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      <titlestmt>
        <titleproper encodinganalog="title">Press Cuttings</titleproper>
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        <publisher encodinganalog="publisher">Special Collections and Archives Department</publisher>
        <address>
          <addressline>GL0-051, Glucksman Library, University of Limerick</addressline>
          <addressline>Limerick</addressline>
          <addressline>V94 DPY6</addressline>
          <addressline>Telephone: +353-61-202690</addressline>
          <addressline>Fax: +353-61-213415</addressline>
          <addressline>Email: specoll@ul.ie</addressline>
          <addressline>https://specialcollections.ul.ie/</addressline>
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        <date normal="2025-03-13" encodinganalog="date">2025-03-13</date>
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        <corpname>Special Collections and Archives Department</corpname>
        <address>
          <addressline>GL0-051, Glucksman Library, University of Limerick</addressline>
          <addressline>Limerick</addressline>
          <addressline>V94 DPY6</addressline>
          <addressline>Telephone: +353-61-202690</addressline>
          <addressline>Fax: +353-61-213415</addressline>
          <addressline>Email: specoll@ul.ie</addressline>
          <addressline>https://specialcollections.ul.ie/</addressline>
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        <language langcode="eng">English</language>
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        <famname id="atom_109927_actor">O'Mara family of Strand House, Limerick</famname>
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      <note>
        <p>The history of the O’Mara family of Strand house and O’Mara’s Bacon Company go hand in hand.  The factory was founded in 1839 by James O’Meara (1817-1899), who originated from the village of Toomevaara in county Tipperary.  Having worked for some years in the woollen mills in Clonmel, he got a job as a clerk with Matterson’s Bacon Factory in Limerick and in 1839 founded O’Mara’s Bacon Company in his house on Mungret Street.  It is said that he dropped the ‘e’ from his surname as he felt that O’Meara was too long for commercial purposes.  James initially sold for Matterson’s but soon began to cure his own bacon in the basement of his house.  As his business grew, he acquired dedicated premises for the purpose near the top of Roche’s Street.<lb/><lb/>In 1841, James O’Mara married Honora Fowley (d. 1878), who worked in the bacon business alongside her husband.  A devoted nationalist, James was one of the early supporters of Isaac Butt’s Home Rule movement.  He was High Sheriff of Limerick City in 1887, and acted as Town Councillor on Limerick Corporation at least from 1888 to 1898.<lb/><lb/>James and Honora O’Mara had 13 children, of whom the two eldest surviving sons, Stephen O’Mara (1844-1926) and John (Jack) O’Mara (1856-1919) were instrumental in building up the O’Mara’s Bacon Factory into a great success.   The youngest son, Joseph (Joe) O’Mara (1864-1927) became a celebrated opera singer.<lb/><lb/>When James O’Mara retired from business his son John (Jack) O’Mara became manager of the O’Mara Bacon Factory.  In the late 1880s, Jack was invited to Russia by Tsar Alexander III to provide instruction on bacon curing.  He stayed in St Petersburg to supervise the construction of a bacon factory.  In 1891, his father bought the rights of the Russian Bacon Company and the family imported bacon from Russia into London until 1903.  James (Jim) O’Mara (1858-1893) acted as agent for O’Mara’s in London until his untimely death from heart disease.  His nephew James O’Mara (1873-1948), son of Stephen O’Mara Senior (1844-1926), took over the agency and held it until 1914.<lb/><lb/>When John (Jack) O’Mara died in 1919, his younger brother Stephen O’Mara (1844-1926) became Managing Director of O’Mara Limited and remained in that capacity until 1923.  Having entered into the family business at the age of fifteen, his great business acumen established O’Mara’s Bacon Factory as one of the most prominent commercial enterprises in Limerick city.  He also purchased a bacon factory in Palmerston, Ontario, Canada, which was managed by his son Joseph (Joe) O’Mara (1878-1950) until the business was wound up in the 1940s.<lb/><lb/>Like his father, Stephen O’Mara was a strong supporter of Isaac Butt’s Home Rule movement and a member of the committee which secured Butt’s election for Limerick city in 1871.  He later developed a close association with Charles Stewart Parnell and was elected Member of Parliament for Upper Ossory in Kilkenny South for the Irish Parliamentary Party in February 1886.  When the Irish National League split from Irish Parliamentary Party in December 1890, O’Mara took the Parnellite side.  He continued to act as trustee of the Party funds until 1908, when he resigned from his trusteeship.  Towards the end of his life, his moderate political views became more radicalised under the influence of his sons James (1873-1948) and Stephen Junior (1884-1959).  He had agreed with his son James’s decision to resign from the Irish Parliamentary Party in 1907 in order to join Sinn Fein, and personally supported the party in the 1918 General Election.  Both Stephen and his son James were strong supporters of the 1921 Anglo-Irish Treaty but were on friendly terms with Eamon de Valera who, it is said, spent the night at the O’Mara family home, Strand House, as the Treaty was being signed in London.  In the 1925 election, Stephen O’Mara was elected as Senator to the Free State Seanad.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara was also a prominent figure in local politics.  He became a Town Councillor on Limerick Corporation in the 1880s and was elected Mayor of Limerick in 1885.  He was the first Mayor of Limerick to be elected on a Nationalist ticket.  He also served as High Sheriff of Limerick city in 1888, 1913 and 1914.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara married Ellen Pigott in 1867, and the couple had 12 children of whom the eldest three died tragically of diphtheria in 1872.  From c. 1909 onwards, the family lived at Strand House.  Their third son, Stephen O’Mara Junior, was born on 5 January 1884.  He entered the family business in 1903 when he travelled to Canada to work in the bacon factory established by the O’Mara family in Ottawa.  In 1923, he became Managing Director of O’Mara Limited and created numerous employment opportunities by establishing bacon factories in Claremorris, County Mayo, and Letterkenny, County Donegal, in the 1930s.  The three bacon companies were amalgamated in 1938 and formed into the Bacon Company of Ireland.  Stephen O’Mara Junior remained the company’s chairman until his death in 1959.  In 1987, the Bacon Company of Ireland merged with Hanley of Rooskey and Benesford UK (Castlebar) with assistance from the Industrial Development Agency Ireland (IDA) to form Irish Country Bacon.  Shortly afterwards the old O’Mara factory in Limerick was closed down.  It was subsequently demolished to make way for a multi-storey car park.<lb/><lb/>Throughout his life, Stephen O’Mara Junior played a prominent role in both local and national affairs.  Unlike his father and elder brother James, Stephen was opposed to the Anglo-Irish Treaty but in a conciliatory manner.  He was prominently identified with the Sinn Fein movement after the Easter Rising.  He was one of Eamon de Valera’s strongest supporters and a member of his Fianna Fail Party since its formation in 1926.<lb/><lb/>When George Clancy, Lord Mayor of Limerick, and his predecessor Michael O’Callaghan were murdered by the British military forces in March 1921, Stephen decided to stand for election and became Mayor.  He was re-elected in 1922 and in 1923 but resigned before the expiration of his term of office.<lb/><lb/>In 1921, Stephen O’Mara Junior was selected to go to America as Special Envoy appointed by Dáil Éireann to the United States to oversee one of the country’s biggest fundraising drives to finance the first Dáil and was made Trustee of the funds.  The funds-drive was terminated following the signing of the Anglo-Irish Treaty.  Considering himself as the exchequer to the Irish Free State, O’Mara refused to hand over the collected funds to the pro-Treaty administration which resulted in his imprisonment in 1922-1923.  He had also been imprisoned for seven days in 1921 for refusing to pay a fine of £10 for non-compliance with a military summons.<lb/><lb/>The bulk of the money collected during the Bond Drive was left in various banks in New York and remained untouched for a number of years.  In 1927, following legal action between the Irish Government and Eamon de Valera, a court in New York ordered that money outstanding to bond holders must be paid back.  Having anticipated such a ruling, de Valera’s legal team invited bond holders to sign over their bonds to de Valera, for which they were paid 58 cents to the dollar.  The monies so accumulated were used to launch the national daily newspaper *The Irish Press*.  Stephen O’Mara served on the paper’s Board of Directors until his resignation in 1935.<lb/><lb/>In 1932, Stephen O’Mara was once again sent to America on a mission involving the various consular and diplomatic offices maintained in the country by the Irish Government.  Two years later, he was appointed a member of the Commission on Vocational Organisation, on which he served until 1943.  In 1959, he was created a member of the Council of State following de Valera’s inauguration as President of Ireland.  Stephen O’Mara died less than two months after his appointment, on 11 November 1959.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara Junior married in 1918 Anne O’Brien, third daughter of Thomas O’Brien of Boru House, and the couple had an adopted son, Peter O’Mara.  Anne’s youngest sister, Kate O’Brien, became one of the most prominent novelists in 20th-century Ireland and a voice of the respectable Irish Roman Catholic middle class.</p>
      </note>
    </bioghist>
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      <p>This sub-series contains press cuttings relating to Kate O'Brien and her works, including her 'Long Distance' newspaper column and other newspaper articles written by her, reviews of her books, articles about Kate O'Brien and notices of her death.</p>
    </scopecontent>
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      <p>The material is arranged into four sub-series by subject matter.</p>
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      <p>Paper documents in good condition.</p>
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      <p>Unrestricted access to all items.</p>
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          <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">'Long Distance' Column</unittitle>
          <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="IE" repositorycode="2135">P40/3/10/2/1</unitid>
          <unitdate normal="1967-01-01/1971-12-31" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1967-1971</unitdate>
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            <language langcode="eng">English</language>
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            <famname id="atom_109943_actor">O'Mara family of Strand House, Limerick</famname>
          </origination>
        </did>
        <bioghist id="md5-be03d29153491160a15961757089b84f" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
          <note>
            <p>The history of the O’Mara family of Strand house and O’Mara’s Bacon Company go hand in hand.  The factory was founded in 1839 by James O’Meara (1817-1899), who originated from the village of Toomevaara in county Tipperary.  Having worked for some years in the woollen mills in Clonmel, he got a job as a clerk with Matterson’s Bacon Factory in Limerick and in 1839 founded O’Mara’s Bacon Company in his house on Mungret Street.  It is said that he dropped the ‘e’ from his surname as he felt that O’Meara was too long for commercial purposes.  James initially sold for Matterson’s but soon began to cure his own bacon in the basement of his house.  As his business grew, he acquired dedicated premises for the purpose near the top of Roche’s Street.<lb/><lb/>In 1841, James O’Mara married Honora Fowley (d. 1878), who worked in the bacon business alongside her husband.  A devoted nationalist, James was one of the early supporters of Isaac Butt’s Home Rule movement.  He was High Sheriff of Limerick City in 1887, and acted as Town Councillor on Limerick Corporation at least from 1888 to 1898.<lb/><lb/>James and Honora O’Mara had 13 children, of whom the two eldest surviving sons, Stephen O’Mara (1844-1926) and John (Jack) O’Mara (1856-1919) were instrumental in building up the O’Mara’s Bacon Factory into a great success.   The youngest son, Joseph (Joe) O’Mara (1864-1927) became a celebrated opera singer.<lb/><lb/>When James O’Mara retired from business his son John (Jack) O’Mara became manager of the O’Mara Bacon Factory.  In the late 1880s, Jack was invited to Russia by Tsar Alexander III to provide instruction on bacon curing.  He stayed in St Petersburg to supervise the construction of a bacon factory.  In 1891, his father bought the rights of the Russian Bacon Company and the family imported bacon from Russia into London until 1903.  James (Jim) O’Mara (1858-1893) acted as agent for O’Mara’s in London until his untimely death from heart disease.  His nephew James O’Mara (1873-1948), son of Stephen O’Mara Senior (1844-1926), took over the agency and held it until 1914.<lb/><lb/>When John (Jack) O’Mara died in 1919, his younger brother Stephen O’Mara (1844-1926) became Managing Director of O’Mara Limited and remained in that capacity until 1923.  Having entered into the family business at the age of fifteen, his great business acumen established O’Mara’s Bacon Factory as one of the most prominent commercial enterprises in Limerick city.  He also purchased a bacon factory in Palmerston, Ontario, Canada, which was managed by his son Joseph (Joe) O’Mara (1878-1950) until the business was wound up in the 1940s.<lb/><lb/>Like his father, Stephen O’Mara was a strong supporter of Isaac Butt’s Home Rule movement and a member of the committee which secured Butt’s election for Limerick city in 1871.  He later developed a close association with Charles Stewart Parnell and was elected Member of Parliament for Upper Ossory in Kilkenny South for the Irish Parliamentary Party in February 1886.  When the Irish National League split from Irish Parliamentary Party in December 1890, O’Mara took the Parnellite side.  He continued to act as trustee of the Party funds until 1908, when he resigned from his trusteeship.  Towards the end of his life, his moderate political views became more radicalised under the influence of his sons James (1873-1948) and Stephen Junior (1884-1959).  He had agreed with his son James’s decision to resign from the Irish Parliamentary Party in 1907 in order to join Sinn Fein, and personally supported the party in the 1918 General Election.  Both Stephen and his son James were strong supporters of the 1921 Anglo-Irish Treaty but were on friendly terms with Eamon de Valera who, it is said, spent the night at the O’Mara family home, Strand House, as the Treaty was being signed in London.  In the 1925 election, Stephen O’Mara was elected as Senator to the Free State Seanad.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara was also a prominent figure in local politics.  He became a Town Councillor on Limerick Corporation in the 1880s and was elected Mayor of Limerick in 1885.  He was the first Mayor of Limerick to be elected on a Nationalist ticket.  He also served as High Sheriff of Limerick city in 1888, 1913 and 1914.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara married Ellen Pigott in 1867, and the couple had 12 children of whom the eldest three died tragically of diphtheria in 1872.  From c. 1909 onwards, the family lived at Strand House.  Their third son, Stephen O’Mara Junior, was born on 5 January 1884.  He entered the family business in 1903 when he travelled to Canada to work in the bacon factory established by the O’Mara family in Ottawa.  In 1923, he became Managing Director of O’Mara Limited and created numerous employment opportunities by establishing bacon factories in Claremorris, County Mayo, and Letterkenny, County Donegal, in the 1930s.  The three bacon companies were amalgamated in 1938 and formed into the Bacon Company of Ireland.  Stephen O’Mara Junior remained the company’s chairman until his death in 1959.  In 1987, the Bacon Company of Ireland merged with Hanley of Rooskey and Benesford UK (Castlebar) with assistance from the Industrial Development Agency Ireland (IDA) to form Irish Country Bacon.  Shortly afterwards the old O’Mara factory in Limerick was closed down.  It was subsequently demolished to make way for a multi-storey car park.<lb/><lb/>Throughout his life, Stephen O’Mara Junior played a prominent role in both local and national affairs.  Unlike his father and elder brother James, Stephen was opposed to the Anglo-Irish Treaty but in a conciliatory manner.  He was prominently identified with the Sinn Fein movement after the Easter Rising.  He was one of Eamon de Valera’s strongest supporters and a member of his Fianna Fail Party since its formation in 1926.<lb/><lb/>When George Clancy, Lord Mayor of Limerick, and his predecessor Michael O’Callaghan were murdered by the British military forces in March 1921, Stephen decided to stand for election and became Mayor.  He was re-elected in 1922 and in 1923 but resigned before the expiration of his term of office.<lb/><lb/>In 1921, Stephen O’Mara Junior was selected to go to America as Special Envoy appointed by Dáil Éireann to the United States to oversee one of the country’s biggest fundraising drives to finance the first Dáil and was made Trustee of the funds.  The funds-drive was terminated following the signing of the Anglo-Irish Treaty.  Considering himself as the exchequer to the Irish Free State, O’Mara refused to hand over the collected funds to the pro-Treaty administration which resulted in his imprisonment in 1922-1923.  He had also been imprisoned for seven days in 1921 for refusing to pay a fine of £10 for non-compliance with a military summons.<lb/><lb/>The bulk of the money collected during the Bond Drive was left in various banks in New York and remained untouched for a number of years.  In 1927, following legal action between the Irish Government and Eamon de Valera, a court in New York ordered that money outstanding to bond holders must be paid back.  Having anticipated such a ruling, de Valera’s legal team invited bond holders to sign over their bonds to de Valera, for which they were paid 58 cents to the dollar.  The monies so accumulated were used to launch the national daily newspaper *The Irish Press*.  Stephen O’Mara served on the paper’s Board of Directors until his resignation in 1935.<lb/><lb/>In 1932, Stephen O’Mara was once again sent to America on a mission involving the various consular and diplomatic offices maintained in the country by the Irish Government.  Two years later, he was appointed a member of the Commission on Vocational Organisation, on which he served until 1943.  In 1959, he was created a member of the Council of State following de Valera’s inauguration as President of Ireland.  Stephen O’Mara died less than two months after his appointment, on 11 November 1959.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara Junior married in 1918 Anne O’Brien, third daughter of Thomas O’Brien of Boru House, and the couple had an adopted son, Peter O’Mara.  Anne’s youngest sister, Kate O’Brien, became one of the most prominent novelists in 20th-century Ireland and a voice of the respectable Irish Roman Catholic middle class.</p>
          </note>
        </bioghist>
        <odd type="publicationStatus">
          <p>Published</p>
        </odd>
        <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
          <p>This sub-series contains press cuttings of Kate O'Brien's 'Long Distance' column published in the *Irish Times*.</p>
        </scopecontent>
        <arrangement encodinganalog="3.3.4">
          <p>The material is arranged chronologically by date of publication.</p>
        </arrangement>
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          <p>Paper documents in good condition.</p>
        </phystech>
        <accessrestrict encodinganalog="3.4.1">
          <p>Unrestricted access to all items.</p>
        </accessrestrict>
        <c level="file">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Untitled</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="IE" repositorycode="2135">P40/3/10/2/1/1</unitid>
            <unitid type="alternative" label="Original number">P40/838 (1)-(2)</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1967-12-04/1967-12-04" encodinganalog="3.1.3">4 December 1967</unitdate>
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        2 items    </physdesc>
            <langmaterial encodinganalog="3.4.3">
              <language langcode="eng">English</language>
            </langmaterial>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <famname id="atom_124413_actor">O'Mara family of Strand House, Limerick</famname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-be03d29153491160a15961757089b84f" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>The history of the O’Mara family of Strand house and O’Mara’s Bacon Company go hand in hand.  The factory was founded in 1839 by James O’Meara (1817-1899), who originated from the village of Toomevaara in county Tipperary.  Having worked for some years in the woollen mills in Clonmel, he got a job as a clerk with Matterson’s Bacon Factory in Limerick and in 1839 founded O’Mara’s Bacon Company in his house on Mungret Street.  It is said that he dropped the ‘e’ from his surname as he felt that O’Meara was too long for commercial purposes.  James initially sold for Matterson’s but soon began to cure his own bacon in the basement of his house.  As his business grew, he acquired dedicated premises for the purpose near the top of Roche’s Street.<lb/><lb/>In 1841, James O’Mara married Honora Fowley (d. 1878), who worked in the bacon business alongside her husband.  A devoted nationalist, James was one of the early supporters of Isaac Butt’s Home Rule movement.  He was High Sheriff of Limerick City in 1887, and acted as Town Councillor on Limerick Corporation at least from 1888 to 1898.<lb/><lb/>James and Honora O’Mara had 13 children, of whom the two eldest surviving sons, Stephen O’Mara (1844-1926) and John (Jack) O’Mara (1856-1919) were instrumental in building up the O’Mara’s Bacon Factory into a great success.   The youngest son, Joseph (Joe) O’Mara (1864-1927) became a celebrated opera singer.<lb/><lb/>When James O’Mara retired from business his son John (Jack) O’Mara became manager of the O’Mara Bacon Factory.  In the late 1880s, Jack was invited to Russia by Tsar Alexander III to provide instruction on bacon curing.  He stayed in St Petersburg to supervise the construction of a bacon factory.  In 1891, his father bought the rights of the Russian Bacon Company and the family imported bacon from Russia into London until 1903.  James (Jim) O’Mara (1858-1893) acted as agent for O’Mara’s in London until his untimely death from heart disease.  His nephew James O’Mara (1873-1948), son of Stephen O’Mara Senior (1844-1926), took over the agency and held it until 1914.<lb/><lb/>When John (Jack) O’Mara died in 1919, his younger brother Stephen O’Mara (1844-1926) became Managing Director of O’Mara Limited and remained in that capacity until 1923.  Having entered into the family business at the age of fifteen, his great business acumen established O’Mara’s Bacon Factory as one of the most prominent commercial enterprises in Limerick city.  He also purchased a bacon factory in Palmerston, Ontario, Canada, which was managed by his son Joseph (Joe) O’Mara (1878-1950) until the business was wound up in the 1940s.<lb/><lb/>Like his father, Stephen O’Mara was a strong supporter of Isaac Butt’s Home Rule movement and a member of the committee which secured Butt’s election for Limerick city in 1871.  He later developed a close association with Charles Stewart Parnell and was elected Member of Parliament for Upper Ossory in Kilkenny South for the Irish Parliamentary Party in February 1886.  When the Irish National League split from Irish Parliamentary Party in December 1890, O’Mara took the Parnellite side.  He continued to act as trustee of the Party funds until 1908, when he resigned from his trusteeship.  Towards the end of his life, his moderate political views became more radicalised under the influence of his sons James (1873-1948) and Stephen Junior (1884-1959).  He had agreed with his son James’s decision to resign from the Irish Parliamentary Party in 1907 in order to join Sinn Fein, and personally supported the party in the 1918 General Election.  Both Stephen and his son James were strong supporters of the 1921 Anglo-Irish Treaty but were on friendly terms with Eamon de Valera who, it is said, spent the night at the O’Mara family home, Strand House, as the Treaty was being signed in London.  In the 1925 election, Stephen O’Mara was elected as Senator to the Free State Seanad.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara was also a prominent figure in local politics.  He became a Town Councillor on Limerick Corporation in the 1880s and was elected Mayor of Limerick in 1885.  He was the first Mayor of Limerick to be elected on a Nationalist ticket.  He also served as High Sheriff of Limerick city in 1888, 1913 and 1914.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara married Ellen Pigott in 1867, and the couple had 12 children of whom the eldest three died tragically of diphtheria in 1872.  From c. 1909 onwards, the family lived at Strand House.  Their third son, Stephen O’Mara Junior, was born on 5 January 1884.  He entered the family business in 1903 when he travelled to Canada to work in the bacon factory established by the O’Mara family in Ottawa.  In 1923, he became Managing Director of O’Mara Limited and created numerous employment opportunities by establishing bacon factories in Claremorris, County Mayo, and Letterkenny, County Donegal, in the 1930s.  The three bacon companies were amalgamated in 1938 and formed into the Bacon Company of Ireland.  Stephen O’Mara Junior remained the company’s chairman until his death in 1959.  In 1987, the Bacon Company of Ireland merged with Hanley of Rooskey and Benesford UK (Castlebar) with assistance from the Industrial Development Agency Ireland (IDA) to form Irish Country Bacon.  Shortly afterwards the old O’Mara factory in Limerick was closed down.  It was subsequently demolished to make way for a multi-storey car park.<lb/><lb/>Throughout his life, Stephen O’Mara Junior played a prominent role in both local and national affairs.  Unlike his father and elder brother James, Stephen was opposed to the Anglo-Irish Treaty but in a conciliatory manner.  He was prominently identified with the Sinn Fein movement after the Easter Rising.  He was one of Eamon de Valera’s strongest supporters and a member of his Fianna Fail Party since its formation in 1926.<lb/><lb/>When George Clancy, Lord Mayor of Limerick, and his predecessor Michael O’Callaghan were murdered by the British military forces in March 1921, Stephen decided to stand for election and became Mayor.  He was re-elected in 1922 and in 1923 but resigned before the expiration of his term of office.<lb/><lb/>In 1921, Stephen O’Mara Junior was selected to go to America as Special Envoy appointed by Dáil Éireann to the United States to oversee one of the country’s biggest fundraising drives to finance the first Dáil and was made Trustee of the funds.  The funds-drive was terminated following the signing of the Anglo-Irish Treaty.  Considering himself as the exchequer to the Irish Free State, O’Mara refused to hand over the collected funds to the pro-Treaty administration which resulted in his imprisonment in 1922-1923.  He had also been imprisoned for seven days in 1921 for refusing to pay a fine of £10 for non-compliance with a military summons.<lb/><lb/>The bulk of the money collected during the Bond Drive was left in various banks in New York and remained untouched for a number of years.  In 1927, following legal action between the Irish Government and Eamon de Valera, a court in New York ordered that money outstanding to bond holders must be paid back.  Having anticipated such a ruling, de Valera’s legal team invited bond holders to sign over their bonds to de Valera, for which they were paid 58 cents to the dollar.  The monies so accumulated were used to launch the national daily newspaper *The Irish Press*.  Stephen O’Mara served on the paper’s Board of Directors until his resignation in 1935.<lb/><lb/>In 1932, Stephen O’Mara was once again sent to America on a mission involving the various consular and diplomatic offices maintained in the country by the Irish Government.  Two years later, he was appointed a member of the Commission on Vocational Organisation, on which he served until 1943.  In 1959, he was created a member of the Council of State following de Valera’s inauguration as President of Ireland.  Stephen O’Mara died less than two months after his appointment, on 11 November 1959.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara Junior married in 1918 Anne O’Brien, third daughter of Thomas O’Brien of Boru House, and the couple had an adopted son, Peter O’Mara.  Anne’s youngest sister, Kate O’Brien, became one of the most prominent novelists in 20th-century Ireland and a voice of the respectable Irish Roman Catholic middle class.</p>
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            <p>Untitled ‘Long Distance’ column by Kate O’Brien, published in the *Irish Times* on 4 December 1967.</p>
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              <p>The history of the O’Mara family of Strand house and O’Mara’s Bacon Company go hand in hand.  The factory was founded in 1839 by James O’Meara (1817-1899), who originated from the village of Toomevaara in county Tipperary.  Having worked for some years in the woollen mills in Clonmel, he got a job as a clerk with Matterson’s Bacon Factory in Limerick and in 1839 founded O’Mara’s Bacon Company in his house on Mungret Street.  It is said that he dropped the ‘e’ from his surname as he felt that O’Meara was too long for commercial purposes.  James initially sold for Matterson’s but soon began to cure his own bacon in the basement of his house.  As his business grew, he acquired dedicated premises for the purpose near the top of Roche’s Street.<lb/><lb/>In 1841, James O’Mara married Honora Fowley (d. 1878), who worked in the bacon business alongside her husband.  A devoted nationalist, James was one of the early supporters of Isaac Butt’s Home Rule movement.  He was High Sheriff of Limerick City in 1887, and acted as Town Councillor on Limerick Corporation at least from 1888 to 1898.<lb/><lb/>James and Honora O’Mara had 13 children, of whom the two eldest surviving sons, Stephen O’Mara (1844-1926) and John (Jack) O’Mara (1856-1919) were instrumental in building up the O’Mara’s Bacon Factory into a great success.   The youngest son, Joseph (Joe) O’Mara (1864-1927) became a celebrated opera singer.<lb/><lb/>When James O’Mara retired from business his son John (Jack) O’Mara became manager of the O’Mara Bacon Factory.  In the late 1880s, Jack was invited to Russia by Tsar Alexander III to provide instruction on bacon curing.  He stayed in St Petersburg to supervise the construction of a bacon factory.  In 1891, his father bought the rights of the Russian Bacon Company and the family imported bacon from Russia into London until 1903.  James (Jim) O’Mara (1858-1893) acted as agent for O’Mara’s in London until his untimely death from heart disease.  His nephew James O’Mara (1873-1948), son of Stephen O’Mara Senior (1844-1926), took over the agency and held it until 1914.<lb/><lb/>When John (Jack) O’Mara died in 1919, his younger brother Stephen O’Mara (1844-1926) became Managing Director of O’Mara Limited and remained in that capacity until 1923.  Having entered into the family business at the age of fifteen, his great business acumen established O’Mara’s Bacon Factory as one of the most prominent commercial enterprises in Limerick city.  He also purchased a bacon factory in Palmerston, Ontario, Canada, which was managed by his son Joseph (Joe) O’Mara (1878-1950) until the business was wound up in the 1940s.<lb/><lb/>Like his father, Stephen O’Mara was a strong supporter of Isaac Butt’s Home Rule movement and a member of the committee which secured Butt’s election for Limerick city in 1871.  He later developed a close association with Charles Stewart Parnell and was elected Member of Parliament for Upper Ossory in Kilkenny South for the Irish Parliamentary Party in February 1886.  When the Irish National League split from Irish Parliamentary Party in December 1890, O’Mara took the Parnellite side.  He continued to act as trustee of the Party funds until 1908, when he resigned from his trusteeship.  Towards the end of his life, his moderate political views became more radicalised under the influence of his sons James (1873-1948) and Stephen Junior (1884-1959).  He had agreed with his son James’s decision to resign from the Irish Parliamentary Party in 1907 in order to join Sinn Fein, and personally supported the party in the 1918 General Election.  Both Stephen and his son James were strong supporters of the 1921 Anglo-Irish Treaty but were on friendly terms with Eamon de Valera who, it is said, spent the night at the O’Mara family home, Strand House, as the Treaty was being signed in London.  In the 1925 election, Stephen O’Mara was elected as Senator to the Free State Seanad.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara was also a prominent figure in local politics.  He became a Town Councillor on Limerick Corporation in the 1880s and was elected Mayor of Limerick in 1885.  He was the first Mayor of Limerick to be elected on a Nationalist ticket.  He also served as High Sheriff of Limerick city in 1888, 1913 and 1914.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara married Ellen Pigott in 1867, and the couple had 12 children of whom the eldest three died tragically of diphtheria in 1872.  From c. 1909 onwards, the family lived at Strand House.  Their third son, Stephen O’Mara Junior, was born on 5 January 1884.  He entered the family business in 1903 when he travelled to Canada to work in the bacon factory established by the O’Mara family in Ottawa.  In 1923, he became Managing Director of O’Mara Limited and created numerous employment opportunities by establishing bacon factories in Claremorris, County Mayo, and Letterkenny, County Donegal, in the 1930s.  The three bacon companies were amalgamated in 1938 and formed into the Bacon Company of Ireland.  Stephen O’Mara Junior remained the company’s chairman until his death in 1959.  In 1987, the Bacon Company of Ireland merged with Hanley of Rooskey and Benesford UK (Castlebar) with assistance from the Industrial Development Agency Ireland (IDA) to form Irish Country Bacon.  Shortly afterwards the old O’Mara factory in Limerick was closed down.  It was subsequently demolished to make way for a multi-storey car park.<lb/><lb/>Throughout his life, Stephen O’Mara Junior played a prominent role in both local and national affairs.  Unlike his father and elder brother James, Stephen was opposed to the Anglo-Irish Treaty but in a conciliatory manner.  He was prominently identified with the Sinn Fein movement after the Easter Rising.  He was one of Eamon de Valera’s strongest supporters and a member of his Fianna Fail Party since its formation in 1926.<lb/><lb/>When George Clancy, Lord Mayor of Limerick, and his predecessor Michael O’Callaghan were murdered by the British military forces in March 1921, Stephen decided to stand for election and became Mayor.  He was re-elected in 1922 and in 1923 but resigned before the expiration of his term of office.<lb/><lb/>In 1921, Stephen O’Mara Junior was selected to go to America as Special Envoy appointed by Dáil Éireann to the United States to oversee one of the country’s biggest fundraising drives to finance the first Dáil and was made Trustee of the funds.  The funds-drive was terminated following the signing of the Anglo-Irish Treaty.  Considering himself as the exchequer to the Irish Free State, O’Mara refused to hand over the collected funds to the pro-Treaty administration which resulted in his imprisonment in 1922-1923.  He had also been imprisoned for seven days in 1921 for refusing to pay a fine of £10 for non-compliance with a military summons.<lb/><lb/>The bulk of the money collected during the Bond Drive was left in various banks in New York and remained untouched for a number of years.  In 1927, following legal action between the Irish Government and Eamon de Valera, a court in New York ordered that money outstanding to bond holders must be paid back.  Having anticipated such a ruling, de Valera’s legal team invited bond holders to sign over their bonds to de Valera, for which they were paid 58 cents to the dollar.  The monies so accumulated were used to launch the national daily newspaper *The Irish Press*.  Stephen O’Mara served on the paper’s Board of Directors until his resignation in 1935.<lb/><lb/>In 1932, Stephen O’Mara was once again sent to America on a mission involving the various consular and diplomatic offices maintained in the country by the Irish Government.  Two years later, he was appointed a member of the Commission on Vocational Organisation, on which he served until 1943.  In 1959, he was created a member of the Council of State following de Valera’s inauguration as President of Ireland.  Stephen O’Mara died less than two months after his appointment, on 11 November 1959.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara Junior married in 1918 Anne O’Brien, third daughter of Thomas O’Brien of Boru House, and the couple had an adopted son, Peter O’Mara.  Anne’s youngest sister, Kate O’Brien, became one of the most prominent novelists in 20th-century Ireland and a voice of the respectable Irish Roman Catholic middle class.</p>
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            <p>Untitled ‘Long Distance’ column by Kate O’Brien, published in the *Irish Times* on 1 January 1968.</p>
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            <note>
              <p>The history of the O’Mara family of Strand house and O’Mara’s Bacon Company go hand in hand.  The factory was founded in 1839 by James O’Meara (1817-1899), who originated from the village of Toomevaara in county Tipperary.  Having worked for some years in the woollen mills in Clonmel, he got a job as a clerk with Matterson’s Bacon Factory in Limerick and in 1839 founded O’Mara’s Bacon Company in his house on Mungret Street.  It is said that he dropped the ‘e’ from his surname as he felt that O’Meara was too long for commercial purposes.  James initially sold for Matterson’s but soon began to cure his own bacon in the basement of his house.  As his business grew, he acquired dedicated premises for the purpose near the top of Roche’s Street.<lb/><lb/>In 1841, James O’Mara married Honora Fowley (d. 1878), who worked in the bacon business alongside her husband.  A devoted nationalist, James was one of the early supporters of Isaac Butt’s Home Rule movement.  He was High Sheriff of Limerick City in 1887, and acted as Town Councillor on Limerick Corporation at least from 1888 to 1898.<lb/><lb/>James and Honora O’Mara had 13 children, of whom the two eldest surviving sons, Stephen O’Mara (1844-1926) and John (Jack) O’Mara (1856-1919) were instrumental in building up the O’Mara’s Bacon Factory into a great success.   The youngest son, Joseph (Joe) O’Mara (1864-1927) became a celebrated opera singer.<lb/><lb/>When James O’Mara retired from business his son John (Jack) O’Mara became manager of the O’Mara Bacon Factory.  In the late 1880s, Jack was invited to Russia by Tsar Alexander III to provide instruction on bacon curing.  He stayed in St Petersburg to supervise the construction of a bacon factory.  In 1891, his father bought the rights of the Russian Bacon Company and the family imported bacon from Russia into London until 1903.  James (Jim) O’Mara (1858-1893) acted as agent for O’Mara’s in London until his untimely death from heart disease.  His nephew James O’Mara (1873-1948), son of Stephen O’Mara Senior (1844-1926), took over the agency and held it until 1914.<lb/><lb/>When John (Jack) O’Mara died in 1919, his younger brother Stephen O’Mara (1844-1926) became Managing Director of O’Mara Limited and remained in that capacity until 1923.  Having entered into the family business at the age of fifteen, his great business acumen established O’Mara’s Bacon Factory as one of the most prominent commercial enterprises in Limerick city.  He also purchased a bacon factory in Palmerston, Ontario, Canada, which was managed by his son Joseph (Joe) O’Mara (1878-1950) until the business was wound up in the 1940s.<lb/><lb/>Like his father, Stephen O’Mara was a strong supporter of Isaac Butt’s Home Rule movement and a member of the committee which secured Butt’s election for Limerick city in 1871.  He later developed a close association with Charles Stewart Parnell and was elected Member of Parliament for Upper Ossory in Kilkenny South for the Irish Parliamentary Party in February 1886.  When the Irish National League split from Irish Parliamentary Party in December 1890, O’Mara took the Parnellite side.  He continued to act as trustee of the Party funds until 1908, when he resigned from his trusteeship.  Towards the end of his life, his moderate political views became more radicalised under the influence of his sons James (1873-1948) and Stephen Junior (1884-1959).  He had agreed with his son James’s decision to resign from the Irish Parliamentary Party in 1907 in order to join Sinn Fein, and personally supported the party in the 1918 General Election.  Both Stephen and his son James were strong supporters of the 1921 Anglo-Irish Treaty but were on friendly terms with Eamon de Valera who, it is said, spent the night at the O’Mara family home, Strand House, as the Treaty was being signed in London.  In the 1925 election, Stephen O’Mara was elected as Senator to the Free State Seanad.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara was also a prominent figure in local politics.  He became a Town Councillor on Limerick Corporation in the 1880s and was elected Mayor of Limerick in 1885.  He was the first Mayor of Limerick to be elected on a Nationalist ticket.  He also served as High Sheriff of Limerick city in 1888, 1913 and 1914.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara married Ellen Pigott in 1867, and the couple had 12 children of whom the eldest three died tragically of diphtheria in 1872.  From c. 1909 onwards, the family lived at Strand House.  Their third son, Stephen O’Mara Junior, was born on 5 January 1884.  He entered the family business in 1903 when he travelled to Canada to work in the bacon factory established by the O’Mara family in Ottawa.  In 1923, he became Managing Director of O’Mara Limited and created numerous employment opportunities by establishing bacon factories in Claremorris, County Mayo, and Letterkenny, County Donegal, in the 1930s.  The three bacon companies were amalgamated in 1938 and formed into the Bacon Company of Ireland.  Stephen O’Mara Junior remained the company’s chairman until his death in 1959.  In 1987, the Bacon Company of Ireland merged with Hanley of Rooskey and Benesford UK (Castlebar) with assistance from the Industrial Development Agency Ireland (IDA) to form Irish Country Bacon.  Shortly afterwards the old O’Mara factory in Limerick was closed down.  It was subsequently demolished to make way for a multi-storey car park.<lb/><lb/>Throughout his life, Stephen O’Mara Junior played a prominent role in both local and national affairs.  Unlike his father and elder brother James, Stephen was opposed to the Anglo-Irish Treaty but in a conciliatory manner.  He was prominently identified with the Sinn Fein movement after the Easter Rising.  He was one of Eamon de Valera’s strongest supporters and a member of his Fianna Fail Party since its formation in 1926.<lb/><lb/>When George Clancy, Lord Mayor of Limerick, and his predecessor Michael O’Callaghan were murdered by the British military forces in March 1921, Stephen decided to stand for election and became Mayor.  He was re-elected in 1922 and in 1923 but resigned before the expiration of his term of office.<lb/><lb/>In 1921, Stephen O’Mara Junior was selected to go to America as Special Envoy appointed by Dáil Éireann to the United States to oversee one of the country’s biggest fundraising drives to finance the first Dáil and was made Trustee of the funds.  The funds-drive was terminated following the signing of the Anglo-Irish Treaty.  Considering himself as the exchequer to the Irish Free State, O’Mara refused to hand over the collected funds to the pro-Treaty administration which resulted in his imprisonment in 1922-1923.  He had also been imprisoned for seven days in 1921 for refusing to pay a fine of £10 for non-compliance with a military summons.<lb/><lb/>The bulk of the money collected during the Bond Drive was left in various banks in New York and remained untouched for a number of years.  In 1927, following legal action between the Irish Government and Eamon de Valera, a court in New York ordered that money outstanding to bond holders must be paid back.  Having anticipated such a ruling, de Valera’s legal team invited bond holders to sign over their bonds to de Valera, for which they were paid 58 cents to the dollar.  The monies so accumulated were used to launch the national daily newspaper *The Irish Press*.  Stephen O’Mara served on the paper’s Board of Directors until his resignation in 1935.<lb/><lb/>In 1932, Stephen O’Mara was once again sent to America on a mission involving the various consular and diplomatic offices maintained in the country by the Irish Government.  Two years later, he was appointed a member of the Commission on Vocational Organisation, on which he served until 1943.  In 1959, he was created a member of the Council of State following de Valera’s inauguration as President of Ireland.  Stephen O’Mara died less than two months after his appointment, on 11 November 1959.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara Junior married in 1918 Anne O’Brien, third daughter of Thomas O’Brien of Boru House, and the couple had an adopted son, Peter O’Mara.  Anne’s youngest sister, Kate O’Brien, became one of the most prominent novelists in 20th-century Ireland and a voice of the respectable Irish Roman Catholic middle class.</p>
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            <note>
              <p>The history of the O’Mara family of Strand house and O’Mara’s Bacon Company go hand in hand.  The factory was founded in 1839 by James O’Meara (1817-1899), who originated from the village of Toomevaara in county Tipperary.  Having worked for some years in the woollen mills in Clonmel, he got a job as a clerk with Matterson’s Bacon Factory in Limerick and in 1839 founded O’Mara’s Bacon Company in his house on Mungret Street.  It is said that he dropped the ‘e’ from his surname as he felt that O’Meara was too long for commercial purposes.  James initially sold for Matterson’s but soon began to cure his own bacon in the basement of his house.  As his business grew, he acquired dedicated premises for the purpose near the top of Roche’s Street.<lb/><lb/>In 1841, James O’Mara married Honora Fowley (d. 1878), who worked in the bacon business alongside her husband.  A devoted nationalist, James was one of the early supporters of Isaac Butt’s Home Rule movement.  He was High Sheriff of Limerick City in 1887, and acted as Town Councillor on Limerick Corporation at least from 1888 to 1898.<lb/><lb/>James and Honora O’Mara had 13 children, of whom the two eldest surviving sons, Stephen O’Mara (1844-1926) and John (Jack) O’Mara (1856-1919) were instrumental in building up the O’Mara’s Bacon Factory into a great success.   The youngest son, Joseph (Joe) O’Mara (1864-1927) became a celebrated opera singer.<lb/><lb/>When James O’Mara retired from business his son John (Jack) O’Mara became manager of the O’Mara Bacon Factory.  In the late 1880s, Jack was invited to Russia by Tsar Alexander III to provide instruction on bacon curing.  He stayed in St Petersburg to supervise the construction of a bacon factory.  In 1891, his father bought the rights of the Russian Bacon Company and the family imported bacon from Russia into London until 1903.  James (Jim) O’Mara (1858-1893) acted as agent for O’Mara’s in London until his untimely death from heart disease.  His nephew James O’Mara (1873-1948), son of Stephen O’Mara Senior (1844-1926), took over the agency and held it until 1914.<lb/><lb/>When John (Jack) O’Mara died in 1919, his younger brother Stephen O’Mara (1844-1926) became Managing Director of O’Mara Limited and remained in that capacity until 1923.  Having entered into the family business at the age of fifteen, his great business acumen established O’Mara’s Bacon Factory as one of the most prominent commercial enterprises in Limerick city.  He also purchased a bacon factory in Palmerston, Ontario, Canada, which was managed by his son Joseph (Joe) O’Mara (1878-1950) until the business was wound up in the 1940s.<lb/><lb/>Like his father, Stephen O’Mara was a strong supporter of Isaac Butt’s Home Rule movement and a member of the committee which secured Butt’s election for Limerick city in 1871.  He later developed a close association with Charles Stewart Parnell and was elected Member of Parliament for Upper Ossory in Kilkenny South for the Irish Parliamentary Party in February 1886.  When the Irish National League split from Irish Parliamentary Party in December 1890, O’Mara took the Parnellite side.  He continued to act as trustee of the Party funds until 1908, when he resigned from his trusteeship.  Towards the end of his life, his moderate political views became more radicalised under the influence of his sons James (1873-1948) and Stephen Junior (1884-1959).  He had agreed with his son James’s decision to resign from the Irish Parliamentary Party in 1907 in order to join Sinn Fein, and personally supported the party in the 1918 General Election.  Both Stephen and his son James were strong supporters of the 1921 Anglo-Irish Treaty but were on friendly terms with Eamon de Valera who, it is said, spent the night at the O’Mara family home, Strand House, as the Treaty was being signed in London.  In the 1925 election, Stephen O’Mara was elected as Senator to the Free State Seanad.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara was also a prominent figure in local politics.  He became a Town Councillor on Limerick Corporation in the 1880s and was elected Mayor of Limerick in 1885.  He was the first Mayor of Limerick to be elected on a Nationalist ticket.  He also served as High Sheriff of Limerick city in 1888, 1913 and 1914.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara married Ellen Pigott in 1867, and the couple had 12 children of whom the eldest three died tragically of diphtheria in 1872.  From c. 1909 onwards, the family lived at Strand House.  Their third son, Stephen O’Mara Junior, was born on 5 January 1884.  He entered the family business in 1903 when he travelled to Canada to work in the bacon factory established by the O’Mara family in Ottawa.  In 1923, he became Managing Director of O’Mara Limited and created numerous employment opportunities by establishing bacon factories in Claremorris, County Mayo, and Letterkenny, County Donegal, in the 1930s.  The three bacon companies were amalgamated in 1938 and formed into the Bacon Company of Ireland.  Stephen O’Mara Junior remained the company’s chairman until his death in 1959.  In 1987, the Bacon Company of Ireland merged with Hanley of Rooskey and Benesford UK (Castlebar) with assistance from the Industrial Development Agency Ireland (IDA) to form Irish Country Bacon.  Shortly afterwards the old O’Mara factory in Limerick was closed down.  It was subsequently demolished to make way for a multi-storey car park.<lb/><lb/>Throughout his life, Stephen O’Mara Junior played a prominent role in both local and national affairs.  Unlike his father and elder brother James, Stephen was opposed to the Anglo-Irish Treaty but in a conciliatory manner.  He was prominently identified with the Sinn Fein movement after the Easter Rising.  He was one of Eamon de Valera’s strongest supporters and a member of his Fianna Fail Party since its formation in 1926.<lb/><lb/>When George Clancy, Lord Mayor of Limerick, and his predecessor Michael O’Callaghan were murdered by the British military forces in March 1921, Stephen decided to stand for election and became Mayor.  He was re-elected in 1922 and in 1923 but resigned before the expiration of his term of office.<lb/><lb/>In 1921, Stephen O’Mara Junior was selected to go to America as Special Envoy appointed by Dáil Éireann to the United States to oversee one of the country’s biggest fundraising drives to finance the first Dáil and was made Trustee of the funds.  The funds-drive was terminated following the signing of the Anglo-Irish Treaty.  Considering himself as the exchequer to the Irish Free State, O’Mara refused to hand over the collected funds to the pro-Treaty administration which resulted in his imprisonment in 1922-1923.  He had also been imprisoned for seven days in 1921 for refusing to pay a fine of £10 for non-compliance with a military summons.<lb/><lb/>The bulk of the money collected during the Bond Drive was left in various banks in New York and remained untouched for a number of years.  In 1927, following legal action between the Irish Government and Eamon de Valera, a court in New York ordered that money outstanding to bond holders must be paid back.  Having anticipated such a ruling, de Valera’s legal team invited bond holders to sign over their bonds to de Valera, for which they were paid 58 cents to the dollar.  The monies so accumulated were used to launch the national daily newspaper *The Irish Press*.  Stephen O’Mara served on the paper’s Board of Directors until his resignation in 1935.<lb/><lb/>In 1932, Stephen O’Mara was once again sent to America on a mission involving the various consular and diplomatic offices maintained in the country by the Irish Government.  Two years later, he was appointed a member of the Commission on Vocational Organisation, on which he served until 1943.  In 1959, he was created a member of the Council of State following de Valera’s inauguration as President of Ireland.  Stephen O’Mara died less than two months after his appointment, on 11 November 1959.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara Junior married in 1918 Anne O’Brien, third daughter of Thomas O’Brien of Boru House, and the couple had an adopted son, Peter O’Mara.  Anne’s youngest sister, Kate O’Brien, became one of the most prominent novelists in 20th-century Ireland and a voice of the respectable Irish Roman Catholic middle class.</p>
            </note>
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            <p>‘Long Distance’ column entitled ‘Willie Moloney – the Radiant Wit’ by Kate O’Brien, published in the *Irish Times* on 4 March 1968.</p>
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                <addressline>Ireland</addressline>
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                <addressline>Telephone: +353-61-202690</addressline>
                <addressline>Fax: +353-61-213415</addressline>
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              <p>The history of the O’Mara family of Strand house and O’Mara’s Bacon Company go hand in hand.  The factory was founded in 1839 by James O’Meara (1817-1899), who originated from the village of Toomevaara in county Tipperary.  Having worked for some years in the woollen mills in Clonmel, he got a job as a clerk with Matterson’s Bacon Factory in Limerick and in 1839 founded O’Mara’s Bacon Company in his house on Mungret Street.  It is said that he dropped the ‘e’ from his surname as he felt that O’Meara was too long for commercial purposes.  James initially sold for Matterson’s but soon began to cure his own bacon in the basement of his house.  As his business grew, he acquired dedicated premises for the purpose near the top of Roche’s Street.<lb/><lb/>In 1841, James O’Mara married Honora Fowley (d. 1878), who worked in the bacon business alongside her husband.  A devoted nationalist, James was one of the early supporters of Isaac Butt’s Home Rule movement.  He was High Sheriff of Limerick City in 1887, and acted as Town Councillor on Limerick Corporation at least from 1888 to 1898.<lb/><lb/>James and Honora O’Mara had 13 children, of whom the two eldest surviving sons, Stephen O’Mara (1844-1926) and John (Jack) O’Mara (1856-1919) were instrumental in building up the O’Mara’s Bacon Factory into a great success.   The youngest son, Joseph (Joe) O’Mara (1864-1927) became a celebrated opera singer.<lb/><lb/>When James O’Mara retired from business his son John (Jack) O’Mara became manager of the O’Mara Bacon Factory.  In the late 1880s, Jack was invited to Russia by Tsar Alexander III to provide instruction on bacon curing.  He stayed in St Petersburg to supervise the construction of a bacon factory.  In 1891, his father bought the rights of the Russian Bacon Company and the family imported bacon from Russia into London until 1903.  James (Jim) O’Mara (1858-1893) acted as agent for O’Mara’s in London until his untimely death from heart disease.  His nephew James O’Mara (1873-1948), son of Stephen O’Mara Senior (1844-1926), took over the agency and held it until 1914.<lb/><lb/>When John (Jack) O’Mara died in 1919, his younger brother Stephen O’Mara (1844-1926) became Managing Director of O’Mara Limited and remained in that capacity until 1923.  Having entered into the family business at the age of fifteen, his great business acumen established O’Mara’s Bacon Factory as one of the most prominent commercial enterprises in Limerick city.  He also purchased a bacon factory in Palmerston, Ontario, Canada, which was managed by his son Joseph (Joe) O’Mara (1878-1950) until the business was wound up in the 1940s.<lb/><lb/>Like his father, Stephen O’Mara was a strong supporter of Isaac Butt’s Home Rule movement and a member of the committee which secured Butt’s election for Limerick city in 1871.  He later developed a close association with Charles Stewart Parnell and was elected Member of Parliament for Upper Ossory in Kilkenny South for the Irish Parliamentary Party in February 1886.  When the Irish National League split from Irish Parliamentary Party in December 1890, O’Mara took the Parnellite side.  He continued to act as trustee of the Party funds until 1908, when he resigned from his trusteeship.  Towards the end of his life, his moderate political views became more radicalised under the influence of his sons James (1873-1948) and Stephen Junior (1884-1959).  He had agreed with his son James’s decision to resign from the Irish Parliamentary Party in 1907 in order to join Sinn Fein, and personally supported the party in the 1918 General Election.  Both Stephen and his son James were strong supporters of the 1921 Anglo-Irish Treaty but were on friendly terms with Eamon de Valera who, it is said, spent the night at the O’Mara family home, Strand House, as the Treaty was being signed in London.  In the 1925 election, Stephen O’Mara was elected as Senator to the Free State Seanad.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara was also a prominent figure in local politics.  He became a Town Councillor on Limerick Corporation in the 1880s and was elected Mayor of Limerick in 1885.  He was the first Mayor of Limerick to be elected on a Nationalist ticket.  He also served as High Sheriff of Limerick city in 1888, 1913 and 1914.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara married Ellen Pigott in 1867, and the couple had 12 children of whom the eldest three died tragically of diphtheria in 1872.  From c. 1909 onwards, the family lived at Strand House.  Their third son, Stephen O’Mara Junior, was born on 5 January 1884.  He entered the family business in 1903 when he travelled to Canada to work in the bacon factory established by the O’Mara family in Ottawa.  In 1923, he became Managing Director of O’Mara Limited and created numerous employment opportunities by establishing bacon factories in Claremorris, County Mayo, and Letterkenny, County Donegal, in the 1930s.  The three bacon companies were amalgamated in 1938 and formed into the Bacon Company of Ireland.  Stephen O’Mara Junior remained the company’s chairman until his death in 1959.  In 1987, the Bacon Company of Ireland merged with Hanley of Rooskey and Benesford UK (Castlebar) with assistance from the Industrial Development Agency Ireland (IDA) to form Irish Country Bacon.  Shortly afterwards the old O’Mara factory in Limerick was closed down.  It was subsequently demolished to make way for a multi-storey car park.<lb/><lb/>Throughout his life, Stephen O’Mara Junior played a prominent role in both local and national affairs.  Unlike his father and elder brother James, Stephen was opposed to the Anglo-Irish Treaty but in a conciliatory manner.  He was prominently identified with the Sinn Fein movement after the Easter Rising.  He was one of Eamon de Valera’s strongest supporters and a member of his Fianna Fail Party since its formation in 1926.<lb/><lb/>When George Clancy, Lord Mayor of Limerick, and his predecessor Michael O’Callaghan were murdered by the British military forces in March 1921, Stephen decided to stand for election and became Mayor.  He was re-elected in 1922 and in 1923 but resigned before the expiration of his term of office.<lb/><lb/>In 1921, Stephen O’Mara Junior was selected to go to America as Special Envoy appointed by Dáil Éireann to the United States to oversee one of the country’s biggest fundraising drives to finance the first Dáil and was made Trustee of the funds.  The funds-drive was terminated following the signing of the Anglo-Irish Treaty.  Considering himself as the exchequer to the Irish Free State, O’Mara refused to hand over the collected funds to the pro-Treaty administration which resulted in his imprisonment in 1922-1923.  He had also been imprisoned for seven days in 1921 for refusing to pay a fine of £10 for non-compliance with a military summons.<lb/><lb/>The bulk of the money collected during the Bond Drive was left in various banks in New York and remained untouched for a number of years.  In 1927, following legal action between the Irish Government and Eamon de Valera, a court in New York ordered that money outstanding to bond holders must be paid back.  Having anticipated such a ruling, de Valera’s legal team invited bond holders to sign over their bonds to de Valera, for which they were paid 58 cents to the dollar.  The monies so accumulated were used to launch the national daily newspaper *The Irish Press*.  Stephen O’Mara served on the paper’s Board of Directors until his resignation in 1935.<lb/><lb/>In 1932, Stephen O’Mara was once again sent to America on a mission involving the various consular and diplomatic offices maintained in the country by the Irish Government.  Two years later, he was appointed a member of the Commission on Vocational Organisation, on which he served until 1943.  In 1959, he was created a member of the Council of State following de Valera’s inauguration as President of Ireland.  Stephen O’Mara died less than two months after his appointment, on 11 November 1959.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara Junior married in 1918 Anne O’Brien, third daughter of Thomas O’Brien of Boru House, and the couple had an adopted son, Peter O’Mara.  Anne’s youngest sister, Kate O’Brien, became one of the most prominent novelists in 20th-century Ireland and a voice of the respectable Irish Roman Catholic middle class.</p>
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            <p>‘Long Distance’ column entitled ‘Here’s a Day to Beware!’ by Kate O’Brien, published in the *Irish Times* on 1 April 1968.</p>
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                <addressline>Fax: +353-61-213415</addressline>
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            <note>
              <p>The history of the O’Mara family of Strand house and O’Mara’s Bacon Company go hand in hand.  The factory was founded in 1839 by James O’Meara (1817-1899), who originated from the village of Toomevaara in county Tipperary.  Having worked for some years in the woollen mills in Clonmel, he got a job as a clerk with Matterson’s Bacon Factory in Limerick and in 1839 founded O’Mara’s Bacon Company in his house on Mungret Street.  It is said that he dropped the ‘e’ from his surname as he felt that O’Meara was too long for commercial purposes.  James initially sold for Matterson’s but soon began to cure his own bacon in the basement of his house.  As his business grew, he acquired dedicated premises for the purpose near the top of Roche’s Street.<lb/><lb/>In 1841, James O’Mara married Honora Fowley (d. 1878), who worked in the bacon business alongside her husband.  A devoted nationalist, James was one of the early supporters of Isaac Butt’s Home Rule movement.  He was High Sheriff of Limerick City in 1887, and acted as Town Councillor on Limerick Corporation at least from 1888 to 1898.<lb/><lb/>James and Honora O’Mara had 13 children, of whom the two eldest surviving sons, Stephen O’Mara (1844-1926) and John (Jack) O’Mara (1856-1919) were instrumental in building up the O’Mara’s Bacon Factory into a great success.   The youngest son, Joseph (Joe) O’Mara (1864-1927) became a celebrated opera singer.<lb/><lb/>When James O’Mara retired from business his son John (Jack) O’Mara became manager of the O’Mara Bacon Factory.  In the late 1880s, Jack was invited to Russia by Tsar Alexander III to provide instruction on bacon curing.  He stayed in St Petersburg to supervise the construction of a bacon factory.  In 1891, his father bought the rights of the Russian Bacon Company and the family imported bacon from Russia into London until 1903.  James (Jim) O’Mara (1858-1893) acted as agent for O’Mara’s in London until his untimely death from heart disease.  His nephew James O’Mara (1873-1948), son of Stephen O’Mara Senior (1844-1926), took over the agency and held it until 1914.<lb/><lb/>When John (Jack) O’Mara died in 1919, his younger brother Stephen O’Mara (1844-1926) became Managing Director of O’Mara Limited and remained in that capacity until 1923.  Having entered into the family business at the age of fifteen, his great business acumen established O’Mara’s Bacon Factory as one of the most prominent commercial enterprises in Limerick city.  He also purchased a bacon factory in Palmerston, Ontario, Canada, which was managed by his son Joseph (Joe) O’Mara (1878-1950) until the business was wound up in the 1940s.<lb/><lb/>Like his father, Stephen O’Mara was a strong supporter of Isaac Butt’s Home Rule movement and a member of the committee which secured Butt’s election for Limerick city in 1871.  He later developed a close association with Charles Stewart Parnell and was elected Member of Parliament for Upper Ossory in Kilkenny South for the Irish Parliamentary Party in February 1886.  When the Irish National League split from Irish Parliamentary Party in December 1890, O’Mara took the Parnellite side.  He continued to act as trustee of the Party funds until 1908, when he resigned from his trusteeship.  Towards the end of his life, his moderate political views became more radicalised under the influence of his sons James (1873-1948) and Stephen Junior (1884-1959).  He had agreed with his son James’s decision to resign from the Irish Parliamentary Party in 1907 in order to join Sinn Fein, and personally supported the party in the 1918 General Election.  Both Stephen and his son James were strong supporters of the 1921 Anglo-Irish Treaty but were on friendly terms with Eamon de Valera who, it is said, spent the night at the O’Mara family home, Strand House, as the Treaty was being signed in London.  In the 1925 election, Stephen O’Mara was elected as Senator to the Free State Seanad.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara was also a prominent figure in local politics.  He became a Town Councillor on Limerick Corporation in the 1880s and was elected Mayor of Limerick in 1885.  He was the first Mayor of Limerick to be elected on a Nationalist ticket.  He also served as High Sheriff of Limerick city in 1888, 1913 and 1914.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara married Ellen Pigott in 1867, and the couple had 12 children of whom the eldest three died tragically of diphtheria in 1872.  From c. 1909 onwards, the family lived at Strand House.  Their third son, Stephen O’Mara Junior, was born on 5 January 1884.  He entered the family business in 1903 when he travelled to Canada to work in the bacon factory established by the O’Mara family in Ottawa.  In 1923, he became Managing Director of O’Mara Limited and created numerous employment opportunities by establishing bacon factories in Claremorris, County Mayo, and Letterkenny, County Donegal, in the 1930s.  The three bacon companies were amalgamated in 1938 and formed into the Bacon Company of Ireland.  Stephen O’Mara Junior remained the company’s chairman until his death in 1959.  In 1987, the Bacon Company of Ireland merged with Hanley of Rooskey and Benesford UK (Castlebar) with assistance from the Industrial Development Agency Ireland (IDA) to form Irish Country Bacon.  Shortly afterwards the old O’Mara factory in Limerick was closed down.  It was subsequently demolished to make way for a multi-storey car park.<lb/><lb/>Throughout his life, Stephen O’Mara Junior played a prominent role in both local and national affairs.  Unlike his father and elder brother James, Stephen was opposed to the Anglo-Irish Treaty but in a conciliatory manner.  He was prominently identified with the Sinn Fein movement after the Easter Rising.  He was one of Eamon de Valera’s strongest supporters and a member of his Fianna Fail Party since its formation in 1926.<lb/><lb/>When George Clancy, Lord Mayor of Limerick, and his predecessor Michael O’Callaghan were murdered by the British military forces in March 1921, Stephen decided to stand for election and became Mayor.  He was re-elected in 1922 and in 1923 but resigned before the expiration of his term of office.<lb/><lb/>In 1921, Stephen O’Mara Junior was selected to go to America as Special Envoy appointed by Dáil Éireann to the United States to oversee one of the country’s biggest fundraising drives to finance the first Dáil and was made Trustee of the funds.  The funds-drive was terminated following the signing of the Anglo-Irish Treaty.  Considering himself as the exchequer to the Irish Free State, O’Mara refused to hand over the collected funds to the pro-Treaty administration which resulted in his imprisonment in 1922-1923.  He had also been imprisoned for seven days in 1921 for refusing to pay a fine of £10 for non-compliance with a military summons.<lb/><lb/>The bulk of the money collected during the Bond Drive was left in various banks in New York and remained untouched for a number of years.  In 1927, following legal action between the Irish Government and Eamon de Valera, a court in New York ordered that money outstanding to bond holders must be paid back.  Having anticipated such a ruling, de Valera’s legal team invited bond holders to sign over their bonds to de Valera, for which they were paid 58 cents to the dollar.  The monies so accumulated were used to launch the national daily newspaper *The Irish Press*.  Stephen O’Mara served on the paper’s Board of Directors until his resignation in 1935.<lb/><lb/>In 1932, Stephen O’Mara was once again sent to America on a mission involving the various consular and diplomatic offices maintained in the country by the Irish Government.  Two years later, he was appointed a member of the Commission on Vocational Organisation, on which he served until 1943.  In 1959, he was created a member of the Council of State following de Valera’s inauguration as President of Ireland.  Stephen O’Mara died less than two months after his appointment, on 11 November 1959.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara Junior married in 1918 Anne O’Brien, third daughter of Thomas O’Brien of Boru House, and the couple had an adopted son, Peter O’Mara.  Anne’s youngest sister, Kate O’Brien, became one of the most prominent novelists in 20th-century Ireland and a voice of the respectable Irish Roman Catholic middle class.</p>
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            <p>‘Long Distance’ column entitled ‘A Peaceful Day under the Sun’ by Kate O’Brien, published in the *Irish Times* on 1 July 1968.</p>
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            <note>
              <p>The history of the O’Mara family of Strand house and O’Mara’s Bacon Company go hand in hand.  The factory was founded in 1839 by James O’Meara (1817-1899), who originated from the village of Toomevaara in county Tipperary.  Having worked for some years in the woollen mills in Clonmel, he got a job as a clerk with Matterson’s Bacon Factory in Limerick and in 1839 founded O’Mara’s Bacon Company in his house on Mungret Street.  It is said that he dropped the ‘e’ from his surname as he felt that O’Meara was too long for commercial purposes.  James initially sold for Matterson’s but soon began to cure his own bacon in the basement of his house.  As his business grew, he acquired dedicated premises for the purpose near the top of Roche’s Street.<lb/><lb/>In 1841, James O’Mara married Honora Fowley (d. 1878), who worked in the bacon business alongside her husband.  A devoted nationalist, James was one of the early supporters of Isaac Butt’s Home Rule movement.  He was High Sheriff of Limerick City in 1887, and acted as Town Councillor on Limerick Corporation at least from 1888 to 1898.<lb/><lb/>James and Honora O’Mara had 13 children, of whom the two eldest surviving sons, Stephen O’Mara (1844-1926) and John (Jack) O’Mara (1856-1919) were instrumental in building up the O’Mara’s Bacon Factory into a great success.   The youngest son, Joseph (Joe) O’Mara (1864-1927) became a celebrated opera singer.<lb/><lb/>When James O’Mara retired from business his son John (Jack) O’Mara became manager of the O’Mara Bacon Factory.  In the late 1880s, Jack was invited to Russia by Tsar Alexander III to provide instruction on bacon curing.  He stayed in St Petersburg to supervise the construction of a bacon factory.  In 1891, his father bought the rights of the Russian Bacon Company and the family imported bacon from Russia into London until 1903.  James (Jim) O’Mara (1858-1893) acted as agent for O’Mara’s in London until his untimely death from heart disease.  His nephew James O’Mara (1873-1948), son of Stephen O’Mara Senior (1844-1926), took over the agency and held it until 1914.<lb/><lb/>When John (Jack) O’Mara died in 1919, his younger brother Stephen O’Mara (1844-1926) became Managing Director of O’Mara Limited and remained in that capacity until 1923.  Having entered into the family business at the age of fifteen, his great business acumen established O’Mara’s Bacon Factory as one of the most prominent commercial enterprises in Limerick city.  He also purchased a bacon factory in Palmerston, Ontario, Canada, which was managed by his son Joseph (Joe) O’Mara (1878-1950) until the business was wound up in the 1940s.<lb/><lb/>Like his father, Stephen O’Mara was a strong supporter of Isaac Butt’s Home Rule movement and a member of the committee which secured Butt’s election for Limerick city in 1871.  He later developed a close association with Charles Stewart Parnell and was elected Member of Parliament for Upper Ossory in Kilkenny South for the Irish Parliamentary Party in February 1886.  When the Irish National League split from Irish Parliamentary Party in December 1890, O’Mara took the Parnellite side.  He continued to act as trustee of the Party funds until 1908, when he resigned from his trusteeship.  Towards the end of his life, his moderate political views became more radicalised under the influence of his sons James (1873-1948) and Stephen Junior (1884-1959).  He had agreed with his son James’s decision to resign from the Irish Parliamentary Party in 1907 in order to join Sinn Fein, and personally supported the party in the 1918 General Election.  Both Stephen and his son James were strong supporters of the 1921 Anglo-Irish Treaty but were on friendly terms with Eamon de Valera who, it is said, spent the night at the O’Mara family home, Strand House, as the Treaty was being signed in London.  In the 1925 election, Stephen O’Mara was elected as Senator to the Free State Seanad.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara was also a prominent figure in local politics.  He became a Town Councillor on Limerick Corporation in the 1880s and was elected Mayor of Limerick in 1885.  He was the first Mayor of Limerick to be elected on a Nationalist ticket.  He also served as High Sheriff of Limerick city in 1888, 1913 and 1914.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara married Ellen Pigott in 1867, and the couple had 12 children of whom the eldest three died tragically of diphtheria in 1872.  From c. 1909 onwards, the family lived at Strand House.  Their third son, Stephen O’Mara Junior, was born on 5 January 1884.  He entered the family business in 1903 when he travelled to Canada to work in the bacon factory established by the O’Mara family in Ottawa.  In 1923, he became Managing Director of O’Mara Limited and created numerous employment opportunities by establishing bacon factories in Claremorris, County Mayo, and Letterkenny, County Donegal, in the 1930s.  The three bacon companies were amalgamated in 1938 and formed into the Bacon Company of Ireland.  Stephen O’Mara Junior remained the company’s chairman until his death in 1959.  In 1987, the Bacon Company of Ireland merged with Hanley of Rooskey and Benesford UK (Castlebar) with assistance from the Industrial Development Agency Ireland (IDA) to form Irish Country Bacon.  Shortly afterwards the old O’Mara factory in Limerick was closed down.  It was subsequently demolished to make way for a multi-storey car park.<lb/><lb/>Throughout his life, Stephen O’Mara Junior played a prominent role in both local and national affairs.  Unlike his father and elder brother James, Stephen was opposed to the Anglo-Irish Treaty but in a conciliatory manner.  He was prominently identified with the Sinn Fein movement after the Easter Rising.  He was one of Eamon de Valera’s strongest supporters and a member of his Fianna Fail Party since its formation in 1926.<lb/><lb/>When George Clancy, Lord Mayor of Limerick, and his predecessor Michael O’Callaghan were murdered by the British military forces in March 1921, Stephen decided to stand for election and became Mayor.  He was re-elected in 1922 and in 1923 but resigned before the expiration of his term of office.<lb/><lb/>In 1921, Stephen O’Mara Junior was selected to go to America as Special Envoy appointed by Dáil Éireann to the United States to oversee one of the country’s biggest fundraising drives to finance the first Dáil and was made Trustee of the funds.  The funds-drive was terminated following the signing of the Anglo-Irish Treaty.  Considering himself as the exchequer to the Irish Free State, O’Mara refused to hand over the collected funds to the pro-Treaty administration which resulted in his imprisonment in 1922-1923.  He had also been imprisoned for seven days in 1921 for refusing to pay a fine of £10 for non-compliance with a military summons.<lb/><lb/>The bulk of the money collected during the Bond Drive was left in various banks in New York and remained untouched for a number of years.  In 1927, following legal action between the Irish Government and Eamon de Valera, a court in New York ordered that money outstanding to bond holders must be paid back.  Having anticipated such a ruling, de Valera’s legal team invited bond holders to sign over their bonds to de Valera, for which they were paid 58 cents to the dollar.  The monies so accumulated were used to launch the national daily newspaper *The Irish Press*.  Stephen O’Mara served on the paper’s Board of Directors until his resignation in 1935.<lb/><lb/>In 1932, Stephen O’Mara was once again sent to America on a mission involving the various consular and diplomatic offices maintained in the country by the Irish Government.  Two years later, he was appointed a member of the Commission on Vocational Organisation, on which he served until 1943.  In 1959, he was created a member of the Council of State following de Valera’s inauguration as President of Ireland.  Stephen O’Mara died less than two months after his appointment, on 11 November 1959.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara Junior married in 1918 Anne O’Brien, third daughter of Thomas O’Brien of Boru House, and the couple had an adopted son, Peter O’Mara.  Anne’s youngest sister, Kate O’Brien, became one of the most prominent novelists in 20th-century Ireland and a voice of the respectable Irish Roman Catholic middle class.</p>
            </note>
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            <p>‘Long Distance’ column entitled ‘As the Black Sun Shines’ by Kate O’Brien, published in the *Irish Times* on 2 September 1968.</p>
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                <addressline>Telephone: +353-61-202690</addressline>
                <addressline>Fax: +353-61-213415</addressline>
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              <p>The history of the O’Mara family of Strand house and O’Mara’s Bacon Company go hand in hand.  The factory was founded in 1839 by James O’Meara (1817-1899), who originated from the village of Toomevaara in county Tipperary.  Having worked for some years in the woollen mills in Clonmel, he got a job as a clerk with Matterson’s Bacon Factory in Limerick and in 1839 founded O’Mara’s Bacon Company in his house on Mungret Street.  It is said that he dropped the ‘e’ from his surname as he felt that O’Meara was too long for commercial purposes.  James initially sold for Matterson’s but soon began to cure his own bacon in the basement of his house.  As his business grew, he acquired dedicated premises for the purpose near the top of Roche’s Street.<lb/><lb/>In 1841, James O’Mara married Honora Fowley (d. 1878), who worked in the bacon business alongside her husband.  A devoted nationalist, James was one of the early supporters of Isaac Butt’s Home Rule movement.  He was High Sheriff of Limerick City in 1887, and acted as Town Councillor on Limerick Corporation at least from 1888 to 1898.<lb/><lb/>James and Honora O’Mara had 13 children, of whom the two eldest surviving sons, Stephen O’Mara (1844-1926) and John (Jack) O’Mara (1856-1919) were instrumental in building up the O’Mara’s Bacon Factory into a great success.   The youngest son, Joseph (Joe) O’Mara (1864-1927) became a celebrated opera singer.<lb/><lb/>When James O’Mara retired from business his son John (Jack) O’Mara became manager of the O’Mara Bacon Factory.  In the late 1880s, Jack was invited to Russia by Tsar Alexander III to provide instruction on bacon curing.  He stayed in St Petersburg to supervise the construction of a bacon factory.  In 1891, his father bought the rights of the Russian Bacon Company and the family imported bacon from Russia into London until 1903.  James (Jim) O’Mara (1858-1893) acted as agent for O’Mara’s in London until his untimely death from heart disease.  His nephew James O’Mara (1873-1948), son of Stephen O’Mara Senior (1844-1926), took over the agency and held it until 1914.<lb/><lb/>When John (Jack) O’Mara died in 1919, his younger brother Stephen O’Mara (1844-1926) became Managing Director of O’Mara Limited and remained in that capacity until 1923.  Having entered into the family business at the age of fifteen, his great business acumen established O’Mara’s Bacon Factory as one of the most prominent commercial enterprises in Limerick city.  He also purchased a bacon factory in Palmerston, Ontario, Canada, which was managed by his son Joseph (Joe) O’Mara (1878-1950) until the business was wound up in the 1940s.<lb/><lb/>Like his father, Stephen O’Mara was a strong supporter of Isaac Butt’s Home Rule movement and a member of the committee which secured Butt’s election for Limerick city in 1871.  He later developed a close association with Charles Stewart Parnell and was elected Member of Parliament for Upper Ossory in Kilkenny South for the Irish Parliamentary Party in February 1886.  When the Irish National League split from Irish Parliamentary Party in December 1890, O’Mara took the Parnellite side.  He continued to act as trustee of the Party funds until 1908, when he resigned from his trusteeship.  Towards the end of his life, his moderate political views became more radicalised under the influence of his sons James (1873-1948) and Stephen Junior (1884-1959).  He had agreed with his son James’s decision to resign from the Irish Parliamentary Party in 1907 in order to join Sinn Fein, and personally supported the party in the 1918 General Election.  Both Stephen and his son James were strong supporters of the 1921 Anglo-Irish Treaty but were on friendly terms with Eamon de Valera who, it is said, spent the night at the O’Mara family home, Strand House, as the Treaty was being signed in London.  In the 1925 election, Stephen O’Mara was elected as Senator to the Free State Seanad.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara was also a prominent figure in local politics.  He became a Town Councillor on Limerick Corporation in the 1880s and was elected Mayor of Limerick in 1885.  He was the first Mayor of Limerick to be elected on a Nationalist ticket.  He also served as High Sheriff of Limerick city in 1888, 1913 and 1914.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara married Ellen Pigott in 1867, and the couple had 12 children of whom the eldest three died tragically of diphtheria in 1872.  From c. 1909 onwards, the family lived at Strand House.  Their third son, Stephen O’Mara Junior, was born on 5 January 1884.  He entered the family business in 1903 when he travelled to Canada to work in the bacon factory established by the O’Mara family in Ottawa.  In 1923, he became Managing Director of O’Mara Limited and created numerous employment opportunities by establishing bacon factories in Claremorris, County Mayo, and Letterkenny, County Donegal, in the 1930s.  The three bacon companies were amalgamated in 1938 and formed into the Bacon Company of Ireland.  Stephen O’Mara Junior remained the company’s chairman until his death in 1959.  In 1987, the Bacon Company of Ireland merged with Hanley of Rooskey and Benesford UK (Castlebar) with assistance from the Industrial Development Agency Ireland (IDA) to form Irish Country Bacon.  Shortly afterwards the old O’Mara factory in Limerick was closed down.  It was subsequently demolished to make way for a multi-storey car park.<lb/><lb/>Throughout his life, Stephen O’Mara Junior played a prominent role in both local and national affairs.  Unlike his father and elder brother James, Stephen was opposed to the Anglo-Irish Treaty but in a conciliatory manner.  He was prominently identified with the Sinn Fein movement after the Easter Rising.  He was one of Eamon de Valera’s strongest supporters and a member of his Fianna Fail Party since its formation in 1926.<lb/><lb/>When George Clancy, Lord Mayor of Limerick, and his predecessor Michael O’Callaghan were murdered by the British military forces in March 1921, Stephen decided to stand for election and became Mayor.  He was re-elected in 1922 and in 1923 but resigned before the expiration of his term of office.<lb/><lb/>In 1921, Stephen O’Mara Junior was selected to go to America as Special Envoy appointed by Dáil Éireann to the United States to oversee one of the country’s biggest fundraising drives to finance the first Dáil and was made Trustee of the funds.  The funds-drive was terminated following the signing of the Anglo-Irish Treaty.  Considering himself as the exchequer to the Irish Free State, O’Mara refused to hand over the collected funds to the pro-Treaty administration which resulted in his imprisonment in 1922-1923.  He had also been imprisoned for seven days in 1921 for refusing to pay a fine of £10 for non-compliance with a military summons.<lb/><lb/>The bulk of the money collected during the Bond Drive was left in various banks in New York and remained untouched for a number of years.  In 1927, following legal action between the Irish Government and Eamon de Valera, a court in New York ordered that money outstanding to bond holders must be paid back.  Having anticipated such a ruling, de Valera’s legal team invited bond holders to sign over their bonds to de Valera, for which they were paid 58 cents to the dollar.  The monies so accumulated were used to launch the national daily newspaper *The Irish Press*.  Stephen O’Mara served on the paper’s Board of Directors until his resignation in 1935.<lb/><lb/>In 1932, Stephen O’Mara was once again sent to America on a mission involving the various consular and diplomatic offices maintained in the country by the Irish Government.  Two years later, he was appointed a member of the Commission on Vocational Organisation, on which he served until 1943.  In 1959, he was created a member of the Council of State following de Valera’s inauguration as President of Ireland.  Stephen O’Mara died less than two months after his appointment, on 11 November 1959.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara Junior married in 1918 Anne O’Brien, third daughter of Thomas O’Brien of Boru House, and the couple had an adopted son, Peter O’Mara.  Anne’s youngest sister, Kate O’Brien, became one of the most prominent novelists in 20th-century Ireland and a voice of the respectable Irish Roman Catholic middle class.</p>
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            <p>‘Long Distance’ column entitled ‘Under a Cloud of Guilt’ by Kate O’Brien, published in the *Irish Times* on 5 January 1969.</p>
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                <addressline>Fax: +353-61-213415</addressline>
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            <note>
              <p>The history of the O’Mara family of Strand house and O’Mara’s Bacon Company go hand in hand.  The factory was founded in 1839 by James O’Meara (1817-1899), who originated from the village of Toomevaara in county Tipperary.  Having worked for some years in the woollen mills in Clonmel, he got a job as a clerk with Matterson’s Bacon Factory in Limerick and in 1839 founded O’Mara’s Bacon Company in his house on Mungret Street.  It is said that he dropped the ‘e’ from his surname as he felt that O’Meara was too long for commercial purposes.  James initially sold for Matterson’s but soon began to cure his own bacon in the basement of his house.  As his business grew, he acquired dedicated premises for the purpose near the top of Roche’s Street.<lb/><lb/>In 1841, James O’Mara married Honora Fowley (d. 1878), who worked in the bacon business alongside her husband.  A devoted nationalist, James was one of the early supporters of Isaac Butt’s Home Rule movement.  He was High Sheriff of Limerick City in 1887, and acted as Town Councillor on Limerick Corporation at least from 1888 to 1898.<lb/><lb/>James and Honora O’Mara had 13 children, of whom the two eldest surviving sons, Stephen O’Mara (1844-1926) and John (Jack) O’Mara (1856-1919) were instrumental in building up the O’Mara’s Bacon Factory into a great success.   The youngest son, Joseph (Joe) O’Mara (1864-1927) became a celebrated opera singer.<lb/><lb/>When James O’Mara retired from business his son John (Jack) O’Mara became manager of the O’Mara Bacon Factory.  In the late 1880s, Jack was invited to Russia by Tsar Alexander III to provide instruction on bacon curing.  He stayed in St Petersburg to supervise the construction of a bacon factory.  In 1891, his father bought the rights of the Russian Bacon Company and the family imported bacon from Russia into London until 1903.  James (Jim) O’Mara (1858-1893) acted as agent for O’Mara’s in London until his untimely death from heart disease.  His nephew James O’Mara (1873-1948), son of Stephen O’Mara Senior (1844-1926), took over the agency and held it until 1914.<lb/><lb/>When John (Jack) O’Mara died in 1919, his younger brother Stephen O’Mara (1844-1926) became Managing Director of O’Mara Limited and remained in that capacity until 1923.  Having entered into the family business at the age of fifteen, his great business acumen established O’Mara’s Bacon Factory as one of the most prominent commercial enterprises in Limerick city.  He also purchased a bacon factory in Palmerston, Ontario, Canada, which was managed by his son Joseph (Joe) O’Mara (1878-1950) until the business was wound up in the 1940s.<lb/><lb/>Like his father, Stephen O’Mara was a strong supporter of Isaac Butt’s Home Rule movement and a member of the committee which secured Butt’s election for Limerick city in 1871.  He later developed a close association with Charles Stewart Parnell and was elected Member of Parliament for Upper Ossory in Kilkenny South for the Irish Parliamentary Party in February 1886.  When the Irish National League split from Irish Parliamentary Party in December 1890, O’Mara took the Parnellite side.  He continued to act as trustee of the Party funds until 1908, when he resigned from his trusteeship.  Towards the end of his life, his moderate political views became more radicalised under the influence of his sons James (1873-1948) and Stephen Junior (1884-1959).  He had agreed with his son James’s decision to resign from the Irish Parliamentary Party in 1907 in order to join Sinn Fein, and personally supported the party in the 1918 General Election.  Both Stephen and his son James were strong supporters of the 1921 Anglo-Irish Treaty but were on friendly terms with Eamon de Valera who, it is said, spent the night at the O’Mara family home, Strand House, as the Treaty was being signed in London.  In the 1925 election, Stephen O’Mara was elected as Senator to the Free State Seanad.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara was also a prominent figure in local politics.  He became a Town Councillor on Limerick Corporation in the 1880s and was elected Mayor of Limerick in 1885.  He was the first Mayor of Limerick to be elected on a Nationalist ticket.  He also served as High Sheriff of Limerick city in 1888, 1913 and 1914.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara married Ellen Pigott in 1867, and the couple had 12 children of whom the eldest three died tragically of diphtheria in 1872.  From c. 1909 onwards, the family lived at Strand House.  Their third son, Stephen O’Mara Junior, was born on 5 January 1884.  He entered the family business in 1903 when he travelled to Canada to work in the bacon factory established by the O’Mara family in Ottawa.  In 1923, he became Managing Director of O’Mara Limited and created numerous employment opportunities by establishing bacon factories in Claremorris, County Mayo, and Letterkenny, County Donegal, in the 1930s.  The three bacon companies were amalgamated in 1938 and formed into the Bacon Company of Ireland.  Stephen O’Mara Junior remained the company’s chairman until his death in 1959.  In 1987, the Bacon Company of Ireland merged with Hanley of Rooskey and Benesford UK (Castlebar) with assistance from the Industrial Development Agency Ireland (IDA) to form Irish Country Bacon.  Shortly afterwards the old O’Mara factory in Limerick was closed down.  It was subsequently demolished to make way for a multi-storey car park.<lb/><lb/>Throughout his life, Stephen O’Mara Junior played a prominent role in both local and national affairs.  Unlike his father and elder brother James, Stephen was opposed to the Anglo-Irish Treaty but in a conciliatory manner.  He was prominently identified with the Sinn Fein movement after the Easter Rising.  He was one of Eamon de Valera’s strongest supporters and a member of his Fianna Fail Party since its formation in 1926.<lb/><lb/>When George Clancy, Lord Mayor of Limerick, and his predecessor Michael O’Callaghan were murdered by the British military forces in March 1921, Stephen decided to stand for election and became Mayor.  He was re-elected in 1922 and in 1923 but resigned before the expiration of his term of office.<lb/><lb/>In 1921, Stephen O’Mara Junior was selected to go to America as Special Envoy appointed by Dáil Éireann to the United States to oversee one of the country’s biggest fundraising drives to finance the first Dáil and was made Trustee of the funds.  The funds-drive was terminated following the signing of the Anglo-Irish Treaty.  Considering himself as the exchequer to the Irish Free State, O’Mara refused to hand over the collected funds to the pro-Treaty administration which resulted in his imprisonment in 1922-1923.  He had also been imprisoned for seven days in 1921 for refusing to pay a fine of £10 for non-compliance with a military summons.<lb/><lb/>The bulk of the money collected during the Bond Drive was left in various banks in New York and remained untouched for a number of years.  In 1927, following legal action between the Irish Government and Eamon de Valera, a court in New York ordered that money outstanding to bond holders must be paid back.  Having anticipated such a ruling, de Valera’s legal team invited bond holders to sign over their bonds to de Valera, for which they were paid 58 cents to the dollar.  The monies so accumulated were used to launch the national daily newspaper *The Irish Press*.  Stephen O’Mara served on the paper’s Board of Directors until his resignation in 1935.<lb/><lb/>In 1932, Stephen O’Mara was once again sent to America on a mission involving the various consular and diplomatic offices maintained in the country by the Irish Government.  Two years later, he was appointed a member of the Commission on Vocational Organisation, on which he served until 1943.  In 1959, he was created a member of the Council of State following de Valera’s inauguration as President of Ireland.  Stephen O’Mara died less than two months after his appointment, on 11 November 1959.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara Junior married in 1918 Anne O’Brien, third daughter of Thomas O’Brien of Boru House, and the couple had an adopted son, Peter O’Mara.  Anne’s youngest sister, Kate O’Brien, became one of the most prominent novelists in 20th-century Ireland and a voice of the respectable Irish Roman Catholic middle class.</p>
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            <p>‘Long Distance’ column entitled ‘Joyful Farewell to January’ by Kate O’Brien, published in the *Irish Times* on 5 February 1969.</p>
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            <note>
              <p>The history of the O’Mara family of Strand house and O’Mara’s Bacon Company go hand in hand.  The factory was founded in 1839 by James O’Meara (1817-1899), who originated from the village of Toomevaara in county Tipperary.  Having worked for some years in the woollen mills in Clonmel, he got a job as a clerk with Matterson’s Bacon Factory in Limerick and in 1839 founded O’Mara’s Bacon Company in his house on Mungret Street.  It is said that he dropped the ‘e’ from his surname as he felt that O’Meara was too long for commercial purposes.  James initially sold for Matterson’s but soon began to cure his own bacon in the basement of his house.  As his business grew, he acquired dedicated premises for the purpose near the top of Roche’s Street.<lb/><lb/>In 1841, James O’Mara married Honora Fowley (d. 1878), who worked in the bacon business alongside her husband.  A devoted nationalist, James was one of the early supporters of Isaac Butt’s Home Rule movement.  He was High Sheriff of Limerick City in 1887, and acted as Town Councillor on Limerick Corporation at least from 1888 to 1898.<lb/><lb/>James and Honora O’Mara had 13 children, of whom the two eldest surviving sons, Stephen O’Mara (1844-1926) and John (Jack) O’Mara (1856-1919) were instrumental in building up the O’Mara’s Bacon Factory into a great success.   The youngest son, Joseph (Joe) O’Mara (1864-1927) became a celebrated opera singer.<lb/><lb/>When James O’Mara retired from business his son John (Jack) O’Mara became manager of the O’Mara Bacon Factory.  In the late 1880s, Jack was invited to Russia by Tsar Alexander III to provide instruction on bacon curing.  He stayed in St Petersburg to supervise the construction of a bacon factory.  In 1891, his father bought the rights of the Russian Bacon Company and the family imported bacon from Russia into London until 1903.  James (Jim) O’Mara (1858-1893) acted as agent for O’Mara’s in London until his untimely death from heart disease.  His nephew James O’Mara (1873-1948), son of Stephen O’Mara Senior (1844-1926), took over the agency and held it until 1914.<lb/><lb/>When John (Jack) O’Mara died in 1919, his younger brother Stephen O’Mara (1844-1926) became Managing Director of O’Mara Limited and remained in that capacity until 1923.  Having entered into the family business at the age of fifteen, his great business acumen established O’Mara’s Bacon Factory as one of the most prominent commercial enterprises in Limerick city.  He also purchased a bacon factory in Palmerston, Ontario, Canada, which was managed by his son Joseph (Joe) O’Mara (1878-1950) until the business was wound up in the 1940s.<lb/><lb/>Like his father, Stephen O’Mara was a strong supporter of Isaac Butt’s Home Rule movement and a member of the committee which secured Butt’s election for Limerick city in 1871.  He later developed a close association with Charles Stewart Parnell and was elected Member of Parliament for Upper Ossory in Kilkenny South for the Irish Parliamentary Party in February 1886.  When the Irish National League split from Irish Parliamentary Party in December 1890, O’Mara took the Parnellite side.  He continued to act as trustee of the Party funds until 1908, when he resigned from his trusteeship.  Towards the end of his life, his moderate political views became more radicalised under the influence of his sons James (1873-1948) and Stephen Junior (1884-1959).  He had agreed with his son James’s decision to resign from the Irish Parliamentary Party in 1907 in order to join Sinn Fein, and personally supported the party in the 1918 General Election.  Both Stephen and his son James were strong supporters of the 1921 Anglo-Irish Treaty but were on friendly terms with Eamon de Valera who, it is said, spent the night at the O’Mara family home, Strand House, as the Treaty was being signed in London.  In the 1925 election, Stephen O’Mara was elected as Senator to the Free State Seanad.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara was also a prominent figure in local politics.  He became a Town Councillor on Limerick Corporation in the 1880s and was elected Mayor of Limerick in 1885.  He was the first Mayor of Limerick to be elected on a Nationalist ticket.  He also served as High Sheriff of Limerick city in 1888, 1913 and 1914.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara married Ellen Pigott in 1867, and the couple had 12 children of whom the eldest three died tragically of diphtheria in 1872.  From c. 1909 onwards, the family lived at Strand House.  Their third son, Stephen O’Mara Junior, was born on 5 January 1884.  He entered the family business in 1903 when he travelled to Canada to work in the bacon factory established by the O’Mara family in Ottawa.  In 1923, he became Managing Director of O’Mara Limited and created numerous employment opportunities by establishing bacon factories in Claremorris, County Mayo, and Letterkenny, County Donegal, in the 1930s.  The three bacon companies were amalgamated in 1938 and formed into the Bacon Company of Ireland.  Stephen O’Mara Junior remained the company’s chairman until his death in 1959.  In 1987, the Bacon Company of Ireland merged with Hanley of Rooskey and Benesford UK (Castlebar) with assistance from the Industrial Development Agency Ireland (IDA) to form Irish Country Bacon.  Shortly afterwards the old O’Mara factory in Limerick was closed down.  It was subsequently demolished to make way for a multi-storey car park.<lb/><lb/>Throughout his life, Stephen O’Mara Junior played a prominent role in both local and national affairs.  Unlike his father and elder brother James, Stephen was opposed to the Anglo-Irish Treaty but in a conciliatory manner.  He was prominently identified with the Sinn Fein movement after the Easter Rising.  He was one of Eamon de Valera’s strongest supporters and a member of his Fianna Fail Party since its formation in 1926.<lb/><lb/>When George Clancy, Lord Mayor of Limerick, and his predecessor Michael O’Callaghan were murdered by the British military forces in March 1921, Stephen decided to stand for election and became Mayor.  He was re-elected in 1922 and in 1923 but resigned before the expiration of his term of office.<lb/><lb/>In 1921, Stephen O’Mara Junior was selected to go to America as Special Envoy appointed by Dáil Éireann to the United States to oversee one of the country’s biggest fundraising drives to finance the first Dáil and was made Trustee of the funds.  The funds-drive was terminated following the signing of the Anglo-Irish Treaty.  Considering himself as the exchequer to the Irish Free State, O’Mara refused to hand over the collected funds to the pro-Treaty administration which resulted in his imprisonment in 1922-1923.  He had also been imprisoned for seven days in 1921 for refusing to pay a fine of £10 for non-compliance with a military summons.<lb/><lb/>The bulk of the money collected during the Bond Drive was left in various banks in New York and remained untouched for a number of years.  In 1927, following legal action between the Irish Government and Eamon de Valera, a court in New York ordered that money outstanding to bond holders must be paid back.  Having anticipated such a ruling, de Valera’s legal team invited bond holders to sign over their bonds to de Valera, for which they were paid 58 cents to the dollar.  The monies so accumulated were used to launch the national daily newspaper *The Irish Press*.  Stephen O’Mara served on the paper’s Board of Directors until his resignation in 1935.<lb/><lb/>In 1932, Stephen O’Mara was once again sent to America on a mission involving the various consular and diplomatic offices maintained in the country by the Irish Government.  Two years later, he was appointed a member of the Commission on Vocational Organisation, on which he served until 1943.  In 1959, he was created a member of the Council of State following de Valera’s inauguration as President of Ireland.  Stephen O’Mara died less than two months after his appointment, on 11 November 1959.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara Junior married in 1918 Anne O’Brien, third daughter of Thomas O’Brien of Boru House, and the couple had an adopted son, Peter O’Mara.  Anne’s youngest sister, Kate O’Brien, became one of the most prominent novelists in 20th-century Ireland and a voice of the respectable Irish Roman Catholic middle class.</p>
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            <p>Untitled ‘Long Distance’ column by Kate O’Brien, published in the *Irish Times* on 7 April 1969.</p>
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                <addressline>Fax: +353-61-213415</addressline>
