A bound volume of Irish pamphlets. The spine has a gilt title which reads ‘Pamphlets / / Vol. LIV’.
A bound volume of mostly Irish pamphlets. The spine has a gilt title which reads ‘Pamphlets / Vol. 184’.
John George MacCarthy, ‘Irish Parliamentary Policy / a letter with rejoinders’ (Dublin: Hodges, Figgis & Co., Grafton Street, 1881).
A copy of a pamphlet titled ‘Irish peace / a test of British statesmanship / a series of special articles together with four leading articles reprinted from “The Times” (London: Times Publishing Company, [1919]). The text comprises articles published in ‘The Times’ from late June and early July 1919
An image of a pilgrimage group at the Vatican. The group includes Margaret Mary Pearse, Fr. Senan Moynihan OFM Cap., Fr. Gerald McCann OFM Cap., Thomas MacGreevy, and Cormac Breathnach, Lord Mayor of Dublin.
An image of a pilgrimage group at the Vatican. The group includes Margaret Mary Pearse, Fr. Senan Moynihan OFM Cap., Fr. Gerald McCann OFM Cap., Thomas MacGreevy, Richard King, and Cormac Breathnach, Lord Mayor of Dublin.
A set of four picture postcards produced by Valentine & Sons of Dundee, Scotland. The postcards are titled 'Irish Jaunting Car', 'Irish Turf Sellers', 'Carrying Home the Turf', and 'Going for Turf'.
The file comprises the following article clippings:
‘Pearse saw Ireland with idealism, and detachment’, 'Irish Press', 10 Nov. 1954. Another clipping from the same edition of the paper includes articles by Francis MacManus, Pádraig de Brún, and Lennox Robinson.
Desmond Ryan, ‘Emmet’s spirit over Rathfarnham’, 'Irish Press', 13 Nov. 1954.
Desmond Ryan, ‘A moment with Pearse’, 'Irish Press', 11 Nov. 1954. Includes a photograph Senator Margaret Mary Pearse, ‘the only surviving member of the family’.
Desmond Ryan, ‘Pearse the orator’, 'Irish Press', 12 Nov. 1954.
A clipping of a photograph of a group of Irish prisoners held at a camp in Limburg, Germany. It is noted that Lance Corporal Eite, Royal Irish Rifles, was taken prisoner at the Battle of the Marne (September 1914). Lance Corporal Eite was employed at the Guinness Brewery prior to the outbreak of the war. It is also affirmed that Eite’s father resides at 31 Oxmantown Road in Dublin.
A flier promoting the ‘Irish Race Convention’ in New York in August 1932. This fund-raising convention was organised by the ‘Irish World’ newspaper, the largest Irish American newspaper.