Commercials!Paul

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Commercials!Paul » THIS FAINT PAUL DAILY GLOBTS: MONDAY MORNim JUNE 4. JP94. - " - , -.--\u25a0... I been made— a vessel was ready to carry pressed wonder that Dublin council had ing the season lroui- \u25a0 three to .something \u25a0 nut already done practical. 'four''bushels': of ""roses have been i' '' him from beneath the enemy's flag- • ' " ' " ** ' \j& ' ' ! \u25a0 GREAT IRISH "X," responsible of- gathered ;: : v Ste_ '• ~yi^ ;'''V*! m \u25a0- SENSATION. Paruell courage, and the Invincible "Ins one wrek,' , and *'•\u25a0 At* Vt«* *'''"\u25a0 ibut had not the ficer in chance in Dublin, received the when shedding its petals the round ' )'"* ,?•*':V7* **V,*lx *T* X refused to leave. Had lie accepted the sanction and orders ot the then Irish beneath is -.completely covered- win, "NUMBER ONE" TYN+tl MAKES SOME plan uf rescue, the so-called constitu- party before striking a blow. The In- Its fragrant blossoms. Its trunk for tional agitation would have openly vincibles were carrying on the war de- tivnfeet from the cround Is nearly a;COMMERCIALS! PAUL STARTLING DISCLOSURES. assumed the manner and attitude of clared by their statesmen. foot in circumference, and it lias been : Wolfe Tone and George Washington. A dispatch from these Paruellite estimated that ifits branches grew ill statesmen, it is claimed, would have one continuous vine it would exceed That the tide has turned is generally conceded. The re I\VI\(IHLi:S The Parnell PhciMiix Park proclama- 4 THE HUSH made the removals in the Phuenix park mile inlength. These branches j•cent periodical spasm 01 depression reached hig-h-water mark denouncing killing of : hav^ tion, the liurke on the nth of May, 1882, an impossib- entirely covered the .- side of a house :jn 1893. In the rebound, ami Cavendish, Tynan refers to as "the ility. near which the bush crow?, and have, discerning minds plainly see days And Their Connection - With the policy of infamy," and demonstrates "To their honor," says Tynan, "they extended to the neiehboi ing trees sim smd years of prosperoub activity. St. Paul may be congratu- of Par- did not, send this dispatch. The honor rounding it, so that when itIs Irish Parliamentary Party— th.it it established a clear case inbloom lated upon having stood firm as a rock through the recent com- denouncing himself. The book of the it forms a perfect bower" of- roses. -.: : Workings of the "Inner Cir- nell J jmercial upheaval. styles the Parnell inovotnent--with its TUAGIC EVENT : :^ 1 Park Murders revolves on the statesmenship of the m So much the cle"—Phoenix ": — Invincible affiliation—"the Parnell gov- ~£- for past. Let us turn to the future. by Tynan ToriCJ to Parnellite movement." Planned ernment," and justifies the phrase by Tynan then gives exhausive de- West Third Streot Business Prop* 4894 promises to be a good crop year. For a year past Mr. -• : ' Ec Benefited by the Exposure. an elaborate description of the thor- tails of the preparations for the success- erty at Auction. :.--<-i j;' Sight orders have been placed for stocks of merchandise. Empty ough organization of that move- ful "removal" of Chief Secretary Cav- Iwill sell on the premises, No. 181 — [From the Sunday Globe. j endish and Under Secretary Burke, «helves must soon be replenished largely from St. Paul. The [PubliKhed by miss-ion of Author,1 ment. When the land league was West Third street, the store and round l'ei the. formally suppressed by gov- adding that "every precaution that belonging to Mr. Mnrteuke; the jrrouuCi jrecently opened line of the Great Northern railroad to the Pa- New Yoisk, June 2 —The Associated the British humai' ingenuity coulddevise was taken - ' ernment in lsSl, itwas seeietly is 80x100, the building is three-story cific coast