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IE CA FM RES/8/19 · Item · Oct. 1890
Part of Irish Capuchin Archives

Author: Joseph Poole Addey
Publisher: [Dublin]: 'Freeman’s Journal' Ltd.
Language: English
Full title: 'Father Mathew centenary / Dublin Celebrations / Prize Centenary Ode to Father Mathew'. Illustration of the Father Mathew Statue on Sackville Street, Dublin, on the front cover.

Prize Bonds
IE PVBM TNC/3/74/4/4 · Sub-series · 1972
Part of Presentation Sisters Congregational Archives

Prize Bonds from Prize Bonds Office to South Presentation Convent regarding Edward O'Brien deceased and a cheque in favour of Missus Rita Heffernan.

Private Correspondence
IE IE/ROS IE/ROS/CAR/CAR/2/CAR/2/2 · File · 1888-11-14 - 1980-10-21
Part of Rosminian Congregation Ireland & USA

[John Ryan]: Brother Vincent: Pádraic Ó Muinneacain: ‘Annie’: Teresa Moynihan: ‘[Aggie]’: Teresa Finnegan: Joe Finnerty: Frank Fahy.

This file contains the private and personal correspondence between Brother Vincent Corcoran and his friends and family. A letter from 1888 is included regarding John Ryan (Carmelite) welcoming [Thomas N.] Burke to Melbourne.

Prisoners’ Experiences
IE CA CP/1/2/34 · Item · 1966-1969
Part of Irish Capuchin Archives

Drafts of an article by Fintan Brennan titled ‘Recollections of IRA’s men fight for POW treatment in Parkhurst Prison, 1920-1922’. With a covering letter from Brennan to Fr. Henry Anglin OFM Cap. (28 Nov. 1966). The article was published as ‘Prisoners’ Experiences’ in 'The Capuchin Annual' (1969), pp 57-64

IE CA CP/3/17/2/4 · Part · 1917
Part of Irish Capuchin Archives

Joseph M. Byrne, ‘Prisoners of war / some recollections of an Irish deportee’ (Dublin: The Art Depot, 6 Mary Street, 1917). The pamphlet recounts Byrne’s experiences as a prisoner in both Wakefield Prison in Yorkshire, and later in Frongoch Internment Camp in North Wales.

Prisoner Poem, Lewes Jail
IE CA CP/3/16/5/58 · Part · 1917
Part of Irish Capuchin Archives

The text of a poem titled ‘Resurrection’ with an ink drawing of a prisoner cap labelled ‘The noblest crown an Irish head can wear’. The text was seemingly written by an Irish political prisoner in Lewes Prison in England. The text is signed with the initials ‘J.J.B.’.