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              <p>The history of the O’Mara family of Strand house and O’Mara’s Bacon Company go hand in hand.  The factory was founded in 1839 by James O’Meara (1817-1899), who originated from the village of Toomevaara in county Tipperary.  Having worked for some years in the woollen mills in Clonmel, he got a job as a clerk with Matterson’s Bacon Factory in Limerick and in 1839 founded O’Mara’s Bacon Company in his house on Mungret Street.  It is said that he dropped the ‘e’ from his surname as he felt that O’Meara was too long for commercial purposes.  James initially sold for Matterson’s but soon began to cure his own bacon in the basement of his house.  As his business grew, he acquired dedicated premises for the purpose near the top of Roche’s Street.<lb/><lb/>In 1841, James O’Mara married Honora Fowley (d. 1878), who worked in the bacon business alongside her husband.  A devoted nationalist, James was one of the early supporters of Isaac Butt’s Home Rule movement.  He was High Sheriff of Limerick City in 1887, and acted as Town Councillor on Limerick Corporation at least from 1888 to 1898.<lb/><lb/>James and Honora O’Mara had 13 children, of whom the two eldest surviving sons, Stephen O’Mara (1844-1926) and John (Jack) O’Mara (1856-1919) were instrumental in building up the O’Mara’s Bacon Factory into a great success.   The youngest son, Joseph (Joe) O’Mara (1864-1927) became a celebrated opera singer.<lb/><lb/>When James O’Mara retired from business his son John (Jack) O’Mara became manager of the O’Mara Bacon Factory.  In the late 1880s, Jack was invited to Russia by Tsar Alexander III to provide instruction on bacon curing.  He stayed in St Petersburg to supervise the construction of a bacon factory.  In 1891, his father bought the rights of the Russian Bacon Company and the family imported bacon from Russia into London until 1903.  James (Jim) O’Mara (1858-1893) acted as agent for O’Mara’s in London until his untimely death from heart disease.  His nephew James O’Mara (1873-1948), son of Stephen O’Mara Senior (1844-1926), took over the agency and held it until 1914.<lb/><lb/>When John (Jack) O’Mara died in 1919, his younger brother Stephen O’Mara (1844-1926) became Managing Director of O’Mara Limited and remained in that capacity until 1923.  Having entered into the family business at the age of fifteen, his great business acumen established O’Mara’s Bacon Factory as one of the most prominent commercial enterprises in Limerick city.  He also purchased a bacon factory in Palmerston, Ontario, Canada, which was managed by his son Joseph (Joe) O’Mara (1878-1950) until the business was wound up in the 1940s.<lb/><lb/>Like his father, Stephen O’Mara was a strong supporter of Isaac Butt’s Home Rule movement and a member of the committee which secured Butt’s election for Limerick city in 1871.  He later developed a close association with Charles Stewart Parnell and was elected Member of Parliament for Upper Ossory in Kilkenny South for the Irish Parliamentary Party in February 1886.  When the Irish National League split from Irish Parliamentary Party in December 1890, O’Mara took the Parnellite side.  He continued to act as trustee of the Party funds until 1908, when he resigned from his trusteeship.  Towards the end of his life, his moderate political views became more radicalised under the influence of his sons James (1873-1948) and Stephen Junior (1884-1959).  He had agreed with his son James’s decision to resign from the Irish Parliamentary Party in 1907 in order to join Sinn Fein, and personally supported the party in the 1918 General Election.  Both Stephen and his son James were strong supporters of the 1921 Anglo-Irish Treaty but were on friendly terms with Eamon de Valera who, it is said, spent the night at the O’Mara family home, Strand House, as the Treaty was being signed in London.  In the 1925 election, Stephen O’Mara was elected as Senator to the Free State Seanad.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara was also a prominent figure in local politics.  He became a Town Councillor on Limerick Corporation in the 1880s and was elected Mayor of Limerick in 1885.  He was the first Mayor of Limerick to be elected on a Nationalist ticket.  He also served as High Sheriff of Limerick city in 1888, 1913 and 1914.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara married Ellen Pigott in 1867, and the couple had 12 children of whom the eldest three died tragically of diphtheria in 1872.  From c. 1909 onwards, the family lived at Strand House.  Their third son, Stephen O’Mara Junior, was born on 5 January 1884.  He entered the family business in 1903 when he travelled to Canada to work in the bacon factory established by the O’Mara family in Ottawa.  In 1923, he became Managing Director of O’Mara Limited and created numerous employment opportunities by establishing bacon factories in Claremorris, County Mayo, and Letterkenny, County Donegal, in the 1930s.  The three bacon companies were amalgamated in 1938 and formed into the Bacon Company of Ireland.  Stephen O’Mara Junior remained the company’s chairman until his death in 1959.  In 1987, the Bacon Company of Ireland merged with Hanley of Rooskey and Benesford UK (Castlebar) with assistance from the Industrial Development Agency Ireland (IDA) to form Irish Country Bacon.  Shortly afterwards the old O’Mara factory in Limerick was closed down.  It was subsequently demolished to make way for a multi-storey car park.<lb/><lb/>Throughout his life, Stephen O’Mara Junior played a prominent role in both local and national affairs.  Unlike his father and elder brother James, Stephen was opposed to the Anglo-Irish Treaty but in a conciliatory manner.  He was prominently identified with the Sinn Fein movement after the Easter Rising.  He was one of Eamon de Valera’s strongest supporters and a member of his Fianna Fail Party since its formation in 1926.<lb/><lb/>When George Clancy, Lord Mayor of Limerick, and his predecessor Michael O’Callaghan were murdered by the British military forces in March 1921, Stephen decided to stand for election and became Mayor.  He was re-elected in 1922 and in 1923 but resigned before the expiration of his term of office.<lb/><lb/>In 1921, Stephen O’Mara Junior was selected to go to America as Special Envoy appointed by Dáil Éireann to the United States to oversee one of the country’s biggest fundraising drives to finance the first Dáil and was made Trustee of the funds.  The funds-drive was terminated following the signing of the Anglo-Irish Treaty.  Considering himself as the exchequer to the Irish Free State, O’Mara refused to hand over the collected funds to the pro-Treaty administration which resulted in his imprisonment in 1922-1923.  He had also been imprisoned for seven days in 1921 for refusing to pay a fine of £10 for non-compliance with a military summons.<lb/><lb/>The bulk of the money collected during the Bond Drive was left in various banks in New York and remained untouched for a number of years.  In 1927, following legal action between the Irish Government and Eamon de Valera, a court in New York ordered that money outstanding to bond holders must be paid back.  Having anticipated such a ruling, de Valera’s legal team invited bond holders to sign over their bonds to de Valera, for which they were paid 58 cents to the dollar.  The monies so accumulated were used to launch the national daily newspaper *The Irish Press*.  Stephen O’Mara served on the paper’s Board of Directors until his resignation in 1935.<lb/><lb/>In 1932, Stephen O’Mara was once again sent to America on a mission involving the various consular and diplomatic offices maintained in the country by the Irish Government.  Two years later, he was appointed a member of the Commission on Vocational Organisation, on which he served until 1943.  In 1959, he was created a member of the Council of State following de Valera’s inauguration as President of Ireland.  Stephen O’Mara died less than two months after his appointment, on 11 November 1959.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara Junior married in 1918 Anne O’Brien, third daughter of Thomas O’Brien of Boru House, and the couple had an adopted son, Peter O’Mara.  Anne’s youngest sister, Kate O’Brien, became one of the most prominent novelists in 20th-century Ireland and a voice of the respectable Irish Roman Catholic middle class.</p>
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            <p>‘Long Distance’ column entitled ‘Proud Self-Dismissal by De Gaulle’ by Kate O’Brien, published in the *Irish Times* on 19 May 1969.</p>
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            <note>
              <p>The history of the O’Mara family of Strand house and O’Mara’s Bacon Company go hand in hand.  The factory was founded in 1839 by James O’Meara (1817-1899), who originated from the village of Toomevaara in county Tipperary.  Having worked for some years in the woollen mills in Clonmel, he got a job as a clerk with Matterson’s Bacon Factory in Limerick and in 1839 founded O’Mara’s Bacon Company in his house on Mungret Street.  It is said that he dropped the ‘e’ from his surname as he felt that O’Meara was too long for commercial purposes.  James initially sold for Matterson’s but soon began to cure his own bacon in the basement of his house.  As his business grew, he acquired dedicated premises for the purpose near the top of Roche’s Street.<lb/><lb/>In 1841, James O’Mara married Honora Fowley (d. 1878), who worked in the bacon business alongside her husband.  A devoted nationalist, James was one of the early supporters of Isaac Butt’s Home Rule movement.  He was High Sheriff of Limerick City in 1887, and acted as Town Councillor on Limerick Corporation at least from 1888 to 1898.<lb/><lb/>James and Honora O’Mara had 13 children, of whom the two eldest surviving sons, Stephen O’Mara (1844-1926) and John (Jack) O’Mara (1856-1919) were instrumental in building up the O’Mara’s Bacon Factory into a great success.   The youngest son, Joseph (Joe) O’Mara (1864-1927) became a celebrated opera singer.<lb/><lb/>When James O’Mara retired from business his son John (Jack) O’Mara became manager of the O’Mara Bacon Factory.  In the late 1880s, Jack was invited to Russia by Tsar Alexander III to provide instruction on bacon curing.  He stayed in St Petersburg to supervise the construction of a bacon factory.  In 1891, his father bought the rights of the Russian Bacon Company and the family imported bacon from Russia into London until 1903.  James (Jim) O’Mara (1858-1893) acted as agent for O’Mara’s in London until his untimely death from heart disease.  His nephew James O’Mara (1873-1948), son of Stephen O’Mara Senior (1844-1926), took over the agency and held it until 1914.<lb/><lb/>When John (Jack) O’Mara died in 1919, his younger brother Stephen O’Mara (1844-1926) became Managing Director of O’Mara Limited and remained in that capacity until 1923.  Having entered into the family business at the age of fifteen, his great business acumen established O’Mara’s Bacon Factory as one of the most prominent commercial enterprises in Limerick city.  He also purchased a bacon factory in Palmerston, Ontario, Canada, which was managed by his son Joseph (Joe) O’Mara (1878-1950) until the business was wound up in the 1940s.<lb/><lb/>Like his father, Stephen O’Mara was a strong supporter of Isaac Butt’s Home Rule movement and a member of the committee which secured Butt’s election for Limerick city in 1871.  He later developed a close association with Charles Stewart Parnell and was elected Member of Parliament for Upper Ossory in Kilkenny South for the Irish Parliamentary Party in February 1886.  When the Irish National League split from Irish Parliamentary Party in December 1890, O’Mara took the Parnellite side.  He continued to act as trustee of the Party funds until 1908, when he resigned from his trusteeship.  Towards the end of his life, his moderate political views became more radicalised under the influence of his sons James (1873-1948) and Stephen Junior (1884-1959).  He had agreed with his son James’s decision to resign from the Irish Parliamentary Party in 1907 in order to join Sinn Fein, and personally supported the party in the 1918 General Election.  Both Stephen and his son James were strong supporters of the 1921 Anglo-Irish Treaty but were on friendly terms with Eamon de Valera who, it is said, spent the night at the O’Mara family home, Strand House, as the Treaty was being signed in London.  In the 1925 election, Stephen O’Mara was elected as Senator to the Free State Seanad.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara was also a prominent figure in local politics.  He became a Town Councillor on Limerick Corporation in the 1880s and was elected Mayor of Limerick in 1885.  He was the first Mayor of Limerick to be elected on a Nationalist ticket.  He also served as High Sheriff of Limerick city in 1888, 1913 and 1914.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara married Ellen Pigott in 1867, and the couple had 12 children of whom the eldest three died tragically of diphtheria in 1872.  From c. 1909 onwards, the family lived at Strand House.  Their third son, Stephen O’Mara Junior, was born on 5 January 1884.  He entered the family business in 1903 when he travelled to Canada to work in the bacon factory established by the O’Mara family in Ottawa.  In 1923, he became Managing Director of O’Mara Limited and created numerous employment opportunities by establishing bacon factories in Claremorris, County Mayo, and Letterkenny, County Donegal, in the 1930s.  The three bacon companies were amalgamated in 1938 and formed into the Bacon Company of Ireland.  Stephen O’Mara Junior remained the company’s chairman until his death in 1959.  In 1987, the Bacon Company of Ireland merged with Hanley of Rooskey and Benesford UK (Castlebar) with assistance from the Industrial Development Agency Ireland (IDA) to form Irish Country Bacon.  Shortly afterwards the old O’Mara factory in Limerick was closed down.  It was subsequently demolished to make way for a multi-storey car park.<lb/><lb/>Throughout his life, Stephen O’Mara Junior played a prominent role in both local and national affairs.  Unlike his father and elder brother James, Stephen was opposed to the Anglo-Irish Treaty but in a conciliatory manner.  He was prominently identified with the Sinn Fein movement after the Easter Rising.  He was one of Eamon de Valera’s strongest supporters and a member of his Fianna Fail Party since its formation in 1926.<lb/><lb/>When George Clancy, Lord Mayor of Limerick, and his predecessor Michael O’Callaghan were murdered by the British military forces in March 1921, Stephen decided to stand for election and became Mayor.  He was re-elected in 1922 and in 1923 but resigned before the expiration of his term of office.<lb/><lb/>In 1921, Stephen O’Mara Junior was selected to go to America as Special Envoy appointed by Dáil Éireann to the United States to oversee one of the country’s biggest fundraising drives to finance the first Dáil and was made Trustee of the funds.  The funds-drive was terminated following the signing of the Anglo-Irish Treaty.  Considering himself as the exchequer to the Irish Free State, O’Mara refused to hand over the collected funds to the pro-Treaty administration which resulted in his imprisonment in 1922-1923.  He had also been imprisoned for seven days in 1921 for refusing to pay a fine of £10 for non-compliance with a military summons.<lb/><lb/>The bulk of the money collected during the Bond Drive was left in various banks in New York and remained untouched for a number of years.  In 1927, following legal action between the Irish Government and Eamon de Valera, a court in New York ordered that money outstanding to bond holders must be paid back.  Having anticipated such a ruling, de Valera’s legal team invited bond holders to sign over their bonds to de Valera, for which they were paid 58 cents to the dollar.  The monies so accumulated were used to launch the national daily newspaper *The Irish Press*.  Stephen O’Mara served on the paper’s Board of Directors until his resignation in 1935.<lb/><lb/>In 1932, Stephen O’Mara was once again sent to America on a mission involving the various consular and diplomatic offices maintained in the country by the Irish Government.  Two years later, he was appointed a member of the Commission on Vocational Organisation, on which he served until 1943.  In 1959, he was created a member of the Council of State following de Valera’s inauguration as President of Ireland.  Stephen O’Mara died less than two months after his appointment, on 11 November 1959.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara Junior married in 1918 Anne O’Brien, third daughter of Thomas O’Brien of Boru House, and the couple had an adopted son, Peter O’Mara.  Anne’s youngest sister, Kate O’Brien, became one of the most prominent novelists in 20th-century Ireland and a voice of the respectable Irish Roman Catholic middle class.</p>
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              <p>The history of the O’Mara family of Strand house and O’Mara’s Bacon Company go hand in hand.  The factory was founded in 1839 by James O’Meara (1817-1899), who originated from the village of Toomevaara in county Tipperary.  Having worked for some years in the woollen mills in Clonmel, he got a job as a clerk with Matterson’s Bacon Factory in Limerick and in 1839 founded O’Mara’s Bacon Company in his house on Mungret Street.  It is said that he dropped the ‘e’ from his surname as he felt that O’Meara was too long for commercial purposes.  James initially sold for Matterson’s but soon began to cure his own bacon in the basement of his house.  As his business grew, he acquired dedicated premises for the purpose near the top of Roche’s Street.<lb/><lb/>In 1841, James O’Mara married Honora Fowley (d. 1878), who worked in the bacon business alongside her husband.  A devoted nationalist, James was one of the early supporters of Isaac Butt’s Home Rule movement.  He was High Sheriff of Limerick City in 1887, and acted as Town Councillor on Limerick Corporation at least from 1888 to 1898.<lb/><lb/>James and Honora O’Mara had 13 children, of whom the two eldest surviving sons, Stephen O’Mara (1844-1926) and John (Jack) O’Mara (1856-1919) were instrumental in building up the O’Mara’s Bacon Factory into a great success.   The youngest son, Joseph (Joe) O’Mara (1864-1927) became a celebrated opera singer.<lb/><lb/>When James O’Mara retired from business his son John (Jack) O’Mara became manager of the O’Mara Bacon Factory.  In the late 1880s, Jack was invited to Russia by Tsar Alexander III to provide instruction on bacon curing.  He stayed in St Petersburg to supervise the construction of a bacon factory.  In 1891, his father bought the rights of the Russian Bacon Company and the family imported bacon from Russia into London until 1903.  James (Jim) O’Mara (1858-1893) acted as agent for O’Mara’s in London until his untimely death from heart disease.  His nephew James O’Mara (1873-1948), son of Stephen O’Mara Senior (1844-1926), took over the agency and held it until 1914.<lb/><lb/>When John (Jack) O’Mara died in 1919, his younger brother Stephen O’Mara (1844-1926) became Managing Director of O’Mara Limited and remained in that capacity until 1923.  Having entered into the family business at the age of fifteen, his great business acumen established O’Mara’s Bacon Factory as one of the most prominent commercial enterprises in Limerick city.  He also purchased a bacon factory in Palmerston, Ontario, Canada, which was managed by his son Joseph (Joe) O’Mara (1878-1950) until the business was wound up in the 1940s.<lb/><lb/>Like his father, Stephen O’Mara was a strong supporter of Isaac Butt’s Home Rule movement and a member of the committee which secured Butt’s election for Limerick city in 1871.  He later developed a close association with Charles Stewart Parnell and was elected Member of Parliament for Upper Ossory in Kilkenny South for the Irish Parliamentary Party in February 1886.  When the Irish National League split from Irish Parliamentary Party in December 1890, O’Mara took the Parnellite side.  He continued to act as trustee of the Party funds until 1908, when he resigned from his trusteeship.  Towards the end of his life, his moderate political views became more radicalised under the influence of his sons James (1873-1948) and Stephen Junior (1884-1959).  He had agreed with his son James’s decision to resign from the Irish Parliamentary Party in 1907 in order to join Sinn Fein, and personally supported the party in the 1918 General Election.  Both Stephen and his son James were strong supporters of the 1921 Anglo-Irish Treaty but were on friendly terms with Eamon de Valera who, it is said, spent the night at the O’Mara family home, Strand House, as the Treaty was being signed in London.  In the 1925 election, Stephen O’Mara was elected as Senator to the Free State Seanad.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara was also a prominent figure in local politics.  He became a Town Councillor on Limerick Corporation in the 1880s and was elected Mayor of Limerick in 1885.  He was the first Mayor of Limerick to be elected on a Nationalist ticket.  He also served as High Sheriff of Limerick city in 1888, 1913 and 1914.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara married Ellen Pigott in 1867, and the couple had 12 children of whom the eldest three died tragically of diphtheria in 1872.  From c. 1909 onwards, the family lived at Strand House.  Their third son, Stephen O’Mara Junior, was born on 5 January 1884.  He entered the family business in 1903 when he travelled to Canada to work in the bacon factory established by the O’Mara family in Ottawa.  In 1923, he became Managing Director of O’Mara Limited and created numerous employment opportunities by establishing bacon factories in Claremorris, County Mayo, and Letterkenny, County Donegal, in the 1930s.  The three bacon companies were amalgamated in 1938 and formed into the Bacon Company of Ireland.  Stephen O’Mara Junior remained the company’s chairman until his death in 1959.  In 1987, the Bacon Company of Ireland merged with Hanley of Rooskey and Benesford UK (Castlebar) with assistance from the Industrial Development Agency Ireland (IDA) to form Irish Country Bacon.  Shortly afterwards the old O’Mara factory in Limerick was closed down.  It was subsequently demolished to make way for a multi-storey car park.<lb/><lb/>Throughout his life, Stephen O’Mara Junior played a prominent role in both local and national affairs.  Unlike his father and elder brother James, Stephen was opposed to the Anglo-Irish Treaty but in a conciliatory manner.  He was prominently identified with the Sinn Fein movement after the Easter Rising.  He was one of Eamon de Valera’s strongest supporters and a member of his Fianna Fail Party since its formation in 1926.<lb/><lb/>When George Clancy, Lord Mayor of Limerick, and his predecessor Michael O’Callaghan were murdered by the British military forces in March 1921, Stephen decided to stand for election and became Mayor.  He was re-elected in 1922 and in 1923 but resigned before the expiration of his term of office.<lb/><lb/>In 1921, Stephen O’Mara Junior was selected to go to America as Special Envoy appointed by Dáil Éireann to the United States to oversee one of the country’s biggest fundraising drives to finance the first Dáil and was made Trustee of the funds.  The funds-drive was terminated following the signing of the Anglo-Irish Treaty.  Considering himself as the exchequer to the Irish Free State, O’Mara refused to hand over the collected funds to the pro-Treaty administration which resulted in his imprisonment in 1922-1923.  He had also been imprisoned for seven days in 1921 for refusing to pay a fine of £10 for non-compliance with a military summons.<lb/><lb/>The bulk of the money collected during the Bond Drive was left in various banks in New York and remained untouched for a number of years.  In 1927, following legal action between the Irish Government and Eamon de Valera, a court in New York ordered that money outstanding to bond holders must be paid back.  Having anticipated such a ruling, de Valera’s legal team invited bond holders to sign over their bonds to de Valera, for which they were paid 58 cents to the dollar.  The monies so accumulated were used to launch the national daily newspaper *The Irish Press*.  Stephen O’Mara served on the paper’s Board of Directors until his resignation in 1935.<lb/><lb/>In 1932, Stephen O’Mara was once again sent to America on a mission involving the various consular and diplomatic offices maintained in the country by the Irish Government.  Two years later, he was appointed a member of the Commission on Vocational Organisation, on which he served until 1943.  In 1959, he was created a member of the Council of State following de Valera’s inauguration as President of Ireland.  Stephen O’Mara died less than two months after his appointment, on 11 November 1959.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara Junior married in 1918 Anne O’Brien, third daughter of Thomas O’Brien of Boru House, and the couple had an adopted son, Peter O’Mara.  Anne’s youngest sister, Kate O’Brien, became one of the most prominent novelists in 20th-century Ireland and a voice of the respectable Irish Roman Catholic middle class.</p>
            </note>
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            <p>‘Long Distance’ column entitled ‘Election Time and Our Anarchical Cynicism’ by Kate O’Brien, published in the *Irish Times* on 16 June 1969.</p>
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            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">‘The Prince’s Questioning Face under the Coronet’</unittitle>
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                <addressline>Limerick</addressline>
                <addressline>Ireland</addressline>
                <addressline>V94 DPY6</addressline>
                <addressline>Telephone: +353-61-202690</addressline>
                <addressline>Fax: +353-61-213415</addressline>
                <addressline>Email: specoll@ul.ie</addressline>
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              <p>The history of the O’Mara family of Strand house and O’Mara’s Bacon Company go hand in hand.  The factory was founded in 1839 by James O’Meara (1817-1899), who originated from the village of Toomevaara in county Tipperary.  Having worked for some years in the woollen mills in Clonmel, he got a job as a clerk with Matterson’s Bacon Factory in Limerick and in 1839 founded O’Mara’s Bacon Company in his house on Mungret Street.  It is said that he dropped the ‘e’ from his surname as he felt that O’Meara was too long for commercial purposes.  James initially sold for Matterson’s but soon began to cure his own bacon in the basement of his house.  As his business grew, he acquired dedicated premises for the purpose near the top of Roche’s Street.<lb/><lb/>In 1841, James O’Mara married Honora Fowley (d. 1878), who worked in the bacon business alongside her husband.  A devoted nationalist, James was one of the early supporters of Isaac Butt’s Home Rule movement.  He was High Sheriff of Limerick City in 1887, and acted as Town Councillor on Limerick Corporation at least from 1888 to 1898.<lb/><lb/>James and Honora O’Mara had 13 children, of whom the two eldest surviving sons, Stephen O’Mara (1844-1926) and John (Jack) O’Mara (1856-1919) were instrumental in building up the O’Mara’s Bacon Factory into a great success.   The youngest son, Joseph (Joe) O’Mara (1864-1927) became a celebrated opera singer.<lb/><lb/>When James O’Mara retired from business his son John (Jack) O’Mara became manager of the O’Mara Bacon Factory.  In the late 1880s, Jack was invited to Russia by Tsar Alexander III to provide instruction on bacon curing.  He stayed in St Petersburg to supervise the construction of a bacon factory.  In 1891, his father bought the rights of the Russian Bacon Company and the family imported bacon from Russia into London until 1903.  James (Jim) O’Mara (1858-1893) acted as agent for O’Mara’s in London until his untimely death from heart disease.  His nephew James O’Mara (1873-1948), son of Stephen O’Mara Senior (1844-1926), took over the agency and held it until 1914.<lb/><lb/>When John (Jack) O’Mara died in 1919, his younger brother Stephen O’Mara (1844-1926) became Managing Director of O’Mara Limited and remained in that capacity until 1923.  Having entered into the family business at the age of fifteen, his great business acumen established O’Mara’s Bacon Factory as one of the most prominent commercial enterprises in Limerick city.  He also purchased a bacon factory in Palmerston, Ontario, Canada, which was managed by his son Joseph (Joe) O’Mara (1878-1950) until the business was wound up in the 1940s.<lb/><lb/>Like his father, Stephen O’Mara was a strong supporter of Isaac Butt’s Home Rule movement and a member of the committee which secured Butt’s election for Limerick city in 1871.  He later developed a close association with Charles Stewart Parnell and was elected Member of Parliament for Upper Ossory in Kilkenny South for the Irish Parliamentary Party in February 1886.  When the Irish National League split from Irish Parliamentary Party in December 1890, O’Mara took the Parnellite side.  He continued to act as trustee of the Party funds until 1908, when he resigned from his trusteeship.  Towards the end of his life, his moderate political views became more radicalised under the influence of his sons James (1873-1948) and Stephen Junior (1884-1959).  He had agreed with his son James’s decision to resign from the Irish Parliamentary Party in 1907 in order to join Sinn Fein, and personally supported the party in the 1918 General Election.  Both Stephen and his son James were strong supporters of the 1921 Anglo-Irish Treaty but were on friendly terms with Eamon de Valera who, it is said, spent the night at the O’Mara family home, Strand House, as the Treaty was being signed in London.  In the 1925 election, Stephen O’Mara was elected as Senator to the Free State Seanad.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara was also a prominent figure in local politics.  He became a Town Councillor on Limerick Corporation in the 1880s and was elected Mayor of Limerick in 1885.  He was the first Mayor of Limerick to be elected on a Nationalist ticket.  He also served as High Sheriff of Limerick city in 1888, 1913 and 1914.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara married Ellen Pigott in 1867, and the couple had 12 children of whom the eldest three died tragically of diphtheria in 1872.  From c. 1909 onwards, the family lived at Strand House.  Their third son, Stephen O’Mara Junior, was born on 5 January 1884.  He entered the family business in 1903 when he travelled to Canada to work in the bacon factory established by the O’Mara family in Ottawa.  In 1923, he became Managing Director of O’Mara Limited and created numerous employment opportunities by establishing bacon factories in Claremorris, County Mayo, and Letterkenny, County Donegal, in the 1930s.  The three bacon companies were amalgamated in 1938 and formed into the Bacon Company of Ireland.  Stephen O’Mara Junior remained the company’s chairman until his death in 1959.  In 1987, the Bacon Company of Ireland merged with Hanley of Rooskey and Benesford UK (Castlebar) with assistance from the Industrial Development Agency Ireland (IDA) to form Irish Country Bacon.  Shortly afterwards the old O’Mara factory in Limerick was closed down.  It was subsequently demolished to make way for a multi-storey car park.<lb/><lb/>Throughout his life, Stephen O’Mara Junior played a prominent role in both local and national affairs.  Unlike his father and elder brother James, Stephen was opposed to the Anglo-Irish Treaty but in a conciliatory manner.  He was prominently identified with the Sinn Fein movement after the Easter Rising.  He was one of Eamon de Valera’s strongest supporters and a member of his Fianna Fail Party since its formation in 1926.<lb/><lb/>When George Clancy, Lord Mayor of Limerick, and his predecessor Michael O’Callaghan were murdered by the British military forces in March 1921, Stephen decided to stand for election and became Mayor.  He was re-elected in 1922 and in 1923 but resigned before the expiration of his term of office.<lb/><lb/>In 1921, Stephen O’Mara Junior was selected to go to America as Special Envoy appointed by Dáil Éireann to the United States to oversee one of the country’s biggest fundraising drives to finance the first Dáil and was made Trustee of the funds.  The funds-drive was terminated following the signing of the Anglo-Irish Treaty.  Considering himself as the exchequer to the Irish Free State, O’Mara refused to hand over the collected funds to the pro-Treaty administration which resulted in his imprisonment in 1922-1923.  He had also been imprisoned for seven days in 1921 for refusing to pay a fine of £10 for non-compliance with a military summons.<lb/><lb/>The bulk of the money collected during the Bond Drive was left in various banks in New York and remained untouched for a number of years.  In 1927, following legal action between the Irish Government and Eamon de Valera, a court in New York ordered that money outstanding to bond holders must be paid back.  Having anticipated such a ruling, de Valera’s legal team invited bond holders to sign over their bonds to de Valera, for which they were paid 58 cents to the dollar.  The monies so accumulated were used to launch the national daily newspaper *The Irish Press*.  Stephen O’Mara served on the paper’s Board of Directors until his resignation in 1935.<lb/><lb/>In 1932, Stephen O’Mara was once again sent to America on a mission involving the various consular and diplomatic offices maintained in the country by the Irish Government.  Two years later, he was appointed a member of the Commission on Vocational Organisation, on which he served until 1943.  In 1959, he was created a member of the Council of State following de Valera’s inauguration as President of Ireland.  Stephen O’Mara died less than two months after his appointment, on 11 November 1959.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara Junior married in 1918 Anne O’Brien, third daughter of Thomas O’Brien of Boru House, and the couple had an adopted son, Peter O’Mara.  Anne’s youngest sister, Kate O’Brien, became one of the most prominent novelists in 20th-century Ireland and a voice of the respectable Irish Roman Catholic middle class.</p>
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            <p>‘Long Distance’ column entitled ‘The Prince’s Questioning Face under the Coronet’ by Kate O’Brien, published in the *Irish Times* on 7 July 1969.</p>
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            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">‘Come Down from the Moon’</unittitle>
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                <addressline>Ireland</addressline>
                <addressline>V94 DPY6</addressline>
                <addressline>Telephone: +353-61-202690</addressline>
                <addressline>Fax: +353-61-213415</addressline>
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            <note>
              <p>The history of the O’Mara family of Strand house and O’Mara’s Bacon Company go hand in hand.  The factory was founded in 1839 by James O’Meara (1817-1899), who originated from the village of Toomevaara in county Tipperary.  Having worked for some years in the woollen mills in Clonmel, he got a job as a clerk with Matterson’s Bacon Factory in Limerick and in 1839 founded O’Mara’s Bacon Company in his house on Mungret Street.  It is said that he dropped the ‘e’ from his surname as he felt that O’Meara was too long for commercial purposes.  James initially sold for Matterson’s but soon began to cure his own bacon in the basement of his house.  As his business grew, he acquired dedicated premises for the purpose near the top of Roche’s Street.<lb/><lb/>In 1841, James O’Mara married Honora Fowley (d. 1878), who worked in the bacon business alongside her husband.  A devoted nationalist, James was one of the early supporters of Isaac Butt’s Home Rule movement.  He was High Sheriff of Limerick City in 1887, and acted as Town Councillor on Limerick Corporation at least from 1888 to 1898.<lb/><lb/>James and Honora O’Mara had 13 children, of whom the two eldest surviving sons, Stephen O’Mara (1844-1926) and John (Jack) O’Mara (1856-1919) were instrumental in building up the O’Mara’s Bacon Factory into a great success.   The youngest son, Joseph (Joe) O’Mara (1864-1927) became a celebrated opera singer.<lb/><lb/>When James O’Mara retired from business his son John (Jack) O’Mara became manager of the O’Mara Bacon Factory.  In the late 1880s, Jack was invited to Russia by Tsar Alexander III to provide instruction on bacon curing.  He stayed in St Petersburg to supervise the construction of a bacon factory.  In 1891, his father bought the rights of the Russian Bacon Company and the family imported bacon from Russia into London until 1903.  James (Jim) O’Mara (1858-1893) acted as agent for O’Mara’s in London until his untimely death from heart disease.  His nephew James O’Mara (1873-1948), son of Stephen O’Mara Senior (1844-1926), took over the agency and held it until 1914.<lb/><lb/>When John (Jack) O’Mara died in 1919, his younger brother Stephen O’Mara (1844-1926) became Managing Director of O’Mara Limited and remained in that capacity until 1923.  Having entered into the family business at the age of fifteen, his great business acumen established O’Mara’s Bacon Factory as one of the most prominent commercial enterprises in Limerick city.  He also purchased a bacon factory in Palmerston, Ontario, Canada, which was managed by his son Joseph (Joe) O’Mara (1878-1950) until the business was wound up in the 1940s.<lb/><lb/>Like his father, Stephen O’Mara was a strong supporter of Isaac Butt’s Home Rule movement and a member of the committee which secured Butt’s election for Limerick city in 1871.  He later developed a close association with Charles Stewart Parnell and was elected Member of Parliament for Upper Ossory in Kilkenny South for the Irish Parliamentary Party in February 1886.  When the Irish National League split from Irish Parliamentary Party in December 1890, O’Mara took the Parnellite side.  He continued to act as trustee of the Party funds until 1908, when he resigned from his trusteeship.  Towards the end of his life, his moderate political views became more radicalised under the influence of his sons James (1873-1948) and Stephen Junior (1884-1959).  He had agreed with his son James’s decision to resign from the Irish Parliamentary Party in 1907 in order to join Sinn Fein, and personally supported the party in the 1918 General Election.  Both Stephen and his son James were strong supporters of the 1921 Anglo-Irish Treaty but were on friendly terms with Eamon de Valera who, it is said, spent the night at the O’Mara family home, Strand House, as the Treaty was being signed in London.  In the 1925 election, Stephen O’Mara was elected as Senator to the Free State Seanad.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara was also a prominent figure in local politics.  He became a Town Councillor on Limerick Corporation in the 1880s and was elected Mayor of Limerick in 1885.  He was the first Mayor of Limerick to be elected on a Nationalist ticket.  He also served as High Sheriff of Limerick city in 1888, 1913 and 1914.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara married Ellen Pigott in 1867, and the couple had 12 children of whom the eldest three died tragically of diphtheria in 1872.  From c. 1909 onwards, the family lived at Strand House.  Their third son, Stephen O’Mara Junior, was born on 5 January 1884.  He entered the family business in 1903 when he travelled to Canada to work in the bacon factory established by the O’Mara family in Ottawa.  In 1923, he became Managing Director of O’Mara Limited and created numerous employment opportunities by establishing bacon factories in Claremorris, County Mayo, and Letterkenny, County Donegal, in the 1930s.  The three bacon companies were amalgamated in 1938 and formed into the Bacon Company of Ireland.  Stephen O’Mara Junior remained the company’s chairman until his death in 1959.  In 1987, the Bacon Company of Ireland merged with Hanley of Rooskey and Benesford UK (Castlebar) with assistance from the Industrial Development Agency Ireland (IDA) to form Irish Country Bacon.  Shortly afterwards the old O’Mara factory in Limerick was closed down.  It was subsequently demolished to make way for a multi-storey car park.<lb/><lb/>Throughout his life, Stephen O’Mara Junior played a prominent role in both local and national affairs.  Unlike his father and elder brother James, Stephen was opposed to the Anglo-Irish Treaty but in a conciliatory manner.  He was prominently identified with the Sinn Fein movement after the Easter Rising.  He was one of Eamon de Valera’s strongest supporters and a member of his Fianna Fail Party since its formation in 1926.<lb/><lb/>When George Clancy, Lord Mayor of Limerick, and his predecessor Michael O’Callaghan were murdered by the British military forces in March 1921, Stephen decided to stand for election and became Mayor.  He was re-elected in 1922 and in 1923 but resigned before the expiration of his term of office.<lb/><lb/>In 1921, Stephen O’Mara Junior was selected to go to America as Special Envoy appointed by Dáil Éireann to the United States to oversee one of the country’s biggest fundraising drives to finance the first Dáil and was made Trustee of the funds.  The funds-drive was terminated following the signing of the Anglo-Irish Treaty.  Considering himself as the exchequer to the Irish Free State, O’Mara refused to hand over the collected funds to the pro-Treaty administration which resulted in his imprisonment in 1922-1923.  He had also been imprisoned for seven days in 1921 for refusing to pay a fine of £10 for non-compliance with a military summons.<lb/><lb/>The bulk of the money collected during the Bond Drive was left in various banks in New York and remained untouched for a number of years.  In 1927, following legal action between the Irish Government and Eamon de Valera, a court in New York ordered that money outstanding to bond holders must be paid back.  Having anticipated such a ruling, de Valera’s legal team invited bond holders to sign over their bonds to de Valera, for which they were paid 58 cents to the dollar.  The monies so accumulated were used to launch the national daily newspaper *The Irish Press*.  Stephen O’Mara served on the paper’s Board of Directors until his resignation in 1935.<lb/><lb/>In 1932, Stephen O’Mara was once again sent to America on a mission involving the various consular and diplomatic offices maintained in the country by the Irish Government.  Two years later, he was appointed a member of the Commission on Vocational Organisation, on which he served until 1943.  In 1959, he was created a member of the Council of State following de Valera’s inauguration as President of Ireland.  Stephen O’Mara died less than two months after his appointment, on 11 November 1959.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara Junior married in 1918 Anne O’Brien, third daughter of Thomas O’Brien of Boru House, and the couple had an adopted son, Peter O’Mara.  Anne’s youngest sister, Kate O’Brien, became one of the most prominent novelists in 20th-century Ireland and a voice of the respectable Irish Roman Catholic middle class.</p>
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            <p>‘Long Distance’ column entitled ‘Come Down from the Moon’ by Kate O’Brien, published in the *Irish Times* on 21 July 1969.</p>
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                <addressline>Fax: +353-61-213415</addressline>
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              <p>The history of the O’Mara family of Strand house and O’Mara’s Bacon Company go hand in hand.  The factory was founded in 1839 by James O’Meara (1817-1899), who originated from the village of Toomevaara in county Tipperary.  Having worked for some years in the woollen mills in Clonmel, he got a job as a clerk with Matterson’s Bacon Factory in Limerick and in 1839 founded O’Mara’s Bacon Company in his house on Mungret Street.  It is said that he dropped the ‘e’ from his surname as he felt that O’Meara was too long for commercial purposes.  James initially sold for Matterson’s but soon began to cure his own bacon in the basement of his house.  As his business grew, he acquired dedicated premises for the purpose near the top of Roche’s Street.<lb/><lb/>In 1841, James O’Mara married Honora Fowley (d. 1878), who worked in the bacon business alongside her husband.  A devoted nationalist, James was one of the early supporters of Isaac Butt’s Home Rule movement.  He was High Sheriff of Limerick City in 1887, and acted as Town Councillor on Limerick Corporation at least from 1888 to 1898.<lb/><lb/>James and Honora O’Mara had 13 children, of whom the two eldest surviving sons, Stephen O’Mara (1844-1926) and John (Jack) O’Mara (1856-1919) were instrumental in building up the O’Mara’s Bacon Factory into a great success.   The youngest son, Joseph (Joe) O’Mara (1864-1927) became a celebrated opera singer.<lb/><lb/>When James O’Mara retired from business his son John (Jack) O’Mara became manager of the O’Mara Bacon Factory.  In the late 1880s, Jack was invited to Russia by Tsar Alexander III to provide instruction on bacon curing.  He stayed in St Petersburg to supervise the construction of a bacon factory.  In 1891, his father bought the rights of the Russian Bacon Company and the family imported bacon from Russia into London until 1903.  James (Jim) O’Mara (1858-1893) acted as agent for O’Mara’s in London until his untimely death from heart disease.  His nephew James O’Mara (1873-1948), son of Stephen O’Mara Senior (1844-1926), took over the agency and held it until 1914.<lb/><lb/>When John (Jack) O’Mara died in 1919, his younger brother Stephen O’Mara (1844-1926) became Managing Director of O’Mara Limited and remained in that capacity until 1923.  Having entered into the family business at the age of fifteen, his great business acumen established O’Mara’s Bacon Factory as one of the most prominent commercial enterprises in Limerick city.  He also purchased a bacon factory in Palmerston, Ontario, Canada, which was managed by his son Joseph (Joe) O’Mara (1878-1950) until the business was wound up in the 1940s.<lb/><lb/>Like his father, Stephen O’Mara was a strong supporter of Isaac Butt’s Home Rule movement and a member of the committee which secured Butt’s election for Limerick city in 1871.  He later developed a close association with Charles Stewart Parnell and was elected Member of Parliament for Upper Ossory in Kilkenny South for the Irish Parliamentary Party in February 1886.  When the Irish National League split from Irish Parliamentary Party in December 1890, O’Mara took the Parnellite side.  He continued to act as trustee of the Party funds until 1908, when he resigned from his trusteeship.  Towards the end of his life, his moderate political views became more radicalised under the influence of his sons James (1873-1948) and Stephen Junior (1884-1959).  He had agreed with his son James’s decision to resign from the Irish Parliamentary Party in 1907 in order to join Sinn Fein, and personally supported the party in the 1918 General Election.  Both Stephen and his son James were strong supporters of the 1921 Anglo-Irish Treaty but were on friendly terms with Eamon de Valera who, it is said, spent the night at the O’Mara family home, Strand House, as the Treaty was being signed in London.  In the 1925 election, Stephen O’Mara was elected as Senator to the Free State Seanad.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara was also a prominent figure in local politics.  He became a Town Councillor on Limerick Corporation in the 1880s and was elected Mayor of Limerick in 1885.  He was the first Mayor of Limerick to be elected on a Nationalist ticket.  He also served as High Sheriff of Limerick city in 1888, 1913 and 1914.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara married Ellen Pigott in 1867, and the couple had 12 children of whom the eldest three died tragically of diphtheria in 1872.  From c. 1909 onwards, the family lived at Strand House.  Their third son, Stephen O’Mara Junior, was born on 5 January 1884.  He entered the family business in 1903 when he travelled to Canada to work in the bacon factory established by the O’Mara family in Ottawa.  In 1923, he became Managing Director of O’Mara Limited and created numerous employment opportunities by establishing bacon factories in Claremorris, County Mayo, and Letterkenny, County Donegal, in the 1930s.  The three bacon companies were amalgamated in 1938 and formed into the Bacon Company of Ireland.  Stephen O’Mara Junior remained the company’s chairman until his death in 1959.  In 1987, the Bacon Company of Ireland merged with Hanley of Rooskey and Benesford UK (Castlebar) with assistance from the Industrial Development Agency Ireland (IDA) to form Irish Country Bacon.  Shortly afterwards the old O’Mara factory in Limerick was closed down.  It was subsequently demolished to make way for a multi-storey car park.<lb/><lb/>Throughout his life, Stephen O’Mara Junior played a prominent role in both local and national affairs.  Unlike his father and elder brother James, Stephen was opposed to the Anglo-Irish Treaty but in a conciliatory manner.  He was prominently identified with the Sinn Fein movement after the Easter Rising.  He was one of Eamon de Valera’s strongest supporters and a member of his Fianna Fail Party since its formation in 1926.<lb/><lb/>When George Clancy, Lord Mayor of Limerick, and his predecessor Michael O’Callaghan were murdered by the British military forces in March 1921, Stephen decided to stand for election and became Mayor.  He was re-elected in 1922 and in 1923 but resigned before the expiration of his term of office.<lb/><lb/>In 1921, Stephen O’Mara Junior was selected to go to America as Special Envoy appointed by Dáil Éireann to the United States to oversee one of the country’s biggest fundraising drives to finance the first Dáil and was made Trustee of the funds.  The funds-drive was terminated following the signing of the Anglo-Irish Treaty.  Considering himself as the exchequer to the Irish Free State, O’Mara refused to hand over the collected funds to the pro-Treaty administration which resulted in his imprisonment in 1922-1923.  He had also been imprisoned for seven days in 1921 for refusing to pay a fine of £10 for non-compliance with a military summons.<lb/><lb/>The bulk of the money collected during the Bond Drive was left in various banks in New York and remained untouched for a number of years.  In 1927, following legal action between the Irish Government and Eamon de Valera, a court in New York ordered that money outstanding to bond holders must be paid back.  Having anticipated such a ruling, de Valera’s legal team invited bond holders to sign over their bonds to de Valera, for which they were paid 58 cents to the dollar.  The monies so accumulated were used to launch the national daily newspaper *The Irish Press*.  Stephen O’Mara served on the paper’s Board of Directors until his resignation in 1935.<lb/><lb/>In 1932, Stephen O’Mara was once again sent to America on a mission involving the various consular and diplomatic offices maintained in the country by the Irish Government.  Two years later, he was appointed a member of the Commission on Vocational Organisation, on which he served until 1943.  In 1959, he was created a member of the Council of State following de Valera’s inauguration as President of Ireland.  Stephen O’Mara died less than two months after his appointment, on 11 November 1959.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara Junior married in 1918 Anne O’Brien, third daughter of Thomas O’Brien of Boru House, and the couple had an adopted son, Peter O’Mara.  Anne’s youngest sister, Kate O’Brien, became one of the most prominent novelists in 20th-century Ireland and a voice of the respectable Irish Roman Catholic middle class.</p>
            </note>
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            <p>‘Long Distance’ column entitled ‘Why Send Derelict Souls Man to Gentle Kerry?’ by Kate O’Brien, published in the *Irish Times* on 5 August 1969.</p>
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            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">‘Glasgow – City of Misery’</unittitle>
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                <addressline>GL0-051, Glucksman Library, University of Limerick</addressline>
                <addressline>Limerick</addressline>
                <addressline>Ireland</addressline>
                <addressline>V94 DPY6</addressline>
                <addressline>Telephone: +353-61-202690</addressline>
                <addressline>Fax: +353-61-213415</addressline>
                <addressline>Email: specoll@ul.ie</addressline>
                <addressline>https://specialcollections.ul.ie/</addressline>
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              <language langcode="eng">English</language>
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            <note>
              <p>The history of the O’Mara family of Strand house and O’Mara’s Bacon Company go hand in hand.  The factory was founded in 1839 by James O’Meara (1817-1899), who originated from the village of Toomevaara in county Tipperary.  Having worked for some years in the woollen mills in Clonmel, he got a job as a clerk with Matterson’s Bacon Factory in Limerick and in 1839 founded O’Mara’s Bacon Company in his house on Mungret Street.  It is said that he dropped the ‘e’ from his surname as he felt that O’Meara was too long for commercial purposes.  James initially sold for Matterson’s but soon began to cure his own bacon in the basement of his house.  As his business grew, he acquired dedicated premises for the purpose near the top of Roche’s Street.<lb/><lb/>In 1841, James O’Mara married Honora Fowley (d. 1878), who worked in the bacon business alongside her husband.  A devoted nationalist, James was one of the early supporters of Isaac Butt’s Home Rule movement.  He was High Sheriff of Limerick City in 1887, and acted as Town Councillor on Limerick Corporation at least from 1888 to 1898.<lb/><lb/>James and Honora O’Mara had 13 children, of whom the two eldest surviving sons, Stephen O’Mara (1844-1926) and John (Jack) O’Mara (1856-1919) were instrumental in building up the O’Mara’s Bacon Factory into a great success.   The youngest son, Joseph (Joe) O’Mara (1864-1927) became a celebrated opera singer.<lb/><lb/>When James O’Mara retired from business his son John (Jack) O’Mara became manager of the O’Mara Bacon Factory.  In the late 1880s, Jack was invited to Russia by Tsar Alexander III to provide instruction on bacon curing.  He stayed in St Petersburg to supervise the construction of a bacon factory.  In 1891, his father bought the rights of the Russian Bacon Company and the family imported bacon from Russia into London until 1903.  James (Jim) O’Mara (1858-1893) acted as agent for O’Mara’s in London until his untimely death from heart disease.  His nephew James O’Mara (1873-1948), son of Stephen O’Mara Senior (1844-1926), took over the agency and held it until 1914.<lb/><lb/>When John (Jack) O’Mara died in 1919, his younger brother Stephen O’Mara (1844-1926) became Managing Director of O’Mara Limited and remained in that capacity until 1923.  Having entered into the family business at the age of fifteen, his great business acumen established O’Mara’s Bacon Factory as one of the most prominent commercial enterprises in Limerick city.  He also purchased a bacon factory in Palmerston, Ontario, Canada, which was managed by his son Joseph (Joe) O’Mara (1878-1950) until the business was wound up in the 1940s.<lb/><lb/>Like his father, Stephen O’Mara was a strong supporter of Isaac Butt’s Home Rule movement and a member of the committee which secured Butt’s election for Limerick city in 1871.  He later developed a close association with Charles Stewart Parnell and was elected Member of Parliament for Upper Ossory in Kilkenny South for the Irish Parliamentary Party in February 1886.  When the Irish National League split from Irish Parliamentary Party in December 1890, O’Mara took the Parnellite side.  He continued to act as trustee of the Party funds until 1908, when he resigned from his trusteeship.  Towards the end of his life, his moderate political views became more radicalised under the influence of his sons James (1873-1948) and Stephen Junior (1884-1959).  He had agreed with his son James’s decision to resign from the Irish Parliamentary Party in 1907 in order to join Sinn Fein, and personally supported the party in the 1918 General Election.  Both Stephen and his son James were strong supporters of the 1921 Anglo-Irish Treaty but were on friendly terms with Eamon de Valera who, it is said, spent the night at the O’Mara family home, Strand House, as the Treaty was being signed in London.  In the 1925 election, Stephen O’Mara was elected as Senator to the Free State Seanad.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara was also a prominent figure in local politics.  He became a Town Councillor on Limerick Corporation in the 1880s and was elected Mayor of Limerick in 1885.  He was the first Mayor of Limerick to be elected on a Nationalist ticket.  He also served as High Sheriff of Limerick city in 1888, 1913 and 1914.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara married Ellen Pigott in 1867, and the couple had 12 children of whom the eldest three died tragically of diphtheria in 1872.  From c. 1909 onwards, the family lived at Strand House.  Their third son, Stephen O’Mara Junior, was born on 5 January 1884.  He entered the family business in 1903 when he travelled to Canada to work in the bacon factory established by the O’Mara family in Ottawa.  In 1923, he became Managing Director of O’Mara Limited and created numerous employment opportunities by establishing bacon factories in Claremorris, County Mayo, and Letterkenny, County Donegal, in the 1930s.  The three bacon companies were amalgamated in 1938 and formed into the Bacon Company of Ireland.  Stephen O’Mara Junior remained the company’s chairman until his death in 1959.  In 1987, the Bacon Company of Ireland merged with Hanley of Rooskey and Benesford UK (Castlebar) with assistance from the Industrial Development Agency Ireland (IDA) to form Irish Country Bacon.  Shortly afterwards the old O’Mara factory in Limerick was closed down.  It was subsequently demolished to make way for a multi-storey car park.<lb/><lb/>Throughout his life, Stephen O’Mara Junior played a prominent role in both local and national affairs.  Unlike his father and elder brother James, Stephen was opposed to the Anglo-Irish Treaty but in a conciliatory manner.  He was prominently identified with the Sinn Fein movement after the Easter Rising.  He was one of Eamon de Valera’s strongest supporters and a member of his Fianna Fail Party since its formation in 1926.<lb/><lb/>When George Clancy, Lord Mayor of Limerick, and his predecessor Michael O’Callaghan were murdered by the British military forces in March 1921, Stephen decided to stand for election and became Mayor.  He was re-elected in 1922 and in 1923 but resigned before the expiration of his term of office.<lb/><lb/>In 1921, Stephen O’Mara Junior was selected to go to America as Special Envoy appointed by Dáil Éireann to the United States to oversee one of the country’s biggest fundraising drives to finance the first Dáil and was made Trustee of the funds.  The funds-drive was terminated following the signing of the Anglo-Irish Treaty.  Considering himself as the exchequer to the Irish Free State, O’Mara refused to hand over the collected funds to the pro-Treaty administration which resulted in his imprisonment in 1922-1923.  He had also been imprisoned for seven days in 1921 for refusing to pay a fine of £10 for non-compliance with a military summons.<lb/><lb/>The bulk of the money collected during the Bond Drive was left in various banks in New York and remained untouched for a number of years.  In 1927, following legal action between the Irish Government and Eamon de Valera, a court in New York ordered that money outstanding to bond holders must be paid back.  Having anticipated such a ruling, de Valera’s legal team invited bond holders to sign over their bonds to de Valera, for which they were paid 58 cents to the dollar.  The monies so accumulated were used to launch the national daily newspaper *The Irish Press*.  Stephen O’Mara served on the paper’s Board of Directors until his resignation in 1935.<lb/><lb/>In 1932, Stephen O’Mara was once again sent to America on a mission involving the various consular and diplomatic offices maintained in the country by the Irish Government.  Two years later, he was appointed a member of the Commission on Vocational Organisation, on which he served until 1943.  In 1959, he was created a member of the Council of State following de Valera’s inauguration as President of Ireland.  Stephen O’Mara died less than two months after his appointment, on 11 November 1959.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara Junior married in 1918 Anne O’Brien, third daughter of Thomas O’Brien of Boru House, and the couple had an adopted son, Peter O’Mara.  Anne’s youngest sister, Kate O’Brien, became one of the most prominent novelists in 20th-century Ireland and a voice of the respectable Irish Roman Catholic middle class.</p>
            </note>
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            <p>‘Long Distance’ column entitled ‘Glasgow – City of Misery’ by Kate O’Brien, published in the *Irish Times* on 18 August 1969.</p>
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                <addressline>Telephone: +353-61-202690</addressline>
                <addressline>Fax: +353-61-213415</addressline>
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            <note>
              <p>The history of the O’Mara family of Strand house and O’Mara’s Bacon Company go hand in hand.  The factory was founded in 1839 by James O’Meara (1817-1899), who originated from the village of Toomevaara in county Tipperary.  Having worked for some years in the woollen mills in Clonmel, he got a job as a clerk with Matterson’s Bacon Factory in Limerick and in 1839 founded O’Mara’s Bacon Company in his house on Mungret Street.  It is said that he dropped the ‘e’ from his surname as he felt that O’Meara was too long for commercial purposes.  James initially sold for Matterson’s but soon began to cure his own bacon in the basement of his house.  As his business grew, he acquired dedicated premises for the purpose near the top of Roche’s Street.<lb/><lb/>In 1841, James O’Mara married Honora Fowley (d. 1878), who worked in the bacon business alongside her husband.  A devoted nationalist, James was one of the early supporters of Isaac Butt’s Home Rule movement.  He was High Sheriff of Limerick City in 1887, and acted as Town Councillor on Limerick Corporation at least from 1888 to 1898.<lb/><lb/>James and Honora O’Mara had 13 children, of whom the two eldest surviving sons, Stephen O’Mara (1844-1926) and John (Jack) O’Mara (1856-1919) were instrumental in building up the O’Mara’s Bacon Factory into a great success.   The youngest son, Joseph (Joe) O’Mara (1864-1927) became a celebrated opera singer.<lb/><lb/>When James O’Mara retired from business his son John (Jack) O’Mara became manager of the O’Mara Bacon Factory.  In the late 1880s, Jack was invited to Russia by Tsar Alexander III to provide instruction on bacon curing.  He stayed in St Petersburg to supervise the construction of a bacon factory.  In 1891, his father bought the rights of the Russian Bacon Company and the family imported bacon from Russia into London until 1903.  James (Jim) O’Mara (1858-1893) acted as agent for O’Mara’s in London until his untimely death from heart disease.  His nephew James O’Mara (1873-1948), son of Stephen O’Mara Senior (1844-1926), took over the agency and held it until 1914.<lb/><lb/>When John (Jack) O’Mara died in 1919, his younger brother Stephen O’Mara (1844-1926) became Managing Director of O’Mara Limited and remained in that capacity until 1923.  Having entered into the family business at the age of fifteen, his great business acumen established O’Mara’s Bacon Factory as one of the most prominent commercial enterprises in Limerick city.  He also purchased a bacon factory in Palmerston, Ontario, Canada, which was managed by his son Joseph (Joe) O’Mara (1878-1950) until the business was wound up in the 1940s.<lb/><lb/>Like his father, Stephen O’Mara was a strong supporter of Isaac Butt’s Home Rule movement and a member of the committee which secured Butt’s election for Limerick city in 1871.  He later developed a close association with Charles Stewart Parnell and was elected Member of Parliament for Upper Ossory in Kilkenny South for the Irish Parliamentary Party in February 1886.  When the Irish National League split from Irish Parliamentary Party in December 1890, O’Mara took the Parnellite side.  He continued to act as trustee of the Party funds until 1908, when he resigned from his trusteeship.  Towards the end of his life, his moderate political views became more radicalised under the influence of his sons James (1873-1948) and Stephen Junior (1884-1959).  He had agreed with his son James’s decision to resign from the Irish Parliamentary Party in 1907 in order to join Sinn Fein, and personally supported the party in the 1918 General Election.  Both Stephen and his son James were strong supporters of the 1921 Anglo-Irish Treaty but were on friendly terms with Eamon de Valera who, it is said, spent the night at the O’Mara family home, Strand House, as the Treaty was being signed in London.  In the 1925 election, Stephen O’Mara was elected as Senator to the Free State Seanad.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara was also a prominent figure in local politics.  He became a Town Councillor on Limerick Corporation in the 1880s and was elected Mayor of Limerick in 1885.  He was the first Mayor of Limerick to be elected on a Nationalist ticket.  He also served as High Sheriff of Limerick city in 1888, 1913 and 1914.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara married Ellen Pigott in 1867, and the couple had 12 children of whom the eldest three died tragically of diphtheria in 1872.  From c. 1909 onwards, the family lived at Strand House.  Their third son, Stephen O’Mara Junior, was born on 5 January 1884.  He entered the family business in 1903 when he travelled to Canada to work in the bacon factory established by the O’Mara family in Ottawa.  In 1923, he became Managing Director of O’Mara Limited and created numerous employment opportunities by establishing bacon factories in Claremorris, County Mayo, and Letterkenny, County Donegal, in the 1930s.  The three bacon companies were amalgamated in 1938 and formed into the Bacon Company of Ireland.  Stephen O’Mara Junior remained the company’s chairman until his death in 1959.  In 1987, the Bacon Company of Ireland merged with Hanley of Rooskey and Benesford UK (Castlebar) with assistance from the Industrial Development Agency Ireland (IDA) to form Irish Country Bacon.  Shortly afterwards the old O’Mara factory in Limerick was closed down.  It was subsequently demolished to make way for a multi-storey car park.<lb/><lb/>Throughout his life, Stephen O’Mara Junior played a prominent role in both local and national affairs.  Unlike his father and elder brother James, Stephen was opposed to the Anglo-Irish Treaty but in a conciliatory manner.  He was prominently identified with the Sinn Fein movement after the Easter Rising.  He was one of Eamon de Valera’s strongest supporters and a member of his Fianna Fail Party since its formation in 1926.<lb/><lb/>When George Clancy, Lord Mayor of Limerick, and his predecessor Michael O’Callaghan were murdered by the British military forces in March 1921, Stephen decided to stand for election and became Mayor.  He was re-elected in 1922 and in 1923 but resigned before the expiration of his term of office.<lb/><lb/>In 1921, Stephen O’Mara Junior was selected to go to America as Special Envoy appointed by Dáil Éireann to the United States to oversee one of the country’s biggest fundraising drives to finance the first Dáil and was made Trustee of the funds.  The funds-drive was terminated following the signing of the Anglo-Irish Treaty.  Considering himself as the exchequer to the Irish Free State, O’Mara refused to hand over the collected funds to the pro-Treaty administration which resulted in his imprisonment in 1922-1923.  He had also been imprisoned for seven days in 1921 for refusing to pay a fine of £10 for non-compliance with a military summons.<lb/><lb/>The bulk of the money collected during the Bond Drive was left in various banks in New York and remained untouched for a number of years.  In 1927, following legal action between the Irish Government and Eamon de Valera, a court in New York ordered that money outstanding to bond holders must be paid back.  Having anticipated such a ruling, de Valera’s legal team invited bond holders to sign over their bonds to de Valera, for which they were paid 58 cents to the dollar.  The monies so accumulated were used to launch the national daily newspaper *The Irish Press*.  Stephen O’Mara served on the paper’s Board of Directors until his resignation in 1935.<lb/><lb/>In 1932, Stephen O’Mara was once again sent to America on a mission involving the various consular and diplomatic offices maintained in the country by the Irish Government.  Two years later, he was appointed a member of the Commission on Vocational Organisation, on which he served until 1943.  In 1959, he was created a member of the Council of State following de Valera’s inauguration as President of Ireland.  Stephen O’Mara died less than two months after his appointment, on 11 November 1959.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara Junior married in 1918 Anne O’Brien, third daughter of Thomas O’Brien of Boru House, and the couple had an adopted son, Peter O’Mara.  Anne’s youngest sister, Kate O’Brien, became one of the most prominent novelists in 20th-century Ireland and a voice of the respectable Irish Roman Catholic middle class.</p>
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            <p>Untitled ‘Long Distance’ column by Kate O’Brien, published in the *Irish Times* on 6 October 1969.</p>
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                <addressline>Ireland</addressline>
                <addressline>V94 DPY6</addressline>
                <addressline>Telephone: +353-61-202690</addressline>
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              <p>The history of the O’Mara family of Strand house and O’Mara’s Bacon Company go hand in hand.  The factory was founded in 1839 by James O’Meara (1817-1899), who originated from the village of Toomevaara in county Tipperary.  Having worked for some years in the woollen mills in Clonmel, he got a job as a clerk with Matterson’s Bacon Factory in Limerick and in 1839 founded O’Mara’s Bacon Company in his house on Mungret Street.  It is said that he dropped the ‘e’ from his surname as he felt that O’Meara was too long for commercial purposes.  James initially sold for Matterson’s but soon began to cure his own bacon in the basement of his house.  As his business grew, he acquired dedicated premises for the purpose near the top of Roche’s Street.<lb/><lb/>In 1841, James O’Mara married Honora Fowley (d. 1878), who worked in the bacon business alongside her husband.  A devoted nationalist, James was one of the early supporters of Isaac Butt’s Home Rule movement.  He was High Sheriff of Limerick City in 1887, and acted as Town Councillor on Limerick Corporation at least from 1888 to 1898.<lb/><lb/>James and Honora O’Mara had 13 children, of whom the two eldest surviving sons, Stephen O’Mara (1844-1926) and John (Jack) O’Mara (1856-1919) were instrumental in building up the O’Mara’s Bacon Factory into a great success.   The youngest son, Joseph (Joe) O’Mara (1864-1927) became a celebrated opera singer.<lb/><lb/>When James O’Mara retired from business his son John (Jack) O’Mara became manager of the O’Mara Bacon Factory.  In the late 1880s, Jack was invited to Russia by Tsar Alexander III to provide instruction on bacon curing.  He stayed in St Petersburg to supervise the construction of a bacon factory.  In 1891, his father bought the rights of the Russian Bacon Company and the family imported bacon from Russia into London until 1903.  James (Jim) O’Mara (1858-1893) acted as agent for O’Mara’s in London until his untimely death from heart disease.  His nephew James O’Mara (1873-1948), son of Stephen O’Mara Senior (1844-1926), took over the agency and held it until 1914.<lb/><lb/>When John (Jack) O’Mara died in 1919, his younger brother Stephen O’Mara (1844-1926) became Managing Director of O’Mara Limited and remained in that capacity until 1923.  Having entered into the family business at the age of fifteen, his great business acumen established O’Mara’s Bacon Factory as one of the most prominent commercial enterprises in Limerick city.  He also purchased a bacon factory in Palmerston, Ontario, Canada, which was managed by his son Joseph (Joe) O’Mara (1878-1950) until the business was wound up in the 1940s.<lb/><lb/>Like his father, Stephen O’Mara was a strong supporter of Isaac Butt’s Home Rule movement and a member of the committee which secured Butt’s election for Limerick city in 1871.  He later developed a close association with Charles Stewart Parnell and was elected Member of Parliament for Upper Ossory in Kilkenny South for the Irish Parliamentary Party in February 1886.  When the Irish National League split from Irish Parliamentary Party in December 1890, O’Mara took the Parnellite side.  He continued to act as trustee of the Party funds until 1908, when he resigned from his trusteeship.  Towards the end of his life, his moderate political views became more radicalised under the influence of his sons James (1873-1948) and Stephen Junior (1884-1959).  He had agreed with his son James’s decision to resign from the Irish Parliamentary Party in 1907 in order to join Sinn Fein, and personally supported the party in the 1918 General Election.  Both Stephen and his son James were strong supporters of the 1921 Anglo-Irish Treaty but were on friendly terms with Eamon de Valera who, it is said, spent the night at the O’Mara family home, Strand House, as the Treaty was being signed in London.  In the 1925 election, Stephen O’Mara was elected as Senator to the Free State Seanad.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara was also a prominent figure in local politics.  He became a Town Councillor on Limerick Corporation in the 1880s and was elected Mayor of Limerick in 1885.  He was the first Mayor of Limerick to be elected on a Nationalist ticket.  He also served as High Sheriff of Limerick city in 1888, 1913 and 1914.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara married Ellen Pigott in 1867, and the couple had 12 children of whom the eldest three died tragically of diphtheria in 1872.  From c. 1909 onwards, the family lived at Strand House.  Their third son, Stephen O’Mara Junior, was born on 5 January 1884.  He entered the family business in 1903 when he travelled to Canada to work in the bacon factory established by the O’Mara family in Ottawa.  In 1923, he became Managing Director of O’Mara Limited and created numerous employment opportunities by establishing bacon factories in Claremorris, County Mayo, and Letterkenny, County Donegal, in the 1930s.  The three bacon companies were amalgamated in 1938 and formed into the Bacon Company of Ireland.  Stephen O’Mara Junior remained the company’s chairman until his death in 1959.  In 1987, the Bacon Company of Ireland merged with Hanley of Rooskey and Benesford UK (Castlebar) with assistance from the Industrial Development Agency Ireland (IDA) to form Irish Country Bacon.  Shortly afterwards the old O’Mara factory in Limerick was closed down.  It was subsequently demolished to make way for a multi-storey car park.<lb/><lb/>Throughout his life, Stephen O’Mara Junior played a prominent role in both local and national affairs.  Unlike his father and elder brother James, Stephen was opposed to the Anglo-Irish Treaty but in a conciliatory manner.  He was prominently identified with the Sinn Fein movement after the Easter Rising.  He was one of Eamon de Valera’s strongest supporters and a member of his Fianna Fail Party since its formation in 1926.<lb/><lb/>When George Clancy, Lord Mayor of Limerick, and his predecessor Michael O’Callaghan were murdered by the British military forces in March 1921, Stephen decided to stand for election and became Mayor.  He was re-elected in 1922 and in 1923 but resigned before the expiration of his term of office.<lb/><lb/>In 1921, Stephen O’Mara Junior was selected to go to America as Special Envoy appointed by Dáil Éireann to the United States to oversee one of the country’s biggest fundraising drives to finance the first Dáil and was made Trustee of the funds.  The funds-drive was terminated following the signing of the Anglo-Irish Treaty.  Considering himself as the exchequer to the Irish Free State, O’Mara refused to hand over the collected funds to the pro-Treaty administration which resulted in his imprisonment in 1922-1923.  He had also been imprisoned for seven days in 1921 for refusing to pay a fine of £10 for non-compliance with a military summons.<lb/><lb/>The bulk of the money collected during the Bond Drive was left in various banks in New York and remained untouched for a number of years.  In 1927, following legal action between the Irish Government and Eamon de Valera, a court in New York ordered that money outstanding to bond holders must be paid back.  Having anticipated such a ruling, de Valera’s legal team invited bond holders to sign over their bonds to de Valera, for which they were paid 58 cents to the dollar.  The monies so accumulated were used to launch the national daily newspaper *The Irish Press*.  Stephen O’Mara served on the paper’s Board of Directors until his resignation in 1935.<lb/><lb/>In 1932, Stephen O’Mara was once again sent to America on a mission involving the various consular and diplomatic offices maintained in the country by the Irish Government.  Two years later, he was appointed a member of the Commission on Vocational Organisation, on which he served until 1943.  In 1959, he was created a member of the Council of State following de Valera’s inauguration as President of Ireland.  Stephen O’Mara died less than two months after his appointment, on 11 November 1959.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara Junior married in 1918 Anne O’Brien, third daughter of Thomas O’Brien of Boru House, and the couple had an adopted son, Peter O’Mara.  Anne’s youngest sister, Kate O’Brien, became one of the most prominent novelists in 20th-century Ireland and a voice of the respectable Irish Roman Catholic middle class.</p>
            </note>
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          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Untitled ‘Long Distance’ column by Kate O’Brien, published in the *Irish Times* on 6 October 1969.</p>
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            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">‘Human Disaster’</unittitle>
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                <addressline>Limerick</addressline>
                <addressline>Ireland</addressline>
                <addressline>V94 DPY6</addressline>
                <addressline>Telephone: +353-61-202690</addressline>
                <addressline>Fax: +353-61-213415</addressline>
                <addressline>Email: specoll@ul.ie</addressline>
                <addressline>https://specialcollections.ul.ie/</addressline>
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            <note>
              <p>The history of the O’Mara family of Strand house and O’Mara’s Bacon Company go hand in hand.  The factory was founded in 1839 by James O’Meara (1817-1899), who originated from the village of Toomevaara in county Tipperary.  Having worked for some years in the woollen mills in Clonmel, he got a job as a clerk with Matterson’s Bacon Factory in Limerick and in 1839 founded O’Mara’s Bacon Company in his house on Mungret Street.  It is said that he dropped the ‘e’ from his surname as he felt that O’Meara was too long for commercial purposes.  James initially sold for Matterson’s but soon began to cure his own bacon in the basement of his house.  As his business grew, he acquired dedicated premises for the purpose near the top of Roche’s Street.<lb/><lb/>In 1841, James O’Mara married Honora Fowley (d. 1878), who worked in the bacon business alongside her husband.  A devoted nationalist, James was one of the early supporters of Isaac Butt’s Home Rule movement.  He was High Sheriff of Limerick City in 1887, and acted as Town Councillor on Limerick Corporation at least from 1888 to 1898.<lb/><lb/>James and Honora O’Mara had 13 children, of whom the two eldest surviving sons, Stephen O’Mara (1844-1926) and John (Jack) O’Mara (1856-1919) were instrumental in building up the O’Mara’s Bacon Factory into a great success.   The youngest son, Joseph (Joe) O’Mara (1864-1927) became a celebrated opera singer.<lb/><lb/>When James O’Mara retired from business his son John (Jack) O’Mara became manager of the O’Mara Bacon Factory.  In the late 1880s, Jack was invited to Russia by Tsar Alexander III to provide instruction on bacon curing.  He stayed in St Petersburg to supervise the construction of a bacon factory.  In 1891, his father bought the rights of the Russian Bacon Company and the family imported bacon from Russia into London until 1903.  James (Jim) O’Mara (1858-1893) acted as agent for O’Mara’s in London until his untimely death from heart disease.  His nephew James O’Mara (1873-1948), son of Stephen O’Mara Senior (1844-1926), took over the agency and held it until 1914.<lb/><lb/>When John (Jack) O’Mara died in 1919, his younger brother Stephen O’Mara (1844-1926) became Managing Director of O’Mara Limited and remained in that capacity until 1923.  Having entered into the family business at the age of fifteen, his great business acumen established O’Mara’s Bacon Factory as one of the most prominent commercial enterprises in Limerick city.  He also purchased a bacon factory in Palmerston, Ontario, Canada, which was managed by his son Joseph (Joe) O’Mara (1878-1950) until the business was wound up in the 1940s.<lb/><lb/>Like his father, Stephen O’Mara was a strong supporter of Isaac Butt’s Home Rule movement and a member of the committee which secured Butt’s election for Limerick city in 1871.  He later developed a close association with Charles Stewart Parnell and was elected Member of Parliament for Upper Ossory in Kilkenny South for the Irish Parliamentary Party in February 1886.  When the Irish National League split from Irish Parliamentary Party in December 1890, O’Mara took the Parnellite side.  He continued to act as trustee of the Party funds until 1908, when he resigned from his trusteeship.  Towards the end of his life, his moderate political views became more radicalised under the influence of his sons James (1873-1948) and Stephen Junior (1884-1959).  He had agreed with his son James’s decision to resign from the Irish Parliamentary Party in 1907 in order to join Sinn Fein, and personally supported the party in the 1918 General Election.  Both Stephen and his son James were strong supporters of the 1921 Anglo-Irish Treaty but were on friendly terms with Eamon de Valera who, it is said, spent the night at the O’Mara family home, Strand House, as the Treaty was being signed in London.  In the 1925 election, Stephen O’Mara was elected as Senator to the Free State Seanad.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara was also a prominent figure in local politics.  He became a Town Councillor on Limerick Corporation in the 1880s and was elected Mayor of Limerick in 1885.  He was the first Mayor of Limerick to be elected on a Nationalist ticket.  He also served as High Sheriff of Limerick city in 1888, 1913 and 1914.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara married Ellen Pigott in 1867, and the couple had 12 children of whom the eldest three died tragically of diphtheria in 1872.  From c. 1909 onwards, the family lived at Strand House.  Their third son, Stephen O’Mara Junior, was born on 5 January 1884.  He entered the family business in 1903 when he travelled to Canada to work in the bacon factory established by the O’Mara family in Ottawa.  In 1923, he became Managing Director of O’Mara Limited and created numerous employment opportunities by establishing bacon factories in Claremorris, County Mayo, and Letterkenny, County Donegal, in the 1930s.  The three bacon companies were amalgamated in 1938 and formed into the Bacon Company of Ireland.  Stephen O’Mara Junior remained the company’s chairman until his death in 1959.  In 1987, the Bacon Company of Ireland merged with Hanley of Rooskey and Benesford UK (Castlebar) with assistance from the Industrial Development Agency Ireland (IDA) to form Irish Country Bacon.  Shortly afterwards the old O’Mara factory in Limerick was closed down.  It was subsequently demolished to make way for a multi-storey car park.<lb/><lb/>Throughout his life, Stephen O’Mara Junior played a prominent role in both local and national affairs.  Unlike his father and elder brother James, Stephen was opposed to the Anglo-Irish Treaty but in a conciliatory manner.  He was prominently identified with the Sinn Fein movement after the Easter Rising.  He was one of Eamon de Valera’s strongest supporters and a member of his Fianna Fail Party since its formation in 1926.<lb/><lb/>When George Clancy, Lord Mayor of Limerick, and his predecessor Michael O’Callaghan were murdered by the British military forces in March 1921, Stephen decided to stand for election and became Mayor.  He was re-elected in 1922 and in 1923 but resigned before the expiration of his term of office.<lb/><lb/>In 1921, Stephen O’Mara Junior was selected to go to America as Special Envoy appointed by Dáil Éireann to the United States to oversee one of the country’s biggest fundraising drives to finance the first Dáil and was made Trustee of the funds.  The funds-drive was terminated following the signing of the Anglo-Irish Treaty.  Considering himself as the exchequer to the Irish Free State, O’Mara refused to hand over the collected funds to the pro-Treaty administration which resulted in his imprisonment in 1922-1923.  He had also been imprisoned for seven days in 1921 for refusing to pay a fine of £10 for non-compliance with a military summons.<lb/><lb/>The bulk of the money collected during the Bond Drive was left in various banks in New York and remained untouched for a number of years.  In 1927, following legal action between the Irish Government and Eamon de Valera, a court in New York ordered that money outstanding to bond holders must be paid back.  Having anticipated such a ruling, de Valera’s legal team invited bond holders to sign over their bonds to de Valera, for which they were paid 58 cents to the dollar.  The monies so accumulated were used to launch the national daily newspaper *The Irish Press*.  Stephen O’Mara served on the paper’s Board of Directors until his resignation in 1935.<lb/><lb/>In 1932, Stephen O’Mara was once again sent to America on a mission involving the various consular and diplomatic offices maintained in the country by the Irish Government.  Two years later, he was appointed a member of the Commission on Vocational Organisation, on which he served until 1943.  In 1959, he was created a member of the Council of State following de Valera’s inauguration as President of Ireland.  Stephen O’Mara died less than two months after his appointment, on 11 November 1959.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara Junior married in 1918 Anne O’Brien, third daughter of Thomas O’Brien of Boru House, and the couple had an adopted son, Peter O’Mara.  Anne’s youngest sister, Kate O’Brien, became one of the most prominent novelists in 20th-century Ireland and a voice of the respectable Irish Roman Catholic middle class.</p>
            </note>
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            <p>‘Long Distance’ column entitled ‘Human Disaster’ by Kate O’Brien, published in the *Irish Times* on 20 January 1970.</p>
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            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">‘A Welcome to February’</unittitle>
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                <addressline>Ireland</addressline>
                <addressline>V94 DPY6</addressline>
                <addressline>Telephone: +353-61-202690</addressline>
                <addressline>Fax: +353-61-213415</addressline>
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            <note>
              <p>The history of the O’Mara family of Strand house and O’Mara’s Bacon Company go hand in hand.  The factory was founded in 1839 by James O’Meara (1817-1899), who originated from the village of Toomevaara in county Tipperary.  Having worked for some years in the woollen mills in Clonmel, he got a job as a clerk with Matterson’s Bacon Factory in Limerick and in 1839 founded O’Mara’s Bacon Company in his house on Mungret Street.  It is said that he dropped the ‘e’ from his surname as he felt that O’Meara was too long for commercial purposes.  James initially sold for Matterson’s but soon began to cure his own bacon in the basement of his house.  As his business grew, he acquired dedicated premises for the purpose near the top of Roche’s Street.<lb/><lb/>In 1841, James O’Mara married Honora Fowley (d. 1878), who worked in the bacon business alongside her husband.  A devoted nationalist, James was one of the early supporters of Isaac Butt’s Home Rule movement.  He was High Sheriff of Limerick City in 1887, and acted as Town Councillor on Limerick Corporation at least from 1888 to 1898.<lb/><lb/>James and Honora O’Mara had 13 children, of whom the two eldest surviving sons, Stephen O’Mara (1844-1926) and John (Jack) O’Mara (1856-1919) were instrumental in building up the O’Mara’s Bacon Factory into a great success.   The youngest son, Joseph (Joe) O’Mara (1864-1927) became a celebrated opera singer.<lb/><lb/>When James O’Mara retired from business his son John (Jack) O’Mara became manager of the O’Mara Bacon Factory.  In the late 1880s, Jack was invited to Russia by Tsar Alexander III to provide instruction on bacon curing.  He stayed in St Petersburg to supervise the construction of a bacon factory.  In 1891, his father bought the rights of the Russian Bacon Company and the family imported bacon from Russia into London until 1903.  James (Jim) O’Mara (1858-1893) acted as agent for O’Mara’s in London until his untimely death from heart disease.  His nephew James O’Mara (1873-1948), son of Stephen O’Mara Senior (1844-1926), took over the agency and held it until 1914.<lb/><lb/>When John (Jack) O’Mara died in 1919, his younger brother Stephen O’Mara (1844-1926) became Managing Director of O’Mara Limited and remained in that capacity until 1923.  Having entered into the family business at the age of fifteen, his great business acumen established O’Mara’s Bacon Factory as one of the most prominent commercial enterprises in Limerick city.  He also purchased a bacon factory in Palmerston, Ontario, Canada, which was managed by his son Joseph (Joe) O’Mara (1878-1950) until the business was wound up in the 1940s.<lb/><lb/>Like his father, Stephen O’Mara was a strong supporter of Isaac Butt’s Home Rule movement and a member of the committee which secured Butt’s election for Limerick city in 1871.  He later developed a close association with Charles Stewart Parnell and was elected Member of Parliament for Upper Ossory in Kilkenny South for the Irish Parliamentary Party in February 1886.  When the Irish National League split from Irish Parliamentary Party in December 1890, O’Mara took the Parnellite side.  He continued to act as trustee of the Party funds until 1908, when he resigned from his trusteeship.  Towards the end of his life, his moderate political views became more radicalised under the influence of his sons James (1873-1948) and Stephen Junior (1884-1959).  He had agreed with his son James’s decision to resign from the Irish Parliamentary Party in 1907 in order to join Sinn Fein, and personally supported the party in the 1918 General Election.  Both Stephen and his son James were strong supporters of the 1921 Anglo-Irish Treaty but were on friendly terms with Eamon de Valera who, it is said, spent the night at the O’Mara family home, Strand House, as the Treaty was being signed in London.  In the 1925 election, Stephen O’Mara was elected as Senator to the Free State Seanad.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara was also a prominent figure in local politics.  He became a Town Councillor on Limerick Corporation in the 1880s and was elected Mayor of Limerick in 1885.  He was the first Mayor of Limerick to be elected on a Nationalist ticket.  He also served as High Sheriff of Limerick city in 1888, 1913 and 1914.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara married Ellen Pigott in 1867, and the couple had 12 children of whom the eldest three died tragically of diphtheria in 1872.  From c. 1909 onwards, the family lived at Strand House.  Their third son, Stephen O’Mara Junior, was born on 5 January 1884.  He entered the family business in 1903 when he travelled to Canada to work in the bacon factory established by the O’Mara family in Ottawa.  In 1923, he became Managing Director of O’Mara Limited and created numerous employment opportunities by establishing bacon factories in Claremorris, County Mayo, and Letterkenny, County Donegal, in the 1930s.  The three bacon companies were amalgamated in 1938 and formed into the Bacon Company of Ireland.  Stephen O’Mara Junior remained the company’s chairman until his death in 1959.  In 1987, the Bacon Company of Ireland merged with Hanley of Rooskey and Benesford UK (Castlebar) with assistance from the Industrial Development Agency Ireland (IDA) to form Irish Country Bacon.  Shortly afterwards the old O’Mara factory in Limerick was closed down.  It was subsequently demolished to make way for a multi-storey car park.<lb/><lb/>Throughout his life, Stephen O’Mara Junior played a prominent role in both local and national affairs.  Unlike his father and elder brother James, Stephen was opposed to the Anglo-Irish Treaty but in a conciliatory manner.  He was prominently identified with the Sinn Fein movement after the Easter Rising.  He was one of Eamon de Valera’s strongest supporters and a member of his Fianna Fail Party since its formation in 1926.<lb/><lb/>When George Clancy, Lord Mayor of Limerick, and his predecessor Michael O’Callaghan were murdered by the British military forces in March 1921, Stephen decided to stand for election and became Mayor.  He was re-elected in 1922 and in 1923 but resigned before the expiration of his term of office.<lb/><lb/>In 1921, Stephen O’Mara Junior was selected to go to America as Special Envoy appointed by Dáil Éireann to the United States to oversee one of the country’s biggest fundraising drives to finance the first Dáil and was made Trustee of the funds.  The funds-drive was terminated following the signing of the Anglo-Irish Treaty.  Considering himself as the exchequer to the Irish Free State, O’Mara refused to hand over the collected funds to the pro-Treaty administration which resulted in his imprisonment in 1922-1923.  He had also been imprisoned for seven days in 1921 for refusing to pay a fine of £10 for non-compliance with a military summons.<lb/><lb/>The bulk of the money collected during the Bond Drive was left in various banks in New York and remained untouched for a number of years.  In 1927, following legal action between the Irish Government and Eamon de Valera, a court in New York ordered that money outstanding to bond holders must be paid back.  Having anticipated such a ruling, de Valera’s legal team invited bond holders to sign over their bonds to de Valera, for which they were paid 58 cents to the dollar.  The monies so accumulated were used to launch the national daily newspaper *The Irish Press*.  Stephen O’Mara served on the paper’s Board of Directors until his resignation in 1935.<lb/><lb/>In 1932, Stephen O’Mara was once again sent to America on a mission involving the various consular and diplomatic offices maintained in the country by the Irish Government.  Two years later, he was appointed a member of the Commission on Vocational Organisation, on which he served until 1943.  In 1959, he was created a member of the Council of State following de Valera’s inauguration as President of Ireland.  Stephen O’Mara died less than two months after his appointment, on 11 November 1959.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara Junior married in 1918 Anne O’Brien, third daughter of Thomas O’Brien of Boru House, and the couple had an adopted son, Peter O’Mara.  Anne’s youngest sister, Kate O’Brien, became one of the most prominent novelists in 20th-century Ireland and a voice of the respectable Irish Roman Catholic middle class.</p>
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            <p>‘Long Distance’ column entitled ‘A Welcome to February’ by Kate O’Brien, published in the *Irish Times* on 3 February 1970.</p>
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                <addressline>Telephone: +353-61-202690</addressline>
                <addressline>Fax: +353-61-213415</addressline>
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              <p>The history of the O’Mara family of Strand house and O’Mara’s Bacon Company go hand in hand.  The factory was founded in 1839 by James O’Meara (1817-1899), who originated from the village of Toomevaara in county Tipperary.  Having worked for some years in the woollen mills in Clonmel, he got a job as a clerk with Matterson’s Bacon Factory in Limerick and in 1839 founded O’Mara’s Bacon Company in his house on Mungret Street.  It is said that he dropped the ‘e’ from his surname as he felt that O’Meara was too long for commercial purposes.  James initially sold for Matterson’s but soon began to cure his own bacon in the basement of his house.  As his business grew, he acquired dedicated premises for the purpose near the top of Roche’s Street.<lb/><lb/>In 1841, James O’Mara married Honora Fowley (d. 1878), who worked in the bacon business alongside her husband.  A devoted nationalist, James was one of the early supporters of Isaac Butt’s Home Rule movement.  He was High Sheriff of Limerick City in 1887, and acted as Town Councillor on Limerick Corporation at least from 1888 to 1898.<lb/><lb/>James and Honora O’Mara had 13 children, of whom the two eldest surviving sons, Stephen O’Mara (1844-1926) and John (Jack) O’Mara (1856-1919) were instrumental in building up the O’Mara’s Bacon Factory into a great success.   The youngest son, Joseph (Joe) O’Mara (1864-1927) became a celebrated opera singer.<lb/><lb/>When James O’Mara retired from business his son John (Jack) O’Mara became manager of the O’Mara Bacon Factory.  In the late 1880s, Jack was invited to Russia by Tsar Alexander III to provide instruction on bacon curing.  He stayed in St Petersburg to supervise the construction of a bacon factory.  In 1891, his father bought the rights of the Russian Bacon Company and the family imported bacon from Russia into London until 1903.  James (Jim) O’Mara (1858-1893) acted as agent for O’Mara’s in London until his untimely death from heart disease.  His nephew James O’Mara (1873-1948), son of Stephen O’Mara Senior (1844-1926), took over the agency and held it until 1914.<lb/><lb/>When John (Jack) O’Mara died in 1919, his younger brother Stephen O’Mara (1844-1926) became Managing Director of O’Mara Limited and remained in that capacity until 1923.  Having entered into the family business at the age of fifteen, his great business acumen established O’Mara’s Bacon Factory as one of the most prominent commercial enterprises in Limerick city.  He also purchased a bacon factory in Palmerston, Ontario, Canada, which was managed by his son Joseph (Joe) O’Mara (1878-1950) until the business was wound up in the 1940s.<lb/><lb/>Like his father, Stephen O’Mara was a strong supporter of Isaac Butt’s Home Rule movement and a member of the committee which secured Butt’s election for Limerick city in 1871.  He later developed a close association with Charles Stewart Parnell and was elected Member of Parliament for Upper Ossory in Kilkenny South for the Irish Parliamentary Party in February 1886.  When the Irish National League split from Irish Parliamentary Party in December 1890, O’Mara took the Parnellite side.  He continued to act as trustee of the Party funds until 1908, when he resigned from his trusteeship.  Towards the end of his life, his moderate political views became more radicalised under the influence of his sons James (1873-1948) and Stephen Junior (1884-1959).  He had agreed with his son James’s decision to resign from the Irish Parliamentary Party in 1907 in order to join Sinn Fein, and personally supported the party in the 1918 General Election.  Both Stephen and his son James were strong supporters of the 1921 Anglo-Irish Treaty but were on friendly terms with Eamon de Valera who, it is said, spent the night at the O’Mara family home, Strand House, as the Treaty was being signed in London.  In the 1925 election, Stephen O’Mara was elected as Senator to the Free State Seanad.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara was also a prominent figure in local politics.  He became a Town Councillor on Limerick Corporation in the 1880s and was elected Mayor of Limerick in 1885.  He was the first Mayor of Limerick to be elected on a Nationalist ticket.  He also served as High Sheriff of Limerick city in 1888, 1913 and 1914.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara married Ellen Pigott in 1867, and the couple had 12 children of whom the eldest three died tragically of diphtheria in 1872.  From c. 1909 onwards, the family lived at Strand House.  Their third son, Stephen O’Mara Junior, was born on 5 January 1884.  He entered the family business in 1903 when he travelled to Canada to work in the bacon factory established by the O’Mara family in Ottawa.  In 1923, he became Managing Director of O’Mara Limited and created numerous employment opportunities by establishing bacon factories in Claremorris, County Mayo, and Letterkenny, County Donegal, in the 1930s.  The three bacon companies were amalgamated in 1938 and formed into the Bacon Company of Ireland.  Stephen O’Mara Junior remained the company’s chairman until his death in 1959.  In 1987, the Bacon Company of Ireland merged with Hanley of Rooskey and Benesford UK (Castlebar) with assistance from the Industrial Development Agency Ireland (IDA) to form Irish Country Bacon.  Shortly afterwards the old O’Mara factory in Limerick was closed down.  It was subsequently demolished to make way for a multi-storey car park.<lb/><lb/>Throughout his life, Stephen O’Mara Junior played a prominent role in both local and national affairs.  Unlike his father and elder brother James, Stephen was opposed to the Anglo-Irish Treaty but in a conciliatory manner.  He was prominently identified with the Sinn Fein movement after the Easter Rising.  He was one of Eamon de Valera’s strongest supporters and a member of his Fianna Fail Party since its formation in 1926.<lb/><lb/>When George Clancy, Lord Mayor of Limerick, and his predecessor Michael O’Callaghan were murdered by the British military forces in March 1921, Stephen decided to stand for election and became Mayor.  He was re-elected in 1922 and in 1923 but resigned before the expiration of his term of office.<lb/><lb/>In 1921, Stephen O’Mara Junior was selected to go to America as Special Envoy appointed by Dáil Éireann to the United States to oversee one of the country’s biggest fundraising drives to finance the first Dáil and was made Trustee of the funds.  The funds-drive was terminated following the signing of the Anglo-Irish Treaty.  Considering himself as the exchequer to the Irish Free State, O’Mara refused to hand over the collected funds to the pro-Treaty administration which resulted in his imprisonment in 1922-1923.  He had also been imprisoned for seven days in 1921 for refusing to pay a fine of £10 for non-compliance with a military summons.<lb/><lb/>The bulk of the money collected during the Bond Drive was left in various banks in New York and remained untouched for a number of years.  In 1927, following legal action between the Irish Government and Eamon de Valera, a court in New York ordered that money outstanding to bond holders must be paid back.  Having anticipated such a ruling, de Valera’s legal team invited bond holders to sign over their bonds to de Valera, for which they were paid 58 cents to the dollar.  The monies so accumulated were used to launch the national daily newspaper *The Irish Press*.  Stephen O’Mara served on the paper’s Board of Directors until his resignation in 1935.<lb/><lb/>In 1932, Stephen O’Mara was once again sent to America on a mission involving the various consular and diplomatic offices maintained in the country by the Irish Government.  Two years later, he was appointed a member of the Commission on Vocational Organisation, on which he served until 1943.  In 1959, he was created a member of the Council of State following de Valera’s inauguration as President of Ireland.  Stephen O’Mara died less than two months after his appointment, on 11 November 1959.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara Junior married in 1918 Anne O’Brien, third daughter of Thomas O’Brien of Boru House, and the couple had an adopted son, Peter O’Mara.  Anne’s youngest sister, Kate O’Brien, became one of the most prominent novelists in 20th-century Ireland and a voice of the respectable Irish Roman Catholic middle class.</p>
            </note>
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            <p>‘Long Distance’ column entitled ‘The Great BBC Row’ by Kate O’Brien, published in the *Irish Times* on 2 March 1970.</p>
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                <addressline>Ireland</addressline>
                <addressline>V94 DPY6</addressline>
                <addressline>Telephone: +353-61-202690</addressline>
                <addressline>Fax: +353-61-213415</addressline>
                <addressline>Email: specoll@ul.ie</addressline>
                <addressline>https://specialcollections.ul.ie/</addressline>
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            <note>
