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Irish Capuchin Archives Documento
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New Ireland (Ár n-Ėire)

The file comprises the following editions of this Irish nationalist newspaper edited by D. Gwynn and P.S. Little:
Bound editions:
27 May 1922 (new issue, vol. 1, no. 1)-24 June 1922 (new issue, vol. 1, no. 5)
Loose editions:
7 July 1917 (Vol. IV, no. 9)
9 Aug. 1919 (Vol. VIII, No. 14) (pp 219-20 only);
16 Aug. 1919 (Vol. VIII, No. 15);
17 June 1922 (new issue, vol. I, no. 4) (pp 3-4 only);
24 June 1922 (new issue, vol. I, no. 5);
1 July 1922 (new issue, vol. I, no. 6).

The Weekly Bulletin

The file comprises the following editions of this journal published by the North Eastern Boundary Bureau:
No. 6. (2 copies) No. 21 (2 copies)
No. 9 No. 25
No. 10 No. 28
No. 12 No. 30 (2 copies)
No. 13 (3 copies) No. 31 (3 copies)
No. 14 (2 copies) No. 32 (3 copies)
No. 16 (2 copies)
No. 17
No. 18
No. 19 (3 copies)
The North-Eastern Boundary Bureau was set up on the authority of a Minute of the Provisional Government dated 2 Oct. 1922, authorising Kevin O’Shiel, then Assistant Law Adviser, to take all necessary steps for the collection and compilation of data in connection with the Boundary Commission. O’Shiel remained Director of the Bureau until his appointment to the Irish Land Commission in Nov. 1923. From Nov. 1922 until the British Government suggested a conference on the Northern question, a 'Weekly Bulletin' was issued to the press, which dealt with current controversy on the boundary or partition questions. It analyzed the facts or financial statements which might be relevant to this issue. In this and all other publications which were issued from the Bureau, all acrimonious arguments were omitted. The literature was specially designed to remove the Northern question as far as possible from the realm of heated controversy and make it a matter of reasoned political argument. The 'Bulletin' was greatly appreciated by the press. The material it contained was often used, as was intended, in an unacknowledged form, while some papers frequently published the 'Bulletin' in full. Copies of the 'Bulletin', in addition to being sent to the press, were also sent to Consuls, agents in the northern counties, and other interested parties. The 'Bulletin' was discontinued when the Boundary Commission became a matter of public controversy. The file also includes ‘North East Ulster, The Truth about the Boundary Commission. The Treaty’. A cover letter indicates that this statement was sent to an editor by the North Eastern Boundary Bureau on 7 Nov. 1922

