User:Smirkybec/100wikidays
(Redirected from User:Smirkybec/100wikidays list)
To do
editDIB
edit- Albert Bibby (1877–1925), Capuchin priest and republican born Thomas Francis Bibby
- Mary Bolton (counsellor)
- Alive Barry, 1st countess of Barrymore (1608–c. 1667)
- Elizabeth Boyle, countess of Cork and Burlington (1613–1691)
- Margaret Boyle, 1st countess of Orrery (1623–1689)
- José Browne artist, wife of Denis Browne, 10th Marquess of Sligo
- Timothy Corcoran (cultural historian) un-redirect
- Ellen Courtenay
- Maeve Curtis (1911–71), journalist and teacher
- Constance Delap
- Marie Louise Dickie (1871–1947), public servant
- P. V. Doyle hotelier and builder
- Robert Emmet (state physician) (1729–1802)
- James Esdall (d. 1755), printer, publisher, and bookseller
- George Furlong
- Denis Guiney
- Timothy Hallissy
- John Harding (printer)
- Cathy Henderson (undo redirect?) (1963–2014), artist
- Mary Hennessey Sister of Charity and pioneer in primary education
- Elizabeth Holmes (philanthropist)
- John Ingram (educationalist) (1887–1973), engineer, educationalist, and civil servant
- Florence Irwin (1883–1965), educator
- Theophilus Jones (printer)
- Alice Keenan (1836–1914), Sister of Mercy and educator
- Iris Kellett (1926–2011), showjumper and horse trainer
- Rosaline Kelly (1922–2013), union official and media professional
- Sarah Kelly (landowner) (1801–56), landowner and murder victim
- Brigid Lynch (1757–1830), sixth abbess of the Ypres Benedictine convent
- Máire MacDermott Roe (d. 1739?), patron of Turlough Carolan
- Berna McIvor (1932–2010), political and community activist
- Maud McKee (1954–2014), medical doctor and therapist
- Anne Maher (c.1845–1924), servant
- Marie Moore (republican activist) (1936–2009)
- Catherine Louisa Morgan (c.1838–1886), divorcée
- Máire O'Brien (civil servant) (1882-1958), republican activist, civil servant and translator
- Miriam Thérèse O'Brien (1945–2006), religious sister, educator, and aid worker in west Africa
- Veronica O'Brien (spiritual adviser) (1905–98), Legion of Mary worker and spiritual adviser
- Maura O'Donohue (1933–2015), missionary doctor and public health campaigner
- John Grey Vesey Porter son of Margaret Grey Porter
- Eileen Randles (1937–2015), teacher, education leader and nun
- Mary Redmond (solicitor) (1950–2015), solicitor and founder of the Irish Hospice Foundation
- Agnes Ryan (businesswoman) (1890–1971), businesswoman
- Etienne Rynne (1932–2012), archaeologist
- William Tighe (MP) (1766–1816), politician, topographer, and landowner, father of Theodosia Blachford
- William Theobald Wolfe Tone son of Matilda Tone and Wolfe Tone
- Paddy Trench (1905–48), Trotskyite socialist
- Terry Trench (1909–2005), founder of An Óige, author and businessman
- Wilbraham Trench (1873–1939), academic
- Eibhlín Uí Choisdeailbh (1870–1962), folksong collector, Irish language enthusiast, and political activist
- Patricia Walsh (nurse) (1942–2015), missionary nurse
- Danuta Wejchert (1938–2014), architect
- Katie Gifford Wilson, Gifford sister
- William Wright (professor) former dean of engineering at TCD
Snoddy's
edit- Janie Beamish (1856-1930)
- Robert Cresswell Boak
- John Nunn Bolton
- John Bourke (sculptor)
- Howard Bowen (artist)
- Charles Braithwaite (artist)
- Peter Brennan (sculptor)
- Meredith Brosnan
- Nicholas A. Brophy
- Nassau Blair Browne
- Robert Burke (artist) (1909-1991)
- Thomas Burke (British painter) (1906-1945)
- Michael Byrne (Irish artist) (1923-1989)
- John Carey (Irish artist)
- Joseph S. M. Carré (fl. 1900-1914)
- Mina Carney (1892-1974)
- Aloysius J. Cashen (1896-1972)
- Hugh C. Charde (1858-1946)
- Katherine Clausen (1886-1936)
- Terence Clarke (Irish artist) (1917-1968)
- Brian Coghlan (Irish artist) (1903-1978)
- Eileen Coghlan (1909-1990)
- Alexander Colles (artist) (1850-1945)
- Annie Colthurst (1855-1930)
- Helen Colvill (1856-1953)
- Margaret Condon (1884-1969)
- Emily D. Corry (1873-1942)
- Oswald Hamilton Cunningham (1883-c.1935)
- Leslie Curtis (artist) (1918-1974)
- Joseph Cusack (Irish artist) (1906-1983)
- John Day (Irish artist) (1854-1931)
- Vincent de Gernon (1856-fl.1909)
- Sally de Montfort (1929-1996)
- Michael Dignam (c.1874-1934)
- Seán Dixon (1905-1946)
- Gerard Donnolly (1911-1975)
- Christopher M. Doran (1900-1981)
