A view of Knocklofty Bridge over the River Suir in about 1935. The bridge is located near Clonmel on the border between Counties Tipperary and Waterford. A manuscript annotation on the reverse of the print reads 'Knocklofty Bridge (River Suir) / dividing County Waterford from County Tipperary'.
A view of the Anglers Rest Hotel and the Strawberry Beds from Knockmaroon Hill (situated between Chapelizod and Castleknock) in Dublin. A manuscript annotation on the reverse of the print reads 'Valley of the Liffey from Knockmaroon Hill, County Dublin'.
A study on Northern Rhodesia compiled by Rev. E. Hoch. The text focuses on the northern part of the country inhabited by the Babemba and other tribes. The notes are largely based on 'Rhodesia and Nyasaland' by W.V. Brelsford and 'A study of the Babemba and neighbouring tribes' by Fr. Etienne OBE. The text includes a ‘tribal map of Northern Rhodesia’ attached to the back cover.
Author: E. Peltier Publisher: Paris: Librairie Charles Poussielgue, 15 Rue Cassette Language: French Series: Nouvelle Bibliothèque Franciscaine; VIII Full title: 'L’apôtre de la tempérance, ou Vie du P. Théobald Mathieu, des Frères mineurs capucins de la province d’Irlande / par E. Peltier / d’apres les travaux de Lord Maguire'. Annotation: Ink stamp on inside front cover reads: ‘Library OFM Cap., Church Street’.
An Italian newspaper containing an article by Donal McHales, General Consular and Agent of the Irish Republic, concerning the ‘atrocities’ committed by Belfast Protestants upon Irish Catholics and nationalists. (p. 2).
A clipping of members of the Women’s National Health Association (WNHA) in Dublin in 1915. The image was published in the ‘Irish Life’ magazine (19 February 1915) on the occasion of the departure of the WNHA’s founder Ishbel Hamilton-Gordon (Lady Aberdeen) from Ireland. She is the central figure in the front row. (Volume page 155)
Clipping of an article titled ‘Lady Stewart-Bam at Ards House’ published in 'The Gentlewoman' magazine. The article refers to the marriage of Captain Sir Pieter Canzius Van Bloommestein Bam and Ena Dingwall Tasca Stewart of Ards House, County Donegal, on 26 July 1910. The article also provides an account of the Stewart-Bam residence in Ards, County Donegal. With a photographic print of Lady Stewart-Bam and Ards House. The article reads: 'Lady Stewart-Bam, although the heiress to an Irish estate, was not born in Ireland: but here heart is often with her people there, and she loves nothing so much as to find herself surrounded by those who hail from the “distressful Isle”. She told the writer that when she settles down in her own home in London, she intends to have none but her “own people” about her as servants'. The file includes a photostat copy of the article.