- IE CA CP/3/16/3/14
- Deel
- c.1923
Part of Irish Capuchin Archives
A handbill in the republican interest drawing a parallel between the executions carried out by the British government and the Irish Free State.
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Part of Irish Capuchin Archives
A handbill in the republican interest drawing a parallel between the executions carried out by the British government and the Irish Free State.
You can buy Dáil Éireann bonds today
Part of Irish Capuchin Archives
A leaflet promoting the Dáil Éireann loan and encouraging people to purchase government bonds to support the Irish Republic.
Sensational Discovery! / Conspiracy to dismember Ireland
Part of Irish Capuchin Archives
A republican handbill alleging that Michael Collins acquiesced in the permanent partition of Ireland.
The Bishop of Limerick speaks: How the Irish prisoners are treated
Part of Irish Capuchin Archives
A pamphlet in the republican interest referring to those interned by British authorities in the aftermath of the 1916 Rising. Written by the Most Rev. Edward Thomas O’Dwyer (1842-1917), Bishop of Limerick. Published in Limerick, 1917.
Election Flier for Michael O’Mullane
Part of Irish Capuchin Archives
An election flier for Michael O’Mullane, a Sinn Féin politician, referring to Noel Lemass who ‘has been brutally murdered by agents of The "Free" State’. The flier asks the ‘Electors of South Dublin show your disapproval of all such hellish acts by recording your vote for Michael O’Mullane’. Published in Dublin by Joseph Clarke.
Part of Irish Capuchin Archives
A flier with the text of a republican ballad titled ‘The Old Kings Inns / June 1st 1920’.
Part of Irish Capuchin Archives
A flier with the text of a republican ballad deriding a petty attitude to Irish speakers among Justices of the Peace in Macroom, County Cork.
Part of Irish Capuchin Archives
Day account book of house expenses, Capuchin Friary, Walkin Street, Kilkenny. The title is given on the first page: ‘Day book commenced April 1932, Fr. Ignatius Collins of Cork, guardian’. The volume includes accounts for routine household expenses such as foodstuffs, washing, clothing, stationary, and newspapers. Other expenses included wages paid to lay staff. The entries are periodically signed by the guardian and by Provincial Ministers at visitations.
Purchase of Fee Farm Grants of houses on Walkin Street
Part of Irish Capuchin Archives
Deeds, correspondence and related legal documents concerning negotiations for the purchase of premises on Walkin Street (later Friary Street) by the Capuchin Order. The principal vendor and fee farm grant holder was the Rev. Andrew Craig Robinson (Church of Ireland Rector of Ballymoney, County Cork). Some of Robinson’s relations also had interests in the properties. The file relates primarily to the protracted negotiations for the purchase, and to efforts to trace title to the properties (Robinson had inherited the fee farm grant of rents accruing from the premises through his mother, Margaret Anne, a daughter of Captain James Montgomery Blair). Reference is also made to various mortgages on the properties and to the original fee farm grant of 1705 made by James Butler, 2nd Duke of Ormonde. The Capuchins eventually secured the property in 1919 for £650 (See CA KK/2/1/1/3/13). The final conveyance contained a covenant by the vendor to indemnify the property transferred against all rents accruing out of any other premises which he continued to hold on Walkin Street.
Part of Irish Capuchin Archives