- William Dowling (Irish artist) (1907-1980)
- Mary Duncan (artist) (1885-1964)
- William Earley (Irish artist) (1872-1956)
- Phyllis Eason (1896-1974)
- Paul Egestorff (1906-1995)
- Robert Elliott (Irish artist) (1863-1910)
- Michael Farrell (Irish artist) (1893-1948)
- Richard Faulkner (Irish artist) (1917-1988)
- George Drummond-Fish (fl 1906-1938)
- Dorothy Fitzgerald (1888-1979)
- Ian Friers (1909-1975)
- Stella Frost (1890-1962)
- William H. Fry (artist) (1883-1962)
- Seamus Furlong (1920-1998)
- Theodora Harrison (1890-1969)
- Phyllis Hayward (1903-1985)
- Gwendolen Herbert (1878-1966)
- Clara Irwin (1853-1921)
- Cecilia Keyes (1873-1941)
- Alice M. Latimer (1874-1964)
- Nettie McCormick (Irish artist) (fl. 1906-1936)
- Phylis Moore (1879-1976)
- Gertrude O'Flynn (1895-1946)
- Elsie O'Keefe (1877-fl. 1916)
- Frida Perrott (fl. 1899-1946)
- Daphne Pitt-Taylor (1889-1945)
- Maureen Collins Ryan (1909-1977)
- Margaret Saunders (artist) (1851-1918) portrait and figure painter
Everything else
edit- Georgie McCutcheon George (Georgie) McCutcheon (1958-2015)
- Trish Reilly Irish Traveller activist and performer
- Rose Marie Maughan human rights activist and Accommodation Policy Officer with the Irish Traveller Movement
- Martin Warde Traveller, comedian, writer, podcaster
- Fitzwilliam Street, Dublin
- Bridge Street, Dublin
- Castle Street, Dublin
- James Joyce Street
- Church Street, Dublin
- Delville House
- Hainault House
- St Teresa's Church, Clarendon Street
- Exchequer Street
- North Brunswick Street (Dublin Workhouse)
- Joseph Bewley (1795–1851), philanthropist
- Henry Bewley (1804–76), businessman and evangelist
- Joshua Bewley (1819–1900), tea and coffee merchant
- Henry Theodore Bewley (1860–1945), physician and lecturer, son of Henry Bewley
- Geoffrey Bewley (1894–1981), physician, son of Henry Theodore Bewley
- Kenneth Bewley (1890–1943), civil servant, son of Henry Theodore Bewley
- Ernest Bewley (1860–1932), founder of Bewley's Oriental Cafés (son of Joshua)
- Victor Bewley (1912–99)
- Public housing in the Republic of Ireland base on Public housing in the United Kingdom
- Bungalow Bliss by Jack Fitzsimons
- Jude Sherry
- Frank O'Connor (designer)
- Gillian Darley
- free! (magazine)
- The Outing Festival
- Pat Wallace
- Irish Yeast Company
- Frank Feely (city manager)
- Rachel Evelyn Butler (1826-1898) author
- John Coll (artist)
- Linda Brunker
- Caoimhe Kilfeather
- Elizabeth O'Kane
- Elizabeth McLaughlin (artist)
- Alice Rekab
- Sandra Bell
- Betty Newman
- Geraldine Creedon (artist)
- Refugee and Migrant Solidarity Centre Ireland
- Cooking for Freedom
- Our Table
- Sanctuary Runners
- Tolü Makay
- Felispeaks
- Lorraine Maher curator of I am Irish
- Anthony Ekundayo Lennon
- Zithelo Bobby Mthombeni
- Dublin Sketching Club now the Dublin Painting and Sketching Club
- Irish Decorative Art Association
- Irish National Ballet
- Cork Orchestral Society
- Cork Ballet Company
- Andrea Jameson (born Norway 1953)
- Patricia Jorgensen (born 1936)
- Louisa Glascott
- Laura Stephens (linguist) (1875-1958)
- Bridget Dudley Edwards suffragette and a member of Cumann na mBan
- Geraldine Leeson Lady Milltown
- Annie Brophy Irish photographer
- Edward William O'Flaherty Lynam curator in the British Library
- Susie Kennedy
- Mary Garrioch
- Gráinne Uí Mhaitiú
- Frank Twomey (actor)
- Mai Lambert
- Cecil F. Ford
- Nino Bartholomew
- The Jimmy Cake Irish band
- Aran Heritage Centre
- Ardara Heritage Centre
- Athenry Heritage Centre
- Bantry Museum
- Battle Of Aughrim Interpretative Centre
- Belcarra Eviction Cottage
- Berkeley Costume and Toy Museum
- Bray Heritage Centre
- Burren Centre
- Cape Clear Museum
- Carrick Craft Basketry Museum
- Cruachan Aí Heritage Centre
- Douglas Hyde Centre
- Doagh Famine Village
- Donaghmore Famine Workhouse Museum
- Dunlewey Centre
- Glebe House and Gallery
- Hillview Museum
- Jackie Clarke Library and Archives
- Mountmellick Museum
- Thurles Castle
- Henry Hawley (naturalist)
- James Wilson (Irish naturalist)
- John Adams (naturalist)
- Walter Mead Rankin
- Frances Proskitt, born in England
- Patrick Dowling (engineer) (1904-1999) electrical engineer
- John Horn (shipbuilder) (1814-1895)
- John Henry Synge (1788-1845) educator
- Francis Nevill (c.1648 - 1727) geologist
- Maura O'Crohan (Q19882701) Irish writer?
