seamus dubhghaill

Promoting Irish Culture and History from Little Rock, Arkansas, USA


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Founding of the Royal Horticultural Society of Ireland

The Royal Horticultural Society of Ireland (RHSI), Ireland’s leading gardening charity, is founded on September 30, 1816.

The RHSI is founded with the purpose of encouraging the love and sharing the knowledge of gardening in all its forms, while fostering environmental awareness and building a sense of community. The inaugural meeting takes place at the Rose Tavern, Donnybrook, Dublin, as the Horticultural Society of Ireland with Francis Caulfeild, 2nd Earl of Charlemont, as its patron and Francis Hetherington as its chairman. The new society holds its first flower show on Easter Monday 1817, and flower and fruit show on August 18, 1817. After a number of shows in the intervening years, the society declines, and is re-established with a new committee in 1830. By 1848, the Society becomes known as the Royal Horticultural Society of Ireland.

The RHSI’s membership is made up of both professional and amateur gardeners from all walks of life who are united by a shared passion for gardens, plants, and growing. The members enjoy access to expert insights through the Society’s printed journal, monthly talks, regular bulletins, and visits to over 60 affiliated Partner Gardens across Ireland and abroad.

The RHSI acts as a central hub, proudly affiliated with horticultural, gardening and floral art societies and clubs across Ireland. These connections help support a nationwide exchange of knowledge, experience, and enthusiasm. From heritage landscapes to urban balconies, the RHSI celebrates the richness of gardening across Ireland. The RHSI remains committed to supporting those who grow, teach, study, and care for plants—helping to ensure that gardening continues to thrive for generations to come.

The RHSI celebrated its 200 anniversary in 2016.

In November 2023, the RHSI announces an extraordinary general meeting to consider changing its name by dropping “Royal” from the title.

For more information about the Royal Horticultural Society of Ireland, visit their website at https://rhsi.ie.


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Founding of Bord Fáilte, the Irish Tourist Board

Bord Fáilte, the Irish Tourist Board, is founded on July 3, 1952, and is the predecessor organization of Fáilte Ireland (Ireland’s Welcome), which is the operating name of the National Tourism Development Authority of Ireland.

After the foundation of the Irish Free State in 1922, hoteliers and others create local tourism boards in various regions, which combine in 1924 into the Irish Tourism Association (ITA), a private organisation “promoting tourism to the benefit of the nation.” (An earlier, unionist-led, ITA existed from 1895 to 1921.) ITA lobbying leads to the Irish Tourist Board being established by the Tourist Traffic Act 1939. This is renamed An Bord Fáilte by the Tourist Traffic Act 1952, which creates a separate body, Fógra Fáilte, to handle publicity. The Tourist Traffic Act 1955 remerges the two as Bord Fáilte Éireann (BFÉ or “Bord Fáilte”). An Tóstal, a summer cultural festival held from 1953 to 1959, takes up the bulk of the authority’s work during this period. In 1963 the Council of Education, Recruitment and Training (CERT) is created to take over training of workers in the hospitality industry.

In 1964, eight regional tourist organisations (RTOs) are established which are intended to supersede the ITA. An extraordinary general meeting (EGM) called in 1964 to dissolve the ITA votes not to do so, but it nevertheless soon becomes defunct. The RTOs reduce in number to six in the 1980s, and are renamed regional tourist associations (RTAs) in 1996. In 1989 the Dublin RTO loses a High Court action to prevent BFÉ dissolving it. It is reconstituted as Dublin Tourism and more closely controlled by BFÉ.

In 2003 CERT and BFÉ merge to form Fáilte Ireland, to better co-ordinate with Tourism Ireland, the all-island body established under the Good Friday Agreement. The advent of travel websites reduces the usefulness of the RTAs and a 2005 PricewaterhouseCoopers report recommends substantial reorganisation. As a consequence all are dissolved in 2006, except Dublin Tourism, which is made a direct subsidiary of Fáilte Ireland. Dublin Tourism’s separate status ends in 2012 in line with a 2011 report by Grant Thornton International.

Fáilte Ireland played a leading role in The Gathering Ireland 2013, a year-long programme of events encouraging members of the Irish diaspora to visit their region of origin.

The legal name of the body is the National Tourism Development Authority, according to the National Tourism Development Authority Act 2003 which established it. The 2003 act also empowers the body to use the trading name of Fáilte Ireland. The word fáilte is Irish for “welcome.” In official Irish-language texts the form Fáilte Éireann has been used.