Photographic prints of two close-up views of the High Altar and pulpit of St. Mary of the Angels, Church Street. A manuscript annotation on the reverse reads ‘The Father Mathew Record’
Date: 1773 Author: James Harris (1709-1780) Publisher: Dublin, printed for J. Williams, at No. 5 in Skinner Row Full title: 'Hermes: or, A philosophical inquiry concerning universal grammar, the 4th edition, revised and corrected'. Language: English
VHS tapes containing recordings of a documentary (titled ‘Here goes, in the name of God!’) on the life and temperance campaign of Fr. Mathew produced by Icon Communications Ltd. for the bicentenary of his birth. The documentary ‘traces the story of Fr. Mathew and his crusade from 1838 until his death in 1856, and examines some of the works of the Capuchin friars today, as they follow in the footsteps of their single-minded and dedicated predecessor’.
The original caption reads: ‘After the surrender the British soldiers with guns at the ready amid the ruins of Henry Street, at the right of the picture with canopy over the door, the bombed out Coliseum Variety Theatre’.
An image of Henebry’s grocery shop in Portlaw, County Waterford. The shop was run by the siblings of Fr. Richard Henebry. The shop front signage spells the family name in Irish as ‘de Henebre’.
An offprint of a tribute/assessment of Professor Heinrich Zimmer by Fr. Richard Henebry. The article was published in ‘The Irish Educational Review’, Vol. IV, No. 5 (Feb. 1911).
Scale: 8 feet to 1 inch Ground and first floor plans showing proposals (in blue ink) for the installation of heating pipes and radiators at the Capuchin Friary, Kilkenny. Plans by Messrs Maguire & Gatchell, engineering consultants, 10 Dawson Street, Dublin.