- Máirín Ní Rodaigh (Q13157586) Irish language teacher
- Sarah Jane Carr (Q43928546)
- Sister Agnes (Q27833494) Irish nun and hymn-writer
- The Big Snow of 1982 large snowfall in Ireland, weather event
- William Edward Steele director of the National Museum of Ireland
- George Tindall Plunkett director of the National Museum of Ireland
- Breandán Ó Ríordáin director of the National Museum of Ireland
- Margaret Murphy (suffragette)
- Leslie Owen (academic) and Linguist
- Mary Rynne, Abbey playwright and author
- Sherd
- Potsherd ref 1 ref 2 ref 3
- Walsh Whiskey Distillery
- Conservation and restoration of fluid preserved specimens
- Tempo Manor County Fermanagh
- John Dunville (distiller) (1866 - 1929), Whiskey Distiller And Balloonist
- Violet Anne Blanche Dunville née Lambart (Mrs. John Dunville) (1861-1940)
- Mir Aulad Ali TCD professor 1866-1890
- Dick Joynt
- Francis Sandys
- Percy Wood (sculptor)
- Niall Montgomery
- Jakki McKenna
- Daithí Hanly
- C. J. McCarthy Dublin city architect
- William Sedgwick Keatinge architect
- James Toomey (architect)
- Fergus O'Ryan painter (1911-1989)
- Brian J. Goggin historian
- Donal Cregan
- Max Zaska musician
- Lucille Redmond
- Sara E. Hampson Nurse, the first lady superintendent of the Rotunda Hospital, Dublin fl. 1860-1908
- Honoria Galwey
- Frances Cassandra Hawke wife of Lawrence Parsons, 4th Earl of Rosse
- Patrick Laver diplomat
Irish badminton players
edit- Dorothy Cunningham (image on Museum of Badminton site)
- M. Obre possibly Mary Obre/é from Armagh and living at 35 Morehampton Road, Dublin in 1901. Later Mrs Latham/Letham/Lathem, possibly under the name Hope.
- H. Pigot possibly Helen Pigot of Dundrum
2020
edit- Nina Coote (1883–1945), croquet champion
- Janet Jackson (golfer)
- Phoebe Blair-White (1894-1991), tennis player, wife of Arthur Blair-White
- Maire Quinn (fl.1900–47), actress and nationalist
- Eveline Burchill dance teacher
- Betty de Courcy Ireland wife of John de Courcy Ireland
- Kathleen O'Connell (1888–1956), personal secretary to Éamon de Valera
- Teresa Mullen (1938–89), paralympic athlete
- Alice Reeves (1874–1955), matron of Dr Steevens’ Hospital
- Mary Butters (c.1770–c.1850) witch
- Sarah Leech (b. 1809), poet
- Róise Mhic Ghrianna (1879–1964), traditional Irish-language singer and storyteller
- Mary E. Balfour poet
- Lily Anderson (campaigner), social campaigner and communist
- Anne Crone (1915–72), novelist and teacher
- Florence Culwick (1877–1929), director of the Culwick choir
- Mary McShain (1907–98), landowner and benefactor
- Gertrude Keightley (d. 1929), Lady Keightley, local administrator
- Kathleen Mulchrone (1895–1973), Celticist
- Thomas P. O'Neill (historian)
- Janie McCarthy (c.1890–1964), resistance worker and language teacher
- Máire Wyse Power (1887–1916), Celtic scholar
- A. M. Head
- Ellen Grimley (c.1887–1960), trade unionist
- Nora Ashe teacher, nationalist, and Irish language enthusiast
- Mary Ann Byrne nationalist, wife of Frank Byrne (Irish nationalist)
- Margaret Callan (writer) (c.1817–c.1883), writer, teacher, and nationalist
- Mary O'Kelly de Galway (1905–99), Belgian resistance operative
- Sarah Hyde (d. 1750), printer and bookseller
- Eleanor Whitton (1879–1956), campaigner for animal welfare
- Elizabeth Pue (fl. 1722–6), printer, publisher, and coffee house proprietor
- Sinéad Derrig (1899–1991), civil servant
- Clarissa von Ranke (1808–71), poet
- Elizabeth Butler, Duchess of Ormond wife of James Butler, 1st Duke of Ormond
- Marie Joseph Butler
- Ethna Byrne-Costigan (1904–91), academic and writer
- Agnes McCullough (1888–1967), teacher and activist and philanthropist
- Anne Donnellan friend of Letitia Bushe (c.1700–62), literary critic, and promoter of literature, learning, and the arts
- Bridget Connolly Brede Connolly (1890-1981) may have been the only Carlow person at the centre of the action in the GPO during the Rising
- Val Vousden (1886-1951) actor, poet and playwright Bill MacNevin (William Francis Maher MacNevin)
- Cecilia Betham archer
- Jane Ross (collector) (1810–79), folksong collector
- Anne Jane Carlile (1775–1864), temperance pioneer and philanthropist
- Catherine Fenton Boyle countess of Cork, wife of Richard Boyle, 1st Earl of Cork
- Mai Clifford (1913–86), trade union official and laundress
- Kathleen Dolan (1921–2003), radio announcer
- Monica Sheridan (1912–93), cookery expert, broadcaster, and journalist
- Chloe Gibson (1899–1995), theatre and television director
- Ellen McKenna (1819–83), Sister of Mercy, American civil war nurse and teacher
- Maire MacDonagh (1918–97), trade unionist
- Mariga Guinness (1932–89), architectural conservationist and socialite
- Teresa Mulally (1728–1803), educationist, businesswoman, and philanthropist
- Anne Lee Guinness (1839–89), philanthropist
- Máirín Ní Mhuiríosa (1906–82), Irish scholar, poet and journalist
