Copy cutting from the National Mirror, 3 Feb. 1992, referring to a ceremony held in St. Ignatius Church, Lusaka, to mark the creation of the new Capuchin Vice-Province in Zambia. A photograph shows Fr. Angelus O’Neill OFM Cap., Provincial Minister, and Fr. Flavio Roberto Carraro OFM Cap., General Minister, at the celebration.
Photographic prints of Capuchin friars celebrating the silver jubilee of Fr. Seán Cahill OFM Cap. in Parow, Cape Town, South Africa. The group includes Fr. Marcartan Hyland OFM Cap. (1939-2000), Fr. Albeus McQuillan OFM Cap., Fr. Raymond Dillane OFM Cap., and Fr. Flannan Buckley OFM Cap.
A card conveying Christmas blessings from Archbishop Ettore Felici, Apostolic Nuncio to Ireland.
A Christmas greeting card from Archbishop Joseph Walsh.
A Christmas greeting card from Arthur M. Campbell. The card has an illustration by Campbell titled ‘Knock near Carnlough, County Antrim’.
Card from Bishop Patrick Lyons to Fr. Senan Moynihan OFM Cap. thanking him for the gift of a copy of ‘The Capuchin Annual’. The image side of the card shows construction work on the Cathedral of Saint Patrick and Saint Felim (Cavan Cathedral) in the diocese of Kilmore in December 1940.
A Christmas greeting card from William MacNeely, Bishop of Raphoe. The card illustration is most likely the work of Richard King (Rísteard Ó Cíonga).
A Christmas greeting card from Canon Patrick Rogers. The card has an illustration of the exterior of Trench House (later known as St. Joseph’s College), a Catholic teacher training college, located on Stewartstown Road in the Andersonstown area of Belfast. Canon Rogers was principal of the college.
A Christmas greeting card from Clare Sheridan enclosing a photograph of her at work in her studio in Galway.
A Christmas greeting card from Con Cremin, Ireland’s Ambassador to France. The card has an illustration of the main entrance to the Irish College in Paris (Collège des Irlandais). Founded in the late sixteenth century, the college (located on Rue des Irlandais) was a Catholic educational institution in the French capital. The building is now used as a cultural center, known as the Centre Culturel Irlandais.