- IE CA CP/3/5/4/1
- Part
- 1902-c.1925
Part of Irish Capuchin Archives
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Part of Irish Capuchin Archives
Letters to Margaret Mary Pearse
Part of Irish Capuchin Archives
Letters to James Pearse from W.J. Ramsey
Part of Irish Capuchin Archives
Letters to James Pearse from W.J. Ramsey, Manager, the Progressive Publishing Company, 28 Stonecutter Street, London. The letter of 25 November 1884 encloses a clipping of an advertisement for ‘Socialism a curse / a reply to a Lecture delivered by Edward B. Aveling’ and ‘Is God the First Cause?’ (1883) by ‘Humanitas’ (James Pearse).
Letters to James Pearse from Treasurer’s Department, Birmingham Council
Part of Irish Capuchin Archives
Letters to James Pearse, 27 Great Brunswick Street, Dublin, from the Treasurer’s Department, City of Birmingham Council, re the repayment of a loan of £100. The file includes a statement of loan repayment and a receipt for the same.
Letters to James Pearse from Mr. Humphreys
Part of Irish Capuchin Archives
Letters to James Pearse from a Mr. Humphreys, ‘The National Reformer’, 20 Circus Road, St. John’s Wood, London. The letters to a manuscript sent by Pearse for possible publication. Humphreys affirms that Charles Bradlaugh ‘has been so much occupied with the litigation that he has not yet had time to examine’ the manuscript (29 December 1889).
Letters to James Pearse from J. Graham Alexander
Part of Irish Capuchin Archives
Letters from J. Graham Alexander, solicitor, 47 Lower Gardiner Street, Dublin, to James Pearse, relating to rent on Pearse’s premises at 27 Great Brunswick Street in Dublin.
Letters to James Pearse from J. Graham Alexander
Part of Irish Capuchin Archives
Letters from J. Graham Alexander, 47 Lower Gardner Street, Dublin, to James Pearse, re ‘Johnston, a bankrupt’. The first letter encloses a copy of a letter (29 Aug. 1888) to Alexander from Messrs Casey & Clay.
Letters to James Pearse from E.H. Johnston
Part of Irish Capuchin Archives
Letters to James Pearse from E.H. Johnston. The letters refer to payments of rent by Pearse on his residence at 27 Great Brunswick Street, Dublin. With an enclosed set of accounts re payments for the upkeep of the premises.
Part of Irish Capuchin Archives
Two letters to Germaine Stockley re the treatment of female republican prisoners. One of the letters is from Mary MacSwiney (Máire Nic Shuibhne). The letter refers to the release of her sister Annie MacSwiney from prison. She writes ‘I know how glad and happy you are about Annie’s release. She is getting on well but more slowly than I should like. The doctor says she must take great care for some time. Of course, she is not long out yet’. She also refers to a raid on her house and the imprisonment of other republican women.
Letters to Fr. Seraphin Van Damme OSFC
Part of Irish Capuchin Archives
Letters from [Madge Auld?], St. Andrew’s, Queen’s Crescent, Southsea, Hampshire, to Fr. Seraphin Van Damme OSFC (1820-1887), referring to a sum of £300 left in trust with Fr. Laurence O’Dea OSFC ‘to build a chapel [in Kilkenny] where the Third Order Sisters would meet and masses be said for me and mine’. An annotation notes that these letters were from the ‘late Mrs Sullivan of Lacken, Kilkenny’.