Correspondence regarding the E.E.C. Social fund; progress of the project; A proposal for a programme of co-operation between Muintir na Tíre and Combat Poverty committee for a research action project in community development to be carried out in the northwest Clare area; E.E.C. Information seminar.
Correspondence regarding the E.E.C. Social fund; progress of the project; interim ‘Submission to the Minister of the Gaeltacht, Mr Tom O’Donnell on the organisation of the functions of government at sub-national levels’.
Correspondence, memorandums and reports from Tomás Roseingrave to individuals, the National Executive and community development officers; includes Economic and social Committee Study Group on Telecommunications Memorandum on main points of discussion as recorded by the Rapporteur Tomás Roseingrave; Development Sub-Committee minutes and work programme; Memorandum re the contract and the social fund; Social Service Guide by Tomás Roseingrave; staff meeting minutes.
Correspondence regarding the E.E.C. Social fund; report on meeting of the officers of the European Social Fund on 21/09/1976; R.T.E. radio scripts; Combat Poverty regarding the proposed co-operation for a research action project.
Black and white photograph used to illustrate an article by Richard Greenough in the Landmark dated February 1981. The article is entitled "Why half the children who go to school are not educated". The photograph depicts villagers near Dakar listen to interviews they have just recorded. This UNESCO aided radio network in Senegal helps improve life in the country by providing for a forum for peasants' suggestions and complaints. Such methods are needed when formal education ends too early in a child's life.
File with letter to Carolyn Swift thanking her for her support to the Dalkey School project to create a non-denominational school in the Educate Together model. Newsletters of the project also included.
A compendium of family history on the Dalys of Castle Daly, completed by Dermot Peter Macro Daly, including notes on the general history of the family, as well as copies of letters and diaries from various members of the family in the nineteenth century. Includes notes on the Daly’s Grove Plantation, Jamaica.
Two legal documents relating to the Daly family of Dunsandle. Legal copy of Rental of certain estates of James Daly in the County of Galway, giving the denomination, acreage, tenants names and observations of the leases (3 Aug 1837). Also, copy of a valuation for Probate of the Household furniture, silver plate, horses, carriages, harnesses, implements, machinery etc. made at Dunsandle, County Galway for the executors of the late William Daly. It gives valuations of items by room (7 Jan 1911).
LE13 is a collection of solicitors' papers relating to the estates of the Daly family of Dunsandle, near Loughrea, Co Galway, and was acquired by the James Hardiman Library, NUI, Galway, in 1998. The collection is in two parts, the first part containing original deeds and the second part made up of legal and financial papers mainly relating to death duties.
The papers of a firm of solicitors', who by 1950, were known as Darley, Orpen and McGillycuddy and relating to the acquisition and settlement of some of the Daly of Dunsandle estates in the 19th and 20th centuries and to the payment of estate duties. The collection contains approximately 230 items, comprised of deeds, copy and draft legal documents, letters, Inland Revenue forms, schedules, accounts and manuscript notes.
The provenance of this collection of papers can be traced through a firm of solicitors, situated in Kildare Street, Dublin, in the 19th and 20th centuries. Many of the papers were generated in the firm's office others accumulated there. This firm of solicitors was known by a number of different names but each was a continuation of the original firm. The following list has been compiled from the papers themselves and from Thom's Directory. The firm was located at 8 Kildare St, Dublin until 1887 , when it moved to 31 Kildare St and from 1924 the address was 30 and 31 Kildare St.
R Meade and Son 1854
Meade and Colles 1862-1892
Meade and Richardson 1893-1895
Richardson and Synnott 1896-1931
Darley, Orpen and Synnott 1924-1935
Darley, Orpen and McGillycuddy 1936-1951
The collection had been divided into two parts before its acquisition by NUI, Galway. The first part was made up of fifty deeds in chronological order and the second part contained loose legal papers, mainly relating to the payment of death duties. In this descriptive list the fifty deeds have been left as a separate entity (A) with some minor alterations in their arrangement. A chronological arrangement has been imposed on the second part of the collection (B), as no original order could be perceived. These legal papers have been divided into a number of sections according to their subject matter (1, 2, 3, etc). The last section has been further subdivided (15.1, 15.2, 15.3 etc).