              <p>The history of the O’Mara family of Strand house and O’Mara’s Bacon Company go hand in hand.  The factory was founded in 1839 by James O’Meara (1817-1899), who originated from the village of Toomevaara in county Tipperary.  Having worked for some years in the woollen mills in Clonmel, he got a job as a clerk with Matterson’s Bacon Factory in Limerick and in 1839 founded O’Mara’s Bacon Company in his house on Mungret Street.  It is said that he dropped the ‘e’ from his surname as he felt that O’Meara was too long for commercial purposes.  James initially sold for Matterson’s but soon began to cure his own bacon in the basement of his house.  As his business grew, he acquired dedicated premises for the purpose near the top of Roche’s Street.<lb/><lb/>In 1841, James O’Mara married Honora Fowley (d. 1878), who worked in the bacon business alongside her husband.  A devoted nationalist, James was one of the early supporters of Isaac Butt’s Home Rule movement.  He was High Sheriff of Limerick City in 1887, and acted as Town Councillor on Limerick Corporation at least from 1888 to 1898.<lb/><lb/>James and Honora O’Mara had 13 children, of whom the two eldest surviving sons, Stephen O’Mara (1844-1926) and John (Jack) O’Mara (1856-1919) were instrumental in building up the O’Mara’s Bacon Factory into a great success.   The youngest son, Joseph (Joe) O’Mara (1864-1927) became a celebrated opera singer.<lb/><lb/>When James O’Mara retired from business his son John (Jack) O’Mara became manager of the O’Mara Bacon Factory.  In the late 1880s, Jack was invited to Russia by Tsar Alexander III to provide instruction on bacon curing.  He stayed in St Petersburg to supervise the construction of a bacon factory.  In 1891, his father bought the rights of the Russian Bacon Company and the family imported bacon from Russia into London until 1903.  James (Jim) O’Mara (1858-1893) acted as agent for O’Mara’s in London until his untimely death from heart disease.  His nephew James O’Mara (1873-1948), son of Stephen O’Mara Senior (1844-1926), took over the agency and held it until 1914.<lb/><lb/>When John (Jack) O’Mara died in 1919, his younger brother Stephen O’Mara (1844-1926) became Managing Director of O’Mara Limited and remained in that capacity until 1923.  Having entered into the family business at the age of fifteen, his great business acumen established O’Mara’s Bacon Factory as one of the most prominent commercial enterprises in Limerick city.  He also purchased a bacon factory in Palmerston, Ontario, Canada, which was managed by his son Joseph (Joe) O’Mara (1878-1950) until the business was wound up in the 1940s.<lb/><lb/>Like his father, Stephen O’Mara was a strong supporter of Isaac Butt’s Home Rule movement and a member of the committee which secured Butt’s election for Limerick city in 1871.  He later developed a close association with Charles Stewart Parnell and was elected Member of Parliament for Upper Ossory in Kilkenny South for the Irish Parliamentary Party in February 1886.  When the Irish National League split from Irish Parliamentary Party in December 1890, O’Mara took the Parnellite side.  He continued to act as trustee of the Party funds until 1908, when he resigned from his trusteeship.  Towards the end of his life, his moderate political views became more radicalised under the influence of his sons James (1873-1948) and Stephen Junior (1884-1959).  He had agreed with his son James’s decision to resign from the Irish Parliamentary Party in 1907 in order to join Sinn Fein, and personally supported the party in the 1918 General Election.  Both Stephen and his son James were strong supporters of the 1921 Anglo-Irish Treaty but were on friendly terms with Eamon de Valera who, it is said, spent the night at the O’Mara family home, Strand House, as the Treaty was being signed in London.  In the 1925 election, Stephen O’Mara was elected as Senator to the Free State Seanad.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara was also a prominent figure in local politics.  He became a Town Councillor on Limerick Corporation in the 1880s and was elected Mayor of Limerick in 1885.  He was the first Mayor of Limerick to be elected on a Nationalist ticket.  He also served as High Sheriff of Limerick city in 1888, 1913 and 1914.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara married Ellen Pigott in 1867, and the couple had 12 children of whom the eldest three died tragically of diphtheria in 1872.  From c. 1909 onwards, the family lived at Strand House.  Their third son, Stephen O’Mara Junior, was born on 5 January 1884.  He entered the family business in 1903 when he travelled to Canada to work in the bacon factory established by the O’Mara family in Ottawa.  In 1923, he became Managing Director of O’Mara Limited and created numerous employment opportunities by establishing bacon factories in Claremorris, County Mayo, and Letterkenny, County Donegal, in the 1930s.  The three bacon companies were amalgamated in 1938 and formed into the Bacon Company of Ireland.  Stephen O’Mara Junior remained the company’s chairman until his death in 1959.  In 1987, the Bacon Company of Ireland merged with Hanley of Rooskey and Benesford UK (Castlebar) with assistance from the Industrial Development Agency Ireland (IDA) to form Irish Country Bacon.  Shortly afterwards the old O’Mara factory in Limerick was closed down.  It was subsequently demolished to make way for a multi-storey car park.<lb/><lb/>Throughout his life, Stephen O’Mara Junior played a prominent role in both local and national affairs.  Unlike his father and elder brother James, Stephen was opposed to the Anglo-Irish Treaty but in a conciliatory manner.  He was prominently identified with the Sinn Fein movement after the Easter Rising.  He was one of Eamon de Valera’s strongest supporters and a member of his Fianna Fail Party since its formation in 1926.<lb/><lb/>When George Clancy, Lord Mayor of Limerick, and his predecessor Michael O’Callaghan were murdered by the British military forces in March 1921, Stephen decided to stand for election and became Mayor.  He was re-elected in 1922 and in 1923 but resigned before the expiration of his term of office.<lb/><lb/>In 1921, Stephen O’Mara Junior was selected to go to America as Special Envoy appointed by Dáil Éireann to the United States to oversee one of the country’s biggest fundraising drives to finance the first Dáil and was made Trustee of the funds.  The funds-drive was terminated following the signing of the Anglo-Irish Treaty.  Considering himself as the exchequer to the Irish Free State, O’Mara refused to hand over the collected funds to the pro-Treaty administration which resulted in his imprisonment in 1922-1923.  He had also been imprisoned for seven days in 1921 for refusing to pay a fine of £10 for non-compliance with a military summons.<lb/><lb/>The bulk of the money collected during the Bond Drive was left in various banks in New York and remained untouched for a number of years.  In 1927, following legal action between the Irish Government and Eamon de Valera, a court in New York ordered that money outstanding to bond holders must be paid back.  Having anticipated such a ruling, de Valera’s legal team invited bond holders to sign over their bonds to de Valera, for which they were paid 58 cents to the dollar.  The monies so accumulated were used to launch the national daily newspaper *The Irish Press*.  Stephen O’Mara served on the paper’s Board of Directors until his resignation in 1935.<lb/><lb/>In 1932, Stephen O’Mara was once again sent to America on a mission involving the various consular and diplomatic offices maintained in the country by the Irish Government.  Two years later, he was appointed a member of the Commission on Vocational Organisation, on which he served until 1943.  In 1959, he was created a member of the Council of State following de Valera’s inauguration as President of Ireland.  Stephen O’Mara died less than two months after his appointment, on 11 November 1959.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara Junior married in 1918 Anne O’Brien, third daughter of Thomas O’Brien of Boru House, and the couple had an adopted son, Peter O’Mara.  Anne’s youngest sister, Kate O’Brien, became one of the most prominent novelists in 20th-century Ireland and a voice of the respectable Irish Roman Catholic middle class.</p>
            </note>
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            <p>Untitled ‘Long Distance’ column by Kate O’Brien, published in the *Irish Times* on 27 May 1970.</p>
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                <addressline>Telephone: +353-61-202690</addressline>
                <addressline>Fax: +353-61-213415</addressline>
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            <note>
              <p>The history of the O’Mara family of Strand house and O’Mara’s Bacon Company go hand in hand.  The factory was founded in 1839 by James O’Meara (1817-1899), who originated from the village of Toomevaara in county Tipperary.  Having worked for some years in the woollen mills in Clonmel, he got a job as a clerk with Matterson’s Bacon Factory in Limerick and in 1839 founded O’Mara’s Bacon Company in his house on Mungret Street.  It is said that he dropped the ‘e’ from his surname as he felt that O’Meara was too long for commercial purposes.  James initially sold for Matterson’s but soon began to cure his own bacon in the basement of his house.  As his business grew, he acquired dedicated premises for the purpose near the top of Roche’s Street.<lb/><lb/>In 1841, James O’Mara married Honora Fowley (d. 1878), who worked in the bacon business alongside her husband.  A devoted nationalist, James was one of the early supporters of Isaac Butt’s Home Rule movement.  He was High Sheriff of Limerick City in 1887, and acted as Town Councillor on Limerick Corporation at least from 1888 to 1898.<lb/><lb/>James and Honora O’Mara had 13 children, of whom the two eldest surviving sons, Stephen O’Mara (1844-1926) and John (Jack) O’Mara (1856-1919) were instrumental in building up the O’Mara’s Bacon Factory into a great success.   The youngest son, Joseph (Joe) O’Mara (1864-1927) became a celebrated opera singer.<lb/><lb/>When James O’Mara retired from business his son John (Jack) O’Mara became manager of the O’Mara Bacon Factory.  In the late 1880s, Jack was invited to Russia by Tsar Alexander III to provide instruction on bacon curing.  He stayed in St Petersburg to supervise the construction of a bacon factory.  In 1891, his father bought the rights of the Russian Bacon Company and the family imported bacon from Russia into London until 1903.  James (Jim) O’Mara (1858-1893) acted as agent for O’Mara’s in London until his untimely death from heart disease.  His nephew James O’Mara (1873-1948), son of Stephen O’Mara Senior (1844-1926), took over the agency and held it until 1914.<lb/><lb/>When John (Jack) O’Mara died in 1919, his younger brother Stephen O’Mara (1844-1926) became Managing Director of O’Mara Limited and remained in that capacity until 1923.  Having entered into the family business at the age of fifteen, his great business acumen established O’Mara’s Bacon Factory as one of the most prominent commercial enterprises in Limerick city.  He also purchased a bacon factory in Palmerston, Ontario, Canada, which was managed by his son Joseph (Joe) O’Mara (1878-1950) until the business was wound up in the 1940s.<lb/><lb/>Like his father, Stephen O’Mara was a strong supporter of Isaac Butt’s Home Rule movement and a member of the committee which secured Butt’s election for Limerick city in 1871.  He later developed a close association with Charles Stewart Parnell and was elected Member of Parliament for Upper Ossory in Kilkenny South for the Irish Parliamentary Party in February 1886.  When the Irish National League split from Irish Parliamentary Party in December 1890, O’Mara took the Parnellite side.  He continued to act as trustee of the Party funds until 1908, when he resigned from his trusteeship.  Towards the end of his life, his moderate political views became more radicalised under the influence of his sons James (1873-1948) and Stephen Junior (1884-1959).  He had agreed with his son James’s decision to resign from the Irish Parliamentary Party in 1907 in order to join Sinn Fein, and personally supported the party in the 1918 General Election.  Both Stephen and his son James were strong supporters of the 1921 Anglo-Irish Treaty but were on friendly terms with Eamon de Valera who, it is said, spent the night at the O’Mara family home, Strand House, as the Treaty was being signed in London.  In the 1925 election, Stephen O’Mara was elected as Senator to the Free State Seanad.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara was also a prominent figure in local politics.  He became a Town Councillor on Limerick Corporation in the 1880s and was elected Mayor of Limerick in 1885.  He was the first Mayor of Limerick to be elected on a Nationalist ticket.  He also served as High Sheriff of Limerick city in 1888, 1913 and 1914.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara married Ellen Pigott in 1867, and the couple had 12 children of whom the eldest three died tragically of diphtheria in 1872.  From c. 1909 onwards, the family lived at Strand House.  Their third son, Stephen O’Mara Junior, was born on 5 January 1884.  He entered the family business in 1903 when he travelled to Canada to work in the bacon factory established by the O’Mara family in Ottawa.  In 1923, he became Managing Director of O’Mara Limited and created numerous employment opportunities by establishing bacon factories in Claremorris, County Mayo, and Letterkenny, County Donegal, in the 1930s.  The three bacon companies were amalgamated in 1938 and formed into the Bacon Company of Ireland.  Stephen O’Mara Junior remained the company’s chairman until his death in 1959.  In 1987, the Bacon Company of Ireland merged with Hanley of Rooskey and Benesford UK (Castlebar) with assistance from the Industrial Development Agency Ireland (IDA) to form Irish Country Bacon.  Shortly afterwards the old O’Mara factory in Limerick was closed down.  It was subsequently demolished to make way for a multi-storey car park.<lb/><lb/>Throughout his life, Stephen O’Mara Junior played a prominent role in both local and national affairs.  Unlike his father and elder brother James, Stephen was opposed to the Anglo-Irish Treaty but in a conciliatory manner.  He was prominently identified with the Sinn Fein movement after the Easter Rising.  He was one of Eamon de Valera’s strongest supporters and a member of his Fianna Fail Party since its formation in 1926.<lb/><lb/>When George Clancy, Lord Mayor of Limerick, and his predecessor Michael O’Callaghan were murdered by the British military forces in March 1921, Stephen decided to stand for election and became Mayor.  He was re-elected in 1922 and in 1923 but resigned before the expiration of his term of office.<lb/><lb/>In 1921, Stephen O’Mara Junior was selected to go to America as Special Envoy appointed by Dáil Éireann to the United States to oversee one of the country’s biggest fundraising drives to finance the first Dáil and was made Trustee of the funds.  The funds-drive was terminated following the signing of the Anglo-Irish Treaty.  Considering himself as the exchequer to the Irish Free State, O’Mara refused to hand over the collected funds to the pro-Treaty administration which resulted in his imprisonment in 1922-1923.  He had also been imprisoned for seven days in 1921 for refusing to pay a fine of £10 for non-compliance with a military summons.<lb/><lb/>The bulk of the money collected during the Bond Drive was left in various banks in New York and remained untouched for a number of years.  In 1927, following legal action between the Irish Government and Eamon de Valera, a court in New York ordered that money outstanding to bond holders must be paid back.  Having anticipated such a ruling, de Valera’s legal team invited bond holders to sign over their bonds to de Valera, for which they were paid 58 cents to the dollar.  The monies so accumulated were used to launch the national daily newspaper *The Irish Press*.  Stephen O’Mara served on the paper’s Board of Directors until his resignation in 1935.<lb/><lb/>In 1932, Stephen O’Mara was once again sent to America on a mission involving the various consular and diplomatic offices maintained in the country by the Irish Government.  Two years later, he was appointed a member of the Commission on Vocational Organisation, on which he served until 1943.  In 1959, he was created a member of the Council of State following de Valera’s inauguration as President of Ireland.  Stephen O’Mara died less than two months after his appointment, on 11 November 1959.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara Junior married in 1918 Anne O’Brien, third daughter of Thomas O’Brien of Boru House, and the couple had an adopted son, Peter O’Mara.  Anne’s youngest sister, Kate O’Brien, became one of the most prominent novelists in 20th-century Ireland and a voice of the respectable Irish Roman Catholic middle class.</p>
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            <p>Untitled ‘Long Distance’ column by Kate O’Brien, published in the *Irish Times* on 14 June 1970.</p>
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              <p>The history of the O’Mara family of Strand house and O’Mara’s Bacon Company go hand in hand.  The factory was founded in 1839 by James O’Meara (1817-1899), who originated from the village of Toomevaara in county Tipperary.  Having worked for some years in the woollen mills in Clonmel, he got a job as a clerk with Matterson’s Bacon Factory in Limerick and in 1839 founded O’Mara’s Bacon Company in his house on Mungret Street.  It is said that he dropped the ‘e’ from his surname as he felt that O’Meara was too long for commercial purposes.  James initially sold for Matterson’s but soon began to cure his own bacon in the basement of his house.  As his business grew, he acquired dedicated premises for the purpose near the top of Roche’s Street.<lb/><lb/>In 1841, James O’Mara married Honora Fowley (d. 1878), who worked in the bacon business alongside her husband.  A devoted nationalist, James was one of the early supporters of Isaac Butt’s Home Rule movement.  He was High Sheriff of Limerick City in 1887, and acted as Town Councillor on Limerick Corporation at least from 1888 to 1898.<lb/><lb/>James and Honora O’Mara had 13 children, of whom the two eldest surviving sons, Stephen O’Mara (1844-1926) and John (Jack) O’Mara (1856-1919) were instrumental in building up the O’Mara’s Bacon Factory into a great success.   The youngest son, Joseph (Joe) O’Mara (1864-1927) became a celebrated opera singer.<lb/><lb/>When James O’Mara retired from business his son John (Jack) O’Mara became manager of the O’Mara Bacon Factory.  In the late 1880s, Jack was invited to Russia by Tsar Alexander III to provide instruction on bacon curing.  He stayed in St Petersburg to supervise the construction of a bacon factory.  In 1891, his father bought the rights of the Russian Bacon Company and the family imported bacon from Russia into London until 1903.  James (Jim) O’Mara (1858-1893) acted as agent for O’Mara’s in London until his untimely death from heart disease.  His nephew James O’Mara (1873-1948), son of Stephen O’Mara Senior (1844-1926), took over the agency and held it until 1914.<lb/><lb/>When John (Jack) O’Mara died in 1919, his younger brother Stephen O’Mara (1844-1926) became Managing Director of O’Mara Limited and remained in that capacity until 1923.  Having entered into the family business at the age of fifteen, his great business acumen established O’Mara’s Bacon Factory as one of the most prominent commercial enterprises in Limerick city.  He also purchased a bacon factory in Palmerston, Ontario, Canada, which was managed by his son Joseph (Joe) O’Mara (1878-1950) until the business was wound up in the 1940s.<lb/><lb/>Like his father, Stephen O’Mara was a strong supporter of Isaac Butt’s Home Rule movement and a member of the committee which secured Butt’s election for Limerick city in 1871.  He later developed a close association with Charles Stewart Parnell and was elected Member of Parliament for Upper Ossory in Kilkenny South for the Irish Parliamentary Party in February 1886.  When the Irish National League split from Irish Parliamentary Party in December 1890, O’Mara took the Parnellite side.  He continued to act as trustee of the Party funds until 1908, when he resigned from his trusteeship.  Towards the end of his life, his moderate political views became more radicalised under the influence of his sons James (1873-1948) and Stephen Junior (1884-1959).  He had agreed with his son James’s decision to resign from the Irish Parliamentary Party in 1907 in order to join Sinn Fein, and personally supported the party in the 1918 General Election.  Both Stephen and his son James were strong supporters of the 1921 Anglo-Irish Treaty but were on friendly terms with Eamon de Valera who, it is said, spent the night at the O’Mara family home, Strand House, as the Treaty was being signed in London.  In the 1925 election, Stephen O’Mara was elected as Senator to the Free State Seanad.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara was also a prominent figure in local politics.  He became a Town Councillor on Limerick Corporation in the 1880s and was elected Mayor of Limerick in 1885.  He was the first Mayor of Limerick to be elected on a Nationalist ticket.  He also served as High Sheriff of Limerick city in 1888, 1913 and 1914.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara married Ellen Pigott in 1867, and the couple had 12 children of whom the eldest three died tragically of diphtheria in 1872.  From c. 1909 onwards, the family lived at Strand House.  Their third son, Stephen O’Mara Junior, was born on 5 January 1884.  He entered the family business in 1903 when he travelled to Canada to work in the bacon factory established by the O’Mara family in Ottawa.  In 1923, he became Managing Director of O’Mara Limited and created numerous employment opportunities by establishing bacon factories in Claremorris, County Mayo, and Letterkenny, County Donegal, in the 1930s.  The three bacon companies were amalgamated in 1938 and formed into the Bacon Company of Ireland.  Stephen O’Mara Junior remained the company’s chairman until his death in 1959.  In 1987, the Bacon Company of Ireland merged with Hanley of Rooskey and Benesford UK (Castlebar) with assistance from the Industrial Development Agency Ireland (IDA) to form Irish Country Bacon.  Shortly afterwards the old O’Mara factory in Limerick was closed down.  It was subsequently demolished to make way for a multi-storey car park.<lb/><lb/>Throughout his life, Stephen O’Mara Junior played a prominent role in both local and national affairs.  Unlike his father and elder brother James, Stephen was opposed to the Anglo-Irish Treaty but in a conciliatory manner.  He was prominently identified with the Sinn Fein movement after the Easter Rising.  He was one of Eamon de Valera’s strongest supporters and a member of his Fianna Fail Party since its formation in 1926.<lb/><lb/>When George Clancy, Lord Mayor of Limerick, and his predecessor Michael O’Callaghan were murdered by the British military forces in March 1921, Stephen decided to stand for election and became Mayor.  He was re-elected in 1922 and in 1923 but resigned before the expiration of his term of office.<lb/><lb/>In 1921, Stephen O’Mara Junior was selected to go to America as Special Envoy appointed by Dáil Éireann to the United States to oversee one of the country’s biggest fundraising drives to finance the first Dáil and was made Trustee of the funds.  The funds-drive was terminated following the signing of the Anglo-Irish Treaty.  Considering himself as the exchequer to the Irish Free State, O’Mara refused to hand over the collected funds to the pro-Treaty administration which resulted in his imprisonment in 1922-1923.  He had also been imprisoned for seven days in 1921 for refusing to pay a fine of £10 for non-compliance with a military summons.<lb/><lb/>The bulk of the money collected during the Bond Drive was left in various banks in New York and remained untouched for a number of years.  In 1927, following legal action between the Irish Government and Eamon de Valera, a court in New York ordered that money outstanding to bond holders must be paid back.  Having anticipated such a ruling, de Valera’s legal team invited bond holders to sign over their bonds to de Valera, for which they were paid 58 cents to the dollar.  The monies so accumulated were used to launch the national daily newspaper *The Irish Press*.  Stephen O’Mara served on the paper’s Board of Directors until his resignation in 1935.<lb/><lb/>In 1932, Stephen O’Mara was once again sent to America on a mission involving the various consular and diplomatic offices maintained in the country by the Irish Government.  Two years later, he was appointed a member of the Commission on Vocational Organisation, on which he served until 1943.  In 1959, he was created a member of the Council of State following de Valera’s inauguration as President of Ireland.  Stephen O’Mara died less than two months after his appointment, on 11 November 1959.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara Junior married in 1918 Anne O’Brien, third daughter of Thomas O’Brien of Boru House, and the couple had an adopted son, Peter O’Mara.  Anne’s youngest sister, Kate O’Brien, became one of the most prominent novelists in 20th-century Ireland and a voice of the respectable Irish Roman Catholic middle class.</p>
            </note>
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            <p>Untitled ‘Long Distance’ column by Kate O’Brien, published in the *Irish Times* on 13 July 1970.</p>
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                <addressline>Telephone: +353-61-202690</addressline>
                <addressline>Fax: +353-61-213415</addressline>
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            <note>
              <p>The history of the O’Mara family of Strand house and O’Mara’s Bacon Company go hand in hand.  The factory was founded in 1839 by James O’Meara (1817-1899), who originated from the village of Toomevaara in county Tipperary.  Having worked for some years in the woollen mills in Clonmel, he got a job as a clerk with Matterson’s Bacon Factory in Limerick and in 1839 founded O’Mara’s Bacon Company in his house on Mungret Street.  It is said that he dropped the ‘e’ from his surname as he felt that O’Meara was too long for commercial purposes.  James initially sold for Matterson’s but soon began to cure his own bacon in the basement of his house.  As his business grew, he acquired dedicated premises for the purpose near the top of Roche’s Street.<lb/><lb/>In 1841, James O’Mara married Honora Fowley (d. 1878), who worked in the bacon business alongside her husband.  A devoted nationalist, James was one of the early supporters of Isaac Butt’s Home Rule movement.  He was High Sheriff of Limerick City in 1887, and acted as Town Councillor on Limerick Corporation at least from 1888 to 1898.<lb/><lb/>James and Honora O’Mara had 13 children, of whom the two eldest surviving sons, Stephen O’Mara (1844-1926) and John (Jack) O’Mara (1856-1919) were instrumental in building up the O’Mara’s Bacon Factory into a great success.   The youngest son, Joseph (Joe) O’Mara (1864-1927) became a celebrated opera singer.<lb/><lb/>When James O’Mara retired from business his son John (Jack) O’Mara became manager of the O’Mara Bacon Factory.  In the late 1880s, Jack was invited to Russia by Tsar Alexander III to provide instruction on bacon curing.  He stayed in St Petersburg to supervise the construction of a bacon factory.  In 1891, his father bought the rights of the Russian Bacon Company and the family imported bacon from Russia into London until 1903.  James (Jim) O’Mara (1858-1893) acted as agent for O’Mara’s in London until his untimely death from heart disease.  His nephew James O’Mara (1873-1948), son of Stephen O’Mara Senior (1844-1926), took over the agency and held it until 1914.<lb/><lb/>When John (Jack) O’Mara died in 1919, his younger brother Stephen O’Mara (1844-1926) became Managing Director of O’Mara Limited and remained in that capacity until 1923.  Having entered into the family business at the age of fifteen, his great business acumen established O’Mara’s Bacon Factory as one of the most prominent commercial enterprises in Limerick city.  He also purchased a bacon factory in Palmerston, Ontario, Canada, which was managed by his son Joseph (Joe) O’Mara (1878-1950) until the business was wound up in the 1940s.<lb/><lb/>Like his father, Stephen O’Mara was a strong supporter of Isaac Butt’s Home Rule movement and a member of the committee which secured Butt’s election for Limerick city in 1871.  He later developed a close association with Charles Stewart Parnell and was elected Member of Parliament for Upper Ossory in Kilkenny South for the Irish Parliamentary Party in February 1886.  When the Irish National League split from Irish Parliamentary Party in December 1890, O’Mara took the Parnellite side.  He continued to act as trustee of the Party funds until 1908, when he resigned from his trusteeship.  Towards the end of his life, his moderate political views became more radicalised under the influence of his sons James (1873-1948) and Stephen Junior (1884-1959).  He had agreed with his son James’s decision to resign from the Irish Parliamentary Party in 1907 in order to join Sinn Fein, and personally supported the party in the 1918 General Election.  Both Stephen and his son James were strong supporters of the 1921 Anglo-Irish Treaty but were on friendly terms with Eamon de Valera who, it is said, spent the night at the O’Mara family home, Strand House, as the Treaty was being signed in London.  In the 1925 election, Stephen O’Mara was elected as Senator to the Free State Seanad.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara was also a prominent figure in local politics.  He became a Town Councillor on Limerick Corporation in the 1880s and was elected Mayor of Limerick in 1885.  He was the first Mayor of Limerick to be elected on a Nationalist ticket.  He also served as High Sheriff of Limerick city in 1888, 1913 and 1914.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara married Ellen Pigott in 1867, and the couple had 12 children of whom the eldest three died tragically of diphtheria in 1872.  From c. 1909 onwards, the family lived at Strand House.  Their third son, Stephen O’Mara Junior, was born on 5 January 1884.  He entered the family business in 1903 when he travelled to Canada to work in the bacon factory established by the O’Mara family in Ottawa.  In 1923, he became Managing Director of O’Mara Limited and created numerous employment opportunities by establishing bacon factories in Claremorris, County Mayo, and Letterkenny, County Donegal, in the 1930s.  The three bacon companies were amalgamated in 1938 and formed into the Bacon Company of Ireland.  Stephen O’Mara Junior remained the company’s chairman until his death in 1959.  In 1987, the Bacon Company of Ireland merged with Hanley of Rooskey and Benesford UK (Castlebar) with assistance from the Industrial Development Agency Ireland (IDA) to form Irish Country Bacon.  Shortly afterwards the old O’Mara factory in Limerick was closed down.  It was subsequently demolished to make way for a multi-storey car park.<lb/><lb/>Throughout his life, Stephen O’Mara Junior played a prominent role in both local and national affairs.  Unlike his father and elder brother James, Stephen was opposed to the Anglo-Irish Treaty but in a conciliatory manner.  He was prominently identified with the Sinn Fein movement after the Easter Rising.  He was one of Eamon de Valera’s strongest supporters and a member of his Fianna Fail Party since its formation in 1926.<lb/><lb/>When George Clancy, Lord Mayor of Limerick, and his predecessor Michael O’Callaghan were murdered by the British military forces in March 1921, Stephen decided to stand for election and became Mayor.  He was re-elected in 1922 and in 1923 but resigned before the expiration of his term of office.<lb/><lb/>In 1921, Stephen O’Mara Junior was selected to go to America as Special Envoy appointed by Dáil Éireann to the United States to oversee one of the country’s biggest fundraising drives to finance the first Dáil and was made Trustee of the funds.  The funds-drive was terminated following the signing of the Anglo-Irish Treaty.  Considering himself as the exchequer to the Irish Free State, O’Mara refused to hand over the collected funds to the pro-Treaty administration which resulted in his imprisonment in 1922-1923.  He had also been imprisoned for seven days in 1921 for refusing to pay a fine of £10 for non-compliance with a military summons.<lb/><lb/>The bulk of the money collected during the Bond Drive was left in various banks in New York and remained untouched for a number of years.  In 1927, following legal action between the Irish Government and Eamon de Valera, a court in New York ordered that money outstanding to bond holders must be paid back.  Having anticipated such a ruling, de Valera’s legal team invited bond holders to sign over their bonds to de Valera, for which they were paid 58 cents to the dollar.  The monies so accumulated were used to launch the national daily newspaper *The Irish Press*.  Stephen O’Mara served on the paper’s Board of Directors until his resignation in 1935.<lb/><lb/>In 1932, Stephen O’Mara was once again sent to America on a mission involving the various consular and diplomatic offices maintained in the country by the Irish Government.  Two years later, he was appointed a member of the Commission on Vocational Organisation, on which he served until 1943.  In 1959, he was created a member of the Council of State following de Valera’s inauguration as President of Ireland.  Stephen O’Mara died less than two months after his appointment, on 11 November 1959.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara Junior married in 1918 Anne O’Brien, third daughter of Thomas O’Brien of Boru House, and the couple had an adopted son, Peter O’Mara.  Anne’s youngest sister, Kate O’Brien, became one of the most prominent novelists in 20th-century Ireland and a voice of the respectable Irish Roman Catholic middle class.</p>
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            <p>Untitled ‘Long Distance’ column by Kate O’Brien, published in the *Irish Times* on 27 July 1970.</p>
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            <note>
              <p>The history of the O’Mara family of Strand house and O’Mara’s Bacon Company go hand in hand.  The factory was founded in 1839 by James O’Meara (1817-1899), who originated from the village of Toomevaara in county Tipperary.  Having worked for some years in the woollen mills in Clonmel, he got a job as a clerk with Matterson’s Bacon Factory in Limerick and in 1839 founded O’Mara’s Bacon Company in his house on Mungret Street.  It is said that he dropped the ‘e’ from his surname as he felt that O’Meara was too long for commercial purposes.  James initially sold for Matterson’s but soon began to cure his own bacon in the basement of his house.  As his business grew, he acquired dedicated premises for the purpose near the top of Roche’s Street.<lb/><lb/>In 1841, James O’Mara married Honora Fowley (d. 1878), who worked in the bacon business alongside her husband.  A devoted nationalist, James was one of the early supporters of Isaac Butt’s Home Rule movement.  He was High Sheriff of Limerick City in 1887, and acted as Town Councillor on Limerick Corporation at least from 1888 to 1898.<lb/><lb/>James and Honora O’Mara had 13 children, of whom the two eldest surviving sons, Stephen O’Mara (1844-1926) and John (Jack) O’Mara (1856-1919) were instrumental in building up the O’Mara’s Bacon Factory into a great success.   The youngest son, Joseph (Joe) O’Mara (1864-1927) became a celebrated opera singer.<lb/><lb/>When James O’Mara retired from business his son John (Jack) O’Mara became manager of the O’Mara Bacon Factory.  In the late 1880s, Jack was invited to Russia by Tsar Alexander III to provide instruction on bacon curing.  He stayed in St Petersburg to supervise the construction of a bacon factory.  In 1891, his father bought the rights of the Russian Bacon Company and the family imported bacon from Russia into London until 1903.  James (Jim) O’Mara (1858-1893) acted as agent for O’Mara’s in London until his untimely death from heart disease.  His nephew James O’Mara (1873-1948), son of Stephen O’Mara Senior (1844-1926), took over the agency and held it until 1914.<lb/><lb/>When John (Jack) O’Mara died in 1919, his younger brother Stephen O’Mara (1844-1926) became Managing Director of O’Mara Limited and remained in that capacity until 1923.  Having entered into the family business at the age of fifteen, his great business acumen established O’Mara’s Bacon Factory as one of the most prominent commercial enterprises in Limerick city.  He also purchased a bacon factory in Palmerston, Ontario, Canada, which was managed by his son Joseph (Joe) O’Mara (1878-1950) until the business was wound up in the 1940s.<lb/><lb/>Like his father, Stephen O’Mara was a strong supporter of Isaac Butt’s Home Rule movement and a member of the committee which secured Butt’s election for Limerick city in 1871.  He later developed a close association with Charles Stewart Parnell and was elected Member of Parliament for Upper Ossory in Kilkenny South for the Irish Parliamentary Party in February 1886.  When the Irish National League split from Irish Parliamentary Party in December 1890, O’Mara took the Parnellite side.  He continued to act as trustee of the Party funds until 1908, when he resigned from his trusteeship.  Towards the end of his life, his moderate political views became more radicalised under the influence of his sons James (1873-1948) and Stephen Junior (1884-1959).  He had agreed with his son James’s decision to resign from the Irish Parliamentary Party in 1907 in order to join Sinn Fein, and personally supported the party in the 1918 General Election.  Both Stephen and his son James were strong supporters of the 1921 Anglo-Irish Treaty but were on friendly terms with Eamon de Valera who, it is said, spent the night at the O’Mara family home, Strand House, as the Treaty was being signed in London.  In the 1925 election, Stephen O’Mara was elected as Senator to the Free State Seanad.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara was also a prominent figure in local politics.  He became a Town Councillor on Limerick Corporation in the 1880s and was elected Mayor of Limerick in 1885.  He was the first Mayor of Limerick to be elected on a Nationalist ticket.  He also served as High Sheriff of Limerick city in 1888, 1913 and 1914.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara married Ellen Pigott in 1867, and the couple had 12 children of whom the eldest three died tragically of diphtheria in 1872.  From c. 1909 onwards, the family lived at Strand House.  Their third son, Stephen O’Mara Junior, was born on 5 January 1884.  He entered the family business in 1903 when he travelled to Canada to work in the bacon factory established by the O’Mara family in Ottawa.  In 1923, he became Managing Director of O’Mara Limited and created numerous employment opportunities by establishing bacon factories in Claremorris, County Mayo, and Letterkenny, County Donegal, in the 1930s.  The three bacon companies were amalgamated in 1938 and formed into the Bacon Company of Ireland.  Stephen O’Mara Junior remained the company’s chairman until his death in 1959.  In 1987, the Bacon Company of Ireland merged with Hanley of Rooskey and Benesford UK (Castlebar) with assistance from the Industrial Development Agency Ireland (IDA) to form Irish Country Bacon.  Shortly afterwards the old O’Mara factory in Limerick was closed down.  It was subsequently demolished to make way for a multi-storey car park.<lb/><lb/>Throughout his life, Stephen O’Mara Junior played a prominent role in both local and national affairs.  Unlike his father and elder brother James, Stephen was opposed to the Anglo-Irish Treaty but in a conciliatory manner.  He was prominently identified with the Sinn Fein movement after the Easter Rising.  He was one of Eamon de Valera’s strongest supporters and a member of his Fianna Fail Party since its formation in 1926.<lb/><lb/>When George Clancy, Lord Mayor of Limerick, and his predecessor Michael O’Callaghan were murdered by the British military forces in March 1921, Stephen decided to stand for election and became Mayor.  He was re-elected in 1922 and in 1923 but resigned before the expiration of his term of office.<lb/><lb/>In 1921, Stephen O’Mara Junior was selected to go to America as Special Envoy appointed by Dáil Éireann to the United States to oversee one of the country’s biggest fundraising drives to finance the first Dáil and was made Trustee of the funds.  The funds-drive was terminated following the signing of the Anglo-Irish Treaty.  Considering himself as the exchequer to the Irish Free State, O’Mara refused to hand over the collected funds to the pro-Treaty administration which resulted in his imprisonment in 1922-1923.  He had also been imprisoned for seven days in 1921 for refusing to pay a fine of £10 for non-compliance with a military summons.<lb/><lb/>The bulk of the money collected during the Bond Drive was left in various banks in New York and remained untouched for a number of years.  In 1927, following legal action between the Irish Government and Eamon de Valera, a court in New York ordered that money outstanding to bond holders must be paid back.  Having anticipated such a ruling, de Valera’s legal team invited bond holders to sign over their bonds to de Valera, for which they were paid 58 cents to the dollar.  The monies so accumulated were used to launch the national daily newspaper *The Irish Press*.  Stephen O’Mara served on the paper’s Board of Directors until his resignation in 1935.<lb/><lb/>In 1932, Stephen O’Mara was once again sent to America on a mission involving the various consular and diplomatic offices maintained in the country by the Irish Government.  Two years later, he was appointed a member of the Commission on Vocational Organisation, on which he served until 1943.  In 1959, he was created a member of the Council of State following de Valera’s inauguration as President of Ireland.  Stephen O’Mara died less than two months after his appointment, on 11 November 1959.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara Junior married in 1918 Anne O’Brien, third daughter of Thomas O’Brien of Boru House, and the couple had an adopted son, Peter O’Mara.  Anne’s youngest sister, Kate O’Brien, became one of the most prominent novelists in 20th-century Ireland and a voice of the respectable Irish Roman Catholic middle class.</p>
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              <p>The history of the O’Mara family of Strand house and O’Mara’s Bacon Company go hand in hand.  The factory was founded in 1839 by James O’Meara (1817-1899), who originated from the village of Toomevaara in county Tipperary.  Having worked for some years in the woollen mills in Clonmel, he got a job as a clerk with Matterson’s Bacon Factory in Limerick and in 1839 founded O’Mara’s Bacon Company in his house on Mungret Street.  It is said that he dropped the ‘e’ from his surname as he felt that O’Meara was too long for commercial purposes.  James initially sold for Matterson’s but soon began to cure his own bacon in the basement of his house.  As his business grew, he acquired dedicated premises for the purpose near the top of Roche’s Street.<lb/><lb/>In 1841, James O’Mara married Honora Fowley (d. 1878), who worked in the bacon business alongside her husband.  A devoted nationalist, James was one of the early supporters of Isaac Butt’s Home Rule movement.  He was High Sheriff of Limerick City in 1887, and acted as Town Councillor on Limerick Corporation at least from 1888 to 1898.<lb/><lb/>James and Honora O’Mara had 13 children, of whom the two eldest surviving sons, Stephen O’Mara (1844-1926) and John (Jack) O’Mara (1856-1919) were instrumental in building up the O’Mara’s Bacon Factory into a great success.   The youngest son, Joseph (Joe) O’Mara (1864-1927) became a celebrated opera singer.<lb/><lb/>When James O’Mara retired from business his son John (Jack) O’Mara became manager of the O’Mara Bacon Factory.  In the late 1880s, Jack was invited to Russia by Tsar Alexander III to provide instruction on bacon curing.  He stayed in St Petersburg to supervise the construction of a bacon factory.  In 1891, his father bought the rights of the Russian Bacon Company and the family imported bacon from Russia into London until 1903.  James (Jim) O’Mara (1858-1893) acted as agent for O’Mara’s in London until his untimely death from heart disease.  His nephew James O’Mara (1873-1948), son of Stephen O’Mara Senior (1844-1926), took over the agency and held it until 1914.<lb/><lb/>When John (Jack) O’Mara died in 1919, his younger brother Stephen O’Mara (1844-1926) became Managing Director of O’Mara Limited and remained in that capacity until 1923.  Having entered into the family business at the age of fifteen, his great business acumen established O’Mara’s Bacon Factory as one of the most prominent commercial enterprises in Limerick city.  He also purchased a bacon factory in Palmerston, Ontario, Canada, which was managed by his son Joseph (Joe) O’Mara (1878-1950) until the business was wound up in the 1940s.<lb/><lb/>Like his father, Stephen O’Mara was a strong supporter of Isaac Butt’s Home Rule movement and a member of the committee which secured Butt’s election for Limerick city in 1871.  He later developed a close association with Charles Stewart Parnell and was elected Member of Parliament for Upper Ossory in Kilkenny South for the Irish Parliamentary Party in February 1886.  When the Irish National League split from Irish Parliamentary Party in December 1890, O’Mara took the Parnellite side.  He continued to act as trustee of the Party funds until 1908, when he resigned from his trusteeship.  Towards the end of his life, his moderate political views became more radicalised under the influence of his sons James (1873-1948) and Stephen Junior (1884-1959).  He had agreed with his son James’s decision to resign from the Irish Parliamentary Party in 1907 in order to join Sinn Fein, and personally supported the party in the 1918 General Election.  Both Stephen and his son James were strong supporters of the 1921 Anglo-Irish Treaty but were on friendly terms with Eamon de Valera who, it is said, spent the night at the O’Mara family home, Strand House, as the Treaty was being signed in London.  In the 1925 election, Stephen O’Mara was elected as Senator to the Free State Seanad.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara was also a prominent figure in local politics.  He became a Town Councillor on Limerick Corporation in the 1880s and was elected Mayor of Limerick in 1885.  He was the first Mayor of Limerick to be elected on a Nationalist ticket.  He also served as High Sheriff of Limerick city in 1888, 1913 and 1914.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara married Ellen Pigott in 1867, and the couple had 12 children of whom the eldest three died tragically of diphtheria in 1872.  From c. 1909 onwards, the family lived at Strand House.  Their third son, Stephen O’Mara Junior, was born on 5 January 1884.  He entered the family business in 1903 when he travelled to Canada to work in the bacon factory established by the O’Mara family in Ottawa.  In 1923, he became Managing Director of O’Mara Limited and created numerous employment opportunities by establishing bacon factories in Claremorris, County Mayo, and Letterkenny, County Donegal, in the 1930s.  The three bacon companies were amalgamated in 1938 and formed into the Bacon Company of Ireland.  Stephen O’Mara Junior remained the company’s chairman until his death in 1959.  In 1987, the Bacon Company of Ireland merged with Hanley of Rooskey and Benesford UK (Castlebar) with assistance from the Industrial Development Agency Ireland (IDA) to form Irish Country Bacon.  Shortly afterwards the old O’Mara factory in Limerick was closed down.  It was subsequently demolished to make way for a multi-storey car park.<lb/><lb/>Throughout his life, Stephen O’Mara Junior played a prominent role in both local and national affairs.  Unlike his father and elder brother James, Stephen was opposed to the Anglo-Irish Treaty but in a conciliatory manner.  He was prominently identified with the Sinn Fein movement after the Easter Rising.  He was one of Eamon de Valera’s strongest supporters and a member of his Fianna Fail Party since its formation in 1926.<lb/><lb/>When George Clancy, Lord Mayor of Limerick, and his predecessor Michael O’Callaghan were murdered by the British military forces in March 1921, Stephen decided to stand for election and became Mayor.  He was re-elected in 1922 and in 1923 but resigned before the expiration of his term of office.<lb/><lb/>In 1921, Stephen O’Mara Junior was selected to go to America as Special Envoy appointed by Dáil Éireann to the United States to oversee one of the country’s biggest fundraising drives to finance the first Dáil and was made Trustee of the funds.  The funds-drive was terminated following the signing of the Anglo-Irish Treaty.  Considering himself as the exchequer to the Irish Free State, O’Mara refused to hand over the collected funds to the pro-Treaty administration which resulted in his imprisonment in 1922-1923.  He had also been imprisoned for seven days in 1921 for refusing to pay a fine of £10 for non-compliance with a military summons.<lb/><lb/>The bulk of the money collected during the Bond Drive was left in various banks in New York and remained untouched for a number of years.  In 1927, following legal action between the Irish Government and Eamon de Valera, a court in New York ordered that money outstanding to bond holders must be paid back.  Having anticipated such a ruling, de Valera’s legal team invited bond holders to sign over their bonds to de Valera, for which they were paid 58 cents to the dollar.  The monies so accumulated were used to launch the national daily newspaper *The Irish Press*.  Stephen O’Mara served on the paper’s Board of Directors until his resignation in 1935.<lb/><lb/>In 1932, Stephen O’Mara was once again sent to America on a mission involving the various consular and diplomatic offices maintained in the country by the Irish Government.  Two years later, he was appointed a member of the Commission on Vocational Organisation, on which he served until 1943.  In 1959, he was created a member of the Council of State following de Valera’s inauguration as President of Ireland.  Stephen O’Mara died less than two months after his appointment, on 11 November 1959.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara Junior married in 1918 Anne O’Brien, third daughter of Thomas O’Brien of Boru House, and the couple had an adopted son, Peter O’Mara.  Anne’s youngest sister, Kate O’Brien, became one of the most prominent novelists in 20th-century Ireland and a voice of the respectable Irish Roman Catholic middle class.</p>
            </note>
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            <p>Untitled ‘Long Distance’ column by Kate O’Brien, published in the *Irish Times* on 26 October 1970.</p>
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                <addressline>Telephone: +353-61-202690</addressline>
                <addressline>Fax: +353-61-213415</addressline>
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            <note>
              <p>The history of the O’Mara family of Strand house and O’Mara’s Bacon Company go hand in hand.  The factory was founded in 1839 by James O’Meara (1817-1899), who originated from the village of Toomevaara in county Tipperary.  Having worked for some years in the woollen mills in Clonmel, he got a job as a clerk with Matterson’s Bacon Factory in Limerick and in 1839 founded O’Mara’s Bacon Company in his house on Mungret Street.  It is said that he dropped the ‘e’ from his surname as he felt that O’Meara was too long for commercial purposes.  James initially sold for Matterson’s but soon began to cure his own bacon in the basement of his house.  As his business grew, he acquired dedicated premises for the purpose near the top of Roche’s Street.<lb/><lb/>In 1841, James O’Mara married Honora Fowley (d. 1878), who worked in the bacon business alongside her husband.  A devoted nationalist, James was one of the early supporters of Isaac Butt’s Home Rule movement.  He was High Sheriff of Limerick City in 1887, and acted as Town Councillor on Limerick Corporation at least from 1888 to 1898.<lb/><lb/>James and Honora O’Mara had 13 children, of whom the two eldest surviving sons, Stephen O’Mara (1844-1926) and John (Jack) O’Mara (1856-1919) were instrumental in building up the O’Mara’s Bacon Factory into a great success.   The youngest son, Joseph (Joe) O’Mara (1864-1927) became a celebrated opera singer.<lb/><lb/>When James O’Mara retired from business his son John (Jack) O’Mara became manager of the O’Mara Bacon Factory.  In the late 1880s, Jack was invited to Russia by Tsar Alexander III to provide instruction on bacon curing.  He stayed in St Petersburg to supervise the construction of a bacon factory.  In 1891, his father bought the rights of the Russian Bacon Company and the family imported bacon from Russia into London until 1903.  James (Jim) O’Mara (1858-1893) acted as agent for O’Mara’s in London until his untimely death from heart disease.  His nephew James O’Mara (1873-1948), son of Stephen O’Mara Senior (1844-1926), took over the agency and held it until 1914.<lb/><lb/>When John (Jack) O’Mara died in 1919, his younger brother Stephen O’Mara (1844-1926) became Managing Director of O’Mara Limited and remained in that capacity until 1923.  Having entered into the family business at the age of fifteen, his great business acumen established O’Mara’s Bacon Factory as one of the most prominent commercial enterprises in Limerick city.  He also purchased a bacon factory in Palmerston, Ontario, Canada, which was managed by his son Joseph (Joe) O’Mara (1878-1950) until the business was wound up in the 1940s.<lb/><lb/>Like his father, Stephen O’Mara was a strong supporter of Isaac Butt’s Home Rule movement and a member of the committee which secured Butt’s election for Limerick city in 1871.  He later developed a close association with Charles Stewart Parnell and was elected Member of Parliament for Upper Ossory in Kilkenny South for the Irish Parliamentary Party in February 1886.  When the Irish National League split from Irish Parliamentary Party in December 1890, O’Mara took the Parnellite side.  He continued to act as trustee of the Party funds until 1908, when he resigned from his trusteeship.  Towards the end of his life, his moderate political views became more radicalised under the influence of his sons James (1873-1948) and Stephen Junior (1884-1959).  He had agreed with his son James’s decision to resign from the Irish Parliamentary Party in 1907 in order to join Sinn Fein, and personally supported the party in the 1918 General Election.  Both Stephen and his son James were strong supporters of the 1921 Anglo-Irish Treaty but were on friendly terms with Eamon de Valera who, it is said, spent the night at the O’Mara family home, Strand House, as the Treaty was being signed in London.  In the 1925 election, Stephen O’Mara was elected as Senator to the Free State Seanad.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara was also a prominent figure in local politics.  He became a Town Councillor on Limerick Corporation in the 1880s and was elected Mayor of Limerick in 1885.  He was the first Mayor of Limerick to be elected on a Nationalist ticket.  He also served as High Sheriff of Limerick city in 1888, 1913 and 1914.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara married Ellen Pigott in 1867, and the couple had 12 children of whom the eldest three died tragically of diphtheria in 1872.  From c. 1909 onwards, the family lived at Strand House.  Their third son, Stephen O’Mara Junior, was born on 5 January 1884.  He entered the family business in 1903 when he travelled to Canada to work in the bacon factory established by the O’Mara family in Ottawa.  In 1923, he became Managing Director of O’Mara Limited and created numerous employment opportunities by establishing bacon factories in Claremorris, County Mayo, and Letterkenny, County Donegal, in the 1930s.  The three bacon companies were amalgamated in 1938 and formed into the Bacon Company of Ireland.  Stephen O’Mara Junior remained the company’s chairman until his death in 1959.  In 1987, the Bacon Company of Ireland merged with Hanley of Rooskey and Benesford UK (Castlebar) with assistance from the Industrial Development Agency Ireland (IDA) to form Irish Country Bacon.  Shortly afterwards the old O’Mara factory in Limerick was closed down.  It was subsequently demolished to make way for a multi-storey car park.<lb/><lb/>Throughout his life, Stephen O’Mara Junior played a prominent role in both local and national affairs.  Unlike his father and elder brother James, Stephen was opposed to the Anglo-Irish Treaty but in a conciliatory manner.  He was prominently identified with the Sinn Fein movement after the Easter Rising.  He was one of Eamon de Valera’s strongest supporters and a member of his Fianna Fail Party since its formation in 1926.<lb/><lb/>When George Clancy, Lord Mayor of Limerick, and his predecessor Michael O’Callaghan were murdered by the British military forces in March 1921, Stephen decided to stand for election and became Mayor.  He was re-elected in 1922 and in 1923 but resigned before the expiration of his term of office.<lb/><lb/>In 1921, Stephen O’Mara Junior was selected to go to America as Special Envoy appointed by Dáil Éireann to the United States to oversee one of the country’s biggest fundraising drives to finance the first Dáil and was made Trustee of the funds.  The funds-drive was terminated following the signing of the Anglo-Irish Treaty.  Considering himself as the exchequer to the Irish Free State, O’Mara refused to hand over the collected funds to the pro-Treaty administration which resulted in his imprisonment in 1922-1923.  He had also been imprisoned for seven days in 1921 for refusing to pay a fine of £10 for non-compliance with a military summons.<lb/><lb/>The bulk of the money collected during the Bond Drive was left in various banks in New York and remained untouched for a number of years.  In 1927, following legal action between the Irish Government and Eamon de Valera, a court in New York ordered that money outstanding to bond holders must be paid back.  Having anticipated such a ruling, de Valera’s legal team invited bond holders to sign over their bonds to de Valera, for which they were paid 58 cents to the dollar.  The monies so accumulated were used to launch the national daily newspaper *The Irish Press*.  Stephen O’Mara served on the paper’s Board of Directors until his resignation in 1935.<lb/><lb/>In 1932, Stephen O’Mara was once again sent to America on a mission involving the various consular and diplomatic offices maintained in the country by the Irish Government.  Two years later, he was appointed a member of the Commission on Vocational Organisation, on which he served until 1943.  In 1959, he was created a member of the Council of State following de Valera’s inauguration as President of Ireland.  Stephen O’Mara died less than two months after his appointment, on 11 November 1959.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara Junior married in 1918 Anne O’Brien, third daughter of Thomas O’Brien of Boru House, and the couple had an adopted son, Peter O’Mara.  Anne’s youngest sister, Kate O’Brien, became one of the most prominent novelists in 20th-century Ireland and a voice of the respectable Irish Roman Catholic middle class.</p>
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            <p>Untitled ‘Long Distance’ column by Kate O’Brien, published in the *Irish Times* on 9 November 1970.</p>
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            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">‘Farewell to a Great Man’</unittitle>
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                <addressline>Fax: +353-61-213415</addressline>
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            <note>
              <p>The history of the O’Mara family of Strand house and O’Mara’s Bacon Company go hand in hand.  The factory was founded in 1839 by James O’Meara (1817-1899), who originated from the village of Toomevaara in county Tipperary.  Having worked for some years in the woollen mills in Clonmel, he got a job as a clerk with Matterson’s Bacon Factory in Limerick and in 1839 founded O’Mara’s Bacon Company in his house on Mungret Street.  It is said that he dropped the ‘e’ from his surname as he felt that O’Meara was too long for commercial purposes.  James initially sold for Matterson’s but soon began to cure his own bacon in the basement of his house.  As his business grew, he acquired dedicated premises for the purpose near the top of Roche’s Street.<lb/><lb/>In 1841, James O’Mara married Honora Fowley (d. 1878), who worked in the bacon business alongside her husband.  A devoted nationalist, James was one of the early supporters of Isaac Butt’s Home Rule movement.  He was High Sheriff of Limerick City in 1887, and acted as Town Councillor on Limerick Corporation at least from 1888 to 1898.<lb/><lb/>James and Honora O’Mara had 13 children, of whom the two eldest surviving sons, Stephen O’Mara (1844-1926) and John (Jack) O’Mara (1856-1919) were instrumental in building up the O’Mara’s Bacon Factory into a great success.   The youngest son, Joseph (Joe) O’Mara (1864-1927) became a celebrated opera singer.<lb/><lb/>When James O’Mara retired from business his son John (Jack) O’Mara became manager of the O’Mara Bacon Factory.  In the late 1880s, Jack was invited to Russia by Tsar Alexander III to provide instruction on bacon curing.  He stayed in St Petersburg to supervise the construction of a bacon factory.  In 1891, his father bought the rights of the Russian Bacon Company and the family imported bacon from Russia into London until 1903.  James (Jim) O’Mara (1858-1893) acted as agent for O’Mara’s in London until his untimely death from heart disease.  His nephew James O’Mara (1873-1948), son of Stephen O’Mara Senior (1844-1926), took over the agency and held it until 1914.<lb/><lb/>When John (Jack) O’Mara died in 1919, his younger brother Stephen O’Mara (1844-1926) became Managing Director of O’Mara Limited and remained in that capacity until 1923.  Having entered into the family business at the age of fifteen, his great business acumen established O’Mara’s Bacon Factory as one of the most prominent commercial enterprises in Limerick city.  He also purchased a bacon factory in Palmerston, Ontario, Canada, which was managed by his son Joseph (Joe) O’Mara (1878-1950) until the business was wound up in the 1940s.<lb/><lb/>Like his father, Stephen O’Mara was a strong supporter of Isaac Butt’s Home Rule movement and a member of the committee which secured Butt’s election for Limerick city in 1871.  He later developed a close association with Charles Stewart Parnell and was elected Member of Parliament for Upper Ossory in Kilkenny South for the Irish Parliamentary Party in February 1886.  When the Irish National League split from Irish Parliamentary Party in December 1890, O’Mara took the Parnellite side.  He continued to act as trustee of the Party funds until 1908, when he resigned from his trusteeship.  Towards the end of his life, his moderate political views became more radicalised under the influence of his sons James (1873-1948) and Stephen Junior (1884-1959).  He had agreed with his son James’s decision to resign from the Irish Parliamentary Party in 1907 in order to join Sinn Fein, and personally supported the party in the 1918 General Election.  Both Stephen and his son James were strong supporters of the 1921 Anglo-Irish Treaty but were on friendly terms with Eamon de Valera who, it is said, spent the night at the O’Mara family home, Strand House, as the Treaty was being signed in London.  In the 1925 election, Stephen O’Mara was elected as Senator to the Free State Seanad.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara was also a prominent figure in local politics.  He became a Town Councillor on Limerick Corporation in the 1880s and was elected Mayor of Limerick in 1885.  He was the first Mayor of Limerick to be elected on a Nationalist ticket.  He also served as High Sheriff of Limerick city in 1888, 1913 and 1914.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara married Ellen Pigott in 1867, and the couple had 12 children of whom the eldest three died tragically of diphtheria in 1872.  From c. 1909 onwards, the family lived at Strand House.  Their third son, Stephen O’Mara Junior, was born on 5 January 1884.  He entered the family business in 1903 when he travelled to Canada to work in the bacon factory established by the O’Mara family in Ottawa.  In 1923, he became Managing Director of O’Mara Limited and created numerous employment opportunities by establishing bacon factories in Claremorris, County Mayo, and Letterkenny, County Donegal, in the 1930s.  The three bacon companies were amalgamated in 1938 and formed into the Bacon Company of Ireland.  Stephen O’Mara Junior remained the company’s chairman until his death in 1959.  In 1987, the Bacon Company of Ireland merged with Hanley of Rooskey and Benesford UK (Castlebar) with assistance from the Industrial Development Agency Ireland (IDA) to form Irish Country Bacon.  Shortly afterwards the old O’Mara factory in Limerick was closed down.  It was subsequently demolished to make way for a multi-storey car park.<lb/><lb/>Throughout his life, Stephen O’Mara Junior played a prominent role in both local and national affairs.  Unlike his father and elder brother James, Stephen was opposed to the Anglo-Irish Treaty but in a conciliatory manner.  He was prominently identified with the Sinn Fein movement after the Easter Rising.  He was one of Eamon de Valera’s strongest supporters and a member of his Fianna Fail Party since its formation in 1926.<lb/><lb/>When George Clancy, Lord Mayor of Limerick, and his predecessor Michael O’Callaghan were murdered by the British military forces in March 1921, Stephen decided to stand for election and became Mayor.  He was re-elected in 1922 and in 1923 but resigned before the expiration of his term of office.<lb/><lb/>In 1921, Stephen O’Mara Junior was selected to go to America as Special Envoy appointed by Dáil Éireann to the United States to oversee one of the country’s biggest fundraising drives to finance the first Dáil and was made Trustee of the funds.  The funds-drive was terminated following the signing of the Anglo-Irish Treaty.  Considering himself as the exchequer to the Irish Free State, O’Mara refused to hand over the collected funds to the pro-Treaty administration which resulted in his imprisonment in 1922-1923.  He had also been imprisoned for seven days in 1921 for refusing to pay a fine of £10 for non-compliance with a military summons.<lb/><lb/>The bulk of the money collected during the Bond Drive was left in various banks in New York and remained untouched for a number of years.  In 1927, following legal action between the Irish Government and Eamon de Valera, a court in New York ordered that money outstanding to bond holders must be paid back.  Having anticipated such a ruling, de Valera’s legal team invited bond holders to sign over their bonds to de Valera, for which they were paid 58 cents to the dollar.  The monies so accumulated were used to launch the national daily newspaper *The Irish Press*.  Stephen O’Mara served on the paper’s Board of Directors until his resignation in 1935.<lb/><lb/>In 1932, Stephen O’Mara was once again sent to America on a mission involving the various consular and diplomatic offices maintained in the country by the Irish Government.  Two years later, he was appointed a member of the Commission on Vocational Organisation, on which he served until 1943.  In 1959, he was created a member of the Council of State following de Valera’s inauguration as President of Ireland.  Stephen O’Mara died less than two months after his appointment, on 11 November 1959.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara Junior married in 1918 Anne O’Brien, third daughter of Thomas O’Brien of Boru House, and the couple had an adopted son, Peter O’Mara.  Anne’s youngest sister, Kate O’Brien, became one of the most prominent novelists in 20th-century Ireland and a voice of the respectable Irish Roman Catholic middle class.</p>
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              <p>The history of the O’Mara family of Strand house and O’Mara’s Bacon Company go hand in hand.  The factory was founded in 1839 by James O’Meara (1817-1899), who originated from the village of Toomevaara in county Tipperary.  Having worked for some years in the woollen mills in Clonmel, he got a job as a clerk with Matterson’s Bacon Factory in Limerick and in 1839 founded O’Mara’s Bacon Company in his house on Mungret Street.  It is said that he dropped the ‘e’ from his surname as he felt that O’Meara was too long for commercial purposes.  James initially sold for Matterson’s but soon began to cure his own bacon in the basement of his house.  As his business grew, he acquired dedicated premises for the purpose near the top of Roche’s Street.<lb/><lb/>In 1841, James O’Mara married Honora Fowley (d. 1878), who worked in the bacon business alongside her husband.  A devoted nationalist, James was one of the early supporters of Isaac Butt’s Home Rule movement.  He was High Sheriff of Limerick City in 1887, and acted as Town Councillor on Limerick Corporation at least from 1888 to 1898.<lb/><lb/>James and Honora O’Mara had 13 children, of whom the two eldest surviving sons, Stephen O’Mara (1844-1926) and John (Jack) O’Mara (1856-1919) were instrumental in building up the O’Mara’s Bacon Factory into a great success.   The youngest son, Joseph (Joe) O’Mara (1864-1927) became a celebrated opera singer.<lb/><lb/>When James O’Mara retired from business his son John (Jack) O’Mara became manager of the O’Mara Bacon Factory.  In the late 1880s, Jack was invited to Russia by Tsar Alexander III to provide instruction on bacon curing.  He stayed in St Petersburg to supervise the construction of a bacon factory.  In 1891, his father bought the rights of the Russian Bacon Company and the family imported bacon from Russia into London until 1903.  James (Jim) O’Mara (1858-1893) acted as agent for O’Mara’s in London until his untimely death from heart disease.  His nephew James O’Mara (1873-1948), son of Stephen O’Mara Senior (1844-1926), took over the agency and held it until 1914.<lb/><lb/>When John (Jack) O’Mara died in 1919, his younger brother Stephen O’Mara (1844-1926) became Managing Director of O’Mara Limited and remained in that capacity until 1923.  Having entered into the family business at the age of fifteen, his great business acumen established O’Mara’s Bacon Factory as one of the most prominent commercial enterprises in Limerick city.  He also purchased a bacon factory in Palmerston, Ontario, Canada, which was managed by his son Joseph (Joe) O’Mara (1878-1950) until the business was wound up in the 1940s.<lb/><lb/>Like his father, Stephen O’Mara was a strong supporter of Isaac Butt’s Home Rule movement and a member of the committee which secured Butt’s election for Limerick city in 1871.  He later developed a close association with Charles Stewart Parnell and was elected Member of Parliament for Upper Ossory in Kilkenny South for the Irish Parliamentary Party in February 1886.  When the Irish National League split from Irish Parliamentary Party in December 1890, O’Mara took the Parnellite side.  He continued to act as trustee of the Party funds until 1908, when he resigned from his trusteeship.  Towards the end of his life, his moderate political views became more radicalised under the influence of his sons James (1873-1948) and Stephen Junior (1884-1959).  He had agreed with his son James’s decision to resign from the Irish Parliamentary Party in 1907 in order to join Sinn Fein, and personally supported the party in the 1918 General Election.  Both Stephen and his son James were strong supporters of the 1921 Anglo-Irish Treaty but were on friendly terms with Eamon de Valera who, it is said, spent the night at the O’Mara family home, Strand House, as the Treaty was being signed in London.  In the 1925 election, Stephen O’Mara was elected as Senator to the Free State Seanad.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara was also a prominent figure in local politics.  He became a Town Councillor on Limerick Corporation in the 1880s and was elected Mayor of Limerick in 1885.  He was the first Mayor of Limerick to be elected on a Nationalist ticket.  He also served as High Sheriff of Limerick city in 1888, 1913 and 1914.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara married Ellen Pigott in 1867, and the couple had 12 children of whom the eldest three died tragically of diphtheria in 1872.  From c. 1909 onwards, the family lived at Strand House.  Their third son, Stephen O’Mara Junior, was born on 5 January 1884.  He entered the family business in 1903 when he travelled to Canada to work in the bacon factory established by the O’Mara family in Ottawa.  In 1923, he became Managing Director of O’Mara Limited and created numerous employment opportunities by establishing bacon factories in Claremorris, County Mayo, and Letterkenny, County Donegal, in the 1930s.  The three bacon companies were amalgamated in 1938 and formed into the Bacon Company of Ireland.  Stephen O’Mara Junior remained the company’s chairman until his death in 1959.  In 1987, the Bacon Company of Ireland merged with Hanley of Rooskey and Benesford UK (Castlebar) with assistance from the Industrial Development Agency Ireland (IDA) to form Irish Country Bacon.  Shortly afterwards the old O’Mara factory in Limerick was closed down.  It was subsequently demolished to make way for a multi-storey car park.<lb/><lb/>Throughout his life, Stephen O’Mara Junior played a prominent role in both local and national affairs.  Unlike his father and elder brother James, Stephen was opposed to the Anglo-Irish Treaty but in a conciliatory manner.  He was prominently identified with the Sinn Fein movement after the Easter Rising.  He was one of Eamon de Valera’s strongest supporters and a member of his Fianna Fail Party since its formation in 1926.<lb/><lb/>When George Clancy, Lord Mayor of Limerick, and his predecessor Michael O’Callaghan were murdered by the British military forces in March 1921, Stephen decided to stand for election and became Mayor.  He was re-elected in 1922 and in 1923 but resigned before the expiration of his term of office.<lb/><lb/>In 1921, Stephen O’Mara Junior was selected to go to America as Special Envoy appointed by Dáil Éireann to the United States to oversee one of the country’s biggest fundraising drives to finance the first Dáil and was made Trustee of the funds.  The funds-drive was terminated following the signing of the Anglo-Irish Treaty.  Considering himself as the exchequer to the Irish Free State, O’Mara refused to hand over the collected funds to the pro-Treaty administration which resulted in his imprisonment in 1922-1923.  He had also been imprisoned for seven days in 1921 for refusing to pay a fine of £10 for non-compliance with a military summons.<lb/><lb/>The bulk of the money collected during the Bond Drive was left in various banks in New York and remained untouched for a number of years.  In 1927, following legal action between the Irish Government and Eamon de Valera, a court in New York ordered that money outstanding to bond holders must be paid back.  Having anticipated such a ruling, de Valera’s legal team invited bond holders to sign over their bonds to de Valera, for which they were paid 58 cents to the dollar.  The monies so accumulated were used to launch the national daily newspaper *The Irish Press*.  Stephen O’Mara served on the paper’s Board of Directors until his resignation in 1935.<lb/><lb/>In 1932, Stephen O’Mara was once again sent to America on a mission involving the various consular and diplomatic offices maintained in the country by the Irish Government.  Two years later, he was appointed a member of the Commission on Vocational Organisation, on which he served until 1943.  In 1959, he was created a member of the Council of State following de Valera’s inauguration as President of Ireland.  Stephen O’Mara died less than two months after his appointment, on 11 November 1959.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara Junior married in 1918 Anne O’Brien, third daughter of Thomas O’Brien of Boru House, and the couple had an adopted son, Peter O’Mara.  Anne’s youngest sister, Kate O’Brien, became one of the most prominent novelists in 20th-century Ireland and a voice of the respectable Irish Roman Catholic middle class.</p>
            </note>
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            <p>Untitled ‘Long Distance’ column by Kate O’Brien, published in the *Irish Times* on 23 December 1970.</p>
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                <addressline>Telephone: +353-61-202690</addressline>
                <addressline>Fax: +353-61-213415</addressline>
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            <note>
              <p>The history of the O’Mara family of Strand house and O’Mara’s Bacon Company go hand in hand.  The factory was founded in 1839 by James O’Meara (1817-1899), who originated from the village of Toomevaara in county Tipperary.  Having worked for some years in the woollen mills in Clonmel, he got a job as a clerk with Matterson’s Bacon Factory in Limerick and in 1839 founded O’Mara’s Bacon Company in his house on Mungret Street.  It is said that he dropped the ‘e’ from his surname as he felt that O’Meara was too long for commercial purposes.  James initially sold for Matterson’s but soon began to cure his own bacon in the basement of his house.  As his business grew, he acquired dedicated premises for the purpose near the top of Roche’s Street.<lb/><lb/>In 1841, James O’Mara married Honora Fowley (d. 1878), who worked in the bacon business alongside her husband.  A devoted nationalist, James was one of the early supporters of Isaac Butt’s Home Rule movement.  He was High Sheriff of Limerick City in 1887, and acted as Town Councillor on Limerick Corporation at least from 1888 to 1898.<lb/><lb/>James and Honora O’Mara had 13 children, of whom the two eldest surviving sons, Stephen O’Mara (1844-1926) and John (Jack) O’Mara (1856-1919) were instrumental in building up the O’Mara’s Bacon Factory into a great success.   The youngest son, Joseph (Joe) O’Mara (1864-1927) became a celebrated opera singer.<lb/><lb/>When James O’Mara retired from business his son John (Jack) O’Mara became manager of the O’Mara Bacon Factory.  In the late 1880s, Jack was invited to Russia by Tsar Alexander III to provide instruction on bacon curing.  He stayed in St Petersburg to supervise the construction of a bacon factory.  In 1891, his father bought the rights of the Russian Bacon Company and the family imported bacon from Russia into London until 1903.  James (Jim) O’Mara (1858-1893) acted as agent for O’Mara’s in London until his untimely death from heart disease.  His nephew James O’Mara (1873-1948), son of Stephen O’Mara Senior (1844-1926), took over the agency and held it until 1914.<lb/><lb/>When John (Jack) O’Mara died in 1919, his younger brother Stephen O’Mara (1844-1926) became Managing Director of O’Mara Limited and remained in that capacity until 1923.  Having entered into the family business at the age of fifteen, his great business acumen established O’Mara’s Bacon Factory as one of the most prominent commercial enterprises in Limerick city.  He also purchased a bacon factory in Palmerston, Ontario, Canada, which was managed by his son Joseph (Joe) O’Mara (1878-1950) until the business was wound up in the 1940s.<lb/><lb/>Like his father, Stephen O’Mara was a strong supporter of Isaac Butt’s Home Rule movement and a member of the committee which secured Butt’s election for Limerick city in 1871.  He later developed a close association with Charles Stewart Parnell and was elected Member of Parliament for Upper Ossory in Kilkenny South for the Irish Parliamentary Party in February 1886.  When the Irish National League split from Irish Parliamentary Party in December 1890, O’Mara took the Parnellite side.  He continued to act as trustee of the Party funds until 1908, when he resigned from his trusteeship.  Towards the end of his life, his moderate political views became more radicalised under the influence of his sons James (1873-1948) and Stephen Junior (1884-1959).  He had agreed with his son James’s decision to resign from the Irish Parliamentary Party in 1907 in order to join Sinn Fein, and personally supported the party in the 1918 General Election.  Both Stephen and his son James were strong supporters of the 1921 Anglo-Irish Treaty but were on friendly terms with Eamon de Valera who, it is said, spent the night at the O’Mara family home, Strand House, as the Treaty was being signed in London.  In the 1925 election, Stephen O’Mara was elected as Senator to the Free State Seanad.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara was also a prominent figure in local politics.  He became a Town Councillor on Limerick Corporation in the 1880s and was elected Mayor of Limerick in 1885.  He was the first Mayor of Limerick to be elected on a Nationalist ticket.  He also served as High Sheriff of Limerick city in 1888, 1913 and 1914.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara married Ellen Pigott in 1867, and the couple had 12 children of whom the eldest three died tragically of diphtheria in 1872.  From c. 1909 onwards, the family lived at Strand House.  Their third son, Stephen O’Mara Junior, was born on 5 January 1884.  He entered the family business in 1903 when he travelled to Canada to work in the bacon factory established by the O’Mara family in Ottawa.  In 1923, he became Managing Director of O’Mara Limited and created numerous employment opportunities by establishing bacon factories in Claremorris, County Mayo, and Letterkenny, County Donegal, in the 1930s.  The three bacon companies were amalgamated in 1938 and formed into the Bacon Company of Ireland.  Stephen O’Mara Junior remained the company’s chairman until his death in 1959.  In 1987, the Bacon Company of Ireland merged with Hanley of Rooskey and Benesford UK (Castlebar) with assistance from the Industrial Development Agency Ireland (IDA) to form Irish Country Bacon.  Shortly afterwards the old O’Mara factory in Limerick was closed down.  It was subsequently demolished to make way for a multi-storey car park.<lb/><lb/>Throughout his life, Stephen O’Mara Junior played a prominent role in both local and national affairs.  Unlike his father and elder brother James, Stephen was opposed to the Anglo-Irish Treaty but in a conciliatory manner.  He was prominently identified with the Sinn Fein movement after the Easter Rising.  He was one of Eamon de Valera’s strongest supporters and a member of his Fianna Fail Party since its formation in 1926.<lb/><lb/>When George Clancy, Lord Mayor of Limerick, and his predecessor Michael O’Callaghan were murdered by the British military forces in March 1921, Stephen decided to stand for election and became Mayor.  He was re-elected in 1922 and in 1923 but resigned before the expiration of his term of office.<lb/><lb/>In 1921, Stephen O’Mara Junior was selected to go to America as Special Envoy appointed by Dáil Éireann to the United States to oversee one of the country’s biggest fundraising drives to finance the first Dáil and was made Trustee of the funds.  The funds-drive was terminated following the signing of the Anglo-Irish Treaty.  Considering himself as the exchequer to the Irish Free State, O’Mara refused to hand over the collected funds to the pro-Treaty administration which resulted in his imprisonment in 1922-1923.  He had also been imprisoned for seven days in 1921 for refusing to pay a fine of £10 for non-compliance with a military summons.<lb/><lb/>The bulk of the money collected during the Bond Drive was left in various banks in New York and remained untouched for a number of years.  In 1927, following legal action between the Irish Government and Eamon de Valera, a court in New York ordered that money outstanding to bond holders must be paid back.  Having anticipated such a ruling, de Valera’s legal team invited bond holders to sign over their bonds to de Valera, for which they were paid 58 cents to the dollar.  The monies so accumulated were used to launch the national daily newspaper *The Irish Press*.  Stephen O’Mara served on the paper’s Board of Directors until his resignation in 1935.<lb/><lb/>In 1932, Stephen O’Mara was once again sent to America on a mission involving the various consular and diplomatic offices maintained in the country by the Irish Government.  Two years later, he was appointed a member of the Commission on Vocational Organisation, on which he served until 1943.  In 1959, he was created a member of the Council of State following de Valera’s inauguration as President of Ireland.  Stephen O’Mara died less than two months after his appointment, on 11 November 1959.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara Junior married in 1918 Anne O’Brien, third daughter of Thomas O’Brien of Boru House, and the couple had an adopted son, Peter O’Mara.  Anne’s youngest sister, Kate O’Brien, became one of the most prominent novelists in 20th-century Ireland and a voice of the respectable Irish Roman Catholic middle class.</p>
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            <p>‘Long Distance’ column entitled ‘Grey Spring’ by Kate O’Brien, published in the *Irish Times* on 21 April 1971.</p>
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            <note>
              <p>The history of the O’Mara family of Strand house and O’Mara’s Bacon Company go hand in hand.  The factory was founded in 1839 by James O’Meara (1817-1899), who originated from the village of Toomevaara in county Tipperary.  Having worked for some years in the woollen mills in Clonmel, he got a job as a clerk with Matterson’s Bacon Factory in Limerick and in 1839 founded O’Mara’s Bacon Company in his house on Mungret Street.  It is said that he dropped the ‘e’ from his surname as he felt that O’Meara was too long for commercial purposes.  James initially sold for Matterson’s but soon began to cure his own bacon in the basement of his house.  As his business grew, he acquired dedicated premises for the purpose near the top of Roche’s Street.<lb/><lb/>In 1841, James O’Mara married Honora Fowley (d. 1878), who worked in the bacon business alongside her husband.  A devoted nationalist, James was one of the early supporters of Isaac Butt’s Home Rule movement.  He was High Sheriff of Limerick City in 1887, and acted as Town Councillor on Limerick Corporation at least from 1888 to 1898.<lb/><lb/>James and Honora O’Mara had 13 children, of whom the two eldest surviving sons, Stephen O’Mara (1844-1926) and John (Jack) O’Mara (1856-1919) were instrumental in building up the O’Mara’s Bacon Factory into a great success.   The youngest son, Joseph (Joe) O’Mara (1864-1927) became a celebrated opera singer.<lb/><lb/>When James O’Mara retired from business his son John (Jack) O’Mara became manager of the O’Mara Bacon Factory.  In the late 1880s, Jack was invited to Russia by Tsar Alexander III to provide instruction on bacon curing.  He stayed in St Petersburg to supervise the construction of a bacon factory.  In 1891, his father bought the rights of the Russian Bacon Company and the family imported bacon from Russia into London until 1903.  James (Jim) O’Mara (1858-1893) acted as agent for O’Mara’s in London until his untimely death from heart disease.  His nephew James O’Mara (1873-1948), son of Stephen O’Mara Senior (1844-1926), took over the agency and held it until 1914.<lb/><lb/>When John (Jack) O’Mara died in 1919, his younger brother Stephen O’Mara (1844-1926) became Managing Director of O’Mara Limited and remained in that capacity until 1923.  Having entered into the family business at the age of fifteen, his great business acumen established O’Mara’s Bacon Factory as one of the most prominent commercial enterprises in Limerick city.  He also purchased a bacon factory in Palmerston, Ontario, Canada, which was managed by his son Joseph (Joe) O’Mara (1878-1950) until the business was wound up in the 1940s.<lb/><lb/>Like his father, Stephen O’Mara was a strong supporter of Isaac Butt’s Home Rule movement and a member of the committee which secured Butt’s election for Limerick city in 1871.  He later developed a close association with Charles Stewart Parnell and was elected Member of Parliament for Upper Ossory in Kilkenny South for the Irish Parliamentary Party in February 1886.  When the Irish National League split from Irish Parliamentary Party in December 1890, O’Mara took the Parnellite side.  He continued to act as trustee of the Party funds until 1908, when he resigned from his trusteeship.  Towards the end of his life, his moderate political views became more radicalised under the influence of his sons James (1873-1948) and Stephen Junior (1884-1959).  He had agreed with his son James’s decision to resign from the Irish Parliamentary Party in 1907 in order to join Sinn Fein, and personally supported the party in the 1918 General Election.  Both Stephen and his son James were strong supporters of the 1921 Anglo-Irish Treaty but were on friendly terms with Eamon de Valera who, it is said, spent the night at the O’Mara family home, Strand House, as the Treaty was being signed in London.  In the 1925 election, Stephen O’Mara was elected as Senator to the Free State Seanad.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara was also a prominent figure in local politics.  He became a Town Councillor on Limerick Corporation in the 1880s and was elected Mayor of Limerick in 1885.  He was the first Mayor of Limerick to be elected on a Nationalist ticket.  He also served as High Sheriff of Limerick city in 1888, 1913 and 1914.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara married Ellen Pigott in 1867, and the couple had 12 children of whom the eldest three died tragically of diphtheria in 1872.  From c. 1909 onwards, the family lived at Strand House.  Their third son, Stephen O’Mara Junior, was born on 5 January 1884.  He entered the family business in 1903 when he travelled to Canada to work in the bacon factory established by the O’Mara family in Ottawa.  In 1923, he became Managing Director of O’Mara Limited and created numerous employment opportunities by establishing bacon factories in Claremorris, County Mayo, and Letterkenny, County Donegal, in the 1930s.  The three bacon companies were amalgamated in 1938 and formed into the Bacon Company of Ireland.  Stephen O’Mara Junior remained the company’s chairman until his death in 1959.  In 1987, the Bacon Company of Ireland merged with Hanley of Rooskey and Benesford UK (Castlebar) with assistance from the Industrial Development Agency Ireland (IDA) to form Irish Country Bacon.  Shortly afterwards the old O’Mara factory in Limerick was closed down.  It was subsequently demolished to make way for a multi-storey car park.<lb/><lb/>Throughout his life, Stephen O’Mara Junior played a prominent role in both local and national affairs.  Unlike his father and elder brother James, Stephen was opposed to the Anglo-Irish Treaty but in a conciliatory manner.  He was prominently identified with the Sinn Fein movement after the Easter Rising.  He was one of Eamon de Valera’s strongest supporters and a member of his Fianna Fail Party since its formation in 1926.<lb/><lb/>When George Clancy, Lord Mayor of Limerick, and his predecessor Michael O’Callaghan were murdered by the British military forces in March 1921, Stephen decided to stand for election and became Mayor.  He was re-elected in 1922 and in 1923 but resigned before the expiration of his term of office.<lb/><lb/>In 1921, Stephen O’Mara Junior was selected to go to America as Special Envoy appointed by Dáil Éireann to the United States to oversee one of the country’s biggest fundraising drives to finance the first Dáil and was made Trustee of the funds.  The funds-drive was terminated following the signing of the Anglo-Irish Treaty.  Considering himself as the exchequer to the Irish Free State, O’Mara refused to hand over the collected funds to the pro-Treaty administration which resulted in his imprisonment in 1922-1923.  He had also been imprisoned for seven days in 1921 for refusing to pay a fine of £10 for non-compliance with a military summons.<lb/><lb/>The bulk of the money collected during the Bond Drive was left in various banks in New York and remained untouched for a number of years.  In 1927, following legal action between the Irish Government and Eamon de Valera, a court in New York ordered that money outstanding to bond holders must be paid back.  Having anticipated such a ruling, de Valera’s legal team invited bond holders to sign over their bonds to de Valera, for which they were paid 58 cents to the dollar.  The monies so accumulated were used to launch the national daily newspaper *The Irish Press*.  Stephen O’Mara served on the paper’s Board of Directors until his resignation in 1935.<lb/><lb/>In 1932, Stephen O’Mara was once again sent to America on a mission involving the various consular and diplomatic offices maintained in the country by the Irish Government.  Two years later, he was appointed a member of the Commission on Vocational Organisation, on which he served until 1943.  In 1959, he was created a member of the Council of State following de Valera’s inauguration as President of Ireland.  Stephen O’Mara died less than two months after his appointment, on 11 November 1959.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara Junior married in 1918 Anne O’Brien, third daughter of Thomas O’Brien of Boru House, and the couple had an adopted son, Peter O’Mara.  Anne’s youngest sister, Kate O’Brien, became one of the most prominent novelists in 20th-century Ireland and a voice of the respectable Irish Roman Catholic middle class.</p>
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            <p>‘Long Distance’ column entitled ‘Continental’ by Kate O’Brien, published in the *Irish Times* on 30 July 1971.</p>
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              <p>The history of the O’Mara family of Strand house and O’Mara’s Bacon Company go hand in hand.  The factory was founded in 1839 by James O’Meara (1817-1899), who originated from the village of Toomevaara in county Tipperary.  Having worked for some years in the woollen mills in Clonmel, he got a job as a clerk with Matterson’s Bacon Factory in Limerick and in 1839 founded O’Mara’s Bacon Company in his house on Mungret Street.  It is said that he dropped the ‘e’ from his surname as he felt that O’Meara was too long for commercial purposes.  James initially sold for Matterson’s but soon began to cure his own bacon in the basement of his house.  As his business grew, he acquired dedicated premises for the purpose near the top of Roche’s Street.<lb/><lb/>In 1841, James O’Mara married Honora Fowley (d. 1878), who worked in the bacon business alongside her husband.  A devoted nationalist, James was one of the early supporters of Isaac Butt’s Home Rule movement.  He was High Sheriff of Limerick City in 1887, and acted as Town Councillor on Limerick Corporation at least from 1888 to 1898.<lb/><lb/>James and Honora O’Mara had 13 children, of whom the two eldest surviving sons, Stephen O’Mara (1844-1926) and John (Jack) O’Mara (1856-1919) were instrumental in building up the O’Mara’s Bacon Factory into a great success.   The youngest son, Joseph (Joe) O’Mara (1864-1927) became a celebrated opera singer.<lb/><lb/>When James O’Mara retired from business his son John (Jack) O’Mara became manager of the O’Mara Bacon Factory.  In the late 1880s, Jack was invited to Russia by Tsar Alexander III to provide instruction on bacon curing.  He stayed in St Petersburg to supervise the construction of a bacon factory.  In 1891, his father bought the rights of the Russian Bacon Company and the family imported bacon from Russia into London until 1903.  James (Jim) O’Mara (1858-1893) acted as agent for O’Mara’s in London until his untimely death from heart disease.  His nephew James O’Mara (1873-1948), son of Stephen O’Mara Senior (1844-1926), took over the agency and held it until 1914.<lb/><lb/>When John (Jack) O’Mara died in 1919, his younger brother Stephen O’Mara (1844-1926) became Managing Director of O’Mara Limited and remained in that capacity until 1923.  Having entered into the family business at the age of fifteen, his great business acumen established O’Mara’s Bacon Factory as one of the most prominent commercial enterprises in Limerick city.  He also purchased a bacon factory in Palmerston, Ontario, Canada, which was managed by his son Joseph (Joe) O’Mara (1878-1950) until the business was wound up in the 1940s.<lb/><lb/>Like his father, Stephen O’Mara was a strong supporter of Isaac Butt’s Home Rule movement and a member of the committee which secured Butt’s election for Limerick city in 1871.  He later developed a close association with Charles Stewart Parnell and was elected Member of Parliament for Upper Ossory in Kilkenny South for the Irish Parliamentary Party in February 1886.  When the Irish National League split from Irish Parliamentary Party in December 1890, O’Mara took the Parnellite side.  He continued to act as trustee of the Party funds until 1908, when he resigned from his trusteeship.  Towards the end of his life, his moderate political views became more radicalised under the influence of his sons James (1873-1948) and Stephen Junior (1884-1959).  He had agreed with his son James’s decision to resign from the Irish Parliamentary Party in 1907 in order to join Sinn Fein, and personally supported the party in the 1918 General Election.  Both Stephen and his son James were strong supporters of the 1921 Anglo-Irish Treaty but were on friendly terms with Eamon de Valera who, it is said, spent the night at the O’Mara family home, Strand House, as the Treaty was being signed in London.  In the 1925 election, Stephen O’Mara was elected as Senator to the Free State Seanad.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara was also a prominent figure in local politics.  He became a Town Councillor on Limerick Corporation in the 1880s and was elected Mayor of Limerick in 1885.  He was the first Mayor of Limerick to be elected on a Nationalist ticket.  He also served as High Sheriff of Limerick city in 1888, 1913 and 1914.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara married Ellen Pigott in 1867, and the couple had 12 children of whom the eldest three died tragically of diphtheria in 1872.  From c. 1909 onwards, the family lived at Strand House.  Their third son, Stephen O’Mara Junior, was born on 5 January 1884.  He entered the family business in 1903 when he travelled to Canada to work in the bacon factory established by the O’Mara family in Ottawa.  In 1923, he became Managing Director of O’Mara Limited and created numerous employment opportunities by establishing bacon factories in Claremorris, County Mayo, and Letterkenny, County Donegal, in the 1930s.  The three bacon companies were amalgamated in 1938 and formed into the Bacon Company of Ireland.  Stephen O’Mara Junior remained the company’s chairman until his death in 1959.  In 1987, the Bacon Company of Ireland merged with Hanley of Rooskey and Benesford UK (Castlebar) with assistance from the Industrial Development Agency Ireland (IDA) to form Irish Country Bacon.  Shortly afterwards the old O’Mara factory in Limerick was closed down.  It was subsequently demolished to make way for a multi-storey car park.<lb/><lb/>Throughout his life, Stephen O’Mara Junior played a prominent role in both local and national affairs.  Unlike his father and elder brother James, Stephen was opposed to the Anglo-Irish Treaty but in a conciliatory manner.  He was prominently identified with the Sinn Fein movement after the Easter Rising.  He was one of Eamon de Valera’s strongest supporters and a member of his Fianna Fail Party since its formation in 1926.<lb/><lb/>When George Clancy, Lord Mayor of Limerick, and his predecessor Michael O’Callaghan were murdered by the British military forces in March 1921, Stephen decided to stand for election and became Mayor.  He was re-elected in 1922 and in 1923 but resigned before the expiration of his term of office.<lb/><lb/>In 1921, Stephen O’Mara Junior was selected to go to America as Special Envoy appointed by Dáil Éireann to the United States to oversee one of the country’s biggest fundraising drives to finance the first Dáil and was made Trustee of the funds.  The funds-drive was terminated following the signing of the Anglo-Irish Treaty.  Considering himself as the exchequer to the Irish Free State, O’Mara refused to hand over the collected funds to the pro-Treaty administration which resulted in his imprisonment in 1922-1923.  He had also been imprisoned for seven days in 1921 for refusing to pay a fine of £10 for non-compliance with a military summons.<lb/><lb/>The bulk of the money collected during the Bond Drive was left in various banks in New York and remained untouched for a number of years.  In 1927, following legal action between the Irish Government and Eamon de Valera, a court in New York ordered that money outstanding to bond holders must be paid back.  Having anticipated such a ruling, de Valera’s legal team invited bond holders to sign over their bonds to de Valera, for which they were paid 58 cents to the dollar.  The monies so accumulated were used to launch the national daily newspaper *The Irish Press*.  Stephen O’Mara served on the paper’s Board of Directors until his resignation in 1935.<lb/><lb/>In 1932, Stephen O’Mara was once again sent to America on a mission involving the various consular and diplomatic offices maintained in the country by the Irish Government.  Two years later, he was appointed a member of the Commission on Vocational Organisation, on which he served until 1943.  In 1959, he was created a member of the Council of State following de Valera’s inauguration as President of Ireland.  Stephen O’Mara died less than two months after his appointment, on 11 November 1959.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara Junior married in 1918 Anne O’Brien, third daughter of Thomas O’Brien of Boru House, and the couple had an adopted son, Peter O’Mara.  Anne’s youngest sister, Kate O’Brien, became one of the most prominent novelists in 20th-century Ireland and a voice of the respectable Irish Roman Catholic middle class.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
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          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>‘Long Distance’ column entitled ‘Greek Charm’ by Kate O’Brien, published in the *Irish Times* on 12 August 1971.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">‘Home Thoughts’</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="IE" repositorycode="2135">P40/3/10/2/1/35</unitid>
            <unitid type="alternative" label="Original number">P40/838 (38)</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1971-08-31/1971-08-31" encodinganalog="3.1.3">31 August 1971</unitdate>
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        1 item    </physdesc>
            <repository>
              <corpname>Special Collections and Archives Department</corpname>
              <address>
                <addressline>GL0-051, Glucksman Library, University of Limerick</addressline>
                <addressline>Limerick</addressline>
                <addressline>Ireland</addressline>
                <addressline>V94 DPY6</addressline>
                <addressline>Telephone: +353-61-202690</addressline>
                <addressline>Fax: +353-61-213415</addressline>
                <addressline>Email: specoll@ul.ie</addressline>
                <addressline>https://specialcollections.ul.ie/</addressline>
              </address>
            </repository>
            <langmaterial encodinganalog="3.4.3">
              <language langcode="eng">English</language>
            </langmaterial>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <famname id="atom_124515_actor">O'Mara family of Strand House, Limerick</famname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-be03d29153491160a15961757089b84f" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>The history of the O’Mara family of Strand house and O’Mara’s Bacon Company go hand in hand.  The factory was founded in 1839 by James O’Meara (1817-1899), who originated from the village of Toomevaara in county Tipperary.  Having worked for some years in the woollen mills in Clonmel, he got a job as a clerk with Matterson’s Bacon Factory in Limerick and in 1839 founded O’Mara’s Bacon Company in his house on Mungret Street.  It is said that he dropped the ‘e’ from his surname as he felt that O’Meara was too long for commercial purposes.  James initially sold for Matterson’s but soon began to cure his own bacon in the basement of his house.  As his business grew, he acquired dedicated premises for the purpose near the top of Roche’s Street.<lb/><lb/>In 1841, James O’Mara married Honora Fowley (d. 1878), who worked in the bacon business alongside her husband.  A devoted nationalist, James was one of the early supporters of Isaac Butt’s Home Rule movement.  He was High Sheriff of Limerick City in 1887, and acted as Town Councillor on Limerick Corporation at least from 1888 to 1898.<lb/><lb/>James and Honora O’Mara had 13 children, of whom the two eldest surviving sons, Stephen O’Mara (1844-1926) and John (Jack) O’Mara (1856-1919) were instrumental in building up the O’Mara’s Bacon Factory into a great success.   The youngest son, Joseph (Joe) O’Mara (1864-1927) became a celebrated opera singer.<lb/><lb/>When James O’Mara retired from business his son John (Jack) O’Mara became manager of the O’Mara Bacon Factory.  In the late 1880s, Jack was invited to Russia by Tsar Alexander III to provide instruction on bacon curing.  He stayed in St Petersburg to supervise the construction of a bacon factory.  In 1891, his father bought the rights of the Russian Bacon Company and the family imported bacon from Russia into London until 1903.  James (Jim) O’Mara (1858-1893) acted as agent for O’Mara’s in London until his untimely death from heart disease.  His nephew James O’Mara (1873-1948), son of Stephen O’Mara Senior (1844-1926), took over the agency and held it until 1914.<lb/><lb/>When John (Jack) O’Mara died in 1919, his younger brother Stephen O’Mara (1844-1926) became Managing Director of O’Mara Limited and remained in that capacity until 1923.  Having entered into the family business at the age of fifteen, his great business acumen established O’Mara’s Bacon Factory as one of the most prominent commercial enterprises in Limerick city.  He also purchased a bacon factory in Palmerston, Ontario, Canada, which was managed by his son Joseph (Joe) O’Mara (1878-1950) until the business was wound up in the 1940s.<lb/><lb/>Like his father, Stephen O’Mara was a strong supporter of Isaac Butt’s Home Rule movement and a member of the committee which secured Butt’s election for Limerick city in 1871.  He later developed a close association with Charles Stewart Parnell and was elected Member of Parliament for Upper Ossory in Kilkenny South for the Irish Parliamentary Party in February 1886.  When the Irish National League split from Irish Parliamentary Party in December 1890, O’Mara took the Parnellite side.  He continued to act as trustee of the Party funds until 1908, when he resigned from his trusteeship.  Towards the end of his life, his moderate political views became more radicalised under the influence of his sons James (1873-1948) and Stephen Junior (1884-1959).  He had agreed with his son James’s decision to resign from the Irish Parliamentary Party in 1907 in order to join Sinn Fein, and personally supported the party in the 1918 General Election.  Both Stephen and his son James were strong supporters of the 1921 Anglo-Irish Treaty but were on friendly terms with Eamon de Valera who, it is said, spent the night at the O’Mara family home, Strand House, as the Treaty was being signed in London.  In the 1925 election, Stephen O’Mara was elected as Senator to the Free State Seanad.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara was also a prominent figure in local politics.  He became a Town Councillor on Limerick Corporation in the 1880s and was elected Mayor of Limerick in 1885.  He was the first Mayor of Limerick to be elected on a Nationalist ticket.  He also served as High Sheriff of Limerick city in 1888, 1913 and 1914.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara married Ellen Pigott in 1867, and the couple had 12 children of whom the eldest three died tragically of diphtheria in 1872.  From c. 1909 onwards, the family lived at Strand House.  Their third son, Stephen O’Mara Junior, was born on 5 January 1884.  He entered the family business in 1903 when he travelled to Canada to work in the bacon factory established by the O’Mara family in Ottawa.  In 1923, he became Managing Director of O’Mara Limited and created numerous employment opportunities by establishing bacon factories in Claremorris, County Mayo, and Letterkenny, County Donegal, in the 1930s.  The three bacon companies were amalgamated in 1938 and formed into the Bacon Company of Ireland.  Stephen O’Mara Junior remained the company’s chairman until his death in 1959.  In 1987, the Bacon Company of Ireland merged with Hanley of Rooskey and Benesford UK (Castlebar) with assistance from the Industrial Development Agency Ireland (IDA) to form Irish Country Bacon.  Shortly afterwards the old O’Mara factory in Limerick was closed down.  It was subsequently demolished to make way for a multi-storey car park.<lb/><lb/>Throughout his life, Stephen O’Mara Junior played a prominent role in both local and national affairs.  Unlike his father and elder brother James, Stephen was opposed to the Anglo-Irish Treaty but in a conciliatory manner.  He was prominently identified with the Sinn Fein movement after the Easter Rising.  He was one of Eamon de Valera’s strongest supporters and a member of his Fianna Fail Party since its formation in 1926.<lb/><lb/>When George Clancy, Lord Mayor of Limerick, and his predecessor Michael O’Callaghan were murdered by the British military forces in March 1921, Stephen decided to stand for election and became Mayor.  He was re-elected in 1922 and in 1923 but resigned before the expiration of his term of office.<lb/><lb/>In 1921, Stephen O’Mara Junior was selected to go to America as Special Envoy appointed by Dáil Éireann to the United States to oversee one of the country’s biggest fundraising drives to finance the first Dáil and was made Trustee of the funds.  The funds-drive was terminated following the signing of the Anglo-Irish Treaty.  Considering himself as the exchequer to the Irish Free State, O’Mara refused to hand over the collected funds to the pro-Treaty administration which resulted in his imprisonment in 1922-1923.  He had also been imprisoned for seven days in 1921 for refusing to pay a fine of £10 for non-compliance with a military summons.<lb/><lb/>The bulk of the money collected during the Bond Drive was left in various banks in New York and remained untouched for a number of years.  In 1927, following legal action between the Irish Government and Eamon de Valera, a court in New York ordered that money outstanding to bond holders must be paid back.  Having anticipated such a ruling, de Valera’s legal team invited bond holders to sign over their bonds to de Valera, for which they were paid 58 cents to the dollar.  The monies so accumulated were used to launch the national daily newspaper *The Irish Press*.  Stephen O’Mara served on the paper’s Board of Directors until his resignation in 1935.<lb/><lb/>In 1932, Stephen O’Mara was once again sent to America on a mission involving the various consular and diplomatic offices maintained in the country by the Irish Government.  Two years later, he was appointed a member of the Commission on Vocational Organisation, on which he served until 1943.  In 1959, he was created a member of the Council of State following de Valera’s inauguration as President of Ireland.  Stephen O’Mara died less than two months after his appointment, on 11 November 1959.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara Junior married in 1918 Anne O’Brien, third daughter of Thomas O’Brien of Boru House, and the couple had an adopted son, Peter O’Mara.  Anne’s youngest sister, Kate O’Brien, became one of the most prominent novelists in 20th-century Ireland and a voice of the respectable Irish Roman Catholic middle class.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
