If you're Irish, We're going to suppress you!
- IE CA CP/3/16/3/21
- Part
- c.1920
Part of Irish Capuchin Archives
A flier with the text of a republican ballad titled ‘If you're Irish, We're going to suppress you!’
4541 results with digital objects Show results with digital objects
If you're Irish, We're going to suppress you!
Part of Irish Capuchin Archives
A flier with the text of a republican ballad titled ‘If you're Irish, We're going to suppress you!’
Idesbald from Glenstal - 8 Feb 1939
Part of Glenstal Abbey Archive
Letter from Idesbald. in Glenstal. About replacement for Dom Matthew
I don’t mind if I do by “The Rajah of Frongoch”
Part of Irish Capuchin Archives
A flier with the text of a satirical republican ballad titled ‘I don’t mind if I do by “The Rajah of Frongoch” (a nickname used by Jimmy Mulkerns).
Part of Irish Capuchin Archives
An Anti-Treaty handbill: 'I am an Irish Republican but ...'
Part of Irish Capuchin Archives
'Hymn to St. Columcille', performed in Father Mathew Hall for the ‘celebration of St. Mary of the Angels, Church Street, Dublin’. The manuscript annotation appears to be in the hand of Fr. Albert Bibby OSFC.
Huts at Sichili Mission Station
Part of Irish Capuchin Archives
The friars’ huts and sleeping quarters (with kitchen to the right) at Sichili mission station, Barotseland, Northern Rhodesia.
Hurlers at St. Enda’s School, Rathfarnham, Dublin
Part of Irish Capuchin Archives
An image of hurlers at St. Enda’s School, or Scoil Éanna, a secondary school for boys established by Pádraig Pearse in 1908.
Part of Glenstal Abbey Archive
...
Hugh A. Law and Marble Hill House
Part of Irish Capuchin Archives
Photographic prints of a hand-drawn portrait of the Irish nationalist politician, Hugh A. Law (1872-1943) and his residence at Marble Hill House, Dunfanaghy, County Donegal. The portrait is dated 12 Sept. 1928.
Howth Tramway Ticket, 1916 Rising
Part of Irish Capuchin Archives
A ticket for the Hill of Howth Tramway, operated by the Great Northern Railway Company, purchased on 24 April 1916, the first day of the Easter Rising. The ticket was purchased by the family of T. Molloy and his description conveys his personal memories of that day. It reads ‘Ticket issued for Easter Monday 1916 to one of a family going to Howth for the day. Coming to Howth Station to return home in the evening great crowds of people were told that no trains were running as there was trouble in the city. I, at the age eight, with my seven-year-old brother, & my father & mother, who carried another two-year-old brother, had, like many others, to walk home that night’.