- Muriel MacDonagh, Gifford sister, wife of Thomas MacDonagh
- Mary Pike (1776–1832), quaker heiress
- Gladys Roy wingwalker
- Rachel Burrows actress, broadcaster, and teacher
- Paula Lambert (puppeteer)
- Hector Grey
- Lady Mairi Bury gardener and philatelist
- Edith Best (musician) musician
- Olivia Elder (1735?–1780), poet
- Margaret Montgomery Pirrie (1857–1935), Viscountess Pirrie, public figure and philanthropist
- Katty Barry restaurateur and famous Cork character
- Elaine O'Beirne-Ranelagh (1914–96), writer and folklorist
- Mary Elizabeth Cunningham (1868–1939), philanthropist and war worker
- Mary Clare Moore (1814–74), Sister of Mercy, foundress, Crimean war nurse, and teacher
- Violet Conolly (1899–1988), authority on Soviet Russia and traveller
- Eibhlín Nic Niocaill (1884–1909), Gaelic League activist
- Anna Gaynor Sister of Charity and first superior of Our Lady's Hospice, Harold's Cross
- Aloysius Doyle (1820–1908), nun
- Anna Kelly (1891–1958), journalist
- Teresa Cowley Sister of Mercy, Boer war nurse, and educator
- Mary Gertrude Joyce (1884–1964), Sister of Mercy and musician
- Bridget Dirrane nurse, centenarian and memoirist
- Mary Baird (nurse) nurse and health service administrator
- Julia McGroarty (1827–1901), nun and educator
- Maureen Charlton (currently a dubious redirect) (1930–2007), playwright, poet and broadcaster
- Maurice O'Connell (Hunting Cap) uncle of Daniel O'Connell
- Angela Hughes (1806–66), Sister of Charity
- Rachael Baptist expanding from stub for streaming event
- Mabel Bagenal countess of Tyrone
- Geraldine Scholastica Gibbons founder and first superior of the Community of the Good Samaritan
- Vera McWeeney (1909–81), sportswoman and sports journalist
- Melosina Lenox-Conyngham traveller and writer
- Isabel Deane Mitchell (1879–1917), presbyterian missionary in China
- Lucy O'Brien (doctor) (1923–2006), missionary sister and doctor in Africa
- Mary Agnes O'Connor (1815–59), Sister of Mercy, foundress, and social worker
- Lydia Mary Foster (1867-1943), writer and schoolteacher
- Theodosia Wingfield (1800–36), Viscountess Powerscourt, evangelical religious writer
- Cecil Mary Nowell Dering Craig (1883–1960), Viscountess Craigavon, unionist
- Máire Rua O'Brien (1615?–1686), Gaelic aristocrat and figure in Irish folklore
- Cecily Dillon co-foundress and first abbess of the Irish Poor Clares in Dublin, Bethlehem and Athlone
- Emily Wynne (1872–1958), textile artist and author
- Hilary Heron (1923-1977), sculptor
- Elizabeth Dillon (1865–1907), diarist
- Eileen O'Faolain (1900–88), author of children's books, and wife of writer Sean O'Faolain
- May Keating (1895–1965), socialist, feminist and human rights campaigner
- William Coppin sailor, shipbuilder, and inventor
- Louisa Coppin ‘Little Weesy’
- Sarah Harding (printer) printed A Modest Proposal
- Lucinda Sullivan (1831-81), philanthropist, writer and promoter of children's welfare
- Anne Margaret Rowan (1832–1913), novelist, historian, and political activist
- Terry O'Connor (musician) (1897–1983), musician and music teacher
- Mary Eucharia Ryan (1860–1929), Loreto sister and pioneer of women's higher education
- Rosaleen Mills (1905-93), activist and educator
- Jean O'Neill (1915–2008), plantswoman and horticulturalist
- Anne Bushnell singer
- Anne Daly superior general of the Sisters of Charity, Australia
- Alexandra Wejchert (1921–95), sculptor
- Micheline Kerney Walsh (1919–97), archivist and historian
- Martha McTier (1742–1837), writer of letters
- Maureen Constance Guinness (1907–98), countess of Dufferin and Ava, socialite and charity worker
- Henrietta Frances de Grey (1784–1848), Countess de Grey, political hostess and philanthropist
- Elizabeth Watts (printer) (d. 1794), printer, stationer, and ‘bookseller to the courts of law’
- Alice Reilly (1702/3–1778), printer and publisher
- Elaine Feldman public figure and founder of a secondary school for the Jewish community
- Susan Lecky (1837-1896) Irish botanical artist
- Daniel Graisberry
- Ann Saddlemyer
- Mary Drelincourt, wife of Peter Drelincourt
- Ruth Graisberry printer
- Mary Byrne (witness) witness of Knock apparition
- Helen Moloney (1926–2011), artist in stained glass and other media
- Delia Moclair (1895–1971), obstetrician
- Arabella Jeffereyes (c.1734–c.1810), landowner and social radical
- Maisie McDaniel (1939–2008), singer
- Lady Mary Burke (consort) wife of Brian O'Rourke
- Mary Anne Cosgrave pioneer nurse in Rhodesia, educationist, and Dominican prioress
- Catherine Finn printer of Finns Leinster Journal
- Patricia Boylan actor and journalist
- Mary Anne Locke (1831–89), distiller and philanthropist
- Mary "Muds" Locke (1863–1943)
- Martha Wilmot
- Sarah Pue(d. p.1776?), printer, publisher, and patent medicine seller
- Gay Firth author, journalist and political campaigner
