Spinner at Leenane, Connemara, County Galway
- IE CA CP/1/1/1/3/5
- Parte
- c.1935
Parte deIrish Capuchin Archives
A photograph titled ‘spinner at Leenane in Connemara, County Galway’ in about 1935.
Spinner at Leenane, Connemara, County Galway
Parte deIrish Capuchin Archives
A photograph titled ‘spinner at Leenane in Connemara, County Galway’ in about 1935.
Shoemaking on the Aran Islands
Parte deIrish Capuchin Archives
A view of James (Jamesie) O'Flaherty in Kilronan, the main settlement on Inishmore, one of the Aran Islands off the west coast of Ireland, in about 1935. An annotation on the reverse of the print reads: ‘A special kind of footgear has been developed for negotiating the slabs of limestone with which the island is covered. Called the “Pampootie”, it is contrived of raw cowhide. In the photograph, an islander is seen making himself a pair of these novel shoes’.
Parte deIrish Vincentian Archive
Father Andrew Cleary, Redemptorist priest, had been a pupil of Castleknock College (1899-1903).
Photograph by Dorothy Horton, Belfast.
Lay Group at Ard Mhuire Friary
Parte deIrish Capuchin Archives
Photographic print of a large group of lay persons outside the main entrance to Ard Mhuire Friary. The group may have been assembled for a religious ceremony. The group includes some members of An Garda Síochána.
Parte deIrish Capuchin Archives
Two images of St. Patrick’s Street in Cork. One of the prints forms part of Valentine’s & Sons 'Silveresque' postcard series (Dundee and London. Reference no.: R. 202).
Parte deIrish Capuchin Archives
Capuchin friars (including Fr. Seraphin Nesdale OFM Cap. and Fr. Christopher Crowley OFM Cap.) with local inhabitants at the Loanja mission station in Northern Rhodesia.
Parte deIrish Capuchin Archives
A group including Henry Sinjwala (catechist) at Loanja mission station in Northern Rhodesia.
Parte deIrish Capuchin Archives
An article on the history of the Wray family in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries. The Wrays were the owners of the Ards Estate before it was purchased by the Stewarts in 1781. It is noted that in about 1700 William Wray ‘bought 5,000 acres of land between Dunfanaghy and Doe from William Sampson’. The article adds: 'In 1781 the estate was sold to Mr Alexander Stewart, brother of the first Marquess of Londonderry and uncle of the infamous Lord Castlereagh, for the sum of £13,250 in order to meet the owner’s debts'. An appendix to the article includes some brief notes on the Stewarts of Ards compiled by Fr. T.J. Walsh, a diocesan priest in Cork.
Parte deIrish Capuchin Archives
An image of traditional African huts, probably in Barotseland, Northern Rhodesia (now Zambia).
Parte deIrish Capuchin Archives