means a material expansion of our trade. The rapid Press has obtained advance proofs of revived so that there should be no blunder." pays under the name, of the brick, all occupied, and a rental or, development of "Invincible or- The immediate cause of the "removal" : the lake carrying tonnage means cheaper fuel Of fill book upon Irish affairs $1,000 year. W\ the sensational nearly o'er The sale willbe ganization." In view of this fact, was the occurrence ot a conflictbetween written by P. J. P. Tynan, the Irish In- made at- 2. o'clock on Thursday next, ' !»nd rates on merchandise from the East. Our rapidly devel- vincible, generally Tynan asks "Howdare they (the Irish the police and people in Ballina, Mayo, uue 7. P. T. Kavanagb, Auctioneer. more known as where several children were killed by oping manufacturing and industrial enterprises point to an On*," willappear in the parliamentary party) declare publicly, "Number which affair, it, the discharge of rifles in the hands of increased population, greater prosperity of the laboring classes, tomorrow. The book referred to alter the Pluenix Park that the police. astonishing ~ World movement, was open to The difficulties and a vast in the of our Is entitled "Irish National lnvincibles the Invincible surmounted by the lnvincibles in mak- AND increase volume businessyearly. condemnation, and betray men by en- ing park FACTS FANCIES. Our banks, houses, world and Their Times," and its apparent three attacks in Phoenix are jobbing and all classes of business men me flly rolling them in its ranks?" also described at length. Of Under purpose is to establish beyond Finest BoxTrade. are upon a sound footing. Our sails havingbeen trimmed and ***** Secretary Burke, says: connection of the "In- The book points out that the object of he "This official Lovers ot choice uonie-made and fresh a doubt the government was stained with many com- the financial storm weathered, St. Paul invites the Northwest HRj the British Is to crush out crimes llavnnu Cigars caiibe suited at Fetsch's. Vincibles" with the Irish parlia- against Ireland, the of any toward mitted in common lie to its doors with the new era of brightening with \\fW mentary party. O.i the other hand, life Irish movement renegade skies, points Publishers started with \u25a0••\u25a0' national independence by fostering the was a rebel and in the em- Jg^ *£»& by so:nj Irishman ployment of her foe." He thus pride to its record as the Commercial Metropolis of the new the races represented in W it is asserted comparatively thai Mr. Tynan's was written... in harmless relers to Chief Secretary Cav- KEEP YOUR EYE ON PASCO. Northwest, and assures all friends, competitors of book MOVEMENT, and patrons the Midway Plaisance. ~~ older further campaign of HOME RULE endish: "The new chief ot "Koine day a large city willgrow up at m^tT^ till* to the interfere these savage destroyers a continuance of that spirit of fair dealiug which has made the rir3 Salisbury Tory party, which does not with Ireland's of Ireland the junction of the Coluui' .1 and Snake Gibson, «Mj& Lord and the piovinceof empire. deliberately leaving his own home to city great. Mr. J. J. official -^J simply campaign litera- continuance as a the rivers."—Henry Villard. and that it is To this end, itis stated, the British au- continue this alien assassin rule. From World's Fair Photograph- /^g§gg^ ture from the Conservative camp. In the hour he put his blood-stained foot AllCan Be Suited. er, placed his mi&^~ time, thorities are seeking the condemnation upon duty Go to Adam Fifthand Robert, collection fact, itis stated that even at this tne island It was the sacred 1 of as criminals by the for your tine Union Label Cigars.' ;;c :. at their disposal. an aloerian dancer. before th9book is suppose 1 to have the lnvincibles