- IE CA CP/3/16/4/42
- Parte
- c.1910
Parte deIrish Capuchin Archives
A studio portrait print of the Irish nationalist politician Tom Kettle. The print is credited to Keogh Brothers’ Studio.
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Parte deIrish Capuchin Archives
A studio portrait print of the Irish nationalist politician Tom Kettle. The print is credited to Keogh Brothers’ Studio.
Parte deIrish Capuchin Archives
Drafts of an article by Séamus Ó Ríain (Dr. James Ryan) titled ‘Dáil Éireann’, published in 'The Capuchin Annual' (1969). The draft is dated 23 Sept. 1968.
Fr. Fidelis Neary OSFC (1855-1932)
Parte deIrish Capuchin Archives
A view of Fr. Fidelis Neary OSFC (1855-1932) sitting in the garden of the Church Street Friary in Dublin.
Parte deIrish Capuchin Archives
A portrait photograph of a County Down farmer in about 1930.
Father Tom Burke Speaks to Exiles in America
Parte deIrish Capuchin Archives
A clipping of an article reflecting on the American tour of Fr. Tom Burker OP, a noted Irish Dominican preacher and historian. Burke visited the United States in 1871. (Volume page 213).
The G man’s lament / on the establishment of the Irish Republic
Parte deIrish Capuchin Archives
A flier with the text of a ballad referring to the Irish Free State government. To be sung to the air of ‘I am sitting on the stile, Mary’.
Parte deIrish Capuchin Archives
Postcard to Patrick Pearse from an individual in Ballymacahill Inver, County Donegal, seeking a copy of the prospectus for St. Enda’s School and ‘any pamphlets from your pen’. The signature is indecipherable.
Parte deIrish Capuchin Archives
Diary of mass celebrants at St. Mary of the Angels.
Instructions on the epistles and gospels
Parte deIrish Capuchin Archives
Date: 1834
Author: Rev. John Gother
Publisher: B. Smith, 46 Mary Street, Dublin
Full title: 'Instructions on the epistles and gospels of all the Sundays and festivals throughout the year, and of every day during the Holy season of Lent. … Two volumes complete in one'.
Parte deIrish Capuchin Archives
A copy of ‘The Irish Worker’ (6 September 1913). Founded (and initially edited) by Jim Larkin in 1911 as a pro-labour alternative to the capitalist-owned press, ‘The Irish Worker’ was particularly noted for its caustic cartoons by Ernest Kavanagh (1884-1916) attacking William Martin Murphy and the Dublin Metropolitan Police during the Lockout of 1913