1937 Exhumation: coffin after grave was opened
- IE CP photos/4/5/3/19
- Item
- 1937-11-03
1937 Exhumation: coffin after grave was opened
1937 Exhumation: coffin after grave was opened
1937 Exhumation: coffin after grave was opened
1937 Exhumation: nearer view of coffin after grave opening
1937 Exhumation: nearer view of coffin after grave opening
1937 Exhumation: coffin after removal from grave
1937 Exhumation: coffin after removal from grave
Grave, possibly after 1937 exhumation
Grave, possibly after 1937 exhumation
Grave of Bl. Charles after 1937 exhumation
Grave of Bl. Charles after 1937 exhumation
Grave of Bl. Charles after 1937 exhumation (2nd photo)
Grave of Bl. Charles after 1937 exhumation (2nd photo)
Part of Irish Capuchin Archives
Expenditure and receipt book for Father Mathew Hall, Church Street. The inside cover is annotated with a ‘History of Fr. Mathew Hall – copied from the other ledger (1881-1926)’. The history reads: ‘1891: Hall in Church St. formally opened up by Archbishop Walsh. Fr. Columbus Maher OSFC (President)’. The history chronicles extensions, leases and other financial matters concerning the Hall property. The remainder of the volume is made up of expenditure and receipt accounts from Sept. 1934-Sept. 1937. Expenditure is listed under the headings of details, cash and cheques. Receipts are listed under details, cash, total and lodgements. The entries include figures for rents (to the Merchant Tailors), rates (to Dublin Corporation) and the sales of tickets for pantomimes and for various badges, medals, certificates and other paraphernalia.
Clongowes Wood College, County Kildare
Part of Irish Capuchin Archives
An aerial view of Clongowes Wood College near Clane in County Kildare. An annotation on the reverse of the print reads 'Army Air Corps / 11 June 1937 / Clongowes Wood College / Lens: 10” / Height: 800’.
Part of Irish Capuchin Archives
An image titled ‘Inishmaan Pupils’. The print is slightly blurred but the date (25 May 1937) is visible on the teacher’s blackboard. Inishmaan (Inis Meáin) is the middle of the three main Aran Islands located off Galway on Ireland’s Atlantic Coast.
Church of Christ the King, Cabra, Dublin
Part of Irish Capuchin Archives
An aerial photograph of the Church of Christ the King in Cabra in Dublin. The church was designed by the firm of John Joseph Robinson (1887-1965) and Richard Cyril Keefe (c.1889-1965) and was formally opened in October 1933. A printed annotation on the reverse provides provenance information: ‘Army Air Corps / Date: 20 Feb. 1937 / Area: Cabra Chapel / Lens: 10” / Height: 600 m’.