the EU from leading politicians and academics as well as high-profile political correspondents.
    [Show full text]
  • Chronology of Sino-Irish Relations
    The Irish Asia Strategy And Its China Relations: Appendix III ~ Chronology Of Sino-Irish Relations 1979 – Establishment of Diplomatic Relations between Ireland and the PRC 22nd June. 1980 – Exchange of Ambassadors between Ireland and China. 1982 – Minister for Foreign Affairs Gerald Collins to China in October. 1983 – Minister of Health Cui Yu to Ireland in May. – Minister of Trade, Commerce & Tourism Frank Cluskey to China in May. – Minister for Health & Social Welfare Barry Desmond to China in September. 1985 Agreement on Cultural Cooperation between the Government of the People’s Republic of China and the Government of Ireland signed by China’s Minister of Culture, Mr. Zhu Muzhi and Ireland’s Minister for Foreign Affairs, Mr. Peter Barry during Mr. Zhu’s visit to Ireland in May. – Ministry for Agriculture He Kang to Ireland in July. 1986 Agreement between the Government of the People’s Republic of China and the Government of Ireland on Economic, Industrial, Scientific and Technological Cooperation officially signed by the two countries during the visit to Ireland by China’s Minister of Foreign Trade and Economic Cooperation, Mr. Zheng Tuobin in May. – State Councilor & Minister for Foreign Affairs Wu Xueqian to Ireland in May. 1988 – President Patrick J. Hillary to China in April. 1993 – Minister for Tourism & Trade Charlie McCreevy to China in April. 1994 – Attorney General Harry Whelan to China in May. – Tánaiste & Minister for Foreign Affairs Dick Spring to China in September. – Minister of Civil Affairs Doji Cering to Ireland in October. 1995 – Minister of Foreign Affaires & Economic Cooperation Wu Yi to Ireland in April.
    [Show full text]