or Irish honor to suppress him. It was . ELECTRIC BELT Co by few friends Irish people themselves— a condemna- not only a sacrfd duty but a religion." Arcade, been seen more than a tion lips lntol'lfeuix Thicrs Detective Service | 134 la.li.ou St. Paul HOREJS BROS. Accepted the best of his People want to know of the author, copious extracts from it already secured from the of When the Invincibles went the home rulers. Park they expected that their "removal" Established 1873. Local offices, Gei mania exhibit. Went elsewhere how other people live, have made, and that million* of Bldg.. MAKE THE BEST . been "The sprang into of the secretary would bring on a com- Life Insurance cor. Minnesota and 4'h CURES calling to Ty- lnvincibles exist- of a legitimate character AMERICAN J ... for more. work, play, pray, etc. attention Mr. to the St. InvestiKatioiib J^B^* circulars ence," says Tynan, "by bat death. nan's have been printed ready for order of the The were sur- uudertakeu for corporations and individuals. Home -Made Bread. book government of elect- Dublin Invincibles RHEUMATISM AND Igliss^ Found several other col- Subjects themselves cori- to English voters upon the Parnelhte Ireland, prised, amazed, and incensed and Indig- Fetttcli's, Fiftli and distribution ed the Irish the face of Adam Robert. 761-463-1 165-1167 ; equal knowledge. dissolution of parliament. The Irish by nation. In nant, when on the Monday following Smokers of tine Domestic and Key West CHRONIC DISEASES, lections of and tribute such publicly events, the "acted lie' by which the the tragic "removals" of the secretaries Cigars can be accommodated at Fetsch Catalogues Free. , . West Seventh Street. j greater value. Ergo, reliable. parliamentary party denounced walls metropolis . the park crimes, Parnellites repudiated all association the of the Irish were Hie authors of Phoenix 'suppression,' " Tynan, placarded with the Parnell proclama- Acquired the rights to Famous ethnologist, Prof anil in so doing, itis claimed by Mr. with the says ;. DlET*.\u25a0\u25a0;\u25a0-...
Recommended publications
  • Secret Societies and the Easter Rising
    Dominican Scholar Senior Theses Student Scholarship 5-2016 The Power of a Secret: Secret Societies and the Easter Rising Sierra M. Harlan Dominican University of California https://doi.org/10.33015/dominican.edu/2016.HIST.ST.01 Survey: Let us know how this paper benefits you. Recommended Citation Harlan, Sierra M., "The Power of a Secret: Secret Societies and the Easter Rising" (2016). Senior Theses. 49. https://doi.org/10.33015/dominican.edu/2016.HIST.ST.01 This Senior Thesis is brought to you for free and open access by the Student Scholarship at Dominican Scholar. It has been accepted for inclusion in Senior Theses by an authorized administrator of Dominican Scholar. For more information, please contact [email protected]. THE POWER OF A SECRET: SECRET SOCIETIES AND THE EASTER RISING A senior thesis submitted to the History Faculty of Dominican University of California in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the Bachelor of Arts in History by Sierra Harlan San Rafael, California May 2016 Harlan ii © 2016 Sierra Harlan All Rights Reserved. Harlan iii Acknowledgments This paper would not have been possible without the amazing support and at times prodding of my family and friends. I specifically would like to thank my father, without him it would not have been possible for me to attend this school or accomplish this paper. He is an amazing man and an entire page could be written about the ways he has helped me, not only this year but my entire life. As a historian I am indebted to a number of librarians and researchers, first and foremost is Michael Pujals, who helped me expedite many problems and was consistently reachable to answer my questions.
