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Draft Articles by D.L. Kelleher

Draft articles for submission for 'The Capuchin Annual'. The author of the texts is not given but it is possible they are by D.L. Kelleher (1883-1958). The titles include ‘Walking into Wigan Town in 1920’, ‘Traveller’s Joy / The Return of the Native’, ‘Paris / July 5th 1926’, ‘Saint Peter’s and Saint Paul’s, Cork’, ‘Pageant in High Street’, ‘I like Dublin’, ‘Shakespeare in the Cradle’, and ‘Lourdes / November 18th 1923’. It appears that many of the articles are incomplete.

T.J. Molloy

Photographic prints by T.J. Molloy. Most of the prints are annotated on the reverse. The covering envelope is dated 18 Jan. 1960. The file includes the following images:

• Architectural detail from Mellifont Abbey, County Louth.
• Bective Abbey, County Meath.
• Lambay Island, County Dublin.
• Candle-lit vigil in a church.
• Rural and farm images.
• Statue of Our Lady situated on a cliff near Rathdrum, County Wicklow.

Colm M. O’Byrne

Photographic prints by Colm M. O’Byrne, Drimnagh, Dublin. Most of the prints are captioned. Many of the images are of farmers and rural landscapes. The file includes the following images:

• Mount Errigal, County Donegal.
• Gola Island, County Donegal.
• Sandycove, County Dublin.
• Dun Laoghaire, County Dublin.
• Arranmore Island, County Donegal.
• Rural scenes near Rockwell, Cashel, County Tipperary.
• Kenmare Manor, County Kerry.
• Countryside near Glendalough, County Wicklow.
• Dun Laoghaire, County Dublin.
• O’Connell Bridge, Dublin.

Dún Laoghaire, County Dublin

An image of the coast at Dún Laoghaire in County Dublin. A manuscript annotation on the reverse of the print reads 'Eventide at Dún Laoghaire'.

O’Connell Bridge and Eden Quay, Dublin

A view of O’Connell Bridge and Eden Quay, Dublin, in about 1960. The Corinthian Cinema is a noticeable landmark on the left of the image. Originally rebuilt after the 1916 destruction of this part of city, the cinema opened in 1921. It was designed by T.F. McNamara with internal alterations to the auditorium in the 1930s by Jones & Kelly. It was apparently given the name ‘The Ranch’ because of the number of westerns it screened. The Corinthian closed in July 1975 but in October of the same year it re-opened as a two-screen cinema called the Odeon. The cinema closed its doors for the final time in 1993. The building was finally demolished in late 2002 to make way for a commercial development.

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