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          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>‘Long Distance’ column entitled ‘Home Thoughts’ by Kate O’Brien, published in the *Irish Times* on 31 August 1971.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
      </c>
      <c level="subseries">
        <did>
          <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Other Newspaper Contributions</unittitle>
          <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="IE" repositorycode="2135">P40/3/10/2/2</unitid>
          <unitdate normal="1928-01-01/1971-12-31" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1928-1971</unitdate>
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        1 file and 41 items    </physdesc>
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            <language langcode="eng">English</language>
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            <famname id="atom_109946_actor">O'Mara family of Strand House, Limerick</famname>
          </origination>
        </did>
        <bioghist id="md5-be03d29153491160a15961757089b84f" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
          <note>
            <p>The history of the O’Mara family of Strand house and O’Mara’s Bacon Company go hand in hand.  The factory was founded in 1839 by James O’Meara (1817-1899), who originated from the village of Toomevaara in county Tipperary.  Having worked for some years in the woollen mills in Clonmel, he got a job as a clerk with Matterson’s Bacon Factory in Limerick and in 1839 founded O’Mara’s Bacon Company in his house on Mungret Street.  It is said that he dropped the ‘e’ from his surname as he felt that O’Meara was too long for commercial purposes.  James initially sold for Matterson’s but soon began to cure his own bacon in the basement of his house.  As his business grew, he acquired dedicated premises for the purpose near the top of Roche’s Street.<lb/><lb/>In 1841, James O’Mara married Honora Fowley (d. 1878), who worked in the bacon business alongside her husband.  A devoted nationalist, James was one of the early supporters of Isaac Butt’s Home Rule movement.  He was High Sheriff of Limerick City in 1887, and acted as Town Councillor on Limerick Corporation at least from 1888 to 1898.<lb/><lb/>James and Honora O’Mara had 13 children, of whom the two eldest surviving sons, Stephen O’Mara (1844-1926) and John (Jack) O’Mara (1856-1919) were instrumental in building up the O’Mara’s Bacon Factory into a great success.   The youngest son, Joseph (Joe) O’Mara (1864-1927) became a celebrated opera singer.<lb/><lb/>When James O’Mara retired from business his son John (Jack) O’Mara became manager of the O’Mara Bacon Factory.  In the late 1880s, Jack was invited to Russia by Tsar Alexander III to provide instruction on bacon curing.  He stayed in St Petersburg to supervise the construction of a bacon factory.  In 1891, his father bought the rights of the Russian Bacon Company and the family imported bacon from Russia into London until 1903.  James (Jim) O’Mara (1858-1893) acted as agent for O’Mara’s in London until his untimely death from heart disease.  His nephew James O’Mara (1873-1948), son of Stephen O’Mara Senior (1844-1926), took over the agency and held it until 1914.<lb/><lb/>When John (Jack) O’Mara died in 1919, his younger brother Stephen O’Mara (1844-1926) became Managing Director of O’Mara Limited and remained in that capacity until 1923.  Having entered into the family business at the age of fifteen, his great business acumen established O’Mara’s Bacon Factory as one of the most prominent commercial enterprises in Limerick city.  He also purchased a bacon factory in Palmerston, Ontario, Canada, which was managed by his son Joseph (Joe) O’Mara (1878-1950) until the business was wound up in the 1940s.<lb/><lb/>Like his father, Stephen O’Mara was a strong supporter of Isaac Butt’s Home Rule movement and a member of the committee which secured Butt’s election for Limerick city in 1871.  He later developed a close association with Charles Stewart Parnell and was elected Member of Parliament for Upper Ossory in Kilkenny South for the Irish Parliamentary Party in February 1886.  When the Irish National League split from Irish Parliamentary Party in December 1890, O’Mara took the Parnellite side.  He continued to act as trustee of the Party funds until 1908, when he resigned from his trusteeship.  Towards the end of his life, his moderate political views became more radicalised under the influence of his sons James (1873-1948) and Stephen Junior (1884-1959).  He had agreed with his son James’s decision to resign from the Irish Parliamentary Party in 1907 in order to join Sinn Fein, and personally supported the party in the 1918 General Election.  Both Stephen and his son James were strong supporters of the 1921 Anglo-Irish Treaty but were on friendly terms with Eamon de Valera who, it is said, spent the night at the O’Mara family home, Strand House, as the Treaty was being signed in London.  In the 1925 election, Stephen O’Mara was elected as Senator to the Free State Seanad.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara was also a prominent figure in local politics.  He became a Town Councillor on Limerick Corporation in the 1880s and was elected Mayor of Limerick in 1885.  He was the first Mayor of Limerick to be elected on a Nationalist ticket.  He also served as High Sheriff of Limerick city in 1888, 1913 and 1914.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara married Ellen Pigott in 1867, and the couple had 12 children of whom the eldest three died tragically of diphtheria in 1872.  From c. 1909 onwards, the family lived at Strand House.  Their third son, Stephen O’Mara Junior, was born on 5 January 1884.  He entered the family business in 1903 when he travelled to Canada to work in the bacon factory established by the O’Mara family in Ottawa.  In 1923, he became Managing Director of O’Mara Limited and created numerous employment opportunities by establishing bacon factories in Claremorris, County Mayo, and Letterkenny, County Donegal, in the 1930s.  The three bacon companies were amalgamated in 1938 and formed into the Bacon Company of Ireland.  Stephen O’Mara Junior remained the company’s chairman until his death in 1959.  In 1987, the Bacon Company of Ireland merged with Hanley of Rooskey and Benesford UK (Castlebar) with assistance from the Industrial Development Agency Ireland (IDA) to form Irish Country Bacon.  Shortly afterwards the old O’Mara factory in Limerick was closed down.  It was subsequently demolished to make way for a multi-storey car park.<lb/><lb/>Throughout his life, Stephen O’Mara Junior played a prominent role in both local and national affairs.  Unlike his father and elder brother James, Stephen was opposed to the Anglo-Irish Treaty but in a conciliatory manner.  He was prominently identified with the Sinn Fein movement after the Easter Rising.  He was one of Eamon de Valera’s strongest supporters and a member of his Fianna Fail Party since its formation in 1926.<lb/><lb/>When George Clancy, Lord Mayor of Limerick, and his predecessor Michael O’Callaghan were murdered by the British military forces in March 1921, Stephen decided to stand for election and became Mayor.  He was re-elected in 1922 and in 1923 but resigned before the expiration of his term of office.<lb/><lb/>In 1921, Stephen O’Mara Junior was selected to go to America as Special Envoy appointed by Dáil Éireann to the United States to oversee one of the country’s biggest fundraising drives to finance the first Dáil and was made Trustee of the funds.  The funds-drive was terminated following the signing of the Anglo-Irish Treaty.  Considering himself as the exchequer to the Irish Free State, O’Mara refused to hand over the collected funds to the pro-Treaty administration which resulted in his imprisonment in 1922-1923.  He had also been imprisoned for seven days in 1921 for refusing to pay a fine of £10 for non-compliance with a military summons.<lb/><lb/>The bulk of the money collected during the Bond Drive was left in various banks in New York and remained untouched for a number of years.  In 1927, following legal action between the Irish Government and Eamon de Valera, a court in New York ordered that money outstanding to bond holders must be paid back.  Having anticipated such a ruling, de Valera’s legal team invited bond holders to sign over their bonds to de Valera, for which they were paid 58 cents to the dollar.  The monies so accumulated were used to launch the national daily newspaper *The Irish Press*.  Stephen O’Mara served on the paper’s Board of Directors until his resignation in 1935.<lb/><lb/>In 1932, Stephen O’Mara was once again sent to America on a mission involving the various consular and diplomatic offices maintained in the country by the Irish Government.  Two years later, he was appointed a member of the Commission on Vocational Organisation, on which he served until 1943.  In 1959, he was created a member of the Council of State following de Valera’s inauguration as President of Ireland.  Stephen O’Mara died less than two months after his appointment, on 11 November 1959.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara Junior married in 1918 Anne O’Brien, third daughter of Thomas O’Brien of Boru House, and the couple had an adopted son, Peter O’Mara.  Anne’s youngest sister, Kate O’Brien, became one of the most prominent novelists in 20th-century Ireland and a voice of the respectable Irish Roman Catholic middle class.</p>
          </note>
        </bioghist>
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          <p>Published</p>
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        <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
          <p>This sub-series contains press cuttings of other articles by Kate O'Brien published in English and Irish newspapers.</p>
        </scopecontent>
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          <p>The material is arranged chronologically by date of publication.</p>
        </arrangement>
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          <p>Paper documents in good condition.</p>
        </phystech>
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          <p>Unrestricted access to all items.</p>
        </accessrestrict>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">‘Do “Independent” Women Make the Best Wives?’</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="IE" repositorycode="2135">P40/3/10/2/2/1</unitid>
            <unitid type="alternative" label="Original number">P40/832 (1)</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1928-02-13/1928-02-13" encodinganalog="3.1.3">13 February 1928</unitdate>
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        1 item    </physdesc>
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              <language langcode="eng">English</language>
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              <famname id="atom_124519_actor">O'Mara family of Strand House, Limerick</famname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-be03d29153491160a15961757089b84f" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>The history of the O’Mara family of Strand house and O’Mara’s Bacon Company go hand in hand.  The factory was founded in 1839 by James O’Meara (1817-1899), who originated from the village of Toomevaara in county Tipperary.  Having worked for some years in the woollen mills in Clonmel, he got a job as a clerk with Matterson’s Bacon Factory in Limerick and in 1839 founded O’Mara’s Bacon Company in his house on Mungret Street.  It is said that he dropped the ‘e’ from his surname as he felt that O’Meara was too long for commercial purposes.  James initially sold for Matterson’s but soon began to cure his own bacon in the basement of his house.  As his business grew, he acquired dedicated premises for the purpose near the top of Roche’s Street.<lb/><lb/>In 1841, James O’Mara married Honora Fowley (d. 1878), who worked in the bacon business alongside her husband.  A devoted nationalist, James was one of the early supporters of Isaac Butt’s Home Rule movement.  He was High Sheriff of Limerick City in 1887, and acted as Town Councillor on Limerick Corporation at least from 1888 to 1898.<lb/><lb/>James and Honora O’Mara had 13 children, of whom the two eldest surviving sons, Stephen O’Mara (1844-1926) and John (Jack) O’Mara (1856-1919) were instrumental in building up the O’Mara’s Bacon Factory into a great success.   The youngest son, Joseph (Joe) O’Mara (1864-1927) became a celebrated opera singer.<lb/><lb/>When James O’Mara retired from business his son John (Jack) O’Mara became manager of the O’Mara Bacon Factory.  In the late 1880s, Jack was invited to Russia by Tsar Alexander III to provide instruction on bacon curing.  He stayed in St Petersburg to supervise the construction of a bacon factory.  In 1891, his father bought the rights of the Russian Bacon Company and the family imported bacon from Russia into London until 1903.  James (Jim) O’Mara (1858-1893) acted as agent for O’Mara’s in London until his untimely death from heart disease.  His nephew James O’Mara (1873-1948), son of Stephen O’Mara Senior (1844-1926), took over the agency and held it until 1914.<lb/><lb/>When John (Jack) O’Mara died in 1919, his younger brother Stephen O’Mara (1844-1926) became Managing Director of O’Mara Limited and remained in that capacity until 1923.  Having entered into the family business at the age of fifteen, his great business acumen established O’Mara’s Bacon Factory as one of the most prominent commercial enterprises in Limerick city.  He also purchased a bacon factory in Palmerston, Ontario, Canada, which was managed by his son Joseph (Joe) O’Mara (1878-1950) until the business was wound up in the 1940s.<lb/><lb/>Like his father, Stephen O’Mara was a strong supporter of Isaac Butt’s Home Rule movement and a member of the committee which secured Butt’s election for Limerick city in 1871.  He later developed a close association with Charles Stewart Parnell and was elected Member of Parliament for Upper Ossory in Kilkenny South for the Irish Parliamentary Party in February 1886.  When the Irish National League split from Irish Parliamentary Party in December 1890, O’Mara took the Parnellite side.  He continued to act as trustee of the Party funds until 1908, when he resigned from his trusteeship.  Towards the end of his life, his moderate political views became more radicalised under the influence of his sons James (1873-1948) and Stephen Junior (1884-1959).  He had agreed with his son James’s decision to resign from the Irish Parliamentary Party in 1907 in order to join Sinn Fein, and personally supported the party in the 1918 General Election.  Both Stephen and his son James were strong supporters of the 1921 Anglo-Irish Treaty but were on friendly terms with Eamon de Valera who, it is said, spent the night at the O’Mara family home, Strand House, as the Treaty was being signed in London.  In the 1925 election, Stephen O’Mara was elected as Senator to the Free State Seanad.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara was also a prominent figure in local politics.  He became a Town Councillor on Limerick Corporation in the 1880s and was elected Mayor of Limerick in 1885.  He was the first Mayor of Limerick to be elected on a Nationalist ticket.  He also served as High Sheriff of Limerick city in 1888, 1913 and 1914.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara married Ellen Pigott in 1867, and the couple had 12 children of whom the eldest three died tragically of diphtheria in 1872.  From c. 1909 onwards, the family lived at Strand House.  Their third son, Stephen O’Mara Junior, was born on 5 January 1884.  He entered the family business in 1903 when he travelled to Canada to work in the bacon factory established by the O’Mara family in Ottawa.  In 1923, he became Managing Director of O’Mara Limited and created numerous employment opportunities by establishing bacon factories in Claremorris, County Mayo, and Letterkenny, County Donegal, in the 1930s.  The three bacon companies were amalgamated in 1938 and formed into the Bacon Company of Ireland.  Stephen O’Mara Junior remained the company’s chairman until his death in 1959.  In 1987, the Bacon Company of Ireland merged with Hanley of Rooskey and Benesford UK (Castlebar) with assistance from the Industrial Development Agency Ireland (IDA) to form Irish Country Bacon.  Shortly afterwards the old O’Mara factory in Limerick was closed down.  It was subsequently demolished to make way for a multi-storey car park.<lb/><lb/>Throughout his life, Stephen O’Mara Junior played a prominent role in both local and national affairs.  Unlike his father and elder brother James, Stephen was opposed to the Anglo-Irish Treaty but in a conciliatory manner.  He was prominently identified with the Sinn Fein movement after the Easter Rising.  He was one of Eamon de Valera’s strongest supporters and a member of his Fianna Fail Party since its formation in 1926.<lb/><lb/>When George Clancy, Lord Mayor of Limerick, and his predecessor Michael O’Callaghan were murdered by the British military forces in March 1921, Stephen decided to stand for election and became Mayor.  He was re-elected in 1922 and in 1923 but resigned before the expiration of his term of office.<lb/><lb/>In 1921, Stephen O’Mara Junior was selected to go to America as Special Envoy appointed by Dáil Éireann to the United States to oversee one of the country’s biggest fundraising drives to finance the first Dáil and was made Trustee of the funds.  The funds-drive was terminated following the signing of the Anglo-Irish Treaty.  Considering himself as the exchequer to the Irish Free State, O’Mara refused to hand over the collected funds to the pro-Treaty administration which resulted in his imprisonment in 1922-1923.  He had also been imprisoned for seven days in 1921 for refusing to pay a fine of £10 for non-compliance with a military summons.<lb/><lb/>The bulk of the money collected during the Bond Drive was left in various banks in New York and remained untouched for a number of years.  In 1927, following legal action between the Irish Government and Eamon de Valera, a court in New York ordered that money outstanding to bond holders must be paid back.  Having anticipated such a ruling, de Valera’s legal team invited bond holders to sign over their bonds to de Valera, for which they were paid 58 cents to the dollar.  The monies so accumulated were used to launch the national daily newspaper *The Irish Press*.  Stephen O’Mara served on the paper’s Board of Directors until his resignation in 1935.<lb/><lb/>In 1932, Stephen O’Mara was once again sent to America on a mission involving the various consular and diplomatic offices maintained in the country by the Irish Government.  Two years later, he was appointed a member of the Commission on Vocational Organisation, on which he served until 1943.  In 1959, he was created a member of the Council of State following de Valera’s inauguration as President of Ireland.  Stephen O’Mara died less than two months after his appointment, on 11 November 1959.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara Junior married in 1918 Anne O’Brien, third daughter of Thomas O’Brien of Boru House, and the couple had an adopted son, Peter O’Mara.  Anne’s youngest sister, Kate O’Brien, became one of the most prominent novelists in 20th-century Ireland and a voice of the respectable Irish Roman Catholic middle class.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
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            <p>Article entitled ‘Do “Independent” Women Make the Best Wives?’ by Kate O’Brien, published in the *Evening Standard* on 13 February 1928.</p>
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            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">‘The Amateur Playwright’</unittitle>
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                <addressline>Limerick</addressline>
                <addressline>Ireland</addressline>
                <addressline>V94 DPY6</addressline>
                <addressline>Telephone: +353-61-202690</addressline>
                <addressline>Fax: +353-61-213415</addressline>
                <addressline>Email: specoll@ul.ie</addressline>
                <addressline>https://specialcollections.ul.ie/</addressline>
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            <note>
              <p>The history of the O’Mara family of Strand house and O’Mara’s Bacon Company go hand in hand.  The factory was founded in 1839 by James O’Meara (1817-1899), who originated from the village of Toomevaara in county Tipperary.  Having worked for some years in the woollen mills in Clonmel, he got a job as a clerk with Matterson’s Bacon Factory in Limerick and in 1839 founded O’Mara’s Bacon Company in his house on Mungret Street.  It is said that he dropped the ‘e’ from his surname as he felt that O’Meara was too long for commercial purposes.  James initially sold for Matterson’s but soon began to cure his own bacon in the basement of his house.  As his business grew, he acquired dedicated premises for the purpose near the top of Roche’s Street.<lb/><lb/>In 1841, James O’Mara married Honora Fowley (d. 1878), who worked in the bacon business alongside her husband.  A devoted nationalist, James was one of the early supporters of Isaac Butt’s Home Rule movement.  He was High Sheriff of Limerick City in 1887, and acted as Town Councillor on Limerick Corporation at least from 1888 to 1898.<lb/><lb/>James and Honora O’Mara had 13 children, of whom the two eldest surviving sons, Stephen O’Mara (1844-1926) and John (Jack) O’Mara (1856-1919) were instrumental in building up the O’Mara’s Bacon Factory into a great success.   The youngest son, Joseph (Joe) O’Mara (1864-1927) became a celebrated opera singer.<lb/><lb/>When James O’Mara retired from business his son John (Jack) O’Mara became manager of the O’Mara Bacon Factory.  In the late 1880s, Jack was invited to Russia by Tsar Alexander III to provide instruction on bacon curing.  He stayed in St Petersburg to supervise the construction of a bacon factory.  In 1891, his father bought the rights of the Russian Bacon Company and the family imported bacon from Russia into London until 1903.  James (Jim) O’Mara (1858-1893) acted as agent for O’Mara’s in London until his untimely death from heart disease.  His nephew James O’Mara (1873-1948), son of Stephen O’Mara Senior (1844-1926), took over the agency and held it until 1914.<lb/><lb/>When John (Jack) O’Mara died in 1919, his younger brother Stephen O’Mara (1844-1926) became Managing Director of O’Mara Limited and remained in that capacity until 1923.  Having entered into the family business at the age of fifteen, his great business acumen established O’Mara’s Bacon Factory as one of the most prominent commercial enterprises in Limerick city.  He also purchased a bacon factory in Palmerston, Ontario, Canada, which was managed by his son Joseph (Joe) O’Mara (1878-1950) until the business was wound up in the 1940s.<lb/><lb/>Like his father, Stephen O’Mara was a strong supporter of Isaac Butt’s Home Rule movement and a member of the committee which secured Butt’s election for Limerick city in 1871.  He later developed a close association with Charles Stewart Parnell and was elected Member of Parliament for Upper Ossory in Kilkenny South for the Irish Parliamentary Party in February 1886.  When the Irish National League split from Irish Parliamentary Party in December 1890, O’Mara took the Parnellite side.  He continued to act as trustee of the Party funds until 1908, when he resigned from his trusteeship.  Towards the end of his life, his moderate political views became more radicalised under the influence of his sons James (1873-1948) and Stephen Junior (1884-1959).  He had agreed with his son James’s decision to resign from the Irish Parliamentary Party in 1907 in order to join Sinn Fein, and personally supported the party in the 1918 General Election.  Both Stephen and his son James were strong supporters of the 1921 Anglo-Irish Treaty but were on friendly terms with Eamon de Valera who, it is said, spent the night at the O’Mara family home, Strand House, as the Treaty was being signed in London.  In the 1925 election, Stephen O’Mara was elected as Senator to the Free State Seanad.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara was also a prominent figure in local politics.  He became a Town Councillor on Limerick Corporation in the 1880s and was elected Mayor of Limerick in 1885.  He was the first Mayor of Limerick to be elected on a Nationalist ticket.  He also served as High Sheriff of Limerick city in 1888, 1913 and 1914.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara married Ellen Pigott in 1867, and the couple had 12 children of whom the eldest three died tragically of diphtheria in 1872.  From c. 1909 onwards, the family lived at Strand House.  Their third son, Stephen O’Mara Junior, was born on 5 January 1884.  He entered the family business in 1903 when he travelled to Canada to work in the bacon factory established by the O’Mara family in Ottawa.  In 1923, he became Managing Director of O’Mara Limited and created numerous employment opportunities by establishing bacon factories in Claremorris, County Mayo, and Letterkenny, County Donegal, in the 1930s.  The three bacon companies were amalgamated in 1938 and formed into the Bacon Company of Ireland.  Stephen O’Mara Junior remained the company’s chairman until his death in 1959.  In 1987, the Bacon Company of Ireland merged with Hanley of Rooskey and Benesford UK (Castlebar) with assistance from the Industrial Development Agency Ireland (IDA) to form Irish Country Bacon.  Shortly afterwards the old O’Mara factory in Limerick was closed down.  It was subsequently demolished to make way for a multi-storey car park.<lb/><lb/>Throughout his life, Stephen O’Mara Junior played a prominent role in both local and national affairs.  Unlike his father and elder brother James, Stephen was opposed to the Anglo-Irish Treaty but in a conciliatory manner.  He was prominently identified with the Sinn Fein movement after the Easter Rising.  He was one of Eamon de Valera’s strongest supporters and a member of his Fianna Fail Party since its formation in 1926.<lb/><lb/>When George Clancy, Lord Mayor of Limerick, and his predecessor Michael O’Callaghan were murdered by the British military forces in March 1921, Stephen decided to stand for election and became Mayor.  He was re-elected in 1922 and in 1923 but resigned before the expiration of his term of office.<lb/><lb/>In 1921, Stephen O’Mara Junior was selected to go to America as Special Envoy appointed by Dáil Éireann to the United States to oversee one of the country’s biggest fundraising drives to finance the first Dáil and was made Trustee of the funds.  The funds-drive was terminated following the signing of the Anglo-Irish Treaty.  Considering himself as the exchequer to the Irish Free State, O’Mara refused to hand over the collected funds to the pro-Treaty administration which resulted in his imprisonment in 1922-1923.  He had also been imprisoned for seven days in 1921 for refusing to pay a fine of £10 for non-compliance with a military summons.<lb/><lb/>The bulk of the money collected during the Bond Drive was left in various banks in New York and remained untouched for a number of years.  In 1927, following legal action between the Irish Government and Eamon de Valera, a court in New York ordered that money outstanding to bond holders must be paid back.  Having anticipated such a ruling, de Valera’s legal team invited bond holders to sign over their bonds to de Valera, for which they were paid 58 cents to the dollar.  The monies so accumulated were used to launch the national daily newspaper *The Irish Press*.  Stephen O’Mara served on the paper’s Board of Directors until his resignation in 1935.<lb/><lb/>In 1932, Stephen O’Mara was once again sent to America on a mission involving the various consular and diplomatic offices maintained in the country by the Irish Government.  Two years later, he was appointed a member of the Commission on Vocational Organisation, on which he served until 1943.  In 1959, he was created a member of the Council of State following de Valera’s inauguration as President of Ireland.  Stephen O’Mara died less than two months after his appointment, on 11 November 1959.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara Junior married in 1918 Anne O’Brien, third daughter of Thomas O’Brien of Boru House, and the couple had an adopted son, Peter O’Mara.  Anne’s youngest sister, Kate O’Brien, became one of the most prominent novelists in 20th-century Ireland and a voice of the respectable Irish Roman Catholic middle class.</p>
            </note>
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            <p>Article entitled ‘The Amateur Playwright’ by Kate O’Brien, published in *T.P.’s Weekly* on 10 March 1928.</p>
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                <addressline>Limerick</addressline>
                <addressline>Ireland</addressline>
                <addressline>V94 DPY6</addressline>
                <addressline>Telephone: +353-61-202690</addressline>
                <addressline>Fax: +353-61-213415</addressline>
                <addressline>Email: specoll@ul.ie</addressline>
                <addressline>https://specialcollections.ul.ie/</addressline>
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            <note>
              <p>The history of the O’Mara family of Strand house and O’Mara’s Bacon Company go hand in hand.  The factory was founded in 1839 by James O’Meara (1817-1899), who originated from the village of Toomevaara in county Tipperary.  Having worked for some years in the woollen mills in Clonmel, he got a job as a clerk with Matterson’s Bacon Factory in Limerick and in 1839 founded O’Mara’s Bacon Company in his house on Mungret Street.  It is said that he dropped the ‘e’ from his surname as he felt that O’Meara was too long for commercial purposes.  James initially sold for Matterson’s but soon began to cure his own bacon in the basement of his house.  As his business grew, he acquired dedicated premises for the purpose near the top of Roche’s Street.<lb/><lb/>In 1841, James O’Mara married Honora Fowley (d. 1878), who worked in the bacon business alongside her husband.  A devoted nationalist, James was one of the early supporters of Isaac Butt’s Home Rule movement.  He was High Sheriff of Limerick City in 1887, and acted as Town Councillor on Limerick Corporation at least from 1888 to 1898.<lb/><lb/>James and Honora O’Mara had 13 children, of whom the two eldest surviving sons, Stephen O’Mara (1844-1926) and John (Jack) O’Mara (1856-1919) were instrumental in building up the O’Mara’s Bacon Factory into a great success.   The youngest son, Joseph (Joe) O’Mara (1864-1927) became a celebrated opera singer.<lb/><lb/>When James O’Mara retired from business his son John (Jack) O’Mara became manager of the O’Mara Bacon Factory.  In the late 1880s, Jack was invited to Russia by Tsar Alexander III to provide instruction on bacon curing.  He stayed in St Petersburg to supervise the construction of a bacon factory.  In 1891, his father bought the rights of the Russian Bacon Company and the family imported bacon from Russia into London until 1903.  James (Jim) O’Mara (1858-1893) acted as agent for O’Mara’s in London until his untimely death from heart disease.  His nephew James O’Mara (1873-1948), son of Stephen O’Mara Senior (1844-1926), took over the agency and held it until 1914.<lb/><lb/>When John (Jack) O’Mara died in 1919, his younger brother Stephen O’Mara (1844-1926) became Managing Director of O’Mara Limited and remained in that capacity until 1923.  Having entered into the family business at the age of fifteen, his great business acumen established O’Mara’s Bacon Factory as one of the most prominent commercial enterprises in Limerick city.  He also purchased a bacon factory in Palmerston, Ontario, Canada, which was managed by his son Joseph (Joe) O’Mara (1878-1950) until the business was wound up in the 1940s.<lb/><lb/>Like his father, Stephen O’Mara was a strong supporter of Isaac Butt’s Home Rule movement and a member of the committee which secured Butt’s election for Limerick city in 1871.  He later developed a close association with Charles Stewart Parnell and was elected Member of Parliament for Upper Ossory in Kilkenny South for the Irish Parliamentary Party in February 1886.  When the Irish National League split from Irish Parliamentary Party in December 1890, O’Mara took the Parnellite side.  He continued to act as trustee of the Party funds until 1908, when he resigned from his trusteeship.  Towards the end of his life, his moderate political views became more radicalised under the influence of his sons James (1873-1948) and Stephen Junior (1884-1959).  He had agreed with his son James’s decision to resign from the Irish Parliamentary Party in 1907 in order to join Sinn Fein, and personally supported the party in the 1918 General Election.  Both Stephen and his son James were strong supporters of the 1921 Anglo-Irish Treaty but were on friendly terms with Eamon de Valera who, it is said, spent the night at the O’Mara family home, Strand House, as the Treaty was being signed in London.  In the 1925 election, Stephen O’Mara was elected as Senator to the Free State Seanad.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara was also a prominent figure in local politics.  He became a Town Councillor on Limerick Corporation in the 1880s and was elected Mayor of Limerick in 1885.  He was the first Mayor of Limerick to be elected on a Nationalist ticket.  He also served as High Sheriff of Limerick city in 1888, 1913 and 1914.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara married Ellen Pigott in 1867, and the couple had 12 children of whom the eldest three died tragically of diphtheria in 1872.  From c. 1909 onwards, the family lived at Strand House.  Their third son, Stephen O’Mara Junior, was born on 5 January 1884.  He entered the family business in 1903 when he travelled to Canada to work in the bacon factory established by the O’Mara family in Ottawa.  In 1923, he became Managing Director of O’Mara Limited and created numerous employment opportunities by establishing bacon factories in Claremorris, County Mayo, and Letterkenny, County Donegal, in the 1930s.  The three bacon companies were amalgamated in 1938 and formed into the Bacon Company of Ireland.  Stephen O’Mara Junior remained the company’s chairman until his death in 1959.  In 1987, the Bacon Company of Ireland merged with Hanley of Rooskey and Benesford UK (Castlebar) with assistance from the Industrial Development Agency Ireland (IDA) to form Irish Country Bacon.  Shortly afterwards the old O’Mara factory in Limerick was closed down.  It was subsequently demolished to make way for a multi-storey car park.<lb/><lb/>Throughout his life, Stephen O’Mara Junior played a prominent role in both local and national affairs.  Unlike his father and elder brother James, Stephen was opposed to the Anglo-Irish Treaty but in a conciliatory manner.  He was prominently identified with the Sinn Fein movement after the Easter Rising.  He was one of Eamon de Valera’s strongest supporters and a member of his Fianna Fail Party since its formation in 1926.<lb/><lb/>When George Clancy, Lord Mayor of Limerick, and his predecessor Michael O’Callaghan were murdered by the British military forces in March 1921, Stephen decided to stand for election and became Mayor.  He was re-elected in 1922 and in 1923 but resigned before the expiration of his term of office.<lb/><lb/>In 1921, Stephen O’Mara Junior was selected to go to America as Special Envoy appointed by Dáil Éireann to the United States to oversee one of the country’s biggest fundraising drives to finance the first Dáil and was made Trustee of the funds.  The funds-drive was terminated following the signing of the Anglo-Irish Treaty.  Considering himself as the exchequer to the Irish Free State, O’Mara refused to hand over the collected funds to the pro-Treaty administration which resulted in his imprisonment in 1922-1923.  He had also been imprisoned for seven days in 1921 for refusing to pay a fine of £10 for non-compliance with a military summons.<lb/><lb/>The bulk of the money collected during the Bond Drive was left in various banks in New York and remained untouched for a number of years.  In 1927, following legal action between the Irish Government and Eamon de Valera, a court in New York ordered that money outstanding to bond holders must be paid back.  Having anticipated such a ruling, de Valera’s legal team invited bond holders to sign over their bonds to de Valera, for which they were paid 58 cents to the dollar.  The monies so accumulated were used to launch the national daily newspaper *The Irish Press*.  Stephen O’Mara served on the paper’s Board of Directors until his resignation in 1935.<lb/><lb/>In 1932, Stephen O’Mara was once again sent to America on a mission involving the various consular and diplomatic offices maintained in the country by the Irish Government.  Two years later, he was appointed a member of the Commission on Vocational Organisation, on which he served until 1943.  In 1959, he was created a member of the Council of State following de Valera’s inauguration as President of Ireland.  Stephen O’Mara died less than two months after his appointment, on 11 November 1959.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara Junior married in 1918 Anne O’Brien, third daughter of Thomas O’Brien of Boru House, and the couple had an adopted son, Peter O’Mara.  Anne’s youngest sister, Kate O’Brien, became one of the most prominent novelists in 20th-century Ireland and a voice of the respectable Irish Roman Catholic middle class.</p>
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            <p>Article entitled ‘When I Feel Ashamed’ by Kate O’Brien, published in the *Daily Chronicle* in May 1928.</p>
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            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">‘What Will Women Do Next?’</unittitle>
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                <addressline>Ireland</addressline>
                <addressline>V94 DPY6</addressline>
                <addressline>Telephone: +353-61-202690</addressline>
                <addressline>Fax: +353-61-213415</addressline>
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              <p>The history of the O’Mara family of Strand house and O’Mara’s Bacon Company go hand in hand.  The factory was founded in 1839 by James O’Meara (1817-1899), who originated from the village of Toomevaara in county Tipperary.  Having worked for some years in the woollen mills in Clonmel, he got a job as a clerk with Matterson’s Bacon Factory in Limerick and in 1839 founded O’Mara’s Bacon Company in his house on Mungret Street.  It is said that he dropped the ‘e’ from his surname as he felt that O’Meara was too long for commercial purposes.  James initially sold for Matterson’s but soon began to cure his own bacon in the basement of his house.  As his business grew, he acquired dedicated premises for the purpose near the top of Roche’s Street.<lb/><lb/>In 1841, James O’Mara married Honora Fowley (d. 1878), who worked in the bacon business alongside her husband.  A devoted nationalist, James was one of the early supporters of Isaac Butt’s Home Rule movement.  He was High Sheriff of Limerick City in 1887, and acted as Town Councillor on Limerick Corporation at least from 1888 to 1898.<lb/><lb/>James and Honora O’Mara had 13 children, of whom the two eldest surviving sons, Stephen O’Mara (1844-1926) and John (Jack) O’Mara (1856-1919) were instrumental in building up the O’Mara’s Bacon Factory into a great success.   The youngest son, Joseph (Joe) O’Mara (1864-1927) became a celebrated opera singer.<lb/><lb/>When James O’Mara retired from business his son John (Jack) O’Mara became manager of the O’Mara Bacon Factory.  In the late 1880s, Jack was invited to Russia by Tsar Alexander III to provide instruction on bacon curing.  He stayed in St Petersburg to supervise the construction of a bacon factory.  In 1891, his father bought the rights of the Russian Bacon Company and the family imported bacon from Russia into London until 1903.  James (Jim) O’Mara (1858-1893) acted as agent for O’Mara’s in London until his untimely death from heart disease.  His nephew James O’Mara (1873-1948), son of Stephen O’Mara Senior (1844-1926), took over the agency and held it until 1914.<lb/><lb/>When John (Jack) O’Mara died in 1919, his younger brother Stephen O’Mara (1844-1926) became Managing Director of O’Mara Limited and remained in that capacity until 1923.  Having entered into the family business at the age of fifteen, his great business acumen established O’Mara’s Bacon Factory as one of the most prominent commercial enterprises in Limerick city.  He also purchased a bacon factory in Palmerston, Ontario, Canada, which was managed by his son Joseph (Joe) O’Mara (1878-1950) until the business was wound up in the 1940s.<lb/><lb/>Like his father, Stephen O’Mara was a strong supporter of Isaac Butt’s Home Rule movement and a member of the committee which secured Butt’s election for Limerick city in 1871.  He later developed a close association with Charles Stewart Parnell and was elected Member of Parliament for Upper Ossory in Kilkenny South for the Irish Parliamentary Party in February 1886.  When the Irish National League split from Irish Parliamentary Party in December 1890, O’Mara took the Parnellite side.  He continued to act as trustee of the Party funds until 1908, when he resigned from his trusteeship.  Towards the end of his life, his moderate political views became more radicalised under the influence of his sons James (1873-1948) and Stephen Junior (1884-1959).  He had agreed with his son James’s decision to resign from the Irish Parliamentary Party in 1907 in order to join Sinn Fein, and personally supported the party in the 1918 General Election.  Both Stephen and his son James were strong supporters of the 1921 Anglo-Irish Treaty but were on friendly terms with Eamon de Valera who, it is said, spent the night at the O’Mara family home, Strand House, as the Treaty was being signed in London.  In the 1925 election, Stephen O’Mara was elected as Senator to the Free State Seanad.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara was also a prominent figure in local politics.  He became a Town Councillor on Limerick Corporation in the 1880s and was elected Mayor of Limerick in 1885.  He was the first Mayor of Limerick to be elected on a Nationalist ticket.  He also served as High Sheriff of Limerick city in 1888, 1913 and 1914.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara married Ellen Pigott in 1867, and the couple had 12 children of whom the eldest three died tragically of diphtheria in 1872.  From c. 1909 onwards, the family lived at Strand House.  Their third son, Stephen O’Mara Junior, was born on 5 January 1884.  He entered the family business in 1903 when he travelled to Canada to work in the bacon factory established by the O’Mara family in Ottawa.  In 1923, he became Managing Director of O’Mara Limited and created numerous employment opportunities by establishing bacon factories in Claremorris, County Mayo, and Letterkenny, County Donegal, in the 1930s.  The three bacon companies were amalgamated in 1938 and formed into the Bacon Company of Ireland.  Stephen O’Mara Junior remained the company’s chairman until his death in 1959.  In 1987, the Bacon Company of Ireland merged with Hanley of Rooskey and Benesford UK (Castlebar) with assistance from the Industrial Development Agency Ireland (IDA) to form Irish Country Bacon.  Shortly afterwards the old O’Mara factory in Limerick was closed down.  It was subsequently demolished to make way for a multi-storey car park.<lb/><lb/>Throughout his life, Stephen O’Mara Junior played a prominent role in both local and national affairs.  Unlike his father and elder brother James, Stephen was opposed to the Anglo-Irish Treaty but in a conciliatory manner.  He was prominently identified with the Sinn Fein movement after the Easter Rising.  He was one of Eamon de Valera’s strongest supporters and a member of his Fianna Fail Party since its formation in 1926.<lb/><lb/>When George Clancy, Lord Mayor of Limerick, and his predecessor Michael O’Callaghan were murdered by the British military forces in March 1921, Stephen decided to stand for election and became Mayor.  He was re-elected in 1922 and in 1923 but resigned before the expiration of his term of office.<lb/><lb/>In 1921, Stephen O’Mara Junior was selected to go to America as Special Envoy appointed by Dáil Éireann to the United States to oversee one of the country’s biggest fundraising drives to finance the first Dáil and was made Trustee of the funds.  The funds-drive was terminated following the signing of the Anglo-Irish Treaty.  Considering himself as the exchequer to the Irish Free State, O’Mara refused to hand over the collected funds to the pro-Treaty administration which resulted in his imprisonment in 1922-1923.  He had also been imprisoned for seven days in 1921 for refusing to pay a fine of £10 for non-compliance with a military summons.<lb/><lb/>The bulk of the money collected during the Bond Drive was left in various banks in New York and remained untouched for a number of years.  In 1927, following legal action between the Irish Government and Eamon de Valera, a court in New York ordered that money outstanding to bond holders must be paid back.  Having anticipated such a ruling, de Valera’s legal team invited bond holders to sign over their bonds to de Valera, for which they were paid 58 cents to the dollar.  The monies so accumulated were used to launch the national daily newspaper *The Irish Press*.  Stephen O’Mara served on the paper’s Board of Directors until his resignation in 1935.<lb/><lb/>In 1932, Stephen O’Mara was once again sent to America on a mission involving the various consular and diplomatic offices maintained in the country by the Irish Government.  Two years later, he was appointed a member of the Commission on Vocational Organisation, on which he served until 1943.  In 1959, he was created a member of the Council of State following de Valera’s inauguration as President of Ireland.  Stephen O’Mara died less than two months after his appointment, on 11 November 1959.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara Junior married in 1918 Anne O’Brien, third daughter of Thomas O’Brien of Boru House, and the couple had an adopted son, Peter O’Mara.  Anne’s youngest sister, Kate O’Brien, became one of the most prominent novelists in 20th-century Ireland and a voice of the respectable Irish Roman Catholic middle class.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
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          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Article entitled ‘What Will Women Do Next?’ with joint contributions by May Edington, Kate O’Brien and Anthony M. Ludovici, published in the *Daily Express* on 2 June 1928.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">‘Have Music Halls Been “Killed”?’</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="IE" repositorycode="2135">P40/3/10/2/2/5</unitid>
            <unitid type="alternative" label="Original number">P40/832 (5)</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1928-07-07/1928-07-07" encodinganalog="3.1.3">7 July 1928</unitdate>
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        1 item    </physdesc>
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              <corpname>Special Collections and Archives Department</corpname>
              <address>
                <addressline>GL0-051, Glucksman Library, University of Limerick</addressline>
                <addressline>Limerick</addressline>
                <addressline>Ireland</addressline>
                <addressline>V94 DPY6</addressline>
                <addressline>Telephone: +353-61-202690</addressline>
                <addressline>Fax: +353-61-213415</addressline>
                <addressline>Email: specoll@ul.ie</addressline>
                <addressline>https://specialcollections.ul.ie/</addressline>
              </address>
            </repository>
            <langmaterial encodinganalog="3.4.3">
              <language langcode="eng">English</language>
            </langmaterial>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <famname id="atom_124531_actor">O'Mara family of Strand House, Limerick</famname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-be03d29153491160a15961757089b84f" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>The history of the O’Mara family of Strand house and O’Mara’s Bacon Company go hand in hand.  The factory was founded in 1839 by James O’Meara (1817-1899), who originated from the village of Toomevaara in county Tipperary.  Having worked for some years in the woollen mills in Clonmel, he got a job as a clerk with Matterson’s Bacon Factory in Limerick and in 1839 founded O’Mara’s Bacon Company in his house on Mungret Street.  It is said that he dropped the ‘e’ from his surname as he felt that O’Meara was too long for commercial purposes.  James initially sold for Matterson’s but soon began to cure his own bacon in the basement of his house.  As his business grew, he acquired dedicated premises for the purpose near the top of Roche’s Street.<lb/><lb/>In 1841, James O’Mara married Honora Fowley (d. 1878), who worked in the bacon business alongside her husband.  A devoted nationalist, James was one of the early supporters of Isaac Butt’s Home Rule movement.  He was High Sheriff of Limerick City in 1887, and acted as Town Councillor on Limerick Corporation at least from 1888 to 1898.<lb/><lb/>James and Honora O’Mara had 13 children, of whom the two eldest surviving sons, Stephen O’Mara (1844-1926) and John (Jack) O’Mara (1856-1919) were instrumental in building up the O’Mara’s Bacon Factory into a great success.   The youngest son, Joseph (Joe) O’Mara (1864-1927) became a celebrated opera singer.<lb/><lb/>When James O’Mara retired from business his son John (Jack) O’Mara became manager of the O’Mara Bacon Factory.  In the late 1880s, Jack was invited to Russia by Tsar Alexander III to provide instruction on bacon curing.  He stayed in St Petersburg to supervise the construction of a bacon factory.  In 1891, his father bought the rights of the Russian Bacon Company and the family imported bacon from Russia into London until 1903.  James (Jim) O’Mara (1858-1893) acted as agent for O’Mara’s in London until his untimely death from heart disease.  His nephew James O’Mara (1873-1948), son of Stephen O’Mara Senior (1844-1926), took over the agency and held it until 1914.<lb/><lb/>When John (Jack) O’Mara died in 1919, his younger brother Stephen O’Mara (1844-1926) became Managing Director of O’Mara Limited and remained in that capacity until 1923.  Having entered into the family business at the age of fifteen, his great business acumen established O’Mara’s Bacon Factory as one of the most prominent commercial enterprises in Limerick city.  He also purchased a bacon factory in Palmerston, Ontario, Canada, which was managed by his son Joseph (Joe) O’Mara (1878-1950) until the business was wound up in the 1940s.<lb/><lb/>Like his father, Stephen O’Mara was a strong supporter of Isaac Butt’s Home Rule movement and a member of the committee which secured Butt’s election for Limerick city in 1871.  He later developed a close association with Charles Stewart Parnell and was elected Member of Parliament for Upper Ossory in Kilkenny South for the Irish Parliamentary Party in February 1886.  When the Irish National League split from Irish Parliamentary Party in December 1890, O’Mara took the Parnellite side.  He continued to act as trustee of the Party funds until 1908, when he resigned from his trusteeship.  Towards the end of his life, his moderate political views became more radicalised under the influence of his sons James (1873-1948) and Stephen Junior (1884-1959).  He had agreed with his son James’s decision to resign from the Irish Parliamentary Party in 1907 in order to join Sinn Fein, and personally supported the party in the 1918 General Election.  Both Stephen and his son James were strong supporters of the 1921 Anglo-Irish Treaty but were on friendly terms with Eamon de Valera who, it is said, spent the night at the O’Mara family home, Strand House, as the Treaty was being signed in London.  In the 1925 election, Stephen O’Mara was elected as Senator to the Free State Seanad.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara was also a prominent figure in local politics.  He became a Town Councillor on Limerick Corporation in the 1880s and was elected Mayor of Limerick in 1885.  He was the first Mayor of Limerick to be elected on a Nationalist ticket.  He also served as High Sheriff of Limerick city in 1888, 1913 and 1914.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara married Ellen Pigott in 1867, and the couple had 12 children of whom the eldest three died tragically of diphtheria in 1872.  From c. 1909 onwards, the family lived at Strand House.  Their third son, Stephen O’Mara Junior, was born on 5 January 1884.  He entered the family business in 1903 when he travelled to Canada to work in the bacon factory established by the O’Mara family in Ottawa.  In 1923, he became Managing Director of O’Mara Limited and created numerous employment opportunities by establishing bacon factories in Claremorris, County Mayo, and Letterkenny, County Donegal, in the 1930s.  The three bacon companies were amalgamated in 1938 and formed into the Bacon Company of Ireland.  Stephen O’Mara Junior remained the company’s chairman until his death in 1959.  In 1987, the Bacon Company of Ireland merged with Hanley of Rooskey and Benesford UK (Castlebar) with assistance from the Industrial Development Agency Ireland (IDA) to form Irish Country Bacon.  Shortly afterwards the old O’Mara factory in Limerick was closed down.  It was subsequently demolished to make way for a multi-storey car park.<lb/><lb/>Throughout his life, Stephen O’Mara Junior played a prominent role in both local and national affairs.  Unlike his father and elder brother James, Stephen was opposed to the Anglo-Irish Treaty but in a conciliatory manner.  He was prominently identified with the Sinn Fein movement after the Easter Rising.  He was one of Eamon de Valera’s strongest supporters and a member of his Fianna Fail Party since its formation in 1926.<lb/><lb/>When George Clancy, Lord Mayor of Limerick, and his predecessor Michael O’Callaghan were murdered by the British military forces in March 1921, Stephen decided to stand for election and became Mayor.  He was re-elected in 1922 and in 1923 but resigned before the expiration of his term of office.<lb/><lb/>In 1921, Stephen O’Mara Junior was selected to go to America as Special Envoy appointed by Dáil Éireann to the United States to oversee one of the country’s biggest fundraising drives to finance the first Dáil and was made Trustee of the funds.  The funds-drive was terminated following the signing of the Anglo-Irish Treaty.  Considering himself as the exchequer to the Irish Free State, O’Mara refused to hand over the collected funds to the pro-Treaty administration which resulted in his imprisonment in 1922-1923.  He had also been imprisoned for seven days in 1921 for refusing to pay a fine of £10 for non-compliance with a military summons.<lb/><lb/>The bulk of the money collected during the Bond Drive was left in various banks in New York and remained untouched for a number of years.  In 1927, following legal action between the Irish Government and Eamon de Valera, a court in New York ordered that money outstanding to bond holders must be paid back.  Having anticipated such a ruling, de Valera’s legal team invited bond holders to sign over their bonds to de Valera, for which they were paid 58 cents to the dollar.  The monies so accumulated were used to launch the national daily newspaper *The Irish Press*.  Stephen O’Mara served on the paper’s Board of Directors until his resignation in 1935.<lb/><lb/>In 1932, Stephen O’Mara was once again sent to America on a mission involving the various consular and diplomatic offices maintained in the country by the Irish Government.  Two years later, he was appointed a member of the Commission on Vocational Organisation, on which he served until 1943.  In 1959, he was created a member of the Council of State following de Valera’s inauguration as President of Ireland.  Stephen O’Mara died less than two months after his appointment, on 11 November 1959.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara Junior married in 1918 Anne O’Brien, third daughter of Thomas O’Brien of Boru House, and the couple had an adopted son, Peter O’Mara.  Anne’s youngest sister, Kate O’Brien, became one of the most prominent novelists in 20th-century Ireland and a voice of the respectable Irish Roman Catholic middle class.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
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          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Article entitled ‘Have Music Halls Been “Killed”?’ by Kate O’Brien, published in the *Daily Mirror* on 7 July 1928.</p>
          </scopecontent>
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          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">‘Mr Valentine’</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="IE" repositorycode="2135">P40/3/10/2/2/6</unitid>
            <unitid type="alternative" label="Original number">P40/832 (6)</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1928-08-30/1928-08-30" encodinganalog="3.1.3">30 August 1928</unitdate>
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        1 item    </physdesc>
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              <language langcode="eng">English</language>
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              <famname id="atom_124534_actor">O'Mara family of Strand House, Limerick</famname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-be03d29153491160a15961757089b84f" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>The history of the O’Mara family of Strand house and O’Mara’s Bacon Company go hand in hand.  The factory was founded in 1839 by James O’Meara (1817-1899), who originated from the village of Toomevaara in county Tipperary.  Having worked for some years in the woollen mills in Clonmel, he got a job as a clerk with Matterson’s Bacon Factory in Limerick and in 1839 founded O’Mara’s Bacon Company in his house on Mungret Street.  It is said that he dropped the ‘e’ from his surname as he felt that O’Meara was too long for commercial purposes.  James initially sold for Matterson’s but soon began to cure his own bacon in the basement of his house.  As his business grew, he acquired dedicated premises for the purpose near the top of Roche’s Street.<lb/><lb/>In 1841, James O’Mara married Honora Fowley (d. 1878), who worked in the bacon business alongside her husband.  A devoted nationalist, James was one of the early supporters of Isaac Butt’s Home Rule movement.  He was High Sheriff of Limerick City in 1887, and acted as Town Councillor on Limerick Corporation at least from 1888 to 1898.<lb/><lb/>James and Honora O’Mara had 13 children, of whom the two eldest surviving sons, Stephen O’Mara (1844-1926) and John (Jack) O’Mara (1856-1919) were instrumental in building up the O’Mara’s Bacon Factory into a great success.   The youngest son, Joseph (Joe) O’Mara (1864-1927) became a celebrated opera singer.<lb/><lb/>When James O’Mara retired from business his son John (Jack) O’Mara became manager of the O’Mara Bacon Factory.  In the late 1880s, Jack was invited to Russia by Tsar Alexander III to provide instruction on bacon curing.  He stayed in St Petersburg to supervise the construction of a bacon factory.  In 1891, his father bought the rights of the Russian Bacon Company and the family imported bacon from Russia into London until 1903.  James (Jim) O’Mara (1858-1893) acted as agent for O’Mara’s in London until his untimely death from heart disease.  His nephew James O’Mara (1873-1948), son of Stephen O’Mara Senior (1844-1926), took over the agency and held it until 1914.<lb/><lb/>When John (Jack) O’Mara died in 1919, his younger brother Stephen O’Mara (1844-1926) became Managing Director of O’Mara Limited and remained in that capacity until 1923.  Having entered into the family business at the age of fifteen, his great business acumen established O’Mara’s Bacon Factory as one of the most prominent commercial enterprises in Limerick city.  He also purchased a bacon factory in Palmerston, Ontario, Canada, which was managed by his son Joseph (Joe) O’Mara (1878-1950) until the business was wound up in the 1940s.<lb/><lb/>Like his father, Stephen O’Mara was a strong supporter of Isaac Butt’s Home Rule movement and a member of the committee which secured Butt’s election for Limerick city in 1871.  He later developed a close association with Charles Stewart Parnell and was elected Member of Parliament for Upper Ossory in Kilkenny South for the Irish Parliamentary Party in February 1886.  When the Irish National League split from Irish Parliamentary Party in December 1890, O’Mara took the Parnellite side.  He continued to act as trustee of the Party funds until 1908, when he resigned from his trusteeship.  Towards the end of his life, his moderate political views became more radicalised under the influence of his sons James (1873-1948) and Stephen Junior (1884-1959).  He had agreed with his son James’s decision to resign from the Irish Parliamentary Party in 1907 in order to join Sinn Fein, and personally supported the party in the 1918 General Election.  Both Stephen and his son James were strong supporters of the 1921 Anglo-Irish Treaty but were on friendly terms with Eamon de Valera who, it is said, spent the night at the O’Mara family home, Strand House, as the Treaty was being signed in London.  In the 1925 election, Stephen O’Mara was elected as Senator to the Free State Seanad.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara was also a prominent figure in local politics.  He became a Town Councillor on Limerick Corporation in the 1880s and was elected Mayor of Limerick in 1885.  He was the first Mayor of Limerick to be elected on a Nationalist ticket.  He also served as High Sheriff of Limerick city in 1888, 1913 and 1914.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara married Ellen Pigott in 1867, and the couple had 12 children of whom the eldest three died tragically of diphtheria in 1872.  From c. 1909 onwards, the family lived at Strand House.  Their third son, Stephen O’Mara Junior, was born on 5 January 1884.  He entered the family business in 1903 when he travelled to Canada to work in the bacon factory established by the O’Mara family in Ottawa.  In 1923, he became Managing Director of O’Mara Limited and created numerous employment opportunities by establishing bacon factories in Claremorris, County Mayo, and Letterkenny, County Donegal, in the 1930s.  The three bacon companies were amalgamated in 1938 and formed into the Bacon Company of Ireland.  Stephen O’Mara Junior remained the company’s chairman until his death in 1959.  In 1987, the Bacon Company of Ireland merged with Hanley of Rooskey and Benesford UK (Castlebar) with assistance from the Industrial Development Agency Ireland (IDA) to form Irish Country Bacon.  Shortly afterwards the old O’Mara factory in Limerick was closed down.  It was subsequently demolished to make way for a multi-storey car park.<lb/><lb/>Throughout his life, Stephen O’Mara Junior played a prominent role in both local and national affairs.  Unlike his father and elder brother James, Stephen was opposed to the Anglo-Irish Treaty but in a conciliatory manner.  He was prominently identified with the Sinn Fein movement after the Easter Rising.  He was one of Eamon de Valera’s strongest supporters and a member of his Fianna Fail Party since its formation in 1926.<lb/><lb/>When George Clancy, Lord Mayor of Limerick, and his predecessor Michael O’Callaghan were murdered by the British military forces in March 1921, Stephen decided to stand for election and became Mayor.  He was re-elected in 1922 and in 1923 but resigned before the expiration of his term of office.<lb/><lb/>In 1921, Stephen O’Mara Junior was selected to go to America as Special Envoy appointed by Dáil Éireann to the United States to oversee one of the country’s biggest fundraising drives to finance the first Dáil and was made Trustee of the funds.  The funds-drive was terminated following the signing of the Anglo-Irish Treaty.  Considering himself as the exchequer to the Irish Free State, O’Mara refused to hand over the collected funds to the pro-Treaty administration which resulted in his imprisonment in 1922-1923.  He had also been imprisoned for seven days in 1921 for refusing to pay a fine of £10 for non-compliance with a military summons.<lb/><lb/>The bulk of the money collected during the Bond Drive was left in various banks in New York and remained untouched for a number of years.  In 1927, following legal action between the Irish Government and Eamon de Valera, a court in New York ordered that money outstanding to bond holders must be paid back.  Having anticipated such a ruling, de Valera’s legal team invited bond holders to sign over their bonds to de Valera, for which they were paid 58 cents to the dollar.  The monies so accumulated were used to launch the national daily newspaper *The Irish Press*.  Stephen O’Mara served on the paper’s Board of Directors until his resignation in 1935.<lb/><lb/>In 1932, Stephen O’Mara was once again sent to America on a mission involving the various consular and diplomatic offices maintained in the country by the Irish Government.  Two years later, he was appointed a member of the Commission on Vocational Organisation, on which he served until 1943.  In 1959, he was created a member of the Council of State following de Valera’s inauguration as President of Ireland.  Stephen O’Mara died less than two months after his appointment, on 11 November 1959.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara Junior married in 1918 Anne O’Brien, third daughter of Thomas O’Brien of Boru House, and the couple had an adopted son, Peter O’Mara.  Anne’s youngest sister, Kate O’Brien, became one of the most prominent novelists in 20th-century Ireland and a voice of the respectable Irish Roman Catholic middle class.</p>
            </note>
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          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Short story entitled ‘Mr Valentine’ by Kate O’Brien, published in the *Daily Mirror* on 30 August 1928.</p>
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          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">‘Country Life or Town Life?’</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="IE" repositorycode="2135">P40/3/10/2/2/7</unitid>
            <unitid type="alternative" label="Original number">P40/832 (7)</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1928-09-05/1928-09-05" encodinganalog="3.1.3">5 September 1928</unitdate>
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        1 item    </physdesc>
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              <corpname>Special Collections and Archives Department</corpname>
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                <addressline>GL0-051, Glucksman Library, University of Limerick</addressline>
                <addressline>Limerick</addressline>
                <addressline>Ireland</addressline>
                <addressline>V94 DPY6</addressline>
                <addressline>Telephone: +353-61-202690</addressline>
                <addressline>Fax: +353-61-213415</addressline>
                <addressline>Email: specoll@ul.ie</addressline>
                <addressline>https://specialcollections.ul.ie/</addressline>
              </address>
            </repository>
            <langmaterial encodinganalog="3.4.3">
              <language langcode="eng">English</language>
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              <famname id="atom_124537_actor">O'Mara family of Strand House, Limerick</famname>
            </origination>
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            <note>
              <p>The history of the O’Mara family of Strand house and O’Mara’s Bacon Company go hand in hand.  The factory was founded in 1839 by James O’Meara (1817-1899), who originated from the village of Toomevaara in county Tipperary.  Having worked for some years in the woollen mills in Clonmel, he got a job as a clerk with Matterson’s Bacon Factory in Limerick and in 1839 founded O’Mara’s Bacon Company in his house on Mungret Street.  It is said that he dropped the ‘e’ from his surname as he felt that O’Meara was too long for commercial purposes.  James initially sold for Matterson’s but soon began to cure his own bacon in the basement of his house.  As his business grew, he acquired dedicated premises for the purpose near the top of Roche’s Street.<lb/><lb/>In 1841, James O’Mara married Honora Fowley (d. 1878), who worked in the bacon business alongside her husband.  A devoted nationalist, James was one of the early supporters of Isaac Butt’s Home Rule movement.  He was High Sheriff of Limerick City in 1887, and acted as Town Councillor on Limerick Corporation at least from 1888 to 1898.<lb/><lb/>James and Honora O’Mara had 13 children, of whom the two eldest surviving sons, Stephen O’Mara (1844-1926) and John (Jack) O’Mara (1856-1919) were instrumental in building up the O’Mara’s Bacon Factory into a great success.   The youngest son, Joseph (Joe) O’Mara (1864-1927) became a celebrated opera singer.<lb/><lb/>When James O’Mara retired from business his son John (Jack) O’Mara became manager of the O’Mara Bacon Factory.  In the late 1880s, Jack was invited to Russia by Tsar Alexander III to provide instruction on bacon curing.  He stayed in St Petersburg to supervise the construction of a bacon factory.  In 1891, his father bought the rights of the Russian Bacon Company and the family imported bacon from Russia into London until 1903.  James (Jim) O’Mara (1858-1893) acted as agent for O’Mara’s in London until his untimely death from heart disease.  His nephew James O’Mara (1873-1948), son of Stephen O’Mara Senior (1844-1926), took over the agency and held it until 1914.<lb/><lb/>When John (Jack) O’Mara died in 1919, his younger brother Stephen O’Mara (1844-1926) became Managing Director of O’Mara Limited and remained in that capacity until 1923.  Having entered into the family business at the age of fifteen, his great business acumen established O’Mara’s Bacon Factory as one of the most prominent commercial enterprises in Limerick city.  He also purchased a bacon factory in Palmerston, Ontario, Canada, which was managed by his son Joseph (Joe) O’Mara (1878-1950) until the business was wound up in the 1940s.<lb/><lb/>Like his father, Stephen O’Mara was a strong supporter of Isaac Butt’s Home Rule movement and a member of the committee which secured Butt’s election for Limerick city in 1871.  He later developed a close association with Charles Stewart Parnell and was elected Member of Parliament for Upper Ossory in Kilkenny South for the Irish Parliamentary Party in February 1886.  When the Irish National League split from Irish Parliamentary Party in December 1890, O’Mara took the Parnellite side.  He continued to act as trustee of the Party funds until 1908, when he resigned from his trusteeship.  Towards the end of his life, his moderate political views became more radicalised under the influence of his sons James (1873-1948) and Stephen Junior (1884-1959).  He had agreed with his son James’s decision to resign from the Irish Parliamentary Party in 1907 in order to join Sinn Fein, and personally supported the party in the 1918 General Election.  Both Stephen and his son James were strong supporters of the 1921 Anglo-Irish Treaty but were on friendly terms with Eamon de Valera who, it is said, spent the night at the O’Mara family home, Strand House, as the Treaty was being signed in London.  In the 1925 election, Stephen O’Mara was elected as Senator to the Free State Seanad.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara was also a prominent figure in local politics.  He became a Town Councillor on Limerick Corporation in the 1880s and was elected Mayor of Limerick in 1885.  He was the first Mayor of Limerick to be elected on a Nationalist ticket.  He also served as High Sheriff of Limerick city in 1888, 1913 and 1914.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara married Ellen Pigott in 1867, and the couple had 12 children of whom the eldest three died tragically of diphtheria in 1872.  From c. 1909 onwards, the family lived at Strand House.  Their third son, Stephen O’Mara Junior, was born on 5 January 1884.  He entered the family business in 1903 when he travelled to Canada to work in the bacon factory established by the O’Mara family in Ottawa.  In 1923, he became Managing Director of O’Mara Limited and created numerous employment opportunities by establishing bacon factories in Claremorris, County Mayo, and Letterkenny, County Donegal, in the 1930s.  The three bacon companies were amalgamated in 1938 and formed into the Bacon Company of Ireland.  Stephen O’Mara Junior remained the company’s chairman until his death in 1959.  In 1987, the Bacon Company of Ireland merged with Hanley of Rooskey and Benesford UK (Castlebar) with assistance from the Industrial Development Agency Ireland (IDA) to form Irish Country Bacon.  Shortly afterwards the old O’Mara factory in Limerick was closed down.  It was subsequently demolished to make way for a multi-storey car park.<lb/><lb/>Throughout his life, Stephen O’Mara Junior played a prominent role in both local and national affairs.  Unlike his father and elder brother James, Stephen was opposed to the Anglo-Irish Treaty but in a conciliatory manner.  He was prominently identified with the Sinn Fein movement after the Easter Rising.  He was one of Eamon de Valera’s strongest supporters and a member of his Fianna Fail Party since its formation in 1926.<lb/><lb/>When George Clancy, Lord Mayor of Limerick, and his predecessor Michael O’Callaghan were murdered by the British military forces in March 1921, Stephen decided to stand for election and became Mayor.  He was re-elected in 1922 and in 1923 but resigned before the expiration of his term of office.<lb/><lb/>In 1921, Stephen O’Mara Junior was selected to go to America as Special Envoy appointed by Dáil Éireann to the United States to oversee one of the country’s biggest fundraising drives to finance the first Dáil and was made Trustee of the funds.  The funds-drive was terminated following the signing of the Anglo-Irish Treaty.  Considering himself as the exchequer to the Irish Free State, O’Mara refused to hand over the collected funds to the pro-Treaty administration which resulted in his imprisonment in 1922-1923.  He had also been imprisoned for seven days in 1921 for refusing to pay a fine of £10 for non-compliance with a military summons.<lb/><lb/>The bulk of the money collected during the Bond Drive was left in various banks in New York and remained untouched for a number of years.  In 1927, following legal action between the Irish Government and Eamon de Valera, a court in New York ordered that money outstanding to bond holders must be paid back.  Having anticipated such a ruling, de Valera’s legal team invited bond holders to sign over their bonds to de Valera, for which they were paid 58 cents to the dollar.  The monies so accumulated were used to launch the national daily newspaper *The Irish Press*.  Stephen O’Mara served on the paper’s Board of Directors until his resignation in 1935.<lb/><lb/>In 1932, Stephen O’Mara was once again sent to America on a mission involving the various consular and diplomatic offices maintained in the country by the Irish Government.  Two years later, he was appointed a member of the Commission on Vocational Organisation, on which he served until 1943.  In 1959, he was created a member of the Council of State following de Valera’s inauguration as President of Ireland.  Stephen O’Mara died less than two months after his appointment, on 11 November 1959.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara Junior married in 1918 Anne O’Brien, third daughter of Thomas O’Brien of Boru House, and the couple had an adopted son, Peter O’Mara.  Anne’s youngest sister, Kate O’Brien, became one of the most prominent novelists in 20th-century Ireland and a voice of the respectable Irish Roman Catholic middle class.</p>
            </note>
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            <p>Article entitled ‘Country Life or Town Life?’ by Kate O’Brien, published in the *Daily Mirror* on 5 September 1928.</p>
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            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">‘The Charm of Tiny Things’</unittitle>
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                <addressline>Limerick</addressline>
                <addressline>Ireland</addressline>
                <addressline>V94 DPY6</addressline>
                <addressline>Telephone: +353-61-202690</addressline>
                <addressline>Fax: +353-61-213415</addressline>
                <addressline>Email: specoll@ul.ie</addressline>
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            <note>
              <p>The history of the O’Mara family of Strand house and O’Mara’s Bacon Company go hand in hand.  The factory was founded in 1839 by James O’Meara (1817-1899), who originated from the village of Toomevaara in county Tipperary.  Having worked for some years in the woollen mills in Clonmel, he got a job as a clerk with Matterson’s Bacon Factory in Limerick and in 1839 founded O’Mara’s Bacon Company in his house on Mungret Street.  It is said that he dropped the ‘e’ from his surname as he felt that O’Meara was too long for commercial purposes.  James initially sold for Matterson’s but soon began to cure his own bacon in the basement of his house.  As his business grew, he acquired dedicated premises for the purpose near the top of Roche’s Street.<lb/><lb/>In 1841, James O’Mara married Honora Fowley (d. 1878), who worked in the bacon business alongside her husband.  A devoted nationalist, James was one of the early supporters of Isaac Butt’s Home Rule movement.  He was High Sheriff of Limerick City in 1887, and acted as Town Councillor on Limerick Corporation at least from 1888 to 1898.<lb/><lb/>James and Honora O’Mara had 13 children, of whom the two eldest surviving sons, Stephen O’Mara (1844-1926) and John (Jack) O’Mara (1856-1919) were instrumental in building up the O’Mara’s Bacon Factory into a great success.   The youngest son, Joseph (Joe) O’Mara (1864-1927) became a celebrated opera singer.<lb/><lb/>When James O’Mara retired from business his son John (Jack) O’Mara became manager of the O’Mara Bacon Factory.  In the late 1880s, Jack was invited to Russia by Tsar Alexander III to provide instruction on bacon curing.  He stayed in St Petersburg to supervise the construction of a bacon factory.  In 1891, his father bought the rights of the Russian Bacon Company and the family imported bacon from Russia into London until 1903.  James (Jim) O’Mara (1858-1893) acted as agent for O’Mara’s in London until his untimely death from heart disease.  His nephew James O’Mara (1873-1948), son of Stephen O’Mara Senior (1844-1926), took over the agency and held it until 1914.<lb/><lb/>When John (Jack) O’Mara died in 1919, his younger brother Stephen O’Mara (1844-1926) became Managing Director of O’Mara Limited and remained in that capacity until 1923.  Having entered into the family business at the age of fifteen, his great business acumen established O’Mara’s Bacon Factory as one of the most prominent commercial enterprises in Limerick city.  He also purchased a bacon factory in Palmerston, Ontario, Canada, which was managed by his son Joseph (Joe) O’Mara (1878-1950) until the business was wound up in the 1940s.<lb/><lb/>Like his father, Stephen O’Mara was a strong supporter of Isaac Butt’s Home Rule movement and a member of the committee which secured Butt’s election for Limerick city in 1871.  He later developed a close association with Charles Stewart Parnell and was elected Member of Parliament for Upper Ossory in Kilkenny South for the Irish Parliamentary Party in February 1886.  When the Irish National League split from Irish Parliamentary Party in December 1890, O’Mara took the Parnellite side.  He continued to act as trustee of the Party funds until 1908, when he resigned from his trusteeship.  Towards the end of his life, his moderate political views became more radicalised under the influence of his sons James (1873-1948) and Stephen Junior (1884-1959).  He had agreed with his son James’s decision to resign from the Irish Parliamentary Party in 1907 in order to join Sinn Fein, and personally supported the party in the 1918 General Election.  Both Stephen and his son James were strong supporters of the 1921 Anglo-Irish Treaty but were on friendly terms with Eamon de Valera who, it is said, spent the night at the O’Mara family home, Strand House, as the Treaty was being signed in London.  In the 1925 election, Stephen O’Mara was elected as Senator to the Free State Seanad.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara was also a prominent figure in local politics.  He became a Town Councillor on Limerick Corporation in the 1880s and was elected Mayor of Limerick in 1885.  He was the first Mayor of Limerick to be elected on a Nationalist ticket.  He also served as High Sheriff of Limerick city in 1888, 1913 and 1914.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara married Ellen Pigott in 1867, and the couple had 12 children of whom the eldest three died tragically of diphtheria in 1872.  From c. 1909 onwards, the family lived at Strand House.  Their third son, Stephen O’Mara Junior, was born on 5 January 1884.  He entered the family business in 1903 when he travelled to Canada to work in the bacon factory established by the O’Mara family in Ottawa.  In 1923, he became Managing Director of O’Mara Limited and created numerous employment opportunities by establishing bacon factories in Claremorris, County Mayo, and Letterkenny, County Donegal, in the 1930s.  The three bacon companies were amalgamated in 1938 and formed into the Bacon Company of Ireland.  Stephen O’Mara Junior remained the company’s chairman until his death in 1959.  In 1987, the Bacon Company of Ireland merged with Hanley of Rooskey and Benesford UK (Castlebar) with assistance from the Industrial Development Agency Ireland (IDA) to form Irish Country Bacon.  Shortly afterwards the old O’Mara factory in Limerick was closed down.  It was subsequently demolished to make way for a multi-storey car park.<lb/><lb/>Throughout his life, Stephen O’Mara Junior played a prominent role in both local and national affairs.  Unlike his father and elder brother James, Stephen was opposed to the Anglo-Irish Treaty but in a conciliatory manner.  He was prominently identified with the Sinn Fein movement after the Easter Rising.  He was one of Eamon de Valera’s strongest supporters and a member of his Fianna Fail Party since its formation in 1926.<lb/><lb/>When George Clancy, Lord Mayor of Limerick, and his predecessor Michael O’Callaghan were murdered by the British military forces in March 1921, Stephen decided to stand for election and became Mayor.  He was re-elected in 1922 and in 1923 but resigned before the expiration of his term of office.<lb/><lb/>In 1921, Stephen O’Mara Junior was selected to go to America as Special Envoy appointed by Dáil Éireann to the United States to oversee one of the country’s biggest fundraising drives to finance the first Dáil and was made Trustee of the funds.  The funds-drive was terminated following the signing of the Anglo-Irish Treaty.  Considering himself as the exchequer to the Irish Free State, O’Mara refused to hand over the collected funds to the pro-Treaty administration which resulted in his imprisonment in 1922-1923.  He had also been imprisoned for seven days in 1921 for refusing to pay a fine of £10 for non-compliance with a military summons.<lb/><lb/>The bulk of the money collected during the Bond Drive was left in various banks in New York and remained untouched for a number of years.  In 1927, following legal action between the Irish Government and Eamon de Valera, a court in New York ordered that money outstanding to bond holders must be paid back.  Having anticipated such a ruling, de Valera’s legal team invited bond holders to sign over their bonds to de Valera, for which they were paid 58 cents to the dollar.  The monies so accumulated were used to launch the national daily newspaper *The Irish Press*.  Stephen O’Mara served on the paper’s Board of Directors until his resignation in 1935.<lb/><lb/>In 1932, Stephen O’Mara was once again sent to America on a mission involving the various consular and diplomatic offices maintained in the country by the Irish Government.  Two years later, he was appointed a member of the Commission on Vocational Organisation, on which he served until 1943.  In 1959, he was created a member of the Council of State following de Valera’s inauguration as President of Ireland.  Stephen O’Mara died less than two months after his appointment, on 11 November 1959.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara Junior married in 1918 Anne O’Brien, third daughter of Thomas O’Brien of Boru House, and the couple had an adopted son, Peter O’Mara.  Anne’s youngest sister, Kate O’Brien, became one of the most prominent novelists in 20th-century Ireland and a voice of the respectable Irish Roman Catholic middle class.</p>
            </note>
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            <p>Article entitled ‘The Charm of Tiny Things’ by Kate O’Brien, published in the *Daily Chronicle* on 6 November 1928.</p>
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                <addressline>Fax: +353-61-213415</addressline>
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            <note>
              <p>The history of the O’Mara family of Strand house and O’Mara’s Bacon Company go hand in hand.  The factory was founded in 1839 by James O’Meara (1817-1899), who originated from the village of Toomevaara in county Tipperary.  Having worked for some years in the woollen mills in Clonmel, he got a job as a clerk with Matterson’s Bacon Factory in Limerick and in 1839 founded O’Mara’s Bacon Company in his house on Mungret Street.  It is said that he dropped the ‘e’ from his surname as he felt that O’Meara was too long for commercial purposes.  James initially sold for Matterson’s but soon began to cure his own bacon in the basement of his house.  As his business grew, he acquired dedicated premises for the purpose near the top of Roche’s Street.<lb/><lb/>In 1841, James O’Mara married Honora Fowley (d. 1878), who worked in the bacon business alongside her husband.  A devoted nationalist, James was one of the early supporters of Isaac Butt’s Home Rule movement.  He was High Sheriff of Limerick City in 1887, and acted as Town Councillor on Limerick Corporation at least from 1888 to 1898.<lb/><lb/>James and Honora O’Mara had 13 children, of whom the two eldest surviving sons, Stephen O’Mara (1844-1926) and John (Jack) O’Mara (1856-1919) were instrumental in building up the O’Mara’s Bacon Factory into a great success.   The youngest son, Joseph (Joe) O’Mara (1864-1927) became a celebrated opera singer.<lb/><lb/>When James O’Mara retired from business his son John (Jack) O’Mara became manager of the O’Mara Bacon Factory.  In the late 1880s, Jack was invited to Russia by Tsar Alexander III to provide instruction on bacon curing.  He stayed in St Petersburg to supervise the construction of a bacon factory.  In 1891, his father bought the rights of the Russian Bacon Company and the family imported bacon from Russia into London until 1903.  James (Jim) O’Mara (1858-1893) acted as agent for O’Mara’s in London until his untimely death from heart disease.  His nephew James O’Mara (1873-1948), son of Stephen O’Mara Senior (1844-1926), took over the agency and held it until 1914.<lb/><lb/>When John (Jack) O’Mara died in 1919, his younger brother Stephen O’Mara (1844-1926) became Managing Director of O’Mara Limited and remained in that capacity until 1923.  Having entered into the family business at the age of fifteen, his great business acumen established O’Mara’s Bacon Factory as one of the most prominent commercial enterprises in Limerick city.  He also purchased a bacon factory in Palmerston, Ontario, Canada, which was managed by his son Joseph (Joe) O’Mara (1878-1950) until the business was wound up in the 1940s.<lb/><lb/>Like his father, Stephen O’Mara was a strong supporter of Isaac Butt’s Home Rule movement and a member of the committee which secured Butt’s election for Limerick city in 1871.  He later developed a close association with Charles Stewart Parnell and was elected Member of Parliament for Upper Ossory in Kilkenny South for the Irish Parliamentary Party in February 1886.  When the Irish National League split from Irish Parliamentary Party in December 1890, O’Mara took the Parnellite side.  He continued to act as trustee of the Party funds until 1908, when he resigned from his trusteeship.  Towards the end of his life, his moderate political views became more radicalised under the influence of his sons James (1873-1948) and Stephen Junior (1884-1959).  He had agreed with his son James’s decision to resign from the Irish Parliamentary Party in 1907 in order to join Sinn Fein, and personally supported the party in the 1918 General Election.  Both Stephen and his son James were strong supporters of the 1921 Anglo-Irish Treaty but were on friendly terms with Eamon de Valera who, it is said, spent the night at the O’Mara family home, Strand House, as the Treaty was being signed in London.  In the 1925 election, Stephen O’Mara was elected as Senator to the Free State Seanad.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara was also a prominent figure in local politics.  He became a Town Councillor on Limerick Corporation in the 1880s and was elected Mayor of Limerick in 1885.  He was the first Mayor of Limerick to be elected on a Nationalist ticket.  He also served as High Sheriff of Limerick city in 1888, 1913 and 1914.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara married Ellen Pigott in 1867, and the couple had 12 children of whom the eldest three died tragically of diphtheria in 1872.  From c. 1909 onwards, the family lived at Strand House.  Their third son, Stephen O’Mara Junior, was born on 5 January 1884.  He entered the family business in 1903 when he travelled to Canada to work in the bacon factory established by the O’Mara family in Ottawa.  In 1923, he became Managing Director of O’Mara Limited and created numerous employment opportunities by establishing bacon factories in Claremorris, County Mayo, and Letterkenny, County Donegal, in the 1930s.  The three bacon companies were amalgamated in 1938 and formed into the Bacon Company of Ireland.  Stephen O’Mara Junior remained the company’s chairman until his death in 1959.  In 1987, the Bacon Company of Ireland merged with Hanley of Rooskey and Benesford UK (Castlebar) with assistance from the Industrial Development Agency Ireland (IDA) to form Irish Country Bacon.  Shortly afterwards the old O’Mara factory in Limerick was closed down.  It was subsequently demolished to make way for a multi-storey car park.<lb/><lb/>Throughout his life, Stephen O’Mara Junior played a prominent role in both local and national affairs.  Unlike his father and elder brother James, Stephen was opposed to the Anglo-Irish Treaty but in a conciliatory manner.  He was prominently identified with the Sinn Fein movement after the Easter Rising.  He was one of Eamon de Valera’s strongest supporters and a member of his Fianna Fail Party since its formation in 1926.<lb/><lb/>When George Clancy, Lord Mayor of Limerick, and his predecessor Michael O’Callaghan were murdered by the British military forces in March 1921, Stephen decided to stand for election and became Mayor.  He was re-elected in 1922 and in 1923 but resigned before the expiration of his term of office.<lb/><lb/>In 1921, Stephen O’Mara Junior was selected to go to America as Special Envoy appointed by Dáil Éireann to the United States to oversee one of the country’s biggest fundraising drives to finance the first Dáil and was made Trustee of the funds.  The funds-drive was terminated following the signing of the Anglo-Irish Treaty.  Considering himself as the exchequer to the Irish Free State, O’Mara refused to hand over the collected funds to the pro-Treaty administration which resulted in his imprisonment in 1922-1923.  He had also been imprisoned for seven days in 1921 for refusing to pay a fine of £10 for non-compliance with a military summons.<lb/><lb/>The bulk of the money collected during the Bond Drive was left in various banks in New York and remained untouched for a number of years.  In 1927, following legal action between the Irish Government and Eamon de Valera, a court in New York ordered that money outstanding to bond holders must be paid back.  Having anticipated such a ruling, de Valera’s legal team invited bond holders to sign over their bonds to de Valera, for which they were paid 58 cents to the dollar.  The monies so accumulated were used to launch the national daily newspaper *The Irish Press*.  Stephen O’Mara served on the paper’s Board of Directors until his resignation in 1935.<lb/><lb/>In 1932, Stephen O’Mara was once again sent to America on a mission involving the various consular and diplomatic offices maintained in the country by the Irish Government.  Two years later, he was appointed a member of the Commission on Vocational Organisation, on which he served until 1943.  In 1959, he was created a member of the Council of State following de Valera’s inauguration as President of Ireland.  Stephen O’Mara died less than two months after his appointment, on 11 November 1959.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara Junior married in 1918 Anne O’Brien, third daughter of Thomas O’Brien of Boru House, and the couple had an adopted son, Peter O’Mara.  Anne’s youngest sister, Kate O’Brien, became one of the most prominent novelists in 20th-century Ireland and a voice of the respectable Irish Roman Catholic middle class.</p>
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            <p>Article entitled ‘‘Tricks My Memory Plays Me’ by Kate O’Brien, published in the *Evening Standard* on 27 November 1928.</p>
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              <p>The history of the O’Mara family of Strand house and O’Mara’s Bacon Company go hand in hand.  The factory was founded in 1839 by James O’Meara (1817-1899), who originated from the village of Toomevaara in county Tipperary.  Having worked for some years in the woollen mills in Clonmel, he got a job as a clerk with Matterson’s Bacon Factory in Limerick and in 1839 founded O’Mara’s Bacon Company in his house on Mungret Street.  It is said that he dropped the ‘e’ from his surname as he felt that O’Meara was too long for commercial purposes.  James initially sold for Matterson’s but soon began to cure his own bacon in the basement of his house.  As his business grew, he acquired dedicated premises for the purpose near the top of Roche’s Street.<lb/><lb/>In 1841, James O’Mara married Honora Fowley (d. 1878), who worked in the bacon business alongside her husband.  A devoted nationalist, James was one of the early supporters of Isaac Butt’s Home Rule movement.  He was High Sheriff of Limerick City in 1887, and acted as Town Councillor on Limerick Corporation at least from 1888 to 1898.<lb/><lb/>James and Honora O’Mara had 13 children, of whom the two eldest surviving sons, Stephen O’Mara (1844-1926) and John (Jack) O’Mara (1856-1919) were instrumental in building up the O’Mara’s Bacon Factory into a great success.   The youngest son, Joseph (Joe) O’Mara (1864-1927) became a celebrated opera singer.<lb/><lb/>When James O’Mara retired from business his son John (Jack) O’Mara became manager of the O’Mara Bacon Factory.  In the late 1880s, Jack was invited to Russia by Tsar Alexander III to provide instruction on bacon curing.  He stayed in St Petersburg to supervise the construction of a bacon factory.  In 1891, his father bought the rights of the Russian Bacon Company and the family imported bacon from Russia into London until 1903.  James (Jim) O’Mara (1858-1893) acted as agent for O’Mara’s in London until his untimely death from heart disease.  His nephew James O’Mara (1873-1948), son of Stephen O’Mara Senior (1844-1926), took over the agency and held it until 1914.<lb/><lb/>When John (Jack) O’Mara died in 1919, his younger brother Stephen O’Mara (1844-1926) became Managing Director of O’Mara Limited and remained in that capacity until 1923.  Having entered into the family business at the age of fifteen, his great business acumen established O’Mara’s Bacon Factory as one of the most prominent commercial enterprises in Limerick city.  He also purchased a bacon factory in Palmerston, Ontario, Canada, which was managed by his son Joseph (Joe) O’Mara (1878-1950) until the business was wound up in the 1940s.<lb/><lb/>Like his father, Stephen O’Mara was a strong supporter of Isaac Butt’s Home Rule movement and a member of the committee which secured Butt’s election for Limerick city in 1871.  He later developed a close association with Charles Stewart Parnell and was elected Member of Parliament for Upper Ossory in Kilkenny South for the Irish Parliamentary Party in February 1886.  When the Irish National League split from Irish Parliamentary Party in December 1890, O’Mara took the Parnellite side.  He continued to act as trustee of the Party funds until 1908, when he resigned from his trusteeship.  Towards the end of his life, his moderate political views became more radicalised under the influence of his sons James (1873-1948) and Stephen Junior (1884-1959).  He had agreed with his son James’s decision to resign from the Irish Parliamentary Party in 1907 in order to join Sinn Fein, and personally supported the party in the 1918 General Election.  Both Stephen and his son James were strong supporters of the 1921 Anglo-Irish Treaty but were on friendly terms with Eamon de Valera who, it is said, spent the night at the O’Mara family home, Strand House, as the Treaty was being signed in London.  In the 1925 election, Stephen O’Mara was elected as Senator to the Free State Seanad.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara was also a prominent figure in local politics.  He became a Town Councillor on Limerick Corporation in the 1880s and was elected Mayor of Limerick in 1885.  He was the first Mayor of Limerick to be elected on a Nationalist ticket.  He also served as High Sheriff of Limerick city in 1888, 1913 and 1914.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara married Ellen Pigott in 1867, and the couple had 12 children of whom the eldest three died tragically of diphtheria in 1872.  From c. 1909 onwards, the family lived at Strand House.  Their third son, Stephen O’Mara Junior, was born on 5 January 1884.  He entered the family business in 1903 when he travelled to Canada to work in the bacon factory established by the O’Mara family in Ottawa.  In 1923, he became Managing Director of O’Mara Limited and created numerous employment opportunities by establishing bacon factories in Claremorris, County Mayo, and Letterkenny, County Donegal, in the 1930s.  The three bacon companies were amalgamated in 1938 and formed into the Bacon Company of Ireland.  Stephen O’Mara Junior remained the company’s chairman until his death in 1959.  In 1987, the Bacon Company of Ireland merged with Hanley of Rooskey and Benesford UK (Castlebar) with assistance from the Industrial Development Agency Ireland (IDA) to form Irish Country Bacon.  Shortly afterwards the old O’Mara factory in Limerick was closed down.  It was subsequently demolished to make way for a multi-storey car park.<lb/><lb/>Throughout his life, Stephen O’Mara Junior played a prominent role in both local and national affairs.  Unlike his father and elder brother James, Stephen was opposed to the Anglo-Irish Treaty but in a conciliatory manner.  He was prominently identified with the Sinn Fein movement after the Easter Rising.  He was one of Eamon de Valera’s strongest supporters and a member of his Fianna Fail Party since its formation in 1926.<lb/><lb/>When George Clancy, Lord Mayor of Limerick, and his predecessor Michael O’Callaghan were murdered by the British military forces in March 1921, Stephen decided to stand for election and became Mayor.  He was re-elected in 1922 and in 1923 but resigned before the expiration of his term of office.<lb/><lb/>In 1921, Stephen O’Mara Junior was selected to go to America as Special Envoy appointed by Dáil Éireann to the United States to oversee one of the country’s biggest fundraising drives to finance the first Dáil and was made Trustee of the funds.  The funds-drive was terminated following the signing of the Anglo-Irish Treaty.  Considering himself as the exchequer to the Irish Free State, O’Mara refused to hand over the collected funds to the pro-Treaty administration which resulted in his imprisonment in 1922-1923.  He had also been imprisoned for seven days in 1921 for refusing to pay a fine of £10 for non-compliance with a military summons.<lb/><lb/>The bulk of the money collected during the Bond Drive was left in various banks in New York and remained untouched for a number of years.  In 1927, following legal action between the Irish Government and Eamon de Valera, a court in New York ordered that money outstanding to bond holders must be paid back.  Having anticipated such a ruling, de Valera’s legal team invited bond holders to sign over their bonds to de Valera, for which they were paid 58 cents to the dollar.  The monies so accumulated were used to launch the national daily newspaper *The Irish Press*.  Stephen O’Mara served on the paper’s Board of Directors until his resignation in 1935.<lb/><lb/>In 1932, Stephen O’Mara was once again sent to America on a mission involving the various consular and diplomatic offices maintained in the country by the Irish Government.  Two years later, he was appointed a member of the Commission on Vocational Organisation, on which he served until 1943.  In 1959, he was created a member of the Council of State following de Valera’s inauguration as President of Ireland.  Stephen O’Mara died less than two months after his appointment, on 11 November 1959.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara Junior married in 1918 Anne O’Brien, third daughter of Thomas O’Brien of Boru House, and the couple had an adopted son, Peter O’Mara.  Anne’s youngest sister, Kate O’Brien, became one of the most prominent novelists in 20th-century Ireland and a voice of the respectable Irish Roman Catholic middle class.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
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          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Article entitled ‘A Woman “Spy” on the Tube’ by Kate O’Brien, published in an unidentified newspaper [in 1928].</p>
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            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">‘Could a Million Clean up London?’</unittitle>
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                <addressline>Limerick</addressline>
                <addressline>Ireland</addressline>
                <addressline>V94 DPY6</addressline>
                <addressline>Telephone: +353-61-202690</addressline>
                <addressline>Fax: +353-61-213415</addressline>
                <addressline>Email: specoll@ul.ie</addressline>
                <addressline>https://specialcollections.ul.ie/</addressline>
              </address>
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              <language langcode="eng">English</language>
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            <note>