Religious Ceremonies, Processions and Celebrations

Photographic prints submitted for publication in 'The Capuchin Annual'. The file includes images of various religious ceremonies in both Ireland and in Europe. Most of the prints are annotated on the reverse. Some of the annotations provide details of the photographer or studio responsible for the print. The file includes the following images:
• Religious procession at Marian Shrine, Knock, County Mayo.
• International Eucharistic Congress, Dublin, 22-26 June 1932.
• St. Patrick’s Purgatory, Lough Derg, County Donegal.
• Religious sisters (possibly Franciscan Missionaries of Our Lady) at the Convent of St. Francis, Monroe, Lafayette, Louisiana, 1919. The print is annotated on the reverse with the names of the sisters (including many Irish-born sisters).
• Waterford pilgrims visit Lourdres Grotto, Dublin. 22 June 1931.
• The opening of Seissens Cathedral, France, following its destruction in the First World War. c.1931.
• Procession of the Holy Blood at Bruges, Belgium. c.1931.
• Cardinal Bourne, Archbishop of Westminster, celebrating a solemn mass to Catholic Mission at the Colonial Exhibition in Paris. 17 Sept. 1931.
• Washing of the feet ceremony at Westminster Cathedral. c.1931.
• Opening of the Basilica at Lisieux, France. 19 May 1931.
• Procession of Young Catholic Associations at Berlin-Zehlendorf, Germany. 26 Aug. 1931.
• Members of the Austrian government in procession to the Heldenplatz, Vienna, for an open-air mass. 6 Oct. 1931.
• Procession of the relics of St. Stephen in Budapest, Hungary. 22 Aug. 1931.
• The blessing of motor cars at the Coliseum, Rome. 12 Mar. 1931.
• Mass to celebrate the anniversary of the bishopric of Hamburg, Germany. 5 May 1931.
• Wedding of Prince Gaeten de Parme and Princess Marguerite Marie-Therese Alexandrine de Thurn-Taxis, Paris. 1 May 1931.
• Procession of religious relics of St. Chad, ‘the Apostle of the Midlands’ through the streets of Birmingham, England. 11 May 1931.
• Religious procession in honour of the Feast of Our Lady of Mount Carmel to the Italian Church, Italian Quarter, Hatton Garden, London. 19 July 1931.
• Corpus Christi Procession in Berlin, Germany, led by Reich Ministers Schätzel and Guérard. 9 June 1931.
• Religious ceremony at Arbour Hill, Dublin, to commemorate the 1916 leaders buried there.
• Religious ceremony commemorating the tercentenary of the signing of a declaration in Jamestown, County Leitrim (12 August 1650), in which the Roman Catholic clergy repudiated the government of James Butler, 1st Marquis of Ormonde.
• Graveside commemoration in Midelton, County Cork, for the Irish Volunteers killed in the Clonmult ambush on 20 Feb. 1921.
• The reparation of the remains of Sergeant Wallace McCauley (d. 22 Feb. 1965) who was killed will on peace-keeping duty in Cyprus.
• The consecration of the Most Rev. Dom. Hickey OC at Mount Melleray Cistercian Abbey, County Waterford.
• The Most Rev. Edward Byrne, Archbishop of Dublin, blessing the foundation stone of the new Church of St. Anne, Shankhill, County Dublin. (27 July 1931).
• Cistercian monks taking in the harvest at New Mellifont Abbey, County Louth.
• A group of pilgrims at Gougane Barra, County Cork, in 1910.
• The funeral of the Most Rev. Dom. Maurice Phelan OC at Mount Melleray Cistercian Abbey, County Waterford.
• Crowning of the Blessed Virgin by the Sodality of the Nurses of Our Lady of the Lake on May Day, possibly in Los Angeles, California.
• Group of Religious Sisters at the Our Lady of the Lake, possibly in California in 1928.
• Scene at the graveside of the Lord Abbot of Mount Melleray Cistercian Abbey in County Waterford. ‘Most Rev. Dr. Hackett DD, Bishop of Waterford with spade, the new Lord Abbot, Rt. Rev. Stanislaus Hickey is shown second on the left’.
• The burial of the Most Rev. Denis J. Moynihan, Bishop of Kerry. He died on 5 Dec. 1975.
• Corpus Christi Procession at the Church of St Peter and Paul, Clonmel, County Tipperary in 1938.
• Groups of religious sisters possibly in the United States in 1919 and in 1923.
• Catholic Emancipation Centenary celebrations in the Phoenix Park, Dublin, June 1929.

Foreign Locations and Overseas’ Events

Photographic prints submitted for publication in 'The Capuchin Annual'. The file includes prints of overseas locations including images of churches and sites of religious interest and devotion. Most of the prints are annotated on the reverse. Some of the annotations provide details of the photographer or studio responsible for the print. The file includes the following images:
• Mission station at Bethel, South Africa.
• Mass at St. Peter’s Square, Rome, on Easter Sunday.
• St. Francis Street, Jerusalem.
• The ancient walls of Jerusalem.
• Crowds at the Apostolic Papal Residence at Castel Gandolfo, Italy.
• A large group of Capuchin friars praying on the road to Assisi, Italy.
• Cathedral of The Sacred Heart, Delhi, India.
• Swiss Guards, Vatican.
• The Passion Play Theatre, Oberammergau, Germany.
• Interior of Basilica of San Francesco d’Assisi, Italy.
• The tomb of Pope Pius X, St. Peter’s Basilica, Rome.
• Benedictine Abbey of St Gregory the Great at Downside, Somerset, England.
• Apostolische Kerk, Amsterdam, The Netherlands.
• General Curia, Capuchin Order, Via Piemonte, Rome, Italy.
• Our Lady of Canvey Church, Essex, England.
• Interior of the Papal Basilica of Saint Lawrence outside the Walls, Rome, Italy.
• Capuchin Friary, Frascati, Rome, Italy.
• Tomb of Pope Pius IX, Basilica of Saint Lawrence outside the Walls, Rome.
• The entrance to the Church of the Holy Sepulchre, Jerusalem.
• Church of Our Lady Star of the Sea, Tilbury, Essex, England.
• Scenes during the filming of the Dutch missionary film Ria Rago in Indonesia (released in 1930).
• Bedouin Arab Market in Bethlehem, Palestine.
• A group of boy scouts in the Holy Land.
• Sanctuary of Our Lady of Lourdes, France.
• St. Nicholas Cathedral, Freiburg, Switzerland.
• St. Joseph’s Church, Sofia, Bulgaria.
• An Abyssinian Warrior and an Abyssinian family.
• Cathedral Basilica of Our Lady of Chartres, France. (Colour postcard prints).
• The Catholic Church and other buildings and scenes in Chania, Crete.
• British colonial troops perhaps stationed in South Africa. Photograph by F. Czira.
• Docheiariou monastery, Mount Athos.
• Cox’s Bazar, East Pakistan (later Bangladesh).
• Memorial Cross to the Munster Fusiliers at Ypres, Belgium.
• Choir boys from Lourdes before embarking upon a tour of the United States and Canada. 8 Sept. 1931.
• Independence Hall, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.
• A Catholic church in north-eastern Switzerland.
• The Franciscan Church of the Cordeliers, Freiburg, Switzerland.
• Venetian Canals, Italy.
• Eglise Notre-Dame de Toute Grace, Plateau D’Assy, Haute-Savoie, France.
• Tooting Bec Common, London.
• Snow-covered mountain pass in Montana, United States.
• Mississippi River, Louisiana, United States.
• Mount Fuji, Japan.

