Aperçu avant impression Fermer

Affichage de 35 résultats

Description archivistique
Dossier Glass Plate Negative and Lantern Slide Collection
Aperçu avant impression Hierarchy Affichage :

17 résultats avec objets numériques Afficher les résultats avec des objets numériques

Provincial Chapter and Friar Groups

‘Kodak film wallet / MacSweeny’s Photographic Supply Store, Cork’. The file contains eight plates showing groups of Capuchins, including some images of friars at a Provincial Chapter in the Church Street Friary, Dublin. Includes images of Fr. Edwin Fitzgibbon OFM Cap. (1874-1938). Fr. Edwin was Provincial Minister from 1926-9 and from 1931-7.

Fr. Joseph Harkins OSFC (1853-1888)

Two plates showing portraits of Fr. Joseph Harkins OSFC (1853-1888). This Kilkenny-born friar traveled to India in about 1884 and took charge of a mission in Meerut in Uttar Pradesh. He died in Meerut on 1 December 1888. The larger plate (10.5 cm x 8 cm) appears to a photographic print of a portrait painting. With an annotated cover.

The Road from Rochestown, County Cork

Two plates showing images of the road from Rochestown to the local railway station. The image shows three Capuchin friars with a three-arch stone bridge, a mill and a chimney in the distant background. One of the friars is identifiable. The individual first on the right is Fr. Ignatius Collins OSFC. With an annotated cover.

Acts of Professions of the Irish Capuchin Martyrs

A file containing three plates with images of the original acts of professions of two seventeenth century Irish Capuchin martyrs, Fr. Fiacre Tobin OSFC (c.1620-1656) and Fr. John Baptist Dowdall OSFC (c.1626-1710). The plates are labelled a-c. Fiacre Tobin’s profession is dated 2 July 1638. John Baptist Dowdall’s profession (at the Irish Capuchin friary in Charleville, France) is dated 5 October 1652.

Thomastown Castle, County Tipperary

‘Paget Prize Plate Co., Ltd., Watford’ box. The box contains a manuscript note which reads: ‘With Fr. Russell’s compliments. Negatives of Thomastown Castle, County Tipperary. Front and back views. Maynooth, 27 Nov. 1913’. The box contains three glass plate negatives. A front and rear view of Thomastown Castle, the childhood home of Fr. Theobald Mathew OSFC (1790-1856), and a photographic image of a letter from Fr. Mathew.
Thomastown Castle, near Golden in County Tipperary, was a large country house built by the Mathew family. The earliest house on this site was built by George Mathew and dated to c.1670. The house was enlarged in the Gothic style by Francis Mathew, 2nd Earl of Llandaff, in 1812. The renowned Irish architect, Richard Morrison (1767-1849), redesigned the house incorporating several Gothic features including the ornate towers on the front elevation. Thomastown Castle was the childhood home of Fr. Theobold Mathew OSFC who abandoned a life of privilege to become a Capuchin friar. By the late nineteenth century the fortunes of the Mathew family had declined, and Thomastown Castle had fallen into ruins and the estate was completely abandoned. The ‘Fr. Russell’ referred to in the manuscript note in the file is probably Fr. Mathew Russell, editor of ‘The Irish Monthly’.

Irish Capuchin Friars and Scenes

‘Barnet Red Seal Plate’ (Elliot & Sons, Ltd., Barnet, England) box. The box contains nineteen slides. None of the plates have annotations or captions and most of the descriptive content has been inferred. The box includes the following images:
(a) A junior football team. The ball is annotated with a date of 1908.
(b) Two images of Fr. Aloysius Travers OFM Cap. at a hurling match at Croke Park, Dublin, and at the head of a temperance procession.
(c) The hallway of Rochestown Capuchin Friary, County Cork.
(d) A group of Capuchin friars with musical instruments in the Kilkenny Friary in c.1905. The group includes Fr. Ignatius Collins OFM Cap. and Fr. Albert Bibby OFM Cap.
(e) A group of Capuchin friars in Kilkenny in about 1905. The title, ‘Conradh na Gaeilge’ (Gaelic League), has been superimposed on the original glass plate.
(f) Fr. Albert Bibby OFM Cap. with a group of students possibly at a hurling match in Rochestown, County Cork.

