A clipping of an article reporting on the resignation of Dr Noel Browne as Minister of Health and the publication of correspondence explaining the circumstances of his resignation. The clipping is taken from the ‘Irish Press’ (12 April 1951).
A flier titled ‘No man’s land’. Reprinted from the ‘Social Crediter’ (21 February 1942). The flier was printed by William Brown & Son Ltd., Chichester Street, Belfast. The flier attacks Irish neutrality and highlights what is termed Jewish influence in Irish political life. Refences are made to Robert Briscoe (1894-1969), described as a ‘Zionist Jew, of Lithuanian origin’, and his connections with Irish republicans, Fianna Fáil, and Éamon de Valera, ‘the son of an Irish mother and a “Spanish”, presumably Portuguese-Jewish father’. Mention is also made of the contemporary activities of the IRA described as the ‘latter day edition of the old Jewish-controlled affair of the same name’. The text is initialled ‘B.J.’. A manuscript annotation on the final pages seemingly suggests that this text may have appeared in the ‘Daily Express’.
A bound volume titled ‘Communism in Ireland / Vol. 2 / private papers’. The volume contains numerous newspaper clippings and printed ephemera compiled by Fr. Senan Moynihan OFM Cap. relating to the activities of various socialist and communist groups in Ireland. The volume contains much material relating to the Irish Workers’ League which was founded in 1948. The League was a re-establishment of the southern part of the Communist Party of Ireland. In 1970 the League merged with the Communist Party of Northern Ireland to reunite the party across the island. The file also includes correspondence, notes and lists generated by Fr. Senan on various prominent Irish communists. Many of the clippings in the volume are ‘red scare’ type articles taken from Irish newspapers including the ‘Irish Independent’, the ‘Irish Press’, and the weekly Catholic title ‘The Standard’.
The volume includes much material on the political career of Michael O’Riordan (1917-2006), the prominent Irish communist who fought with the International Brigades during the Spanish Civil War. O’Riordan emerged as a central figure in the leftist republican movement in Ireland in the second half of the twentieth century. He was the founding secretary of the Irish Workers’ League, and general secretary thereafter of its successor grouping, the Irish Workers’ Party, from 1962 to 1970. He later served as general secretary of the reconstituted thirty-two county Communist Party of Ireland from 1970 to 1983 and acted as party chairman until 1997. The volume is a ‘Richview Account Series Book’ printed by Browne & Nolan in Dublin.
A clipping of an article expressing concern about a public meeting of the Irish Workers’ League held in Dublin. The clipping is taken from the ‘Sunday Independent’ (15 April 1949).
A clipping of an article outlining the history of the links between the newly founded Irish Workers’ League and prominent communists. The clipping is taken from ‘The Standard’ (19 August 1949).
A clipping of a letter from Michael O’Riordan refuting the allegations made by an anonymous correspondent in ‘The Standard’ and defending his record of republicanism particularly during the Spanish Civil War. The article also includes a rebuttal from the anonymous writer denying O’Riordan’s accusation that he is a Nazi. The clipping is taken from ‘The Standard’ (9 Sept. 1949).
A short assessment of the strength of communist groupings in Belfast by Fr. Senan Moynihan OFM Cap. Reference is made to named individuals in the Communist Party and to an ‘International Bookshop in Church Lane which seems to be [a] clearing house for printed propaganda’. Moynihan also warns of communist ‘fellow travellers’ who exude strong anti-Catholic sentiments.
A photographic print titled 'On the road to Achill, County Mayo'.
A view of a farmer sowing seeds in a ploughed field. A manuscript annotation on the reverse of the print reads 'The sower went out'.
Steamships at the quay in Waterford in about 1935.