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Fianna Fáil Election Fundraiser Flier
IE CA CP/3/16/2/44 · Partie · 9 June 1943
Fait partie de Irish Capuchin Archives

A flier seeking support for the Fianna Fáil party at the forthcoming general election. The flier has a printed signature of Éamon de Valera. (Volume page 226).

Freedom
IE CA CP/3/16/2/45 · Partie · 24 Sept. 1922
Fait partie de Irish Capuchin Archives

The title page of anti-Treaty publication ‘Freedom’ (24 September 1922). The cover has a satirical portrait of General Richard Mulcahy, Commander-in-Chief of the Provisional Government’s forces. The cartoon’s title reads ‘When Mulcahy wore the collar of gold which he won from the proud invader’. (Volume page 47).

IE CA CP/3/16/3/11 · Partie · 1924
Fait partie de Irish Capuchin Archives

A satirical republican flier celebrating the demise of the pro-Treaty ‘Freeman’s Journal’ newspaper in 1924. The flier promotes a ‘funeral procession’ and notes that the newspaper ceased publication ‘from an acute attack of Clerical Intimidation, Softening of the Back-bone, and other painful disorders’. Reference is made to the former proprietors of the ‘Freeman’s Journal’, Francis Higgins (c.1745-1802), probably better known as the ‘Sham Squire’, and Sir John Gray (1815-1875).

Irish Language Procession, Dublin
IE CA CP/3/16/3/15 · Partie · 19 Sept. 1909
Fait partie de Irish Capuchin Archives

A postcard print image of a large crowd assembled on O’Connell Bridge in Dublin. The caption to the original postcard image (printed by Chancellor Photographic Studio) reads ‘Irish Language Procession, September 19, 1909’. In the background of the print, the statue of William Smith O’Brien (1803-1864), a nationalist politician and Irish language activist, stands in its original position near the junction of O’Connell Bridge with Westmoreland Street and D’Olier Street. It was moved to its present location on O’Connell Street in 1929.

A Recruiting Come-all-ye
IE CA CP/3/16/3/24 · Partie · c.1914
Fait partie de Irish Capuchin Archives

A flier with the text of a ballad titled ‘A Recruiting Come-all-ye’. The ballad derides the recruitment of Irishmen into the British armed forces.