A sketch (coloured ink on paper) by Patrick O'Carroll titled 'An Afternoon's Drink' presumably penned while he was incarcerated in Limerick Jail in early 1923. The work is signed in the bottom right-hand corner 'P. O'Carroll / Kilfinane'.
Scale: 20 feet to 1 inch Sketch map of premises numbered 24 and 25 [Bow Street] demised by Patrick Regan to the Capuchins. (See CA CS/2/2/4/14). Manuscript annotations refer to the mortgages on said premises. The sketch map is drawn onto a printed map of premises in Christ Church Place at the junction of Fishamble Street in Dublin. The reverse is annotated in pencil with a sketch of various premises and plots off Church Street and endorsed with the names of the various owners and lessors.
No scale given Architectural sketch of the new confessional boxes to be installed in Holy Trinity Church by Kelly & Barry, 16 Sidney Place, Cork. File number: 283/7.
A pencilled sketch plan of sewage works at the Capuchin Friary, Holy Trinity Church, Father Mathew Quay, Cork. The sketch is signed by Fr. Martin Hyland OSFC, guardian.
Scale: ‘1/8 scale’ Sketch plans (with sections) of proposed schemes for alterations to the sacristy of the Church of St. Francis, Kilkenny, by John J. Robinson & R.C. Keefe, architects, 8 Merrion Square, Dublin. The sacristy is bordered by reception rooms, altar servers’ rooms, confessionals and a vestments’ press. See related correspondence at CA KK/2/4/16.
Scale: ‘½ scale’ Sketches of proposed memorial ‘to be erected by Mr. Geary’ in the Church of St. Francis. Three alternative sketches or ‘schemes’ of the memorial statue or shrine to Our Lady are given by John J. Robinson & R.C. Keefe, architects, 8 Merrion Square, Dublin. With manuscript annotations re the costs of the work and installation.
An image of Slane Castle and its surrounding parkland in County Meath. A manuscript annotation on the reverse of the print reads 'Slane Castle and the River Boyne / County Meath'.
A view of the landscape around Slemish, a small mountain near Ballymena in County Antrim in about 1935. According to tradition, Slemish (or Slieve Mish as it was historically called), is the first known Irish home of Saint Patrick.
A view of the Hennessy's Road and Slievekeale areas of Waterford city. A typescript annotation on the reverse of the print reads 'Rus in Urba / Ballybricken, Waterford'.