- IE CA CP/3/16/3/67
- Parte
- c.1923
Parte de Irish Capuchin Archives
An anti-Treaty flier rebuking several leading Free State politicians.
Parte de Irish Capuchin Archives
An anti-Treaty flier rebuking several leading Free State politicians.
Parte de Irish Capuchin Archives
A republican flier with the text of a ballad be sung to the air of ‘Where the Blarney roses grow’. The first line reads ‘Twas over in Rathcormac, near the town of old Fermoy’. Cuthbert Lucas became Commander of 17th Infantry Brigade in Ireland in 1919. During the Irish War of Independence, in June 1920 he was captured by the IRA and held in East Clare. He was released four weeks later.
Parte de Irish Capuchin Archives
A republican flier with the text of a ballad titled ‘A black and tan’s letter / to his sweetheart in England’.
Letter from Pádraig Ó Siochfhradha (‘An Seabhac’)
Parte de Irish Capuchin Archives
Letter from Pádraig Ó Siochfhradha (‘An Seabhac’) to Fr. Senan Moynihan OFM Cap. and Fr. Gerald McCann OFM Cap.
Irishmen and women! … the remains of their sixteen martyred leaders
Parte de Irish Capuchin Archives
A flier referring to a public meeting to be held in the Mansion House, Dublin (16 July 1917) calling for the reburial of the remains of the executed leaders of the Easter Rising.
God save Ireland from the Staters
Parte de Irish Capuchin Archives
A republican flier titled ‘God save Ireland from the Staters’ criticising the military forces of the Free State and referring to them as ‘Churchill’s Green Tans’.
Parte de 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.
Hanna Sheehy-Skeffington Tribute
Parte de Irish Capuchin Archives
A tribute to Hanna Sheehy Skeffington published in the ‘Irish Workers’ Weekly Review’, a radical socialist newspaper, in May 1946. She died in Dublin (aged 68) on 20 April 1946.
Parte de Irish Capuchin Archives
A republican flier titled ‘Where the River Lagan Flows / A visitor’s impression of recent visit to Belfast’, referring to the activities of the ‘Belfast mob and Orangemen’.
Parte de Irish Capuchin Archives
A republican flier with the text of a ballad titled ‘The Black and Tans’ Lament’.