Free State Freaks / W.T. Cosgrave
- IE CA IR-1/7/3/31/3
- Part
- c.1922
Part of Irish Capuchin Archives
An anti-Treaty cartoon referring to W.T. Cosgrave as the ‘Jester in chief to the Freak State'.
Free State Freaks / W.T. Cosgrave
Part of Irish Capuchin Archives
An anti-Treaty cartoon referring to W.T. Cosgrave as the ‘Jester in chief to the Freak State'.
Part of Irish Capuchin Archives
A republican handbill with the text of a ballad titled 'A Dublin Battle Ditty' referring to the attack by the forces of the Provisional Government on the Four Courts and the ensuing fighting in Dublin in June and July 1922.
Part of Irish Capuchin Archives
A republican cartoon by Constance Markievicz published during the Civil War affirming that Arthur Griffith and Michael Collins are ‘marching heads up into the Empire over the bodies of their murdered Comrades’.
Part of Irish Capuchin Archives
The file comprises the following editions: 6 July 1922. (no. 1) – 16 July 1922. (no. 7); 29 July (no. 11) – 5 Aug. 1922 (no. 12). These were styled the ‘war news’ editions. The editor of 'Nationality' was Sean T. O’Kelly. The newspaper of the same name was suppressed after the 1916 Rising, but was published for a couple of years later in Belfast. These first seven issues of the weekly paper cover all the hostilities during this early Civil War period, including the shooting of Cathal Brugha. The file includes multiple copies of some editions.
Poblacht na hEireann (War News)
Part of Irish Capuchin Archives
'Poblacht na hEireann (War News)', No. 2, 29 June 1922.
Poblacht na hEireann (War News)
Part of Irish Capuchin Archives
'Poblacht na hEireann (War News)', No. 5, 1 July 1922.
Part of Irish Capuchin Archives
'The Fenian (War Issue)', 20 July 1922 (No. 5).
Letter from Liam Mellows to his mother
Part of Irish Capuchin Archives
Letter from Liam Mellows, Mountjoy Prison, Dublin, to his mother. Written at 5 a.m., shortly before his execution. It reads: ‘The time is short and much I would like to say must go unsaid. But you will understand in such moments heart speaks to heart. At 3.30 this morning we (Dick Barrett, Rory O’Connor, Joe McKelvey and I) were informed that we were to be “executed as a reprisal”. … I go to join Tone and Emmett, the Fenians, Tom Clarke, Connolly, Pearse, Kevin Barry and Childers. My last thoughts will be on God, and Ireland, and you. …. I had hopes that some day I might rest in some quiet place – beside Grandfather and Grandmother in Castletown (Co. Wexford), not amidst the wordly pomps [sic] of Glasnevin but if it is to be the prison clay, it is all the sweeter for many of our best lie here …’.
Letter from the Most Rev. Daniel Cohalan to Fr. Edwin Fitzgibbon OFM Cap.
Part of Irish Capuchin Archives
Letter from the Most Rev. Daniel Cohalan, Bishop of Cork, to Fr. Edwin Fitzgibbon OFM Cap., Provincial Minister, referring to the withdrawal of Fr. Dominic’s faculties due to his inability to take the examination for renewal of faculties. Bishop Cohalan also refers to his unease on reading an announcement in the papers that Fr. Dominic is to be appointed honorary chaplain to a brigade of the IRA. The Bishop wrote: ‘Now I put it to you that a lay body has no authority to confer an ecclesiastical honour from a lay authority’. He later asks Fr. Edwin: ‘Are you not conceding to a military brigade what belongs essentially to the church?’ With a copy reply from Fr. Edwin claiming that he knew nothing of Fr. Dominic's appointment as chaplain to the IRA until his attention was drawn to a report in the Cork newspapers.
O'Connor, Dominic, 1883-1935, Capuchin priest
Part of Irish Capuchin Archives
A flier titled ‘The Battle of the Four Courts / A Visitor’s Impression’. (Volume page 30).