Publisher: Dublin: Humphrey & Armour Language: English: Full title: 'Irish Association for the Prevention of Intemperance / twenty-ninth annual report for the year 1907'. Label on front cover reads: ‘£150 extra per annum required’.
Author: Rev. J. Halpin PP Publisher: Dublin: M.H. Gill & Son, 50 Upper O’Connell Street Language: English Genre: Juvenile Literature Includes a portrait illustration of Fr. Theobald Mathew OSFC.
Publisher: New York: The United States Catholic Historical Society Language: English Format: Journal; 'Historical Records and Studies', vi, part 1 (Feb. 1911) has an article titled: ‘The temperance movement and Father Theobald Mathew’s visit to the United States, 1840-1851’. Ink stamp on title page reads: ‘Library OFM Cap., Church Street'.
Author: Maire Ni Ćillin Publisher: Dublin: M.H. Gill and Son Ltd. Language: English The Irish Capuchin Archives holds both the 1913 and 1915 editions. Manuscript annotation on the 1913 edition reads: ‘Memory summons another picture of the Friars in the garb of brown … Maire Ni Ćillin’. One of the copies also has a manuscript dedication from the author to Fr. Aloysius Travers OFM Cap. on the fly-leaf.
Publisher: Dublin: Browne & Nolan Ltd, Nassau Street Full title: 'Manual of the Father Mathew Total Abstinence Association in honour of the Sacred Thirst' Ink and printed stamp reads: ‘Franciscan Capuchin Library, Church Street, Dublin'. The front cover also has a portrait of Fr. Theobald Mathew OSFC.
Framed manuscript quoting a passage from Romans Ch. 14, verse 21 which reads ‘It is good not to eat flesh, and not to drink wine nor anything whereby thy brother is offended or scandalized, or made weak’. The passage is signed by Fr. Theobald Mathew and is dated at Cork, 5 Feb. 1845.
Framed letter of Fr. Theobald Mathew OSFC, Imperial Hotel, Dublin, to Richard Dowden referring to the harsh sentence handed down to a sailor at a court martial in Cove (Cobh) Harbour. Fr. Mathew wrote ‘Strict discipline it is true, must be enforced in Her Majesty’s Fleet, but from the Report of the Trial, it is evident that the miserable culprit, was a habitual drunkard, and consequently a lunatic, and should be treated as such …’.