Photograph of a Lenten mission in Holy Trinity Church in Cork. An annotation on the reverse reads ‘Lenten Mission (men’s week) conducted by the Very Rev. Frs. Aloysius and Paschal, English Province, in 1966 in Holy Trinity Church, Cork’.
Photographic print of Holy Trinity Church and Parliament Bridge in Cork.
Photographer/Studio: B. L. MacGill, 33 Patrick Street, Cork.
Photographic print of the interior of Holy Trinity Church. An annotation on the reverse reads ‘The old interior of Holy Trinity Church before the recent renovation, about 1980’.
Photographic print of the exterior of Holy Trinity Church and the adjoining Friary viewed from the opposite bank of the South Channel of the River Lee.
Postcard prints showing a view of Parliament Bridge and Holy Trinity Church in Cork.
Photographic postcard print of the exterior of Holy Trinity Church on Father Mathew Quay in Cork. Reference no.: 2/CK-012.
Newspaper clippings from the 'Cork Evening Echo' and the 'Cork Examiner' reporting the ceremonies to mark the centenary of the laying of the foundation stone of Holy Trinity Church, Cork. With a printed flier for the Solemn High Mass.
Printed tickets for the annual triduum in honour of St. Anthony of Padua at Holy Trinity Church in Cork.
This series contains unpublished material compiled mainly by Capuchin friars (particularly by Fr. Angelus Healy OFM Cap.) relating to the history of the Capuchins in Cork or to noteworthy Cork-born members of the Order.
Transcripts and notes compiled by Fr. Angelus Healy OFM Cap. from mass registers of the Cork community. The notes mainly refer to personnel matters giving the names of community members, the dates of transfers, details of chapter meetings and the appointment of guardians. The title page reads: ‘This book contains notes made from an examination of the mass register of the Cork house. I mean the register signed by the Fathers of the masses discharged by the community. The examination extended over the books from 1889 to December 1914, a period of 25 years. It gives the names of the different Fathers in the community, superiors, dates of visitations and transfers from the community. I also examined house books from July 1883 to April 1885 to 1887 during which Fr. Englebert of Huissen OSFC was guardian. He used a special ledger of his own, as appears from an entry made by Fr. Matthew O’Connor OSFC who succeeded him in office’.
Sans titre