When the clocks were striking noon
- IE CA CP/3/16/3/63
- Deel
- c.1917
Part of Irish Capuchin Archives
A republican flier with the txt of a ballad titled ‘When the clocks were striking noon’ referring to the 1916 Rising.
When the clocks were striking noon
Part of Irish Capuchin Archives
A republican flier with the txt of a ballad titled ‘When the clocks were striking noon’ referring to the 1916 Rising.
Part of Irish Capuchin Archives
A republican flier with the text of a ballad titled ‘A black and tan’s letter / to his sweetheart in England’.
Part of Irish Capuchin Archives
A flier promoting the ‘Irish Race Convention’ in New York in August 1932. This fund-raising convention was organised by the ‘Irish World’ newspaper, the largest Irish American newspaper.
Part of Irish Capuchin Archives
A leaflet promoting the Dáil Éireann loan and encouraging people to purchase government bonds to support the Irish Republic.
Part of Irish Capuchin Archives
A republican flier with the text of a ballad titled ‘Griffith & De Valera / or “put” and “take” for Ireland’. To be sung to the air of ‘The Peeler and the Goat’.
Seán O’Casey’s tribute to Jim Larkin
Part of Irish Capuchin Archives
A clipping of an article reporting Seán O’Casey’s tribute to Jim Larkin, the veteran Irish trade union leader, revolutionary, and socialist. The newspaper from which the article was taken is not given.
Part of Irish Capuchin Archives
A clipping of a tribute to Desmond Fitzgerald (d. 9 April 1947) by Ernest Blythe. The article was published in the ‘Sunday Independent’ (13 April 1947).
Republican Hunger-strikers, Mountjoy Jail, Dublin
Part of Irish Capuchin Archives
A copy print of a group of republican prisoners in Mountjoy Jail in Dublin. A manuscript annotation on the reverse reads ‘Irish republican prisoners / Hunger strike / Mountjoy Jail, October 1919 / second from right top row is Pádraig Ó Caoimh’.
Part of Irish Capuchin Archives
A clipping of a report on the murders of Lord Frederick Cavendish, the Chief Secretary for Ireland, and Thomas Henry Burke, Permanent Secretary for Ireland, in the Phoenix Park, Dublin, on 6 May 1882. The report was published in the ‘Morning Post’ newspaper.
Why are you making war on Ireland! / Stop your war on Ireland now!
Part of Irish Capuchin Archives
A handbill protesting the actions of the English in Ireland and a call for the violence to end. The flier was published by the Irish Self-Determination League of Great Britain. Includes quotes from Lord McCauley, Lloyd George, Joseph Chamberlain, Herbert Asquith, Woodrow Wilson and Winston Churchill. The text reads ‘You are making war on Ireland today in order to impose the will of a small insolent minority on the Irish nation ... in violation of every principle of honour, justice, morality and democracy’.