Handwritten letter from Fr. Liam Carey to Fr. Ardle McMahon, with the report of the meeting attached (item no.126). He hopes this format better helps to outline the work of the Committee.
Mcmahon
45 Archival description results for Mcmahon
Card to Fr. James Ardle McMahon acknowledging his letter of the 19 April 1958.
Typed letter from Fr. Liam Carey to Fr. James Ardle McMahon informing him that Mr. Tony Brown, Mr. Jerome Connolly and Mr. Thomas Roseingrave have been contacted retarding the work that the Committee decided should be done. Mr. Roseingrave has been asked to speak to a paper by An Taoiseach, Mr. Lynch, titled ‘Are Social Principles Enough’.
Letter from Fr. M.S. McMahon to Doctor informing him that he had re- interviewed two young men who had been given permission to attend Trinity College. They are most grateful and will abide by the conditions imposed by the Archbishop.
Letter from Fr. Carey to Fr. Ardle McMahon enclosing a copy of the minutes.
Copy of typed letter to Sean McEntee, Minister for Local Government and Public Health, from Michael P. O’Connell, Secretary, informing him that St. Patrick’s Home, Navan Road, is now part of the parish of Chapelizod and that Fr. Bernard McMahon is its Chaplain.
-1 November 1966 Healy, Mairin, Wilfield Road, to Fr. McMahon. She asks that + McQuaid be asked to exert his influence with the Government regarding the NFA; and that he bring pressure on the Minister for Justice regarding Beat Clubs.
Handwritten letter to Fr. McMahon from P.W. Carroll, Dept. of Social Welfare. The Department has been asked by a British mail-marketing firm to provide for interview a number of women for temporary employment in door-to-door distribution of a booklet. Asks for his views.
Letter from Br. Norbert McMahon to +McQuaid returning correspondence sent by the Archbishop to the Superior General of the St. John of God Brothers in Rome.
Typed minutes of ‘V’ Committee meeting. The following items are mentioned in the report: Fr. Crean has checked on J. Driscoll and J. Meehan and found that they are of good standing. Fr. Kent drew attention to a meeting of the GAA in London which was reported in The Cork Examiner. It stated that the Irish in London were warned that the Bolsheviks and Trotskyites were attempting to infiltrate Irish ranks. Fr. McMahon referred to a letter in The Evening Mail which may be Trotskyite.