Telegram to St. Enda’s School, Hermitage, Dublin
- IE CA CP/3/5/2/1/4
- Item
- 4 July 1920
Part of Irish Capuchin Archives
Telegram to ‘Murphy, Hermitage, Rathfarnham’ from the Commandant Internment Camp, Curragh. The message simply reads ‘yes’.
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Telegram to St. Enda’s School, Hermitage, Dublin
Part of Irish Capuchin Archives
Telegram to ‘Murphy, Hermitage, Rathfarnham’ from the Commandant Internment Camp, Curragh. The message simply reads ‘yes’.
Part of Irish Capuchin Archives
Pledge card of William Pearse affirming his abstinence from intoxicating liquor and enrolling him as a member of the temperance association attached to St. Andrew’s Church on Westland Row in Dublin.
Templebreedy Fort, County Cork
Part of Irish Capuchin Archives
An image of an artillery exercise at Fort Templebreedy near Crosshaven in County Cork. The print is credited to the 'Irish Press'.
Part of Irish Capuchin Archives
A view of Templeport Lake near Bawnboy in County Cavan. A manuscript annotation on the reverse of the print reads 'St. Aidan of Ferns / 31st January [his feast-day] / Templeport Lake, County Cavan. On the wooded island in which St. Aidan was born. The "Cot" in the foreground is the "hearse" used to bring to the island the bodies of those who have the right of burial on it. Crom Cruagh in the distance'.
Part of Irish Capuchin Archives
A photoengraving showing tenement dwellers in Dublin. The original photographic print is credited to Thomas F. Geoghegan (Essex Quay).
Tenement dwellers, Featherbed Lane, Cork
Part of Irish Capuchin Archives
An image of the residents of Featherbed Lane off Barrack Street in Cork city in 1928.
Part of Irish Capuchin Archives
An account by Fr. Dominic O’Connor OFM Cap. of the imprisonment and death of Terence MacSwiney, Lord Mayor of Cork. Fr. Dominic wrote: ‘His sufferings, no pen could write. Try and conceive the pain you suffer in your shoulders and back and in your knees, the stiff, numbing pain in the calves of your legs, the agony in your heels, instep and ankles, even if you remain for six hours outstretched on your back. What a relief to bend your knees and draw them up toward your body. But even that little relief our heroic sufferer could not have, for the flesh had wasted from his knee’.
Terence MacSwiney lying in state in Cork
Part of Irish Capuchin Archives
Terence MacSwiney lying in state at Cork City Hall. To the left of the coffin stands Fr. Dominic O’Connor OFM Cap.
Terence MacSwiney Memoriam Card
Part of Irish Capuchin Archives
A memoriam card for Terence MacSwiney. The card reads ‘In Loving Memory of Toirdhealbhach Mac Suibhne [Terence MacSwiney] TD, Commandant 1st Cork Brigade IRA. Lord Mayor of Cork. Who died for his Country in Brixton Prison, England, 26th October, 1920. (4th Year of the Irish Republic)’ with a portrait photograph and religious text. This particular card gives the date of his death as 26 October, but MacSwiney died on the morning of 25 October.
Terence MacSwiney Photograph / signed by Eithne (Annie) MacSwiney
Part of Irish Capuchin Archives
A studio photograph of Terence MacSwiney signed by his sister Eithne (Annie) MacSwiney.