The issue of 'The Monitor, the family Catholic Weekly of New Jersey’, for 28 Feb. 1925 (No. 9). Two pages of the paper are dedicated in tribute to the recently deceased Fr. Albert Bibby OFM Cap., ‘a priest of Ireland’s Resurrection’.
Includes; letter from Sister M. Christine Baves [?] addressed to "Dear Sisters "referencing the 150th anniversary of the Presentation in Newfoundland (c1983); copy of "The Monitor" newspaper special supplement celebrating the 150th anniversary of the Presentation in Newfoundland, chronology f the opening of convents, articles from Sisters.
A copy of ‘The Monitor / Catholic Weekly of New Jersey’, No. 33 (25 August 1923). ‘The Monitor’ was a weekly magazine published by the Catholic Diocese of Trenton, New Jersey, in the United States. The edition includes commentary on the political situation in Ireland (written from a republican and anti-treaty perspective).
The file contains the following editions of this newspaper published in Kilkenny:
6 Aug. 1814 (No. 94)
13 Aug. 1814 (No. 97)
A clipping of a poem titled ‘The Missionary’ composed by Fr. Urban Riordan OFM Cap. The date or the publication from which the clipping was taken is not stated.
Riordan, Urban, 1891-1972, Capuchin priestpossible copy of pages from Hobart Convent Annals, details of motivations for the Presentation Mission to Hobart on the invitation of Bishop, names of founding Sisters, dates of departure, details of voyage from Cork to Hobart, first Profession of a Presentation Sister in Australia.
Includes; transcripts of talks given by Father Fintan Sheeran; entries under the headings, "Points of clarification in response to group reports", "Overall reaction to reports", "Introduction to challenge session in culture groups", "Culture group reports on challenges", "Impressions".
Creator: Corpus Christi High School, Galesburg, Illinois
File consists of two editions of The Mirror annual published by students from Corpus Christi High School in Galesburg, Illinois, for the years 1923 and 1925containing stories of events that took place during the school year and pictures of students who attended the school.
A view of the Mercy Hospital (now Mercy University Hospital) in Cork in 1938. The caption to the photograph notes that the building was ‘once the Mansion House’, a reference to the fact that the oldest part of the hospital was built between 1764 and 1767 and that the original building served as the official residence of the Lord Mayor of Cork until 1842.
Typescript monitoring reports on R.T.E. output compiled by Joe Foyle and some covering letters to +McQuaid.