- IE CA CP/1/1/2/8/1
- Parte
- c.1917
Parte deIrish Capuchin Archives
A portrait print of John Redmond (1856-1918).
Parte deIrish Capuchin Archives
A portrait print of John Redmond (1856-1918).
Parte deIrish Capuchin Archives
An image of Douglas Hyde (1860-1949), President of Ireland, leaving St. Andrew's Church on Westland Row in Dublin.
Parte deIrish Capuchin Archives
A photographic print of W.T. Cosgrave (1880-1865), President of the Executive Council of the Irish Free State.
Archbishop William Joseph Walsh (1841-1921)
Parte deIrish Capuchin Archives
An image of William Joseph Walsh (1841-1921), Archbishop of Dublin from 1885 to 1921.
Parte deIrish Capuchin Archives
A view of Bantry Harbour on the coast of West Cork in about 1940.
Spelga Pass, Mourne Mountains, County Down
Parte deIrish Capuchin Archives
A view of a road running through the Spelga Pass in the Mourne Mountains in County Down.
Newcastle Bridge, Ballymahon, County Longford
Parte deIrish Capuchin Archives
A view of Newcastle Bridge (an eighteenth-century four-arch road bridge over the River Inny) near Ballymahon in County Longford. A manuscript annotation on the reverse of the print reads 'Newcastle Bridge near Ballymahon, County Longford'.
Parte deIrish Capuchin Archives
A view of horse-drawn hay harvesting in County Carlow in c.1935. The image shows the Brownshill Dolmen, a large megalithic portal tomb in County Carlow. The date of the tomb’s construction has been estimated to be between 4000 and 3000 BC. At one hundred metric tons, the dolmen’s cap stone is reputed to be the largest in Europe.
Parte deIrish Capuchin Archives
A view of the shoreline along Lough Conn in County Mayo. A manuscript annotation on the reverse of the print reads 'By the shores of Lough Conn'.
Parte deIrish Capuchin Archives
A pictorial postcard print of the town of Enniscorthy in County Wexford in about 1945. Some of the prominent buildings in the image include Enniscorthy Castle (centre), a late sixteenth-century fortified tower house, St. Aidan’s Cathedral (background, centre-left), the largest building in Ireland designed (1843) by Augustus Welby Pugin (1812-1852), the architect responsible for the interior of the Palace of Westminster in London, and St. Mary’s Church of Ireland (left), a Gothic Revival style church built between 1840 and 1850 to the designs of Joseph Welland (1798-1860), architect to the Ecclesiastical Commissioners in Ireland.