              <p>The history of the O’Mara family of Strand house and O’Mara’s Bacon Company go hand in hand.  The factory was founded in 1839 by James O’Meara (1817-1899), who originated from the village of Toomevaara in county Tipperary.  Having worked for some years in the woollen mills in Clonmel, he got a job as a clerk with Matterson’s Bacon Factory in Limerick and in 1839 founded O’Mara’s Bacon Company in his house on Mungret Street.  It is said that he dropped the ‘e’ from his surname as he felt that O’Meara was too long for commercial purposes.  James initially sold for Matterson’s but soon began to cure his own bacon in the basement of his house.  As his business grew, he acquired dedicated premises for the purpose near the top of Roche’s Street.<lb/><lb/>In 1841, James O’Mara married Honora Fowley (d. 1878), who worked in the bacon business alongside her husband.  A devoted nationalist, James was one of the early supporters of Isaac Butt’s Home Rule movement.  He was High Sheriff of Limerick City in 1887, and acted as Town Councillor on Limerick Corporation at least from 1888 to 1898.<lb/><lb/>James and Honora O’Mara had 13 children, of whom the two eldest surviving sons, Stephen O’Mara (1844-1926) and John (Jack) O’Mara (1856-1919) were instrumental in building up the O’Mara’s Bacon Factory into a great success.   The youngest son, Joseph (Joe) O’Mara (1864-1927) became a celebrated opera singer.<lb/><lb/>When James O’Mara retired from business his son John (Jack) O’Mara became manager of the O’Mara Bacon Factory.  In the late 1880s, Jack was invited to Russia by Tsar Alexander III to provide instruction on bacon curing.  He stayed in St Petersburg to supervise the construction of a bacon factory.  In 1891, his father bought the rights of the Russian Bacon Company and the family imported bacon from Russia into London until 1903.  James (Jim) O’Mara (1858-1893) acted as agent for O’Mara’s in London until his untimely death from heart disease.  His nephew James O’Mara (1873-1948), son of Stephen O’Mara Senior (1844-1926), took over the agency and held it until 1914.<lb/><lb/>When John (Jack) O’Mara died in 1919, his younger brother Stephen O’Mara (1844-1926) became Managing Director of O’Mara Limited and remained in that capacity until 1923.  Having entered into the family business at the age of fifteen, his great business acumen established O’Mara’s Bacon Factory as one of the most prominent commercial enterprises in Limerick city.  He also purchased a bacon factory in Palmerston, Ontario, Canada, which was managed by his son Joseph (Joe) O’Mara (1878-1950) until the business was wound up in the 1940s.<lb/><lb/>Like his father, Stephen O’Mara was a strong supporter of Isaac Butt’s Home Rule movement and a member of the committee which secured Butt’s election for Limerick city in 1871.  He later developed a close association with Charles Stewart Parnell and was elected Member of Parliament for Upper Ossory in Kilkenny South for the Irish Parliamentary Party in February 1886.  When the Irish National League split from Irish Parliamentary Party in December 1890, O’Mara took the Parnellite side.  He continued to act as trustee of the Party funds until 1908, when he resigned from his trusteeship.  Towards the end of his life, his moderate political views became more radicalised under the influence of his sons James (1873-1948) and Stephen Junior (1884-1959).  He had agreed with his son James’s decision to resign from the Irish Parliamentary Party in 1907 in order to join Sinn Fein, and personally supported the party in the 1918 General Election.  Both Stephen and his son James were strong supporters of the 1921 Anglo-Irish Treaty but were on friendly terms with Eamon de Valera who, it is said, spent the night at the O’Mara family home, Strand House, as the Treaty was being signed in London.  In the 1925 election, Stephen O’Mara was elected as Senator to the Free State Seanad.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara was also a prominent figure in local politics.  He became a Town Councillor on Limerick Corporation in the 1880s and was elected Mayor of Limerick in 1885.  He was the first Mayor of Limerick to be elected on a Nationalist ticket.  He also served as High Sheriff of Limerick city in 1888, 1913 and 1914.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara married Ellen Pigott in 1867, and the couple had 12 children of whom the eldest three died tragically of diphtheria in 1872.  From c. 1909 onwards, the family lived at Strand House.  Their third son, Stephen O’Mara Junior, was born on 5 January 1884.  He entered the family business in 1903 when he travelled to Canada to work in the bacon factory established by the O’Mara family in Ottawa.  In 1923, he became Managing Director of O’Mara Limited and created numerous employment opportunities by establishing bacon factories in Claremorris, County Mayo, and Letterkenny, County Donegal, in the 1930s.  The three bacon companies were amalgamated in 1938 and formed into the Bacon Company of Ireland.  Stephen O’Mara Junior remained the company’s chairman until his death in 1959.  In 1987, the Bacon Company of Ireland merged with Hanley of Rooskey and Benesford UK (Castlebar) with assistance from the Industrial Development Agency Ireland (IDA) to form Irish Country Bacon.  Shortly afterwards the old O’Mara factory in Limerick was closed down.  It was subsequently demolished to make way for a multi-storey car park.<lb/><lb/>Throughout his life, Stephen O’Mara Junior played a prominent role in both local and national affairs.  Unlike his father and elder brother James, Stephen was opposed to the Anglo-Irish Treaty but in a conciliatory manner.  He was prominently identified with the Sinn Fein movement after the Easter Rising.  He was one of Eamon de Valera’s strongest supporters and a member of his Fianna Fail Party since its formation in 1926.<lb/><lb/>When George Clancy, Lord Mayor of Limerick, and his predecessor Michael O’Callaghan were murdered by the British military forces in March 1921, Stephen decided to stand for election and became Mayor.  He was re-elected in 1922 and in 1923 but resigned before the expiration of his term of office.<lb/><lb/>In 1921, Stephen O’Mara Junior was selected to go to America as Special Envoy appointed by Dáil Éireann to the United States to oversee one of the country’s biggest fundraising drives to finance the first Dáil and was made Trustee of the funds.  The funds-drive was terminated following the signing of the Anglo-Irish Treaty.  Considering himself as the exchequer to the Irish Free State, O’Mara refused to hand over the collected funds to the pro-Treaty administration which resulted in his imprisonment in 1922-1923.  He had also been imprisoned for seven days in 1921 for refusing to pay a fine of £10 for non-compliance with a military summons.<lb/><lb/>The bulk of the money collected during the Bond Drive was left in various banks in New York and remained untouched for a number of years.  In 1927, following legal action between the Irish Government and Eamon de Valera, a court in New York ordered that money outstanding to bond holders must be paid back.  Having anticipated such a ruling, de Valera’s legal team invited bond holders to sign over their bonds to de Valera, for which they were paid 58 cents to the dollar.  The monies so accumulated were used to launch the national daily newspaper *The Irish Press*.  Stephen O’Mara served on the paper’s Board of Directors until his resignation in 1935.<lb/><lb/>In 1932, Stephen O’Mara was once again sent to America on a mission involving the various consular and diplomatic offices maintained in the country by the Irish Government.  Two years later, he was appointed a member of the Commission on Vocational Organisation, on which he served until 1943.  In 1959, he was created a member of the Council of State following de Valera’s inauguration as President of Ireland.  Stephen O’Mara died less than two months after his appointment, on 11 November 1959.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara Junior married in 1918 Anne O’Brien, third daughter of Thomas O’Brien of Boru House, and the couple had an adopted son, Peter O’Mara.  Anne’s youngest sister, Kate O’Brien, became one of the most prominent novelists in 20th-century Ireland and a voice of the respectable Irish Roman Catholic middle class.</p>
            </note>
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            <p>Article entitled ‘Could a Million Clean up London?’ by Kate O’Brien, published in an unidentified newspaper [in 1928].</p>
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            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">‘The Home of the Future’</unittitle>
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                <addressline>Limerick</addressline>
                <addressline>Ireland</addressline>
                <addressline>V94 DPY6</addressline>
                <addressline>Telephone: +353-61-202690</addressline>
                <addressline>Fax: +353-61-213415</addressline>
                <addressline>Email: specoll@ul.ie</addressline>
                <addressline>https://specialcollections.ul.ie/</addressline>
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            <note>
              <p>The history of the O’Mara family of Strand house and O’Mara’s Bacon Company go hand in hand.  The factory was founded in 1839 by James O’Meara (1817-1899), who originated from the village of Toomevaara in county Tipperary.  Having worked for some years in the woollen mills in Clonmel, he got a job as a clerk with Matterson’s Bacon Factory in Limerick and in 1839 founded O’Mara’s Bacon Company in his house on Mungret Street.  It is said that he dropped the ‘e’ from his surname as he felt that O’Meara was too long for commercial purposes.  James initially sold for Matterson’s but soon began to cure his own bacon in the basement of his house.  As his business grew, he acquired dedicated premises for the purpose near the top of Roche’s Street.<lb/><lb/>In 1841, James O’Mara married Honora Fowley (d. 1878), who worked in the bacon business alongside her husband.  A devoted nationalist, James was one of the early supporters of Isaac Butt’s Home Rule movement.  He was High Sheriff of Limerick City in 1887, and acted as Town Councillor on Limerick Corporation at least from 1888 to 1898.<lb/><lb/>James and Honora O’Mara had 13 children, of whom the two eldest surviving sons, Stephen O’Mara (1844-1926) and John (Jack) O’Mara (1856-1919) were instrumental in building up the O’Mara’s Bacon Factory into a great success.   The youngest son, Joseph (Joe) O’Mara (1864-1927) became a celebrated opera singer.<lb/><lb/>When James O’Mara retired from business his son John (Jack) O’Mara became manager of the O’Mara Bacon Factory.  In the late 1880s, Jack was invited to Russia by Tsar Alexander III to provide instruction on bacon curing.  He stayed in St Petersburg to supervise the construction of a bacon factory.  In 1891, his father bought the rights of the Russian Bacon Company and the family imported bacon from Russia into London until 1903.  James (Jim) O’Mara (1858-1893) acted as agent for O’Mara’s in London until his untimely death from heart disease.  His nephew James O’Mara (1873-1948), son of Stephen O’Mara Senior (1844-1926), took over the agency and held it until 1914.<lb/><lb/>When John (Jack) O’Mara died in 1919, his younger brother Stephen O’Mara (1844-1926) became Managing Director of O’Mara Limited and remained in that capacity until 1923.  Having entered into the family business at the age of fifteen, his great business acumen established O’Mara’s Bacon Factory as one of the most prominent commercial enterprises in Limerick city.  He also purchased a bacon factory in Palmerston, Ontario, Canada, which was managed by his son Joseph (Joe) O’Mara (1878-1950) until the business was wound up in the 1940s.<lb/><lb/>Like his father, Stephen O’Mara was a strong supporter of Isaac Butt’s Home Rule movement and a member of the committee which secured Butt’s election for Limerick city in 1871.  He later developed a close association with Charles Stewart Parnell and was elected Member of Parliament for Upper Ossory in Kilkenny South for the Irish Parliamentary Party in February 1886.  When the Irish National League split from Irish Parliamentary Party in December 1890, O’Mara took the Parnellite side.  He continued to act as trustee of the Party funds until 1908, when he resigned from his trusteeship.  Towards the end of his life, his moderate political views became more radicalised under the influence of his sons James (1873-1948) and Stephen Junior (1884-1959).  He had agreed with his son James’s decision to resign from the Irish Parliamentary Party in 1907 in order to join Sinn Fein, and personally supported the party in the 1918 General Election.  Both Stephen and his son James were strong supporters of the 1921 Anglo-Irish Treaty but were on friendly terms with Eamon de Valera who, it is said, spent the night at the O’Mara family home, Strand House, as the Treaty was being signed in London.  In the 1925 election, Stephen O’Mara was elected as Senator to the Free State Seanad.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara was also a prominent figure in local politics.  He became a Town Councillor on Limerick Corporation in the 1880s and was elected Mayor of Limerick in 1885.  He was the first Mayor of Limerick to be elected on a Nationalist ticket.  He also served as High Sheriff of Limerick city in 1888, 1913 and 1914.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara married Ellen Pigott in 1867, and the couple had 12 children of whom the eldest three died tragically of diphtheria in 1872.  From c. 1909 onwards, the family lived at Strand House.  Their third son, Stephen O’Mara Junior, was born on 5 January 1884.  He entered the family business in 1903 when he travelled to Canada to work in the bacon factory established by the O’Mara family in Ottawa.  In 1923, he became Managing Director of O’Mara Limited and created numerous employment opportunities by establishing bacon factories in Claremorris, County Mayo, and Letterkenny, County Donegal, in the 1930s.  The three bacon companies were amalgamated in 1938 and formed into the Bacon Company of Ireland.  Stephen O’Mara Junior remained the company’s chairman until his death in 1959.  In 1987, the Bacon Company of Ireland merged with Hanley of Rooskey and Benesford UK (Castlebar) with assistance from the Industrial Development Agency Ireland (IDA) to form Irish Country Bacon.  Shortly afterwards the old O’Mara factory in Limerick was closed down.  It was subsequently demolished to make way for a multi-storey car park.<lb/><lb/>Throughout his life, Stephen O’Mara Junior played a prominent role in both local and national affairs.  Unlike his father and elder brother James, Stephen was opposed to the Anglo-Irish Treaty but in a conciliatory manner.  He was prominently identified with the Sinn Fein movement after the Easter Rising.  He was one of Eamon de Valera’s strongest supporters and a member of his Fianna Fail Party since its formation in 1926.<lb/><lb/>When George Clancy, Lord Mayor of Limerick, and his predecessor Michael O’Callaghan were murdered by the British military forces in March 1921, Stephen decided to stand for election and became Mayor.  He was re-elected in 1922 and in 1923 but resigned before the expiration of his term of office.<lb/><lb/>In 1921, Stephen O’Mara Junior was selected to go to America as Special Envoy appointed by Dáil Éireann to the United States to oversee one of the country’s biggest fundraising drives to finance the first Dáil and was made Trustee of the funds.  The funds-drive was terminated following the signing of the Anglo-Irish Treaty.  Considering himself as the exchequer to the Irish Free State, O’Mara refused to hand over the collected funds to the pro-Treaty administration which resulted in his imprisonment in 1922-1923.  He had also been imprisoned for seven days in 1921 for refusing to pay a fine of £10 for non-compliance with a military summons.<lb/><lb/>The bulk of the money collected during the Bond Drive was left in various banks in New York and remained untouched for a number of years.  In 1927, following legal action between the Irish Government and Eamon de Valera, a court in New York ordered that money outstanding to bond holders must be paid back.  Having anticipated such a ruling, de Valera’s legal team invited bond holders to sign over their bonds to de Valera, for which they were paid 58 cents to the dollar.  The monies so accumulated were used to launch the national daily newspaper *The Irish Press*.  Stephen O’Mara served on the paper’s Board of Directors until his resignation in 1935.<lb/><lb/>In 1932, Stephen O’Mara was once again sent to America on a mission involving the various consular and diplomatic offices maintained in the country by the Irish Government.  Two years later, he was appointed a member of the Commission on Vocational Organisation, on which he served until 1943.  In 1959, he was created a member of the Council of State following de Valera’s inauguration as President of Ireland.  Stephen O’Mara died less than two months after his appointment, on 11 November 1959.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara Junior married in 1918 Anne O’Brien, third daughter of Thomas O’Brien of Boru House, and the couple had an adopted son, Peter O’Mara.  Anne’s youngest sister, Kate O’Brien, became one of the most prominent novelists in 20th-century Ireland and a voice of the respectable Irish Roman Catholic middle class.</p>
            </note>
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            <p>Article entitled ‘The Home of the Future’ by Kate O’Brien, published in an unidentified newspaper in c. 1928-1929.</p>
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            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">‘The Perennial Spinsters’</unittitle>
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                <addressline>Ireland</addressline>
                <addressline>V94 DPY6</addressline>
                <addressline>Telephone: +353-61-202690</addressline>
                <addressline>Fax: +353-61-213415</addressline>
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                <addressline>https://specialcollections.ul.ie/</addressline>
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              <p>The history of the O’Mara family of Strand house and O’Mara’s Bacon Company go hand in hand.  The factory was founded in 1839 by James O’Meara (1817-1899), who originated from the village of Toomevaara in county Tipperary.  Having worked for some years in the woollen mills in Clonmel, he got a job as a clerk with Matterson’s Bacon Factory in Limerick and in 1839 founded O’Mara’s Bacon Company in his house on Mungret Street.  It is said that he dropped the ‘e’ from his surname as he felt that O’Meara was too long for commercial purposes.  James initially sold for Matterson’s but soon began to cure his own bacon in the basement of his house.  As his business grew, he acquired dedicated premises for the purpose near the top of Roche’s Street.<lb/><lb/>In 1841, James O’Mara married Honora Fowley (d. 1878), who worked in the bacon business alongside her husband.  A devoted nationalist, James was one of the early supporters of Isaac Butt’s Home Rule movement.  He was High Sheriff of Limerick City in 1887, and acted as Town Councillor on Limerick Corporation at least from 1888 to 1898.<lb/><lb/>James and Honora O’Mara had 13 children, of whom the two eldest surviving sons, Stephen O’Mara (1844-1926) and John (Jack) O’Mara (1856-1919) were instrumental in building up the O’Mara’s Bacon Factory into a great success.   The youngest son, Joseph (Joe) O’Mara (1864-1927) became a celebrated opera singer.<lb/><lb/>When James O’Mara retired from business his son John (Jack) O’Mara became manager of the O’Mara Bacon Factory.  In the late 1880s, Jack was invited to Russia by Tsar Alexander III to provide instruction on bacon curing.  He stayed in St Petersburg to supervise the construction of a bacon factory.  In 1891, his father bought the rights of the Russian Bacon Company and the family imported bacon from Russia into London until 1903.  James (Jim) O’Mara (1858-1893) acted as agent for O’Mara’s in London until his untimely death from heart disease.  His nephew James O’Mara (1873-1948), son of Stephen O’Mara Senior (1844-1926), took over the agency and held it until 1914.<lb/><lb/>When John (Jack) O’Mara died in 1919, his younger brother Stephen O’Mara (1844-1926) became Managing Director of O’Mara Limited and remained in that capacity until 1923.  Having entered into the family business at the age of fifteen, his great business acumen established O’Mara’s Bacon Factory as one of the most prominent commercial enterprises in Limerick city.  He also purchased a bacon factory in Palmerston, Ontario, Canada, which was managed by his son Joseph (Joe) O’Mara (1878-1950) until the business was wound up in the 1940s.<lb/><lb/>Like his father, Stephen O’Mara was a strong supporter of Isaac Butt’s Home Rule movement and a member of the committee which secured Butt’s election for Limerick city in 1871.  He later developed a close association with Charles Stewart Parnell and was elected Member of Parliament for Upper Ossory in Kilkenny South for the Irish Parliamentary Party in February 1886.  When the Irish National League split from Irish Parliamentary Party in December 1890, O’Mara took the Parnellite side.  He continued to act as trustee of the Party funds until 1908, when he resigned from his trusteeship.  Towards the end of his life, his moderate political views became more radicalised under the influence of his sons James (1873-1948) and Stephen Junior (1884-1959).  He had agreed with his son James’s decision to resign from the Irish Parliamentary Party in 1907 in order to join Sinn Fein, and personally supported the party in the 1918 General Election.  Both Stephen and his son James were strong supporters of the 1921 Anglo-Irish Treaty but were on friendly terms with Eamon de Valera who, it is said, spent the night at the O’Mara family home, Strand House, as the Treaty was being signed in London.  In the 1925 election, Stephen O’Mara was elected as Senator to the Free State Seanad.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara was also a prominent figure in local politics.  He became a Town Councillor on Limerick Corporation in the 1880s and was elected Mayor of Limerick in 1885.  He was the first Mayor of Limerick to be elected on a Nationalist ticket.  He also served as High Sheriff of Limerick city in 1888, 1913 and 1914.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara married Ellen Pigott in 1867, and the couple had 12 children of whom the eldest three died tragically of diphtheria in 1872.  From c. 1909 onwards, the family lived at Strand House.  Their third son, Stephen O’Mara Junior, was born on 5 January 1884.  He entered the family business in 1903 when he travelled to Canada to work in the bacon factory established by the O’Mara family in Ottawa.  In 1923, he became Managing Director of O’Mara Limited and created numerous employment opportunities by establishing bacon factories in Claremorris, County Mayo, and Letterkenny, County Donegal, in the 1930s.  The three bacon companies were amalgamated in 1938 and formed into the Bacon Company of Ireland.  Stephen O’Mara Junior remained the company’s chairman until his death in 1959.  In 1987, the Bacon Company of Ireland merged with Hanley of Rooskey and Benesford UK (Castlebar) with assistance from the Industrial Development Agency Ireland (IDA) to form Irish Country Bacon.  Shortly afterwards the old O’Mara factory in Limerick was closed down.  It was subsequently demolished to make way for a multi-storey car park.<lb/><lb/>Throughout his life, Stephen O’Mara Junior played a prominent role in both local and national affairs.  Unlike his father and elder brother James, Stephen was opposed to the Anglo-Irish Treaty but in a conciliatory manner.  He was prominently identified with the Sinn Fein movement after the Easter Rising.  He was one of Eamon de Valera’s strongest supporters and a member of his Fianna Fail Party since its formation in 1926.<lb/><lb/>When George Clancy, Lord Mayor of Limerick, and his predecessor Michael O’Callaghan were murdered by the British military forces in March 1921, Stephen decided to stand for election and became Mayor.  He was re-elected in 1922 and in 1923 but resigned before the expiration of his term of office.<lb/><lb/>In 1921, Stephen O’Mara Junior was selected to go to America as Special Envoy appointed by Dáil Éireann to the United States to oversee one of the country’s biggest fundraising drives to finance the first Dáil and was made Trustee of the funds.  The funds-drive was terminated following the signing of the Anglo-Irish Treaty.  Considering himself as the exchequer to the Irish Free State, O’Mara refused to hand over the collected funds to the pro-Treaty administration which resulted in his imprisonment in 1922-1923.  He had also been imprisoned for seven days in 1921 for refusing to pay a fine of £10 for non-compliance with a military summons.<lb/><lb/>The bulk of the money collected during the Bond Drive was left in various banks in New York and remained untouched for a number of years.  In 1927, following legal action between the Irish Government and Eamon de Valera, a court in New York ordered that money outstanding to bond holders must be paid back.  Having anticipated such a ruling, de Valera’s legal team invited bond holders to sign over their bonds to de Valera, for which they were paid 58 cents to the dollar.  The monies so accumulated were used to launch the national daily newspaper *The Irish Press*.  Stephen O’Mara served on the paper’s Board of Directors until his resignation in 1935.<lb/><lb/>In 1932, Stephen O’Mara was once again sent to America on a mission involving the various consular and diplomatic offices maintained in the country by the Irish Government.  Two years later, he was appointed a member of the Commission on Vocational Organisation, on which he served until 1943.  In 1959, he was created a member of the Council of State following de Valera’s inauguration as President of Ireland.  Stephen O’Mara died less than two months after his appointment, on 11 November 1959.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara Junior married in 1918 Anne O’Brien, third daughter of Thomas O’Brien of Boru House, and the couple had an adopted son, Peter O’Mara.  Anne’s youngest sister, Kate O’Brien, became one of the most prominent novelists in 20th-century Ireland and a voice of the respectable Irish Roman Catholic middle class.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
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            <p>Article entitled ‘The Perennial Spinsters’ by Kate O’Brien, published in the *Daily Mirror* in c. 1928-1929.</p>
          </scopecontent>
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            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">‘Our Railway Stations Are Almost Human’</unittitle>
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                <addressline>GL0-051, Glucksman Library, University of Limerick</addressline>
                <addressline>Limerick</addressline>
                <addressline>Ireland</addressline>
                <addressline>V94 DPY6</addressline>
                <addressline>Telephone: +353-61-202690</addressline>
                <addressline>Fax: +353-61-213415</addressline>
                <addressline>Email: specoll@ul.ie</addressline>
                <addressline>https://specialcollections.ul.ie/</addressline>
              </address>
            </repository>
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              <language langcode="eng">English</language>
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              <famname id="atom_124558_actor">O'Mara family of Strand House, Limerick</famname>
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            <note>
              <p>The history of the O’Mara family of Strand house and O’Mara’s Bacon Company go hand in hand.  The factory was founded in 1839 by James O’Meara (1817-1899), who originated from the village of Toomevaara in county Tipperary.  Having worked for some years in the woollen mills in Clonmel, he got a job as a clerk with Matterson’s Bacon Factory in Limerick and in 1839 founded O’Mara’s Bacon Company in his house on Mungret Street.  It is said that he dropped the ‘e’ from his surname as he felt that O’Meara was too long for commercial purposes.  James initially sold for Matterson’s but soon began to cure his own bacon in the basement of his house.  As his business grew, he acquired dedicated premises for the purpose near the top of Roche’s Street.<lb/><lb/>In 1841, James O’Mara married Honora Fowley (d. 1878), who worked in the bacon business alongside her husband.  A devoted nationalist, James was one of the early supporters of Isaac Butt’s Home Rule movement.  He was High Sheriff of Limerick City in 1887, and acted as Town Councillor on Limerick Corporation at least from 1888 to 1898.<lb/><lb/>James and Honora O’Mara had 13 children, of whom the two eldest surviving sons, Stephen O’Mara (1844-1926) and John (Jack) O’Mara (1856-1919) were instrumental in building up the O’Mara’s Bacon Factory into a great success.   The youngest son, Joseph (Joe) O’Mara (1864-1927) became a celebrated opera singer.<lb/><lb/>When James O’Mara retired from business his son John (Jack) O’Mara became manager of the O’Mara Bacon Factory.  In the late 1880s, Jack was invited to Russia by Tsar Alexander III to provide instruction on bacon curing.  He stayed in St Petersburg to supervise the construction of a bacon factory.  In 1891, his father bought the rights of the Russian Bacon Company and the family imported bacon from Russia into London until 1903.  James (Jim) O’Mara (1858-1893) acted as agent for O’Mara’s in London until his untimely death from heart disease.  His nephew James O’Mara (1873-1948), son of Stephen O’Mara Senior (1844-1926), took over the agency and held it until 1914.<lb/><lb/>When John (Jack) O’Mara died in 1919, his younger brother Stephen O’Mara (1844-1926) became Managing Director of O’Mara Limited and remained in that capacity until 1923.  Having entered into the family business at the age of fifteen, his great business acumen established O’Mara’s Bacon Factory as one of the most prominent commercial enterprises in Limerick city.  He also purchased a bacon factory in Palmerston, Ontario, Canada, which was managed by his son Joseph (Joe) O’Mara (1878-1950) until the business was wound up in the 1940s.<lb/><lb/>Like his father, Stephen O’Mara was a strong supporter of Isaac Butt’s Home Rule movement and a member of the committee which secured Butt’s election for Limerick city in 1871.  He later developed a close association with Charles Stewart Parnell and was elected Member of Parliament for Upper Ossory in Kilkenny South for the Irish Parliamentary Party in February 1886.  When the Irish National League split from Irish Parliamentary Party in December 1890, O’Mara took the Parnellite side.  He continued to act as trustee of the Party funds until 1908, when he resigned from his trusteeship.  Towards the end of his life, his moderate political views became more radicalised under the influence of his sons James (1873-1948) and Stephen Junior (1884-1959).  He had agreed with his son James’s decision to resign from the Irish Parliamentary Party in 1907 in order to join Sinn Fein, and personally supported the party in the 1918 General Election.  Both Stephen and his son James were strong supporters of the 1921 Anglo-Irish Treaty but were on friendly terms with Eamon de Valera who, it is said, spent the night at the O’Mara family home, Strand House, as the Treaty was being signed in London.  In the 1925 election, Stephen O’Mara was elected as Senator to the Free State Seanad.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara was also a prominent figure in local politics.  He became a Town Councillor on Limerick Corporation in the 1880s and was elected Mayor of Limerick in 1885.  He was the first Mayor of Limerick to be elected on a Nationalist ticket.  He also served as High Sheriff of Limerick city in 1888, 1913 and 1914.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara married Ellen Pigott in 1867, and the couple had 12 children of whom the eldest three died tragically of diphtheria in 1872.  From c. 1909 onwards, the family lived at Strand House.  Their third son, Stephen O’Mara Junior, was born on 5 January 1884.  He entered the family business in 1903 when he travelled to Canada to work in the bacon factory established by the O’Mara family in Ottawa.  In 1923, he became Managing Director of O’Mara Limited and created numerous employment opportunities by establishing bacon factories in Claremorris, County Mayo, and Letterkenny, County Donegal, in the 1930s.  The three bacon companies were amalgamated in 1938 and formed into the Bacon Company of Ireland.  Stephen O’Mara Junior remained the company’s chairman until his death in 1959.  In 1987, the Bacon Company of Ireland merged with Hanley of Rooskey and Benesford UK (Castlebar) with assistance from the Industrial Development Agency Ireland (IDA) to form Irish Country Bacon.  Shortly afterwards the old O’Mara factory in Limerick was closed down.  It was subsequently demolished to make way for a multi-storey car park.<lb/><lb/>Throughout his life, Stephen O’Mara Junior played a prominent role in both local and national affairs.  Unlike his father and elder brother James, Stephen was opposed to the Anglo-Irish Treaty but in a conciliatory manner.  He was prominently identified with the Sinn Fein movement after the Easter Rising.  He was one of Eamon de Valera’s strongest supporters and a member of his Fianna Fail Party since its formation in 1926.<lb/><lb/>When George Clancy, Lord Mayor of Limerick, and his predecessor Michael O’Callaghan were murdered by the British military forces in March 1921, Stephen decided to stand for election and became Mayor.  He was re-elected in 1922 and in 1923 but resigned before the expiration of his term of office.<lb/><lb/>In 1921, Stephen O’Mara Junior was selected to go to America as Special Envoy appointed by Dáil Éireann to the United States to oversee one of the country’s biggest fundraising drives to finance the first Dáil and was made Trustee of the funds.  The funds-drive was terminated following the signing of the Anglo-Irish Treaty.  Considering himself as the exchequer to the Irish Free State, O’Mara refused to hand over the collected funds to the pro-Treaty administration which resulted in his imprisonment in 1922-1923.  He had also been imprisoned for seven days in 1921 for refusing to pay a fine of £10 for non-compliance with a military summons.<lb/><lb/>The bulk of the money collected during the Bond Drive was left in various banks in New York and remained untouched for a number of years.  In 1927, following legal action between the Irish Government and Eamon de Valera, a court in New York ordered that money outstanding to bond holders must be paid back.  Having anticipated such a ruling, de Valera’s legal team invited bond holders to sign over their bonds to de Valera, for which they were paid 58 cents to the dollar.  The monies so accumulated were used to launch the national daily newspaper *The Irish Press*.  Stephen O’Mara served on the paper’s Board of Directors until his resignation in 1935.<lb/><lb/>In 1932, Stephen O’Mara was once again sent to America on a mission involving the various consular and diplomatic offices maintained in the country by the Irish Government.  Two years later, he was appointed a member of the Commission on Vocational Organisation, on which he served until 1943.  In 1959, he was created a member of the Council of State following de Valera’s inauguration as President of Ireland.  Stephen O’Mara died less than two months after his appointment, on 11 November 1959.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara Junior married in 1918 Anne O’Brien, third daughter of Thomas O’Brien of Boru House, and the couple had an adopted son, Peter O’Mara.  Anne’s youngest sister, Kate O’Brien, became one of the most prominent novelists in 20th-century Ireland and a voice of the respectable Irish Roman Catholic middle class.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
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            <p>Article entitled ‘Our Railway Stations Are Almost Human’ by Kate O’Brien, published in the *Evening Standard* on 30 April 1929.</p>
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            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">‘A Thousand Miles of Lovely Walks’</unittitle>
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            <unitid type="alternative" label="Original number">P40/832 (15)</unitid>
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                <addressline>GL0-051, Glucksman Library, University of Limerick</addressline>
                <addressline>Limerick</addressline>
                <addressline>Ireland</addressline>
                <addressline>V94 DPY6</addressline>
                <addressline>Telephone: +353-61-202690</addressline>
                <addressline>Fax: +353-61-213415</addressline>
                <addressline>Email: specoll@ul.ie</addressline>
                <addressline>https://specialcollections.ul.ie/</addressline>
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              <language langcode="eng">English</language>
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              <famname id="atom_124561_actor">O'Mara family of Strand House, Limerick</famname>
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            <note>
              <p>The history of the O’Mara family of Strand house and O’Mara’s Bacon Company go hand in hand.  The factory was founded in 1839 by James O’Meara (1817-1899), who originated from the village of Toomevaara in county Tipperary.  Having worked for some years in the woollen mills in Clonmel, he got a job as a clerk with Matterson’s Bacon Factory in Limerick and in 1839 founded O’Mara’s Bacon Company in his house on Mungret Street.  It is said that he dropped the ‘e’ from his surname as he felt that O’Meara was too long for commercial purposes.  James initially sold for Matterson’s but soon began to cure his own bacon in the basement of his house.  As his business grew, he acquired dedicated premises for the purpose near the top of Roche’s Street.<lb/><lb/>In 1841, James O’Mara married Honora Fowley (d. 1878), who worked in the bacon business alongside her husband.  A devoted nationalist, James was one of the early supporters of Isaac Butt’s Home Rule movement.  He was High Sheriff of Limerick City in 1887, and acted as Town Councillor on Limerick Corporation at least from 1888 to 1898.<lb/><lb/>James and Honora O’Mara had 13 children, of whom the two eldest surviving sons, Stephen O’Mara (1844-1926) and John (Jack) O’Mara (1856-1919) were instrumental in building up the O’Mara’s Bacon Factory into a great success.   The youngest son, Joseph (Joe) O’Mara (1864-1927) became a celebrated opera singer.<lb/><lb/>When James O’Mara retired from business his son John (Jack) O’Mara became manager of the O’Mara Bacon Factory.  In the late 1880s, Jack was invited to Russia by Tsar Alexander III to provide instruction on bacon curing.  He stayed in St Petersburg to supervise the construction of a bacon factory.  In 1891, his father bought the rights of the Russian Bacon Company and the family imported bacon from Russia into London until 1903.  James (Jim) O’Mara (1858-1893) acted as agent for O’Mara’s in London until his untimely death from heart disease.  His nephew James O’Mara (1873-1948), son of Stephen O’Mara Senior (1844-1926), took over the agency and held it until 1914.<lb/><lb/>When John (Jack) O’Mara died in 1919, his younger brother Stephen O’Mara (1844-1926) became Managing Director of O’Mara Limited and remained in that capacity until 1923.  Having entered into the family business at the age of fifteen, his great business acumen established O’Mara’s Bacon Factory as one of the most prominent commercial enterprises in Limerick city.  He also purchased a bacon factory in Palmerston, Ontario, Canada, which was managed by his son Joseph (Joe) O’Mara (1878-1950) until the business was wound up in the 1940s.<lb/><lb/>Like his father, Stephen O’Mara was a strong supporter of Isaac Butt’s Home Rule movement and a member of the committee which secured Butt’s election for Limerick city in 1871.  He later developed a close association with Charles Stewart Parnell and was elected Member of Parliament for Upper Ossory in Kilkenny South for the Irish Parliamentary Party in February 1886.  When the Irish National League split from Irish Parliamentary Party in December 1890, O’Mara took the Parnellite side.  He continued to act as trustee of the Party funds until 1908, when he resigned from his trusteeship.  Towards the end of his life, his moderate political views became more radicalised under the influence of his sons James (1873-1948) and Stephen Junior (1884-1959).  He had agreed with his son James’s decision to resign from the Irish Parliamentary Party in 1907 in order to join Sinn Fein, and personally supported the party in the 1918 General Election.  Both Stephen and his son James were strong supporters of the 1921 Anglo-Irish Treaty but were on friendly terms with Eamon de Valera who, it is said, spent the night at the O’Mara family home, Strand House, as the Treaty was being signed in London.  In the 1925 election, Stephen O’Mara was elected as Senator to the Free State Seanad.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara was also a prominent figure in local politics.  He became a Town Councillor on Limerick Corporation in the 1880s and was elected Mayor of Limerick in 1885.  He was the first Mayor of Limerick to be elected on a Nationalist ticket.  He also served as High Sheriff of Limerick city in 1888, 1913 and 1914.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara married Ellen Pigott in 1867, and the couple had 12 children of whom the eldest three died tragically of diphtheria in 1872.  From c. 1909 onwards, the family lived at Strand House.  Their third son, Stephen O’Mara Junior, was born on 5 January 1884.  He entered the family business in 1903 when he travelled to Canada to work in the bacon factory established by the O’Mara family in Ottawa.  In 1923, he became Managing Director of O’Mara Limited and created numerous employment opportunities by establishing bacon factories in Claremorris, County Mayo, and Letterkenny, County Donegal, in the 1930s.  The three bacon companies were amalgamated in 1938 and formed into the Bacon Company of Ireland.  Stephen O’Mara Junior remained the company’s chairman until his death in 1959.  In 1987, the Bacon Company of Ireland merged with Hanley of Rooskey and Benesford UK (Castlebar) with assistance from the Industrial Development Agency Ireland (IDA) to form Irish Country Bacon.  Shortly afterwards the old O’Mara factory in Limerick was closed down.  It was subsequently demolished to make way for a multi-storey car park.<lb/><lb/>Throughout his life, Stephen O’Mara Junior played a prominent role in both local and national affairs.  Unlike his father and elder brother James, Stephen was opposed to the Anglo-Irish Treaty but in a conciliatory manner.  He was prominently identified with the Sinn Fein movement after the Easter Rising.  He was one of Eamon de Valera’s strongest supporters and a member of his Fianna Fail Party since its formation in 1926.<lb/><lb/>When George Clancy, Lord Mayor of Limerick, and his predecessor Michael O’Callaghan were murdered by the British military forces in March 1921, Stephen decided to stand for election and became Mayor.  He was re-elected in 1922 and in 1923 but resigned before the expiration of his term of office.<lb/><lb/>In 1921, Stephen O’Mara Junior was selected to go to America as Special Envoy appointed by Dáil Éireann to the United States to oversee one of the country’s biggest fundraising drives to finance the first Dáil and was made Trustee of the funds.  The funds-drive was terminated following the signing of the Anglo-Irish Treaty.  Considering himself as the exchequer to the Irish Free State, O’Mara refused to hand over the collected funds to the pro-Treaty administration which resulted in his imprisonment in 1922-1923.  He had also been imprisoned for seven days in 1921 for refusing to pay a fine of £10 for non-compliance with a military summons.<lb/><lb/>The bulk of the money collected during the Bond Drive was left in various banks in New York and remained untouched for a number of years.  In 1927, following legal action between the Irish Government and Eamon de Valera, a court in New York ordered that money outstanding to bond holders must be paid back.  Having anticipated such a ruling, de Valera’s legal team invited bond holders to sign over their bonds to de Valera, for which they were paid 58 cents to the dollar.  The monies so accumulated were used to launch the national daily newspaper *The Irish Press*.  Stephen O’Mara served on the paper’s Board of Directors until his resignation in 1935.<lb/><lb/>In 1932, Stephen O’Mara was once again sent to America on a mission involving the various consular and diplomatic offices maintained in the country by the Irish Government.  Two years later, he was appointed a member of the Commission on Vocational Organisation, on which he served until 1943.  In 1959, he was created a member of the Council of State following de Valera’s inauguration as President of Ireland.  Stephen O’Mara died less than two months after his appointment, on 11 November 1959.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara Junior married in 1918 Anne O’Brien, third daughter of Thomas O’Brien of Boru House, and the couple had an adopted son, Peter O’Mara.  Anne’s youngest sister, Kate O’Brien, became one of the most prominent novelists in 20th-century Ireland and a voice of the respectable Irish Roman Catholic middle class.</p>
            </note>
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            <p>Article entitled ‘A Thousand Miles of Lovely Walks’ by Kate O’Brien, published in the *Daily Chronicle* on 10 August 1929.</p>
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            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">‘The Woman of Thirty Odd’</unittitle>
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            <unitdate normal="1929-10-21/1929-10-21" encodinganalog="3.1.3">21 October 1929</unitdate>
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              <language langcode="eng">English</language>
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              <famname id="atom_124564_actor">O'Mara family of Strand House, Limerick</famname>
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            <note>
              <p>The history of the O’Mara family of Strand house and O’Mara’s Bacon Company go hand in hand.  The factory was founded in 1839 by James O’Meara (1817-1899), who originated from the village of Toomevaara in county Tipperary.  Having worked for some years in the woollen mills in Clonmel, he got a job as a clerk with Matterson’s Bacon Factory in Limerick and in 1839 founded O’Mara’s Bacon Company in his house on Mungret Street.  It is said that he dropped the ‘e’ from his surname as he felt that O’Meara was too long for commercial purposes.  James initially sold for Matterson’s but soon began to cure his own bacon in the basement of his house.  As his business grew, he acquired dedicated premises for the purpose near the top of Roche’s Street.<lb/><lb/>In 1841, James O’Mara married Honora Fowley (d. 1878), who worked in the bacon business alongside her husband.  A devoted nationalist, James was one of the early supporters of Isaac Butt’s Home Rule movement.  He was High Sheriff of Limerick City in 1887, and acted as Town Councillor on Limerick Corporation at least from 1888 to 1898.<lb/><lb/>James and Honora O’Mara had 13 children, of whom the two eldest surviving sons, Stephen O’Mara (1844-1926) and John (Jack) O’Mara (1856-1919) were instrumental in building up the O’Mara’s Bacon Factory into a great success.   The youngest son, Joseph (Joe) O’Mara (1864-1927) became a celebrated opera singer.<lb/><lb/>When James O’Mara retired from business his son John (Jack) O’Mara became manager of the O’Mara Bacon Factory.  In the late 1880s, Jack was invited to Russia by Tsar Alexander III to provide instruction on bacon curing.  He stayed in St Petersburg to supervise the construction of a bacon factory.  In 1891, his father bought the rights of the Russian Bacon Company and the family imported bacon from Russia into London until 1903.  James (Jim) O’Mara (1858-1893) acted as agent for O’Mara’s in London until his untimely death from heart disease.  His nephew James O’Mara (1873-1948), son of Stephen O’Mara Senior (1844-1926), took over the agency and held it until 1914.<lb/><lb/>When John (Jack) O’Mara died in 1919, his younger brother Stephen O’Mara (1844-1926) became Managing Director of O’Mara Limited and remained in that capacity until 1923.  Having entered into the family business at the age of fifteen, his great business acumen established O’Mara’s Bacon Factory as one of the most prominent commercial enterprises in Limerick city.  He also purchased a bacon factory in Palmerston, Ontario, Canada, which was managed by his son Joseph (Joe) O’Mara (1878-1950) until the business was wound up in the 1940s.<lb/><lb/>Like his father, Stephen O’Mara was a strong supporter of Isaac Butt’s Home Rule movement and a member of the committee which secured Butt’s election for Limerick city in 1871.  He later developed a close association with Charles Stewart Parnell and was elected Member of Parliament for Upper Ossory in Kilkenny South for the Irish Parliamentary Party in February 1886.  When the Irish National League split from Irish Parliamentary Party in December 1890, O’Mara took the Parnellite side.  He continued to act as trustee of the Party funds until 1908, when he resigned from his trusteeship.  Towards the end of his life, his moderate political views became more radicalised under the influence of his sons James (1873-1948) and Stephen Junior (1884-1959).  He had agreed with his son James’s decision to resign from the Irish Parliamentary Party in 1907 in order to join Sinn Fein, and personally supported the party in the 1918 General Election.  Both Stephen and his son James were strong supporters of the 1921 Anglo-Irish Treaty but were on friendly terms with Eamon de Valera who, it is said, spent the night at the O’Mara family home, Strand House, as the Treaty was being signed in London.  In the 1925 election, Stephen O’Mara was elected as Senator to the Free State Seanad.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara was also a prominent figure in local politics.  He became a Town Councillor on Limerick Corporation in the 1880s and was elected Mayor of Limerick in 1885.  He was the first Mayor of Limerick to be elected on a Nationalist ticket.  He also served as High Sheriff of Limerick city in 1888, 1913 and 1914.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara married Ellen Pigott in 1867, and the couple had 12 children of whom the eldest three died tragically of diphtheria in 1872.  From c. 1909 onwards, the family lived at Strand House.  Their third son, Stephen O’Mara Junior, was born on 5 January 1884.  He entered the family business in 1903 when he travelled to Canada to work in the bacon factory established by the O’Mara family in Ottawa.  In 1923, he became Managing Director of O’Mara Limited and created numerous employment opportunities by establishing bacon factories in Claremorris, County Mayo, and Letterkenny, County Donegal, in the 1930s.  The three bacon companies were amalgamated in 1938 and formed into the Bacon Company of Ireland.  Stephen O’Mara Junior remained the company’s chairman until his death in 1959.  In 1987, the Bacon Company of Ireland merged with Hanley of Rooskey and Benesford UK (Castlebar) with assistance from the Industrial Development Agency Ireland (IDA) to form Irish Country Bacon.  Shortly afterwards the old O’Mara factory in Limerick was closed down.  It was subsequently demolished to make way for a multi-storey car park.<lb/><lb/>Throughout his life, Stephen O’Mara Junior played a prominent role in both local and national affairs.  Unlike his father and elder brother James, Stephen was opposed to the Anglo-Irish Treaty but in a conciliatory manner.  He was prominently identified with the Sinn Fein movement after the Easter Rising.  He was one of Eamon de Valera’s strongest supporters and a member of his Fianna Fail Party since its formation in 1926.<lb/><lb/>When George Clancy, Lord Mayor of Limerick, and his predecessor Michael O’Callaghan were murdered by the British military forces in March 1921, Stephen decided to stand for election and became Mayor.  He was re-elected in 1922 and in 1923 but resigned before the expiration of his term of office.<lb/><lb/>In 1921, Stephen O’Mara Junior was selected to go to America as Special Envoy appointed by Dáil Éireann to the United States to oversee one of the country’s biggest fundraising drives to finance the first Dáil and was made Trustee of the funds.  The funds-drive was terminated following the signing of the Anglo-Irish Treaty.  Considering himself as the exchequer to the Irish Free State, O’Mara refused to hand over the collected funds to the pro-Treaty administration which resulted in his imprisonment in 1922-1923.  He had also been imprisoned for seven days in 1921 for refusing to pay a fine of £10 for non-compliance with a military summons.<lb/><lb/>The bulk of the money collected during the Bond Drive was left in various banks in New York and remained untouched for a number of years.  In 1927, following legal action between the Irish Government and Eamon de Valera, a court in New York ordered that money outstanding to bond holders must be paid back.  Having anticipated such a ruling, de Valera’s legal team invited bond holders to sign over their bonds to de Valera, for which they were paid 58 cents to the dollar.  The monies so accumulated were used to launch the national daily newspaper *The Irish Press*.  Stephen O’Mara served on the paper’s Board of Directors until his resignation in 1935.<lb/><lb/>In 1932, Stephen O’Mara was once again sent to America on a mission involving the various consular and diplomatic offices maintained in the country by the Irish Government.  Two years later, he was appointed a member of the Commission on Vocational Organisation, on which he served until 1943.  In 1959, he was created a member of the Council of State following de Valera’s inauguration as President of Ireland.  Stephen O’Mara died less than two months after his appointment, on 11 November 1959.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara Junior married in 1918 Anne O’Brien, third daughter of Thomas O’Brien of Boru House, and the couple had an adopted son, Peter O’Mara.  Anne’s youngest sister, Kate O’Brien, became one of the most prominent novelists in 20th-century Ireland and a voice of the respectable Irish Roman Catholic middle class.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
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          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Article entitled ‘The Woman of Thirty Odd’ by Kate O’Brien, published in the *Daily Mirror* on 21 October 1929.</p>
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          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">‘Overheard’</unittitle>
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              <corpname>Special Collections and Archives Department</corpname>
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                <addressline>GL0-051, Glucksman Library, University of Limerick</addressline>
                <addressline>Limerick</addressline>
                <addressline>Ireland</addressline>
                <addressline>V94 DPY6</addressline>
                <addressline>Telephone: +353-61-202690</addressline>
                <addressline>Fax: +353-61-213415</addressline>
                <addressline>Email: specoll@ul.ie</addressline>
                <addressline>https://specialcollections.ul.ie/</addressline>
              </address>
            </repository>
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              <language langcode="eng">English</language>
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              <famname id="atom_124567_actor">O'Mara family of Strand House, Limerick</famname>
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            <note>
              <p>The history of the O’Mara family of Strand house and O’Mara’s Bacon Company go hand in hand.  The factory was founded in 1839 by James O’Meara (1817-1899), who originated from the village of Toomevaara in county Tipperary.  Having worked for some years in the woollen mills in Clonmel, he got a job as a clerk with Matterson’s Bacon Factory in Limerick and in 1839 founded O’Mara’s Bacon Company in his house on Mungret Street.  It is said that he dropped the ‘e’ from his surname as he felt that O’Meara was too long for commercial purposes.  James initially sold for Matterson’s but soon began to cure his own bacon in the basement of his house.  As his business grew, he acquired dedicated premises for the purpose near the top of Roche’s Street.<lb/><lb/>In 1841, James O’Mara married Honora Fowley (d. 1878), who worked in the bacon business alongside her husband.  A devoted nationalist, James was one of the early supporters of Isaac Butt’s Home Rule movement.  He was High Sheriff of Limerick City in 1887, and acted as Town Councillor on Limerick Corporation at least from 1888 to 1898.<lb/><lb/>James and Honora O’Mara had 13 children, of whom the two eldest surviving sons, Stephen O’Mara (1844-1926) and John (Jack) O’Mara (1856-1919) were instrumental in building up the O’Mara’s Bacon Factory into a great success.   The youngest son, Joseph (Joe) O’Mara (1864-1927) became a celebrated opera singer.<lb/><lb/>When James O’Mara retired from business his son John (Jack) O’Mara became manager of the O’Mara Bacon Factory.  In the late 1880s, Jack was invited to Russia by Tsar Alexander III to provide instruction on bacon curing.  He stayed in St Petersburg to supervise the construction of a bacon factory.  In 1891, his father bought the rights of the Russian Bacon Company and the family imported bacon from Russia into London until 1903.  James (Jim) O’Mara (1858-1893) acted as agent for O’Mara’s in London until his untimely death from heart disease.  His nephew James O’Mara (1873-1948), son of Stephen O’Mara Senior (1844-1926), took over the agency and held it until 1914.<lb/><lb/>When John (Jack) O’Mara died in 1919, his younger brother Stephen O’Mara (1844-1926) became Managing Director of O’Mara Limited and remained in that capacity until 1923.  Having entered into the family business at the age of fifteen, his great business acumen established O’Mara’s Bacon Factory as one of the most prominent commercial enterprises in Limerick city.  He also purchased a bacon factory in Palmerston, Ontario, Canada, which was managed by his son Joseph (Joe) O’Mara (1878-1950) until the business was wound up in the 1940s.<lb/><lb/>Like his father, Stephen O’Mara was a strong supporter of Isaac Butt’s Home Rule movement and a member of the committee which secured Butt’s election for Limerick city in 1871.  He later developed a close association with Charles Stewart Parnell and was elected Member of Parliament for Upper Ossory in Kilkenny South for the Irish Parliamentary Party in February 1886.  When the Irish National League split from Irish Parliamentary Party in December 1890, O’Mara took the Parnellite side.  He continued to act as trustee of the Party funds until 1908, when he resigned from his trusteeship.  Towards the end of his life, his moderate political views became more radicalised under the influence of his sons James (1873-1948) and Stephen Junior (1884-1959).  He had agreed with his son James’s decision to resign from the Irish Parliamentary Party in 1907 in order to join Sinn Fein, and personally supported the party in the 1918 General Election.  Both Stephen and his son James were strong supporters of the 1921 Anglo-Irish Treaty but were on friendly terms with Eamon de Valera who, it is said, spent the night at the O’Mara family home, Strand House, as the Treaty was being signed in London.  In the 1925 election, Stephen O’Mara was elected as Senator to the Free State Seanad.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara was also a prominent figure in local politics.  He became a Town Councillor on Limerick Corporation in the 1880s and was elected Mayor of Limerick in 1885.  He was the first Mayor of Limerick to be elected on a Nationalist ticket.  He also served as High Sheriff of Limerick city in 1888, 1913 and 1914.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara married Ellen Pigott in 1867, and the couple had 12 children of whom the eldest three died tragically of diphtheria in 1872.  From c. 1909 onwards, the family lived at Strand House.  Their third son, Stephen O’Mara Junior, was born on 5 January 1884.  He entered the family business in 1903 when he travelled to Canada to work in the bacon factory established by the O’Mara family in Ottawa.  In 1923, he became Managing Director of O’Mara Limited and created numerous employment opportunities by establishing bacon factories in Claremorris, County Mayo, and Letterkenny, County Donegal, in the 1930s.  The three bacon companies were amalgamated in 1938 and formed into the Bacon Company of Ireland.  Stephen O’Mara Junior remained the company’s chairman until his death in 1959.  In 1987, the Bacon Company of Ireland merged with Hanley of Rooskey and Benesford UK (Castlebar) with assistance from the Industrial Development Agency Ireland (IDA) to form Irish Country Bacon.  Shortly afterwards the old O’Mara factory in Limerick was closed down.  It was subsequently demolished to make way for a multi-storey car park.<lb/><lb/>Throughout his life, Stephen O’Mara Junior played a prominent role in both local and national affairs.  Unlike his father and elder brother James, Stephen was opposed to the Anglo-Irish Treaty but in a conciliatory manner.  He was prominently identified with the Sinn Fein movement after the Easter Rising.  He was one of Eamon de Valera’s strongest supporters and a member of his Fianna Fail Party since its formation in 1926.<lb/><lb/>When George Clancy, Lord Mayor of Limerick, and his predecessor Michael O’Callaghan were murdered by the British military forces in March 1921, Stephen decided to stand for election and became Mayor.  He was re-elected in 1922 and in 1923 but resigned before the expiration of his term of office.<lb/><lb/>In 1921, Stephen O’Mara Junior was selected to go to America as Special Envoy appointed by Dáil Éireann to the United States to oversee one of the country’s biggest fundraising drives to finance the first Dáil and was made Trustee of the funds.  The funds-drive was terminated following the signing of the Anglo-Irish Treaty.  Considering himself as the exchequer to the Irish Free State, O’Mara refused to hand over the collected funds to the pro-Treaty administration which resulted in his imprisonment in 1922-1923.  He had also been imprisoned for seven days in 1921 for refusing to pay a fine of £10 for non-compliance with a military summons.<lb/><lb/>The bulk of the money collected during the Bond Drive was left in various banks in New York and remained untouched for a number of years.  In 1927, following legal action between the Irish Government and Eamon de Valera, a court in New York ordered that money outstanding to bond holders must be paid back.  Having anticipated such a ruling, de Valera’s legal team invited bond holders to sign over their bonds to de Valera, for which they were paid 58 cents to the dollar.  The monies so accumulated were used to launch the national daily newspaper *The Irish Press*.  Stephen O’Mara served on the paper’s Board of Directors until his resignation in 1935.<lb/><lb/>In 1932, Stephen O’Mara was once again sent to America on a mission involving the various consular and diplomatic offices maintained in the country by the Irish Government.  Two years later, he was appointed a member of the Commission on Vocational Organisation, on which he served until 1943.  In 1959, he was created a member of the Council of State following de Valera’s inauguration as President of Ireland.  Stephen O’Mara died less than two months after his appointment, on 11 November 1959.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara Junior married in 1918 Anne O’Brien, third daughter of Thomas O’Brien of Boru House, and the couple had an adopted son, Peter O’Mara.  Anne’s youngest sister, Kate O’Brien, became one of the most prominent novelists in 20th-century Ireland and a voice of the respectable Irish Roman Catholic middle class.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
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            <p>Article entitled ‘Overheard’ by Kate O’Brien, published in *Time and Tide* on 2 March 1935.</p>
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          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">‘What I Think of Connemara’</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="IE" repositorycode="2135">P40/3/10/2/2/18</unitid>
            <unitid type="alternative" label="Original number">P40/834 (1)</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1945-07-08/1945-07-08" encodinganalog="3.1.3">8 July 1945</unitdate>
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        1 item    </physdesc>
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                <addressline>GL0-051, Glucksman Library, University of Limerick</addressline>
                <addressline>Limerick</addressline>
                <addressline>Ireland</addressline>
                <addressline>V94 DPY6</addressline>
                <addressline>Telephone: +353-61-202690</addressline>
                <addressline>Fax: +353-61-213415</addressline>
                <addressline>Email: specoll@ul.ie</addressline>
                <addressline>https://specialcollections.ul.ie/</addressline>
              </address>
            </repository>
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              <language langcode="eng">English</language>
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              <famname id="atom_124570_actor">O'Mara family of Strand House, Limerick</famname>
            </origination>
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          <bioghist id="md5-be03d29153491160a15961757089b84f" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>The history of the O’Mara family of Strand house and O’Mara’s Bacon Company go hand in hand.  The factory was founded in 1839 by James O’Meara (1817-1899), who originated from the village of Toomevaara in county Tipperary.  Having worked for some years in the woollen mills in Clonmel, he got a job as a clerk with Matterson’s Bacon Factory in Limerick and in 1839 founded O’Mara’s Bacon Company in his house on Mungret Street.  It is said that he dropped the ‘e’ from his surname as he felt that O’Meara was too long for commercial purposes.  James initially sold for Matterson’s but soon began to cure his own bacon in the basement of his house.  As his business grew, he acquired dedicated premises for the purpose near the top of Roche’s Street.<lb/><lb/>In 1841, James O’Mara married Honora Fowley (d. 1878), who worked in the bacon business alongside her husband.  A devoted nationalist, James was one of the early supporters of Isaac Butt’s Home Rule movement.  He was High Sheriff of Limerick City in 1887, and acted as Town Councillor on Limerick Corporation at least from 1888 to 1898.<lb/><lb/>James and Honora O’Mara had 13 children, of whom the two eldest surviving sons, Stephen O’Mara (1844-1926) and John (Jack) O’Mara (1856-1919) were instrumental in building up the O’Mara’s Bacon Factory into a great success.   The youngest son, Joseph (Joe) O’Mara (1864-1927) became a celebrated opera singer.<lb/><lb/>When James O’Mara retired from business his son John (Jack) O’Mara became manager of the O’Mara Bacon Factory.  In the late 1880s, Jack was invited to Russia by Tsar Alexander III to provide instruction on bacon curing.  He stayed in St Petersburg to supervise the construction of a bacon factory.  In 1891, his father bought the rights of the Russian Bacon Company and the family imported bacon from Russia into London until 1903.  James (Jim) O’Mara (1858-1893) acted as agent for O’Mara’s in London until his untimely death from heart disease.  His nephew James O’Mara (1873-1948), son of Stephen O’Mara Senior (1844-1926), took over the agency and held it until 1914.<lb/><lb/>When John (Jack) O’Mara died in 1919, his younger brother Stephen O’Mara (1844-1926) became Managing Director of O’Mara Limited and remained in that capacity until 1923.  Having entered into the family business at the age of fifteen, his great business acumen established O’Mara’s Bacon Factory as one of the most prominent commercial enterprises in Limerick city.  He also purchased a bacon factory in Palmerston, Ontario, Canada, which was managed by his son Joseph (Joe) O’Mara (1878-1950) until the business was wound up in the 1940s.<lb/><lb/>Like his father, Stephen O’Mara was a strong supporter of Isaac Butt’s Home Rule movement and a member of the committee which secured Butt’s election for Limerick city in 1871.  He later developed a close association with Charles Stewart Parnell and was elected Member of Parliament for Upper Ossory in Kilkenny South for the Irish Parliamentary Party in February 1886.  When the Irish National League split from Irish Parliamentary Party in December 1890, O’Mara took the Parnellite side.  He continued to act as trustee of the Party funds until 1908, when he resigned from his trusteeship.  Towards the end of his life, his moderate political views became more radicalised under the influence of his sons James (1873-1948) and Stephen Junior (1884-1959).  He had agreed with his son James’s decision to resign from the Irish Parliamentary Party in 1907 in order to join Sinn Fein, and personally supported the party in the 1918 General Election.  Both Stephen and his son James were strong supporters of the 1921 Anglo-Irish Treaty but were on friendly terms with Eamon de Valera who, it is said, spent the night at the O’Mara family home, Strand House, as the Treaty was being signed in London.  In the 1925 election, Stephen O’Mara was elected as Senator to the Free State Seanad.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara was also a prominent figure in local politics.  He became a Town Councillor on Limerick Corporation in the 1880s and was elected Mayor of Limerick in 1885.  He was the first Mayor of Limerick to be elected on a Nationalist ticket.  He also served as High Sheriff of Limerick city in 1888, 1913 and 1914.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara married Ellen Pigott in 1867, and the couple had 12 children of whom the eldest three died tragically of diphtheria in 1872.  From c. 1909 onwards, the family lived at Strand House.  Their third son, Stephen O’Mara Junior, was born on 5 January 1884.  He entered the family business in 1903 when he travelled to Canada to work in the bacon factory established by the O’Mara family in Ottawa.  In 1923, he became Managing Director of O’Mara Limited and created numerous employment opportunities by establishing bacon factories in Claremorris, County Mayo, and Letterkenny, County Donegal, in the 1930s.  The three bacon companies were amalgamated in 1938 and formed into the Bacon Company of Ireland.  Stephen O’Mara Junior remained the company’s chairman until his death in 1959.  In 1987, the Bacon Company of Ireland merged with Hanley of Rooskey and Benesford UK (Castlebar) with assistance from the Industrial Development Agency Ireland (IDA) to form Irish Country Bacon.  Shortly afterwards the old O’Mara factory in Limerick was closed down.  It was subsequently demolished to make way for a multi-storey car park.<lb/><lb/>Throughout his life, Stephen O’Mara Junior played a prominent role in both local and national affairs.  Unlike his father and elder brother James, Stephen was opposed to the Anglo-Irish Treaty but in a conciliatory manner.  He was prominently identified with the Sinn Fein movement after the Easter Rising.  He was one of Eamon de Valera’s strongest supporters and a member of his Fianna Fail Party since its formation in 1926.<lb/><lb/>When George Clancy, Lord Mayor of Limerick, and his predecessor Michael O’Callaghan were murdered by the British military forces in March 1921, Stephen decided to stand for election and became Mayor.  He was re-elected in 1922 and in 1923 but resigned before the expiration of his term of office.<lb/><lb/>In 1921, Stephen O’Mara Junior was selected to go to America as Special Envoy appointed by Dáil Éireann to the United States to oversee one of the country’s biggest fundraising drives to finance the first Dáil and was made Trustee of the funds.  The funds-drive was terminated following the signing of the Anglo-Irish Treaty.  Considering himself as the exchequer to the Irish Free State, O’Mara refused to hand over the collected funds to the pro-Treaty administration which resulted in his imprisonment in 1922-1923.  He had also been imprisoned for seven days in 1921 for refusing to pay a fine of £10 for non-compliance with a military summons.<lb/><lb/>The bulk of the money collected during the Bond Drive was left in various banks in New York and remained untouched for a number of years.  In 1927, following legal action between the Irish Government and Eamon de Valera, a court in New York ordered that money outstanding to bond holders must be paid back.  Having anticipated such a ruling, de Valera’s legal team invited bond holders to sign over their bonds to de Valera, for which they were paid 58 cents to the dollar.  The monies so accumulated were used to launch the national daily newspaper *The Irish Press*.  Stephen O’Mara served on the paper’s Board of Directors until his resignation in 1935.<lb/><lb/>In 1932, Stephen O’Mara was once again sent to America on a mission involving the various consular and diplomatic offices maintained in the country by the Irish Government.  Two years later, he was appointed a member of the Commission on Vocational Organisation, on which he served until 1943.  In 1959, he was created a member of the Council of State following de Valera’s inauguration as President of Ireland.  Stephen O’Mara died less than two months after his appointment, on 11 November 1959.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara Junior married in 1918 Anne O’Brien, third daughter of Thomas O’Brien of Boru House, and the couple had an adopted son, Peter O’Mara.  Anne’s youngest sister, Kate O’Brien, became one of the most prominent novelists in 20th-century Ireland and a voice of the respectable Irish Roman Catholic middle class.</p>
            </note>
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            <p>Article entitled ‘What I Think of Connemara’ by Kate O’Brien, published in the *Irish Independent* on 8 July 1945.</p>
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            <note>
              <p>The history of the O’Mara family of Strand house and O’Mara’s Bacon Company go hand in hand.  The factory was founded in 1839 by James O’Meara (1817-1899), who originated from the village of Toomevaara in county Tipperary.  Having worked for some years in the woollen mills in Clonmel, he got a job as a clerk with Matterson’s Bacon Factory in Limerick and in 1839 founded O’Mara’s Bacon Company in his house on Mungret Street.  It is said that he dropped the ‘e’ from his surname as he felt that O’Meara was too long for commercial purposes.  James initially sold for Matterson’s but soon began to cure his own bacon in the basement of his house.  As his business grew, he acquired dedicated premises for the purpose near the top of Roche’s Street.<lb/><lb/>In 1841, James O’Mara married Honora Fowley (d. 1878), who worked in the bacon business alongside her husband.  A devoted nationalist, James was one of the early supporters of Isaac Butt’s Home Rule movement.  He was High Sheriff of Limerick City in 1887, and acted as Town Councillor on Limerick Corporation at least from 1888 to 1898.<lb/><lb/>James and Honora O’Mara had 13 children, of whom the two eldest surviving sons, Stephen O’Mara (1844-1926) and John (Jack) O’Mara (1856-1919) were instrumental in building up the O’Mara’s Bacon Factory into a great success.   The youngest son, Joseph (Joe) O’Mara (1864-1927) became a celebrated opera singer.<lb/><lb/>When James O’Mara retired from business his son John (Jack) O’Mara became manager of the O’Mara Bacon Factory.  In the late 1880s, Jack was invited to Russia by Tsar Alexander III to provide instruction on bacon curing.  He stayed in St Petersburg to supervise the construction of a bacon factory.  In 1891, his father bought the rights of the Russian Bacon Company and the family imported bacon from Russia into London until 1903.  James (Jim) O’Mara (1858-1893) acted as agent for O’Mara’s in London until his untimely death from heart disease.  His nephew James O’Mara (1873-1948), son of Stephen O’Mara Senior (1844-1926), took over the agency and held it until 1914.<lb/><lb/>When John (Jack) O’Mara died in 1919, his younger brother Stephen O’Mara (1844-1926) became Managing Director of O’Mara Limited and remained in that capacity until 1923.  Having entered into the family business at the age of fifteen, his great business acumen established O’Mara’s Bacon Factory as one of the most prominent commercial enterprises in Limerick city.  He also purchased a bacon factory in Palmerston, Ontario, Canada, which was managed by his son Joseph (Joe) O’Mara (1878-1950) until the business was wound up in the 1940s.<lb/><lb/>Like his father, Stephen O’Mara was a strong supporter of Isaac Butt’s Home Rule movement and a member of the committee which secured Butt’s election for Limerick city in 1871.  He later developed a close association with Charles Stewart Parnell and was elected Member of Parliament for Upper Ossory in Kilkenny South for the Irish Parliamentary Party in February 1886.  When the Irish National League split from Irish Parliamentary Party in December 1890, O’Mara took the Parnellite side.  He continued to act as trustee of the Party funds until 1908, when he resigned from his trusteeship.  Towards the end of his life, his moderate political views became more radicalised under the influence of his sons James (1873-1948) and Stephen Junior (1884-1959).  He had agreed with his son James’s decision to resign from the Irish Parliamentary Party in 1907 in order to join Sinn Fein, and personally supported the party in the 1918 General Election.  Both Stephen and his son James were strong supporters of the 1921 Anglo-Irish Treaty but were on friendly terms with Eamon de Valera who, it is said, spent the night at the O’Mara family home, Strand House, as the Treaty was being signed in London.  In the 1925 election, Stephen O’Mara was elected as Senator to the Free State Seanad.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara was also a prominent figure in local politics.  He became a Town Councillor on Limerick Corporation in the 1880s and was elected Mayor of Limerick in 1885.  He was the first Mayor of Limerick to be elected on a Nationalist ticket.  He also served as High Sheriff of Limerick city in 1888, 1913 and 1914.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara married Ellen Pigott in 1867, and the couple had 12 children of whom the eldest three died tragically of diphtheria in 1872.  From c. 1909 onwards, the family lived at Strand House.  Their third son, Stephen O’Mara Junior, was born on 5 January 1884.  He entered the family business in 1903 when he travelled to Canada to work in the bacon factory established by the O’Mara family in Ottawa.  In 1923, he became Managing Director of O’Mara Limited and created numerous employment opportunities by establishing bacon factories in Claremorris, County Mayo, and Letterkenny, County Donegal, in the 1930s.  The three bacon companies were amalgamated in 1938 and formed into the Bacon Company of Ireland.  Stephen O’Mara Junior remained the company’s chairman until his death in 1959.  In 1987, the Bacon Company of Ireland merged with Hanley of Rooskey and Benesford UK (Castlebar) with assistance from the Industrial Development Agency Ireland (IDA) to form Irish Country Bacon.  Shortly afterwards the old O’Mara factory in Limerick was closed down.  It was subsequently demolished to make way for a multi-storey car park.<lb/><lb/>Throughout his life, Stephen O’Mara Junior played a prominent role in both local and national affairs.  Unlike his father and elder brother James, Stephen was opposed to the Anglo-Irish Treaty but in a conciliatory manner.  He was prominently identified with the Sinn Fein movement after the Easter Rising.  He was one of Eamon de Valera’s strongest supporters and a member of his Fianna Fail Party since its formation in 1926.<lb/><lb/>When George Clancy, Lord Mayor of Limerick, and his predecessor Michael O’Callaghan were murdered by the British military forces in March 1921, Stephen decided to stand for election and became Mayor.  He was re-elected in 1922 and in 1923 but resigned before the expiration of his term of office.<lb/><lb/>In 1921, Stephen O’Mara Junior was selected to go to America as Special Envoy appointed by Dáil Éireann to the United States to oversee one of the country’s biggest fundraising drives to finance the first Dáil and was made Trustee of the funds.  The funds-drive was terminated following the signing of the Anglo-Irish Treaty.  Considering himself as the exchequer to the Irish Free State, O’Mara refused to hand over the collected funds to the pro-Treaty administration which resulted in his imprisonment in 1922-1923.  He had also been imprisoned for seven days in 1921 for refusing to pay a fine of £10 for non-compliance with a military summons.<lb/><lb/>The bulk of the money collected during the Bond Drive was left in various banks in New York and remained untouched for a number of years.  In 1927, following legal action between the Irish Government and Eamon de Valera, a court in New York ordered that money outstanding to bond holders must be paid back.  Having anticipated such a ruling, de Valera’s legal team invited bond holders to sign over their bonds to de Valera, for which they were paid 58 cents to the dollar.  The monies so accumulated were used to launch the national daily newspaper *The Irish Press*.  Stephen O’Mara served on the paper’s Board of Directors until his resignation in 1935.<lb/><lb/>In 1932, Stephen O’Mara was once again sent to America on a mission involving the various consular and diplomatic offices maintained in the country by the Irish Government.  Two years later, he was appointed a member of the Commission on Vocational Organisation, on which he served until 1943.  In 1959, he was created a member of the Council of State following de Valera’s inauguration as President of Ireland.  Stephen O’Mara died less than two months after his appointment, on 11 November 1959.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara Junior married in 1918 Anne O’Brien, third daughter of Thomas O’Brien of Boru House, and the couple had an adopted son, Peter O’Mara.  Anne’s youngest sister, Kate O’Brien, became one of the most prominent novelists in 20th-century Ireland and a voice of the respectable Irish Roman Catholic middle class.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Article entitled ‘Saint Teresa of Avila’ by Kate O’Brien, published in an unidentified newspaper in the 1940s.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">‘Rats!’</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="IE" repositorycode="2135">P40/3/10/2/2/20</unitid>
            <unitid type="alternative" label="Original number">P40/835 (1)</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1957-08-21/1957-08-21" encodinganalog="3.1.3">21 August 1957</unitdate>
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        1 item    </physdesc>
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              <language langcode="eng">English</language>
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              <famname id="atom_124573_actor">O'Mara family of Strand House, Limerick</famname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-be03d29153491160a15961757089b84f" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>The history of the O’Mara family of Strand house and O’Mara’s Bacon Company go hand in hand.  The factory was founded in 1839 by James O’Meara (1817-1899), who originated from the village of Toomevaara in county Tipperary.  Having worked for some years in the woollen mills in Clonmel, he got a job as a clerk with Matterson’s Bacon Factory in Limerick and in 1839 founded O’Mara’s Bacon Company in his house on Mungret Street.  It is said that he dropped the ‘e’ from his surname as he felt that O’Meara was too long for commercial purposes.  James initially sold for Matterson’s but soon began to cure his own bacon in the basement of his house.  As his business grew, he acquired dedicated premises for the purpose near the top of Roche’s Street.<lb/><lb/>In 1841, James O’Mara married Honora Fowley (d. 1878), who worked in the bacon business alongside her husband.  A devoted nationalist, James was one of the early supporters of Isaac Butt’s Home Rule movement.  He was High Sheriff of Limerick City in 1887, and acted as Town Councillor on Limerick Corporation at least from 1888 to 1898.<lb/><lb/>James and Honora O’Mara had 13 children, of whom the two eldest surviving sons, Stephen O’Mara (1844-1926) and John (Jack) O’Mara (1856-1919) were instrumental in building up the O’Mara’s Bacon Factory into a great success.   The youngest son, Joseph (Joe) O’Mara (1864-1927) became a celebrated opera singer.<lb/><lb/>When James O’Mara retired from business his son John (Jack) O’Mara became manager of the O’Mara Bacon Factory.  In the late 1880s, Jack was invited to Russia by Tsar Alexander III to provide instruction on bacon curing.  He stayed in St Petersburg to supervise the construction of a bacon factory.  In 1891, his father bought the rights of the Russian Bacon Company and the family imported bacon from Russia into London until 1903.  James (Jim) O’Mara (1858-1893) acted as agent for O’Mara’s in London until his untimely death from heart disease.  His nephew James O’Mara (1873-1948), son of Stephen O’Mara Senior (1844-1926), took over the agency and held it until 1914.<lb/><lb/>When John (Jack) O’Mara died in 1919, his younger brother Stephen O’Mara (1844-1926) became Managing Director of O’Mara Limited and remained in that capacity until 1923.  Having entered into the family business at the age of fifteen, his great business acumen established O’Mara’s Bacon Factory as one of the most prominent commercial enterprises in Limerick city.  He also purchased a bacon factory in Palmerston, Ontario, Canada, which was managed by his son Joseph (Joe) O’Mara (1878-1950) until the business was wound up in the 1940s.<lb/><lb/>Like his father, Stephen O’Mara was a strong supporter of Isaac Butt’s Home Rule movement and a member of the committee which secured Butt’s election for Limerick city in 1871.  He later developed a close association with Charles Stewart Parnell and was elected Member of Parliament for Upper Ossory in Kilkenny South for the Irish Parliamentary Party in February 1886.  When the Irish National League split from Irish Parliamentary Party in December 1890, O’Mara took the Parnellite side.  He continued to act as trustee of the Party funds until 1908, when he resigned from his trusteeship.  Towards the end of his life, his moderate political views became more radicalised under the influence of his sons James (1873-1948) and Stephen Junior (1884-1959).  He had agreed with his son James’s decision to resign from the Irish Parliamentary Party in 1907 in order to join Sinn Fein, and personally supported the party in the 1918 General Election.  Both Stephen and his son James were strong supporters of the 1921 Anglo-Irish Treaty but were on friendly terms with Eamon de Valera who, it is said, spent the night at the O’Mara family home, Strand House, as the Treaty was being signed in London.  In the 1925 election, Stephen O’Mara was elected as Senator to the Free State Seanad.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara was also a prominent figure in local politics.  He became a Town Councillor on Limerick Corporation in the 1880s and was elected Mayor of Limerick in 1885.  He was the first Mayor of Limerick to be elected on a Nationalist ticket.  He also served as High Sheriff of Limerick city in 1888, 1913 and 1914.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara married Ellen Pigott in 1867, and the couple had 12 children of whom the eldest three died tragically of diphtheria in 1872.  From c. 1909 onwards, the family lived at Strand House.  Their third son, Stephen O’Mara Junior, was born on 5 January 1884.  He entered the family business in 1903 when he travelled to Canada to work in the bacon factory established by the O’Mara family in Ottawa.  In 1923, he became Managing Director of O’Mara Limited and created numerous employment opportunities by establishing bacon factories in Claremorris, County Mayo, and Letterkenny, County Donegal, in the 1930s.  The three bacon companies were amalgamated in 1938 and formed into the Bacon Company of Ireland.  Stephen O’Mara Junior remained the company’s chairman until his death in 1959.  In 1987, the Bacon Company of Ireland merged with Hanley of Rooskey and Benesford UK (Castlebar) with assistance from the Industrial Development Agency Ireland (IDA) to form Irish Country Bacon.  Shortly afterwards the old O’Mara factory in Limerick was closed down.  It was subsequently demolished to make way for a multi-storey car park.<lb/><lb/>Throughout his life, Stephen O’Mara Junior played a prominent role in both local and national affairs.  Unlike his father and elder brother James, Stephen was opposed to the Anglo-Irish Treaty but in a conciliatory manner.  He was prominently identified with the Sinn Fein movement after the Easter Rising.  He was one of Eamon de Valera’s strongest supporters and a member of his Fianna Fail Party since its formation in 1926.<lb/><lb/>When George Clancy, Lord Mayor of Limerick, and his predecessor Michael O’Callaghan were murdered by the British military forces in March 1921, Stephen decided to stand for election and became Mayor.  He was re-elected in 1922 and in 1923 but resigned before the expiration of his term of office.<lb/><lb/>In 1921, Stephen O’Mara Junior was selected to go to America as Special Envoy appointed by Dáil Éireann to the United States to oversee one of the country’s biggest fundraising drives to finance the first Dáil and was made Trustee of the funds.  The funds-drive was terminated following the signing of the Anglo-Irish Treaty.  Considering himself as the exchequer to the Irish Free State, O’Mara refused to hand over the collected funds to the pro-Treaty administration which resulted in his imprisonment in 1922-1923.  He had also been imprisoned for seven days in 1921 for refusing to pay a fine of £10 for non-compliance with a military summons.<lb/><lb/>The bulk of the money collected during the Bond Drive was left in various banks in New York and remained untouched for a number of years.  In 1927, following legal action between the Irish Government and Eamon de Valera, a court in New York ordered that money outstanding to bond holders must be paid back.  Having anticipated such a ruling, de Valera’s legal team invited bond holders to sign over their bonds to de Valera, for which they were paid 58 cents to the dollar.  The monies so accumulated were used to launch the national daily newspaper *The Irish Press*.  Stephen O’Mara served on the paper’s Board of Directors until his resignation in 1935.<lb/><lb/>In 1932, Stephen O’Mara was once again sent to America on a mission involving the various consular and diplomatic offices maintained in the country by the Irish Government.  Two years later, he was appointed a member of the Commission on Vocational Organisation, on which he served until 1943.  In 1959, he was created a member of the Council of State following de Valera’s inauguration as President of Ireland.  Stephen O’Mara died less than two months after his appointment, on 11 November 1959.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara Junior married in 1918 Anne O’Brien, third daughter of Thomas O’Brien of Boru House, and the couple had an adopted son, Peter O’Mara.  Anne’s youngest sister, Kate O’Brien, became one of the most prominent novelists in 20th-century Ireland and a voice of the respectable Irish Roman Catholic middle class.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
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            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Short story entitled ‘Rats!’ by Kate O’Brien, published in an unidentified newspaper on 21 August 1957.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">‘On a Slow Train from Dublin’</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="IE" repositorycode="2135">P40/3/10/2/2/21</unitid>
            <unitid type="alternative" label="Original number">P40/835 (2)</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1957-01-01/1963-12-31" encodinganalog="3.1.3">[1957-1963]</unitdate>
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        1 item    </physdesc>
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              <language langcode="eng">English</language>
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            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <famname id="atom_124576_actor">O'Mara family of Strand House, Limerick</famname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-be03d29153491160a15961757089b84f" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>The history of the O’Mara family of Strand house and O’Mara’s Bacon Company go hand in hand.  The factory was founded in 1839 by James O’Meara (1817-1899), who originated from the village of Toomevaara in county Tipperary.  Having worked for some years in the woollen mills in Clonmel, he got a job as a clerk with Matterson’s Bacon Factory in Limerick and in 1839 founded O’Mara’s Bacon Company in his house on Mungret Street.  It is said that he dropped the ‘e’ from his surname as he felt that O’Meara was too long for commercial purposes.  James initially sold for Matterson’s but soon began to cure his own bacon in the basement of his house.  As his business grew, he acquired dedicated premises for the purpose near the top of Roche’s Street.<lb/><lb/>In 1841, James O’Mara married Honora Fowley (d. 1878), who worked in the bacon business alongside her husband.  A devoted nationalist, James was one of the early supporters of Isaac Butt’s Home Rule movement.  He was High Sheriff of Limerick City in 1887, and acted as Town Councillor on Limerick Corporation at least from 1888 to 1898.<lb/><lb/>James and Honora O’Mara had 13 children, of whom the two eldest surviving sons, Stephen O’Mara (1844-1926) and John (Jack) O’Mara (1856-1919) were instrumental in building up the O’Mara’s Bacon Factory into a great success.   The youngest son, Joseph (Joe) O’Mara (1864-1927) became a celebrated opera singer.<lb/><lb/>When James O’Mara retired from business his son John (Jack) O’Mara became manager of the O’Mara Bacon Factory.  In the late 1880s, Jack was invited to Russia by Tsar Alexander III to provide instruction on bacon curing.  He stayed in St Petersburg to supervise the construction of a bacon factory.  In 1891, his father bought the rights of the Russian Bacon Company and the family imported bacon from Russia into London until 1903.  James (Jim) O’Mara (1858-1893) acted as agent for O’Mara’s in London until his untimely death from heart disease.  His nephew James O’Mara (1873-1948), son of Stephen O’Mara Senior (1844-1926), took over the agency and held it until 1914.<lb/><lb/>When John (Jack) O’Mara died in 1919, his younger brother Stephen O’Mara (1844-1926) became Managing Director of O’Mara Limited and remained in that capacity until 1923.  Having entered into the family business at the age of fifteen, his great business acumen established O’Mara’s Bacon Factory as one of the most prominent commercial enterprises in Limerick city.  He also purchased a bacon factory in Palmerston, Ontario, Canada, which was managed by his son Joseph (Joe) O’Mara (1878-1950) until the business was wound up in the 1940s.<lb/><lb/>Like his father, Stephen O’Mara was a strong supporter of Isaac Butt’s Home Rule movement and a member of the committee which secured Butt’s election for Limerick city in 1871.  He later developed a close association with Charles Stewart Parnell and was elected Member of Parliament for Upper Ossory in Kilkenny South for the Irish Parliamentary Party in February 1886.  When the Irish National League split from Irish Parliamentary Party in December 1890, O’Mara took the Parnellite side.  He continued to act as trustee of the Party funds until 1908, when he resigned from his trusteeship.  Towards the end of his life, his moderate political views became more radicalised under the influence of his sons James (1873-1948) and Stephen Junior (1884-1959).  He had agreed with his son James’s decision to resign from the Irish Parliamentary Party in 1907 in order to join Sinn Fein, and personally supported the party in the 1918 General Election.  Both Stephen and his son James were strong supporters of the 1921 Anglo-Irish Treaty but were on friendly terms with Eamon de Valera who, it is said, spent the night at the O’Mara family home, Strand House, as the Treaty was being signed in London.  In the 1925 election, Stephen O’Mara was elected as Senator to the Free State Seanad.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara was also a prominent figure in local politics.  He became a Town Councillor on Limerick Corporation in the 1880s and was elected Mayor of Limerick in 1885.  He was the first Mayor of Limerick to be elected on a Nationalist ticket.  He also served as High Sheriff of Limerick city in 1888, 1913 and 1914.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara married Ellen Pigott in 1867, and the couple had 12 children of whom the eldest three died tragically of diphtheria in 1872.  From c. 1909 onwards, the family lived at Strand House.  Their third son, Stephen O’Mara Junior, was born on 5 January 1884.  He entered the family business in 1903 when he travelled to Canada to work in the bacon factory established by the O’Mara family in Ottawa.  In 1923, he became Managing Director of O’Mara Limited and created numerous employment opportunities by establishing bacon factories in Claremorris, County Mayo, and Letterkenny, County Donegal, in the 1930s.  The three bacon companies were amalgamated in 1938 and formed into the Bacon Company of Ireland.  Stephen O’Mara Junior remained the company’s chairman until his death in 1959.  In 1987, the Bacon Company of Ireland merged with Hanley of Rooskey and Benesford UK (Castlebar) with assistance from the Industrial Development Agency Ireland (IDA) to form Irish Country Bacon.  Shortly afterwards the old O’Mara factory in Limerick was closed down.  It was subsequently demolished to make way for a multi-storey car park.<lb/><lb/>Throughout his life, Stephen O’Mara Junior played a prominent role in both local and national affairs.  Unlike his father and elder brother James, Stephen was opposed to the Anglo-Irish Treaty but in a conciliatory manner.  He was prominently identified with the Sinn Fein movement after the Easter Rising.  He was one of Eamon de Valera’s strongest supporters and a member of his Fianna Fail Party since its formation in 1926.<lb/><lb/>When George Clancy, Lord Mayor of Limerick, and his predecessor Michael O’Callaghan were murdered by the British military forces in March 1921, Stephen decided to stand for election and became Mayor.  He was re-elected in 1922 and in 1923 but resigned before the expiration of his term of office.<lb/><lb/>In 1921, Stephen O’Mara Junior was selected to go to America as Special Envoy appointed by Dáil Éireann to the United States to oversee one of the country’s biggest fundraising drives to finance the first Dáil and was made Trustee of the funds.  The funds-drive was terminated following the signing of the Anglo-Irish Treaty.  Considering himself as the exchequer to the Irish Free State, O’Mara refused to hand over the collected funds to the pro-Treaty administration which resulted in his imprisonment in 1922-1923.  He had also been imprisoned for seven days in 1921 for refusing to pay a fine of £10 for non-compliance with a military summons.<lb/><lb/>The bulk of the money collected during the Bond Drive was left in various banks in New York and remained untouched for a number of years.  In 1927, following legal action between the Irish Government and Eamon de Valera, a court in New York ordered that money outstanding to bond holders must be paid back.  Having anticipated such a ruling, de Valera’s legal team invited bond holders to sign over their bonds to de Valera, for which they were paid 58 cents to the dollar.  The monies so accumulated were used to launch the national daily newspaper *The Irish Press*.  Stephen O’Mara served on the paper’s Board of Directors until his resignation in 1935.<lb/><lb/>In 1932, Stephen O’Mara was once again sent to America on a mission involving the various consular and diplomatic offices maintained in the country by the Irish Government.  Two years later, he was appointed a member of the Commission on Vocational Organisation, on which he served until 1943.  In 1959, he was created a member of the Council of State following de Valera’s inauguration as President of Ireland.  Stephen O’Mara died less than two months after his appointment, on 11 November 1959.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara Junior married in 1918 Anne O’Brien, third daughter of Thomas O’Brien of Boru House, and the couple had an adopted son, Peter O’Mara.  Anne’s youngest sister, Kate O’Brien, became one of the most prominent novelists in 20th-century Ireland and a voice of the respectable Irish Roman Catholic middle class.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
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            <p>Published</p>
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          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Article entitled ‘On a Slow Train from Dublin’ by Kate O’Brien, published in the *Sunday Review*, c. 1957-1963.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">‘Cousins and Cozenage’</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="IE" repositorycode="2135">P40/3/10/2/2/22</unitid>
            <unitid type="alternative" label="Original number">P40/835 (3)</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1959-10-10/1959-10-10" encodinganalog="3.1.3">10 October 1959</unitdate>
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        1 item    </physdesc>
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              <language langcode="eng">English</language>
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              <famname id="atom_124584_actor">O'Mara family of Strand House, Limerick</famname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-be03d29153491160a15961757089b84f" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>The history of the O’Mara family of Strand house and O’Mara’s Bacon Company go hand in hand.  The factory was founded in 1839 by James O’Meara (1817-1899), who originated from the village of Toomevaara in county Tipperary.  Having worked for some years in the woollen mills in Clonmel, he got a job as a clerk with Matterson’s Bacon Factory in Limerick and in 1839 founded O’Mara’s Bacon Company in his house on Mungret Street.  It is said that he dropped the ‘e’ from his surname as he felt that O’Meara was too long for commercial purposes.  James initially sold for Matterson’s but soon began to cure his own bacon in the basement of his house.  As his business grew, he acquired dedicated premises for the purpose near the top of Roche’s Street.<lb/><lb/>In 1841, James O’Mara married Honora Fowley (d. 1878), who worked in the bacon business alongside her husband.  A devoted nationalist, James was one of the early supporters of Isaac Butt’s Home Rule movement.  He was High Sheriff of Limerick City in 1887, and acted as Town Councillor on Limerick Corporation at least from 1888 to 1898.<lb/><lb/>James and Honora O’Mara had 13 children, of whom the two eldest surviving sons, Stephen O’Mara (1844-1926) and John (Jack) O’Mara (1856-1919) were instrumental in building up the O’Mara’s Bacon Factory into a great success.   The youngest son, Joseph (Joe) O’Mara (1864-1927) became a celebrated opera singer.<lb/><lb/>When James O’Mara retired from business his son John (Jack) O’Mara became manager of the O’Mara Bacon Factory.  In the late 1880s, Jack was invited to Russia by Tsar Alexander III to provide instruction on bacon curing.  He stayed in St Petersburg to supervise the construction of a bacon factory.  In 1891, his father bought the rights of the Russian Bacon Company and the family imported bacon from Russia into London until 1903.  James (Jim) O’Mara (1858-1893) acted as agent for O’Mara’s in London until his untimely death from heart disease.  His nephew James O’Mara (1873-1948), son of Stephen O’Mara Senior (1844-1926), took over the agency and held it until 1914.<lb/><lb/>When John (Jack) O’Mara died in 1919, his younger brother Stephen O’Mara (1844-1926) became Managing Director of O’Mara Limited and remained in that capacity until 1923.  Having entered into the family business at the age of fifteen, his great business acumen established O’Mara’s Bacon Factory as one of the most prominent commercial enterprises in Limerick city.  He also purchased a bacon factory in Palmerston, Ontario, Canada, which was managed by his son Joseph (Joe) O’Mara (1878-1950) until the business was wound up in the 1940s.<lb/><lb/>Like his father, Stephen O’Mara was a strong supporter of Isaac Butt’s Home Rule movement and a member of the committee which secured Butt’s election for Limerick city in 1871.  He later developed a close association with Charles Stewart Parnell and was elected Member of Parliament for Upper Ossory in Kilkenny South for the Irish Parliamentary Party in February 1886.  When the Irish National League split from Irish Parliamentary Party in December 1890, O’Mara took the Parnellite side.  He continued to act as trustee of the Party funds until 1908, when he resigned from his trusteeship.  Towards the end of his life, his moderate political views became more radicalised under the influence of his sons James (1873-1948) and Stephen Junior (1884-1959).  He had agreed with his son James’s decision to resign from the Irish Parliamentary Party in 1907 in order to join Sinn Fein, and personally supported the party in the 1918 General Election.  Both Stephen and his son James were strong supporters of the 1921 Anglo-Irish Treaty but were on friendly terms with Eamon de Valera who, it is said, spent the night at the O’Mara family home, Strand House, as the Treaty was being signed in London.  In the 1925 election, Stephen O’Mara was elected as Senator to the Free State Seanad.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara was also a prominent figure in local politics.  He became a Town Councillor on Limerick Corporation in the 1880s and was elected Mayor of Limerick in 1885.  He was the first Mayor of Limerick to be elected on a Nationalist ticket.  He also served as High Sheriff of Limerick city in 1888, 1913 and 1914.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara married Ellen Pigott in 1867, and the couple had 12 children of whom the eldest three died tragically of diphtheria in 1872.  From c. 1909 onwards, the family lived at Strand House.  Their third son, Stephen O’Mara Junior, was born on 5 January 1884.  He entered the family business in 1903 when he travelled to Canada to work in the bacon factory established by the O’Mara family in Ottawa.  In 1923, he became Managing Director of O’Mara Limited and created numerous employment opportunities by establishing bacon factories in Claremorris, County Mayo, and Letterkenny, County Donegal, in the 1930s.  The three bacon companies were amalgamated in 1938 and formed into the Bacon Company of Ireland.  Stephen O’Mara Junior remained the company’s chairman until his death in 1959.  In 1987, the Bacon Company of Ireland merged with Hanley of Rooskey and Benesford UK (Castlebar) with assistance from the Industrial Development Agency Ireland (IDA) to form Irish Country Bacon.  Shortly afterwards the old O’Mara factory in Limerick was closed down.  It was subsequently demolished to make way for a multi-storey car park.<lb/><lb/>Throughout his life, Stephen O’Mara Junior played a prominent role in both local and national affairs.  Unlike his father and elder brother James, Stephen was opposed to the Anglo-Irish Treaty but in a conciliatory manner.  He was prominently identified with the Sinn Fein movement after the Easter Rising.  He was one of Eamon de Valera’s strongest supporters and a member of his Fianna Fail Party since its formation in 1926.<lb/><lb/>When George Clancy, Lord Mayor of Limerick, and his predecessor Michael O’Callaghan were murdered by the British military forces in March 1921, Stephen decided to stand for election and became Mayor.  He was re-elected in 1922 and in 1923 but resigned before the expiration of his term of office.<lb/><lb/>In 1921, Stephen O’Mara Junior was selected to go to America as Special Envoy appointed by Dáil Éireann to the United States to oversee one of the country’s biggest fundraising drives to finance the first Dáil and was made Trustee of the funds.  The funds-drive was terminated following the signing of the Anglo-Irish Treaty.  Considering himself as the exchequer to the Irish Free State, O’Mara refused to hand over the collected funds to the pro-Treaty administration which resulted in his imprisonment in 1922-1923.  He had also been imprisoned for seven days in 1921 for refusing to pay a fine of £10 for non-compliance with a military summons.<lb/><lb/>The bulk of the money collected during the Bond Drive was left in various banks in New York and remained untouched for a number of years.  In 1927, following legal action between the Irish Government and Eamon de Valera, a court in New York ordered that money outstanding to bond holders must be paid back.  Having anticipated such a ruling, de Valera’s legal team invited bond holders to sign over their bonds to de Valera, for which they were paid 58 cents to the dollar.  The monies so accumulated were used to launch the national daily newspaper *The Irish Press*.  Stephen O’Mara served on the paper’s Board of Directors until his resignation in 1935.<lb/><lb/>In 1932, Stephen O’Mara was once again sent to America on a mission involving the various consular and diplomatic offices maintained in the country by the Irish Government.  Two years later, he was appointed a member of the Commission on Vocational Organisation, on which he served until 1943.  In 1959, he was created a member of the Council of State following de Valera’s inauguration as President of Ireland.  Stephen O’Mara died less than two months after his appointment, on 11 November 1959.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara Junior married in 1918 Anne O’Brien, third daughter of Thomas O’Brien of Boru House, and the couple had an adopted son, Peter O’Mara.  Anne’s youngest sister, Kate O’Brien, became one of the most prominent novelists in 20th-century Ireland and a voice of the respectable Irish Roman Catholic middle class.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
