A photograph of the Irish delegation in London for negotiations with British officials. The group are from left to right John Whelan Dulanty, Irish High Commissioner, Seán Lemass, and Dr James Ryan.
James Hack Tuck, ‘Irish distress and its remedies / the land question / a visit to Donegal and Connaught in the spring of 1880’ (London: W. Ridgeway, 179 Piccadilly, 1880). The copy is incomplete and contains only the title page, preface, and pp 1-2 of the text.
A flier from the Irish Drapers’ Assistants Association (IDAA) dated March 1906. The IDAA was founded by Michael O’Lehane (1873-1920), a Cork-born trade unionist. Unlike the more traditional trade unions O’Lehane was prepared to recruit women members. Out of a total effective membership of 4,000 in 1914, 1,400 IDAA members were women. It is noted in the flier that 40% of drapery employees in Dublin were female. The main objective of the IDAA was a reduction in the working hours per week. Reference is also made in the leaflet to the unhealthy working conditions endured by drapery employees and the risk particularly from tuberculosis.
A copy of the ‘Irish Ecclesiastical Record’, Vol. LXXII, No. 5 (November 1949). Printed by Browne & Nolan Limited in Dublin.
A leaflet with the text of a letter from Edward Thomas O’Dwyer, the Bishop of Limerick, to the editor of the ‘Munster News’ dated 10 November 1915. The text reads ‘the treatment which the poor Irish emigrant lads have received at Liverpool is enough to make any Irishman's blood boil with anger and indignation. What wrong have they done to deserve insults and outrage at the hands of a brutal English mob? They don't want to be forced into the English Army, and sent to fight English battles in some part of the world’.
Photographic reproductions of maps from the Botanical Society of the British Isles used to illustrate an article by Fergus J O’Rourke titled ‘Irish Fauna’, published in 'The Capuchin Annual' (1973).
Isaac Butt, ‘Irish federalism! / its meaning, its objects, and its hopes’ (Dublin: John Falconer, 53 Upper Sackville Street, 2nd edition, 1870).
An image of a large group of Irish pilgrims at an audience with Pope Pius XII (1876-1958) at Castel Gandolfo just outside Rome on 20 September 1953. The pilgrims are members of the Third Order of St. Francis, a religious fraternity of lay men and women attached to the Franciscan Friary on Merchants’ Quay in Dublin. Several Franciscan friars (Order of Friars Minor) can be seen in the image. The individual (with the spectacles) immediately to the right of Pius XII is William MacNeely (1889-1963), the Bishop of Raphoe from 1923 until 1963.
A clipping of an article reporting on the efforts of the Irish National Volunteers to secure more rifles and ammunition. The clipping is taken from the ‘Sunday Chronicle’ (31 May 1914).
A photographic print showing two views of a traditional (medieval) Irish harp. The print is by G.D. Croker, Waterford.