An image of the ruins of Killarney House in County Kerry in about 1945. Built in 1872 for Valentine Browne, 4th Earl of Kenmare (1825-1905), this Elizabethan-Revival manor house was built on an elevated site overlooking Lough Leane. It was destroyed by fire in 1913 and was never rebuilt.
A view of the town of Newport in County Mayo. The seven arches bridge (formerly a viaduct for the Achill branch of the Midland Great Western Railway line) and St. Patrick's Church are prominent in the image.
An image of an outdoor (clothing and shoe) street market, most likely in the vicinity of the old Moore Street market area in Dublin. The image may possibly show stalls on either Horseman’s Row or Coles Lane in this area (the present-day Ilac Centre now covers this site).
A view of Knocklofty Bridge over the River Suir in about 1930. The bridge is located near Clonmel on the border between Counties Tipperary and Waterford. This three-arch limestone structure dates to circa 1770 and is attributed to the Cork-born architect Thomas Ivory (c.1732-1786), a highly significant figure in the building of Georgian Dublin.
A postcard print of a large crowd assembled around a specially erected altar on Watling Street Bridge (now known as Rory O’More Bridge) over the River Liffey in Dublin during the Catholic Emancipation centenary celebrations in June 1929.
An image of the unveiling of a memorial marking the tercentenary of the synod which repudiated James Butler, 1st Marquess of Ormonde (1610-1688), the former Lord Lieutenant of Ireland, and excommunicated his followers. The synod was held in the Franciscan Friary in Jamestown in August 1650.