Weekly Irish Bulletin

The file comprises the following editions this weekly journal published by the Publicity Department of Dáil Eireann: 5 June 1922 (Vol. 1, no. 3) – 17 July 1922 (Vol. 1, no. 9). Printed in Dublin by Wood Printing Works, Fleet Street, and The Gaelic Press, 27 North Frederick Street, Dublin. There is some duplication of editions in the file and one undated edition [c. July 1922]. Most of the journal’s articles deal with cataloguing and detailing anti-Catholic riots in Belfast and in the rest of Northern Ireland.

Irish Bulletin

The file contains volume 3, 1 Sept. 1920 (No. 1)-31 Dec. 1920 (No. 83), of the 'Irish Bulletin'. The series is complete with multiple copies of some issues.

Republic of Ireland (Poblacht na h-Eireann)

The file comprises the following issues of this weekly Anti-Treaty newspaper: 3 Jan. 1922 (Vol. 1, No. 1)-29 June 1922 (Vol. 1, No. 27). The series is complete with multiple copies of some issues. The issue of 15 Mar. 1922 (no. 12) is endorsed ‘Fr. Stanislaus [Kavanagh OFM Cap.] … Dun Laoghaire’.

Republican War Bulletin

The file comprises:
9 Aug. 1922 (no. 1);
12 Aug. 1922 (no. 3);
15 Aug. 1922 (no. 5). 2 copies;
22 Aug. 1922 (no. 7). 2 copies;
1 Sept. 1922 (no. 10). 2 copies;
5 Sept. 1922 (no. 12);
16 Sept. 1922 (no edition number). Title page has a drawing ‘With the IRA (somewhere in Ireland)’ by Constance Markievicz;
17 Sept. 1922 (no. 15). 2 copies;
27 Sept. 1922 (no. 19);
28 Sept. 1922 (no. 20). Title page has a drawing ‘Free Staters in Action’;
1 Oct. 1922 (No. 21). Title page has a drawing ‘With the Dublin Brigade, IRA’ by Constance Markievicz;
8 Oct. 1922 (no. 23). 2 copies;
22 Oct. 1922 (No. 30);
27 Oct. 1922 (No. 33).
The issue of 8 Oct. 1922 is annotated on the reverse ‘G.K. 544 N.C.R., A.F. M. Philips. It was found in an envelope with a manuscript annotation: ‘Rev. Fr. Sebastian [O’Brien OFM Cap.]’.

The Nation / Sovereign and Undivided

The file contains the following editions of this Anti-Treaty newsletter:
12 Aug. 1922 (No. 1)-23 Sept. 1922 (No. 6)
6 Sept. 1922 (No. 8)-4 Nov. 1922 (No. 12)
18 Nov. 1922 (No. 14)-19 Dec. 1922 (No. 19)
Multiple copies of some editions of 'The Nation' are extant in the file. With two copies of 'Handbills for Heretics', an undated Anti-Treaty publication which re-used some content from 'The Nation'.

Straight Talk

The file contains the following editions of this Anti-Treaty publication: 8 Nov. 1922; 22 Nov. 1922 (No. 2); 29 Nov. 1922 (No. 3); 14 Dec. 1922 (No. 5).

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