    [Show full text]
  • Zjkcilitants of the 1860'S: the Philadelphia Fenians
    zJkCilitants of the 1860's: The Philadelphia Fenians HE history of any secret organization presents a particularly difficult field of inquiry. One of the legacies of secret societies Tis a mass of contradictions and pitfalls for historians. Oaths of secrecy, subterfuge, aliases, code words and wildly exaggerated perceptions conspire against the historian. They add another vexing dimension to the ordinary difficulty of tracing and evaluating docu- mentary sources.1 The Fenian Brotherhood, an international revo- lutionary organization active in Ireland, England, and the United States a century ago, is a case in point. Founded in Dublin in 1858, the organization underwent many vicissitudes. Harried by British police and agents, split by factionalism, buffeted by failures, reverses, and defections, the Fenians created a vivid and romantic Irish nationalist legend. Part of their notoriety derived from spectacular exploits that received sensational publicity, and part derived from the intrepid character of some of the leaders. Modern historians credit the Fenians with the preservation of Irish national identity and idealism during one of the darkest periods of Irish national life.2 Although some general studies of the Fenians have been written, there are few studies of local branches of the Brotherhood. Just how such a group operating in several countries functioned amid prob- lems of hostile surveillance, difficulties of communication, and 1 One student of Irish secret societies, who wrote a history of the "Invincibles," a terrorist group of the i88o's, found the evidence "riddled with doubt and untruth, vagueness and confusion." Tom Corfe, The Phoenix Park Murders (London, 1968), 135. 2 T.
    [Show full text]
  • Representations of Charles Stewart Parnell in English and Irish Newspapers
    University of Bristol Department of Historical Studies Best undergraduate dissertations of 2009 Rachel de Courcy Representations of Charles Stewart Parnell in English and Irish Newspapers PDF processed with CutePDF evaluation edition www.CutePDF.com In June 2009, the Department of Historical Studies at the University of Bristol voted to begin to publish the best of the annual dissertations produced by the department’s 3rd year undergraduates (deemed to be those receiving a mark of 75 or above) in recognition of the excellent research work being undertaken by our students. As a department, we are committed to the advancement of historical knowledge and understanding, and to research of the highest order. We believe that our undergraduates are part of that endeavour. This was one of the best of this year’s 3rd year undergraduate dissertations. Please note: this dissertation is published in the state it was submitted for examination. Thus the author has not been able to correct errors and/or departures from departmental guidelines for the presentation of dissertations (e.g. in the formatting of its footnotes and bibliography). The author, 2009. All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted by any means without the prior permission in writing of the author, or as expressly permitted by law. Candidate Number: 29705 Representations of Charles Stewart Parnell in English and Irish Newspapers Introduction Charles Stewart Parnell became leader of the Irish nationalist movement in May 1880 when he was elected head of the Irish Parliamentary Party (IPP), having already been elected president of the Land League (LL) – a more extreme nationalist organisation - in October 1879.
    [Show full text]
  • A HISTORY of the DUBLIN METROPOLITAN POLICE and ITS COLONIAL LEGACY Anastasia Dukova World Histories of Crime, Culture and Violence
    W H C, C V A HISTORY OF THE DUBLIN METROPOLITAN POLICE AND ITS COLONIAL LEGACY Anastasia Dukova World Histories of Crime, Culture and Violence Series Editors Marianna Muravyeva University of Helsinki Finland Raisa Maria Toivo University of Tampere Finland Palgrave’s World Histories of Crime, Culture and Violence seeks to pub- lish research monographs, collections of scholarly essays, multi- authored books, and Palgrave Pivots addressing themes and issues of interdisciplin- ary histories of crime, criminal justice, criminal policy, culture and vio- lence globally and on a wide chronological scale (from the ancient to the modern period). It focuses on interdisciplinary studies, historically con- textualized, across various cultures and spaces employing a wide range of methodologies and conceptual frameworks. More information about this series at http://www.springer.com/series/14383 Anastasia Dukova A History of the Dublin Metropolitan Police and its Colonial Legacy Anastasia Dukova Brisbane , Australia World Histories of Crime, Culture and Violence ISBN 978-1-137-55581-6 ISBN 978-1-137-55582-3 (eBook) DOI 10.1057/978-1-137-55582-3 Library of Congress Control Number: 2016953884 © The Editor(s) (if applicable) and The Author(s) 2016 The author(s) has/have asserted their right(s) to be identifi ed as the author(s) of this workin accordance with the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988. This work is subject to copyright. All rights are solely and exclusively licensed by the Publisher, whether the whole or part of the material is concerned, specifi cally the rights of translation, reprinting, reuse of illustrations, recitation, broadcasting, reproduction on microfi lms or in any other physical way, and transmission or information storage and retrieval, electronic adaptation, computer software, or by similar or dissimilar methodology now known or hereafter developed.