- Sheila Dowling (c.1896–1957), republican, socialist, trade unionist, and feminist
- Sarah Cotter (fl. 1751–92), printer and bookseller
- John Mandeville (Land Leaguer) un-divert
- Valerie Place (1969–93), nurse and overseas aid worker
- Mary Bryan (badminton)
- List of nature reserves in the Republic of Ireland
- Angela Russell (doctor) (1893–1991), physician and social reformer
- Eleanor Dillon nun
- Women Artist Action Group
- Pauline Cummins
- Society of Dublin Painters also known as Dublin Painters' Society
- Clare Marsh
- Mary Crooke (fl. 1657–92), printer and bookseller
- Jane Jones (printer)
- Anne Esdall (1718–1795), printer and publisher
- Jean Crawford Cochrane educator and activist for women's education
- Ola Majekodunmi radio presenter and Irish language activist
- Black Pride Ireland
- Movement of Asylum Seekers in Ireland
- Irish Refugee Council
- Migrants and Ethnic-minorities for Reproductive Justice
- Immigrant Council of Ireland
- Migrant Rights Centre Ireland
- Irish Network Against Racism
- Denise Chaila
- Irish Traveller Movement
- Ebun Joseph
- Spirasi
- Zainab Boladale RTÉ presenter
- Erica Cody
- National Traveller Women's Forum expanded from a stub for live stream
- Samantha Kay Soulé (singer)
- Volunteer Ireland
- Doras (NGO)
- Bulelani Mfaco
- Ellie Kisyombe
- Nasc (NGO)
- Lucky Khambule
- Kathleen Lynch (academic)
- Christchurch Place formerly Skinner Row
- Film Company of Ireland
- Barbara Stokes paediatrician and disability campaigner 1922–2009
- Mary Dunlop (1912–2003), campaigner for the welfare of the blind
- Sarah Clarke (nun) nun and civil rights campaigner
- Emma Duffin (1883–1979), nurse, diarist and welfare worker
- Brigid McCole (1942–96), hepatitis C campaigner
- Catherine Cummins Sister of Charity and founder member of Cappagh Orthopaedic Hospital
- Josie Airey, legal-aid campaigner
- Joyce McCartan (1929–96), community worker
- Patricia Hoey (1883-1930), journalist, suffragist and nationalist
- Beatrice Dixon (1916–2005), pioneer of women's participation in public life
- Mary Aquinas Monaghan (1919–85), Missionary Sister of St Columban and physician
- Kevin Scannell
- Maighréad Ní Annagáin (1875–1952), folk music collector and performer
- Metal Man (beacon) County Sligo
- Olive Wilson badminton player
- Yvonne Kelly badminton player
- Mary Dinan
- Barbara Beckett
- Jean Lawless (later Jean Sharkey)
- T. D. Good Dr Thomas Douglas Good
- Ada Good Ada Baillee Good nee Carroll (born c. 1880)
- Barbara J. Good
- Derreen Good (born c. 1905)
- Norman D. Good (born c.1907)
- Nora Conway
- Lena Rea
- Mona-Lxsa
- Chiamaka Enyi-Amadi
- Farah Elle
- Celaviedmai
- Hare Squead
- Williams & Son, Dublin taxidermists
- Joan Horan (1918-65), paralympian
- Marie Fleming campaigner for assisted suicide
- Eileen Gallagher Ireland's first female commercial traveller for Urney Chocolates
- Henry Gallagher (businessman)
- Veronica Ryan (teacher) (1921–1966), founder and headmistress of the Children's House Montessori School
- Mary Purcell (biographer) (1906–91), teacher, religious biographer, and archivist
- Edith Newman Devlin lecturer in English
- Fanny Forrester (poet) poet, daughter of Ellen Forrester
- Geraldine Mary Harmsworth (1838–1925), matriarch
- Ballynastaig Wood
- Ballyarr Wood
- Oldhead Wood
- Ballykeeffe Wood
- Vera Klute
- Marjorie Fitzgibbon (1930-2018)
- Vale of Clara
- Fenor Bog
- Ballyteigue Burrow
- Ballygilgan
- Glenealo Valley
- Balnagowan House
- Knocksink Wood
- Alexander Strain architect and builder
- Celeste Bowe Daughter of Charity and nurse
- Mary de Lourdes Gogan Medical Missionary of Mary
- Keelhilla, Slieve Carron
- Clochar na gCon
- Derrycrag Wood Nature Reserve
- Leam West Bog
- Pollnaknockaun Wood
- Rosturra Wood
- Richmond Esker
- Knockmoyle Sheskin
- Owenboy (nature reserve)
- Easkey Bog
- Pollardstown Fen
- Fiddown Island
- Timahoe Esker
- Coolacurragh Wood
- Grantstown Wood and Grantstown Lough
- Scragh Bog
- The Raven Nature Reserve
- Deputy's Pass
- Ballyteigue
- Cahermurphy Nature Reserve
- Knockadoon Head
- Kilcolman Bog
- Knockomagh Wood
- Castlemaine Harbour
- Cummeragh River Bog
- Derrycunnihy Wood
- Eirk Bog
- List of Special Protection Areas in the Republic of Ireland
- Sheheree Bog
- Redwood Bog
- Duntally Wood
- Lough Barra Bog
- Meenachullion Bog
- Pettigo Plateau
- Rathmullen Wood
- Myra Kathleen Hughes (1877-1918) Wexford illustrator
- Frances MacCurtain (1936–98), speech therapist and voice coach
- Erica O'Donnell (1920–99), art historian and SOE officer
- Geraldine Plunkett Dillon
- Katherine O'Doherty and Séamus O'Doherty
- Kathleen Napoli McKenna (1897–1988), republican and administrator
- Patricia O'Connor (playwright) (1905-83), writer and teacher
- Amy Curtis (1894–1970), administrator
- Kay McDowell (1897–1975), trade union leader
- Kathleen Barry Moloney (1896–1969), republican and trade unionist
