- IE CA HT/5/51
- Pièce
- c.1982
Fait partie de Irish Capuchin Archives
Photographic print of the Gothic-Revival portico entrance to Holy Trinity Church, Cork, built in c.1899.
2141 résultats avec objets numériques Afficher les résultats avec des objets numériques
Fait partie de Irish Capuchin Archives
Photographic print of the Gothic-Revival portico entrance to Holy Trinity Church, Cork, built in c.1899.
High Altar, Holy Trinity Church, Cork
Fait partie de Irish Capuchin Archives
Printed prayer to St. Francis showing the High Altar and sanctuary of Holy Trinity Church, Cork, decorated for Christmas celebrations.
Copy map of St. Lawrence’s Chapel, Cork
Fait partie de Irish Capuchin Archives
Copy map showing outline of the medieval St. Lawrence’s Chapel near the South Channel of the River Lee. The chapel is bounded by Webber’s Lane (now Morgan’s Lane) and by the ‘ascertained line of the Old City Wall’. The site was seemingly covered by the recently-demolished former Beamish & Crawford Brewery, Main Street South, Cork. The map was probably copied from a nineteenth-century lease map and has the following key to the coloured areas:
‘Land coloured red leased by Carleton & Mitchell to Francis Cottrell, 1st June 1796.
Green and brown leased by Carleton & Mitchell to Francis Cottrell, 1st June 1796.
Land coloured green held by Carleton under lease from Corporation dated May 6th 1706.
Land coloured brown held by Carleton under lease from Prebendary of Christ Church.
Land coloured blue held by Beamish & Crawford, surviving partners of “Beamish, Crawford & Barrett” as shewn on lease [of] Carleton & Mitchell to Cottrell dated 1st June 1796’.
With a typescript note by Fr. Angelus Healy OSFC on the history of St. Lawrence’s Church.
Fr. Casimir Butler OFM Cap. in Livingstone
Fait partie de Irish Capuchin Archives
Fr. Casimir Butler OFM Cap. at the rear of St. Theresa's Friary in Livingstone. The original caption reads: ‘In 1910 he left Ireland to help out in Hermiston, Oregon in the United States. Casimir began work and soon he had built a small church. Before he left Hermiston, Casimir built three mission churches. Casimir embarked on a new adventure, going to Cape Town, helping to establish a Capuchin presence there and then Zambia (then called Northern Rhodesia) where the Irish Capuchin Province had established a new mission. The Livingstone government had set aside a plot for a Catholic church and house. Casimir hired a contractor to build a house: ever since known as “217” (PO Box). Casimir was fifty-five years old when he arrived and was not in good health’.
St. Theresa’s Church and Friary, Livingstone
Fait partie de Irish Capuchin Archives
The exterior of St. Theresa’s Church and Friary, Livingstone, Northern Rhodesia.
Fait partie de Irish Capuchin Archives
Photographic print of Fr. Fintan Roche OFM Cap., Fr. Seraphin Nesdale OFM Cap., Fr. Christopher Crowley OFM Cap. and Fr. Timothy Phelim O’Shea OFM Cap. at Loanja mission station.
Fait partie de Irish Capuchin Archives
Mission huts at Loanja mission station in Northern Rhodesia.
St. Theresa’s Church, Livingstone
Fait partie de Irish Capuchin Archives
The altar and sanctuary of St. Theresa’s Church, Livingstone, Northern Rhodesia. The altar was constructed by the father of Fr. Declan McFadden OFM Cap.
Fr. Fintan Roche OFM Cap. at Loanja
Fait partie de Irish Capuchin Archives
Fr. Fintan Roche at the Loanja mission station in Northern Rhodesia.
Fait partie de Irish Capuchin Archives
Fr. Killian Flynn OFM Cap., Fr. Seraphin Nesdale OFM Cap. and two other Capuchin friars at Loanja mission station in Northern Rhodesia.