    [Show full text]
  • The Black and Tans: British Police in the First Irish War, 1920-21
    THE BLACK AND TANS THE BLACK AND TANS: BRITISH POLICE IN THE FIRST IRISH WAR, 1920-21 By DAVID LEESON, B.A., M.A. A Thesis Submitted to the School of Graduate Studies In Partial Fulfilment of the Requirements For the Degree Doctor of Philosophy McMaster University ©Copyright by David Leeson, August 2003 11 DOCTOR OF PHILOSOPHY McMaster University (History) Hamilton, Ontario TITLE: The Black and Tans: British Police in the First Irish War, 1920-21 AUTHOR: David Leeson, B.A., M.A. SUPERVISOR: Professor R. A. Rempel NUMBER OF PAGES: 264 lll ABSTRACT Over ten thousand Britons fought as police in the First Irish War ( 1920-21 ). Most of these British police were ex-soldiers, veterans of the Great War and members of the Royal Irish Constabulary (RfC), called 'Black and Tans' for their mixed uniforms of dark police green and military khaki. Ex-officers joined a separate force, the Auxiliary Division (ADRIC), a special emergency gendarmerie, heavily armed and organized in military-style companies. Pitted against the guerrillas of the Irish Republican Army (IRA), the Black and Tans and Auxiliaries took many 'reprisals', assassinating Irish republicans and burning their homes and shops. As a consequence, their name became a byword for crime and violence, and the spectre of 'black-and-tannery' has haunted Ireland ever since. This dissertation uses evidence from both British and Irish archives and from British newspapers to study the British police and their behaviour in the First Irish War. According to legend the Black and Tans and Auxiliaries were ex-convicts and psychopaths, hardened by prison and crazed by war.
    [Show full text]
  • The Lighter Side of My Official Life
    THE LIGHTER SIDE OF MY OFFICIAL LIFE SIR ROBERT ANDERSON G-B LIBRARY OF THE UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA. Class THE LIGHTER SIDE OF MY OFFICIAL LIFE THE LIGHTER SIDE OF MY OFFICIAL LIFE BY SIR ROBERT ANDERSON K.C.B., LL.D. HODDER AND STOUGHTON NEW YORK AND LONDON PREFACE A BOOK of this kind needs no preface, save to express the author's acknowledgments to Messrs. William Blackwood and Sons for sanctioning the republication of articles which recently appeared in Blackwood"s Magazine. If, notwithstanding the author's estimate of these articles, as indicated in his opening sen- tences, he now reissues them in book form, he does so in response to appeals from many quarters. It has been pressed upon him, more- over, that they must be of exceptional interest, seeing that they were made the subject of "a " full-dress debate in Parliament ; and that, too, at a time when opportunity could not be found for any adequate discussion of great questions of national importance and gravity. 225374 CONTENTS CHAPTER I PAGE Scheme of the book Some personal details French versions of nursery rhymes Life in Trinity College, Dublin "The Irish Question ": Lord Morris's definition of it The College Historical Society A mock criminal trial The Irish Bench and Bar, reminiscences and incidents The Fenian trials in Ireland and in England contrasted . 1-16 CHAPTER II Entrance into Government work The "Fenian " Rising" and the "Clerkenwell explosion of 1867 Panic caused in London: illustrative incidents Interview with a clairvoyant informant of Lord Derby's The Birdcage Walk mystery of January, 1868: panic in London ...
