- IE IE/GLA IE/GLA/2020-03-06/9/2020-03-12/17/2023-05-03/509
- Item
- c01-01-1936
Part of Glenstal Abbey Archive
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Glenstal Abbey Auth Rec
Part of Glenstal Abbey Archive
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Glenstal Abbey Auth Rec
Part of Irish Capuchin Archives
An image of Leinster Lawn situated on the Merrion Square side of Leinster House, the seat of the Oireachtas. The Cenotaph commemorating Arthur Griffith, Michael Collins, and Kevin O'Higgins, and John Henry Foley’s statue of Albert, the Prince Consort, are visible in the image.
Part of Irish Capuchin Archives
A view of Leinster Market, a small lane linking D’Olier Street and Hawkins Street in Dublin’s city centre in about 1910.
Lenten Mission, Holy Trinity Church, Cork
Part of Irish Capuchin Archives
Photograph of a Lenten mission in Holy Trinity Church in Cork. An annotation on the reverse reads ‘Lenten Mission (men’s week) conducted by the Very Rev. Frs. Aloysius and Paschal, English Province, in 1966 in Holy Trinity Church, Cork’.
León Ó Broin’s review of ‘Bonaventura’
Part of Irish Capuchin Archives
A clipping of a review by León Ó Broin of the first edition of ‘Bonaventura’. The review was published in ‘The Leader’ (17 July 1937).
Part of Irish Capuchin Archives
A clipping of two photographs showing the crowds in attendance at Leopardstown Racecourse in Dublin in May 1915. The images were published in the ‘Irish Life’ magazine (7 May 1915). The original captions read (upper) ‘In the front, Marchioness Conyngham consulting her programme, on her right Mrs Faudel Philips, and on her left Miss Beatrice Murphy and (lower) ‘In the members’ enclosure watching the start’. The ‘Marchioness Conyngham’ referred to in the caption is Frances Elizabeth Conyngham (1862-1939), the widow of Henry Francis Conyngham, 4th Marquess Conyngham (1857-1897), of Slane Castle in County Meath. Marchioness Conyngham’s eldest son, Victor George Conyngham (5th Marquess), was a lieutenant in the South Irish Horse, a cavalry battalion of the Royal Irish Regiment which was deployed to the Western Front during the Great War. He survived the fighting but was stricken with pneumonia in the trenches, and died on 9 November 1918, at the age of 35, just two days before the Armistice. He was chronologically the last of the forty-two British parliamentarians who died during the war (he sat in the House of Lords as an Irish Peer). (Volume page 197).
Part of Glenstal Abbey Archive
From Fr. Jules at Maredsous
Les pretextes se succenent aux pretextes
Part of Glenstal Abbey Archive
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Letter and Sketch of Charles E. Kelly
Part of Irish Capuchin Archives
A note from Charles E. Kelly (1902-1981), enclosing a humorous verse and sketch regarding Fr. Senan Moynihan OFM Cap.
Letter E.T. Keane, editor of the ‘Kilkenny People’
Part of Irish Capuchin Archives
A letter from Edward Thomas (‘E.T.’) Keane, editor of the ‘Kilkenny People’, to Fr. Senan Moynihan OFM Cap. referring to the ‘Orange Terror’ reprint. Keane states that ‘certain features of what you call Orange Terror are duplicated in the twenty-six counties’. He notes that ‘we probably have more internees, men and women, in the twenty-six counties … Our “Republican” government can do what they like and sit on criticism’.