Letter from Sr. Francis of St. Mary's Convent, Castledermot, County Kildare, to Eoghan Ó Tuairisc, thanking him for his work on the mock Irish orals, and asking if he would like to teach classes in Irish and French at the school for the third term as a su
Manuscript
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Letter from Joan [ ], The Irish Press to Eoghan Ó Tuairisc thanking him for his fine review.
Letter from Jo h-umhal to Fr. [ ] passing on £5 for Connradh, praising the good work of the organisation and speaking of the importance of printing Irish language books [in Irish].
Letter from JJ Touhey, 15 North Frederick St., Dublin to Stephen Barrett thanking him for the Oireachtas tickets. He goes on to describe a meeting, and discusses the unsuitability of the teacher and secretary in their branch, complaining "we have a duffer who neither understands the English nor the Irish he uses, although he is intelligent enough". Ends with "Excuse my long rigmarole. Joined by my better half in warmest regards and renewed thanks".
Letter from J.J. MacSweeney, 6 Molesworth St., Dublin, Secretary of the Society for the Preservation of the Irish Language, to Mr. Barrett forwarding a report for 1886 as requested.
Letter from J.J. MacSweeney, 6 Molesworth St., Dublin, Secretary of the Society for the Preservation of the Irish Language, to Mr. Barrett stating that Rev. Close had received his subscription and that he would send on an associate's card.
Membership card for S.J. Barrett for the Society for the Preservation of the Irish Language, signed by J.J. MacSweeney.
MS letter from Quinn, attorney at law, New York, giving an account how Quinn's working office in Belfast was raided by the 'Specials' - "The orangemen invaded our office at the Great Northern Railway and drove all 'papists' out. Reference is made to the 'Specials' that "massacred the McMahon family". "Times were tough in Belfast then too but the Catholics did not fight back."
Letter from Dudgeon, Belfast, to Boyle, responding to Boyle's letter of 30 Mar 1981, and explaining his reasons for parting company with Boyle and Francis Keenan as legal representatives for Dudgeon's case when being heard at the European Court of Human Rights in Strasbourg. "I don't doubt you were personally grieved and annoyed by my decision to go it alone last July", thanking Boyle for his work to date and explaining his future case argument. Also, Dudgeon cites a strained and difficult working relationship with Keenan as another factor.
Letter from Jeanne Marie Woulfe of the Talbot Press, Dublin, asking if they can include his poem "The Dead Music" in an anthology of Modern Irish Poetry they are putting together.