On the roadside near Rochestown, County Cork

Two glass plates titled ‘On the roadside, Rochestown’. The cover annotation provides a date of 1906. The image is of two women (possibly a mother and daughter) greeting a group a children on a wooded path. The same women appear in the photograph at CA PH-1-29-D.

Landscapes and Views

A file containing eleven glass stereo plates of views of landscapes, scenery, and people. The images include:
33 (a) Three individuals on the roadside just overlooking the village of Raffeen in County Cork.
33 (b) A group of five individuals (probably a family group) collecting berries along the roadside.
33 (c) A portrait of a sitting woman with a cottage in the background.
33 (d) Four individuals working on the train line at Mageney Railway Station, County Kildare.
33 (e) A family group of seven individuals (two women and five children).
33 (f) A kneeling religious wearing a broad-brimmed hat cradling a young dog.
33 (g) A view of the Strawberry Beds in Dublin in about 1910.
33 (h) A woman wearing a long dress and a flat cap standing at a garden gate.
33 (i) Five dray horses standing harnessed to carts hauling large kegs at the Jameson Distillery, Bow Street, Dublin. A view of some of the working horses used at the Jameson Distillery, Bow Street, Dublin, in about 1910. The photograph was probably taken from atop of the old Capuchin Friary which fronted onto Bow Street.
33 (j) Two women (one sitting and holding a jug) on a forested hillside. The plate is missing a portion of the right-hand bottom corner.
33 (k) A large group of schoolchildren outside presumably a school building.

Irish Capuchin Friars and Locations

The file comprises ten plates and includes images of both individual Irish Capuchin friars and scenery and locations.
35 (a) A view of St. Mary of the Angels, Church Street, Dublin, from a slightly elevated position. The print shows the building before the addition of the Sacred Heart Chapel which was built as an aisle church in 1908. The caption refers to the ordination of Fr. Theobald Mathew OSFC (1790-1856) in the previous chapel on Church Street in 1809. With cover. A copy of this image is extant at CA-PH-1-71.
35 (b) Two plates of Fr. Berchmans Cantillon OFM Cap. (1880-1942). With cover.
35 (c) Two Capuchin friars and two dogs in the Church Street Friary garden. With annotated envelope suggesting that this is likely a poor quality image.
35 (d) Fr. Alphonsus Carroll OFM Cap. (1874-1934). With cover.
35 (e) Fr. Salvator Maria Corrigan OFM Cap. (1835-1919). The annotation on the cover suggests that this may be a poor quality image.
35 (f) An unidentified family group (six standing and five sitting or kneeling).
35 (g) Two plates of two separate and unidentified women. The annotated cover suggests that they are ‘Jenny & May’.
35 (h) An unidentified church and graveyard.

Landscapes and Groups

A file (with original box lacking a cover) containing eight slides. The file includes images of individuals, groups and landscapes.
36 (a) A glass stereo plate image of four women at the seaside cliffs known as Bridges of Ross, on the north side of the Loop Head peninsula in County Clare.
36 (b) A view of two Capuchin friars taking a break from an excursion on a jaunting car near Rochestown in County Cork in c.1908. The two friars are probably Fr. Jarlath Hynes OFM Cap. (1867-1918) and Fr. Casimir Butler OFM Cap. (1876-1958). The same image is extant at CA PH-1-23-S.
36 (c) A glass stereo plate of what appears to be unidentified deceased Capuchin friar in a coffin. This is probably an image of a deceased Fr. Sebastian O’Brien OFM Cap. (1867-1931).
36 (d) An interior view of Rochestown Friary Church in County Cork.
36 (f) A large group of both men and women (both sitting and standing) outside the main door to St. Mary of the Angels, Church Street, Dublin. Some of the men in the back row appear to be wearing temperance badges. They are probably part of a lay temperance association attached to the Church.
36 (g) A portrait of a man with beard (he does not appear to be a cleric) with a long waistcoat carrying a top hat. The plate has been scrubbed clean around edges and the upper right-hand portion of the plate is cracked with a fragment detached.
36 (h) A view of Lower Main Street in Graiguenamangh, County Kilkenny, in about 1905.

Résultats 1 à 10 sur 35