- Nora Harkin (1910–2012), republican socialist
- Thomas Sinclair (politician, 1838–1914)
- F.E. Crichton
- Sheila Conroy (1918–2012), trade unionist, social activist and administrator
- Florence Armstrong, pioneer of multi-denominational education in Ireland
- Cecil Crawford O'Gorman Irish artist, father of Juan O'Gorman
- Geraldine Penrose Fitzgerald (1846–1939), novelist and catholic convert
- Cecil Ffrench Salkeld artist
- Samuel Clossy (c.1724-1786) anatomist
- Elizabeth O'Shea Dillon and Marion O'Shea Roosevelt
- Lil Nic Dhonnchadha (1891–1984), Irish language scholar and language activist
- Maighréad Nic Mhaicín (1899–1983), translator
- Padraic Breslin
- Harold G. Leask architect and archaeologist
- Kitty MacCormack (1892-1975) design with the Dun Emer Guild
- Dun Emer Guild
- Sinéad McCoole
- Edmund Finn (printer) printer
- Doreen Corcoran local historian
- George Canning father of George Canning
- Desmond FitzGerald (architect)
- Madeleine O'Rourke (1951–2006), aviator and organiser of aviation events
- Peggy Hogg (1919–94), camogie player
- Katherine Everett writer of Bricks and Flowers wife of John Everett
- Oscar Mac Carthy (1815 - 1894) geographer and explorer of Irish heritage
- Kay Keohane-O'Riordan (1910–91), communist
- Marguerite Palmer, suffragette
- Edward Gerrard & Sons taxidermists
- Carolyn Mulholland undo redirect
- Hawkins Street
- Apollo House (Dublin)
- Margaret Williamson Rea b. 1875 botantist
- Margarita Dawson Stelfox 1886-1971
- Thomas Dillon (chemist) husband of Geraldine Plunkett Dillon
- Maureen Mockford Northern Irish, played for Ireland
- William Boyton Kirk (1824–1900) sculptor
- Thomas Stewart Kirk (1848–79) sculptor
- Monica Farrell protestant evangelist
- John D. M. McCallum (1883-1967)
- Tullow Museum
- Samuel Frederick Brocas (c. 1792–1847)
- James Brocas
- Kate Stone (engineer) for Pride in STEM day!
- James Henry Brocas
- William Brocas
- Henry Brocas (junior)
- Máirín Beaumont teacher and nationalist
- Eileen Morris (1919–93), Medical Missionary of Mary
- Mary Teresa Cullen (nun) nun and founder of the magazine Virgo Potens
- Margaret Dowling Dominican Sister and foundress
- List of buildings designed by architect Andrew Devane
- Thomas Joseph Byrne OPW architect
- James Gwim (c. 1720–1769)
- William Howis (1804–1882)
- Hans Iten (born Switzerland 1874-1930)
- Sir John Langham (1894–1972) Irish botanical artist
- James Mannin (Died 1779)
- Isaac Whitehead (c.1819-1881)
- David Wilson (1873–1935)
- Betty Lombard tennis player
- Walter G. Strickland
- Con Leventhal husband of Ethna MacCarthy
- Seamus Clandillon musician, civil servant, and first director of radio broadcasting at 2RN
- Robert Perceval (1756 - 1839), chemist
- James Emerson Reynolds (1844 - 1920) chemist
- William Ringrose Gelston Atkins (1884-1959)
- Robert Collins (physician) (1800-1868) physician in 1824, master of the Rotunda hospital
- Stephen Mitchell Dixon (1866-1940) civil engineer
- Edward Edwin Glanville (1873-1898) physicist, wireless telegraphy pioneer
- William James Knowles father of Matilda Knowles
- Richard Orpen architect and painter
- Joseph Raftery director of the National Museum of Ireland
- George F. Beckett (1877–1961), architect
- Primrose McConnell (1906–1991), missionary
- H. Ormonde McConnell
- Spectacle Bridge
- Ninian Niven
- Thomas Drummond Lambert (1837–1911), veterinary surgeon
- Richard Lane Joynt
- Isaac Swain
- Arthur Wynne Foot
- Arthur Humphreys Foord
- George William Chaster
- Nathaniel H. Alcock
- David Callender Campbell (naturalist)
- Rayna Katsarova
2018
edit- Mary Guiney (1901–2004), businesswoman and centenarian
- Patricia Cockburn (1914–89), author and artist, granddaughter of Henry Arthur Blake and Edith Blake
- Marjorie Hasler (c.1887–1913), suffragist
- Mina Robinson (fl. 1893–1910), founder of the Irish Decorative Art Association
- Eva McKee (1890–1955), craftswoman
- Maud Aiken director of the Dublin Municipal School of Music
- Mary Anne Holmes (1773–1805), poet and writer, sister of Robert Emmet
- Elizabeth Emmet Lenox-Conyngham
- Maura Breslin trade unionist and feminist
- Caroline Agnes Gray (1848–1927) wife of Edmund Dwyer Gray (Irish politician)
- Margaret Dockrell (1849–1926), suffragist, philanthropist, and councillor
- Maud Joynt (1868–1940), Celtic scholar and linguist
- Lucy Anne FitzGerald (1771–1851), radical
- Dolly Robinson (1901–77), artist and theatre designer
- Rosanna Johnson (1891–1987), street trader
- Margaret Pender (1850–1920), writer
- Maude Clarke (1892–1935), historian
- Anna Maria Chetwode (fl. 1827), novelist
- Kate Jordan (1862–1926), novelist and playwright
- May Guinness (1863–1955), painter
- Elizabeth Mernin (1886–1957), intelligence agent
- Margaret Grey Porter (d. 1881), philanthropist
- Barbara McDonnell (1847?–1928), philanthropist
- Sarah Venie Barr political and community activist
