Mount Argus: Confraternity: Women's Branch: Record of monthly Confraternity Masses (with celebrant's signature) said 1932-1943
Mount Argus: Directorium for Students and Junior Brothers.
Province of St. Paul of the Cross.
Mount Argus; Finances: receipted bill from Sawing, Planning and Moulding Mills, Great Brunswick Street, Dublin for £30 in respect of goods suplied.
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Mount Argus: Lands: Avenues: letter from Road Constructiors Ltd., 13 Harcourt Street, Dublin to Rector Mount Argus, Dublin: Answers inquiry for estimate for re-surfacing the avenues. Total for all items estimated at £665.12.7
Mount Argus: Legion of Mary: Mother of Holy Hope Praesidium.
Minute Book 21/05/1941---8/09/1943.
Mount Argus; Rates: Finances: Irish LAnd Commission: (Church Temporalities Fund); Receipted demand for 33.7.1 due on 29 September, 1937
The documents of the Archives of the Passionist Congregation in Scotland and Ireland.
Material that is outside the scope of GDPR concerns has been made available on the public facing side of the catalogue.
There is a private catalogue which contains information that can be released, but needs to be assessed by the archivist, on a case by case basis before doing so. If researchers wish to access any information from the 20th century onwards, they need to contact the archivist beforehand.
The Passionist Congregation, St. Patrick's ProvinceAll the files of the Poor Clares of Galway, from their foundation.
Poor Clares, GalwayThe majority of the documents in this collection were created by members of the Institute of Charity and so are personal in nature. The personal documents in this collection include letters, birth certificates, death certificates, application forms, passports and photographs. Any documents created by other characters mostly come in the form of letters, correspondence and reports. There are also newspaper cuttings regarding news stories that concern the Institute of Charity and its members. Maps of land owned by the Institute of Charity also make up a part of this collection. As a large part of this collection comes from the late nineteenth and early twentieth century’s, money is recorded as pounds, then shillings and then pence. The use of miles as a form of distance is also used in some documents. Most of the correspondence is handwritten but typed correspondence becomes more common from the 1980s onwards.
Rosminian Congregation Ireland