An image of the ruined Mellifont Cistercian Abbey in County Louth. A manuscript annotation on the reverse of the print reads ‘A study of the corner of the ruined Abbey of Mellifont, County Louth, the first foundation of the Cistercian monks in Ireland’.
A postcard print of the ruins of the ruined Mellifont (Cistercian) Abbey in County Louth.
An image of the ruins of Killarney House in County Kerry in about 1945. Built in 1872 for Valentine Browne, 4th Earl of Kenmare (1825-1905), this Elizabethan-Revival manor house was built on an elevated site overlooking Lough Leane. It was destroyed by fire in 1913 and was never rebuilt.
A Capuchin friar and a canine companion at the ruined Annaghdown Cathedral, located on the shores of Lough Corrib, in County Galway. Annaghdown is closely associated with St. Brendan of Clonfert (also known as Brendan the Navigator), who died here in about 580. The cathedral dates to the fifteenth century.
A copy of the speech by Ruairí Brugha (1917-2006) at a Roger Casement Commemoration at Murlough, County Antrim, on 1 Aug. 1965.
Rt. Rev. Msgr. Verheggen on visit to Mount Argus
An image showing the arrival of King Edward VII and his wife Queen Alexandra at Phoenix Park Racecourse in Dublin in April 1904. The British sovereign arrived in Ireland on 26 April for an eight-day visit during which he attended several events and ceremonies in Dublin, Kilkenny, and Waterford.
A photographic print of a Royal Irish Constabulary rugby union team. The print has numerals on some of the individuals in the group.
A photographic print of Royal Irish Constabulary officers at their depot in the Phoenix Park in Dublin. The image was probably taken shortly before the disbandment of the force in 1922.
A photographic print of the last Royal Irish Constabulary officers to be disbanded at their depot in the Phoenix Park in Dublin.