The Goats' Path overlooking Bantry Bay, County Cork
- IE CA CP/1/1/3/9/2
- Part
- c.1971
Part of Irish Capuchin Archives
An image captioned 'The Goats' Path overlooking Bantry Bay' in County Cork.
The Goats' Path overlooking Bantry Bay, County Cork
Part of Irish Capuchin Archives
An image captioned 'The Goats' Path overlooking Bantry Bay' in County Cork.
The G man’s lament / on the establishment of the Irish Republic
Part of Irish Capuchin Archives
A flier with the text of a ballad referring to the Irish Free State government. To be sung to the air of ‘I am sitting on the stile, Mary’.
Part of Irish Capuchin Archives
An Anti-Treaty leaflet and off-print concerning conditions in Kilkenny Jail, the murder of Sean Edwards in Kilkenny, and the murder of Maurice Condon, an unarmed prisoner in Clonmel Town Hall.
Part of Irish Capuchin Archives
A view of the Four Courts, Dublin, from a photograph taken on Wood Quay in about 1945.
The Four Courts as seen from the 'Forty Steps’, Dublin
Part of Irish Capuchin Archives
The Four Courts as seen from a laneway (‘the Forty Steps’) adjacent to Christ Church Cathedral, Dublin.
Part of Irish Capuchin Archives
A view of the Ford Factory in Cork in about 1945.
The Flag on the G.P.O. / Easter 1917
Part of Irish Capuchin Archives
A flier with the text of a republican poem titled ‘The Flag on the G.P.O. / Easter 1917’ by J.J. Walsh. The first two lines of the verse read ‘Why gather the crowd in O'Connell Street? / Why throng all the people there? …’.
Part of Irish Capuchin Archives
A flier titled ‘The Ferrets of Kildare’ referring to the escape of Irish prisoners from the Curragh Camp in County Kildare in 1921. (Volume page 4).
Part of Irish Capuchin Archives
The series is incomplete but there are multiple copies of some editions extant in the file.
Individual (loose) editions:
15 July 1922 (No. 2)-21 July 1922 (No. 6).
7 Aug. 1922 (No. 20)-14 Aug. 1922 (No. 26)
16 Aug. 1922 (No. 28)-26 Aug. 1922 (No. 37)
29 Aug. 1922 (No. 40)
31 Aug. 1922 (No. 43)-1 Sept. 1922 (No. 44)
23 Sept. 1922 (No. 63)
26 Sept. 1922 (No. 65)-29 Sept. 1922 (No. 68).
30 Sept. 1922 (No. 70)-7 Oct. 1922 (No. 76).
10 Oct. 1922 (No. 78)-11 Oct. 1922 (No. 79)
12 Oct. 1922 (No. 80)-17 Oct. 1922 (No. 84).
Bound editions:
26 July 1922-5 Aug. 1922 (Nos. 10-19).
18 Aug. 1922-26 Aug. 1922 (Nos. 30-38).
29 Aug. 1922-7 Sept. 1922 (Nos. 40-49).
2 Sept. 1922-11 Sept. 1922 (Nos. 45-52).
8 Sept. 1922-19 Sept. 1922 (Nos. 50-59).
12 Sept. 1922-15 Sept. 1922 (Nos. 53-56).
16 Sept.-25 Sept. 1922 (Nos. 57-64).
20 Sept.-30 Sept. 1922 (Nos. 60-69).
30 Sept. 1922-6 Oct. 1922 (Nos. 70-79).
'The Fenian' was an Anti-Treaty newspaper providing the republican perspective on the course of Civil War hostilities. The paper warns that ‘insidious attempts have been made within the last few days by the English King’s Provisional Ministers to spread the rumour that a truce had been achieved. Under cover of this they hope to weaken the splendid morale of the republican troops and then attack them when off their guard’. The editions were bound together with a note indicating that they belonged to ‘Rev. Fr. Sebastian [O’Brien OFM Cap.], Church Street’.
Part of Irish Capuchin Archives
'The Fenian (War Issue)', 20 July 1922 (No. 5).