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          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Article entitled ‘Cousins and Cozenage’ by Kate O’Brien, published in the *Irish Times* on 10 October 1959.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">‘A Regular Royal Queen’</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="IE" repositorycode="2135">P40/3/10/2/2/23</unitid>
            <unitid type="alternative" label="Original number">P40/835 (4)</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1959-10-26/1959-10-26" encodinganalog="3.1.3">26 October 1959</unitdate>
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        1 item    </physdesc>
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              <language langcode="eng">English</language>
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              <famname id="atom_124587_actor">O'Mara family of Strand House, Limerick</famname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-be03d29153491160a15961757089b84f" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>The history of the O’Mara family of Strand house and O’Mara’s Bacon Company go hand in hand.  The factory was founded in 1839 by James O’Meara (1817-1899), who originated from the village of Toomevaara in county Tipperary.  Having worked for some years in the woollen mills in Clonmel, he got a job as a clerk with Matterson’s Bacon Factory in Limerick and in 1839 founded O’Mara’s Bacon Company in his house on Mungret Street.  It is said that he dropped the ‘e’ from his surname as he felt that O’Meara was too long for commercial purposes.  James initially sold for Matterson’s but soon began to cure his own bacon in the basement of his house.  As his business grew, he acquired dedicated premises for the purpose near the top of Roche’s Street.<lb/><lb/>In 1841, James O’Mara married Honora Fowley (d. 1878), who worked in the bacon business alongside her husband.  A devoted nationalist, James was one of the early supporters of Isaac Butt’s Home Rule movement.  He was High Sheriff of Limerick City in 1887, and acted as Town Councillor on Limerick Corporation at least from 1888 to 1898.<lb/><lb/>James and Honora O’Mara had 13 children, of whom the two eldest surviving sons, Stephen O’Mara (1844-1926) and John (Jack) O’Mara (1856-1919) were instrumental in building up the O’Mara’s Bacon Factory into a great success.   The youngest son, Joseph (Joe) O’Mara (1864-1927) became a celebrated opera singer.<lb/><lb/>When James O’Mara retired from business his son John (Jack) O’Mara became manager of the O’Mara Bacon Factory.  In the late 1880s, Jack was invited to Russia by Tsar Alexander III to provide instruction on bacon curing.  He stayed in St Petersburg to supervise the construction of a bacon factory.  In 1891, his father bought the rights of the Russian Bacon Company and the family imported bacon from Russia into London until 1903.  James (Jim) O’Mara (1858-1893) acted as agent for O’Mara’s in London until his untimely death from heart disease.  His nephew James O’Mara (1873-1948), son of Stephen O’Mara Senior (1844-1926), took over the agency and held it until 1914.<lb/><lb/>When John (Jack) O’Mara died in 1919, his younger brother Stephen O’Mara (1844-1926) became Managing Director of O’Mara Limited and remained in that capacity until 1923.  Having entered into the family business at the age of fifteen, his great business acumen established O’Mara’s Bacon Factory as one of the most prominent commercial enterprises in Limerick city.  He also purchased a bacon factory in Palmerston, Ontario, Canada, which was managed by his son Joseph (Joe) O’Mara (1878-1950) until the business was wound up in the 1940s.<lb/><lb/>Like his father, Stephen O’Mara was a strong supporter of Isaac Butt’s Home Rule movement and a member of the committee which secured Butt’s election for Limerick city in 1871.  He later developed a close association with Charles Stewart Parnell and was elected Member of Parliament for Upper Ossory in Kilkenny South for the Irish Parliamentary Party in February 1886.  When the Irish National League split from Irish Parliamentary Party in December 1890, O’Mara took the Parnellite side.  He continued to act as trustee of the Party funds until 1908, when he resigned from his trusteeship.  Towards the end of his life, his moderate political views became more radicalised under the influence of his sons James (1873-1948) and Stephen Junior (1884-1959).  He had agreed with his son James’s decision to resign from the Irish Parliamentary Party in 1907 in order to join Sinn Fein, and personally supported the party in the 1918 General Election.  Both Stephen and his son James were strong supporters of the 1921 Anglo-Irish Treaty but were on friendly terms with Eamon de Valera who, it is said, spent the night at the O’Mara family home, Strand House, as the Treaty was being signed in London.  In the 1925 election, Stephen O’Mara was elected as Senator to the Free State Seanad.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara was also a prominent figure in local politics.  He became a Town Councillor on Limerick Corporation in the 1880s and was elected Mayor of Limerick in 1885.  He was the first Mayor of Limerick to be elected on a Nationalist ticket.  He also served as High Sheriff of Limerick city in 1888, 1913 and 1914.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara married Ellen Pigott in 1867, and the couple had 12 children of whom the eldest three died tragically of diphtheria in 1872.  From c. 1909 onwards, the family lived at Strand House.  Their third son, Stephen O’Mara Junior, was born on 5 January 1884.  He entered the family business in 1903 when he travelled to Canada to work in the bacon factory established by the O’Mara family in Ottawa.  In 1923, he became Managing Director of O’Mara Limited and created numerous employment opportunities by establishing bacon factories in Claremorris, County Mayo, and Letterkenny, County Donegal, in the 1930s.  The three bacon companies were amalgamated in 1938 and formed into the Bacon Company of Ireland.  Stephen O’Mara Junior remained the company’s chairman until his death in 1959.  In 1987, the Bacon Company of Ireland merged with Hanley of Rooskey and Benesford UK (Castlebar) with assistance from the Industrial Development Agency Ireland (IDA) to form Irish Country Bacon.  Shortly afterwards the old O’Mara factory in Limerick was closed down.  It was subsequently demolished to make way for a multi-storey car park.<lb/><lb/>Throughout his life, Stephen O’Mara Junior played a prominent role in both local and national affairs.  Unlike his father and elder brother James, Stephen was opposed to the Anglo-Irish Treaty but in a conciliatory manner.  He was prominently identified with the Sinn Fein movement after the Easter Rising.  He was one of Eamon de Valera’s strongest supporters and a member of his Fianna Fail Party since its formation in 1926.<lb/><lb/>When George Clancy, Lord Mayor of Limerick, and his predecessor Michael O’Callaghan were murdered by the British military forces in March 1921, Stephen decided to stand for election and became Mayor.  He was re-elected in 1922 and in 1923 but resigned before the expiration of his term of office.<lb/><lb/>In 1921, Stephen O’Mara Junior was selected to go to America as Special Envoy appointed by Dáil Éireann to the United States to oversee one of the country’s biggest fundraising drives to finance the first Dáil and was made Trustee of the funds.  The funds-drive was terminated following the signing of the Anglo-Irish Treaty.  Considering himself as the exchequer to the Irish Free State, O’Mara refused to hand over the collected funds to the pro-Treaty administration which resulted in his imprisonment in 1922-1923.  He had also been imprisoned for seven days in 1921 for refusing to pay a fine of £10 for non-compliance with a military summons.<lb/><lb/>The bulk of the money collected during the Bond Drive was left in various banks in New York and remained untouched for a number of years.  In 1927, following legal action between the Irish Government and Eamon de Valera, a court in New York ordered that money outstanding to bond holders must be paid back.  Having anticipated such a ruling, de Valera’s legal team invited bond holders to sign over their bonds to de Valera, for which they were paid 58 cents to the dollar.  The monies so accumulated were used to launch the national daily newspaper *The Irish Press*.  Stephen O’Mara served on the paper’s Board of Directors until his resignation in 1935.<lb/><lb/>In 1932, Stephen O’Mara was once again sent to America on a mission involving the various consular and diplomatic offices maintained in the country by the Irish Government.  Two years later, he was appointed a member of the Commission on Vocational Organisation, on which he served until 1943.  In 1959, he was created a member of the Council of State following de Valera’s inauguration as President of Ireland.  Stephen O’Mara died less than two months after his appointment, on 11 November 1959.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara Junior married in 1918 Anne O’Brien, third daughter of Thomas O’Brien of Boru House, and the couple had an adopted son, Peter O’Mara.  Anne’s youngest sister, Kate O’Brien, became one of the most prominent novelists in 20th-century Ireland and a voice of the respectable Irish Roman Catholic middle class.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
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            <p>Published</p>
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          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Book review entitled ‘A Regular Royal Queen’ by Kate O’Brien, published in an unidentified newspaper on 26 October 1959.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">‘Armagh’s Such a Lovely Place’</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="IE" repositorycode="2135">P40/3/10/2/2/24</unitid>
            <unitid type="alternative" label="Original number">P40/835 (5)</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1950-01-01/1969-12-31" encodinganalog="3.1.3">[c. 1950s-1960s]</unitdate>
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              <language langcode="eng">English</language>
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              <famname id="atom_124590_actor">O'Mara family of Strand House, Limerick</famname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-be03d29153491160a15961757089b84f" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>The history of the O’Mara family of Strand house and O’Mara’s Bacon Company go hand in hand.  The factory was founded in 1839 by James O’Meara (1817-1899), who originated from the village of Toomevaara in county Tipperary.  Having worked for some years in the woollen mills in Clonmel, he got a job as a clerk with Matterson’s Bacon Factory in Limerick and in 1839 founded O’Mara’s Bacon Company in his house on Mungret Street.  It is said that he dropped the ‘e’ from his surname as he felt that O’Meara was too long for commercial purposes.  James initially sold for Matterson’s but soon began to cure his own bacon in the basement of his house.  As his business grew, he acquired dedicated premises for the purpose near the top of Roche’s Street.<lb/><lb/>In 1841, James O’Mara married Honora Fowley (d. 1878), who worked in the bacon business alongside her husband.  A devoted nationalist, James was one of the early supporters of Isaac Butt’s Home Rule movement.  He was High Sheriff of Limerick City in 1887, and acted as Town Councillor on Limerick Corporation at least from 1888 to 1898.<lb/><lb/>James and Honora O’Mara had 13 children, of whom the two eldest surviving sons, Stephen O’Mara (1844-1926) and John (Jack) O’Mara (1856-1919) were instrumental in building up the O’Mara’s Bacon Factory into a great success.   The youngest son, Joseph (Joe) O’Mara (1864-1927) became a celebrated opera singer.<lb/><lb/>When James O’Mara retired from business his son John (Jack) O’Mara became manager of the O’Mara Bacon Factory.  In the late 1880s, Jack was invited to Russia by Tsar Alexander III to provide instruction on bacon curing.  He stayed in St Petersburg to supervise the construction of a bacon factory.  In 1891, his father bought the rights of the Russian Bacon Company and the family imported bacon from Russia into London until 1903.  James (Jim) O’Mara (1858-1893) acted as agent for O’Mara’s in London until his untimely death from heart disease.  His nephew James O’Mara (1873-1948), son of Stephen O’Mara Senior (1844-1926), took over the agency and held it until 1914.<lb/><lb/>When John (Jack) O’Mara died in 1919, his younger brother Stephen O’Mara (1844-1926) became Managing Director of O’Mara Limited and remained in that capacity until 1923.  Having entered into the family business at the age of fifteen, his great business acumen established O’Mara’s Bacon Factory as one of the most prominent commercial enterprises in Limerick city.  He also purchased a bacon factory in Palmerston, Ontario, Canada, which was managed by his son Joseph (Joe) O’Mara (1878-1950) until the business was wound up in the 1940s.<lb/><lb/>Like his father, Stephen O’Mara was a strong supporter of Isaac Butt’s Home Rule movement and a member of the committee which secured Butt’s election for Limerick city in 1871.  He later developed a close association with Charles Stewart Parnell and was elected Member of Parliament for Upper Ossory in Kilkenny South for the Irish Parliamentary Party in February 1886.  When the Irish National League split from Irish Parliamentary Party in December 1890, O’Mara took the Parnellite side.  He continued to act as trustee of the Party funds until 1908, when he resigned from his trusteeship.  Towards the end of his life, his moderate political views became more radicalised under the influence of his sons James (1873-1948) and Stephen Junior (1884-1959).  He had agreed with his son James’s decision to resign from the Irish Parliamentary Party in 1907 in order to join Sinn Fein, and personally supported the party in the 1918 General Election.  Both Stephen and his son James were strong supporters of the 1921 Anglo-Irish Treaty but were on friendly terms with Eamon de Valera who, it is said, spent the night at the O’Mara family home, Strand House, as the Treaty was being signed in London.  In the 1925 election, Stephen O’Mara was elected as Senator to the Free State Seanad.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara was also a prominent figure in local politics.  He became a Town Councillor on Limerick Corporation in the 1880s and was elected Mayor of Limerick in 1885.  He was the first Mayor of Limerick to be elected on a Nationalist ticket.  He also served as High Sheriff of Limerick city in 1888, 1913 and 1914.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara married Ellen Pigott in 1867, and the couple had 12 children of whom the eldest three died tragically of diphtheria in 1872.  From c. 1909 onwards, the family lived at Strand House.  Their third son, Stephen O’Mara Junior, was born on 5 January 1884.  He entered the family business in 1903 when he travelled to Canada to work in the bacon factory established by the O’Mara family in Ottawa.  In 1923, he became Managing Director of O’Mara Limited and created numerous employment opportunities by establishing bacon factories in Claremorris, County Mayo, and Letterkenny, County Donegal, in the 1930s.  The three bacon companies were amalgamated in 1938 and formed into the Bacon Company of Ireland.  Stephen O’Mara Junior remained the company’s chairman until his death in 1959.  In 1987, the Bacon Company of Ireland merged with Hanley of Rooskey and Benesford UK (Castlebar) with assistance from the Industrial Development Agency Ireland (IDA) to form Irish Country Bacon.  Shortly afterwards the old O’Mara factory in Limerick was closed down.  It was subsequently demolished to make way for a multi-storey car park.<lb/><lb/>Throughout his life, Stephen O’Mara Junior played a prominent role in both local and national affairs.  Unlike his father and elder brother James, Stephen was opposed to the Anglo-Irish Treaty but in a conciliatory manner.  He was prominently identified with the Sinn Fein movement after the Easter Rising.  He was one of Eamon de Valera’s strongest supporters and a member of his Fianna Fail Party since its formation in 1926.<lb/><lb/>When George Clancy, Lord Mayor of Limerick, and his predecessor Michael O’Callaghan were murdered by the British military forces in March 1921, Stephen decided to stand for election and became Mayor.  He was re-elected in 1922 and in 1923 but resigned before the expiration of his term of office.<lb/><lb/>In 1921, Stephen O’Mara Junior was selected to go to America as Special Envoy appointed by Dáil Éireann to the United States to oversee one of the country’s biggest fundraising drives to finance the first Dáil and was made Trustee of the funds.  The funds-drive was terminated following the signing of the Anglo-Irish Treaty.  Considering himself as the exchequer to the Irish Free State, O’Mara refused to hand over the collected funds to the pro-Treaty administration which resulted in his imprisonment in 1922-1923.  He had also been imprisoned for seven days in 1921 for refusing to pay a fine of £10 for non-compliance with a military summons.<lb/><lb/>The bulk of the money collected during the Bond Drive was left in various banks in New York and remained untouched for a number of years.  In 1927, following legal action between the Irish Government and Eamon de Valera, a court in New York ordered that money outstanding to bond holders must be paid back.  Having anticipated such a ruling, de Valera’s legal team invited bond holders to sign over their bonds to de Valera, for which they were paid 58 cents to the dollar.  The monies so accumulated were used to launch the national daily newspaper *The Irish Press*.  Stephen O’Mara served on the paper’s Board of Directors until his resignation in 1935.<lb/><lb/>In 1932, Stephen O’Mara was once again sent to America on a mission involving the various consular and diplomatic offices maintained in the country by the Irish Government.  Two years later, he was appointed a member of the Commission on Vocational Organisation, on which he served until 1943.  In 1959, he was created a member of the Council of State following de Valera’s inauguration as President of Ireland.  Stephen O’Mara died less than two months after his appointment, on 11 November 1959.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara Junior married in 1918 Anne O’Brien, third daughter of Thomas O’Brien of Boru House, and the couple had an adopted son, Peter O’Mara.  Anne’s youngest sister, Kate O’Brien, became one of the most prominent novelists in 20th-century Ireland and a voice of the respectable Irish Roman Catholic middle class.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
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            <p>Published</p>
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          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Article entitled ‘Armagh’s Such a Lovely Place’ by Kate O’Brien, published in an unidentified newspaper in c. 1950s-1960s.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">‘What Was Victorianism?’</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="IE" repositorycode="2135">P40/3/10/2/2/25</unitid>
            <unitid type="alternative" label="Original number">P40/836 (1)</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1960-07-02/1960-07-02" encodinganalog="3.1.3">2 July 1960</unitdate>
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        1 item    </physdesc>
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              <language langcode="eng">English</language>
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              <famname id="atom_124593_actor">O'Mara family of Strand House, Limerick</famname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-be03d29153491160a15961757089b84f" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>The history of the O’Mara family of Strand house and O’Mara’s Bacon Company go hand in hand.  The factory was founded in 1839 by James O’Meara (1817-1899), who originated from the village of Toomevaara in county Tipperary.  Having worked for some years in the woollen mills in Clonmel, he got a job as a clerk with Matterson’s Bacon Factory in Limerick and in 1839 founded O’Mara’s Bacon Company in his house on Mungret Street.  It is said that he dropped the ‘e’ from his surname as he felt that O’Meara was too long for commercial purposes.  James initially sold for Matterson’s but soon began to cure his own bacon in the basement of his house.  As his business grew, he acquired dedicated premises for the purpose near the top of Roche’s Street.<lb/><lb/>In 1841, James O’Mara married Honora Fowley (d. 1878), who worked in the bacon business alongside her husband.  A devoted nationalist, James was one of the early supporters of Isaac Butt’s Home Rule movement.  He was High Sheriff of Limerick City in 1887, and acted as Town Councillor on Limerick Corporation at least from 1888 to 1898.<lb/><lb/>James and Honora O’Mara had 13 children, of whom the two eldest surviving sons, Stephen O’Mara (1844-1926) and John (Jack) O’Mara (1856-1919) were instrumental in building up the O’Mara’s Bacon Factory into a great success.   The youngest son, Joseph (Joe) O’Mara (1864-1927) became a celebrated opera singer.<lb/><lb/>When James O’Mara retired from business his son John (Jack) O’Mara became manager of the O’Mara Bacon Factory.  In the late 1880s, Jack was invited to Russia by Tsar Alexander III to provide instruction on bacon curing.  He stayed in St Petersburg to supervise the construction of a bacon factory.  In 1891, his father bought the rights of the Russian Bacon Company and the family imported bacon from Russia into London until 1903.  James (Jim) O’Mara (1858-1893) acted as agent for O’Mara’s in London until his untimely death from heart disease.  His nephew James O’Mara (1873-1948), son of Stephen O’Mara Senior (1844-1926), took over the agency and held it until 1914.<lb/><lb/>When John (Jack) O’Mara died in 1919, his younger brother Stephen O’Mara (1844-1926) became Managing Director of O’Mara Limited and remained in that capacity until 1923.  Having entered into the family business at the age of fifteen, his great business acumen established O’Mara’s Bacon Factory as one of the most prominent commercial enterprises in Limerick city.  He also purchased a bacon factory in Palmerston, Ontario, Canada, which was managed by his son Joseph (Joe) O’Mara (1878-1950) until the business was wound up in the 1940s.<lb/><lb/>Like his father, Stephen O’Mara was a strong supporter of Isaac Butt’s Home Rule movement and a member of the committee which secured Butt’s election for Limerick city in 1871.  He later developed a close association with Charles Stewart Parnell and was elected Member of Parliament for Upper Ossory in Kilkenny South for the Irish Parliamentary Party in February 1886.  When the Irish National League split from Irish Parliamentary Party in December 1890, O’Mara took the Parnellite side.  He continued to act as trustee of the Party funds until 1908, when he resigned from his trusteeship.  Towards the end of his life, his moderate political views became more radicalised under the influence of his sons James (1873-1948) and Stephen Junior (1884-1959).  He had agreed with his son James’s decision to resign from the Irish Parliamentary Party in 1907 in order to join Sinn Fein, and personally supported the party in the 1918 General Election.  Both Stephen and his son James were strong supporters of the 1921 Anglo-Irish Treaty but were on friendly terms with Eamon de Valera who, it is said, spent the night at the O’Mara family home, Strand House, as the Treaty was being signed in London.  In the 1925 election, Stephen O’Mara was elected as Senator to the Free State Seanad.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara was also a prominent figure in local politics.  He became a Town Councillor on Limerick Corporation in the 1880s and was elected Mayor of Limerick in 1885.  He was the first Mayor of Limerick to be elected on a Nationalist ticket.  He also served as High Sheriff of Limerick city in 1888, 1913 and 1914.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara married Ellen Pigott in 1867, and the couple had 12 children of whom the eldest three died tragically of diphtheria in 1872.  From c. 1909 onwards, the family lived at Strand House.  Their third son, Stephen O’Mara Junior, was born on 5 January 1884.  He entered the family business in 1903 when he travelled to Canada to work in the bacon factory established by the O’Mara family in Ottawa.  In 1923, he became Managing Director of O’Mara Limited and created numerous employment opportunities by establishing bacon factories in Claremorris, County Mayo, and Letterkenny, County Donegal, in the 1930s.  The three bacon companies were amalgamated in 1938 and formed into the Bacon Company of Ireland.  Stephen O’Mara Junior remained the company’s chairman until his death in 1959.  In 1987, the Bacon Company of Ireland merged with Hanley of Rooskey and Benesford UK (Castlebar) with assistance from the Industrial Development Agency Ireland (IDA) to form Irish Country Bacon.  Shortly afterwards the old O’Mara factory in Limerick was closed down.  It was subsequently demolished to make way for a multi-storey car park.<lb/><lb/>Throughout his life, Stephen O’Mara Junior played a prominent role in both local and national affairs.  Unlike his father and elder brother James, Stephen was opposed to the Anglo-Irish Treaty but in a conciliatory manner.  He was prominently identified with the Sinn Fein movement after the Easter Rising.  He was one of Eamon de Valera’s strongest supporters and a member of his Fianna Fail Party since its formation in 1926.<lb/><lb/>When George Clancy, Lord Mayor of Limerick, and his predecessor Michael O’Callaghan were murdered by the British military forces in March 1921, Stephen decided to stand for election and became Mayor.  He was re-elected in 1922 and in 1923 but resigned before the expiration of his term of office.<lb/><lb/>In 1921, Stephen O’Mara Junior was selected to go to America as Special Envoy appointed by Dáil Éireann to the United States to oversee one of the country’s biggest fundraising drives to finance the first Dáil and was made Trustee of the funds.  The funds-drive was terminated following the signing of the Anglo-Irish Treaty.  Considering himself as the exchequer to the Irish Free State, O’Mara refused to hand over the collected funds to the pro-Treaty administration which resulted in his imprisonment in 1922-1923.  He had also been imprisoned for seven days in 1921 for refusing to pay a fine of £10 for non-compliance with a military summons.<lb/><lb/>The bulk of the money collected during the Bond Drive was left in various banks in New York and remained untouched for a number of years.  In 1927, following legal action between the Irish Government and Eamon de Valera, a court in New York ordered that money outstanding to bond holders must be paid back.  Having anticipated such a ruling, de Valera’s legal team invited bond holders to sign over their bonds to de Valera, for which they were paid 58 cents to the dollar.  The monies so accumulated were used to launch the national daily newspaper *The Irish Press*.  Stephen O’Mara served on the paper’s Board of Directors until his resignation in 1935.<lb/><lb/>In 1932, Stephen O’Mara was once again sent to America on a mission involving the various consular and diplomatic offices maintained in the country by the Irish Government.  Two years later, he was appointed a member of the Commission on Vocational Organisation, on which he served until 1943.  In 1959, he was created a member of the Council of State following de Valera’s inauguration as President of Ireland.  Stephen O’Mara died less than two months after his appointment, on 11 November 1959.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara Junior married in 1918 Anne O’Brien, third daughter of Thomas O’Brien of Boru House, and the couple had an adopted son, Peter O’Mara.  Anne’s youngest sister, Kate O’Brien, became one of the most prominent novelists in 20th-century Ireland and a voice of the respectable Irish Roman Catholic middle class.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
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            <p>Book review entitled ‘What Was Victorianism?’ by Kate O’Brien, published in the *Irish Times* on 2 July 1960.</p>
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            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">‘Roman Love Affair’</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="IE" repositorycode="2135">P40/3/10/2/2/26</unitid>
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              <famname id="atom_124596_actor">O'Mara family of Strand House, Limerick</famname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-be03d29153491160a15961757089b84f" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>The history of the O’Mara family of Strand house and O’Mara’s Bacon Company go hand in hand.  The factory was founded in 1839 by James O’Meara (1817-1899), who originated from the village of Toomevaara in county Tipperary.  Having worked for some years in the woollen mills in Clonmel, he got a job as a clerk with Matterson’s Bacon Factory in Limerick and in 1839 founded O’Mara’s Bacon Company in his house on Mungret Street.  It is said that he dropped the ‘e’ from his surname as he felt that O’Meara was too long for commercial purposes.  James initially sold for Matterson’s but soon began to cure his own bacon in the basement of his house.  As his business grew, he acquired dedicated premises for the purpose near the top of Roche’s Street.<lb/><lb/>In 1841, James O’Mara married Honora Fowley (d. 1878), who worked in the bacon business alongside her husband.  A devoted nationalist, James was one of the early supporters of Isaac Butt’s Home Rule movement.  He was High Sheriff of Limerick City in 1887, and acted as Town Councillor on Limerick Corporation at least from 1888 to 1898.<lb/><lb/>James and Honora O’Mara had 13 children, of whom the two eldest surviving sons, Stephen O’Mara (1844-1926) and John (Jack) O’Mara (1856-1919) were instrumental in building up the O’Mara’s Bacon Factory into a great success.   The youngest son, Joseph (Joe) O’Mara (1864-1927) became a celebrated opera singer.<lb/><lb/>When James O’Mara retired from business his son John (Jack) O’Mara became manager of the O’Mara Bacon Factory.  In the late 1880s, Jack was invited to Russia by Tsar Alexander III to provide instruction on bacon curing.  He stayed in St Petersburg to supervise the construction of a bacon factory.  In 1891, his father bought the rights of the Russian Bacon Company and the family imported bacon from Russia into London until 1903.  James (Jim) O’Mara (1858-1893) acted as agent for O’Mara’s in London until his untimely death from heart disease.  His nephew James O’Mara (1873-1948), son of Stephen O’Mara Senior (1844-1926), took over the agency and held it until 1914.<lb/><lb/>When John (Jack) O’Mara died in 1919, his younger brother Stephen O’Mara (1844-1926) became Managing Director of O’Mara Limited and remained in that capacity until 1923.  Having entered into the family business at the age of fifteen, his great business acumen established O’Mara’s Bacon Factory as one of the most prominent commercial enterprises in Limerick city.  He also purchased a bacon factory in Palmerston, Ontario, Canada, which was managed by his son Joseph (Joe) O’Mara (1878-1950) until the business was wound up in the 1940s.<lb/><lb/>Like his father, Stephen O’Mara was a strong supporter of Isaac Butt’s Home Rule movement and a member of the committee which secured Butt’s election for Limerick city in 1871.  He later developed a close association with Charles Stewart Parnell and was elected Member of Parliament for Upper Ossory in Kilkenny South for the Irish Parliamentary Party in February 1886.  When the Irish National League split from Irish Parliamentary Party in December 1890, O’Mara took the Parnellite side.  He continued to act as trustee of the Party funds until 1908, when he resigned from his trusteeship.  Towards the end of his life, his moderate political views became more radicalised under the influence of his sons James (1873-1948) and Stephen Junior (1884-1959).  He had agreed with his son James’s decision to resign from the Irish Parliamentary Party in 1907 in order to join Sinn Fein, and personally supported the party in the 1918 General Election.  Both Stephen and his son James were strong supporters of the 1921 Anglo-Irish Treaty but were on friendly terms with Eamon de Valera who, it is said, spent the night at the O’Mara family home, Strand House, as the Treaty was being signed in London.  In the 1925 election, Stephen O’Mara was elected as Senator to the Free State Seanad.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara was also a prominent figure in local politics.  He became a Town Councillor on Limerick Corporation in the 1880s and was elected Mayor of Limerick in 1885.  He was the first Mayor of Limerick to be elected on a Nationalist ticket.  He also served as High Sheriff of Limerick city in 1888, 1913 and 1914.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara married Ellen Pigott in 1867, and the couple had 12 children of whom the eldest three died tragically of diphtheria in 1872.  From c. 1909 onwards, the family lived at Strand House.  Their third son, Stephen O’Mara Junior, was born on 5 January 1884.  He entered the family business in 1903 when he travelled to Canada to work in the bacon factory established by the O’Mara family in Ottawa.  In 1923, he became Managing Director of O’Mara Limited and created numerous employment opportunities by establishing bacon factories in Claremorris, County Mayo, and Letterkenny, County Donegal, in the 1930s.  The three bacon companies were amalgamated in 1938 and formed into the Bacon Company of Ireland.  Stephen O’Mara Junior remained the company’s chairman until his death in 1959.  In 1987, the Bacon Company of Ireland merged with Hanley of Rooskey and Benesford UK (Castlebar) with assistance from the Industrial Development Agency Ireland (IDA) to form Irish Country Bacon.  Shortly afterwards the old O’Mara factory in Limerick was closed down.  It was subsequently demolished to make way for a multi-storey car park.<lb/><lb/>Throughout his life, Stephen O’Mara Junior played a prominent role in both local and national affairs.  Unlike his father and elder brother James, Stephen was opposed to the Anglo-Irish Treaty but in a conciliatory manner.  He was prominently identified with the Sinn Fein movement after the Easter Rising.  He was one of Eamon de Valera’s strongest supporters and a member of his Fianna Fail Party since its formation in 1926.<lb/><lb/>When George Clancy, Lord Mayor of Limerick, and his predecessor Michael O’Callaghan were murdered by the British military forces in March 1921, Stephen decided to stand for election and became Mayor.  He was re-elected in 1922 and in 1923 but resigned before the expiration of his term of office.<lb/><lb/>In 1921, Stephen O’Mara Junior was selected to go to America as Special Envoy appointed by Dáil Éireann to the United States to oversee one of the country’s biggest fundraising drives to finance the first Dáil and was made Trustee of the funds.  The funds-drive was terminated following the signing of the Anglo-Irish Treaty.  Considering himself as the exchequer to the Irish Free State, O’Mara refused to hand over the collected funds to the pro-Treaty administration which resulted in his imprisonment in 1922-1923.  He had also been imprisoned for seven days in 1921 for refusing to pay a fine of £10 for non-compliance with a military summons.<lb/><lb/>The bulk of the money collected during the Bond Drive was left in various banks in New York and remained untouched for a number of years.  In 1927, following legal action between the Irish Government and Eamon de Valera, a court in New York ordered that money outstanding to bond holders must be paid back.  Having anticipated such a ruling, de Valera’s legal team invited bond holders to sign over their bonds to de Valera, for which they were paid 58 cents to the dollar.  The monies so accumulated were used to launch the national daily newspaper *The Irish Press*.  Stephen O’Mara served on the paper’s Board of Directors until his resignation in 1935.<lb/><lb/>In 1932, Stephen O’Mara was once again sent to America on a mission involving the various consular and diplomatic offices maintained in the country by the Irish Government.  Two years later, he was appointed a member of the Commission on Vocational Organisation, on which he served until 1943.  In 1959, he was created a member of the Council of State following de Valera’s inauguration as President of Ireland.  Stephen O’Mara died less than two months after his appointment, on 11 November 1959.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara Junior married in 1918 Anne O’Brien, third daughter of Thomas O’Brien of Boru House, and the couple had an adopted son, Peter O’Mara.  Anne’s youngest sister, Kate O’Brien, became one of the most prominent novelists in 20th-century Ireland and a voice of the respectable Irish Roman Catholic middle class.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
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            <p>Book review entitled ‘Roman Love Affair’ by Kate O’Brien, published in the *Irish Times* on 23 July 1960.</p>
          </scopecontent>
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            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">‘Charlotte Despard’</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="IE" repositorycode="2135">P40/3/10/2/2/27</unitid>
            <unitid type="alternative" label="Original number">P40/836 (3)</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1961-08-26/1961-08-26" encodinganalog="3.1.3">26 August 1961</unitdate>
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              <language langcode="eng">English</language>
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              <famname id="atom_124599_actor">O'Mara family of Strand House, Limerick</famname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-be03d29153491160a15961757089b84f" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>The history of the O’Mara family of Strand house and O’Mara’s Bacon Company go hand in hand.  The factory was founded in 1839 by James O’Meara (1817-1899), who originated from the village of Toomevaara in county Tipperary.  Having worked for some years in the woollen mills in Clonmel, he got a job as a clerk with Matterson’s Bacon Factory in Limerick and in 1839 founded O’Mara’s Bacon Company in his house on Mungret Street.  It is said that he dropped the ‘e’ from his surname as he felt that O’Meara was too long for commercial purposes.  James initially sold for Matterson’s but soon began to cure his own bacon in the basement of his house.  As his business grew, he acquired dedicated premises for the purpose near the top of Roche’s Street.<lb/><lb/>In 1841, James O’Mara married Honora Fowley (d. 1878), who worked in the bacon business alongside her husband.  A devoted nationalist, James was one of the early supporters of Isaac Butt’s Home Rule movement.  He was High Sheriff of Limerick City in 1887, and acted as Town Councillor on Limerick Corporation at least from 1888 to 1898.<lb/><lb/>James and Honora O’Mara had 13 children, of whom the two eldest surviving sons, Stephen O’Mara (1844-1926) and John (Jack) O’Mara (1856-1919) were instrumental in building up the O’Mara’s Bacon Factory into a great success.   The youngest son, Joseph (Joe) O’Mara (1864-1927) became a celebrated opera singer.<lb/><lb/>When James O’Mara retired from business his son John (Jack) O’Mara became manager of the O’Mara Bacon Factory.  In the late 1880s, Jack was invited to Russia by Tsar Alexander III to provide instruction on bacon curing.  He stayed in St Petersburg to supervise the construction of a bacon factory.  In 1891, his father bought the rights of the Russian Bacon Company and the family imported bacon from Russia into London until 1903.  James (Jim) O’Mara (1858-1893) acted as agent for O’Mara’s in London until his untimely death from heart disease.  His nephew James O’Mara (1873-1948), son of Stephen O’Mara Senior (1844-1926), took over the agency and held it until 1914.<lb/><lb/>When John (Jack) O’Mara died in 1919, his younger brother Stephen O’Mara (1844-1926) became Managing Director of O’Mara Limited and remained in that capacity until 1923.  Having entered into the family business at the age of fifteen, his great business acumen established O’Mara’s Bacon Factory as one of the most prominent commercial enterprises in Limerick city.  He also purchased a bacon factory in Palmerston, Ontario, Canada, which was managed by his son Joseph (Joe) O’Mara (1878-1950) until the business was wound up in the 1940s.<lb/><lb/>Like his father, Stephen O’Mara was a strong supporter of Isaac Butt’s Home Rule movement and a member of the committee which secured Butt’s election for Limerick city in 1871.  He later developed a close association with Charles Stewart Parnell and was elected Member of Parliament for Upper Ossory in Kilkenny South for the Irish Parliamentary Party in February 1886.  When the Irish National League split from Irish Parliamentary Party in December 1890, O’Mara took the Parnellite side.  He continued to act as trustee of the Party funds until 1908, when he resigned from his trusteeship.  Towards the end of his life, his moderate political views became more radicalised under the influence of his sons James (1873-1948) and Stephen Junior (1884-1959).  He had agreed with his son James’s decision to resign from the Irish Parliamentary Party in 1907 in order to join Sinn Fein, and personally supported the party in the 1918 General Election.  Both Stephen and his son James were strong supporters of the 1921 Anglo-Irish Treaty but were on friendly terms with Eamon de Valera who, it is said, spent the night at the O’Mara family home, Strand House, as the Treaty was being signed in London.  In the 1925 election, Stephen O’Mara was elected as Senator to the Free State Seanad.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara was also a prominent figure in local politics.  He became a Town Councillor on Limerick Corporation in the 1880s and was elected Mayor of Limerick in 1885.  He was the first Mayor of Limerick to be elected on a Nationalist ticket.  He also served as High Sheriff of Limerick city in 1888, 1913 and 1914.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara married Ellen Pigott in 1867, and the couple had 12 children of whom the eldest three died tragically of diphtheria in 1872.  From c. 1909 onwards, the family lived at Strand House.  Their third son, Stephen O’Mara Junior, was born on 5 January 1884.  He entered the family business in 1903 when he travelled to Canada to work in the bacon factory established by the O’Mara family in Ottawa.  In 1923, he became Managing Director of O’Mara Limited and created numerous employment opportunities by establishing bacon factories in Claremorris, County Mayo, and Letterkenny, County Donegal, in the 1930s.  The three bacon companies were amalgamated in 1938 and formed into the Bacon Company of Ireland.  Stephen O’Mara Junior remained the company’s chairman until his death in 1959.  In 1987, the Bacon Company of Ireland merged with Hanley of Rooskey and Benesford UK (Castlebar) with assistance from the Industrial Development Agency Ireland (IDA) to form Irish Country Bacon.  Shortly afterwards the old O’Mara factory in Limerick was closed down.  It was subsequently demolished to make way for a multi-storey car park.<lb/><lb/>Throughout his life, Stephen O’Mara Junior played a prominent role in both local and national affairs.  Unlike his father and elder brother James, Stephen was opposed to the Anglo-Irish Treaty but in a conciliatory manner.  He was prominently identified with the Sinn Fein movement after the Easter Rising.  He was one of Eamon de Valera’s strongest supporters and a member of his Fianna Fail Party since its formation in 1926.<lb/><lb/>When George Clancy, Lord Mayor of Limerick, and his predecessor Michael O’Callaghan were murdered by the British military forces in March 1921, Stephen decided to stand for election and became Mayor.  He was re-elected in 1922 and in 1923 but resigned before the expiration of his term of office.<lb/><lb/>In 1921, Stephen O’Mara Junior was selected to go to America as Special Envoy appointed by Dáil Éireann to the United States to oversee one of the country’s biggest fundraising drives to finance the first Dáil and was made Trustee of the funds.  The funds-drive was terminated following the signing of the Anglo-Irish Treaty.  Considering himself as the exchequer to the Irish Free State, O’Mara refused to hand over the collected funds to the pro-Treaty administration which resulted in his imprisonment in 1922-1923.  He had also been imprisoned for seven days in 1921 for refusing to pay a fine of £10 for non-compliance with a military summons.<lb/><lb/>The bulk of the money collected during the Bond Drive was left in various banks in New York and remained untouched for a number of years.  In 1927, following legal action between the Irish Government and Eamon de Valera, a court in New York ordered that money outstanding to bond holders must be paid back.  Having anticipated such a ruling, de Valera’s legal team invited bond holders to sign over their bonds to de Valera, for which they were paid 58 cents to the dollar.  The monies so accumulated were used to launch the national daily newspaper *The Irish Press*.  Stephen O’Mara served on the paper’s Board of Directors until his resignation in 1935.<lb/><lb/>In 1932, Stephen O’Mara was once again sent to America on a mission involving the various consular and diplomatic offices maintained in the country by the Irish Government.  Two years later, he was appointed a member of the Commission on Vocational Organisation, on which he served until 1943.  In 1959, he was created a member of the Council of State following de Valera’s inauguration as President of Ireland.  Stephen O’Mara died less than two months after his appointment, on 11 November 1959.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara Junior married in 1918 Anne O’Brien, third daughter of Thomas O’Brien of Boru House, and the couple had an adopted son, Peter O’Mara.  Anne’s youngest sister, Kate O’Brien, became one of the most prominent novelists in 20th-century Ireland and a voice of the respectable Irish Roman Catholic middle class.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
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          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Article entitled ‘Charlotte Despard’ by Kate O’Brien, published in the *Irish Times* on 26 August 1961.</p>
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            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">'Miss Marian Reeves'</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="IE" repositorycode="2135">P40/3/10/2/2/28</unitid>
            <unitid type="alternative" label="Original number">P40/836 (4)</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1961-09-01/1961-09-01" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1 September 1961</unitdate>
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              <language langcode="eng">English</language>
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              <famname id="atom_124602_actor">O'Mara family of Strand House, Limerick</famname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-be03d29153491160a15961757089b84f" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>The history of the O’Mara family of Strand house and O’Mara’s Bacon Company go hand in hand.  The factory was founded in 1839 by James O’Meara (1817-1899), who originated from the village of Toomevaara in county Tipperary.  Having worked for some years in the woollen mills in Clonmel, he got a job as a clerk with Matterson’s Bacon Factory in Limerick and in 1839 founded O’Mara’s Bacon Company in his house on Mungret Street.  It is said that he dropped the ‘e’ from his surname as he felt that O’Meara was too long for commercial purposes.  James initially sold for Matterson’s but soon began to cure his own bacon in the basement of his house.  As his business grew, he acquired dedicated premises for the purpose near the top of Roche’s Street.<lb/><lb/>In 1841, James O’Mara married Honora Fowley (d. 1878), who worked in the bacon business alongside her husband.  A devoted nationalist, James was one of the early supporters of Isaac Butt’s Home Rule movement.  He was High Sheriff of Limerick City in 1887, and acted as Town Councillor on Limerick Corporation at least from 1888 to 1898.<lb/><lb/>James and Honora O’Mara had 13 children, of whom the two eldest surviving sons, Stephen O’Mara (1844-1926) and John (Jack) O’Mara (1856-1919) were instrumental in building up the O’Mara’s Bacon Factory into a great success.   The youngest son, Joseph (Joe) O’Mara (1864-1927) became a celebrated opera singer.<lb/><lb/>When James O’Mara retired from business his son John (Jack) O’Mara became manager of the O’Mara Bacon Factory.  In the late 1880s, Jack was invited to Russia by Tsar Alexander III to provide instruction on bacon curing.  He stayed in St Petersburg to supervise the construction of a bacon factory.  In 1891, his father bought the rights of the Russian Bacon Company and the family imported bacon from Russia into London until 1903.  James (Jim) O’Mara (1858-1893) acted as agent for O’Mara’s in London until his untimely death from heart disease.  His nephew James O’Mara (1873-1948), son of Stephen O’Mara Senior (1844-1926), took over the agency and held it until 1914.<lb/><lb/>When John (Jack) O’Mara died in 1919, his younger brother Stephen O’Mara (1844-1926) became Managing Director of O’Mara Limited and remained in that capacity until 1923.  Having entered into the family business at the age of fifteen, his great business acumen established O’Mara’s Bacon Factory as one of the most prominent commercial enterprises in Limerick city.  He also purchased a bacon factory in Palmerston, Ontario, Canada, which was managed by his son Joseph (Joe) O’Mara (1878-1950) until the business was wound up in the 1940s.<lb/><lb/>Like his father, Stephen O’Mara was a strong supporter of Isaac Butt’s Home Rule movement and a member of the committee which secured Butt’s election for Limerick city in 1871.  He later developed a close association with Charles Stewart Parnell and was elected Member of Parliament for Upper Ossory in Kilkenny South for the Irish Parliamentary Party in February 1886.  When the Irish National League split from Irish Parliamentary Party in December 1890, O’Mara took the Parnellite side.  He continued to act as trustee of the Party funds until 1908, when he resigned from his trusteeship.  Towards the end of his life, his moderate political views became more radicalised under the influence of his sons James (1873-1948) and Stephen Junior (1884-1959).  He had agreed with his son James’s decision to resign from the Irish Parliamentary Party in 1907 in order to join Sinn Fein, and personally supported the party in the 1918 General Election.  Both Stephen and his son James were strong supporters of the 1921 Anglo-Irish Treaty but were on friendly terms with Eamon de Valera who, it is said, spent the night at the O’Mara family home, Strand House, as the Treaty was being signed in London.  In the 1925 election, Stephen O’Mara was elected as Senator to the Free State Seanad.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara was also a prominent figure in local politics.  He became a Town Councillor on Limerick Corporation in the 1880s and was elected Mayor of Limerick in 1885.  He was the first Mayor of Limerick to be elected on a Nationalist ticket.  He also served as High Sheriff of Limerick city in 1888, 1913 and 1914.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara married Ellen Pigott in 1867, and the couple had 12 children of whom the eldest three died tragically of diphtheria in 1872.  From c. 1909 onwards, the family lived at Strand House.  Their third son, Stephen O’Mara Junior, was born on 5 January 1884.  He entered the family business in 1903 when he travelled to Canada to work in the bacon factory established by the O’Mara family in Ottawa.  In 1923, he became Managing Director of O’Mara Limited and created numerous employment opportunities by establishing bacon factories in Claremorris, County Mayo, and Letterkenny, County Donegal, in the 1930s.  The three bacon companies were amalgamated in 1938 and formed into the Bacon Company of Ireland.  Stephen O’Mara Junior remained the company’s chairman until his death in 1959.  In 1987, the Bacon Company of Ireland merged with Hanley of Rooskey and Benesford UK (Castlebar) with assistance from the Industrial Development Agency Ireland (IDA) to form Irish Country Bacon.  Shortly afterwards the old O’Mara factory in Limerick was closed down.  It was subsequently demolished to make way for a multi-storey car park.<lb/><lb/>Throughout his life, Stephen O’Mara Junior played a prominent role in both local and national affairs.  Unlike his father and elder brother James, Stephen was opposed to the Anglo-Irish Treaty but in a conciliatory manner.  He was prominently identified with the Sinn Fein movement after the Easter Rising.  He was one of Eamon de Valera’s strongest supporters and a member of his Fianna Fail Party since its formation in 1926.<lb/><lb/>When George Clancy, Lord Mayor of Limerick, and his predecessor Michael O’Callaghan were murdered by the British military forces in March 1921, Stephen decided to stand for election and became Mayor.  He was re-elected in 1922 and in 1923 but resigned before the expiration of his term of office.<lb/><lb/>In 1921, Stephen O’Mara Junior was selected to go to America as Special Envoy appointed by Dáil Éireann to the United States to oversee one of the country’s biggest fundraising drives to finance the first Dáil and was made Trustee of the funds.  The funds-drive was terminated following the signing of the Anglo-Irish Treaty.  Considering himself as the exchequer to the Irish Free State, O’Mara refused to hand over the collected funds to the pro-Treaty administration which resulted in his imprisonment in 1922-1923.  He had also been imprisoned for seven days in 1921 for refusing to pay a fine of £10 for non-compliance with a military summons.<lb/><lb/>The bulk of the money collected during the Bond Drive was left in various banks in New York and remained untouched for a number of years.  In 1927, following legal action between the Irish Government and Eamon de Valera, a court in New York ordered that money outstanding to bond holders must be paid back.  Having anticipated such a ruling, de Valera’s legal team invited bond holders to sign over their bonds to de Valera, for which they were paid 58 cents to the dollar.  The monies so accumulated were used to launch the national daily newspaper *The Irish Press*.  Stephen O’Mara served on the paper’s Board of Directors until his resignation in 1935.<lb/><lb/>In 1932, Stephen O’Mara was once again sent to America on a mission involving the various consular and diplomatic offices maintained in the country by the Irish Government.  Two years later, he was appointed a member of the Commission on Vocational Organisation, on which he served until 1943.  In 1959, he was created a member of the Council of State following de Valera’s inauguration as President of Ireland.  Stephen O’Mara died less than two months after his appointment, on 11 November 1959.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara Junior married in 1918 Anne O’Brien, third daughter of Thomas O’Brien of Boru House, and the couple had an adopted son, Peter O’Mara.  Anne’s youngest sister, Kate O’Brien, became one of the most prominent novelists in 20th-century Ireland and a voice of the respectable Irish Roman Catholic middle class.</p>
            </note>
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            <p>Obituary of the British feminist activist Marian Reeves (1879-1961) by Kate O’Brien, published in the *Irish Times* on 1 September 1961.</p>
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            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">‘A Day in Avila: Episodes in a Transformation’</unittitle>
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            <unitid type="alternative" label="Original number">P40/836 (5)</unitid>
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            <note>
              <p>The history of the O’Mara family of Strand house and O’Mara’s Bacon Company go hand in hand.  The factory was founded in 1839 by James O’Meara (1817-1899), who originated from the village of Toomevaara in county Tipperary.  Having worked for some years in the woollen mills in Clonmel, he got a job as a clerk with Matterson’s Bacon Factory in Limerick and in 1839 founded O’Mara’s Bacon Company in his house on Mungret Street.  It is said that he dropped the ‘e’ from his surname as he felt that O’Meara was too long for commercial purposes.  James initially sold for Matterson’s but soon began to cure his own bacon in the basement of his house.  As his business grew, he acquired dedicated premises for the purpose near the top of Roche’s Street.<lb/><lb/>In 1841, James O’Mara married Honora Fowley (d. 1878), who worked in the bacon business alongside her husband.  A devoted nationalist, James was one of the early supporters of Isaac Butt’s Home Rule movement.  He was High Sheriff of Limerick City in 1887, and acted as Town Councillor on Limerick Corporation at least from 1888 to 1898.<lb/><lb/>James and Honora O’Mara had 13 children, of whom the two eldest surviving sons, Stephen O’Mara (1844-1926) and John (Jack) O’Mara (1856-1919) were instrumental in building up the O’Mara’s Bacon Factory into a great success.   The youngest son, Joseph (Joe) O’Mara (1864-1927) became a celebrated opera singer.<lb/><lb/>When James O’Mara retired from business his son John (Jack) O’Mara became manager of the O’Mara Bacon Factory.  In the late 1880s, Jack was invited to Russia by Tsar Alexander III to provide instruction on bacon curing.  He stayed in St Petersburg to supervise the construction of a bacon factory.  In 1891, his father bought the rights of the Russian Bacon Company and the family imported bacon from Russia into London until 1903.  James (Jim) O’Mara (1858-1893) acted as agent for O’Mara’s in London until his untimely death from heart disease.  His nephew James O’Mara (1873-1948), son of Stephen O’Mara Senior (1844-1926), took over the agency and held it until 1914.<lb/><lb/>When John (Jack) O’Mara died in 1919, his younger brother Stephen O’Mara (1844-1926) became Managing Director of O’Mara Limited and remained in that capacity until 1923.  Having entered into the family business at the age of fifteen, his great business acumen established O’Mara’s Bacon Factory as one of the most prominent commercial enterprises in Limerick city.  He also purchased a bacon factory in Palmerston, Ontario, Canada, which was managed by his son Joseph (Joe) O’Mara (1878-1950) until the business was wound up in the 1940s.<lb/><lb/>Like his father, Stephen O’Mara was a strong supporter of Isaac Butt’s Home Rule movement and a member of the committee which secured Butt’s election for Limerick city in 1871.  He later developed a close association with Charles Stewart Parnell and was elected Member of Parliament for Upper Ossory in Kilkenny South for the Irish Parliamentary Party in February 1886.  When the Irish National League split from Irish Parliamentary Party in December 1890, O’Mara took the Parnellite side.  He continued to act as trustee of the Party funds until 1908, when he resigned from his trusteeship.  Towards the end of his life, his moderate political views became more radicalised under the influence of his sons James (1873-1948) and Stephen Junior (1884-1959).  He had agreed with his son James’s decision to resign from the Irish Parliamentary Party in 1907 in order to join Sinn Fein, and personally supported the party in the 1918 General Election.  Both Stephen and his son James were strong supporters of the 1921 Anglo-Irish Treaty but were on friendly terms with Eamon de Valera who, it is said, spent the night at the O’Mara family home, Strand House, as the Treaty was being signed in London.  In the 1925 election, Stephen O’Mara was elected as Senator to the Free State Seanad.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara was also a prominent figure in local politics.  He became a Town Councillor on Limerick Corporation in the 1880s and was elected Mayor of Limerick in 1885.  He was the first Mayor of Limerick to be elected on a Nationalist ticket.  He also served as High Sheriff of Limerick city in 1888, 1913 and 1914.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara married Ellen Pigott in 1867, and the couple had 12 children of whom the eldest three died tragically of diphtheria in 1872.  From c. 1909 onwards, the family lived at Strand House.  Their third son, Stephen O’Mara Junior, was born on 5 January 1884.  He entered the family business in 1903 when he travelled to Canada to work in the bacon factory established by the O’Mara family in Ottawa.  In 1923, he became Managing Director of O’Mara Limited and created numerous employment opportunities by establishing bacon factories in Claremorris, County Mayo, and Letterkenny, County Donegal, in the 1930s.  The three bacon companies were amalgamated in 1938 and formed into the Bacon Company of Ireland.  Stephen O’Mara Junior remained the company’s chairman until his death in 1959.  In 1987, the Bacon Company of Ireland merged with Hanley of Rooskey and Benesford UK (Castlebar) with assistance from the Industrial Development Agency Ireland (IDA) to form Irish Country Bacon.  Shortly afterwards the old O’Mara factory in Limerick was closed down.  It was subsequently demolished to make way for a multi-storey car park.<lb/><lb/>Throughout his life, Stephen O’Mara Junior played a prominent role in both local and national affairs.  Unlike his father and elder brother James, Stephen was opposed to the Anglo-Irish Treaty but in a conciliatory manner.  He was prominently identified with the Sinn Fein movement after the Easter Rising.  He was one of Eamon de Valera’s strongest supporters and a member of his Fianna Fail Party since its formation in 1926.<lb/><lb/>When George Clancy, Lord Mayor of Limerick, and his predecessor Michael O’Callaghan were murdered by the British military forces in March 1921, Stephen decided to stand for election and became Mayor.  He was re-elected in 1922 and in 1923 but resigned before the expiration of his term of office.<lb/><lb/>In 1921, Stephen O’Mara Junior was selected to go to America as Special Envoy appointed by Dáil Éireann to the United States to oversee one of the country’s biggest fundraising drives to finance the first Dáil and was made Trustee of the funds.  The funds-drive was terminated following the signing of the Anglo-Irish Treaty.  Considering himself as the exchequer to the Irish Free State, O’Mara refused to hand over the collected funds to the pro-Treaty administration which resulted in his imprisonment in 1922-1923.  He had also been imprisoned for seven days in 1921 for refusing to pay a fine of £10 for non-compliance with a military summons.<lb/><lb/>The bulk of the money collected during the Bond Drive was left in various banks in New York and remained untouched for a number of years.  In 1927, following legal action between the Irish Government and Eamon de Valera, a court in New York ordered that money outstanding to bond holders must be paid back.  Having anticipated such a ruling, de Valera’s legal team invited bond holders to sign over their bonds to de Valera, for which they were paid 58 cents to the dollar.  The monies so accumulated were used to launch the national daily newspaper *The Irish Press*.  Stephen O’Mara served on the paper’s Board of Directors until his resignation in 1935.<lb/><lb/>In 1932, Stephen O’Mara was once again sent to America on a mission involving the various consular and diplomatic offices maintained in the country by the Irish Government.  Two years later, he was appointed a member of the Commission on Vocational Organisation, on which he served until 1943.  In 1959, he was created a member of the Council of State following de Valera’s inauguration as President of Ireland.  Stephen O’Mara died less than two months after his appointment, on 11 November 1959.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara Junior married in 1918 Anne O’Brien, third daughter of Thomas O’Brien of Boru House, and the couple had an adopted son, Peter O’Mara.  Anne’s youngest sister, Kate O’Brien, became one of the most prominent novelists in 20th-century Ireland and a voice of the respectable Irish Roman Catholic middle class.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
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          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Article entitled ‘A Day in Avila: Episodes in a Transformation’ by Kate O’Brien, published in the *Irish Times* on 24 January 1962.</p>
          </scopecontent>
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            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">‘New Writing in Spain’</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="IE" repositorycode="2135">P40/3/10/2/2/30</unitid>
            <unitid type="alternative" label="Original number">P40/836 (6)</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1962-01-31/1962-01-31" encodinganalog="3.1.3">31 January 1962</unitdate>
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              <famname id="atom_124608_actor">O'Mara family of Strand House, Limerick</famname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-be03d29153491160a15961757089b84f" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>The history of the O’Mara family of Strand house and O’Mara’s Bacon Company go hand in hand.  The factory was founded in 1839 by James O’Meara (1817-1899), who originated from the village of Toomevaara in county Tipperary.  Having worked for some years in the woollen mills in Clonmel, he got a job as a clerk with Matterson’s Bacon Factory in Limerick and in 1839 founded O’Mara’s Bacon Company in his house on Mungret Street.  It is said that he dropped the ‘e’ from his surname as he felt that O’Meara was too long for commercial purposes.  James initially sold for Matterson’s but soon began to cure his own bacon in the basement of his house.  As his business grew, he acquired dedicated premises for the purpose near the top of Roche’s Street.<lb/><lb/>In 1841, James O’Mara married Honora Fowley (d. 1878), who worked in the bacon business alongside her husband.  A devoted nationalist, James was one of the early supporters of Isaac Butt’s Home Rule movement.  He was High Sheriff of Limerick City in 1887, and acted as Town Councillor on Limerick Corporation at least from 1888 to 1898.<lb/><lb/>James and Honora O’Mara had 13 children, of whom the two eldest surviving sons, Stephen O’Mara (1844-1926) and John (Jack) O’Mara (1856-1919) were instrumental in building up the O’Mara’s Bacon Factory into a great success.   The youngest son, Joseph (Joe) O’Mara (1864-1927) became a celebrated opera singer.<lb/><lb/>When James O’Mara retired from business his son John (Jack) O’Mara became manager of the O’Mara Bacon Factory.  In the late 1880s, Jack was invited to Russia by Tsar Alexander III to provide instruction on bacon curing.  He stayed in St Petersburg to supervise the construction of a bacon factory.  In 1891, his father bought the rights of the Russian Bacon Company and the family imported bacon from Russia into London until 1903.  James (Jim) O’Mara (1858-1893) acted as agent for O’Mara’s in London until his untimely death from heart disease.  His nephew James O’Mara (1873-1948), son of Stephen O’Mara Senior (1844-1926), took over the agency and held it until 1914.<lb/><lb/>When John (Jack) O’Mara died in 1919, his younger brother Stephen O’Mara (1844-1926) became Managing Director of O’Mara Limited and remained in that capacity until 1923.  Having entered into the family business at the age of fifteen, his great business acumen established O’Mara’s Bacon Factory as one of the most prominent commercial enterprises in Limerick city.  He also purchased a bacon factory in Palmerston, Ontario, Canada, which was managed by his son Joseph (Joe) O’Mara (1878-1950) until the business was wound up in the 1940s.<lb/><lb/>Like his father, Stephen O’Mara was a strong supporter of Isaac Butt’s Home Rule movement and a member of the committee which secured Butt’s election for Limerick city in 1871.  He later developed a close association with Charles Stewart Parnell and was elected Member of Parliament for Upper Ossory in Kilkenny South for the Irish Parliamentary Party in February 1886.  When the Irish National League split from Irish Parliamentary Party in December 1890, O’Mara took the Parnellite side.  He continued to act as trustee of the Party funds until 1908, when he resigned from his trusteeship.  Towards the end of his life, his moderate political views became more radicalised under the influence of his sons James (1873-1948) and Stephen Junior (1884-1959).  He had agreed with his son James’s decision to resign from the Irish Parliamentary Party in 1907 in order to join Sinn Fein, and personally supported the party in the 1918 General Election.  Both Stephen and his son James were strong supporters of the 1921 Anglo-Irish Treaty but were on friendly terms with Eamon de Valera who, it is said, spent the night at the O’Mara family home, Strand House, as the Treaty was being signed in London.  In the 1925 election, Stephen O’Mara was elected as Senator to the Free State Seanad.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara was also a prominent figure in local politics.  He became a Town Councillor on Limerick Corporation in the 1880s and was elected Mayor of Limerick in 1885.  He was the first Mayor of Limerick to be elected on a Nationalist ticket.  He also served as High Sheriff of Limerick city in 1888, 1913 and 1914.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara married Ellen Pigott in 1867, and the couple had 12 children of whom the eldest three died tragically of diphtheria in 1872.  From c. 1909 onwards, the family lived at Strand House.  Their third son, Stephen O’Mara Junior, was born on 5 January 1884.  He entered the family business in 1903 when he travelled to Canada to work in the bacon factory established by the O’Mara family in Ottawa.  In 1923, he became Managing Director of O’Mara Limited and created numerous employment opportunities by establishing bacon factories in Claremorris, County Mayo, and Letterkenny, County Donegal, in the 1930s.  The three bacon companies were amalgamated in 1938 and formed into the Bacon Company of Ireland.  Stephen O’Mara Junior remained the company’s chairman until his death in 1959.  In 1987, the Bacon Company of Ireland merged with Hanley of Rooskey and Benesford UK (Castlebar) with assistance from the Industrial Development Agency Ireland (IDA) to form Irish Country Bacon.  Shortly afterwards the old O’Mara factory in Limerick was closed down.  It was subsequently demolished to make way for a multi-storey car park.<lb/><lb/>Throughout his life, Stephen O’Mara Junior played a prominent role in both local and national affairs.  Unlike his father and elder brother James, Stephen was opposed to the Anglo-Irish Treaty but in a conciliatory manner.  He was prominently identified with the Sinn Fein movement after the Easter Rising.  He was one of Eamon de Valera’s strongest supporters and a member of his Fianna Fail Party since its formation in 1926.<lb/><lb/>When George Clancy, Lord Mayor of Limerick, and his predecessor Michael O’Callaghan were murdered by the British military forces in March 1921, Stephen decided to stand for election and became Mayor.  He was re-elected in 1922 and in 1923 but resigned before the expiration of his term of office.<lb/><lb/>In 1921, Stephen O’Mara Junior was selected to go to America as Special Envoy appointed by Dáil Éireann to the United States to oversee one of the country’s biggest fundraising drives to finance the first Dáil and was made Trustee of the funds.  The funds-drive was terminated following the signing of the Anglo-Irish Treaty.  Considering himself as the exchequer to the Irish Free State, O’Mara refused to hand over the collected funds to the pro-Treaty administration which resulted in his imprisonment in 1922-1923.  He had also been imprisoned for seven days in 1921 for refusing to pay a fine of £10 for non-compliance with a military summons.<lb/><lb/>The bulk of the money collected during the Bond Drive was left in various banks in New York and remained untouched for a number of years.  In 1927, following legal action between the Irish Government and Eamon de Valera, a court in New York ordered that money outstanding to bond holders must be paid back.  Having anticipated such a ruling, de Valera’s legal team invited bond holders to sign over their bonds to de Valera, for which they were paid 58 cents to the dollar.  The monies so accumulated were used to launch the national daily newspaper *The Irish Press*.  Stephen O’Mara served on the paper’s Board of Directors until his resignation in 1935.<lb/><lb/>In 1932, Stephen O’Mara was once again sent to America on a mission involving the various consular and diplomatic offices maintained in the country by the Irish Government.  Two years later, he was appointed a member of the Commission on Vocational Organisation, on which he served until 1943.  In 1959, he was created a member of the Council of State following de Valera’s inauguration as President of Ireland.  Stephen O’Mara died less than two months after his appointment, on 11 November 1959.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara Junior married in 1918 Anne O’Brien, third daughter of Thomas O’Brien of Boru House, and the couple had an adopted son, Peter O’Mara.  Anne’s youngest sister, Kate O’Brien, became one of the most prominent novelists in 20th-century Ireland and a voice of the respectable Irish Roman Catholic middle class.</p>
            </note>
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            <p>Article entitled ‘New Writing in Spain’ by Kate O’Brien, published in the *Irish Times* on 31 January 1962.</p>
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            <unitdate normal="1962-02-07/1962-02-07" encodinganalog="3.1.3">7 February 1962</unitdate>
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            <note>
              <p>The history of the O’Mara family of Strand house and O’Mara’s Bacon Company go hand in hand.  The factory was founded in 1839 by James O’Meara (1817-1899), who originated from the village of Toomevaara in county Tipperary.  Having worked for some years in the woollen mills in Clonmel, he got a job as a clerk with Matterson’s Bacon Factory in Limerick and in 1839 founded O’Mara’s Bacon Company in his house on Mungret Street.  It is said that he dropped the ‘e’ from his surname as he felt that O’Meara was too long for commercial purposes.  James initially sold for Matterson’s but soon began to cure his own bacon in the basement of his house.  As his business grew, he acquired dedicated premises for the purpose near the top of Roche’s Street.<lb/><lb/>In 1841, James O’Mara married Honora Fowley (d. 1878), who worked in the bacon business alongside her husband.  A devoted nationalist, James was one of the early supporters of Isaac Butt’s Home Rule movement.  He was High Sheriff of Limerick City in 1887, and acted as Town Councillor on Limerick Corporation at least from 1888 to 1898.<lb/><lb/>James and Honora O’Mara had 13 children, of whom the two eldest surviving sons, Stephen O’Mara (1844-1926) and John (Jack) O’Mara (1856-1919) were instrumental in building up the O’Mara’s Bacon Factory into a great success.   The youngest son, Joseph (Joe) O’Mara (1864-1927) became a celebrated opera singer.<lb/><lb/>When James O’Mara retired from business his son John (Jack) O’Mara became manager of the O’Mara Bacon Factory.  In the late 1880s, Jack was invited to Russia by Tsar Alexander III to provide instruction on bacon curing.  He stayed in St Petersburg to supervise the construction of a bacon factory.  In 1891, his father bought the rights of the Russian Bacon Company and the family imported bacon from Russia into London until 1903.  James (Jim) O’Mara (1858-1893) acted as agent for O’Mara’s in London until his untimely death from heart disease.  His nephew James O’Mara (1873-1948), son of Stephen O’Mara Senior (1844-1926), took over the agency and held it until 1914.<lb/><lb/>When John (Jack) O’Mara died in 1919, his younger brother Stephen O’Mara (1844-1926) became Managing Director of O’Mara Limited and remained in that capacity until 1923.  Having entered into the family business at the age of fifteen, his great business acumen established O’Mara’s Bacon Factory as one of the most prominent commercial enterprises in Limerick city.  He also purchased a bacon factory in Palmerston, Ontario, Canada, which was managed by his son Joseph (Joe) O’Mara (1878-1950) until the business was wound up in the 1940s.<lb/><lb/>Like his father, Stephen O’Mara was a strong supporter of Isaac Butt’s Home Rule movement and a member of the committee which secured Butt’s election for Limerick city in 1871.  He later developed a close association with Charles Stewart Parnell and was elected Member of Parliament for Upper Ossory in Kilkenny South for the Irish Parliamentary Party in February 1886.  When the Irish National League split from Irish Parliamentary Party in December 1890, O’Mara took the Parnellite side.  He continued to act as trustee of the Party funds until 1908, when he resigned from his trusteeship.  Towards the end of his life, his moderate political views became more radicalised under the influence of his sons James (1873-1948) and Stephen Junior (1884-1959).  He had agreed with his son James’s decision to resign from the Irish Parliamentary Party in 1907 in order to join Sinn Fein, and personally supported the party in the 1918 General Election.  Both Stephen and his son James were strong supporters of the 1921 Anglo-Irish Treaty but were on friendly terms with Eamon de Valera who, it is said, spent the night at the O’Mara family home, Strand House, as the Treaty was being signed in London.  In the 1925 election, Stephen O’Mara was elected as Senator to the Free State Seanad.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara was also a prominent figure in local politics.  He became a Town Councillor on Limerick Corporation in the 1880s and was elected Mayor of Limerick in 1885.  He was the first Mayor of Limerick to be elected on a Nationalist ticket.  He also served as High Sheriff of Limerick city in 1888, 1913 and 1914.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara married Ellen Pigott in 1867, and the couple had 12 children of whom the eldest three died tragically of diphtheria in 1872.  From c. 1909 onwards, the family lived at Strand House.  Their third son, Stephen O’Mara Junior, was born on 5 January 1884.  He entered the family business in 1903 when he travelled to Canada to work in the bacon factory established by the O’Mara family in Ottawa.  In 1923, he became Managing Director of O’Mara Limited and created numerous employment opportunities by establishing bacon factories in Claremorris, County Mayo, and Letterkenny, County Donegal, in the 1930s.  The three bacon companies were amalgamated in 1938 and formed into the Bacon Company of Ireland.  Stephen O’Mara Junior remained the company’s chairman until his death in 1959.  In 1987, the Bacon Company of Ireland merged with Hanley of Rooskey and Benesford UK (Castlebar) with assistance from the Industrial Development Agency Ireland (IDA) to form Irish Country Bacon.  Shortly afterwards the old O’Mara factory in Limerick was closed down.  It was subsequently demolished to make way for a multi-storey car park.<lb/><lb/>Throughout his life, Stephen O’Mara Junior played a prominent role in both local and national affairs.  Unlike his father and elder brother James, Stephen was opposed to the Anglo-Irish Treaty but in a conciliatory manner.  He was prominently identified with the Sinn Fein movement after the Easter Rising.  He was one of Eamon de Valera’s strongest supporters and a member of his Fianna Fail Party since its formation in 1926.<lb/><lb/>When George Clancy, Lord Mayor of Limerick, and his predecessor Michael O’Callaghan were murdered by the British military forces in March 1921, Stephen decided to stand for election and became Mayor.  He was re-elected in 1922 and in 1923 but resigned before the expiration of his term of office.<lb/><lb/>In 1921, Stephen O’Mara Junior was selected to go to America as Special Envoy appointed by Dáil Éireann to the United States to oversee one of the country’s biggest fundraising drives to finance the first Dáil and was made Trustee of the funds.  The funds-drive was terminated following the signing of the Anglo-Irish Treaty.  Considering himself as the exchequer to the Irish Free State, O’Mara refused to hand over the collected funds to the pro-Treaty administration which resulted in his imprisonment in 1922-1923.  He had also been imprisoned for seven days in 1921 for refusing to pay a fine of £10 for non-compliance with a military summons.<lb/><lb/>The bulk of the money collected during the Bond Drive was left in various banks in New York and remained untouched for a number of years.  In 1927, following legal action between the Irish Government and Eamon de Valera, a court in New York ordered that money outstanding to bond holders must be paid back.  Having anticipated such a ruling, de Valera’s legal team invited bond holders to sign over their bonds to de Valera, for which they were paid 58 cents to the dollar.  The monies so accumulated were used to launch the national daily newspaper *The Irish Press*.  Stephen O’Mara served on the paper’s Board of Directors until his resignation in 1935.<lb/><lb/>In 1932, Stephen O’Mara was once again sent to America on a mission involving the various consular and diplomatic offices maintained in the country by the Irish Government.  Two years later, he was appointed a member of the Commission on Vocational Organisation, on which he served until 1943.  In 1959, he was created a member of the Council of State following de Valera’s inauguration as President of Ireland.  Stephen O’Mara died less than two months after his appointment, on 11 November 1959.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara Junior married in 1918 Anne O’Brien, third daughter of Thomas O’Brien of Boru House, and the couple had an adopted son, Peter O’Mara.  Anne’s youngest sister, Kate O’Brien, became one of the most prominent novelists in 20th-century Ireland and a voice of the respectable Irish Roman Catholic middle class.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
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            <p>Article entitled ‘Land of Misinformation’ by Kate O’Brien, published in the *Irish Times* on 7 February 1962.</p>
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          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">‘Young Novelists and the Spanish Spring’</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="IE" repositorycode="2135">P40/3/10/2/2/32</unitid>
            <unitid type="alternative" label="Original number">P40/836 (8)</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1962-02-14/1962-02-14" encodinganalog="3.1.3">14 February 1962</unitdate>
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              <famname id="atom_124614_actor">O'Mara family of Strand House, Limerick</famname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-be03d29153491160a15961757089b84f" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>The history of the O’Mara family of Strand house and O’Mara’s Bacon Company go hand in hand.  The factory was founded in 1839 by James O’Meara (1817-1899), who originated from the village of Toomevaara in county Tipperary.  Having worked for some years in the woollen mills in Clonmel, he got a job as a clerk with Matterson’s Bacon Factory in Limerick and in 1839 founded O’Mara’s Bacon Company in his house on Mungret Street.  It is said that he dropped the ‘e’ from his surname as he felt that O’Meara was too long for commercial purposes.  James initially sold for Matterson’s but soon began to cure his own bacon in the basement of his house.  As his business grew, he acquired dedicated premises for the purpose near the top of Roche’s Street.<lb/><lb/>In 1841, James O’Mara married Honora Fowley (d. 1878), who worked in the bacon business alongside her husband.  A devoted nationalist, James was one of the early supporters of Isaac Butt’s Home Rule movement.  He was High Sheriff of Limerick City in 1887, and acted as Town Councillor on Limerick Corporation at least from 1888 to 1898.<lb/><lb/>James and Honora O’Mara had 13 children, of whom the two eldest surviving sons, Stephen O’Mara (1844-1926) and John (Jack) O’Mara (1856-1919) were instrumental in building up the O’Mara’s Bacon Factory into a great success.   The youngest son, Joseph (Joe) O’Mara (1864-1927) became a celebrated opera singer.<lb/><lb/>When James O’Mara retired from business his son John (Jack) O’Mara became manager of the O’Mara Bacon Factory.  In the late 1880s, Jack was invited to Russia by Tsar Alexander III to provide instruction on bacon curing.  He stayed in St Petersburg to supervise the construction of a bacon factory.  In 1891, his father bought the rights of the Russian Bacon Company and the family imported bacon from Russia into London until 1903.  James (Jim) O’Mara (1858-1893) acted as agent for O’Mara’s in London until his untimely death from heart disease.  His nephew James O’Mara (1873-1948), son of Stephen O’Mara Senior (1844-1926), took over the agency and held it until 1914.<lb/><lb/>When John (Jack) O’Mara died in 1919, his younger brother Stephen O’Mara (1844-1926) became Managing Director of O’Mara Limited and remained in that capacity until 1923.  Having entered into the family business at the age of fifteen, his great business acumen established O’Mara’s Bacon Factory as one of the most prominent commercial enterprises in Limerick city.  He also purchased a bacon factory in Palmerston, Ontario, Canada, which was managed by his son Joseph (Joe) O’Mara (1878-1950) until the business was wound up in the 1940s.<lb/><lb/>Like his father, Stephen O’Mara was a strong supporter of Isaac Butt’s Home Rule movement and a member of the committee which secured Butt’s election for Limerick city in 1871.  He later developed a close association with Charles Stewart Parnell and was elected Member of Parliament for Upper Ossory in Kilkenny South for the Irish Parliamentary Party in February 1886.  When the Irish National League split from Irish Parliamentary Party in December 1890, O’Mara took the Parnellite side.  He continued to act as trustee of the Party funds until 1908, when he resigned from his trusteeship.  Towards the end of his life, his moderate political views became more radicalised under the influence of his sons James (1873-1948) and Stephen Junior (1884-1959).  He had agreed with his son James’s decision to resign from the Irish Parliamentary Party in 1907 in order to join Sinn Fein, and personally supported the party in the 1918 General Election.  Both Stephen and his son James were strong supporters of the 1921 Anglo-Irish Treaty but were on friendly terms with Eamon de Valera who, it is said, spent the night at the O’Mara family home, Strand House, as the Treaty was being signed in London.  In the 1925 election, Stephen O’Mara was elected as Senator to the Free State Seanad.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara was also a prominent figure in local politics.  He became a Town Councillor on Limerick Corporation in the 1880s and was elected Mayor of Limerick in 1885.  He was the first Mayor of Limerick to be elected on a Nationalist ticket.  He also served as High Sheriff of Limerick city in 1888, 1913 and 1914.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara married Ellen Pigott in 1867, and the couple had 12 children of whom the eldest three died tragically of diphtheria in 1872.  From c. 1909 onwards, the family lived at Strand House.  Their third son, Stephen O’Mara Junior, was born on 5 January 1884.  He entered the family business in 1903 when he travelled to Canada to work in the bacon factory established by the O’Mara family in Ottawa.  In 1923, he became Managing Director of O’Mara Limited and created numerous employment opportunities by establishing bacon factories in Claremorris, County Mayo, and Letterkenny, County Donegal, in the 1930s.  The three bacon companies were amalgamated in 1938 and formed into the Bacon Company of Ireland.  Stephen O’Mara Junior remained the company’s chairman until his death in 1959.  In 1987, the Bacon Company of Ireland merged with Hanley of Rooskey and Benesford UK (Castlebar) with assistance from the Industrial Development Agency Ireland (IDA) to form Irish Country Bacon.  Shortly afterwards the old O’Mara factory in Limerick was closed down.  It was subsequently demolished to make way for a multi-storey car park.<lb/><lb/>Throughout his life, Stephen O’Mara Junior played a prominent role in both local and national affairs.  Unlike his father and elder brother James, Stephen was opposed to the Anglo-Irish Treaty but in a conciliatory manner.  He was prominently identified with the Sinn Fein movement after the Easter Rising.  He was one of Eamon de Valera’s strongest supporters and a member of his Fianna Fail Party since its formation in 1926.<lb/><lb/>When George Clancy, Lord Mayor of Limerick, and his predecessor Michael O’Callaghan were murdered by the British military forces in March 1921, Stephen decided to stand for election and became Mayor.  He was re-elected in 1922 and in 1923 but resigned before the expiration of his term of office.<lb/><lb/>In 1921, Stephen O’Mara Junior was selected to go to America as Special Envoy appointed by Dáil Éireann to the United States to oversee one of the country’s biggest fundraising drives to finance the first Dáil and was made Trustee of the funds.  The funds-drive was terminated following the signing of the Anglo-Irish Treaty.  Considering himself as the exchequer to the Irish Free State, O’Mara refused to hand over the collected funds to the pro-Treaty administration which resulted in his imprisonment in 1922-1923.  He had also been imprisoned for seven days in 1921 for refusing to pay a fine of £10 for non-compliance with a military summons.<lb/><lb/>The bulk of the money collected during the Bond Drive was left in various banks in New York and remained untouched for a number of years.  In 1927, following legal action between the Irish Government and Eamon de Valera, a court in New York ordered that money outstanding to bond holders must be paid back.  Having anticipated such a ruling, de Valera’s legal team invited bond holders to sign over their bonds to de Valera, for which they were paid 58 cents to the dollar.  The monies so accumulated were used to launch the national daily newspaper *The Irish Press*.  Stephen O’Mara served on the paper’s Board of Directors until his resignation in 1935.<lb/><lb/>In 1932, Stephen O’Mara was once again sent to America on a mission involving the various consular and diplomatic offices maintained in the country by the Irish Government.  Two years later, he was appointed a member of the Commission on Vocational Organisation, on which he served until 1943.  In 1959, he was created a member of the Council of State following de Valera’s inauguration as President of Ireland.  Stephen O’Mara died less than two months after his appointment, on 11 November 1959.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara Junior married in 1918 Anne O’Brien, third daughter of Thomas O’Brien of Boru House, and the couple had an adopted son, Peter O’Mara.  Anne’s youngest sister, Kate O’Brien, became one of the most prominent novelists in 20th-century Ireland and a voice of the respectable Irish Roman Catholic middle class.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
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            <p>Article entitled ‘Young Novelists and the Spanish Spring’ by Kate O’Brien, published in the *Irish Times* on 14 February 1962.</p>
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          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">‘Babies in Exile – Blame the Greedy Grasping Parents’</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="IE" repositorycode="2135">P40/3/10/2/2/33</unitid>
            <unitid type="alternative" label="Original number">P40/836 (9)</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1962-07-24/1962-07-24" encodinganalog="3.1.3">24 July 1962</unitdate>
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              <language langcode="eng">English</language>
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              <famname id="atom_124617_actor">O'Mara family of Strand House, Limerick</famname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-be03d29153491160a15961757089b84f" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>The history of the O’Mara family of Strand house and O’Mara’s Bacon Company go hand in hand.  The factory was founded in 1839 by James O’Meara (1817-1899), who originated from the village of Toomevaara in county Tipperary.  Having worked for some years in the woollen mills in Clonmel, he got a job as a clerk with Matterson’s Bacon Factory in Limerick and in 1839 founded O’Mara’s Bacon Company in his house on Mungret Street.  It is said that he dropped the ‘e’ from his surname as he felt that O’Meara was too long for commercial purposes.  James initially sold for Matterson’s but soon began to cure his own bacon in the basement of his house.  As his business grew, he acquired dedicated premises for the purpose near the top of Roche’s Street.<lb/><lb/>In 1841, James O’Mara married Honora Fowley (d. 1878), who worked in the bacon business alongside her husband.  A devoted nationalist, James was one of the early supporters of Isaac Butt’s Home Rule movement.  He was High Sheriff of Limerick City in 1887, and acted as Town Councillor on Limerick Corporation at least from 1888 to 1898.<lb/><lb/>James and Honora O’Mara had 13 children, of whom the two eldest surviving sons, Stephen O’Mara (1844-1926) and John (Jack) O’Mara (1856-1919) were instrumental in building up the O’Mara’s Bacon Factory into a great success.   The youngest son, Joseph (Joe) O’Mara (1864-1927) became a celebrated opera singer.<lb/><lb/>When James O’Mara retired from business his son John (Jack) O’Mara became manager of the O’Mara Bacon Factory.  In the late 1880s, Jack was invited to Russia by Tsar Alexander III to provide instruction on bacon curing.  He stayed in St Petersburg to supervise the construction of a bacon factory.  In 1891, his father bought the rights of the Russian Bacon Company and the family imported bacon from Russia into London until 1903.  James (Jim) O’Mara (1858-1893) acted as agent for O’Mara’s in London until his untimely death from heart disease.  His nephew James O’Mara (1873-1948), son of Stephen O’Mara Senior (1844-1926), took over the agency and held it until 1914.<lb/><lb/>When John (Jack) O’Mara died in 1919, his younger brother Stephen O’Mara (1844-1926) became Managing Director of O’Mara Limited and remained in that capacity until 1923.  Having entered into the family business at the age of fifteen, his great business acumen established O’Mara’s Bacon Factory as one of the most prominent commercial enterprises in Limerick city.  He also purchased a bacon factory in Palmerston, Ontario, Canada, which was managed by his son Joseph (Joe) O’Mara (1878-1950) until the business was wound up in the 1940s.<lb/><lb/>Like his father, Stephen O’Mara was a strong supporter of Isaac Butt’s Home Rule movement and a member of the committee which secured Butt’s election for Limerick city in 1871.  He later developed a close association with Charles Stewart Parnell and was elected Member of Parliament for Upper Ossory in Kilkenny South for the Irish Parliamentary Party in February 1886.  When the Irish National League split from Irish Parliamentary Party in December 1890, O’Mara took the Parnellite side.  He continued to act as trustee of the Party funds until 1908, when he resigned from his trusteeship.  Towards the end of his life, his moderate political views became more radicalised under the influence of his sons James (1873-1948) and Stephen Junior (1884-1959).  He had agreed with his son James’s decision to resign from the Irish Parliamentary Party in 1907 in order to join Sinn Fein, and personally supported the party in the 1918 General Election.  Both Stephen and his son James were strong supporters of the 1921 Anglo-Irish Treaty but were on friendly terms with Eamon de Valera who, it is said, spent the night at the O’Mara family home, Strand House, as the Treaty was being signed in London.  In the 1925 election, Stephen O’Mara was elected as Senator to the Free State Seanad.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara was also a prominent figure in local politics.  He became a Town Councillor on Limerick Corporation in the 1880s and was elected Mayor of Limerick in 1885.  He was the first Mayor of Limerick to be elected on a Nationalist ticket.  He also served as High Sheriff of Limerick city in 1888, 1913 and 1914.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara married Ellen Pigott in 1867, and the couple had 12 children of whom the eldest three died tragically of diphtheria in 1872.  From c. 1909 onwards, the family lived at Strand House.  Their third son, Stephen O’Mara Junior, was born on 5 January 1884.  He entered the family business in 1903 when he travelled to Canada to work in the bacon factory established by the O’Mara family in Ottawa.  In 1923, he became Managing Director of O’Mara Limited and created numerous employment opportunities by establishing bacon factories in Claremorris, County Mayo, and Letterkenny, County Donegal, in the 1930s.  The three bacon companies were amalgamated in 1938 and formed into the Bacon Company of Ireland.  Stephen O’Mara Junior remained the company’s chairman until his death in 1959.  In 1987, the Bacon Company of Ireland merged with Hanley of Rooskey and Benesford UK (Castlebar) with assistance from the Industrial Development Agency Ireland (IDA) to form Irish Country Bacon.  Shortly afterwards the old O’Mara factory in Limerick was closed down.  It was subsequently demolished to make way for a multi-storey car park.<lb/><lb/>Throughout his life, Stephen O’Mara Junior played a prominent role in both local and national affairs.  Unlike his father and elder brother James, Stephen was opposed to the Anglo-Irish Treaty but in a conciliatory manner.  He was prominently identified with the Sinn Fein movement after the Easter Rising.  He was one of Eamon de Valera’s strongest supporters and a member of his Fianna Fail Party since its formation in 1926.<lb/><lb/>When George Clancy, Lord Mayor of Limerick, and his predecessor Michael O’Callaghan were murdered by the British military forces in March 1921, Stephen decided to stand for election and became Mayor.  He was re-elected in 1922 and in 1923 but resigned before the expiration of his term of office.<lb/><lb/>In 1921, Stephen O’Mara Junior was selected to go to America as Special Envoy appointed by Dáil Éireann to the United States to oversee one of the country’s biggest fundraising drives to finance the first Dáil and was made Trustee of the funds.  The funds-drive was terminated following the signing of the Anglo-Irish Treaty.  Considering himself as the exchequer to the Irish Free State, O’Mara refused to hand over the collected funds to the pro-Treaty administration which resulted in his imprisonment in 1922-1923.  He had also been imprisoned for seven days in 1921 for refusing to pay a fine of £10 for non-compliance with a military summons.<lb/><lb/>The bulk of the money collected during the Bond Drive was left in various banks in New York and remained untouched for a number of years.  In 1927, following legal action between the Irish Government and Eamon de Valera, a court in New York ordered that money outstanding to bond holders must be paid back.  Having anticipated such a ruling, de Valera’s legal team invited bond holders to sign over their bonds to de Valera, for which they were paid 58 cents to the dollar.  The monies so accumulated were used to launch the national daily newspaper *The Irish Press*.  Stephen O’Mara served on the paper’s Board of Directors until his resignation in 1935.<lb/><lb/>In 1932, Stephen O’Mara was once again sent to America on a mission involving the various consular and diplomatic offices maintained in the country by the Irish Government.  Two years later, he was appointed a member of the Commission on Vocational Organisation, on which he served until 1943.  In 1959, he was created a member of the Council of State following de Valera’s inauguration as President of Ireland.  Stephen O’Mara died less than two months after his appointment, on 11 November 1959.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara Junior married in 1918 Anne O’Brien, third daughter of Thomas O’Brien of Boru House, and the couple had an adopted son, Peter O’Mara.  Anne’s youngest sister, Kate O’Brien, became one of the most prominent novelists in 20th-century Ireland and a voice of the respectable Irish Roman Catholic middle class.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
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            <p>Article entitled ‘Babies in Exile – Blame the Greedy Grasping Parents’ by Kate O’Brien, published in the *Evening Press* on 24 July 1962.</p>
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            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Untitled article relating to Limerick City</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="IE" repositorycode="2135">P40/3/10/2/2/34</unitid>
            <unitid type="alternative" label="Original number">P40/836 (10)</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1962-11-12/1962-11-12" encodinganalog="3.1.3">12 November 1962</unitdate>
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              <language langcode="eng">English</language>
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              <famname id="atom_124620_actor">O'Mara family of Strand House, Limerick</famname>
            </origination>
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          <bioghist id="md5-be03d29153491160a15961757089b84f" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>The history of the O’Mara family of Strand house and O’Mara’s Bacon Company go hand in hand.  The factory was founded in 1839 by James O’Meara (1817-1899), who originated from the village of Toomevaara in county Tipperary.  Having worked for some years in the woollen mills in Clonmel, he got a job as a clerk with Matterson’s Bacon Factory in Limerick and in 1839 founded O’Mara’s Bacon Company in his house on Mungret Street.  It is said that he dropped the ‘e’ from his surname as he felt that O’Meara was too long for commercial purposes.  James initially sold for Matterson’s but soon began to cure his own bacon in the basement of his house.  As his business grew, he acquired dedicated premises for the purpose near the top of Roche’s Street.<lb/><lb/>In 1841, James O’Mara married Honora Fowley (d. 1878), who worked in the bacon business alongside her husband.  A devoted nationalist, James was one of the early supporters of Isaac Butt’s Home Rule movement.  He was High Sheriff of Limerick City in 1887, and acted as Town Councillor on Limerick Corporation at least from 1888 to 1898.<lb/><lb/>James and Honora O’Mara had 13 children, of whom the two eldest surviving sons, Stephen O’Mara (1844-1926) and John (Jack) O’Mara (1856-1919) were instrumental in building up the O’Mara’s Bacon Factory into a great success.   The youngest son, Joseph (Joe) O’Mara (1864-1927) became a celebrated opera singer.<lb/><lb/>When James O’Mara retired from business his son John (Jack) O’Mara became manager of the O’Mara Bacon Factory.  In the late 1880s, Jack was invited to Russia by Tsar Alexander III to provide instruction on bacon curing.  He stayed in St Petersburg to supervise the construction of a bacon factory.  In 1891, his father bought the rights of the Russian Bacon Company and the family imported bacon from Russia into London until 1903.  James (Jim) O’Mara (1858-1893) acted as agent for O’Mara’s in London until his untimely death from heart disease.  His nephew James O’Mara (1873-1948), son of Stephen O’Mara Senior (1844-1926), took over the agency and held it until 1914.<lb/><lb/>When John (Jack) O’Mara died in 1919, his younger brother Stephen O’Mara (1844-1926) became Managing Director of O’Mara Limited and remained in that capacity until 1923.  Having entered into the family business at the age of fifteen, his great business acumen established O’Mara’s Bacon Factory as one of the most prominent commercial enterprises in Limerick city.  He also purchased a bacon factory in Palmerston, Ontario, Canada, which was managed by his son Joseph (Joe) O’Mara (1878-1950) until the business was wound up in the 1940s.<lb/><lb/>Like his father, Stephen O’Mara was a strong supporter of Isaac Butt’s Home Rule movement and a member of the committee which secured Butt’s election for Limerick city in 1871.  He later developed a close association with Charles Stewart Parnell and was elected Member of Parliament for Upper Ossory in Kilkenny South for the Irish Parliamentary Party in February 1886.  When the Irish National League split from Irish Parliamentary Party in December 1890, O’Mara took the Parnellite side.  He continued to act as trustee of the Party funds until 1908, when he resigned from his trusteeship.  Towards the end of his life, his moderate political views became more radicalised under the influence of his sons James (1873-1948) and Stephen Junior (1884-1959).  He had agreed with his son James’s decision to resign from the Irish Parliamentary Party in 1907 in order to join Sinn Fein, and personally supported the party in the 1918 General Election.  Both Stephen and his son James were strong supporters of the 1921 Anglo-Irish Treaty but were on friendly terms with Eamon de Valera who, it is said, spent the night at the O’Mara family home, Strand House, as the Treaty was being signed in London.  In the 1925 election, Stephen O’Mara was elected as Senator to the Free State Seanad.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara was also a prominent figure in local politics.  He became a Town Councillor on Limerick Corporation in the 1880s and was elected Mayor of Limerick in 1885.  He was the first Mayor of Limerick to be elected on a Nationalist ticket.  He also served as High Sheriff of Limerick city in 1888, 1913 and 1914.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara married Ellen Pigott in 1867, and the couple had 12 children of whom the eldest three died tragically of diphtheria in 1872.  From c. 1909 onwards, the family lived at Strand House.  Their third son, Stephen O’Mara Junior, was born on 5 January 1884.  He entered the family business in 1903 when he travelled to Canada to work in the bacon factory established by the O’Mara family in Ottawa.  In 1923, he became Managing Director of O’Mara Limited and created numerous employment opportunities by establishing bacon factories in Claremorris, County Mayo, and Letterkenny, County Donegal, in the 1930s.  The three bacon companies were amalgamated in 1938 and formed into the Bacon Company of Ireland.  Stephen O’Mara Junior remained the company’s chairman until his death in 1959.  In 1987, the Bacon Company of Ireland merged with Hanley of Rooskey and Benesford UK (Castlebar) with assistance from the Industrial Development Agency Ireland (IDA) to form Irish Country Bacon.  Shortly afterwards the old O’Mara factory in Limerick was closed down.  It was subsequently demolished to make way for a multi-storey car park.<lb/><lb/>Throughout his life, Stephen O’Mara Junior played a prominent role in both local and national affairs.  Unlike his father and elder brother James, Stephen was opposed to the Anglo-Irish Treaty but in a conciliatory manner.  He was prominently identified with the Sinn Fein movement after the Easter Rising.  He was one of Eamon de Valera’s strongest supporters and a member of his Fianna Fail Party since its formation in 1926.<lb/><lb/>When George Clancy, Lord Mayor of Limerick, and his predecessor Michael O’Callaghan were murdered by the British military forces in March 1921, Stephen decided to stand for election and became Mayor.  He was re-elected in 1922 and in 1923 but resigned before the expiration of his term of office.<lb/><lb/>In 1921, Stephen O’Mara Junior was selected to go to America as Special Envoy appointed by Dáil Éireann to the United States to oversee one of the country’s biggest fundraising drives to finance the first Dáil and was made Trustee of the funds.  The funds-drive was terminated following the signing of the Anglo-Irish Treaty.  Considering himself as the exchequer to the Irish Free State, O’Mara refused to hand over the collected funds to the pro-Treaty administration which resulted in his imprisonment in 1922-1923.  He had also been imprisoned for seven days in 1921 for refusing to pay a fine of £10 for non-compliance with a military summons.<lb/><lb/>The bulk of the money collected during the Bond Drive was left in various banks in New York and remained untouched for a number of years.  In 1927, following legal action between the Irish Government and Eamon de Valera, a court in New York ordered that money outstanding to bond holders must be paid back.  Having anticipated such a ruling, de Valera’s legal team invited bond holders to sign over their bonds to de Valera, for which they were paid 58 cents to the dollar.  The monies so accumulated were used to launch the national daily newspaper *The Irish Press*.  Stephen O’Mara served on the paper’s Board of Directors until his resignation in 1935.<lb/><lb/>In 1932, Stephen O’Mara was once again sent to America on a mission involving the various consular and diplomatic offices maintained in the country by the Irish Government.  Two years later, he was appointed a member of the Commission on Vocational Organisation, on which he served until 1943.  In 1959, he was created a member of the Council of State following de Valera’s inauguration as President of Ireland.  Stephen O’Mara died less than two months after his appointment, on 11 November 1959.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara Junior married in 1918 Anne O’Brien, third daughter of Thomas O’Brien of Boru House, and the couple had an adopted son, Peter O’Mara.  Anne’s youngest sister, Kate O’Brien, became one of the most prominent novelists in 20th-century Ireland and a voice of the respectable Irish Roman Catholic middle class.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
