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IE CA CP/3/16/51 · Unidad documental compuesta · c.1946-1952
Parte de Irish Capuchin Archives

A bound volume containing clippings relating to the three distinct issues. The first issue covered by the clippings is the political scandal involving Dr Francis Constantine ‘Con’ Ward (1891-1966), a Fianna Fáil politician who was a parliamentary secretary in the governments led by Éamon de Valera from 1932 to 1946. Ward’s political career ended in a scandal involving allegations of financial impropriety and local government corruption. A tribunal of inquiry cleared Ward of all these charges but one: that he and other directors of his family’s bacon-curing business had made incomplete tax returns from personal income derived the firm. Ward resigned his office (13 July 1946) and subsequently left the Fianna Fáil party. He never again attended at Leinster House and did not contest the 1948 general election. The Ward scandal contributed to the undermining of public confidence in the Fianna Fáil government and its 1948 electoral defeat.

The second issue covered in the volume’s clippings is the Locke‘s Distillery case. The clippings report on a tribunal of inquiry set up to investigate the proposed sale of Locke‘s Distillery in Kilbeggan in County Westmeath in 1947. The tribunal was established on foot of allegations made in the Dáil by the independent TD for Laois-Offaly, Oliver J. Flanagan (1920-1987). In November 1947 Flanagan accused Éamon de Valera, Gerald Boland, Vivion de Valera, and Seán Lemass of proposing the sale of Locke‘s Distillery to Swiss businessmen in alleged contravention of the law. A tribunal of inquiry comprising three judges investigated Flangan’s allegations and found them to be untrue, even accusing Flanagan of lying in his evidence.

The final and most extensively covered issue in the volume is the Mother and Child scheme. Modelled on the United Kingdom’s National Health Service (NHS), the scheme was the brainchild of Dr Noel Browne (1915-1997), the Clann na Poblachta politician and Minister for Health (1948-1951). The scheme included a proposal for free medical care for all mothers and children. Medical, religious and, eventually, political opposition to the scheme concluded with Browne’s resignation as Minister for Health in April 1951. The scheme is now chiefly remembered as a major political crisis involving primarily the government and the Catholic Church in the early 1950s.

The volume was compiled by Fr. Senan Moynihan OFM Cap. and includes clippings taken from the ‘Irish Press’, ‘Irish Independent’, ‘Irish Times’ and other Irish and Northern Irish newspapers and magazines. The volume includes clippings of articles written by Fr. Senan reflecting on the Mother and Child scheme. Other clippings include articles by Professor Alfred O’Rahilly defending the church’s position in the Mother and Child scheme which were published in ‘The Standard’ newspaper. The volume also includes a letter from Seán MacBride and a copy typescript statement by him on Noel Browne’s resignation

Letter from David Goldstein
IE CA CP/3/16/38/4 · Parte · 25 Apr. 1938
Parte de Irish Capuchin Archives

A letter from David Goldstein, Director, Catholic Campaigners for Christ, to Fr. Senan Moynihan OFM Cap. asking for a copy of ‘The Capuchin Annual’ to be sent to St. Joseph’s Franciscan College, Hinsdale, Illinois.

IE CA CP/3/16/38/9 · Parte · 27 Sept. 1945
Parte de Irish Capuchin Archives

A clipping of an article reporting on an address by Richard Cushing, Archbishop of Boston, on the need for Catholics and Jews to co-operate in tackling ‘common enemies’. The clipping is taken from ‘The Tribune’ (27 Sept. 1945).

Guard unions from Reds, warns priest
IE CA CP/3/16/39/3 · Parte · 1 June 1949
Parte de Irish Capuchin Archives

A clipping of a report on lecture by Fr. Paul Walsh OFM to trade union members in which he warned of the dangers of communism and claimed that there three hundred active communists in Dublin. The clipping is taken from the ‘Irish Independent’ (1 June 1949).

Communist menace in the North
IE CA CP/3/16/39/7 · Parte · 11 Jan. 1950
Parte de Irish Capuchin Archives

A clipping of a report a debate in the Northern Ireland senate referring to fears that ‘communist influences’ were at work in the trade union movement in Ulster. The clipping is taken from the ‘Irish Times’ (11 January 1950).

IE CA CP/3/16/39/12 · Parte · Nov. 1950
Parte de Irish Capuchin Archives

A clipping of an interview with Muriel MacSwiney, the widow of Terence MacSwiney. The interview includes recollections of her husband’s role in the revolutionary period and how ‘he had always been a democrat with a fellow-feeling for the masses’. The clipping is taken from the ‘Irish Workers’ Voice’ (November 1950).

IE CA CP/3/16/39/17 · Parte · 11 Apr. 1951
Parte de Irish Capuchin Archives

A clipping of an advertisement for a public meeting on the Mother and Child health scheme. It is noted that the meeting was sponsored by one hundred women including Louise Bennett, Rosamond Jacob, and Hilda Tweedy. The clipping is taken from the ‘Evening Mail’ (11 April 1951).