    [Show full text]
  • The Dynamiters Niall Whelehan Index More Information
    Cambridge University Press 978-1-107-02332-1 — The Dynamiters Niall Whelehan Index More Information Index Ahmad, Muhammad, 108–9 , 114 Blissert, Robert, 280 Alarm, The , 160 , 169 , 170 , 285 , 286 , 289 Boland, Michael, 85 , 88 , 136 , 180–1 , American Civil War, 38 , 53 , 54 , 60 , 74 , 183 , 187 75 , 76 , 112 , 123 , 139 , 140 , 142 , Boulogne, 130 146 , 147 , 151–4 , 155 , 159 , 170 , Bourke, Richard (Earl of Mayo), 40 , 50 , 174 , 220 , 235 , 301 58 , 207 Sixty-Ninth Regiment, 151 Bradlaugh, Charles, 133 Anarchism, 64–6 Breslin, John, 84 , 141 attentats , 97 Brown, John, 150 , 286 German anarchists in New York, and political violence, 92–3 169–71 , 283–5 Brown, Thomas, 4 , 91 , 189 , 196–7 Haymarket anarchists, 171 , 230, 285 , Budini, Giuseppe, 62 286–8 , 292–3 Buffalo, NY, 74 , 180 International Social Revolutionary and Burke, Thomas, 99 Anarchist Congress 1881, 2 , 65 , Burke, William, 162 , 280 169 Burton, Henry, 109 Anderson, Benedict, 13 Butler, Francis William, 123 Anderson, Robert, 122 Byrne, Frank, 85 Henri Le Caron, 123 , 134 Anderson, Samuel Lee, 70 Cafi ero, Carlo, 3 , 21 , 64 , 65 , 149 Angiolillo, Michele, 99 Callaghan, Peter, 187 Antwerp, 127 , 130 Callan, Thomas, 128 , 186 , 188 Appleton, Henry, 288 , 293 Canada, 4 , 16 , 60 , 74 , 86 , 210 Archibald, Edward, 120–2 , 134 dynamite attacks, 112 , 164 , 165–6 Arendt, Hannah, 6 , 20 Canadian Raids, 74 , 123 , 235 Arthur, Chester, 171 Canovas del Castillo, Antonio, 112 , 289 assassination, 2 , 3 , 15 , 16 , 21 , 58–9 , 65 , Carbonari, 41 , 42 , 43 90 , 98 , 99–103 , 121
    [Show full text]
  • Parnell Silver Casket, 1884
    WORKSHEET 1 A HIStorY OF IRELAND IN 100 OBJECTS, A SELECTION LEAVING CERTIFICATE, ORDINARY AND HIGHER LEVEL HIStorY Parnell silver casket, 1884 Chronological summary of Parnell’s career available on the Parnell Society website: http://parnellsociety.com/csp.htm 1846 Born in Avondale House, Co. Wicklow, 4th son of John Henry Parnell and Delia (nee Stewart of Bordentown, New Jersey, USA) 1859 Father dies suddenly. Parnell children are made Wards of Court 1865–9 Attends Magdalene College Cambridge but does not take degree; 1867 Parnell comes of age and is the legal owner of Avondale House 1874 Serves as High Sheriff of Co. Wicklow and is active in the local gentry 1874 Stands as Home Rule Parliamentary candidate for Co. Dublin but is defeated. 1875 April 22 Takes his seat in Parliament after winning in Co. Meath. 1876 Joins the Amnesty Association to seek the release of Fenian prisoners. 1877 Parnell identifies with the radical Irish ‘obstructionist’ wing of the Home Rule party. 1877 Elected President of the Irish Home Rule Confederation 1878 Michael Davitt and Parnell collaborate to push for sweeping land reform 1879 October 21 Irish National Land League established. The first phase of the ‘Land War’ 1879–80 Visits the United States with John Dillon. They collect £60,000 for poor relief in Ireland. Parnell addresses the U.S Congress—the first Irishman to be so honoured. 1880 Wins three constituency seats in parliament and chooses to represent Cork City. In May is elected as Chairman of the Irish Parliamentary Party. Parnell first meets Mrs Katharine O’Shea in July.