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            <p>Untitled article relating to Limerick City by Kate O’Brien, published in the *Evening Press* on 12 November 1962.</p>
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          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">‘My Childhood Christmas’</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="IE" repositorycode="2135">P40/3/10/2/2/35</unitid>
            <unitid type="alternative" label="Original number">P40/836 (11)</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1962-12-23/1962-12-23" encodinganalog="3.1.3">23 December 1962</unitdate>
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              <language langcode="eng">English</language>
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              <famname id="atom_124623_actor">O'Mara family of Strand House, Limerick</famname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-be03d29153491160a15961757089b84f" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>The history of the O’Mara family of Strand house and O’Mara’s Bacon Company go hand in hand.  The factory was founded in 1839 by James O’Meara (1817-1899), who originated from the village of Toomevaara in county Tipperary.  Having worked for some years in the woollen mills in Clonmel, he got a job as a clerk with Matterson’s Bacon Factory in Limerick and in 1839 founded O’Mara’s Bacon Company in his house on Mungret Street.  It is said that he dropped the ‘e’ from his surname as he felt that O’Meara was too long for commercial purposes.  James initially sold for Matterson’s but soon began to cure his own bacon in the basement of his house.  As his business grew, he acquired dedicated premises for the purpose near the top of Roche’s Street.<lb/><lb/>In 1841, James O’Mara married Honora Fowley (d. 1878), who worked in the bacon business alongside her husband.  A devoted nationalist, James was one of the early supporters of Isaac Butt’s Home Rule movement.  He was High Sheriff of Limerick City in 1887, and acted as Town Councillor on Limerick Corporation at least from 1888 to 1898.<lb/><lb/>James and Honora O’Mara had 13 children, of whom the two eldest surviving sons, Stephen O’Mara (1844-1926) and John (Jack) O’Mara (1856-1919) were instrumental in building up the O’Mara’s Bacon Factory into a great success.   The youngest son, Joseph (Joe) O’Mara (1864-1927) became a celebrated opera singer.<lb/><lb/>When James O’Mara retired from business his son John (Jack) O’Mara became manager of the O’Mara Bacon Factory.  In the late 1880s, Jack was invited to Russia by Tsar Alexander III to provide instruction on bacon curing.  He stayed in St Petersburg to supervise the construction of a bacon factory.  In 1891, his father bought the rights of the Russian Bacon Company and the family imported bacon from Russia into London until 1903.  James (Jim) O’Mara (1858-1893) acted as agent for O’Mara’s in London until his untimely death from heart disease.  His nephew James O’Mara (1873-1948), son of Stephen O’Mara Senior (1844-1926), took over the agency and held it until 1914.<lb/><lb/>When John (Jack) O’Mara died in 1919, his younger brother Stephen O’Mara (1844-1926) became Managing Director of O’Mara Limited and remained in that capacity until 1923.  Having entered into the family business at the age of fifteen, his great business acumen established O’Mara’s Bacon Factory as one of the most prominent commercial enterprises in Limerick city.  He also purchased a bacon factory in Palmerston, Ontario, Canada, which was managed by his son Joseph (Joe) O’Mara (1878-1950) until the business was wound up in the 1940s.<lb/><lb/>Like his father, Stephen O’Mara was a strong supporter of Isaac Butt’s Home Rule movement and a member of the committee which secured Butt’s election for Limerick city in 1871.  He later developed a close association with Charles Stewart Parnell and was elected Member of Parliament for Upper Ossory in Kilkenny South for the Irish Parliamentary Party in February 1886.  When the Irish National League split from Irish Parliamentary Party in December 1890, O’Mara took the Parnellite side.  He continued to act as trustee of the Party funds until 1908, when he resigned from his trusteeship.  Towards the end of his life, his moderate political views became more radicalised under the influence of his sons James (1873-1948) and Stephen Junior (1884-1959).  He had agreed with his son James’s decision to resign from the Irish Parliamentary Party in 1907 in order to join Sinn Fein, and personally supported the party in the 1918 General Election.  Both Stephen and his son James were strong supporters of the 1921 Anglo-Irish Treaty but were on friendly terms with Eamon de Valera who, it is said, spent the night at the O’Mara family home, Strand House, as the Treaty was being signed in London.  In the 1925 election, Stephen O’Mara was elected as Senator to the Free State Seanad.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara was also a prominent figure in local politics.  He became a Town Councillor on Limerick Corporation in the 1880s and was elected Mayor of Limerick in 1885.  He was the first Mayor of Limerick to be elected on a Nationalist ticket.  He also served as High Sheriff of Limerick city in 1888, 1913 and 1914.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara married Ellen Pigott in 1867, and the couple had 12 children of whom the eldest three died tragically of diphtheria in 1872.  From c. 1909 onwards, the family lived at Strand House.  Their third son, Stephen O’Mara Junior, was born on 5 January 1884.  He entered the family business in 1903 when he travelled to Canada to work in the bacon factory established by the O’Mara family in Ottawa.  In 1923, he became Managing Director of O’Mara Limited and created numerous employment opportunities by establishing bacon factories in Claremorris, County Mayo, and Letterkenny, County Donegal, in the 1930s.  The three bacon companies were amalgamated in 1938 and formed into the Bacon Company of Ireland.  Stephen O’Mara Junior remained the company’s chairman until his death in 1959.  In 1987, the Bacon Company of Ireland merged with Hanley of Rooskey and Benesford UK (Castlebar) with assistance from the Industrial Development Agency Ireland (IDA) to form Irish Country Bacon.  Shortly afterwards the old O’Mara factory in Limerick was closed down.  It was subsequently demolished to make way for a multi-storey car park.<lb/><lb/>Throughout his life, Stephen O’Mara Junior played a prominent role in both local and national affairs.  Unlike his father and elder brother James, Stephen was opposed to the Anglo-Irish Treaty but in a conciliatory manner.  He was prominently identified with the Sinn Fein movement after the Easter Rising.  He was one of Eamon de Valera’s strongest supporters and a member of his Fianna Fail Party since its formation in 1926.<lb/><lb/>When George Clancy, Lord Mayor of Limerick, and his predecessor Michael O’Callaghan were murdered by the British military forces in March 1921, Stephen decided to stand for election and became Mayor.  He was re-elected in 1922 and in 1923 but resigned before the expiration of his term of office.<lb/><lb/>In 1921, Stephen O’Mara Junior was selected to go to America as Special Envoy appointed by Dáil Éireann to the United States to oversee one of the country’s biggest fundraising drives to finance the first Dáil and was made Trustee of the funds.  The funds-drive was terminated following the signing of the Anglo-Irish Treaty.  Considering himself as the exchequer to the Irish Free State, O’Mara refused to hand over the collected funds to the pro-Treaty administration which resulted in his imprisonment in 1922-1923.  He had also been imprisoned for seven days in 1921 for refusing to pay a fine of £10 for non-compliance with a military summons.<lb/><lb/>The bulk of the money collected during the Bond Drive was left in various banks in New York and remained untouched for a number of years.  In 1927, following legal action between the Irish Government and Eamon de Valera, a court in New York ordered that money outstanding to bond holders must be paid back.  Having anticipated such a ruling, de Valera’s legal team invited bond holders to sign over their bonds to de Valera, for which they were paid 58 cents to the dollar.  The monies so accumulated were used to launch the national daily newspaper *The Irish Press*.  Stephen O’Mara served on the paper’s Board of Directors until his resignation in 1935.<lb/><lb/>In 1932, Stephen O’Mara was once again sent to America on a mission involving the various consular and diplomatic offices maintained in the country by the Irish Government.  Two years later, he was appointed a member of the Commission on Vocational Organisation, on which he served until 1943.  In 1959, he was created a member of the Council of State following de Valera’s inauguration as President of Ireland.  Stephen O’Mara died less than two months after his appointment, on 11 November 1959.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara Junior married in 1918 Anne O’Brien, third daughter of Thomas O’Brien of Boru House, and the couple had an adopted son, Peter O’Mara.  Anne’s youngest sister, Kate O’Brien, became one of the most prominent novelists in 20th-century Ireland and a voice of the respectable Irish Roman Catholic middle class.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
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          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Article entitled ‘My Childhood Christmas’ by Kate O’Brien, published in the *Sunday Independent* on 23 December 1962.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">‘What Has Country Life to Offer Youth Today?’</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="IE" repositorycode="2135">P40/3/10/2/2/36</unitid>
            <unitid type="alternative" label="Original number">P40/836 (12)</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1962-12-30/1962-12-30" encodinganalog="3.1.3">30 December 1962</unitdate>
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              <language langcode="eng">English</language>
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              <famname id="atom_124626_actor">O'Mara family of Strand House, Limerick</famname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-be03d29153491160a15961757089b84f" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>The history of the O’Mara family of Strand house and O’Mara’s Bacon Company go hand in hand.  The factory was founded in 1839 by James O’Meara (1817-1899), who originated from the village of Toomevaara in county Tipperary.  Having worked for some years in the woollen mills in Clonmel, he got a job as a clerk with Matterson’s Bacon Factory in Limerick and in 1839 founded O’Mara’s Bacon Company in his house on Mungret Street.  It is said that he dropped the ‘e’ from his surname as he felt that O’Meara was too long for commercial purposes.  James initially sold for Matterson’s but soon began to cure his own bacon in the basement of his house.  As his business grew, he acquired dedicated premises for the purpose near the top of Roche’s Street.<lb/><lb/>In 1841, James O’Mara married Honora Fowley (d. 1878), who worked in the bacon business alongside her husband.  A devoted nationalist, James was one of the early supporters of Isaac Butt’s Home Rule movement.  He was High Sheriff of Limerick City in 1887, and acted as Town Councillor on Limerick Corporation at least from 1888 to 1898.<lb/><lb/>James and Honora O’Mara had 13 children, of whom the two eldest surviving sons, Stephen O’Mara (1844-1926) and John (Jack) O’Mara (1856-1919) were instrumental in building up the O’Mara’s Bacon Factory into a great success.   The youngest son, Joseph (Joe) O’Mara (1864-1927) became a celebrated opera singer.<lb/><lb/>When James O’Mara retired from business his son John (Jack) O’Mara became manager of the O’Mara Bacon Factory.  In the late 1880s, Jack was invited to Russia by Tsar Alexander III to provide instruction on bacon curing.  He stayed in St Petersburg to supervise the construction of a bacon factory.  In 1891, his father bought the rights of the Russian Bacon Company and the family imported bacon from Russia into London until 1903.  James (Jim) O’Mara (1858-1893) acted as agent for O’Mara’s in London until his untimely death from heart disease.  His nephew James O’Mara (1873-1948), son of Stephen O’Mara Senior (1844-1926), took over the agency and held it until 1914.<lb/><lb/>When John (Jack) O’Mara died in 1919, his younger brother Stephen O’Mara (1844-1926) became Managing Director of O’Mara Limited and remained in that capacity until 1923.  Having entered into the family business at the age of fifteen, his great business acumen established O’Mara’s Bacon Factory as one of the most prominent commercial enterprises in Limerick city.  He also purchased a bacon factory in Palmerston, Ontario, Canada, which was managed by his son Joseph (Joe) O’Mara (1878-1950) until the business was wound up in the 1940s.<lb/><lb/>Like his father, Stephen O’Mara was a strong supporter of Isaac Butt’s Home Rule movement and a member of the committee which secured Butt’s election for Limerick city in 1871.  He later developed a close association with Charles Stewart Parnell and was elected Member of Parliament for Upper Ossory in Kilkenny South for the Irish Parliamentary Party in February 1886.  When the Irish National League split from Irish Parliamentary Party in December 1890, O’Mara took the Parnellite side.  He continued to act as trustee of the Party funds until 1908, when he resigned from his trusteeship.  Towards the end of his life, his moderate political views became more radicalised under the influence of his sons James (1873-1948) and Stephen Junior (1884-1959).  He had agreed with his son James’s decision to resign from the Irish Parliamentary Party in 1907 in order to join Sinn Fein, and personally supported the party in the 1918 General Election.  Both Stephen and his son James were strong supporters of the 1921 Anglo-Irish Treaty but were on friendly terms with Eamon de Valera who, it is said, spent the night at the O’Mara family home, Strand House, as the Treaty was being signed in London.  In the 1925 election, Stephen O’Mara was elected as Senator to the Free State Seanad.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara was also a prominent figure in local politics.  He became a Town Councillor on Limerick Corporation in the 1880s and was elected Mayor of Limerick in 1885.  He was the first Mayor of Limerick to be elected on a Nationalist ticket.  He also served as High Sheriff of Limerick city in 1888, 1913 and 1914.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara married Ellen Pigott in 1867, and the couple had 12 children of whom the eldest three died tragically of diphtheria in 1872.  From c. 1909 onwards, the family lived at Strand House.  Their third son, Stephen O’Mara Junior, was born on 5 January 1884.  He entered the family business in 1903 when he travelled to Canada to work in the bacon factory established by the O’Mara family in Ottawa.  In 1923, he became Managing Director of O’Mara Limited and created numerous employment opportunities by establishing bacon factories in Claremorris, County Mayo, and Letterkenny, County Donegal, in the 1930s.  The three bacon companies were amalgamated in 1938 and formed into the Bacon Company of Ireland.  Stephen O’Mara Junior remained the company’s chairman until his death in 1959.  In 1987, the Bacon Company of Ireland merged with Hanley of Rooskey and Benesford UK (Castlebar) with assistance from the Industrial Development Agency Ireland (IDA) to form Irish Country Bacon.  Shortly afterwards the old O’Mara factory in Limerick was closed down.  It was subsequently demolished to make way for a multi-storey car park.<lb/><lb/>Throughout his life, Stephen O’Mara Junior played a prominent role in both local and national affairs.  Unlike his father and elder brother James, Stephen was opposed to the Anglo-Irish Treaty but in a conciliatory manner.  He was prominently identified with the Sinn Fein movement after the Easter Rising.  He was one of Eamon de Valera’s strongest supporters and a member of his Fianna Fail Party since its formation in 1926.<lb/><lb/>When George Clancy, Lord Mayor of Limerick, and his predecessor Michael O’Callaghan were murdered by the British military forces in March 1921, Stephen decided to stand for election and became Mayor.  He was re-elected in 1922 and in 1923 but resigned before the expiration of his term of office.<lb/><lb/>In 1921, Stephen O’Mara Junior was selected to go to America as Special Envoy appointed by Dáil Éireann to the United States to oversee one of the country’s biggest fundraising drives to finance the first Dáil and was made Trustee of the funds.  The funds-drive was terminated following the signing of the Anglo-Irish Treaty.  Considering himself as the exchequer to the Irish Free State, O’Mara refused to hand over the collected funds to the pro-Treaty administration which resulted in his imprisonment in 1922-1923.  He had also been imprisoned for seven days in 1921 for refusing to pay a fine of £10 for non-compliance with a military summons.<lb/><lb/>The bulk of the money collected during the Bond Drive was left in various banks in New York and remained untouched for a number of years.  In 1927, following legal action between the Irish Government and Eamon de Valera, a court in New York ordered that money outstanding to bond holders must be paid back.  Having anticipated such a ruling, de Valera’s legal team invited bond holders to sign over their bonds to de Valera, for which they were paid 58 cents to the dollar.  The monies so accumulated were used to launch the national daily newspaper *The Irish Press*.  Stephen O’Mara served on the paper’s Board of Directors until his resignation in 1935.<lb/><lb/>In 1932, Stephen O’Mara was once again sent to America on a mission involving the various consular and diplomatic offices maintained in the country by the Irish Government.  Two years later, he was appointed a member of the Commission on Vocational Organisation, on which he served until 1943.  In 1959, he was created a member of the Council of State following de Valera’s inauguration as President of Ireland.  Stephen O’Mara died less than two months after his appointment, on 11 November 1959.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara Junior married in 1918 Anne O’Brien, third daughter of Thomas O’Brien of Boru House, and the couple had an adopted son, Peter O’Mara.  Anne’s youngest sister, Kate O’Brien, became one of the most prominent novelists in 20th-century Ireland and a voice of the respectable Irish Roman Catholic middle class.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
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          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Article entitled ‘What Has Country Life to Offer Youth Today?’ by Kate O’Brien, published in the *Sunday Press* on 30 December 1962.</p>
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          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">‘I Owe a Good Few Roubles in Leningrad’</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="IE" repositorycode="2135">P40/3/10/2/2/37</unitid>
            <unitid type="alternative" label="Original number">P40/836 (13)</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1963-09-10/1963-09-10" encodinganalog="3.1.3">10 September 1963</unitdate>
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              <language langcode="eng">English</language>
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              <famname id="atom_124629_actor">O'Mara family of Strand House, Limerick</famname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-be03d29153491160a15961757089b84f" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>The history of the O’Mara family of Strand house and O’Mara’s Bacon Company go hand in hand.  The factory was founded in 1839 by James O’Meara (1817-1899), who originated from the village of Toomevaara in county Tipperary.  Having worked for some years in the woollen mills in Clonmel, he got a job as a clerk with Matterson’s Bacon Factory in Limerick and in 1839 founded O’Mara’s Bacon Company in his house on Mungret Street.  It is said that he dropped the ‘e’ from his surname as he felt that O’Meara was too long for commercial purposes.  James initially sold for Matterson’s but soon began to cure his own bacon in the basement of his house.  As his business grew, he acquired dedicated premises for the purpose near the top of Roche’s Street.<lb/><lb/>In 1841, James O’Mara married Honora Fowley (d. 1878), who worked in the bacon business alongside her husband.  A devoted nationalist, James was one of the early supporters of Isaac Butt’s Home Rule movement.  He was High Sheriff of Limerick City in 1887, and acted as Town Councillor on Limerick Corporation at least from 1888 to 1898.<lb/><lb/>James and Honora O’Mara had 13 children, of whom the two eldest surviving sons, Stephen O’Mara (1844-1926) and John (Jack) O’Mara (1856-1919) were instrumental in building up the O’Mara’s Bacon Factory into a great success.   The youngest son, Joseph (Joe) O’Mara (1864-1927) became a celebrated opera singer.<lb/><lb/>When James O’Mara retired from business his son John (Jack) O’Mara became manager of the O’Mara Bacon Factory.  In the late 1880s, Jack was invited to Russia by Tsar Alexander III to provide instruction on bacon curing.  He stayed in St Petersburg to supervise the construction of a bacon factory.  In 1891, his father bought the rights of the Russian Bacon Company and the family imported bacon from Russia into London until 1903.  James (Jim) O’Mara (1858-1893) acted as agent for O’Mara’s in London until his untimely death from heart disease.  His nephew James O’Mara (1873-1948), son of Stephen O’Mara Senior (1844-1926), took over the agency and held it until 1914.<lb/><lb/>When John (Jack) O’Mara died in 1919, his younger brother Stephen O’Mara (1844-1926) became Managing Director of O’Mara Limited and remained in that capacity until 1923.  Having entered into the family business at the age of fifteen, his great business acumen established O’Mara’s Bacon Factory as one of the most prominent commercial enterprises in Limerick city.  He also purchased a bacon factory in Palmerston, Ontario, Canada, which was managed by his son Joseph (Joe) O’Mara (1878-1950) until the business was wound up in the 1940s.<lb/><lb/>Like his father, Stephen O’Mara was a strong supporter of Isaac Butt’s Home Rule movement and a member of the committee which secured Butt’s election for Limerick city in 1871.  He later developed a close association with Charles Stewart Parnell and was elected Member of Parliament for Upper Ossory in Kilkenny South for the Irish Parliamentary Party in February 1886.  When the Irish National League split from Irish Parliamentary Party in December 1890, O’Mara took the Parnellite side.  He continued to act as trustee of the Party funds until 1908, when he resigned from his trusteeship.  Towards the end of his life, his moderate political views became more radicalised under the influence of his sons James (1873-1948) and Stephen Junior (1884-1959).  He had agreed with his son James’s decision to resign from the Irish Parliamentary Party in 1907 in order to join Sinn Fein, and personally supported the party in the 1918 General Election.  Both Stephen and his son James were strong supporters of the 1921 Anglo-Irish Treaty but were on friendly terms with Eamon de Valera who, it is said, spent the night at the O’Mara family home, Strand House, as the Treaty was being signed in London.  In the 1925 election, Stephen O’Mara was elected as Senator to the Free State Seanad.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara was also a prominent figure in local politics.  He became a Town Councillor on Limerick Corporation in the 1880s and was elected Mayor of Limerick in 1885.  He was the first Mayor of Limerick to be elected on a Nationalist ticket.  He also served as High Sheriff of Limerick city in 1888, 1913 and 1914.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara married Ellen Pigott in 1867, and the couple had 12 children of whom the eldest three died tragically of diphtheria in 1872.  From c. 1909 onwards, the family lived at Strand House.  Their third son, Stephen O’Mara Junior, was born on 5 January 1884.  He entered the family business in 1903 when he travelled to Canada to work in the bacon factory established by the O’Mara family in Ottawa.  In 1923, he became Managing Director of O’Mara Limited and created numerous employment opportunities by establishing bacon factories in Claremorris, County Mayo, and Letterkenny, County Donegal, in the 1930s.  The three bacon companies were amalgamated in 1938 and formed into the Bacon Company of Ireland.  Stephen O’Mara Junior remained the company’s chairman until his death in 1959.  In 1987, the Bacon Company of Ireland merged with Hanley of Rooskey and Benesford UK (Castlebar) with assistance from the Industrial Development Agency Ireland (IDA) to form Irish Country Bacon.  Shortly afterwards the old O’Mara factory in Limerick was closed down.  It was subsequently demolished to make way for a multi-storey car park.<lb/><lb/>Throughout his life, Stephen O’Mara Junior played a prominent role in both local and national affairs.  Unlike his father and elder brother James, Stephen was opposed to the Anglo-Irish Treaty but in a conciliatory manner.  He was prominently identified with the Sinn Fein movement after the Easter Rising.  He was one of Eamon de Valera’s strongest supporters and a member of his Fianna Fail Party since its formation in 1926.<lb/><lb/>When George Clancy, Lord Mayor of Limerick, and his predecessor Michael O’Callaghan were murdered by the British military forces in March 1921, Stephen decided to stand for election and became Mayor.  He was re-elected in 1922 and in 1923 but resigned before the expiration of his term of office.<lb/><lb/>In 1921, Stephen O’Mara Junior was selected to go to America as Special Envoy appointed by Dáil Éireann to the United States to oversee one of the country’s biggest fundraising drives to finance the first Dáil and was made Trustee of the funds.  The funds-drive was terminated following the signing of the Anglo-Irish Treaty.  Considering himself as the exchequer to the Irish Free State, O’Mara refused to hand over the collected funds to the pro-Treaty administration which resulted in his imprisonment in 1922-1923.  He had also been imprisoned for seven days in 1921 for refusing to pay a fine of £10 for non-compliance with a military summons.<lb/><lb/>The bulk of the money collected during the Bond Drive was left in various banks in New York and remained untouched for a number of years.  In 1927, following legal action between the Irish Government and Eamon de Valera, a court in New York ordered that money outstanding to bond holders must be paid back.  Having anticipated such a ruling, de Valera’s legal team invited bond holders to sign over their bonds to de Valera, for which they were paid 58 cents to the dollar.  The monies so accumulated were used to launch the national daily newspaper *The Irish Press*.  Stephen O’Mara served on the paper’s Board of Directors until his resignation in 1935.<lb/><lb/>In 1932, Stephen O’Mara was once again sent to America on a mission involving the various consular and diplomatic offices maintained in the country by the Irish Government.  Two years later, he was appointed a member of the Commission on Vocational Organisation, on which he served until 1943.  In 1959, he was created a member of the Council of State following de Valera’s inauguration as President of Ireland.  Stephen O’Mara died less than two months after his appointment, on 11 November 1959.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara Junior married in 1918 Anne O’Brien, third daughter of Thomas O’Brien of Boru House, and the couple had an adopted son, Peter O’Mara.  Anne’s youngest sister, Kate O’Brien, became one of the most prominent novelists in 20th-century Ireland and a voice of the respectable Irish Roman Catholic middle class.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
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            <p>Article entitled ‘I Owe a Good Few Roubles in Leningrad’ by Kate O’Brien, published in the *Evening Press* on 10 September 1963.</p>
          </scopecontent>
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            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">‘Caviar Sandwiches for Breakfast’</unittitle>
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            </origination>
          </did>
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            <note>
              <p>The history of the O’Mara family of Strand house and O’Mara’s Bacon Company go hand in hand.  The factory was founded in 1839 by James O’Meara (1817-1899), who originated from the village of Toomevaara in county Tipperary.  Having worked for some years in the woollen mills in Clonmel, he got a job as a clerk with Matterson’s Bacon Factory in Limerick and in 1839 founded O’Mara’s Bacon Company in his house on Mungret Street.  It is said that he dropped the ‘e’ from his surname as he felt that O’Meara was too long for commercial purposes.  James initially sold for Matterson’s but soon began to cure his own bacon in the basement of his house.  As his business grew, he acquired dedicated premises for the purpose near the top of Roche’s Street.<lb/><lb/>In 1841, James O’Mara married Honora Fowley (d. 1878), who worked in the bacon business alongside her husband.  A devoted nationalist, James was one of the early supporters of Isaac Butt’s Home Rule movement.  He was High Sheriff of Limerick City in 1887, and acted as Town Councillor on Limerick Corporation at least from 1888 to 1898.<lb/><lb/>James and Honora O’Mara had 13 children, of whom the two eldest surviving sons, Stephen O’Mara (1844-1926) and John (Jack) O’Mara (1856-1919) were instrumental in building up the O’Mara’s Bacon Factory into a great success.   The youngest son, Joseph (Joe) O’Mara (1864-1927) became a celebrated opera singer.<lb/><lb/>When James O’Mara retired from business his son John (Jack) O’Mara became manager of the O’Mara Bacon Factory.  In the late 1880s, Jack was invited to Russia by Tsar Alexander III to provide instruction on bacon curing.  He stayed in St Petersburg to supervise the construction of a bacon factory.  In 1891, his father bought the rights of the Russian Bacon Company and the family imported bacon from Russia into London until 1903.  James (Jim) O’Mara (1858-1893) acted as agent for O’Mara’s in London until his untimely death from heart disease.  His nephew James O’Mara (1873-1948), son of Stephen O’Mara Senior (1844-1926), took over the agency and held it until 1914.<lb/><lb/>When John (Jack) O’Mara died in 1919, his younger brother Stephen O’Mara (1844-1926) became Managing Director of O’Mara Limited and remained in that capacity until 1923.  Having entered into the family business at the age of fifteen, his great business acumen established O’Mara’s Bacon Factory as one of the most prominent commercial enterprises in Limerick city.  He also purchased a bacon factory in Palmerston, Ontario, Canada, which was managed by his son Joseph (Joe) O’Mara (1878-1950) until the business was wound up in the 1940s.<lb/><lb/>Like his father, Stephen O’Mara was a strong supporter of Isaac Butt’s Home Rule movement and a member of the committee which secured Butt’s election for Limerick city in 1871.  He later developed a close association with Charles Stewart Parnell and was elected Member of Parliament for Upper Ossory in Kilkenny South for the Irish Parliamentary Party in February 1886.  When the Irish National League split from Irish Parliamentary Party in December 1890, O’Mara took the Parnellite side.  He continued to act as trustee of the Party funds until 1908, when he resigned from his trusteeship.  Towards the end of his life, his moderate political views became more radicalised under the influence of his sons James (1873-1948) and Stephen Junior (1884-1959).  He had agreed with his son James’s decision to resign from the Irish Parliamentary Party in 1907 in order to join Sinn Fein, and personally supported the party in the 1918 General Election.  Both Stephen and his son James were strong supporters of the 1921 Anglo-Irish Treaty but were on friendly terms with Eamon de Valera who, it is said, spent the night at the O’Mara family home, Strand House, as the Treaty was being signed in London.  In the 1925 election, Stephen O’Mara was elected as Senator to the Free State Seanad.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara was also a prominent figure in local politics.  He became a Town Councillor on Limerick Corporation in the 1880s and was elected Mayor of Limerick in 1885.  He was the first Mayor of Limerick to be elected on a Nationalist ticket.  He also served as High Sheriff of Limerick city in 1888, 1913 and 1914.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara married Ellen Pigott in 1867, and the couple had 12 children of whom the eldest three died tragically of diphtheria in 1872.  From c. 1909 onwards, the family lived at Strand House.  Their third son, Stephen O’Mara Junior, was born on 5 January 1884.  He entered the family business in 1903 when he travelled to Canada to work in the bacon factory established by the O’Mara family in Ottawa.  In 1923, he became Managing Director of O’Mara Limited and created numerous employment opportunities by establishing bacon factories in Claremorris, County Mayo, and Letterkenny, County Donegal, in the 1930s.  The three bacon companies were amalgamated in 1938 and formed into the Bacon Company of Ireland.  Stephen O’Mara Junior remained the company’s chairman until his death in 1959.  In 1987, the Bacon Company of Ireland merged with Hanley of Rooskey and Benesford UK (Castlebar) with assistance from the Industrial Development Agency Ireland (IDA) to form Irish Country Bacon.  Shortly afterwards the old O’Mara factory in Limerick was closed down.  It was subsequently demolished to make way for a multi-storey car park.<lb/><lb/>Throughout his life, Stephen O’Mara Junior played a prominent role in both local and national affairs.  Unlike his father and elder brother James, Stephen was opposed to the Anglo-Irish Treaty but in a conciliatory manner.  He was prominently identified with the Sinn Fein movement after the Easter Rising.  He was one of Eamon de Valera’s strongest supporters and a member of his Fianna Fail Party since its formation in 1926.<lb/><lb/>When George Clancy, Lord Mayor of Limerick, and his predecessor Michael O’Callaghan were murdered by the British military forces in March 1921, Stephen decided to stand for election and became Mayor.  He was re-elected in 1922 and in 1923 but resigned before the expiration of his term of office.<lb/><lb/>In 1921, Stephen O’Mara Junior was selected to go to America as Special Envoy appointed by Dáil Éireann to the United States to oversee one of the country’s biggest fundraising drives to finance the first Dáil and was made Trustee of the funds.  The funds-drive was terminated following the signing of the Anglo-Irish Treaty.  Considering himself as the exchequer to the Irish Free State, O’Mara refused to hand over the collected funds to the pro-Treaty administration which resulted in his imprisonment in 1922-1923.  He had also been imprisoned for seven days in 1921 for refusing to pay a fine of £10 for non-compliance with a military summons.<lb/><lb/>The bulk of the money collected during the Bond Drive was left in various banks in New York and remained untouched for a number of years.  In 1927, following legal action between the Irish Government and Eamon de Valera, a court in New York ordered that money outstanding to bond holders must be paid back.  Having anticipated such a ruling, de Valera’s legal team invited bond holders to sign over their bonds to de Valera, for which they were paid 58 cents to the dollar.  The monies so accumulated were used to launch the national daily newspaper *The Irish Press*.  Stephen O’Mara served on the paper’s Board of Directors until his resignation in 1935.<lb/><lb/>In 1932, Stephen O’Mara was once again sent to America on a mission involving the various consular and diplomatic offices maintained in the country by the Irish Government.  Two years later, he was appointed a member of the Commission on Vocational Organisation, on which he served until 1943.  In 1959, he was created a member of the Council of State following de Valera’s inauguration as President of Ireland.  Stephen O’Mara died less than two months after his appointment, on 11 November 1959.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara Junior married in 1918 Anne O’Brien, third daughter of Thomas O’Brien of Boru House, and the couple had an adopted son, Peter O’Mara.  Anne’s youngest sister, Kate O’Brien, became one of the most prominent novelists in 20th-century Ireland and a voice of the respectable Irish Roman Catholic middle class.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
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          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Article entitled ‘Caviar Sandwiches for Breakfast’ by Kate O’Brien, published in the *Evening Press* on 11 September 1963.</p>
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            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">‘Avantgardisme – in Europe and Ireland’</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="IE" repositorycode="2135">P40/3/10/2/2/39</unitid>
            <unitid type="alternative" label="Original number">P40/836 (16)</unitid>
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              <famname id="atom_124635_actor">O'Mara family of Strand House, Limerick</famname>
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          <bioghist id="md5-be03d29153491160a15961757089b84f" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>The history of the O’Mara family of Strand house and O’Mara’s Bacon Company go hand in hand.  The factory was founded in 1839 by James O’Meara (1817-1899), who originated from the village of Toomevaara in county Tipperary.  Having worked for some years in the woollen mills in Clonmel, he got a job as a clerk with Matterson’s Bacon Factory in Limerick and in 1839 founded O’Mara’s Bacon Company in his house on Mungret Street.  It is said that he dropped the ‘e’ from his surname as he felt that O’Meara was too long for commercial purposes.  James initially sold for Matterson’s but soon began to cure his own bacon in the basement of his house.  As his business grew, he acquired dedicated premises for the purpose near the top of Roche’s Street.<lb/><lb/>In 1841, James O’Mara married Honora Fowley (d. 1878), who worked in the bacon business alongside her husband.  A devoted nationalist, James was one of the early supporters of Isaac Butt’s Home Rule movement.  He was High Sheriff of Limerick City in 1887, and acted as Town Councillor on Limerick Corporation at least from 1888 to 1898.<lb/><lb/>James and Honora O’Mara had 13 children, of whom the two eldest surviving sons, Stephen O’Mara (1844-1926) and John (Jack) O’Mara (1856-1919) were instrumental in building up the O’Mara’s Bacon Factory into a great success.   The youngest son, Joseph (Joe) O’Mara (1864-1927) became a celebrated opera singer.<lb/><lb/>When James O’Mara retired from business his son John (Jack) O’Mara became manager of the O’Mara Bacon Factory.  In the late 1880s, Jack was invited to Russia by Tsar Alexander III to provide instruction on bacon curing.  He stayed in St Petersburg to supervise the construction of a bacon factory.  In 1891, his father bought the rights of the Russian Bacon Company and the family imported bacon from Russia into London until 1903.  James (Jim) O’Mara (1858-1893) acted as agent for O’Mara’s in London until his untimely death from heart disease.  His nephew James O’Mara (1873-1948), son of Stephen O’Mara Senior (1844-1926), took over the agency and held it until 1914.<lb/><lb/>When John (Jack) O’Mara died in 1919, his younger brother Stephen O’Mara (1844-1926) became Managing Director of O’Mara Limited and remained in that capacity until 1923.  Having entered into the family business at the age of fifteen, his great business acumen established O’Mara’s Bacon Factory as one of the most prominent commercial enterprises in Limerick city.  He also purchased a bacon factory in Palmerston, Ontario, Canada, which was managed by his son Joseph (Joe) O’Mara (1878-1950) until the business was wound up in the 1940s.<lb/><lb/>Like his father, Stephen O’Mara was a strong supporter of Isaac Butt’s Home Rule movement and a member of the committee which secured Butt’s election for Limerick city in 1871.  He later developed a close association with Charles Stewart Parnell and was elected Member of Parliament for Upper Ossory in Kilkenny South for the Irish Parliamentary Party in February 1886.  When the Irish National League split from Irish Parliamentary Party in December 1890, O’Mara took the Parnellite side.  He continued to act as trustee of the Party funds until 1908, when he resigned from his trusteeship.  Towards the end of his life, his moderate political views became more radicalised under the influence of his sons James (1873-1948) and Stephen Junior (1884-1959).  He had agreed with his son James’s decision to resign from the Irish Parliamentary Party in 1907 in order to join Sinn Fein, and personally supported the party in the 1918 General Election.  Both Stephen and his son James were strong supporters of the 1921 Anglo-Irish Treaty but were on friendly terms with Eamon de Valera who, it is said, spent the night at the O’Mara family home, Strand House, as the Treaty was being signed in London.  In the 1925 election, Stephen O’Mara was elected as Senator to the Free State Seanad.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara was also a prominent figure in local politics.  He became a Town Councillor on Limerick Corporation in the 1880s and was elected Mayor of Limerick in 1885.  He was the first Mayor of Limerick to be elected on a Nationalist ticket.  He also served as High Sheriff of Limerick city in 1888, 1913 and 1914.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara married Ellen Pigott in 1867, and the couple had 12 children of whom the eldest three died tragically of diphtheria in 1872.  From c. 1909 onwards, the family lived at Strand House.  Their third son, Stephen O’Mara Junior, was born on 5 January 1884.  He entered the family business in 1903 when he travelled to Canada to work in the bacon factory established by the O’Mara family in Ottawa.  In 1923, he became Managing Director of O’Mara Limited and created numerous employment opportunities by establishing bacon factories in Claremorris, County Mayo, and Letterkenny, County Donegal, in the 1930s.  The three bacon companies were amalgamated in 1938 and formed into the Bacon Company of Ireland.  Stephen O’Mara Junior remained the company’s chairman until his death in 1959.  In 1987, the Bacon Company of Ireland merged with Hanley of Rooskey and Benesford UK (Castlebar) with assistance from the Industrial Development Agency Ireland (IDA) to form Irish Country Bacon.  Shortly afterwards the old O’Mara factory in Limerick was closed down.  It was subsequently demolished to make way for a multi-storey car park.<lb/><lb/>Throughout his life, Stephen O’Mara Junior played a prominent role in both local and national affairs.  Unlike his father and elder brother James, Stephen was opposed to the Anglo-Irish Treaty but in a conciliatory manner.  He was prominently identified with the Sinn Fein movement after the Easter Rising.  He was one of Eamon de Valera’s strongest supporters and a member of his Fianna Fail Party since its formation in 1926.<lb/><lb/>When George Clancy, Lord Mayor of Limerick, and his predecessor Michael O’Callaghan were murdered by the British military forces in March 1921, Stephen decided to stand for election and became Mayor.  He was re-elected in 1922 and in 1923 but resigned before the expiration of his term of office.<lb/><lb/>In 1921, Stephen O’Mara Junior was selected to go to America as Special Envoy appointed by Dáil Éireann to the United States to oversee one of the country’s biggest fundraising drives to finance the first Dáil and was made Trustee of the funds.  The funds-drive was terminated following the signing of the Anglo-Irish Treaty.  Considering himself as the exchequer to the Irish Free State, O’Mara refused to hand over the collected funds to the pro-Treaty administration which resulted in his imprisonment in 1922-1923.  He had also been imprisoned for seven days in 1921 for refusing to pay a fine of £10 for non-compliance with a military summons.<lb/><lb/>The bulk of the money collected during the Bond Drive was left in various banks in New York and remained untouched for a number of years.  In 1927, following legal action between the Irish Government and Eamon de Valera, a court in New York ordered that money outstanding to bond holders must be paid back.  Having anticipated such a ruling, de Valera’s legal team invited bond holders to sign over their bonds to de Valera, for which they were paid 58 cents to the dollar.  The monies so accumulated were used to launch the national daily newspaper *The Irish Press*.  Stephen O’Mara served on the paper’s Board of Directors until his resignation in 1935.<lb/><lb/>In 1932, Stephen O’Mara was once again sent to America on a mission involving the various consular and diplomatic offices maintained in the country by the Irish Government.  Two years later, he was appointed a member of the Commission on Vocational Organisation, on which he served until 1943.  In 1959, he was created a member of the Council of State following de Valera’s inauguration as President of Ireland.  Stephen O’Mara died less than two months after his appointment, on 11 November 1959.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara Junior married in 1918 Anne O’Brien, third daughter of Thomas O’Brien of Boru House, and the couple had an adopted son, Peter O’Mara.  Anne’s youngest sister, Kate O’Brien, became one of the most prominent novelists in 20th-century Ireland and a voice of the respectable Irish Roman Catholic middle class.</p>
            </note>
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            <p>Article entitled ‘Avantgardisme – in Europe and Ireland’ by Kate O’Brien, published in the *Irish Times* on 21 October 1965.</p>
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            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">‘Spanish Contrast – Sun and Snow’</unittitle>
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            <unitid type="alternative" label="Original number">P40/836 (17)</unitid>
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              <famname id="atom_124638_actor">O'Mara family of Strand House, Limerick</famname>
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          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-be03d29153491160a15961757089b84f" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>The history of the O’Mara family of Strand house and O’Mara’s Bacon Company go hand in hand.  The factory was founded in 1839 by James O’Meara (1817-1899), who originated from the village of Toomevaara in county Tipperary.  Having worked for some years in the woollen mills in Clonmel, he got a job as a clerk with Matterson’s Bacon Factory in Limerick and in 1839 founded O’Mara’s Bacon Company in his house on Mungret Street.  It is said that he dropped the ‘e’ from his surname as he felt that O’Meara was too long for commercial purposes.  James initially sold for Matterson’s but soon began to cure his own bacon in the basement of his house.  As his business grew, he acquired dedicated premises for the purpose near the top of Roche’s Street.<lb/><lb/>In 1841, James O’Mara married Honora Fowley (d. 1878), who worked in the bacon business alongside her husband.  A devoted nationalist, James was one of the early supporters of Isaac Butt’s Home Rule movement.  He was High Sheriff of Limerick City in 1887, and acted as Town Councillor on Limerick Corporation at least from 1888 to 1898.<lb/><lb/>James and Honora O’Mara had 13 children, of whom the two eldest surviving sons, Stephen O’Mara (1844-1926) and John (Jack) O’Mara (1856-1919) were instrumental in building up the O’Mara’s Bacon Factory into a great success.   The youngest son, Joseph (Joe) O’Mara (1864-1927) became a celebrated opera singer.<lb/><lb/>When James O’Mara retired from business his son John (Jack) O’Mara became manager of the O’Mara Bacon Factory.  In the late 1880s, Jack was invited to Russia by Tsar Alexander III to provide instruction on bacon curing.  He stayed in St Petersburg to supervise the construction of a bacon factory.  In 1891, his father bought the rights of the Russian Bacon Company and the family imported bacon from Russia into London until 1903.  James (Jim) O’Mara (1858-1893) acted as agent for O’Mara’s in London until his untimely death from heart disease.  His nephew James O’Mara (1873-1948), son of Stephen O’Mara Senior (1844-1926), took over the agency and held it until 1914.<lb/><lb/>When John (Jack) O’Mara died in 1919, his younger brother Stephen O’Mara (1844-1926) became Managing Director of O’Mara Limited and remained in that capacity until 1923.  Having entered into the family business at the age of fifteen, his great business acumen established O’Mara’s Bacon Factory as one of the most prominent commercial enterprises in Limerick city.  He also purchased a bacon factory in Palmerston, Ontario, Canada, which was managed by his son Joseph (Joe) O’Mara (1878-1950) until the business was wound up in the 1940s.<lb/><lb/>Like his father, Stephen O’Mara was a strong supporter of Isaac Butt’s Home Rule movement and a member of the committee which secured Butt’s election for Limerick city in 1871.  He later developed a close association with Charles Stewart Parnell and was elected Member of Parliament for Upper Ossory in Kilkenny South for the Irish Parliamentary Party in February 1886.  When the Irish National League split from Irish Parliamentary Party in December 1890, O’Mara took the Parnellite side.  He continued to act as trustee of the Party funds until 1908, when he resigned from his trusteeship.  Towards the end of his life, his moderate political views became more radicalised under the influence of his sons James (1873-1948) and Stephen Junior (1884-1959).  He had agreed with his son James’s decision to resign from the Irish Parliamentary Party in 1907 in order to join Sinn Fein, and personally supported the party in the 1918 General Election.  Both Stephen and his son James were strong supporters of the 1921 Anglo-Irish Treaty but were on friendly terms with Eamon de Valera who, it is said, spent the night at the O’Mara family home, Strand House, as the Treaty was being signed in London.  In the 1925 election, Stephen O’Mara was elected as Senator to the Free State Seanad.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara was also a prominent figure in local politics.  He became a Town Councillor on Limerick Corporation in the 1880s and was elected Mayor of Limerick in 1885.  He was the first Mayor of Limerick to be elected on a Nationalist ticket.  He also served as High Sheriff of Limerick city in 1888, 1913 and 1914.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara married Ellen Pigott in 1867, and the couple had 12 children of whom the eldest three died tragically of diphtheria in 1872.  From c. 1909 onwards, the family lived at Strand House.  Their third son, Stephen O’Mara Junior, was born on 5 January 1884.  He entered the family business in 1903 when he travelled to Canada to work in the bacon factory established by the O’Mara family in Ottawa.  In 1923, he became Managing Director of O’Mara Limited and created numerous employment opportunities by establishing bacon factories in Claremorris, County Mayo, and Letterkenny, County Donegal, in the 1930s.  The three bacon companies were amalgamated in 1938 and formed into the Bacon Company of Ireland.  Stephen O’Mara Junior remained the company’s chairman until his death in 1959.  In 1987, the Bacon Company of Ireland merged with Hanley of Rooskey and Benesford UK (Castlebar) with assistance from the Industrial Development Agency Ireland (IDA) to form Irish Country Bacon.  Shortly afterwards the old O’Mara factory in Limerick was closed down.  It was subsequently demolished to make way for a multi-storey car park.<lb/><lb/>Throughout his life, Stephen O’Mara Junior played a prominent role in both local and national affairs.  Unlike his father and elder brother James, Stephen was opposed to the Anglo-Irish Treaty but in a conciliatory manner.  He was prominently identified with the Sinn Fein movement after the Easter Rising.  He was one of Eamon de Valera’s strongest supporters and a member of his Fianna Fail Party since its formation in 1926.<lb/><lb/>When George Clancy, Lord Mayor of Limerick, and his predecessor Michael O’Callaghan were murdered by the British military forces in March 1921, Stephen decided to stand for election and became Mayor.  He was re-elected in 1922 and in 1923 but resigned before the expiration of his term of office.<lb/><lb/>In 1921, Stephen O’Mara Junior was selected to go to America as Special Envoy appointed by Dáil Éireann to the United States to oversee one of the country’s biggest fundraising drives to finance the first Dáil and was made Trustee of the funds.  The funds-drive was terminated following the signing of the Anglo-Irish Treaty.  Considering himself as the exchequer to the Irish Free State, O’Mara refused to hand over the collected funds to the pro-Treaty administration which resulted in his imprisonment in 1922-1923.  He had also been imprisoned for seven days in 1921 for refusing to pay a fine of £10 for non-compliance with a military summons.<lb/><lb/>The bulk of the money collected during the Bond Drive was left in various banks in New York and remained untouched for a number of years.  In 1927, following legal action between the Irish Government and Eamon de Valera, a court in New York ordered that money outstanding to bond holders must be paid back.  Having anticipated such a ruling, de Valera’s legal team invited bond holders to sign over their bonds to de Valera, for which they were paid 58 cents to the dollar.  The monies so accumulated were used to launch the national daily newspaper *The Irish Press*.  Stephen O’Mara served on the paper’s Board of Directors until his resignation in 1935.<lb/><lb/>In 1932, Stephen O’Mara was once again sent to America on a mission involving the various consular and diplomatic offices maintained in the country by the Irish Government.  Two years later, he was appointed a member of the Commission on Vocational Organisation, on which he served until 1943.  In 1959, he was created a member of the Council of State following de Valera’s inauguration as President of Ireland.  Stephen O’Mara died less than two months after his appointment, on 11 November 1959.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara Junior married in 1918 Anne O’Brien, third daughter of Thomas O’Brien of Boru House, and the couple had an adopted son, Peter O’Mara.  Anne’s youngest sister, Kate O’Brien, became one of the most prominent novelists in 20th-century Ireland and a voice of the respectable Irish Roman Catholic middle class.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
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          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Article entitled ‘Spanish Contrast – Sun and Snow’ by Kate O’Brien, published in the *Irish Times* on 5 June 1967.</p>
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              <famname id="atom_124641_actor">O'Mara family of Strand House, Limerick</famname>
            </origination>
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            <note>
              <p>The history of the O’Mara family of Strand house and O’Mara’s Bacon Company go hand in hand.  The factory was founded in 1839 by James O’Meara (1817-1899), who originated from the village of Toomevaara in county Tipperary.  Having worked for some years in the woollen mills in Clonmel, he got a job as a clerk with Matterson’s Bacon Factory in Limerick and in 1839 founded O’Mara’s Bacon Company in his house on Mungret Street.  It is said that he dropped the ‘e’ from his surname as he felt that O’Meara was too long for commercial purposes.  James initially sold for Matterson’s but soon began to cure his own bacon in the basement of his house.  As his business grew, he acquired dedicated premises for the purpose near the top of Roche’s Street.<lb/><lb/>In 1841, James O’Mara married Honora Fowley (d. 1878), who worked in the bacon business alongside her husband.  A devoted nationalist, James was one of the early supporters of Isaac Butt’s Home Rule movement.  He was High Sheriff of Limerick City in 1887, and acted as Town Councillor on Limerick Corporation at least from 1888 to 1898.<lb/><lb/>James and Honora O’Mara had 13 children, of whom the two eldest surviving sons, Stephen O’Mara (1844-1926) and John (Jack) O’Mara (1856-1919) were instrumental in building up the O’Mara’s Bacon Factory into a great success.   The youngest son, Joseph (Joe) O’Mara (1864-1927) became a celebrated opera singer.<lb/><lb/>When James O’Mara retired from business his son John (Jack) O’Mara became manager of the O’Mara Bacon Factory.  In the late 1880s, Jack was invited to Russia by Tsar Alexander III to provide instruction on bacon curing.  He stayed in St Petersburg to supervise the construction of a bacon factory.  In 1891, his father bought the rights of the Russian Bacon Company and the family imported bacon from Russia into London until 1903.  James (Jim) O’Mara (1858-1893) acted as agent for O’Mara’s in London until his untimely death from heart disease.  His nephew James O’Mara (1873-1948), son of Stephen O’Mara Senior (1844-1926), took over the agency and held it until 1914.<lb/><lb/>When John (Jack) O’Mara died in 1919, his younger brother Stephen O’Mara (1844-1926) became Managing Director of O’Mara Limited and remained in that capacity until 1923.  Having entered into the family business at the age of fifteen, his great business acumen established O’Mara’s Bacon Factory as one of the most prominent commercial enterprises in Limerick city.  He also purchased a bacon factory in Palmerston, Ontario, Canada, which was managed by his son Joseph (Joe) O’Mara (1878-1950) until the business was wound up in the 1940s.<lb/><lb/>Like his father, Stephen O’Mara was a strong supporter of Isaac Butt’s Home Rule movement and a member of the committee which secured Butt’s election for Limerick city in 1871.  He later developed a close association with Charles Stewart Parnell and was elected Member of Parliament for Upper Ossory in Kilkenny South for the Irish Parliamentary Party in February 1886.  When the Irish National League split from Irish Parliamentary Party in December 1890, O’Mara took the Parnellite side.  He continued to act as trustee of the Party funds until 1908, when he resigned from his trusteeship.  Towards the end of his life, his moderate political views became more radicalised under the influence of his sons James (1873-1948) and Stephen Junior (1884-1959).  He had agreed with his son James’s decision to resign from the Irish Parliamentary Party in 1907 in order to join Sinn Fein, and personally supported the party in the 1918 General Election.  Both Stephen and his son James were strong supporters of the 1921 Anglo-Irish Treaty but were on friendly terms with Eamon de Valera who, it is said, spent the night at the O’Mara family home, Strand House, as the Treaty was being signed in London.  In the 1925 election, Stephen O’Mara was elected as Senator to the Free State Seanad.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara was also a prominent figure in local politics.  He became a Town Councillor on Limerick Corporation in the 1880s and was elected Mayor of Limerick in 1885.  He was the first Mayor of Limerick to be elected on a Nationalist ticket.  He also served as High Sheriff of Limerick city in 1888, 1913 and 1914.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara married Ellen Pigott in 1867, and the couple had 12 children of whom the eldest three died tragically of diphtheria in 1872.  From c. 1909 onwards, the family lived at Strand House.  Their third son, Stephen O’Mara Junior, was born on 5 January 1884.  He entered the family business in 1903 when he travelled to Canada to work in the bacon factory established by the O’Mara family in Ottawa.  In 1923, he became Managing Director of O’Mara Limited and created numerous employment opportunities by establishing bacon factories in Claremorris, County Mayo, and Letterkenny, County Donegal, in the 1930s.  The three bacon companies were amalgamated in 1938 and formed into the Bacon Company of Ireland.  Stephen O’Mara Junior remained the company’s chairman until his death in 1959.  In 1987, the Bacon Company of Ireland merged with Hanley of Rooskey and Benesford UK (Castlebar) with assistance from the Industrial Development Agency Ireland (IDA) to form Irish Country Bacon.  Shortly afterwards the old O’Mara factory in Limerick was closed down.  It was subsequently demolished to make way for a multi-storey car park.<lb/><lb/>Throughout his life, Stephen O’Mara Junior played a prominent role in both local and national affairs.  Unlike his father and elder brother James, Stephen was opposed to the Anglo-Irish Treaty but in a conciliatory manner.  He was prominently identified with the Sinn Fein movement after the Easter Rising.  He was one of Eamon de Valera’s strongest supporters and a member of his Fianna Fail Party since its formation in 1926.<lb/><lb/>When George Clancy, Lord Mayor of Limerick, and his predecessor Michael O’Callaghan were murdered by the British military forces in March 1921, Stephen decided to stand for election and became Mayor.  He was re-elected in 1922 and in 1923 but resigned before the expiration of his term of office.<lb/><lb/>In 1921, Stephen O’Mara Junior was selected to go to America as Special Envoy appointed by Dáil Éireann to the United States to oversee one of the country’s biggest fundraising drives to finance the first Dáil and was made Trustee of the funds.  The funds-drive was terminated following the signing of the Anglo-Irish Treaty.  Considering himself as the exchequer to the Irish Free State, O’Mara refused to hand over the collected funds to the pro-Treaty administration which resulted in his imprisonment in 1922-1923.  He had also been imprisoned for seven days in 1921 for refusing to pay a fine of £10 for non-compliance with a military summons.<lb/><lb/>The bulk of the money collected during the Bond Drive was left in various banks in New York and remained untouched for a number of years.  In 1927, following legal action between the Irish Government and Eamon de Valera, a court in New York ordered that money outstanding to bond holders must be paid back.  Having anticipated such a ruling, de Valera’s legal team invited bond holders to sign over their bonds to de Valera, for which they were paid 58 cents to the dollar.  The monies so accumulated were used to launch the national daily newspaper *The Irish Press*.  Stephen O’Mara served on the paper’s Board of Directors until his resignation in 1935.<lb/><lb/>In 1932, Stephen O’Mara was once again sent to America on a mission involving the various consular and diplomatic offices maintained in the country by the Irish Government.  Two years later, he was appointed a member of the Commission on Vocational Organisation, on which he served until 1943.  In 1959, he was created a member of the Council of State following de Valera’s inauguration as President of Ireland.  Stephen O’Mara died less than two months after his appointment, on 11 November 1959.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara Junior married in 1918 Anne O’Brien, third daughter of Thomas O’Brien of Boru House, and the couple had an adopted son, Peter O’Mara.  Anne’s youngest sister, Kate O’Brien, became one of the most prominent novelists in 20th-century Ireland and a voice of the respectable Irish Roman Catholic middle class.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
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            <p>Published</p>
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          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Article entitled ‘I: Paris from Nanterre’ by Kate O’Brien, published in the *Irish Times* on 1 July 1970.</p>
          </scopecontent>
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          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">‘II: Paris from the Pont Neuf’</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="IE" repositorycode="2135">P40/3/10/2/2/42</unitid>
            <unitid type="alternative" label="Original number">P40/837 (2)</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1970-07-02/1970-07-02" encodinganalog="3.1.3">2 July 1970</unitdate>
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              <language langcode="eng">English</language>
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              <famname id="atom_124644_actor">O'Mara family of Strand House, Limerick</famname>
            </origination>
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          <bioghist id="md5-be03d29153491160a15961757089b84f" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>The history of the O’Mara family of Strand house and O’Mara’s Bacon Company go hand in hand.  The factory was founded in 1839 by James O’Meara (1817-1899), who originated from the village of Toomevaara in county Tipperary.  Having worked for some years in the woollen mills in Clonmel, he got a job as a clerk with Matterson’s Bacon Factory in Limerick and in 1839 founded O’Mara’s Bacon Company in his house on Mungret Street.  It is said that he dropped the ‘e’ from his surname as he felt that O’Meara was too long for commercial purposes.  James initially sold for Matterson’s but soon began to cure his own bacon in the basement of his house.  As his business grew, he acquired dedicated premises for the purpose near the top of Roche’s Street.<lb/><lb/>In 1841, James O’Mara married Honora Fowley (d. 1878), who worked in the bacon business alongside her husband.  A devoted nationalist, James was one of the early supporters of Isaac Butt’s Home Rule movement.  He was High Sheriff of Limerick City in 1887, and acted as Town Councillor on Limerick Corporation at least from 1888 to 1898.<lb/><lb/>James and Honora O’Mara had 13 children, of whom the two eldest surviving sons, Stephen O’Mara (1844-1926) and John (Jack) O’Mara (1856-1919) were instrumental in building up the O’Mara’s Bacon Factory into a great success.   The youngest son, Joseph (Joe) O’Mara (1864-1927) became a celebrated opera singer.<lb/><lb/>When James O’Mara retired from business his son John (Jack) O’Mara became manager of the O’Mara Bacon Factory.  In the late 1880s, Jack was invited to Russia by Tsar Alexander III to provide instruction on bacon curing.  He stayed in St Petersburg to supervise the construction of a bacon factory.  In 1891, his father bought the rights of the Russian Bacon Company and the family imported bacon from Russia into London until 1903.  James (Jim) O’Mara (1858-1893) acted as agent for O’Mara’s in London until his untimely death from heart disease.  His nephew James O’Mara (1873-1948), son of Stephen O’Mara Senior (1844-1926), took over the agency and held it until 1914.<lb/><lb/>When John (Jack) O’Mara died in 1919, his younger brother Stephen O’Mara (1844-1926) became Managing Director of O’Mara Limited and remained in that capacity until 1923.  Having entered into the family business at the age of fifteen, his great business acumen established O’Mara’s Bacon Factory as one of the most prominent commercial enterprises in Limerick city.  He also purchased a bacon factory in Palmerston, Ontario, Canada, which was managed by his son Joseph (Joe) O’Mara (1878-1950) until the business was wound up in the 1940s.<lb/><lb/>Like his father, Stephen O’Mara was a strong supporter of Isaac Butt’s Home Rule movement and a member of the committee which secured Butt’s election for Limerick city in 1871.  He later developed a close association with Charles Stewart Parnell and was elected Member of Parliament for Upper Ossory in Kilkenny South for the Irish Parliamentary Party in February 1886.  When the Irish National League split from Irish Parliamentary Party in December 1890, O’Mara took the Parnellite side.  He continued to act as trustee of the Party funds until 1908, when he resigned from his trusteeship.  Towards the end of his life, his moderate political views became more radicalised under the influence of his sons James (1873-1948) and Stephen Junior (1884-1959).  He had agreed with his son James’s decision to resign from the Irish Parliamentary Party in 1907 in order to join Sinn Fein, and personally supported the party in the 1918 General Election.  Both Stephen and his son James were strong supporters of the 1921 Anglo-Irish Treaty but were on friendly terms with Eamon de Valera who, it is said, spent the night at the O’Mara family home, Strand House, as the Treaty was being signed in London.  In the 1925 election, Stephen O’Mara was elected as Senator to the Free State Seanad.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara was also a prominent figure in local politics.  He became a Town Councillor on Limerick Corporation in the 1880s and was elected Mayor of Limerick in 1885.  He was the first Mayor of Limerick to be elected on a Nationalist ticket.  He also served as High Sheriff of Limerick city in 1888, 1913 and 1914.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara married Ellen Pigott in 1867, and the couple had 12 children of whom the eldest three died tragically of diphtheria in 1872.  From c. 1909 onwards, the family lived at Strand House.  Their third son, Stephen O’Mara Junior, was born on 5 January 1884.  He entered the family business in 1903 when he travelled to Canada to work in the bacon factory established by the O’Mara family in Ottawa.  In 1923, he became Managing Director of O’Mara Limited and created numerous employment opportunities by establishing bacon factories in Claremorris, County Mayo, and Letterkenny, County Donegal, in the 1930s.  The three bacon companies were amalgamated in 1938 and formed into the Bacon Company of Ireland.  Stephen O’Mara Junior remained the company’s chairman until his death in 1959.  In 1987, the Bacon Company of Ireland merged with Hanley of Rooskey and Benesford UK (Castlebar) with assistance from the Industrial Development Agency Ireland (IDA) to form Irish Country Bacon.  Shortly afterwards the old O’Mara factory in Limerick was closed down.  It was subsequently demolished to make way for a multi-storey car park.<lb/><lb/>Throughout his life, Stephen O’Mara Junior played a prominent role in both local and national affairs.  Unlike his father and elder brother James, Stephen was opposed to the Anglo-Irish Treaty but in a conciliatory manner.  He was prominently identified with the Sinn Fein movement after the Easter Rising.  He was one of Eamon de Valera’s strongest supporters and a member of his Fianna Fail Party since its formation in 1926.<lb/><lb/>When George Clancy, Lord Mayor of Limerick, and his predecessor Michael O’Callaghan were murdered by the British military forces in March 1921, Stephen decided to stand for election and became Mayor.  He was re-elected in 1922 and in 1923 but resigned before the expiration of his term of office.<lb/><lb/>In 1921, Stephen O’Mara Junior was selected to go to America as Special Envoy appointed by Dáil Éireann to the United States to oversee one of the country’s biggest fundraising drives to finance the first Dáil and was made Trustee of the funds.  The funds-drive was terminated following the signing of the Anglo-Irish Treaty.  Considering himself as the exchequer to the Irish Free State, O’Mara refused to hand over the collected funds to the pro-Treaty administration which resulted in his imprisonment in 1922-1923.  He had also been imprisoned for seven days in 1921 for refusing to pay a fine of £10 for non-compliance with a military summons.<lb/><lb/>The bulk of the money collected during the Bond Drive was left in various banks in New York and remained untouched for a number of years.  In 1927, following legal action between the Irish Government and Eamon de Valera, a court in New York ordered that money outstanding to bond holders must be paid back.  Having anticipated such a ruling, de Valera’s legal team invited bond holders to sign over their bonds to de Valera, for which they were paid 58 cents to the dollar.  The monies so accumulated were used to launch the national daily newspaper *The Irish Press*.  Stephen O’Mara served on the paper’s Board of Directors until his resignation in 1935.<lb/><lb/>In 1932, Stephen O’Mara was once again sent to America on a mission involving the various consular and diplomatic offices maintained in the country by the Irish Government.  Two years later, he was appointed a member of the Commission on Vocational Organisation, on which he served until 1943.  In 1959, he was created a member of the Council of State following de Valera’s inauguration as President of Ireland.  Stephen O’Mara died less than two months after his appointment, on 11 November 1959.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara Junior married in 1918 Anne O’Brien, third daughter of Thomas O’Brien of Boru House, and the couple had an adopted son, Peter O’Mara.  Anne’s youngest sister, Kate O’Brien, became one of the most prominent novelists in 20th-century Ireland and a voice of the respectable Irish Roman Catholic middle class.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
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            <p>Published</p>
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          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Article entitled ‘II: Paris from the Pont Neuf’ by Kate O’Brien, published in the *Irish Times* on 2 July 1970.</p>
          </scopecontent>
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        <did>
          <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Reviews of Her Works</unittitle>
          <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="IE" repositorycode="2135">P40/3/10/2/3</unitid>
          <unitdate normal="1926-01-01/1967-12-31" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1926-1967</unitdate>
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        18 files and 1 item    </physdesc>
          <langmaterial encodinganalog="3.4.3">
            <language langcode="eng">English</language>
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            <famname id="atom_109949_actor">O'Mara family of Strand House, Limerick</famname>
          </origination>
        </did>
        <bioghist id="md5-be03d29153491160a15961757089b84f" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
          <note>
            <p>The history of the O’Mara family of Strand house and O’Mara’s Bacon Company go hand in hand.  The factory was founded in 1839 by James O’Meara (1817-1899), who originated from the village of Toomevaara in county Tipperary.  Having worked for some years in the woollen mills in Clonmel, he got a job as a clerk with Matterson’s Bacon Factory in Limerick and in 1839 founded O’Mara’s Bacon Company in his house on Mungret Street.  It is said that he dropped the ‘e’ from his surname as he felt that O’Meara was too long for commercial purposes.  James initially sold for Matterson’s but soon began to cure his own bacon in the basement of his house.  As his business grew, he acquired dedicated premises for the purpose near the top of Roche’s Street.<lb/><lb/>In 1841, James O’Mara married Honora Fowley (d. 1878), who worked in the bacon business alongside her husband.  A devoted nationalist, James was one of the early supporters of Isaac Butt’s Home Rule movement.  He was High Sheriff of Limerick City in 1887, and acted as Town Councillor on Limerick Corporation at least from 1888 to 1898.<lb/><lb/>James and Honora O’Mara had 13 children, of whom the two eldest surviving sons, Stephen O’Mara (1844-1926) and John (Jack) O’Mara (1856-1919) were instrumental in building up the O’Mara’s Bacon Factory into a great success.   The youngest son, Joseph (Joe) O’Mara (1864-1927) became a celebrated opera singer.<lb/><lb/>When James O’Mara retired from business his son John (Jack) O’Mara became manager of the O’Mara Bacon Factory.  In the late 1880s, Jack was invited to Russia by Tsar Alexander III to provide instruction on bacon curing.  He stayed in St Petersburg to supervise the construction of a bacon factory.  In 1891, his father bought the rights of the Russian Bacon Company and the family imported bacon from Russia into London until 1903.  James (Jim) O’Mara (1858-1893) acted as agent for O’Mara’s in London until his untimely death from heart disease.  His nephew James O’Mara (1873-1948), son of Stephen O’Mara Senior (1844-1926), took over the agency and held it until 1914.<lb/><lb/>When John (Jack) O’Mara died in 1919, his younger brother Stephen O’Mara (1844-1926) became Managing Director of O’Mara Limited and remained in that capacity until 1923.  Having entered into the family business at the age of fifteen, his great business acumen established O’Mara’s Bacon Factory as one of the most prominent commercial enterprises in Limerick city.  He also purchased a bacon factory in Palmerston, Ontario, Canada, which was managed by his son Joseph (Joe) O’Mara (1878-1950) until the business was wound up in the 1940s.<lb/><lb/>Like his father, Stephen O’Mara was a strong supporter of Isaac Butt’s Home Rule movement and a member of the committee which secured Butt’s election for Limerick city in 1871.  He later developed a close association with Charles Stewart Parnell and was elected Member of Parliament for Upper Ossory in Kilkenny South for the Irish Parliamentary Party in February 1886.  When the Irish National League split from Irish Parliamentary Party in December 1890, O’Mara took the Parnellite side.  He continued to act as trustee of the Party funds until 1908, when he resigned from his trusteeship.  Towards the end of his life, his moderate political views became more radicalised under the influence of his sons James (1873-1948) and Stephen Junior (1884-1959).  He had agreed with his son James’s decision to resign from the Irish Parliamentary Party in 1907 in order to join Sinn Fein, and personally supported the party in the 1918 General Election.  Both Stephen and his son James were strong supporters of the 1921 Anglo-Irish Treaty but were on friendly terms with Eamon de Valera who, it is said, spent the night at the O’Mara family home, Strand House, as the Treaty was being signed in London.  In the 1925 election, Stephen O’Mara was elected as Senator to the Free State Seanad.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara was also a prominent figure in local politics.  He became a Town Councillor on Limerick Corporation in the 1880s and was elected Mayor of Limerick in 1885.  He was the first Mayor of Limerick to be elected on a Nationalist ticket.  He also served as High Sheriff of Limerick city in 1888, 1913 and 1914.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara married Ellen Pigott in 1867, and the couple had 12 children of whom the eldest three died tragically of diphtheria in 1872.  From c. 1909 onwards, the family lived at Strand House.  Their third son, Stephen O’Mara Junior, was born on 5 January 1884.  He entered the family business in 1903 when he travelled to Canada to work in the bacon factory established by the O’Mara family in Ottawa.  In 1923, he became Managing Director of O’Mara Limited and created numerous employment opportunities by establishing bacon factories in Claremorris, County Mayo, and Letterkenny, County Donegal, in the 1930s.  The three bacon companies were amalgamated in 1938 and formed into the Bacon Company of Ireland.  Stephen O’Mara Junior remained the company’s chairman until his death in 1959.  In 1987, the Bacon Company of Ireland merged with Hanley of Rooskey and Benesford UK (Castlebar) with assistance from the Industrial Development Agency Ireland (IDA) to form Irish Country Bacon.  Shortly afterwards the old O’Mara factory in Limerick was closed down.  It was subsequently demolished to make way for a multi-storey car park.<lb/><lb/>Throughout his life, Stephen O’Mara Junior played a prominent role in both local and national affairs.  Unlike his father and elder brother James, Stephen was opposed to the Anglo-Irish Treaty but in a conciliatory manner.  He was prominently identified with the Sinn Fein movement after the Easter Rising.  He was one of Eamon de Valera’s strongest supporters and a member of his Fianna Fail Party since its formation in 1926.<lb/><lb/>When George Clancy, Lord Mayor of Limerick, and his predecessor Michael O’Callaghan were murdered by the British military forces in March 1921, Stephen decided to stand for election and became Mayor.  He was re-elected in 1922 and in 1923 but resigned before the expiration of his term of office.<lb/><lb/>In 1921, Stephen O’Mara Junior was selected to go to America as Special Envoy appointed by Dáil Éireann to the United States to oversee one of the country’s biggest fundraising drives to finance the first Dáil and was made Trustee of the funds.  The funds-drive was terminated following the signing of the Anglo-Irish Treaty.  Considering himself as the exchequer to the Irish Free State, O’Mara refused to hand over the collected funds to the pro-Treaty administration which resulted in his imprisonment in 1922-1923.  He had also been imprisoned for seven days in 1921 for refusing to pay a fine of £10 for non-compliance with a military summons.<lb/><lb/>The bulk of the money collected during the Bond Drive was left in various banks in New York and remained untouched for a number of years.  In 1927, following legal action between the Irish Government and Eamon de Valera, a court in New York ordered that money outstanding to bond holders must be paid back.  Having anticipated such a ruling, de Valera’s legal team invited bond holders to sign over their bonds to de Valera, for which they were paid 58 cents to the dollar.  The monies so accumulated were used to launch the national daily newspaper *The Irish Press*.  Stephen O’Mara served on the paper’s Board of Directors until his resignation in 1935.<lb/><lb/>In 1932, Stephen O’Mara was once again sent to America on a mission involving the various consular and diplomatic offices maintained in the country by the Irish Government.  Two years later, he was appointed a member of the Commission on Vocational Organisation, on which he served until 1943.  In 1959, he was created a member of the Council of State following de Valera’s inauguration as President of Ireland.  Stephen O’Mara died less than two months after his appointment, on 11 November 1959.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara Junior married in 1918 Anne O’Brien, third daughter of Thomas O’Brien of Boru House, and the couple had an adopted son, Peter O’Mara.  Anne’s youngest sister, Kate O’Brien, became one of the most prominent novelists in 20th-century Ireland and a voice of the respectable Irish Roman Catholic middle class.</p>
          </note>
        </bioghist>
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          <p>This sub-series contains reviews of Kate O'Brien's works published in English and Irish newspapers.</p>
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          <p>The material is grouped by the work to which they relate and the groups arranged chronologically by date.</p>
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          <p>Paper documents in good condition.</p>
        </phystech>
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          <p>Unrestricted access to all items.</p>
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        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Scrapbook of press cuttings relating to Kate O’Brien’s early plays</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="IE" repositorycode="2135">P40/3/10/2/3/1</unitid>
            <unitid type="alternative" label="Original number">P40/839</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1926-01-01/1927-12-31" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1926-1927</unitdate>
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        15 pp.    </physdesc>
            <langmaterial encodinganalog="3.4.3">
              <language langcode="eng">English</language>
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              <famname id="atom_124648_actor">O'Mara family of Strand House, Limerick</famname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-be03d29153491160a15961757089b84f" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>The history of the O’Mara family of Strand house and O’Mara’s Bacon Company go hand in hand.  The factory was founded in 1839 by James O’Meara (1817-1899), who originated from the village of Toomevaara in county Tipperary.  Having worked for some years in the woollen mills in Clonmel, he got a job as a clerk with Matterson’s Bacon Factory in Limerick and in 1839 founded O’Mara’s Bacon Company in his house on Mungret Street.  It is said that he dropped the ‘e’ from his surname as he felt that O’Meara was too long for commercial purposes.  James initially sold for Matterson’s but soon began to cure his own bacon in the basement of his house.  As his business grew, he acquired dedicated premises for the purpose near the top of Roche’s Street.<lb/><lb/>In 1841, James O’Mara married Honora Fowley (d. 1878), who worked in the bacon business alongside her husband.  A devoted nationalist, James was one of the early supporters of Isaac Butt’s Home Rule movement.  He was High Sheriff of Limerick City in 1887, and acted as Town Councillor on Limerick Corporation at least from 1888 to 1898.<lb/><lb/>James and Honora O’Mara had 13 children, of whom the two eldest surviving sons, Stephen O’Mara (1844-1926) and John (Jack) O’Mara (1856-1919) were instrumental in building up the O’Mara’s Bacon Factory into a great success.   The youngest son, Joseph (Joe) O’Mara (1864-1927) became a celebrated opera singer.<lb/><lb/>When James O’Mara retired from business his son John (Jack) O’Mara became manager of the O’Mara Bacon Factory.  In the late 1880s, Jack was invited to Russia by Tsar Alexander III to provide instruction on bacon curing.  He stayed in St Petersburg to supervise the construction of a bacon factory.  In 1891, his father bought the rights of the Russian Bacon Company and the family imported bacon from Russia into London until 1903.  James (Jim) O’Mara (1858-1893) acted as agent for O’Mara’s in London until his untimely death from heart disease.  His nephew James O’Mara (1873-1948), son of Stephen O’Mara Senior (1844-1926), took over the agency and held it until 1914.<lb/><lb/>When John (Jack) O’Mara died in 1919, his younger brother Stephen O’Mara (1844-1926) became Managing Director of O’Mara Limited and remained in that capacity until 1923.  Having entered into the family business at the age of fifteen, his great business acumen established O’Mara’s Bacon Factory as one of the most prominent commercial enterprises in Limerick city.  He also purchased a bacon factory in Palmerston, Ontario, Canada, which was managed by his son Joseph (Joe) O’Mara (1878-1950) until the business was wound up in the 1940s.<lb/><lb/>Like his father, Stephen O’Mara was a strong supporter of Isaac Butt’s Home Rule movement and a member of the committee which secured Butt’s election for Limerick city in 1871.  He later developed a close association with Charles Stewart Parnell and was elected Member of Parliament for Upper Ossory in Kilkenny South for the Irish Parliamentary Party in February 1886.  When the Irish National League split from Irish Parliamentary Party in December 1890, O’Mara took the Parnellite side.  He continued to act as trustee of the Party funds until 1908, when he resigned from his trusteeship.  Towards the end of his life, his moderate political views became more radicalised under the influence of his sons James (1873-1948) and Stephen Junior (1884-1959).  He had agreed with his son James’s decision to resign from the Irish Parliamentary Party in 1907 in order to join Sinn Fein, and personally supported the party in the 1918 General Election.  Both Stephen and his son James were strong supporters of the 1921 Anglo-Irish Treaty but were on friendly terms with Eamon de Valera who, it is said, spent the night at the O’Mara family home, Strand House, as the Treaty was being signed in London.  In the 1925 election, Stephen O’Mara was elected as Senator to the Free State Seanad.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara was also a prominent figure in local politics.  He became a Town Councillor on Limerick Corporation in the 1880s and was elected Mayor of Limerick in 1885.  He was the first Mayor of Limerick to be elected on a Nationalist ticket.  He also served as High Sheriff of Limerick city in 1888, 1913 and 1914.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara married Ellen Pigott in 1867, and the couple had 12 children of whom the eldest three died tragically of diphtheria in 1872.  From c. 1909 onwards, the family lived at Strand House.  Their third son, Stephen O’Mara Junior, was born on 5 January 1884.  He entered the family business in 1903 when he travelled to Canada to work in the bacon factory established by the O’Mara family in Ottawa.  In 1923, he became Managing Director of O’Mara Limited and created numerous employment opportunities by establishing bacon factories in Claremorris, County Mayo, and Letterkenny, County Donegal, in the 1930s.  The three bacon companies were amalgamated in 1938 and formed into the Bacon Company of Ireland.  Stephen O’Mara Junior remained the company’s chairman until his death in 1959.  In 1987, the Bacon Company of Ireland merged with Hanley of Rooskey and Benesford UK (Castlebar) with assistance from the Industrial Development Agency Ireland (IDA) to form Irish Country Bacon.  Shortly afterwards the old O’Mara factory in Limerick was closed down.  It was subsequently demolished to make way for a multi-storey car park.<lb/><lb/>Throughout his life, Stephen O’Mara Junior played a prominent role in both local and national affairs.  Unlike his father and elder brother James, Stephen was opposed to the Anglo-Irish Treaty but in a conciliatory manner.  He was prominently identified with the Sinn Fein movement after the Easter Rising.  He was one of Eamon de Valera’s strongest supporters and a member of his Fianna Fail Party since its formation in 1926.<lb/><lb/>When George Clancy, Lord Mayor of Limerick, and his predecessor Michael O’Callaghan were murdered by the British military forces in March 1921, Stephen decided to stand for election and became Mayor.  He was re-elected in 1922 and in 1923 but resigned before the expiration of his term of office.<lb/><lb/>In 1921, Stephen O’Mara Junior was selected to go to America as Special Envoy appointed by Dáil Éireann to the United States to oversee one of the country’s biggest fundraising drives to finance the first Dáil and was made Trustee of the funds.  The funds-drive was terminated following the signing of the Anglo-Irish Treaty.  Considering himself as the exchequer to the Irish Free State, O’Mara refused to hand over the collected funds to the pro-Treaty administration which resulted in his imprisonment in 1922-1923.  He had also been imprisoned for seven days in 1921 for refusing to pay a fine of £10 for non-compliance with a military summons.<lb/><lb/>The bulk of the money collected during the Bond Drive was left in various banks in New York and remained untouched for a number of years.  In 1927, following legal action between the Irish Government and Eamon de Valera, a court in New York ordered that money outstanding to bond holders must be paid back.  Having anticipated such a ruling, de Valera’s legal team invited bond holders to sign over their bonds to de Valera, for which they were paid 58 cents to the dollar.  The monies so accumulated were used to launch the national daily newspaper *The Irish Press*.  Stephen O’Mara served on the paper’s Board of Directors until his resignation in 1935.<lb/><lb/>In 1932, Stephen O’Mara was once again sent to America on a mission involving the various consular and diplomatic offices maintained in the country by the Irish Government.  Two years later, he was appointed a member of the Commission on Vocational Organisation, on which he served until 1943.  In 1959, he was created a member of the Council of State following de Valera’s inauguration as President of Ireland.  Stephen O’Mara died less than two months after his appointment, on 11 November 1959.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara Junior married in 1918 Anne O’Brien, third daughter of Thomas O’Brien of Boru House, and the couple had an adopted son, Peter O’Mara.  Anne’s youngest sister, Kate O’Brien, became one of the most prominent novelists in 20th-century Ireland and a voice of the respectable Irish Roman Catholic middle class.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Hardback album used as a scrapbook containing newspaper and magazine cuttings relating to Kate O’Brien, mainly reviews of her plays *Distinguished Villa* and *The Bridge*.  Two thirds of the pages are blank.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="file">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Press cuttings relating to ‘Distinguished Villa’</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="IE" repositorycode="2135">P40/3/10/2/3/2</unitid>
            <unitid type="alternative" label="Original number">P40/840</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1926-01-01/1936-12-31" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1926 and 1936</unitdate>
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        20 items    </physdesc>
            <repository>
              <corpname>Special Collections and Archives Department</corpname>
              <address>
                <addressline>GL0-051, Glucksman Library, University of Limerick</addressline>
                <addressline>Limerick</addressline>
                <addressline>Ireland</addressline>
                <addressline>V94 DPY6</addressline>
                <addressline>Telephone: +353-61-202690</addressline>
                <addressline>Fax: +353-61-213415</addressline>
                <addressline>Email: specoll@ul.ie</addressline>
                <addressline>https://specialcollections.ul.ie/</addressline>
              </address>
            </repository>
            <langmaterial encodinganalog="3.4.3">
              <language langcode="eng">English</language>
            </langmaterial>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <famname id="atom_124651_actor">O'Mara family of Strand House, Limerick</famname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-be03d29153491160a15961757089b84f" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>The history of the O’Mara family of Strand house and O’Mara’s Bacon Company go hand in hand.  The factory was founded in 1839 by James O’Meara (1817-1899), who originated from the village of Toomevaara in county Tipperary.  Having worked for some years in the woollen mills in Clonmel, he got a job as a clerk with Matterson’s Bacon Factory in Limerick and in 1839 founded O’Mara’s Bacon Company in his house on Mungret Street.  It is said that he dropped the ‘e’ from his surname as he felt that O’Meara was too long for commercial purposes.  James initially sold for Matterson’s but soon began to cure his own bacon in the basement of his house.  As his business grew, he acquired dedicated premises for the purpose near the top of Roche’s Street.<lb/><lb/>In 1841, James O’Mara married Honora Fowley (d. 1878), who worked in the bacon business alongside her husband.  A devoted nationalist, James was one of the early supporters of Isaac Butt’s Home Rule movement.  He was High Sheriff of Limerick City in 1887, and acted as Town Councillor on Limerick Corporation at least from 1888 to 1898.<lb/><lb/>James and Honora O’Mara had 13 children, of whom the two eldest surviving sons, Stephen O’Mara (1844-1926) and John (Jack) O’Mara (1856-1919) were instrumental in building up the O’Mara’s Bacon Factory into a great success.   The youngest son, Joseph (Joe) O’Mara (1864-1927) became a celebrated opera singer.<lb/><lb/>When James O’Mara retired from business his son John (Jack) O’Mara became manager of the O’Mara Bacon Factory.  In the late 1880s, Jack was invited to Russia by Tsar Alexander III to provide instruction on bacon curing.  He stayed in St Petersburg to supervise the construction of a bacon factory.  In 1891, his father bought the rights of the Russian Bacon Company and the family imported bacon from Russia into London until 1903.  James (Jim) O’Mara (1858-1893) acted as agent for O’Mara’s in London until his untimely death from heart disease.  His nephew James O’Mara (1873-1948), son of Stephen O’Mara Senior (1844-1926), took over the agency and held it until 1914.<lb/><lb/>When John (Jack) O’Mara died in 1919, his younger brother Stephen O’Mara (1844-1926) became Managing Director of O’Mara Limited and remained in that capacity until 1923.  Having entered into the family business at the age of fifteen, his great business acumen established O’Mara’s Bacon Factory as one of the most prominent commercial enterprises in Limerick city.  He also purchased a bacon factory in Palmerston, Ontario, Canada, which was managed by his son Joseph (Joe) O’Mara (1878-1950) until the business was wound up in the 1940s.<lb/><lb/>Like his father, Stephen O’Mara was a strong supporter of Isaac Butt’s Home Rule movement and a member of the committee which secured Butt’s election for Limerick city in 1871.  He later developed a close association with Charles Stewart Parnell and was elected Member of Parliament for Upper Ossory in Kilkenny South for the Irish Parliamentary Party in February 1886.  When the Irish National League split from Irish Parliamentary Party in December 1890, O’Mara took the Parnellite side.  He continued to act as trustee of the Party funds until 1908, when he resigned from his trusteeship.  Towards the end of his life, his moderate political views became more radicalised under the influence of his sons James (1873-1948) and Stephen Junior (1884-1959).  He had agreed with his son James’s decision to resign from the Irish Parliamentary Party in 1907 in order to join Sinn Fein, and personally supported the party in the 1918 General Election.  Both Stephen and his son James were strong supporters of the 1921 Anglo-Irish Treaty but were on friendly terms with Eamon de Valera who, it is said, spent the night at the O’Mara family home, Strand House, as the Treaty was being signed in London.  In the 1925 election, Stephen O’Mara was elected as Senator to the Free State Seanad.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara was also a prominent figure in local politics.  He became a Town Councillor on Limerick Corporation in the 1880s and was elected Mayor of Limerick in 1885.  He was the first Mayor of Limerick to be elected on a Nationalist ticket.  He also served as High Sheriff of Limerick city in 1888, 1913 and 1914.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara married Ellen Pigott in 1867, and the couple had 12 children of whom the eldest three died tragically of diphtheria in 1872.  From c. 1909 onwards, the family lived at Strand House.  Their third son, Stephen O’Mara Junior, was born on 5 January 1884.  He entered the family business in 1903 when he travelled to Canada to work in the bacon factory established by the O’Mara family in Ottawa.  In 1923, he became Managing Director of O’Mara Limited and created numerous employment opportunities by establishing bacon factories in Claremorris, County Mayo, and Letterkenny, County Donegal, in the 1930s.  The three bacon companies were amalgamated in 1938 and formed into the Bacon Company of Ireland.  Stephen O’Mara Junior remained the company’s chairman until his death in 1959.  In 1987, the Bacon Company of Ireland merged with Hanley of Rooskey and Benesford UK (Castlebar) with assistance from the Industrial Development Agency Ireland (IDA) to form Irish Country Bacon.  Shortly afterwards the old O’Mara factory in Limerick was closed down.  It was subsequently demolished to make way for a multi-storey car park.<lb/><lb/>Throughout his life, Stephen O’Mara Junior played a prominent role in both local and national affairs.  Unlike his father and elder brother James, Stephen was opposed to the Anglo-Irish Treaty but in a conciliatory manner.  He was prominently identified with the Sinn Fein movement after the Easter Rising.  He was one of Eamon de Valera’s strongest supporters and a member of his Fianna Fail Party since its formation in 1926.<lb/><lb/>When George Clancy, Lord Mayor of Limerick, and his predecessor Michael O’Callaghan were murdered by the British military forces in March 1921, Stephen decided to stand for election and became Mayor.  He was re-elected in 1922 and in 1923 but resigned before the expiration of his term of office.<lb/><lb/>In 1921, Stephen O’Mara Junior was selected to go to America as Special Envoy appointed by Dáil Éireann to the United States to oversee one of the country’s biggest fundraising drives to finance the first Dáil and was made Trustee of the funds.  The funds-drive was terminated following the signing of the Anglo-Irish Treaty.  Considering himself as the exchequer to the Irish Free State, O’Mara refused to hand over the collected funds to the pro-Treaty administration which resulted in his imprisonment in 1922-1923.  He had also been imprisoned for seven days in 1921 for refusing to pay a fine of £10 for non-compliance with a military summons.<lb/><lb/>The bulk of the money collected during the Bond Drive was left in various banks in New York and remained untouched for a number of years.  In 1927, following legal action between the Irish Government and Eamon de Valera, a court in New York ordered that money outstanding to bond holders must be paid back.  Having anticipated such a ruling, de Valera’s legal team invited bond holders to sign over their bonds to de Valera, for which they were paid 58 cents to the dollar.  The monies so accumulated were used to launch the national daily newspaper *The Irish Press*.  Stephen O’Mara served on the paper’s Board of Directors until his resignation in 1935.<lb/><lb/>In 1932, Stephen O’Mara was once again sent to America on a mission involving the various consular and diplomatic offices maintained in the country by the Irish Government.  Two years later, he was appointed a member of the Commission on Vocational Organisation, on which he served until 1943.  In 1959, he was created a member of the Council of State following de Valera’s inauguration as President of Ireland.  Stephen O’Mara died less than two months after his appointment, on 11 November 1959.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara Junior married in 1918 Anne O’Brien, third daughter of Thomas O’Brien of Boru House, and the couple had an adopted son, Peter O’Mara.  Anne’s youngest sister, Kate O’Brien, became one of the most prominent novelists in 20th-century Ireland and a voice of the respectable Irish Roman Catholic middle class.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Reviews of and other press cuttings relating to the play *Distinguished Villa*.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="file">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Press cuttings relating to Kate O'Brien's plays</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="IE" repositorycode="2135">P40/3/10/2/3/3</unitid>
            <unitid type="alternative" label="Original number">P40/841</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1927-01-01/1929-12-31" encodinganalog="3.1.3">[c. 1927-1929]</unitdate>
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        5 items    </physdesc>
            <repository>
              <corpname>Special Collections and Archives Department</corpname>
              <address>
                <addressline>GL0-051, Glucksman Library, University of Limerick</addressline>
                <addressline>Limerick</addressline>
                <addressline>Ireland</addressline>
                <addressline>V94 DPY6</addressline>
                <addressline>Telephone: +353-61-202690</addressline>
                <addressline>Fax: +353-61-213415</addressline>
                <addressline>Email: specoll@ul.ie</addressline>
                <addressline>https://specialcollections.ul.ie/</addressline>
              </address>
            </repository>
            <langmaterial encodinganalog="3.4.3">
              <language langcode="eng">English</language>