- Eliza Kirk (b. 1812) sculptor
- Mary Mathew (1724–77), diarist
- Harriet Kirkwood (1880–1953), landscape and still life painter
- Katherine Conolly (c.1662–1752), political hostess, landowner, and philanthropist
- Anne Deane (c.1834–1905), businesswoman, philanthropist, and nationalist
- Mary Ann Costello (1747–1827), actress and mother of the British prime minister George Canning
- Matilda Tone (1769–1849), wife of Theobald Wolfe Tone
- Mary O'Connell (1778-1836) (1778–1836), wife of Daniel O'Connell
- Claire Madden (feminist) (1905–98), feminist and political activist
- Etain Madden (1939–82), feminist and political activist
- Eileen Reid (painter) (1894–1981), painter and musician
- Clementina Robertson (1795–1853?), miniature-painter
- Ellen Forrester (1828 – 1883), nationalist and poet
- Caroline Douglas (1821–1904), marchioness of Queensberry, nationalist benefactor
- Ethna MacCarthy (1903–59), poet and paediatrician
- Lily Williams portrait painter, 1874 -1940
- Rosy Gibb (1942–97), social worker, clown, and magician
- Frances O'Brien (1840–83), poet and novelist
- Ballykealy House
- Ada Leask (1899–1987), historian and antiquary
- Emily Crawford (1841–1915), journalist
- Adela Orpen (1855–1927), writer
- Lilla Minnie Perry (1888–1974), landscape painter
- Harriet Bagwell
- Fay Sargent (1890/91–1967), singer, actress, and journalist
- Mary Hobhouse (1864–1901), novelist and poet
- Mary Downing (c.1815–1881), poet and nationalist
- Theodosia Blachford philanthropist and leading methodist
- Kathleen Behan republican
- Gertrude Gaffney (d. 1959), journalist
- Lucy Franks (1878–1964), president of the Irish Countrywomen's Association
- Josephine McNeill (1895–1969), diplomat
- Nesca Robb (1905–76), author
- Máire Ní Dhonnchadha Dhuibh (d. 1795?), poet
- Mary Devenport O'Neill (1879–1967), poet and playwright, ended up merging into existing article
- Emily Cordner-Pinkerton (c.1859–1902), publisher
- Lucy Cane (c.1866–1926), public servant
- Molly Barton (1861–1949) artist
- Kathleen Cruise O'Brien (1886–1938), teacher, suffragist, and Irish language enthusiast
- Anna Maria Ball philanthropist, sister of Frances Ball
- Dorothea Conyers (1869–1949), novelist
- Letitia Overend (1880–1977), philanthropist and motor enthusiast
- Sheila Murphy (diplomat) (1898–1983), diplomat
- Naomi Overend
- Mary Barry O'Delaney (1862–1947), journalist and nationalist
- Deirdre O'Connor (architect) (1951–99), architect
- Margaret Barrington writer and journalist
- Kathleen Quigly (1888–1981), artist
- Emily de Burgh Daly (1859–1935), traveller and writer
- Catherine Drew (1832–1910), journalist and writer
- Mary Pollard of the Trinity Pollard collection
- Isabella Charlotte de Rohan-Chabot (1784–1868) aristocrat and diarist
- Jane Mitchel (c.1820–1899), nationalist
- Betty Chancellor (1910–84), actress
- Barbara Fitzgerald (1911–82), novelist
- Mary Ann Hutton (1862–1953), Irish-language scholar and writer
- Dick's Coffee House early Irish coffee house
- Richard Pue (d. 1722), newspaper publisher, bookseller, and coffee house proprietor
- Mary Cosgrave (c.1877–1941), social worker and local politician
- Erne Palais Ballroom
- Elizabeth Somers (1881–1934), republican and industrial revivalist
- Maude Rooney (1902–1974), consumers' and women's rights activist
- Mary O'Donovan Rossa (Q18529222) Irish nationalist, poet (1845–1916)
- Ballon Hill Co. Carlow
- Brisinga
- Brisinga endecacnemos
- Arts and Crafts Society of Ireland
- Newtown Anner House County Tipperary
- Royal Horticultural Society of Ireland
- August Weckbecker
- Pauline Clotworthy (1912–2004), teacher of fashion design at The Grafton Academy
- Máire Ní Scolaí (1909–85), traditional singer
- Eibhlín Ní Bhriain (1925–86), journalist
- Marianne Trotter (1752–1777), artist
- John Trotter (painter)
- Eliza H. Trotter
Levant women 2017
edit- Amal Naseer Jordanian writer (Q27464000)
- Marie Jubran Syrian singer (Q3292615)
- Yolande Labaki Lebanese painter (Q19956379)
- Mqboola Chalak Syrian writer and lawyer (Q27914725)
- Marie Seurat Syrian novelist (Q28057901)
- Thanaa Debsi Syrian actor (Q12203881)
- Lena Chamamaan Syrian vocalist (Q2583955)
- Abeer Issa Jordanian actress (Q12224303)
- Balqis Sidawi Lebanese writer and poet (Q27914729)
- Seta Manoukian Lebanese painter (Q3480629)
CEE women 2017
edit- Sultana Racho Petrova Bulgarian memorist
- Lidia Shishmanova Bulgarian writer and journalist
- Faina Mihajlovna Kirillova Soviet mathematician
- Dace Akmentiņa Latvian actress
- Lūcija Jēruma-Krastiņa Russian anatomist and anthropologist
- Gizela Bravničar Slovenian ballet dancer and choreographer
- Oľga Textorisová Slovak writer
- Marie Cantacuzène Romanian model
- Eugenija Šimkūnaitė Lithuanian botanist
- Paulina Wilkońska Polish novelist, editor, diarist
2015
edit- Altamont House, Co. Carlow, well known gardens with associated house.