    [Show full text]
  • The Brutal Murder of Lord Frederick Cavendish
    The brutal murder of Lord Frederick Cavendish Phoenix Park murders is the name given to the assassination on May 6, 1882, of Lord Frederick Cavendish, British secretary for Ireland, and Thomas Henry Burke, his undersecretary, in Phoenix Park, Dublin. They were stabbed to death by members of the “Invincibles,” a terrorist splinter group of the Fenian movement . Two of those arrested turned state’s evidence, five were hanged, and three were sentenced to penal servitude. Charles Stewart Parnell was alleged (1887) by his political enemies to have been personally involved in the plot. A parliamentary commission appointed to investigate the charges exonerated him (1890). The political agitators’s interest was apparently in killing Cavendish’s companion Thomas Henry Burke. Though Burke’s assassination was planned in advance, Cavendish had arrived the same day in Ireland and was killed as a byproduct of sectarian political violence. Popular myth has it that he was stabbed to death by a group of assailants. While there were a group of men present and partaking, their method was more sinister. Instead of stabbing their intended victims the group brought surgical knives and slashed the victims many times to promote a slower suffering and eventual death by bleeding. Lord Frederick was a son of the Duke of Devonshire (Sir William 1808-91 – 7th Duke of Devonshire from 1858) who lived at Holker Hall, near Cartmel. During William’s era, Holker Hall became an important social location. William developed local resources (eg involved in the development of Barrow in Furness) and was involved in politics. Frederick (1836-82) was William’s second son and entered Parliament as a Liberal in 1865.
    [Show full text]
  • “Invincibles," and Of
    A SHORT ACCOUNT OF THE DISCOVERY AND CONVIC OF THE “INVINCIBLES," AND OF SOME TRIALS OF WHICH THE WRITER HAD CHARGE IN 1881, 1882, 1883, AND 1881, WITH A FEW OBSERVATIONS ON PRELIMINARY INVESTIGATIONS IN CRIMINAL CASKS. BY GEORGE BOLTON, CROWN SOLICITOR FOR THE COUNTY TIPPERARY. - DUBLIN: IIODGES, FIGGIS, AND CO., GRAFTON STREET. i 8«7- A SHORT ACCOUNT OF THE DISCOVERY AND CONVICTIONION OF THE a INVINCIBLES,” AND OF SOME TRIALS OF WHICH THE WRITER HAD CHARGE IN 1881, 1882, 1883, AND 1884, WITH A FEW OBSERVATIONS ON PRELIMINARY INVESTIGATIONS IN CRIMINAL CASES. BY GEORGE BOLTON, CROWN SOLICITOR FOR THE COUNTY TIPPERARY. DUBLIN: HODGES, FIGGIS, AND CO., GRAFTON STREET. 1887. INDEX, Ballina, Inquest at Ballyragget, Inquest at Bawnogue, Murder at Belmullet, Inquest at Burke, Thomas Henry, Esq., Murder of ... Byrne, Gerald, Solicitor, Letter of Carrickshock, Note as to Cavendish, Lord Frederick, Murder of ... Clonbur, Murder at ... Concannon, Henry, Solicitor, Letter of ... Criminal Investigations, Observations as to Daly, P. J. B., Solicitor, Letter of Field, Denis J., Attack on Gibbons, Thomas, Murder of ... Harrington v. Constables Huddy, Joseph and John, Murders of ... Investigations, Preliminary ... Invincibles, Prosecution of Joyce, John, and others, Murders of Kavanagh, Sergeant, Murder of PAGE. Kenny, John, Murder of 17 Leinster Bar, Testimonial of 51 Letterfrack, Murder at 32 Listowel, Enquiry at ... 29 Lord Lieutenant—His Letter 5° Lough Mask, Murders at 40 Lyden, John and Martin Murders of 31 M'Cune, William, Solicitor, Letter of 54 Maamtrasna, Murders at 33 Miscellaneous 44 Parnell, Mr., Statement of 5 Phoenix Park, Murders in 5 Philipstown, Inquest at 27 Poole, Joseph, Trial of 17 Preliminary Investigations 44 Spencer, Earl, Letter of 5° Tipperary Solicitors, Testimonial of 52 Walsh, James J., Solicitor, Letter of 55 DISCOVEKY AND CONVICTION INVINCIBLES.
