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Comóradh i n-onóir Mhichíl Ui Chléirigh

A copy of ‘Comóradh i n-onóir Mhichíl Ui Chléirigh ... 25ú lá de mhí Meithimh, 1944’ (Dublin: Printed at the Sign of the Three Candles, 1944) with an enclosed invitation to Fr. Senan Moynihan OFM Cap. and newspaper clippings re the commemoration of the Franciscan friar and chronicler Mícheál Ó Cléirigh (c.1590-1643).

Stone sculpture in Pre-Norman Ireland

Photographic prints compiled for an article by Domhnall Ó Murchadha titled ‘Stone sculpture in Pre-Norman Ireland’ published in 'The Capuchin Annual' (1969). The file includes the following images:

• Cross of the Scriptures, Clonmacnois, County Offaly.
• Cathedral, churches and South Cross at Clonmacnois, County Offaly.
• ‘The Nun’s Church’, Clonmacnois, County Offaly.
• Cross of Muiredach, Monasterboice, County Louth.
• Cross of Dysert O’Dea, County Clare.
• Cross on the Rock of Cashel, County Tipperary.
• Ornamental doorway to Saint Brendan’s Cathedral, Clonfert, County Galway.
• Kilfenora Cathedral, County Clare.
• Market Cross, Kells, County Meath.
• Durrow High Cross, County Offaly.
• The South Cross, Castledermot, County Kildare.
• Drumcliffe High Cross, County Sligo.
• North Cross, Ahenny, County Tipperary.
• High Cross, Moone, County Kildare.
• Cross of St. Patrick and St. Columba, Kells, County Meath.
• Carndonagh High Cross and Guard Stone, County Donegal.
• Ullard High Cross, County Kilkenny.
• Knowth Passage Tomb, County Meath.
• Newgrange Passage Tomb, County Meath.
Most of the prints are credited to the National Monuments’ Branch, 10 Hume Street, Dublin. The file also includes four older prints of Irish High Crosses by T.F. Geoghegan, photographer, Dublin, and by Fr. Francis Browne SJ.

Brigadier-Gen. Denis Lacy / his life and adventures

A short sketch of Denis Lacy’s life by Liam Healy. Dennis Lacey (1890-1923) was an IRA soldier during the War of Independence and an Anti-Treaty republican during the Civil War. Lacey was born in 1890 in a village called Attybrack, near Annacarty in County Tipperary. He joined the Irish Volunteers in 1913 and was sworn in to the secretive Irish Republican Brotherhood in 1914. During the War of Independence he commanded an IRA flying column of the 3rd Tipperary Brigade. In July 1920, this guerrilla unit mounted two successful ambushes of British forces – killing six British soldiers at Thomastown near Golden, County Tipperary, and four Royal Irish Constabulary men at Lisnagaul in the Glen of Aherlow. Lacey opposed the Treaty and most of his men followed suit. He later commanded the Anti-Treaty IRA’s Second Southern Division. In the ensuing conflict, he organised guerrilla activity in north Tipperary against Free State forces. He was killed in an action with National Army troops at Ballydavid, near Bansha in the Glen of Aherlow on 18 Feb. 1923. The pamphlet was printed in Waterford by The News Printing Works.

Derry City

A panoramic view of Derry City with the Craigavon Bridge in the foreground. The print was circulated by the Ulster Tourism Development Association (UTDA) which titled the photograph ‘a general view of Londonderry’.

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