- Thomas Cobden, English architect known for his work in Ireland.
- Katherine Sophia Kane nee Katherine Sophia Bailey wrote the first guide to Ireland's flowering plants in 1833.
- Margaret Clarke (artist)
- Carlow County Museum
- Alexander Carte
- Ye Olde Hurdy Gurdy Museum of Vintage Radio
- Gulielma Lister
- Irish Agricultural Museum
- John S. Jackson geologist and environmentalist.
- Kilmallock Abbey Co. Limerick.
- Arigna Mining Experience
- Kathleen King
- Cavan County Museum
- Evelyn Booth
- County Museum Dundalk
- Doris Reynolds
- Monaghan County Museum
- Catherine Gage
- Roscommon County Museum
- Sligo County Museum
- Waterford County Museum
- Enniscorthy Castle was Wexford County Museum.
- Máirin de Valéra (1912–1984), Professor of Botany at University College, Galway.
- Allihies Copper Mine Museum
- James Mitchell Museum Geological Museum at NUI Galway.
- Mary Leebody
- Clare Museum
- Sarah Mary Fitton
- County Carlow Military Museum
- Ethel Rhind
- Catherine Amelia O’Brien
- Number Twenty Nine - Georgian House Museum
- Cork Butter Museum
- Carmel Humphries first woman professor of zoology at UCD.
- Michael Keogh (soldier) fought on both sides of the war in WWI, from Tullow.
- Fanny Currey
- Alfred E. Child
- Gaulstown Portal Tomb
- Vinegar Hill Windmill Co. Wexford.
- Elphin Windmill
- Thomas Antisell
- James Edwin Duerden
- National 1798 Rebellion Centre
- James Bayley Butler
- Katherine Butler
- Robert Bell (Irish geologist)
- Evelyn Gleeson
- Charles Bent Ball
- Mallow Castle Co. Cork.
- Threecastles Castle Co. Wicklow.
- Patrick Pollen stained glass artist.
- Milford Mills, County Carlow
- Mary Swanzy
- Edith Blake (1845–1926), botanical illustrator and writer, wife of Henry Arthur Blake.
- Catherine Isabella Osborne (1818–80), artist and patron.
- Letitia Bushe (c.1710–1757), watercolourist and miniature painter.
- Florence Ross (1870–1949), artist, cousin of John Millington Synge.
- Marianne-Caroline Hamilton (1777–1861), artist and memoirist, great-grandmother of Letitia Marion Hamilton.
- Mercy Hunter (1910–89), artist.
- Kathleen Fox (1880–1963), painter, enamellist, and stained-glass artist.
- Moyra Barry (1886–1960), artist.
- Kathleen Bridle (1897–1989), artist and art teacher.
- Grace Henry (1868–1953), painter.
- Piper's Stones Co. Wicklow.
- Elish Lamont (1816–70), artist and writer.
- Norma Borthwick (1862–1934), artist, writer, and Irish-language activist.
- Alice Jacob (1862-1921) Irish botanical artist.
- Marianne Fannin (1848–1938), later (Mrs Roberts).
- Frances Anne Edgeworth (1769–1864) artist.
- Diana Conyngham Ellis (1813–1851) née Monsell botanical artist.
- Catherine Teresa Cookson (née Catherine Teresa Murray), also known as Mrs James Cookson, botanical artist.
- Caroline Pounds (née Elam) (fl.c.1846-c.1880).
- Mary Manning
- Kathleen Cox (1904–72), artist, sculptor, and mystic.
- Harriet Kavanagh artist, traveller, and antiquarian.
- Ruth Brandt (1936–89), artist and teacher, daughter of Muriel Brandt.
- Kathleen Coyle (1886–1952), novelist.
- Helen Mabel Trevor (1831–1900), artist.
- Dungarvan Castle Co. Waterford.
- Glengowla Mines
- Mary Alment (1834–1908) artist.
- Helen Sophia O'Hara (1846–1920).
- Joan Jameson (1892–1953), still life, figure and landscape painter.
- Lilian Davidson (1879–1954), landscape and portrait artist, art teacher, and writer.
- Ellice Pilkington (1869–1936), women's activist and artist.
- Harriet Osborne O'Hagan (1830–1921), portrait painter.
- Mia Cranwill (1880–1972), design and metal artist.
- Dorothy Blackham (1896–1975), artist and teacher.
- Mabel Young (1889–1974), artist.
- Yvonne Jammet (1900–67), landscape painter and sculptor.
- Althea Gyles (1868–1949), poet and artist.
- Bea Orpen painter.
- Dairine Vanston (1903–88), artist.
- Sophia St John Whitty (1877–1924), woodcarver, teacher, and cooperativist.
- Florence Vere O'Brien (1854–1936), diarist, philanthropist, and craftswoman.
- Nelly O'Brien (1864–1925), miniature and landscape artist, and Gaelic League activist.
- Lilla Vanston artist.
- Helen Hooker (1905–93), sculptor, wife of Ernie O'Malley.
- Mary Mulvihill (1960 - 2015) writer, broadcaster, and science communicator.