    [Show full text]
  • University of California
    UC Riverside UC Riverside Electronic Theses and Dissertations Title The Transatlantic Paddy: The Making of a Transnational Irish Identity in Nineteenth-Century America Permalink https://escholarship.org/uc/item/0x4968kg Author McGuire, Kathleen Diane Publication Date 2009 Peer reviewed|Thesis/dissertation eScholarship.org Powered by the California Digital Library University of California UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA RIVERSIDE The Transatlantic Paddy: The Making of a Transnational Irish Identity in Nineteenth- Century America A Dissertation submitted in partial satisfaction of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy in History by Kathleen Diane McGuire June 2009 Dissertation Committee: Dr. Rebecca Kugel, Chairperson Dr. Thomas Cogswell Dr. Molly McGarry Copyright by Kathleen Diane McGuire 2009 The Dissertation of Kathleen Diane McGuire is approved: __________________________________________ __________________________________________ __________________________________________ Committee Chairperson University of California, Riverside Acknowledgements Just as it takes a village to raise a child, so too does it take a village to complete a dissertation. Certainly this dissertation could not have been completed without the help of my own village in the UC Riverside History Department. As peers, councilors, guides and friends, the following people have brightened my journey through graduate school: Scott Kistler, Michael Drake, Moises Medina, Omar Ronquillo, Brendan Lindsay, Tim Russell, Jon Ille, Liz Von Essen, Mike Cox, Karen Wilson, Tim Watson, Owen Jones, John Bawden, and Cathy Nista. Additionally, Anne Longanbach and Vanessa Wilkie provided unwavering support, crucial advice, and plenty of laughter during our “ABD Ladies Lunches”. Without their friendship and encouragement, I would never have survived this process. And of course, the magnificent staff in the History Department at UC Riverside, Susan Komura, Deisy Escobado, Connie Young, Rosie Mamaril, and Christina Cuellar, all provided incredible support throughout my entire time at graduate school.
    [Show full text]
  • Cardiff School of Social Sciences Paper
    Cardiff School of Social Sciences WWW OOO Paper 124: RRR KKK III NNN Narrating a National Space GGG PPP AAA PPP EEE RRR SSS EEE RRR III EEE SSS WWW OOO RRR KKK III NNN Kate Moles GGG PPP Wales Institute for Social and Economic AAA PPP Research, Data and Methods (WISERD) EEE RRR ISBN 978-1-904815-86-0 SSS EE RRR III EEE www.cardiff.ac.uk/socsi SSS Abstract Recent approaches to landscape and identity have attended to the movement of people in both space and time as a means through which landscapes are personalised and identities created. This has facilitated a move away from a perspective that emphasises fixity and rootedness in the creation of identity, belonging and place and moves towards an approach informed by a focus on narrative and place. This paper develops the intersection of narrative, place and identity in relation to a ‘national space’. Drawing on an ethnography of a park in Dublin, ideas of national identity and space, with particular reference to cultural and material artefacts, are explored. This relationship is discussed through recourse to two important events in the park and the things they have left behind in the landscape. Key Words: Landscape, identity, national space, material and cultural artefacts 2 Introduction The abstract concept of the nation informs the way we approach ideas of identity, place and belonging, but it is more difficult to understand what this idea of nation means ‘on the ground’, to people who live their day to day lives supposedly in this nation, who make sense of what this means and negotiate and construct this meaning.
    [Show full text]