            </langmaterial>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <famname id="atom_124654_actor">O'Mara family of Strand House, Limerick</famname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-be03d29153491160a15961757089b84f" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>The history of the O’Mara family of Strand house and O’Mara’s Bacon Company go hand in hand.  The factory was founded in 1839 by James O’Meara (1817-1899), who originated from the village of Toomevaara in county Tipperary.  Having worked for some years in the woollen mills in Clonmel, he got a job as a clerk with Matterson’s Bacon Factory in Limerick and in 1839 founded O’Mara’s Bacon Company in his house on Mungret Street.  It is said that he dropped the ‘e’ from his surname as he felt that O’Meara was too long for commercial purposes.  James initially sold for Matterson’s but soon began to cure his own bacon in the basement of his house.  As his business grew, he acquired dedicated premises for the purpose near the top of Roche’s Street.<lb/><lb/>In 1841, James O’Mara married Honora Fowley (d. 1878), who worked in the bacon business alongside her husband.  A devoted nationalist, James was one of the early supporters of Isaac Butt’s Home Rule movement.  He was High Sheriff of Limerick City in 1887, and acted as Town Councillor on Limerick Corporation at least from 1888 to 1898.<lb/><lb/>James and Honora O’Mara had 13 children, of whom the two eldest surviving sons, Stephen O’Mara (1844-1926) and John (Jack) O’Mara (1856-1919) were instrumental in building up the O’Mara’s Bacon Factory into a great success.   The youngest son, Joseph (Joe) O’Mara (1864-1927) became a celebrated opera singer.<lb/><lb/>When James O’Mara retired from business his son John (Jack) O’Mara became manager of the O’Mara Bacon Factory.  In the late 1880s, Jack was invited to Russia by Tsar Alexander III to provide instruction on bacon curing.  He stayed in St Petersburg to supervise the construction of a bacon factory.  In 1891, his father bought the rights of the Russian Bacon Company and the family imported bacon from Russia into London until 1903.  James (Jim) O’Mara (1858-1893) acted as agent for O’Mara’s in London until his untimely death from heart disease.  His nephew James O’Mara (1873-1948), son of Stephen O’Mara Senior (1844-1926), took over the agency and held it until 1914.<lb/><lb/>When John (Jack) O’Mara died in 1919, his younger brother Stephen O’Mara (1844-1926) became Managing Director of O’Mara Limited and remained in that capacity until 1923.  Having entered into the family business at the age of fifteen, his great business acumen established O’Mara’s Bacon Factory as one of the most prominent commercial enterprises in Limerick city.  He also purchased a bacon factory in Palmerston, Ontario, Canada, which was managed by his son Joseph (Joe) O’Mara (1878-1950) until the business was wound up in the 1940s.<lb/><lb/>Like his father, Stephen O’Mara was a strong supporter of Isaac Butt’s Home Rule movement and a member of the committee which secured Butt’s election for Limerick city in 1871.  He later developed a close association with Charles Stewart Parnell and was elected Member of Parliament for Upper Ossory in Kilkenny South for the Irish Parliamentary Party in February 1886.  When the Irish National League split from Irish Parliamentary Party in December 1890, O’Mara took the Parnellite side.  He continued to act as trustee of the Party funds until 1908, when he resigned from his trusteeship.  Towards the end of his life, his moderate political views became more radicalised under the influence of his sons James (1873-1948) and Stephen Junior (1884-1959).  He had agreed with his son James’s decision to resign from the Irish Parliamentary Party in 1907 in order to join Sinn Fein, and personally supported the party in the 1918 General Election.  Both Stephen and his son James were strong supporters of the 1921 Anglo-Irish Treaty but were on friendly terms with Eamon de Valera who, it is said, spent the night at the O’Mara family home, Strand House, as the Treaty was being signed in London.  In the 1925 election, Stephen O’Mara was elected as Senator to the Free State Seanad.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara was also a prominent figure in local politics.  He became a Town Councillor on Limerick Corporation in the 1880s and was elected Mayor of Limerick in 1885.  He was the first Mayor of Limerick to be elected on a Nationalist ticket.  He also served as High Sheriff of Limerick city in 1888, 1913 and 1914.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara married Ellen Pigott in 1867, and the couple had 12 children of whom the eldest three died tragically of diphtheria in 1872.  From c. 1909 onwards, the family lived at Strand House.  Their third son, Stephen O’Mara Junior, was born on 5 January 1884.  He entered the family business in 1903 when he travelled to Canada to work in the bacon factory established by the O’Mara family in Ottawa.  In 1923, he became Managing Director of O’Mara Limited and created numerous employment opportunities by establishing bacon factories in Claremorris, County Mayo, and Letterkenny, County Donegal, in the 1930s.  The three bacon companies were amalgamated in 1938 and formed into the Bacon Company of Ireland.  Stephen O’Mara Junior remained the company’s chairman until his death in 1959.  In 1987, the Bacon Company of Ireland merged with Hanley of Rooskey and Benesford UK (Castlebar) with assistance from the Industrial Development Agency Ireland (IDA) to form Irish Country Bacon.  Shortly afterwards the old O’Mara factory in Limerick was closed down.  It was subsequently demolished to make way for a multi-storey car park.<lb/><lb/>Throughout his life, Stephen O’Mara Junior played a prominent role in both local and national affairs.  Unlike his father and elder brother James, Stephen was opposed to the Anglo-Irish Treaty but in a conciliatory manner.  He was prominently identified with the Sinn Fein movement after the Easter Rising.  He was one of Eamon de Valera’s strongest supporters and a member of his Fianna Fail Party since its formation in 1926.<lb/><lb/>When George Clancy, Lord Mayor of Limerick, and his predecessor Michael O’Callaghan were murdered by the British military forces in March 1921, Stephen decided to stand for election and became Mayor.  He was re-elected in 1922 and in 1923 but resigned before the expiration of his term of office.<lb/><lb/>In 1921, Stephen O’Mara Junior was selected to go to America as Special Envoy appointed by Dáil Éireann to the United States to oversee one of the country’s biggest fundraising drives to finance the first Dáil and was made Trustee of the funds.  The funds-drive was terminated following the signing of the Anglo-Irish Treaty.  Considering himself as the exchequer to the Irish Free State, O’Mara refused to hand over the collected funds to the pro-Treaty administration which resulted in his imprisonment in 1922-1923.  He had also been imprisoned for seven days in 1921 for refusing to pay a fine of £10 for non-compliance with a military summons.<lb/><lb/>The bulk of the money collected during the Bond Drive was left in various banks in New York and remained untouched for a number of years.  In 1927, following legal action between the Irish Government and Eamon de Valera, a court in New York ordered that money outstanding to bond holders must be paid back.  Having anticipated such a ruling, de Valera’s legal team invited bond holders to sign over their bonds to de Valera, for which they were paid 58 cents to the dollar.  The monies so accumulated were used to launch the national daily newspaper *The Irish Press*.  Stephen O’Mara served on the paper’s Board of Directors until his resignation in 1935.<lb/><lb/>In 1932, Stephen O’Mara was once again sent to America on a mission involving the various consular and diplomatic offices maintained in the country by the Irish Government.  Two years later, he was appointed a member of the Commission on Vocational Organisation, on which he served until 1943.  In 1959, he was created a member of the Council of State following de Valera’s inauguration as President of Ireland.  Stephen O’Mara died less than two months after his appointment, on 11 November 1959.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara Junior married in 1918 Anne O’Brien, third daughter of Thomas O’Brien of Boru House, and the couple had an adopted son, Peter O’Mara.  Anne’s youngest sister, Kate O’Brien, became one of the most prominent novelists in 20th-century Ireland and a voice of the respectable Irish Roman Catholic middle class.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Press cuttings relating to Kate O’Brien and her plays *The Bridge*, *The Silver Roan* and *Set in Platinum*.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="file">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Press cuttings relating to ‘Without My Cloak’</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="IE" repositorycode="2135">P40/3/10/2/3/4</unitid>
            <unitid type="alternative" label="Original number">P40/842</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1932-01-01/1932-12-31" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1932</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        6 items    </physdesc>
            <repository>
              <corpname>Special Collections and Archives Department</corpname>
              <address>
                <addressline>GL0-051, Glucksman Library, University of Limerick</addressline>
                <addressline>Limerick</addressline>
                <addressline>Ireland</addressline>
                <addressline>V94 DPY6</addressline>
                <addressline>Telephone: +353-61-202690</addressline>
                <addressline>Fax: +353-61-213415</addressline>
                <addressline>Email: specoll@ul.ie</addressline>
                <addressline>https://specialcollections.ul.ie/</addressline>
              </address>
            </repository>
            <langmaterial encodinganalog="3.4.3">
              <language langcode="eng">English</language>
            </langmaterial>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <famname id="atom_124657_actor">O'Mara family of Strand House, Limerick</famname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-be03d29153491160a15961757089b84f" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>The history of the O’Mara family of Strand house and O’Mara’s Bacon Company go hand in hand.  The factory was founded in 1839 by James O’Meara (1817-1899), who originated from the village of Toomevaara in county Tipperary.  Having worked for some years in the woollen mills in Clonmel, he got a job as a clerk with Matterson’s Bacon Factory in Limerick and in 1839 founded O’Mara’s Bacon Company in his house on Mungret Street.  It is said that he dropped the ‘e’ from his surname as he felt that O’Meara was too long for commercial purposes.  James initially sold for Matterson’s but soon began to cure his own bacon in the basement of his house.  As his business grew, he acquired dedicated premises for the purpose near the top of Roche’s Street.<lb/><lb/>In 1841, James O’Mara married Honora Fowley (d. 1878), who worked in the bacon business alongside her husband.  A devoted nationalist, James was one of the early supporters of Isaac Butt’s Home Rule movement.  He was High Sheriff of Limerick City in 1887, and acted as Town Councillor on Limerick Corporation at least from 1888 to 1898.<lb/><lb/>James and Honora O’Mara had 13 children, of whom the two eldest surviving sons, Stephen O’Mara (1844-1926) and John (Jack) O’Mara (1856-1919) were instrumental in building up the O’Mara’s Bacon Factory into a great success.   The youngest son, Joseph (Joe) O’Mara (1864-1927) became a celebrated opera singer.<lb/><lb/>When James O’Mara retired from business his son John (Jack) O’Mara became manager of the O’Mara Bacon Factory.  In the late 1880s, Jack was invited to Russia by Tsar Alexander III to provide instruction on bacon curing.  He stayed in St Petersburg to supervise the construction of a bacon factory.  In 1891, his father bought the rights of the Russian Bacon Company and the family imported bacon from Russia into London until 1903.  James (Jim) O’Mara (1858-1893) acted as agent for O’Mara’s in London until his untimely death from heart disease.  His nephew James O’Mara (1873-1948), son of Stephen O’Mara Senior (1844-1926), took over the agency and held it until 1914.<lb/><lb/>When John (Jack) O’Mara died in 1919, his younger brother Stephen O’Mara (1844-1926) became Managing Director of O’Mara Limited and remained in that capacity until 1923.  Having entered into the family business at the age of fifteen, his great business acumen established O’Mara’s Bacon Factory as one of the most prominent commercial enterprises in Limerick city.  He also purchased a bacon factory in Palmerston, Ontario, Canada, which was managed by his son Joseph (Joe) O’Mara (1878-1950) until the business was wound up in the 1940s.<lb/><lb/>Like his father, Stephen O’Mara was a strong supporter of Isaac Butt’s Home Rule movement and a member of the committee which secured Butt’s election for Limerick city in 1871.  He later developed a close association with Charles Stewart Parnell and was elected Member of Parliament for Upper Ossory in Kilkenny South for the Irish Parliamentary Party in February 1886.  When the Irish National League split from Irish Parliamentary Party in December 1890, O’Mara took the Parnellite side.  He continued to act as trustee of the Party funds until 1908, when he resigned from his trusteeship.  Towards the end of his life, his moderate political views became more radicalised under the influence of his sons James (1873-1948) and Stephen Junior (1884-1959).  He had agreed with his son James’s decision to resign from the Irish Parliamentary Party in 1907 in order to join Sinn Fein, and personally supported the party in the 1918 General Election.  Both Stephen and his son James were strong supporters of the 1921 Anglo-Irish Treaty but were on friendly terms with Eamon de Valera who, it is said, spent the night at the O’Mara family home, Strand House, as the Treaty was being signed in London.  In the 1925 election, Stephen O’Mara was elected as Senator to the Free State Seanad.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara was also a prominent figure in local politics.  He became a Town Councillor on Limerick Corporation in the 1880s and was elected Mayor of Limerick in 1885.  He was the first Mayor of Limerick to be elected on a Nationalist ticket.  He also served as High Sheriff of Limerick city in 1888, 1913 and 1914.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara married Ellen Pigott in 1867, and the couple had 12 children of whom the eldest three died tragically of diphtheria in 1872.  From c. 1909 onwards, the family lived at Strand House.  Their third son, Stephen O’Mara Junior, was born on 5 January 1884.  He entered the family business in 1903 when he travelled to Canada to work in the bacon factory established by the O’Mara family in Ottawa.  In 1923, he became Managing Director of O’Mara Limited and created numerous employment opportunities by establishing bacon factories in Claremorris, County Mayo, and Letterkenny, County Donegal, in the 1930s.  The three bacon companies were amalgamated in 1938 and formed into the Bacon Company of Ireland.  Stephen O’Mara Junior remained the company’s chairman until his death in 1959.  In 1987, the Bacon Company of Ireland merged with Hanley of Rooskey and Benesford UK (Castlebar) with assistance from the Industrial Development Agency Ireland (IDA) to form Irish Country Bacon.  Shortly afterwards the old O’Mara factory in Limerick was closed down.  It was subsequently demolished to make way for a multi-storey car park.<lb/><lb/>Throughout his life, Stephen O’Mara Junior played a prominent role in both local and national affairs.  Unlike his father and elder brother James, Stephen was opposed to the Anglo-Irish Treaty but in a conciliatory manner.  He was prominently identified with the Sinn Fein movement after the Easter Rising.  He was one of Eamon de Valera’s strongest supporters and a member of his Fianna Fail Party since its formation in 1926.<lb/><lb/>When George Clancy, Lord Mayor of Limerick, and his predecessor Michael O’Callaghan were murdered by the British military forces in March 1921, Stephen decided to stand for election and became Mayor.  He was re-elected in 1922 and in 1923 but resigned before the expiration of his term of office.<lb/><lb/>In 1921, Stephen O’Mara Junior was selected to go to America as Special Envoy appointed by Dáil Éireann to the United States to oversee one of the country’s biggest fundraising drives to finance the first Dáil and was made Trustee of the funds.  The funds-drive was terminated following the signing of the Anglo-Irish Treaty.  Considering himself as the exchequer to the Irish Free State, O’Mara refused to hand over the collected funds to the pro-Treaty administration which resulted in his imprisonment in 1922-1923.  He had also been imprisoned for seven days in 1921 for refusing to pay a fine of £10 for non-compliance with a military summons.<lb/><lb/>The bulk of the money collected during the Bond Drive was left in various banks in New York and remained untouched for a number of years.  In 1927, following legal action between the Irish Government and Eamon de Valera, a court in New York ordered that money outstanding to bond holders must be paid back.  Having anticipated such a ruling, de Valera’s legal team invited bond holders to sign over their bonds to de Valera, for which they were paid 58 cents to the dollar.  The monies so accumulated were used to launch the national daily newspaper *The Irish Press*.  Stephen O’Mara served on the paper’s Board of Directors until his resignation in 1935.<lb/><lb/>In 1932, Stephen O’Mara was once again sent to America on a mission involving the various consular and diplomatic offices maintained in the country by the Irish Government.  Two years later, he was appointed a member of the Commission on Vocational Organisation, on which he served until 1943.  In 1959, he was created a member of the Council of State following de Valera’s inauguration as President of Ireland.  Stephen O’Mara died less than two months after his appointment, on 11 November 1959.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara Junior married in 1918 Anne O’Brien, third daughter of Thomas O’Brien of Boru House, and the couple had an adopted son, Peter O’Mara.  Anne’s youngest sister, Kate O’Brien, became one of the most prominent novelists in 20th-century Ireland and a voice of the respectable Irish Roman Catholic middle class.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Press cuttings relating to Kate O’Brien’s first novel *Without My Cloak* and the Hawthornden Prize presented to her for it.  Includes copies of typed transcripts of an article from *Clergy Review*.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="file">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Press cuttings relating to ‘The Ante-Room’</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="IE" repositorycode="2135">P40/3/10/2/3/5</unitid>
            <unitid type="alternative" label="Original number">P40/843</unitid>
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        14 items    </physdesc>
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              <corpname>Special Collections and Archives Department</corpname>
              <address>
                <addressline>GL0-051, Glucksman Library, University of Limerick</addressline>
                <addressline>Limerick</addressline>
                <addressline>Ireland</addressline>
                <addressline>V94 DPY6</addressline>
                <addressline>Telephone: +353-61-202690</addressline>
                <addressline>Fax: +353-61-213415</addressline>
                <addressline>Email: specoll@ul.ie</addressline>
                <addressline>https://specialcollections.ul.ie/</addressline>
              </address>
            </repository>
            <langmaterial encodinganalog="3.4.3">
              <language langcode="eng">English</language>
            </langmaterial>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <famname id="atom_124660_actor">O'Mara family of Strand House, Limerick</famname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-be03d29153491160a15961757089b84f" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>The history of the O’Mara family of Strand house and O’Mara’s Bacon Company go hand in hand.  The factory was founded in 1839 by James O’Meara (1817-1899), who originated from the village of Toomevaara in county Tipperary.  Having worked for some years in the woollen mills in Clonmel, he got a job as a clerk with Matterson’s Bacon Factory in Limerick and in 1839 founded O’Mara’s Bacon Company in his house on Mungret Street.  It is said that he dropped the ‘e’ from his surname as he felt that O’Meara was too long for commercial purposes.  James initially sold for Matterson’s but soon began to cure his own bacon in the basement of his house.  As his business grew, he acquired dedicated premises for the purpose near the top of Roche’s Street.<lb/><lb/>In 1841, James O’Mara married Honora Fowley (d. 1878), who worked in the bacon business alongside her husband.  A devoted nationalist, James was one of the early supporters of Isaac Butt’s Home Rule movement.  He was High Sheriff of Limerick City in 1887, and acted as Town Councillor on Limerick Corporation at least from 1888 to 1898.<lb/><lb/>James and Honora O’Mara had 13 children, of whom the two eldest surviving sons, Stephen O’Mara (1844-1926) and John (Jack) O’Mara (1856-1919) were instrumental in building up the O’Mara’s Bacon Factory into a great success.   The youngest son, Joseph (Joe) O’Mara (1864-1927) became a celebrated opera singer.<lb/><lb/>When James O’Mara retired from business his son John (Jack) O’Mara became manager of the O’Mara Bacon Factory.  In the late 1880s, Jack was invited to Russia by Tsar Alexander III to provide instruction on bacon curing.  He stayed in St Petersburg to supervise the construction of a bacon factory.  In 1891, his father bought the rights of the Russian Bacon Company and the family imported bacon from Russia into London until 1903.  James (Jim) O’Mara (1858-1893) acted as agent for O’Mara’s in London until his untimely death from heart disease.  His nephew James O’Mara (1873-1948), son of Stephen O’Mara Senior (1844-1926), took over the agency and held it until 1914.<lb/><lb/>When John (Jack) O’Mara died in 1919, his younger brother Stephen O’Mara (1844-1926) became Managing Director of O’Mara Limited and remained in that capacity until 1923.  Having entered into the family business at the age of fifteen, his great business acumen established O’Mara’s Bacon Factory as one of the most prominent commercial enterprises in Limerick city.  He also purchased a bacon factory in Palmerston, Ontario, Canada, which was managed by his son Joseph (Joe) O’Mara (1878-1950) until the business was wound up in the 1940s.<lb/><lb/>Like his father, Stephen O’Mara was a strong supporter of Isaac Butt’s Home Rule movement and a member of the committee which secured Butt’s election for Limerick city in 1871.  He later developed a close association with Charles Stewart Parnell and was elected Member of Parliament for Upper Ossory in Kilkenny South for the Irish Parliamentary Party in February 1886.  When the Irish National League split from Irish Parliamentary Party in December 1890, O’Mara took the Parnellite side.  He continued to act as trustee of the Party funds until 1908, when he resigned from his trusteeship.  Towards the end of his life, his moderate political views became more radicalised under the influence of his sons James (1873-1948) and Stephen Junior (1884-1959).  He had agreed with his son James’s decision to resign from the Irish Parliamentary Party in 1907 in order to join Sinn Fein, and personally supported the party in the 1918 General Election.  Both Stephen and his son James were strong supporters of the 1921 Anglo-Irish Treaty but were on friendly terms with Eamon de Valera who, it is said, spent the night at the O’Mara family home, Strand House, as the Treaty was being signed in London.  In the 1925 election, Stephen O’Mara was elected as Senator to the Free State Seanad.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara was also a prominent figure in local politics.  He became a Town Councillor on Limerick Corporation in the 1880s and was elected Mayor of Limerick in 1885.  He was the first Mayor of Limerick to be elected on a Nationalist ticket.  He also served as High Sheriff of Limerick city in 1888, 1913 and 1914.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara married Ellen Pigott in 1867, and the couple had 12 children of whom the eldest three died tragically of diphtheria in 1872.  From c. 1909 onwards, the family lived at Strand House.  Their third son, Stephen O’Mara Junior, was born on 5 January 1884.  He entered the family business in 1903 when he travelled to Canada to work in the bacon factory established by the O’Mara family in Ottawa.  In 1923, he became Managing Director of O’Mara Limited and created numerous employment opportunities by establishing bacon factories in Claremorris, County Mayo, and Letterkenny, County Donegal, in the 1930s.  The three bacon companies were amalgamated in 1938 and formed into the Bacon Company of Ireland.  Stephen O’Mara Junior remained the company’s chairman until his death in 1959.  In 1987, the Bacon Company of Ireland merged with Hanley of Rooskey and Benesford UK (Castlebar) with assistance from the Industrial Development Agency Ireland (IDA) to form Irish Country Bacon.  Shortly afterwards the old O’Mara factory in Limerick was closed down.  It was subsequently demolished to make way for a multi-storey car park.<lb/><lb/>Throughout his life, Stephen O’Mara Junior played a prominent role in both local and national affairs.  Unlike his father and elder brother James, Stephen was opposed to the Anglo-Irish Treaty but in a conciliatory manner.  He was prominently identified with the Sinn Fein movement after the Easter Rising.  He was one of Eamon de Valera’s strongest supporters and a member of his Fianna Fail Party since its formation in 1926.<lb/><lb/>When George Clancy, Lord Mayor of Limerick, and his predecessor Michael O’Callaghan were murdered by the British military forces in March 1921, Stephen decided to stand for election and became Mayor.  He was re-elected in 1922 and in 1923 but resigned before the expiration of his term of office.<lb/><lb/>In 1921, Stephen O’Mara Junior was selected to go to America as Special Envoy appointed by Dáil Éireann to the United States to oversee one of the country’s biggest fundraising drives to finance the first Dáil and was made Trustee of the funds.  The funds-drive was terminated following the signing of the Anglo-Irish Treaty.  Considering himself as the exchequer to the Irish Free State, O’Mara refused to hand over the collected funds to the pro-Treaty administration which resulted in his imprisonment in 1922-1923.  He had also been imprisoned for seven days in 1921 for refusing to pay a fine of £10 for non-compliance with a military summons.<lb/><lb/>The bulk of the money collected during the Bond Drive was left in various banks in New York and remained untouched for a number of years.  In 1927, following legal action between the Irish Government and Eamon de Valera, a court in New York ordered that money outstanding to bond holders must be paid back.  Having anticipated such a ruling, de Valera’s legal team invited bond holders to sign over their bonds to de Valera, for which they were paid 58 cents to the dollar.  The monies so accumulated were used to launch the national daily newspaper *The Irish Press*.  Stephen O’Mara served on the paper’s Board of Directors until his resignation in 1935.<lb/><lb/>In 1932, Stephen O’Mara was once again sent to America on a mission involving the various consular and diplomatic offices maintained in the country by the Irish Government.  Two years later, he was appointed a member of the Commission on Vocational Organisation, on which he served until 1943.  In 1959, he was created a member of the Council of State following de Valera’s inauguration as President of Ireland.  Stephen O’Mara died less than two months after his appointment, on 11 November 1959.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara Junior married in 1918 Anne O’Brien, third daughter of Thomas O’Brien of Boru House, and the couple had an adopted son, Peter O’Mara.  Anne’s youngest sister, Kate O’Brien, became one of the most prominent novelists in 20th-century Ireland and a voice of the respectable Irish Roman Catholic middle class.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Reviews of and other press cuttings relating to Kate O’Brien’s second novel *The Ante-Room*.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="file">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Press cuttings relating to ‘Mary Lavelle’</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="IE" repositorycode="2135">P40/3/10/2/3/6</unitid>
            <unitid type="alternative" label="Original number">P40/844</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1936-01-01/1936-12-31" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1936</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        4 items    </physdesc>
            <repository>
              <corpname>Special Collections and Archives Department</corpname>
              <address>
                <addressline>GL0-051, Glucksman Library, University of Limerick</addressline>
                <addressline>Limerick</addressline>
                <addressline>Ireland</addressline>
                <addressline>V94 DPY6</addressline>
                <addressline>Telephone: +353-61-202690</addressline>
                <addressline>Fax: +353-61-213415</addressline>
                <addressline>Email: specoll@ul.ie</addressline>
                <addressline>https://specialcollections.ul.ie/</addressline>
              </address>
            </repository>
            <langmaterial encodinganalog="3.4.3">
              <language langcode="eng">English</language>
            </langmaterial>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <famname id="atom_124663_actor">O'Mara family of Strand House, Limerick</famname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-be03d29153491160a15961757089b84f" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>The history of the O’Mara family of Strand house and O’Mara’s Bacon Company go hand in hand.  The factory was founded in 1839 by James O’Meara (1817-1899), who originated from the village of Toomevaara in county Tipperary.  Having worked for some years in the woollen mills in Clonmel, he got a job as a clerk with Matterson’s Bacon Factory in Limerick and in 1839 founded O’Mara’s Bacon Company in his house on Mungret Street.  It is said that he dropped the ‘e’ from his surname as he felt that O’Meara was too long for commercial purposes.  James initially sold for Matterson’s but soon began to cure his own bacon in the basement of his house.  As his business grew, he acquired dedicated premises for the purpose near the top of Roche’s Street.<lb/><lb/>In 1841, James O’Mara married Honora Fowley (d. 1878), who worked in the bacon business alongside her husband.  A devoted nationalist, James was one of the early supporters of Isaac Butt’s Home Rule movement.  He was High Sheriff of Limerick City in 1887, and acted as Town Councillor on Limerick Corporation at least from 1888 to 1898.<lb/><lb/>James and Honora O’Mara had 13 children, of whom the two eldest surviving sons, Stephen O’Mara (1844-1926) and John (Jack) O’Mara (1856-1919) were instrumental in building up the O’Mara’s Bacon Factory into a great success.   The youngest son, Joseph (Joe) O’Mara (1864-1927) became a celebrated opera singer.<lb/><lb/>When James O’Mara retired from business his son John (Jack) O’Mara became manager of the O’Mara Bacon Factory.  In the late 1880s, Jack was invited to Russia by Tsar Alexander III to provide instruction on bacon curing.  He stayed in St Petersburg to supervise the construction of a bacon factory.  In 1891, his father bought the rights of the Russian Bacon Company and the family imported bacon from Russia into London until 1903.  James (Jim) O’Mara (1858-1893) acted as agent for O’Mara’s in London until his untimely death from heart disease.  His nephew James O’Mara (1873-1948), son of Stephen O’Mara Senior (1844-1926), took over the agency and held it until 1914.<lb/><lb/>When John (Jack) O’Mara died in 1919, his younger brother Stephen O’Mara (1844-1926) became Managing Director of O’Mara Limited and remained in that capacity until 1923.  Having entered into the family business at the age of fifteen, his great business acumen established O’Mara’s Bacon Factory as one of the most prominent commercial enterprises in Limerick city.  He also purchased a bacon factory in Palmerston, Ontario, Canada, which was managed by his son Joseph (Joe) O’Mara (1878-1950) until the business was wound up in the 1940s.<lb/><lb/>Like his father, Stephen O’Mara was a strong supporter of Isaac Butt’s Home Rule movement and a member of the committee which secured Butt’s election for Limerick city in 1871.  He later developed a close association with Charles Stewart Parnell and was elected Member of Parliament for Upper Ossory in Kilkenny South for the Irish Parliamentary Party in February 1886.  When the Irish National League split from Irish Parliamentary Party in December 1890, O’Mara took the Parnellite side.  He continued to act as trustee of the Party funds until 1908, when he resigned from his trusteeship.  Towards the end of his life, his moderate political views became more radicalised under the influence of his sons James (1873-1948) and Stephen Junior (1884-1959).  He had agreed with his son James’s decision to resign from the Irish Parliamentary Party in 1907 in order to join Sinn Fein, and personally supported the party in the 1918 General Election.  Both Stephen and his son James were strong supporters of the 1921 Anglo-Irish Treaty but were on friendly terms with Eamon de Valera who, it is said, spent the night at the O’Mara family home, Strand House, as the Treaty was being signed in London.  In the 1925 election, Stephen O’Mara was elected as Senator to the Free State Seanad.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara was also a prominent figure in local politics.  He became a Town Councillor on Limerick Corporation in the 1880s and was elected Mayor of Limerick in 1885.  He was the first Mayor of Limerick to be elected on a Nationalist ticket.  He also served as High Sheriff of Limerick city in 1888, 1913 and 1914.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara married Ellen Pigott in 1867, and the couple had 12 children of whom the eldest three died tragically of diphtheria in 1872.  From c. 1909 onwards, the family lived at Strand House.  Their third son, Stephen O’Mara Junior, was born on 5 January 1884.  He entered the family business in 1903 when he travelled to Canada to work in the bacon factory established by the O’Mara family in Ottawa.  In 1923, he became Managing Director of O’Mara Limited and created numerous employment opportunities by establishing bacon factories in Claremorris, County Mayo, and Letterkenny, County Donegal, in the 1930s.  The three bacon companies were amalgamated in 1938 and formed into the Bacon Company of Ireland.  Stephen O’Mara Junior remained the company’s chairman until his death in 1959.  In 1987, the Bacon Company of Ireland merged with Hanley of Rooskey and Benesford UK (Castlebar) with assistance from the Industrial Development Agency Ireland (IDA) to form Irish Country Bacon.  Shortly afterwards the old O’Mara factory in Limerick was closed down.  It was subsequently demolished to make way for a multi-storey car park.<lb/><lb/>Throughout his life, Stephen O’Mara Junior played a prominent role in both local and national affairs.  Unlike his father and elder brother James, Stephen was opposed to the Anglo-Irish Treaty but in a conciliatory manner.  He was prominently identified with the Sinn Fein movement after the Easter Rising.  He was one of Eamon de Valera’s strongest supporters and a member of his Fianna Fail Party since its formation in 1926.<lb/><lb/>When George Clancy, Lord Mayor of Limerick, and his predecessor Michael O’Callaghan were murdered by the British military forces in March 1921, Stephen decided to stand for election and became Mayor.  He was re-elected in 1922 and in 1923 but resigned before the expiration of his term of office.<lb/><lb/>In 1921, Stephen O’Mara Junior was selected to go to America as Special Envoy appointed by Dáil Éireann to the United States to oversee one of the country’s biggest fundraising drives to finance the first Dáil and was made Trustee of the funds.  The funds-drive was terminated following the signing of the Anglo-Irish Treaty.  Considering himself as the exchequer to the Irish Free State, O’Mara refused to hand over the collected funds to the pro-Treaty administration which resulted in his imprisonment in 1922-1923.  He had also been imprisoned for seven days in 1921 for refusing to pay a fine of £10 for non-compliance with a military summons.<lb/><lb/>The bulk of the money collected during the Bond Drive was left in various banks in New York and remained untouched for a number of years.  In 1927, following legal action between the Irish Government and Eamon de Valera, a court in New York ordered that money outstanding to bond holders must be paid back.  Having anticipated such a ruling, de Valera’s legal team invited bond holders to sign over their bonds to de Valera, for which they were paid 58 cents to the dollar.  The monies so accumulated were used to launch the national daily newspaper *The Irish Press*.  Stephen O’Mara served on the paper’s Board of Directors until his resignation in 1935.<lb/><lb/>In 1932, Stephen O’Mara was once again sent to America on a mission involving the various consular and diplomatic offices maintained in the country by the Irish Government.  Two years later, he was appointed a member of the Commission on Vocational Organisation, on which he served until 1943.  In 1959, he was created a member of the Council of State following de Valera’s inauguration as President of Ireland.  Stephen O’Mara died less than two months after his appointment, on 11 November 1959.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara Junior married in 1918 Anne O’Brien, third daughter of Thomas O’Brien of Boru House, and the couple had an adopted son, Peter O’Mara.  Anne’s youngest sister, Kate O’Brien, became one of the most prominent novelists in 20th-century Ireland and a voice of the respectable Irish Roman Catholic middle class.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Reviews of and other press cuttings relating to Kate O’Brien’s third novel *Mary Lavelle*.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="file">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Press cuttings relating to the stage adaptation of ‘The Ante-Room’</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="IE" repositorycode="2135">P40/3/10/2/3/7</unitid>
            <unitid type="alternative" label="Original number">P40/845</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1936-01-01/1938-12-31" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1936 and 1938</unitdate>
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        59 items    </physdesc>
            <langmaterial encodinganalog="3.4.3">
              <language langcode="eng">English</language>
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              <famname id="atom_124666_actor">O'Mara family of Strand House, Limerick</famname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-be03d29153491160a15961757089b84f" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>The history of the O’Mara family of Strand house and O’Mara’s Bacon Company go hand in hand.  The factory was founded in 1839 by James O’Meara (1817-1899), who originated from the village of Toomevaara in county Tipperary.  Having worked for some years in the woollen mills in Clonmel, he got a job as a clerk with Matterson’s Bacon Factory in Limerick and in 1839 founded O’Mara’s Bacon Company in his house on Mungret Street.  It is said that he dropped the ‘e’ from his surname as he felt that O’Meara was too long for commercial purposes.  James initially sold for Matterson’s but soon began to cure his own bacon in the basement of his house.  As his business grew, he acquired dedicated premises for the purpose near the top of Roche’s Street.<lb/><lb/>In 1841, James O’Mara married Honora Fowley (d. 1878), who worked in the bacon business alongside her husband.  A devoted nationalist, James was one of the early supporters of Isaac Butt’s Home Rule movement.  He was High Sheriff of Limerick City in 1887, and acted as Town Councillor on Limerick Corporation at least from 1888 to 1898.<lb/><lb/>James and Honora O’Mara had 13 children, of whom the two eldest surviving sons, Stephen O’Mara (1844-1926) and John (Jack) O’Mara (1856-1919) were instrumental in building up the O’Mara’s Bacon Factory into a great success.   The youngest son, Joseph (Joe) O’Mara (1864-1927) became a celebrated opera singer.<lb/><lb/>When James O’Mara retired from business his son John (Jack) O’Mara became manager of the O’Mara Bacon Factory.  In the late 1880s, Jack was invited to Russia by Tsar Alexander III to provide instruction on bacon curing.  He stayed in St Petersburg to supervise the construction of a bacon factory.  In 1891, his father bought the rights of the Russian Bacon Company and the family imported bacon from Russia into London until 1903.  James (Jim) O’Mara (1858-1893) acted as agent for O’Mara’s in London until his untimely death from heart disease.  His nephew James O’Mara (1873-1948), son of Stephen O’Mara Senior (1844-1926), took over the agency and held it until 1914.<lb/><lb/>When John (Jack) O’Mara died in 1919, his younger brother Stephen O’Mara (1844-1926) became Managing Director of O’Mara Limited and remained in that capacity until 1923.  Having entered into the family business at the age of fifteen, his great business acumen established O’Mara’s Bacon Factory as one of the most prominent commercial enterprises in Limerick city.  He also purchased a bacon factory in Palmerston, Ontario, Canada, which was managed by his son Joseph (Joe) O’Mara (1878-1950) until the business was wound up in the 1940s.<lb/><lb/>Like his father, Stephen O’Mara was a strong supporter of Isaac Butt’s Home Rule movement and a member of the committee which secured Butt’s election for Limerick city in 1871.  He later developed a close association with Charles Stewart Parnell and was elected Member of Parliament for Upper Ossory in Kilkenny South for the Irish Parliamentary Party in February 1886.  When the Irish National League split from Irish Parliamentary Party in December 1890, O’Mara took the Parnellite side.  He continued to act as trustee of the Party funds until 1908, when he resigned from his trusteeship.  Towards the end of his life, his moderate political views became more radicalised under the influence of his sons James (1873-1948) and Stephen Junior (1884-1959).  He had agreed with his son James’s decision to resign from the Irish Parliamentary Party in 1907 in order to join Sinn Fein, and personally supported the party in the 1918 General Election.  Both Stephen and his son James were strong supporters of the 1921 Anglo-Irish Treaty but were on friendly terms with Eamon de Valera who, it is said, spent the night at the O’Mara family home, Strand House, as the Treaty was being signed in London.  In the 1925 election, Stephen O’Mara was elected as Senator to the Free State Seanad.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara was also a prominent figure in local politics.  He became a Town Councillor on Limerick Corporation in the 1880s and was elected Mayor of Limerick in 1885.  He was the first Mayor of Limerick to be elected on a Nationalist ticket.  He also served as High Sheriff of Limerick city in 1888, 1913 and 1914.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara married Ellen Pigott in 1867, and the couple had 12 children of whom the eldest three died tragically of diphtheria in 1872.  From c. 1909 onwards, the family lived at Strand House.  Their third son, Stephen O’Mara Junior, was born on 5 January 1884.  He entered the family business in 1903 when he travelled to Canada to work in the bacon factory established by the O’Mara family in Ottawa.  In 1923, he became Managing Director of O’Mara Limited and created numerous employment opportunities by establishing bacon factories in Claremorris, County Mayo, and Letterkenny, County Donegal, in the 1930s.  The three bacon companies were amalgamated in 1938 and formed into the Bacon Company of Ireland.  Stephen O’Mara Junior remained the company’s chairman until his death in 1959.  In 1987, the Bacon Company of Ireland merged with Hanley of Rooskey and Benesford UK (Castlebar) with assistance from the Industrial Development Agency Ireland (IDA) to form Irish Country Bacon.  Shortly afterwards the old O’Mara factory in Limerick was closed down.  It was subsequently demolished to make way for a multi-storey car park.<lb/><lb/>Throughout his life, Stephen O’Mara Junior played a prominent role in both local and national affairs.  Unlike his father and elder brother James, Stephen was opposed to the Anglo-Irish Treaty but in a conciliatory manner.  He was prominently identified with the Sinn Fein movement after the Easter Rising.  He was one of Eamon de Valera’s strongest supporters and a member of his Fianna Fail Party since its formation in 1926.<lb/><lb/>When George Clancy, Lord Mayor of Limerick, and his predecessor Michael O’Callaghan were murdered by the British military forces in March 1921, Stephen decided to stand for election and became Mayor.  He was re-elected in 1922 and in 1923 but resigned before the expiration of his term of office.<lb/><lb/>In 1921, Stephen O’Mara Junior was selected to go to America as Special Envoy appointed by Dáil Éireann to the United States to oversee one of the country’s biggest fundraising drives to finance the first Dáil and was made Trustee of the funds.  The funds-drive was terminated following the signing of the Anglo-Irish Treaty.  Considering himself as the exchequer to the Irish Free State, O’Mara refused to hand over the collected funds to the pro-Treaty administration which resulted in his imprisonment in 1922-1923.  He had also been imprisoned for seven days in 1921 for refusing to pay a fine of £10 for non-compliance with a military summons.<lb/><lb/>The bulk of the money collected during the Bond Drive was left in various banks in New York and remained untouched for a number of years.  In 1927, following legal action between the Irish Government and Eamon de Valera, a court in New York ordered that money outstanding to bond holders must be paid back.  Having anticipated such a ruling, de Valera’s legal team invited bond holders to sign over their bonds to de Valera, for which they were paid 58 cents to the dollar.  The monies so accumulated were used to launch the national daily newspaper *The Irish Press*.  Stephen O’Mara served on the paper’s Board of Directors until his resignation in 1935.<lb/><lb/>In 1932, Stephen O’Mara was once again sent to America on a mission involving the various consular and diplomatic offices maintained in the country by the Irish Government.  Two years later, he was appointed a member of the Commission on Vocational Organisation, on which he served until 1943.  In 1959, he was created a member of the Council of State following de Valera’s inauguration as President of Ireland.  Stephen O’Mara died less than two months after his appointment, on 11 November 1959.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara Junior married in 1918 Anne O’Brien, third daughter of Thomas O’Brien of Boru House, and the couple had an adopted son, Peter O’Mara.  Anne’s youngest sister, Kate O’Brien, became one of the most prominent novelists in 20th-century Ireland and a voice of the respectable Irish Roman Catholic middle class.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
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            <p>Reviews of the play *The Ante-Room* based on Kate O’Brien’s novel of the same name.  In three folders.</p>
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            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Reviews of ‘Farewell, Spain’</unittitle>
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                <addressline>Limerick</addressline>
                <addressline>Ireland</addressline>
                <addressline>V94 DPY6</addressline>
                <addressline>Telephone: +353-61-202690</addressline>
                <addressline>Fax: +353-61-213415</addressline>
                <addressline>Email: specoll@ul.ie</addressline>
                <addressline>https://specialcollections.ul.ie/</addressline>
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            <note>
              <p>The history of the O’Mara family of Strand house and O’Mara’s Bacon Company go hand in hand.  The factory was founded in 1839 by James O’Meara (1817-1899), who originated from the village of Toomevaara in county Tipperary.  Having worked for some years in the woollen mills in Clonmel, he got a job as a clerk with Matterson’s Bacon Factory in Limerick and in 1839 founded O’Mara’s Bacon Company in his house on Mungret Street.  It is said that he dropped the ‘e’ from his surname as he felt that O’Meara was too long for commercial purposes.  James initially sold for Matterson’s but soon began to cure his own bacon in the basement of his house.  As his business grew, he acquired dedicated premises for the purpose near the top of Roche’s Street.<lb/><lb/>In 1841, James O’Mara married Honora Fowley (d. 1878), who worked in the bacon business alongside her husband.  A devoted nationalist, James was one of the early supporters of Isaac Butt’s Home Rule movement.  He was High Sheriff of Limerick City in 1887, and acted as Town Councillor on Limerick Corporation at least from 1888 to 1898.<lb/><lb/>James and Honora O’Mara had 13 children, of whom the two eldest surviving sons, Stephen O’Mara (1844-1926) and John (Jack) O’Mara (1856-1919) were instrumental in building up the O’Mara’s Bacon Factory into a great success.   The youngest son, Joseph (Joe) O’Mara (1864-1927) became a celebrated opera singer.<lb/><lb/>When James O’Mara retired from business his son John (Jack) O’Mara became manager of the O’Mara Bacon Factory.  In the late 1880s, Jack was invited to Russia by Tsar Alexander III to provide instruction on bacon curing.  He stayed in St Petersburg to supervise the construction of a bacon factory.  In 1891, his father bought the rights of the Russian Bacon Company and the family imported bacon from Russia into London until 1903.  James (Jim) O’Mara (1858-1893) acted as agent for O’Mara’s in London until his untimely death from heart disease.  His nephew James O’Mara (1873-1948), son of Stephen O’Mara Senior (1844-1926), took over the agency and held it until 1914.<lb/><lb/>When John (Jack) O’Mara died in 1919, his younger brother Stephen O’Mara (1844-1926) became Managing Director of O’Mara Limited and remained in that capacity until 1923.  Having entered into the family business at the age of fifteen, his great business acumen established O’Mara’s Bacon Factory as one of the most prominent commercial enterprises in Limerick city.  He also purchased a bacon factory in Palmerston, Ontario, Canada, which was managed by his son Joseph (Joe) O’Mara (1878-1950) until the business was wound up in the 1940s.<lb/><lb/>Like his father, Stephen O’Mara was a strong supporter of Isaac Butt’s Home Rule movement and a member of the committee which secured Butt’s election for Limerick city in 1871.  He later developed a close association with Charles Stewart Parnell and was elected Member of Parliament for Upper Ossory in Kilkenny South for the Irish Parliamentary Party in February 1886.  When the Irish National League split from Irish Parliamentary Party in December 1890, O’Mara took the Parnellite side.  He continued to act as trustee of the Party funds until 1908, when he resigned from his trusteeship.  Towards the end of his life, his moderate political views became more radicalised under the influence of his sons James (1873-1948) and Stephen Junior (1884-1959).  He had agreed with his son James’s decision to resign from the Irish Parliamentary Party in 1907 in order to join Sinn Fein, and personally supported the party in the 1918 General Election.  Both Stephen and his son James were strong supporters of the 1921 Anglo-Irish Treaty but were on friendly terms with Eamon de Valera who, it is said, spent the night at the O’Mara family home, Strand House, as the Treaty was being signed in London.  In the 1925 election, Stephen O’Mara was elected as Senator to the Free State Seanad.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara was also a prominent figure in local politics.  He became a Town Councillor on Limerick Corporation in the 1880s and was elected Mayor of Limerick in 1885.  He was the first Mayor of Limerick to be elected on a Nationalist ticket.  He also served as High Sheriff of Limerick city in 1888, 1913 and 1914.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara married Ellen Pigott in 1867, and the couple had 12 children of whom the eldest three died tragically of diphtheria in 1872.  From c. 1909 onwards, the family lived at Strand House.  Their third son, Stephen O’Mara Junior, was born on 5 January 1884.  He entered the family business in 1903 when he travelled to Canada to work in the bacon factory established by the O’Mara family in Ottawa.  In 1923, he became Managing Director of O’Mara Limited and created numerous employment opportunities by establishing bacon factories in Claremorris, County Mayo, and Letterkenny, County Donegal, in the 1930s.  The three bacon companies were amalgamated in 1938 and formed into the Bacon Company of Ireland.  Stephen O’Mara Junior remained the company’s chairman until his death in 1959.  In 1987, the Bacon Company of Ireland merged with Hanley of Rooskey and Benesford UK (Castlebar) with assistance from the Industrial Development Agency Ireland (IDA) to form Irish Country Bacon.  Shortly afterwards the old O’Mara factory in Limerick was closed down.  It was subsequently demolished to make way for a multi-storey car park.<lb/><lb/>Throughout his life, Stephen O’Mara Junior played a prominent role in both local and national affairs.  Unlike his father and elder brother James, Stephen was opposed to the Anglo-Irish Treaty but in a conciliatory manner.  He was prominently identified with the Sinn Fein movement after the Easter Rising.  He was one of Eamon de Valera’s strongest supporters and a member of his Fianna Fail Party since its formation in 1926.<lb/><lb/>When George Clancy, Lord Mayor of Limerick, and his predecessor Michael O’Callaghan were murdered by the British military forces in March 1921, Stephen decided to stand for election and became Mayor.  He was re-elected in 1922 and in 1923 but resigned before the expiration of his term of office.<lb/><lb/>In 1921, Stephen O’Mara Junior was selected to go to America as Special Envoy appointed by Dáil Éireann to the United States to oversee one of the country’s biggest fundraising drives to finance the first Dáil and was made Trustee of the funds.  The funds-drive was terminated following the signing of the Anglo-Irish Treaty.  Considering himself as the exchequer to the Irish Free State, O’Mara refused to hand over the collected funds to the pro-Treaty administration which resulted in his imprisonment in 1922-1923.  He had also been imprisoned for seven days in 1921 for refusing to pay a fine of £10 for non-compliance with a military summons.<lb/><lb/>The bulk of the money collected during the Bond Drive was left in various banks in New York and remained untouched for a number of years.  In 1927, following legal action between the Irish Government and Eamon de Valera, a court in New York ordered that money outstanding to bond holders must be paid back.  Having anticipated such a ruling, de Valera’s legal team invited bond holders to sign over their bonds to de Valera, for which they were paid 58 cents to the dollar.  The monies so accumulated were used to launch the national daily newspaper *The Irish Press*.  Stephen O’Mara served on the paper’s Board of Directors until his resignation in 1935.<lb/><lb/>In 1932, Stephen O’Mara was once again sent to America on a mission involving the various consular and diplomatic offices maintained in the country by the Irish Government.  Two years later, he was appointed a member of the Commission on Vocational Organisation, on which he served until 1943.  In 1959, he was created a member of the Council of State following de Valera’s inauguration as President of Ireland.  Stephen O’Mara died less than two months after his appointment, on 11 November 1959.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara Junior married in 1918 Anne O’Brien, third daughter of Thomas O’Brien of Boru House, and the couple had an adopted son, Peter O’Mara.  Anne’s youngest sister, Kate O’Brien, became one of the most prominent novelists in 20th-century Ireland and a voice of the respectable Irish Roman Catholic middle class.</p>
            </note>
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            <p>Reviews of *Farewell, Spain*.</p>
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            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Reviews of ‘Pray for the Wanderer’</unittitle>
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                <addressline>V94 DPY6</addressline>
                <addressline>Telephone: +353-61-202690</addressline>
                <addressline>Fax: +353-61-213415</addressline>
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                <addressline>https://specialcollections.ul.ie/</addressline>
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            <note>
              <p>The history of the O’Mara family of Strand house and O’Mara’s Bacon Company go hand in hand.  The factory was founded in 1839 by James O’Meara (1817-1899), who originated from the village of Toomevaara in county Tipperary.  Having worked for some years in the woollen mills in Clonmel, he got a job as a clerk with Matterson’s Bacon Factory in Limerick and in 1839 founded O’Mara’s Bacon Company in his house on Mungret Street.  It is said that he dropped the ‘e’ from his surname as he felt that O’Meara was too long for commercial purposes.  James initially sold for Matterson’s but soon began to cure his own bacon in the basement of his house.  As his business grew, he acquired dedicated premises for the purpose near the top of Roche’s Street.<lb/><lb/>In 1841, James O’Mara married Honora Fowley (d. 1878), who worked in the bacon business alongside her husband.  A devoted nationalist, James was one of the early supporters of Isaac Butt’s Home Rule movement.  He was High Sheriff of Limerick City in 1887, and acted as Town Councillor on Limerick Corporation at least from 1888 to 1898.<lb/><lb/>James and Honora O’Mara had 13 children, of whom the two eldest surviving sons, Stephen O’Mara (1844-1926) and John (Jack) O’Mara (1856-1919) were instrumental in building up the O’Mara’s Bacon Factory into a great success.   The youngest son, Joseph (Joe) O’Mara (1864-1927) became a celebrated opera singer.<lb/><lb/>When James O’Mara retired from business his son John (Jack) O’Mara became manager of the O’Mara Bacon Factory.  In the late 1880s, Jack was invited to Russia by Tsar Alexander III to provide instruction on bacon curing.  He stayed in St Petersburg to supervise the construction of a bacon factory.  In 1891, his father bought the rights of the Russian Bacon Company and the family imported bacon from Russia into London until 1903.  James (Jim) O’Mara (1858-1893) acted as agent for O’Mara’s in London until his untimely death from heart disease.  His nephew James O’Mara (1873-1948), son of Stephen O’Mara Senior (1844-1926), took over the agency and held it until 1914.<lb/><lb/>When John (Jack) O’Mara died in 1919, his younger brother Stephen O’Mara (1844-1926) became Managing Director of O’Mara Limited and remained in that capacity until 1923.  Having entered into the family business at the age of fifteen, his great business acumen established O’Mara’s Bacon Factory as one of the most prominent commercial enterprises in Limerick city.  He also purchased a bacon factory in Palmerston, Ontario, Canada, which was managed by his son Joseph (Joe) O’Mara (1878-1950) until the business was wound up in the 1940s.<lb/><lb/>Like his father, Stephen O’Mara was a strong supporter of Isaac Butt’s Home Rule movement and a member of the committee which secured Butt’s election for Limerick city in 1871.  He later developed a close association with Charles Stewart Parnell and was elected Member of Parliament for Upper Ossory in Kilkenny South for the Irish Parliamentary Party in February 1886.  When the Irish National League split from Irish Parliamentary Party in December 1890, O’Mara took the Parnellite side.  He continued to act as trustee of the Party funds until 1908, when he resigned from his trusteeship.  Towards the end of his life, his moderate political views became more radicalised under the influence of his sons James (1873-1948) and Stephen Junior (1884-1959).  He had agreed with his son James’s decision to resign from the Irish Parliamentary Party in 1907 in order to join Sinn Fein, and personally supported the party in the 1918 General Election.  Both Stephen and his son James were strong supporters of the 1921 Anglo-Irish Treaty but were on friendly terms with Eamon de Valera who, it is said, spent the night at the O’Mara family home, Strand House, as the Treaty was being signed in London.  In the 1925 election, Stephen O’Mara was elected as Senator to the Free State Seanad.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara was also a prominent figure in local politics.  He became a Town Councillor on Limerick Corporation in the 1880s and was elected Mayor of Limerick in 1885.  He was the first Mayor of Limerick to be elected on a Nationalist ticket.  He also served as High Sheriff of Limerick city in 1888, 1913 and 1914.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara married Ellen Pigott in 1867, and the couple had 12 children of whom the eldest three died tragically of diphtheria in 1872.  From c. 1909 onwards, the family lived at Strand House.  Their third son, Stephen O’Mara Junior, was born on 5 January 1884.  He entered the family business in 1903 when he travelled to Canada to work in the bacon factory established by the O’Mara family in Ottawa.  In 1923, he became Managing Director of O’Mara Limited and created numerous employment opportunities by establishing bacon factories in Claremorris, County Mayo, and Letterkenny, County Donegal, in the 1930s.  The three bacon companies were amalgamated in 1938 and formed into the Bacon Company of Ireland.  Stephen O’Mara Junior remained the company’s chairman until his death in 1959.  In 1987, the Bacon Company of Ireland merged with Hanley of Rooskey and Benesford UK (Castlebar) with assistance from the Industrial Development Agency Ireland (IDA) to form Irish Country Bacon.  Shortly afterwards the old O’Mara factory in Limerick was closed down.  It was subsequently demolished to make way for a multi-storey car park.<lb/><lb/>Throughout his life, Stephen O’Mara Junior played a prominent role in both local and national affairs.  Unlike his father and elder brother James, Stephen was opposed to the Anglo-Irish Treaty but in a conciliatory manner.  He was prominently identified with the Sinn Fein movement after the Easter Rising.  He was one of Eamon de Valera’s strongest supporters and a member of his Fianna Fail Party since its formation in 1926.<lb/><lb/>When George Clancy, Lord Mayor of Limerick, and his predecessor Michael O’Callaghan were murdered by the British military forces in March 1921, Stephen decided to stand for election and became Mayor.  He was re-elected in 1922 and in 1923 but resigned before the expiration of his term of office.<lb/><lb/>In 1921, Stephen O’Mara Junior was selected to go to America as Special Envoy appointed by Dáil Éireann to the United States to oversee one of the country’s biggest fundraising drives to finance the first Dáil and was made Trustee of the funds.  The funds-drive was terminated following the signing of the Anglo-Irish Treaty.  Considering himself as the exchequer to the Irish Free State, O’Mara refused to hand over the collected funds to the pro-Treaty administration which resulted in his imprisonment in 1922-1923.  He had also been imprisoned for seven days in 1921 for refusing to pay a fine of £10 for non-compliance with a military summons.<lb/><lb/>The bulk of the money collected during the Bond Drive was left in various banks in New York and remained untouched for a number of years.  In 1927, following legal action between the Irish Government and Eamon de Valera, a court in New York ordered that money outstanding to bond holders must be paid back.  Having anticipated such a ruling, de Valera’s legal team invited bond holders to sign over their bonds to de Valera, for which they were paid 58 cents to the dollar.  The monies so accumulated were used to launch the national daily newspaper *The Irish Press*.  Stephen O’Mara served on the paper’s Board of Directors until his resignation in 1935.<lb/><lb/>In 1932, Stephen O’Mara was once again sent to America on a mission involving the various consular and diplomatic offices maintained in the country by the Irish Government.  Two years later, he was appointed a member of the Commission on Vocational Organisation, on which he served until 1943.  In 1959, he was created a member of the Council of State following de Valera’s inauguration as President of Ireland.  Stephen O’Mara died less than two months after his appointment, on 11 November 1959.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara Junior married in 1918 Anne O’Brien, third daughter of Thomas O’Brien of Boru House, and the couple had an adopted son, Peter O’Mara.  Anne’s youngest sister, Kate O’Brien, became one of the most prominent novelists in 20th-century Ireland and a voice of the respectable Irish Roman Catholic middle class.</p>
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            <p>Reviews of Kate O’Brien’s fourth novel *Pray for the Wanderer*.</p>
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              <p>The history of the O’Mara family of Strand house and O’Mara’s Bacon Company go hand in hand.  The factory was founded in 1839 by James O’Meara (1817-1899), who originated from the village of Toomevaara in county Tipperary.  Having worked for some years in the woollen mills in Clonmel, he got a job as a clerk with Matterson’s Bacon Factory in Limerick and in 1839 founded O’Mara’s Bacon Company in his house on Mungret Street.  It is said that he dropped the ‘e’ from his surname as he felt that O’Meara was too long for commercial purposes.  James initially sold for Matterson’s but soon began to cure his own bacon in the basement of his house.  As his business grew, he acquired dedicated premises for the purpose near the top of Roche’s Street.<lb/><lb/>In 1841, James O’Mara married Honora Fowley (d. 1878), who worked in the bacon business alongside her husband.  A devoted nationalist, James was one of the early supporters of Isaac Butt’s Home Rule movement.  He was High Sheriff of Limerick City in 1887, and acted as Town Councillor on Limerick Corporation at least from 1888 to 1898.<lb/><lb/>James and Honora O’Mara had 13 children, of whom the two eldest surviving sons, Stephen O’Mara (1844-1926) and John (Jack) O’Mara (1856-1919) were instrumental in building up the O’Mara’s Bacon Factory into a great success.   The youngest son, Joseph (Joe) O’Mara (1864-1927) became a celebrated opera singer.<lb/><lb/>When James O’Mara retired from business his son John (Jack) O’Mara became manager of the O’Mara Bacon Factory.  In the late 1880s, Jack was invited to Russia by Tsar Alexander III to provide instruction on bacon curing.  He stayed in St Petersburg to supervise the construction of a bacon factory.  In 1891, his father bought the rights of the Russian Bacon Company and the family imported bacon from Russia into London until 1903.  James (Jim) O’Mara (1858-1893) acted as agent for O’Mara’s in London until his untimely death from heart disease.  His nephew James O’Mara (1873-1948), son of Stephen O’Mara Senior (1844-1926), took over the agency and held it until 1914.<lb/><lb/>When John (Jack) O’Mara died in 1919, his younger brother Stephen O’Mara (1844-1926) became Managing Director of O’Mara Limited and remained in that capacity until 1923.  Having entered into the family business at the age of fifteen, his great business acumen established O’Mara’s Bacon Factory as one of the most prominent commercial enterprises in Limerick city.  He also purchased a bacon factory in Palmerston, Ontario, Canada, which was managed by his son Joseph (Joe) O’Mara (1878-1950) until the business was wound up in the 1940s.<lb/><lb/>Like his father, Stephen O’Mara was a strong supporter of Isaac Butt’s Home Rule movement and a member of the committee which secured Butt’s election for Limerick city in 1871.  He later developed a close association with Charles Stewart Parnell and was elected Member of Parliament for Upper Ossory in Kilkenny South for the Irish Parliamentary Party in February 1886.  When the Irish National League split from Irish Parliamentary Party in December 1890, O’Mara took the Parnellite side.  He continued to act as trustee of the Party funds until 1908, when he resigned from his trusteeship.  Towards the end of his life, his moderate political views became more radicalised under the influence of his sons James (1873-1948) and Stephen Junior (1884-1959).  He had agreed with his son James’s decision to resign from the Irish Parliamentary Party in 1907 in order to join Sinn Fein, and personally supported the party in the 1918 General Election.  Both Stephen and his son James were strong supporters of the 1921 Anglo-Irish Treaty but were on friendly terms with Eamon de Valera who, it is said, spent the night at the O’Mara family home, Strand House, as the Treaty was being signed in London.  In the 1925 election, Stephen O’Mara was elected as Senator to the Free State Seanad.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara was also a prominent figure in local politics.  He became a Town Councillor on Limerick Corporation in the 1880s and was elected Mayor of Limerick in 1885.  He was the first Mayor of Limerick to be elected on a Nationalist ticket.  He also served as High Sheriff of Limerick city in 1888, 1913 and 1914.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara married Ellen Pigott in 1867, and the couple had 12 children of whom the eldest three died tragically of diphtheria in 1872.  From c. 1909 onwards, the family lived at Strand House.  Their third son, Stephen O’Mara Junior, was born on 5 January 1884.  He entered the family business in 1903 when he travelled to Canada to work in the bacon factory established by the O’Mara family in Ottawa.  In 1923, he became Managing Director of O’Mara Limited and created numerous employment opportunities by establishing bacon factories in Claremorris, County Mayo, and Letterkenny, County Donegal, in the 1930s.  The three bacon companies were amalgamated in 1938 and formed into the Bacon Company of Ireland.  Stephen O’Mara Junior remained the company’s chairman until his death in 1959.  In 1987, the Bacon Company of Ireland merged with Hanley of Rooskey and Benesford UK (Castlebar) with assistance from the Industrial Development Agency Ireland (IDA) to form Irish Country Bacon.  Shortly afterwards the old O’Mara factory in Limerick was closed down.  It was subsequently demolished to make way for a multi-storey car park.<lb/><lb/>Throughout his life, Stephen O’Mara Junior played a prominent role in both local and national affairs.  Unlike his father and elder brother James, Stephen was opposed to the Anglo-Irish Treaty but in a conciliatory manner.  He was prominently identified with the Sinn Fein movement after the Easter Rising.  He was one of Eamon de Valera’s strongest supporters and a member of his Fianna Fail Party since its formation in 1926.<lb/><lb/>When George Clancy, Lord Mayor of Limerick, and his predecessor Michael O’Callaghan were murdered by the British military forces in March 1921, Stephen decided to stand for election and became Mayor.  He was re-elected in 1922 and in 1923 but resigned before the expiration of his term of office.<lb/><lb/>In 1921, Stephen O’Mara Junior was selected to go to America as Special Envoy appointed by Dáil Éireann to the United States to oversee one of the country’s biggest fundraising drives to finance the first Dáil and was made Trustee of the funds.  The funds-drive was terminated following the signing of the Anglo-Irish Treaty.  Considering himself as the exchequer to the Irish Free State, O’Mara refused to hand over the collected funds to the pro-Treaty administration which resulted in his imprisonment in 1922-1923.  He had also been imprisoned for seven days in 1921 for refusing to pay a fine of £10 for non-compliance with a military summons.<lb/><lb/>The bulk of the money collected during the Bond Drive was left in various banks in New York and remained untouched for a number of years.  In 1927, following legal action between the Irish Government and Eamon de Valera, a court in New York ordered that money outstanding to bond holders must be paid back.  Having anticipated such a ruling, de Valera’s legal team invited bond holders to sign over their bonds to de Valera, for which they were paid 58 cents to the dollar.  The monies so accumulated were used to launch the national daily newspaper *The Irish Press*.  Stephen O’Mara served on the paper’s Board of Directors until his resignation in 1935.<lb/><lb/>In 1932, Stephen O’Mara was once again sent to America on a mission involving the various consular and diplomatic offices maintained in the country by the Irish Government.  Two years later, he was appointed a member of the Commission on Vocational Organisation, on which he served until 1943.  In 1959, he was created a member of the Council of State following de Valera’s inauguration as President of Ireland.  Stephen O’Mara died less than two months after his appointment, on 11 November 1959.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara Junior married in 1918 Anne O’Brien, third daughter of Thomas O’Brien of Boru House, and the couple had an adopted son, Peter O’Mara.  Anne’s youngest sister, Kate O’Brien, became one of the most prominent novelists in 20th-century Ireland and a voice of the respectable Irish Roman Catholic middle class.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
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          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Reviews and other press cuttings relating to Kate O’Brien’s fifth novel *The Land of Spices*.</p>
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          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Reviews of ‘The Last of Summer’</unittitle>
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                <addressline>GL0-051, Glucksman Library, University of Limerick</addressline>
                <addressline>Limerick</addressline>
                <addressline>Ireland</addressline>
                <addressline>V94 DPY6</addressline>
                <addressline>Telephone: +353-61-202690</addressline>
                <addressline>Fax: +353-61-213415</addressline>
                <addressline>Email: specoll@ul.ie</addressline>
                <addressline>https://specialcollections.ul.ie/</addressline>
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              <language langcode="eng">English</language>
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            <note>
              <p>The history of the O’Mara family of Strand house and O’Mara’s Bacon Company go hand in hand.  The factory was founded in 1839 by James O’Meara (1817-1899), who originated from the village of Toomevaara in county Tipperary.  Having worked for some years in the woollen mills in Clonmel, he got a job as a clerk with Matterson’s Bacon Factory in Limerick and in 1839 founded O’Mara’s Bacon Company in his house on Mungret Street.  It is said that he dropped the ‘e’ from his surname as he felt that O’Meara was too long for commercial purposes.  James initially sold for Matterson’s but soon began to cure his own bacon in the basement of his house.  As his business grew, he acquired dedicated premises for the purpose near the top of Roche’s Street.<lb/><lb/>In 1841, James O’Mara married Honora Fowley (d. 1878), who worked in the bacon business alongside her husband.  A devoted nationalist, James was one of the early supporters of Isaac Butt’s Home Rule movement.  He was High Sheriff of Limerick City in 1887, and acted as Town Councillor on Limerick Corporation at least from 1888 to 1898.<lb/><lb/>James and Honora O’Mara had 13 children, of whom the two eldest surviving sons, Stephen O’Mara (1844-1926) and John (Jack) O’Mara (1856-1919) were instrumental in building up the O’Mara’s Bacon Factory into a great success.   The youngest son, Joseph (Joe) O’Mara (1864-1927) became a celebrated opera singer.<lb/><lb/>When James O’Mara retired from business his son John (Jack) O’Mara became manager of the O’Mara Bacon Factory.  In the late 1880s, Jack was invited to Russia by Tsar Alexander III to provide instruction on bacon curing.  He stayed in St Petersburg to supervise the construction of a bacon factory.  In 1891, his father bought the rights of the Russian Bacon Company and the family imported bacon from Russia into London until 1903.  James (Jim) O’Mara (1858-1893) acted as agent for O’Mara’s in London until his untimely death from heart disease.  His nephew James O’Mara (1873-1948), son of Stephen O’Mara Senior (1844-1926), took over the agency and held it until 1914.<lb/><lb/>When John (Jack) O’Mara died in 1919, his younger brother Stephen O’Mara (1844-1926) became Managing Director of O’Mara Limited and remained in that capacity until 1923.  Having entered into the family business at the age of fifteen, his great business acumen established O’Mara’s Bacon Factory as one of the most prominent commercial enterprises in Limerick city.  He also purchased a bacon factory in Palmerston, Ontario, Canada, which was managed by his son Joseph (Joe) O’Mara (1878-1950) until the business was wound up in the 1940s.<lb/><lb/>Like his father, Stephen O’Mara was a strong supporter of Isaac Butt’s Home Rule movement and a member of the committee which secured Butt’s election for Limerick city in 1871.  He later developed a close association with Charles Stewart Parnell and was elected Member of Parliament for Upper Ossory in Kilkenny South for the Irish Parliamentary Party in February 1886.  When the Irish National League split from Irish Parliamentary Party in December 1890, O’Mara took the Parnellite side.  He continued to act as trustee of the Party funds until 1908, when he resigned from his trusteeship.  Towards the end of his life, his moderate political views became more radicalised under the influence of his sons James (1873-1948) and Stephen Junior (1884-1959).  He had agreed with his son James’s decision to resign from the Irish Parliamentary Party in 1907 in order to join Sinn Fein, and personally supported the party in the 1918 General Election.  Both Stephen and his son James were strong supporters of the 1921 Anglo-Irish Treaty but were on friendly terms with Eamon de Valera who, it is said, spent the night at the O’Mara family home, Strand House, as the Treaty was being signed in London.  In the 1925 election, Stephen O’Mara was elected as Senator to the Free State Seanad.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara was also a prominent figure in local politics.  He became a Town Councillor on Limerick Corporation in the 1880s and was elected Mayor of Limerick in 1885.  He was the first Mayor of Limerick to be elected on a Nationalist ticket.  He also served as High Sheriff of Limerick city in 1888, 1913 and 1914.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara married Ellen Pigott in 1867, and the couple had 12 children of whom the eldest three died tragically of diphtheria in 1872.  From c. 1909 onwards, the family lived at Strand House.  Their third son, Stephen O’Mara Junior, was born on 5 January 1884.  He entered the family business in 1903 when he travelled to Canada to work in the bacon factory established by the O’Mara family in Ottawa.  In 1923, he became Managing Director of O’Mara Limited and created numerous employment opportunities by establishing bacon factories in Claremorris, County Mayo, and Letterkenny, County Donegal, in the 1930s.  The three bacon companies were amalgamated in 1938 and formed into the Bacon Company of Ireland.  Stephen O’Mara Junior remained the company’s chairman until his death in 1959.  In 1987, the Bacon Company of Ireland merged with Hanley of Rooskey and Benesford UK (Castlebar) with assistance from the Industrial Development Agency Ireland (IDA) to form Irish Country Bacon.  Shortly afterwards the old O’Mara factory in Limerick was closed down.  It was subsequently demolished to make way for a multi-storey car park.<lb/><lb/>Throughout his life, Stephen O’Mara Junior played a prominent role in both local and national affairs.  Unlike his father and elder brother James, Stephen was opposed to the Anglo-Irish Treaty but in a conciliatory manner.  He was prominently identified with the Sinn Fein movement after the Easter Rising.  He was one of Eamon de Valera’s strongest supporters and a member of his Fianna Fail Party since its formation in 1926.<lb/><lb/>When George Clancy, Lord Mayor of Limerick, and his predecessor Michael O’Callaghan were murdered by the British military forces in March 1921, Stephen decided to stand for election and became Mayor.  He was re-elected in 1922 and in 1923 but resigned before the expiration of his term of office.<lb/><lb/>In 1921, Stephen O’Mara Junior was selected to go to America as Special Envoy appointed by Dáil Éireann to the United States to oversee one of the country’s biggest fundraising drives to finance the first Dáil and was made Trustee of the funds.  The funds-drive was terminated following the signing of the Anglo-Irish Treaty.  Considering himself as the exchequer to the Irish Free State, O’Mara refused to hand over the collected funds to the pro-Treaty administration which resulted in his imprisonment in 1922-1923.  He had also been imprisoned for seven days in 1921 for refusing to pay a fine of £10 for non-compliance with a military summons.<lb/><lb/>The bulk of the money collected during the Bond Drive was left in various banks in New York and remained untouched for a number of years.  In 1927, following legal action between the Irish Government and Eamon de Valera, a court in New York ordered that money outstanding to bond holders must be paid back.  Having anticipated such a ruling, de Valera’s legal team invited bond holders to sign over their bonds to de Valera, for which they were paid 58 cents to the dollar.  The monies so accumulated were used to launch the national daily newspaper *The Irish Press*.  Stephen O’Mara served on the paper’s Board of Directors until his resignation in 1935.<lb/><lb/>In 1932, Stephen O’Mara was once again sent to America on a mission involving the various consular and diplomatic offices maintained in the country by the Irish Government.  Two years later, he was appointed a member of the Commission on Vocational Organisation, on which he served until 1943.  In 1959, he was created a member of the Council of State following de Valera’s inauguration as President of Ireland.  Stephen O’Mara died less than two months after his appointment, on 11 November 1959.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara Junior married in 1918 Anne O’Brien, third daughter of Thomas O’Brien of Boru House, and the couple had an adopted son, Peter O’Mara.  Anne’s youngest sister, Kate O’Brien, became one of the most prominent novelists in 20th-century Ireland and a voice of the respectable Irish Roman Catholic middle class.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
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          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Reviews of Kate O’Brien’s sixth novel *The Last of Summer*.</p>
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            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Reviews of the stage adaptation of ‘The Last of Summer’</unittitle>
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        15 items    </physdesc>
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                <addressline>GL0-051, Glucksman Library, University of Limerick</addressline>
                <addressline>Limerick</addressline>
                <addressline>Ireland</addressline>
                <addressline>V94 DPY6</addressline>
                <addressline>Telephone: +353-61-202690</addressline>
                <addressline>Fax: +353-61-213415</addressline>
                <addressline>Email: specoll@ul.ie</addressline>
                <addressline>https://specialcollections.ul.ie/</addressline>
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              <language langcode="eng">English</language>
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            <note>
              <p>The history of the O’Mara family of Strand house and O’Mara’s Bacon Company go hand in hand.  The factory was founded in 1839 by James O’Meara (1817-1899), who originated from the village of Toomevaara in county Tipperary.  Having worked for some years in the woollen mills in Clonmel, he got a job as a clerk with Matterson’s Bacon Factory in Limerick and in 1839 founded O’Mara’s Bacon Company in his house on Mungret Street.  It is said that he dropped the ‘e’ from his surname as he felt that O’Meara was too long for commercial purposes.  James initially sold for Matterson’s but soon began to cure his own bacon in the basement of his house.  As his business grew, he acquired dedicated premises for the purpose near the top of Roche’s Street.<lb/><lb/>In 1841, James O’Mara married Honora Fowley (d. 1878), who worked in the bacon business alongside her husband.  A devoted nationalist, James was one of the early supporters of Isaac Butt’s Home Rule movement.  He was High Sheriff of Limerick City in 1887, and acted as Town Councillor on Limerick Corporation at least from 1888 to 1898.<lb/><lb/>James and Honora O’Mara had 13 children, of whom the two eldest surviving sons, Stephen O’Mara (1844-1926) and John (Jack) O’Mara (1856-1919) were instrumental in building up the O’Mara’s Bacon Factory into a great success.   The youngest son, Joseph (Joe) O’Mara (1864-1927) became a celebrated opera singer.<lb/><lb/>When James O’Mara retired from business his son John (Jack) O’Mara became manager of the O’Mara Bacon Factory.  In the late 1880s, Jack was invited to Russia by Tsar Alexander III to provide instruction on bacon curing.  He stayed in St Petersburg to supervise the construction of a bacon factory.  In 1891, his father bought the rights of the Russian Bacon Company and the family imported bacon from Russia into London until 1903.  James (Jim) O’Mara (1858-1893) acted as agent for O’Mara’s in London until his untimely death from heart disease.  His nephew James O’Mara (1873-1948), son of Stephen O’Mara Senior (1844-1926), took over the agency and held it until 1914.<lb/><lb/>When John (Jack) O’Mara died in 1919, his younger brother Stephen O’Mara (1844-1926) became Managing Director of O’Mara Limited and remained in that capacity until 1923.  Having entered into the family business at the age of fifteen, his great business acumen established O’Mara’s Bacon Factory as one of the most prominent commercial enterprises in Limerick city.  He also purchased a bacon factory in Palmerston, Ontario, Canada, which was managed by his son Joseph (Joe) O’Mara (1878-1950) until the business was wound up in the 1940s.<lb/><lb/>Like his father, Stephen O’Mara was a strong supporter of Isaac Butt’s Home Rule movement and a member of the committee which secured Butt’s election for Limerick city in 1871.  He later developed a close association with Charles Stewart Parnell and was elected Member of Parliament for Upper Ossory in Kilkenny South for the Irish Parliamentary Party in February 1886.  When the Irish National League split from Irish Parliamentary Party in December 1890, O’Mara took the Parnellite side.  He continued to act as trustee of the Party funds until 1908, when he resigned from his trusteeship.  Towards the end of his life, his moderate political views became more radicalised under the influence of his sons James (1873-1948) and Stephen Junior (1884-1959).  He had agreed with his son James’s decision to resign from the Irish Parliamentary Party in 1907 in order to join Sinn Fein, and personally supported the party in the 1918 General Election.  Both Stephen and his son James were strong supporters of the 1921 Anglo-Irish Treaty but were on friendly terms with Eamon de Valera who, it is said, spent the night at the O’Mara family home, Strand House, as the Treaty was being signed in London.  In the 1925 election, Stephen O’Mara was elected as Senator to the Free State Seanad.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara was also a prominent figure in local politics.  He became a Town Councillor on Limerick Corporation in the 1880s and was elected Mayor of Limerick in 1885.  He was the first Mayor of Limerick to be elected on a Nationalist ticket.  He also served as High Sheriff of Limerick city in 1888, 1913 and 1914.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara married Ellen Pigott in 1867, and the couple had 12 children of whom the eldest three died tragically of diphtheria in 1872.  From c. 1909 onwards, the family lived at Strand House.  Their third son, Stephen O’Mara Junior, was born on 5 January 1884.  He entered the family business in 1903 when he travelled to Canada to work in the bacon factory established by the O’Mara family in Ottawa.  In 1923, he became Managing Director of O’Mara Limited and created numerous employment opportunities by establishing bacon factories in Claremorris, County Mayo, and Letterkenny, County Donegal, in the 1930s.  The three bacon companies were amalgamated in 1938 and formed into the Bacon Company of Ireland.  Stephen O’Mara Junior remained the company’s chairman until his death in 1959.  In 1987, the Bacon Company of Ireland merged with Hanley of Rooskey and Benesford UK (Castlebar) with assistance from the Industrial Development Agency Ireland (IDA) to form Irish Country Bacon.  Shortly afterwards the old O’Mara factory in Limerick was closed down.  It was subsequently demolished to make way for a multi-storey car park.<lb/><lb/>Throughout his life, Stephen O’Mara Junior played a prominent role in both local and national affairs.  Unlike his father and elder brother James, Stephen was opposed to the Anglo-Irish Treaty but in a conciliatory manner.  He was prominently identified with the Sinn Fein movement after the Easter Rising.  He was one of Eamon de Valera’s strongest supporters and a member of his Fianna Fail Party since its formation in 1926.<lb/><lb/>When George Clancy, Lord Mayor of Limerick, and his predecessor Michael O’Callaghan were murdered by the British military forces in March 1921, Stephen decided to stand for election and became Mayor.  He was re-elected in 1922 and in 1923 but resigned before the expiration of his term of office.<lb/><lb/>In 1921, Stephen O’Mara Junior was selected to go to America as Special Envoy appointed by Dáil Éireann to the United States to oversee one of the country’s biggest fundraising drives to finance the first Dáil and was made Trustee of the funds.  The funds-drive was terminated following the signing of the Anglo-Irish Treaty.  Considering himself as the exchequer to the Irish Free State, O’Mara refused to hand over the collected funds to the pro-Treaty administration which resulted in his imprisonment in 1922-1923.  He had also been imprisoned for seven days in 1921 for refusing to pay a fine of £10 for non-compliance with a military summons.<lb/><lb/>The bulk of the money collected during the Bond Drive was left in various banks in New York and remained untouched for a number of years.  In 1927, following legal action between the Irish Government and Eamon de Valera, a court in New York ordered that money outstanding to bond holders must be paid back.  Having anticipated such a ruling, de Valera’s legal team invited bond holders to sign over their bonds to de Valera, for which they were paid 58 cents to the dollar.  The monies so accumulated were used to launch the national daily newspaper *The Irish Press*.  Stephen O’Mara served on the paper’s Board of Directors until his resignation in 1935.<lb/><lb/>In 1932, Stephen O’Mara was once again sent to America on a mission involving the various consular and diplomatic offices maintained in the country by the Irish Government.  Two years later, he was appointed a member of the Commission on Vocational Organisation, on which he served until 1943.  In 1959, he was created a member of the Council of State following de Valera’s inauguration as President of Ireland.  Stephen O’Mara died less than two months after his appointment, on 11 November 1959.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara Junior married in 1918 Anne O’Brien, third daughter of Thomas O’Brien of Boru House, and the couple had an adopted son, Peter O’Mara.  Anne’s youngest sister, Kate O’Brien, became one of the most prominent novelists in 20th-century Ireland and a voice of the respectable Irish Roman Catholic middle class.</p>
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            <p>Reviews of performances of the stage adaptation of *The Last of Summer*.  Includes a typed transcript of a review from *The Times*.</p>
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            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Press cuttings relating to ‘That Lady’</unittitle>
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                <addressline>Ireland</addressline>
                <addressline>V94 DPY6</addressline>
                <addressline>Telephone: +353-61-202690</addressline>
                <addressline>Fax: +353-61-213415</addressline>
                <addressline>Email: specoll@ul.ie</addressline>
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              <p>The history of the O’Mara family of Strand house and O’Mara’s Bacon Company go hand in hand.  The factory was founded in 1839 by James O’Meara (1817-1899), who originated from the village of Toomevaara in county Tipperary.  Having worked for some years in the woollen mills in Clonmel, he got a job as a clerk with Matterson’s Bacon Factory in Limerick and in 1839 founded O’Mara’s Bacon Company in his house on Mungret Street.  It is said that he dropped the ‘e’ from his surname as he felt that O’Meara was too long for commercial purposes.  James initially sold for Matterson’s but soon began to cure his own bacon in the basement of his house.  As his business grew, he acquired dedicated premises for the purpose near the top of Roche’s Street.<lb/><lb/>In 1841, James O’Mara married Honora Fowley (d. 1878), who worked in the bacon business alongside her husband.  A devoted nationalist, James was one of the early supporters of Isaac Butt’s Home Rule movement.  He was High Sheriff of Limerick City in 1887, and acted as Town Councillor on Limerick Corporation at least from 1888 to 1898.<lb/><lb/>James and Honora O’Mara had 13 children, of whom the two eldest surviving sons, Stephen O’Mara (1844-1926) and John (Jack) O’Mara (1856-1919) were instrumental in building up the O’Mara’s Bacon Factory into a great success.   The youngest son, Joseph (Joe) O’Mara (1864-1927) became a celebrated opera singer.<lb/><lb/>When James O’Mara retired from business his son John (Jack) O’Mara became manager of the O’Mara Bacon Factory.  In the late 1880s, Jack was invited to Russia by Tsar Alexander III to provide instruction on bacon curing.  He stayed in St Petersburg to supervise the construction of a bacon factory.  In 1891, his father bought the rights of the Russian Bacon Company and the family imported bacon from Russia into London until 1903.  James (Jim) O’Mara (1858-1893) acted as agent for O’Mara’s in London until his untimely death from heart disease.  His nephew James O’Mara (1873-1948), son of Stephen O’Mara Senior (1844-1926), took over the agency and held it until 1914.<lb/><lb/>When John (Jack) O’Mara died in 1919, his younger brother Stephen O’Mara (1844-1926) became Managing Director of O’Mara Limited and remained in that capacity until 1923.  Having entered into the family business at the age of fifteen, his great business acumen established O’Mara’s Bacon Factory as one of the most prominent commercial enterprises in Limerick city.  He also purchased a bacon factory in Palmerston, Ontario, Canada, which was managed by his son Joseph (Joe) O’Mara (1878-1950) until the business was wound up in the 1940s.<lb/><lb/>Like his father, Stephen O’Mara was a strong supporter of Isaac Butt’s Home Rule movement and a member of the committee which secured Butt’s election for Limerick city in 1871.  He later developed a close association with Charles Stewart Parnell and was elected Member of Parliament for Upper Ossory in Kilkenny South for the Irish Parliamentary Party in February 1886.  When the Irish National League split from Irish Parliamentary Party in December 1890, O’Mara took the Parnellite side.  He continued to act as trustee of the Party funds until 1908, when he resigned from his trusteeship.  Towards the end of his life, his moderate political views became more radicalised under the influence of his sons James (1873-1948) and Stephen Junior (1884-1959).  He had agreed with his son James’s decision to resign from the Irish Parliamentary Party in 1907 in order to join Sinn Fein, and personally supported the party in the 1918 General Election.  Both Stephen and his son James were strong supporters of the 1921 Anglo-Irish Treaty but were on friendly terms with Eamon de Valera who, it is said, spent the night at the O’Mara family home, Strand House, as the Treaty was being signed in London.  In the 1925 election, Stephen O’Mara was elected as Senator to the Free State Seanad.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara was also a prominent figure in local politics.  He became a Town Councillor on Limerick Corporation in the 1880s and was elected Mayor of Limerick in 1885.  He was the first Mayor of Limerick to be elected on a Nationalist ticket.  He also served as High Sheriff of Limerick city in 1888, 1913 and 1914.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara married Ellen Pigott in 1867, and the couple had 12 children of whom the eldest three died tragically of diphtheria in 1872.  From c. 1909 onwards, the family lived at Strand House.  Their third son, Stephen O’Mara Junior, was born on 5 January 1884.  He entered the family business in 1903 when he travelled to Canada to work in the bacon factory established by the O’Mara family in Ottawa.  In 1923, he became Managing Director of O’Mara Limited and created numerous employment opportunities by establishing bacon factories in Claremorris, County Mayo, and Letterkenny, County Donegal, in the 1930s.  The three bacon companies were amalgamated in 1938 and formed into the Bacon Company of Ireland.  Stephen O’Mara Junior remained the company’s chairman until his death in 1959.  In 1987, the Bacon Company of Ireland merged with Hanley of Rooskey and Benesford UK (Castlebar) with assistance from the Industrial Development Agency Ireland (IDA) to form Irish Country Bacon.  Shortly afterwards the old O’Mara factory in Limerick was closed down.  It was subsequently demolished to make way for a multi-storey car park.<lb/><lb/>Throughout his life, Stephen O’Mara Junior played a prominent role in both local and national affairs.  Unlike his father and elder brother James, Stephen was opposed to the Anglo-Irish Treaty but in a conciliatory manner.  He was prominently identified with the Sinn Fein movement after the Easter Rising.  He was one of Eamon de Valera’s strongest supporters and a member of his Fianna Fail Party since its formation in 1926.<lb/><lb/>When George Clancy, Lord Mayor of Limerick, and his predecessor Michael O’Callaghan were murdered by the British military forces in March 1921, Stephen decided to stand for election and became Mayor.  He was re-elected in 1922 and in 1923 but resigned before the expiration of his term of office.<lb/><lb/>In 1921, Stephen O’Mara Junior was selected to go to America as Special Envoy appointed by Dáil Éireann to the United States to oversee one of the country’s biggest fundraising drives to finance the first Dáil and was made Trustee of the funds.  The funds-drive was terminated following the signing of the Anglo-Irish Treaty.  Considering himself as the exchequer to the Irish Free State, O’Mara refused to hand over the collected funds to the pro-Treaty administration which resulted in his imprisonment in 1922-1923.  He had also been imprisoned for seven days in 1921 for refusing to pay a fine of £10 for non-compliance with a military summons.<lb/><lb/>The bulk of the money collected during the Bond Drive was left in various banks in New York and remained untouched for a number of years.  In 1927, following legal action between the Irish Government and Eamon de Valera, a court in New York ordered that money outstanding to bond holders must be paid back.  Having anticipated such a ruling, de Valera’s legal team invited bond holders to sign over their bonds to de Valera, for which they were paid 58 cents to the dollar.  The monies so accumulated were used to launch the national daily newspaper *The Irish Press*.  Stephen O’Mara served on the paper’s Board of Directors until his resignation in 1935.<lb/><lb/>In 1932, Stephen O’Mara was once again sent to America on a mission involving the various consular and diplomatic offices maintained in the country by the Irish Government.  Two years later, he was appointed a member of the Commission on Vocational Organisation, on which he served until 1943.  In 1959, he was created a member of the Council of State following de Valera’s inauguration as President of Ireland.  Stephen O’Mara died less than two months after his appointment, on 11 November 1959.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara Junior married in 1918 Anne O’Brien, third daughter of Thomas O’Brien of Boru House, and the couple had an adopted son, Peter O’Mara.  Anne’s youngest sister, Kate O’Brien, became one of the most prominent novelists in 20th-century Ireland and a voice of the respectable Irish Roman Catholic middle class.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
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            <p>Reviews of and other articles relating to Kate O’Brien’s seventh novel *That Lady* (published in America under the title *For One Sweet Grape*).  Includes a typed transcript of a review from the *Times Literary Supplement* and a copy of vol. 1, issue 10 of *Books of Today*.  In two folders.</p>
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            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Press cuttings relating to the stage adaptation of ‘That Lady’</unittitle>
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        30 items    </physdesc>
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              <corpname>Special Collections and Archives Department</corpname>
              <address>
                <addressline>GL0-051, Glucksman Library, University of Limerick</addressline>
                <addressline>Limerick</addressline>
                <addressline>Ireland</addressline>
                <addressline>V94 DPY6</addressline>
                <addressline>Telephone: +353-61-202690</addressline>
                <addressline>Fax: +353-61-213415</addressline>
                <addressline>Email: specoll@ul.ie</addressline>
                <addressline>https://specialcollections.ul.ie/</addressline>
              </address>
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              <language langcode="eng">English</language>
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              <famname id="atom_124687_actor">O'Mara family of Strand House, Limerick</famname>
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            <note>
              <p>The history of the O’Mara family of Strand house and O’Mara’s Bacon Company go hand in hand.  The factory was founded in 1839 by James O’Meara (1817-1899), who originated from the village of Toomevaara in county Tipperary.  Having worked for some years in the woollen mills in Clonmel, he got a job as a clerk with Matterson’s Bacon Factory in Limerick and in 1839 founded O’Mara’s Bacon Company in his house on Mungret Street.  It is said that he dropped the ‘e’ from his surname as he felt that O’Meara was too long for commercial purposes.  James initially sold for Matterson’s but soon began to cure his own bacon in the basement of his house.  As his business grew, he acquired dedicated premises for the purpose near the top of Roche’s Street.<lb/><lb/>In 1841, James O’Mara married Honora Fowley (d. 1878), who worked in the bacon business alongside her husband.  A devoted nationalist, James was one of the early supporters of Isaac Butt’s Home Rule movement.  He was High Sheriff of Limerick City in 1887, and acted as Town Councillor on Limerick Corporation at least from 1888 to 1898.<lb/><lb/>James and Honora O’Mara had 13 children, of whom the two eldest surviving sons, Stephen O’Mara (1844-1926) and John (Jack) O’Mara (1856-1919) were instrumental in building up the O’Mara’s Bacon Factory into a great success.   The youngest son, Joseph (Joe) O’Mara (1864-1927) became a celebrated opera singer.<lb/><lb/>When James O’Mara retired from business his son John (Jack) O’Mara became manager of the O’Mara Bacon Factory.  In the late 1880s, Jack was invited to Russia by Tsar Alexander III to provide instruction on bacon curing.  He stayed in St Petersburg to supervise the construction of a bacon factory.  In 1891, his father bought the rights of the Russian Bacon Company and the family imported bacon from Russia into London until 1903.  James (Jim) O’Mara (1858-1893) acted as agent for O’Mara’s in London until his untimely death from heart disease.  His nephew James O’Mara (1873-1948), son of Stephen O’Mara Senior (1844-1926), took over the agency and held it until 1914.<lb/><lb/>When John (Jack) O’Mara died in 1919, his younger brother Stephen O’Mara (1844-1926) became Managing Director of O’Mara Limited and remained in that capacity until 1923.  Having entered into the family business at the age of fifteen, his great business acumen established O’Mara’s Bacon Factory as one of the most prominent commercial enterprises in Limerick city.  He also purchased a bacon factory in Palmerston, Ontario, Canada, which was managed by his son Joseph (Joe) O’Mara (1878-1950) until the business was wound up in the 1940s.<lb/><lb/>Like his father, Stephen O’Mara was a strong supporter of Isaac Butt’s Home Rule movement and a member of the committee which secured Butt’s election for Limerick city in 1871.  He later developed a close association with Charles Stewart Parnell and was elected Member of Parliament for Upper Ossory in Kilkenny South for the Irish Parliamentary Party in February 1886.  When the Irish National League split from Irish Parliamentary Party in December 1890, O’Mara took the Parnellite side.  He continued to act as trustee of the Party funds until 1908, when he resigned from his trusteeship.  Towards the end of his life, his moderate political views became more radicalised under the influence of his sons James (1873-1948) and Stephen Junior (1884-1959).  He had agreed with his son James’s decision to resign from the Irish Parliamentary Party in 1907 in order to join Sinn Fein, and personally supported the party in the 1918 General Election.  Both Stephen and his son James were strong supporters of the 1921 Anglo-Irish Treaty but were on friendly terms with Eamon de Valera who, it is said, spent the night at the O’Mara family home, Strand House, as the Treaty was being signed in London.  In the 1925 election, Stephen O’Mara was elected as Senator to the Free State Seanad.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara was also a prominent figure in local politics.  He became a Town Councillor on Limerick Corporation in the 1880s and was elected Mayor of Limerick in 1885.  He was the first Mayor of Limerick to be elected on a Nationalist ticket.  He also served as High Sheriff of Limerick city in 1888, 1913 and 1914.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara married Ellen Pigott in 1867, and the couple had 12 children of whom the eldest three died tragically of diphtheria in 1872.  From c. 1909 onwards, the family lived at Strand House.  Their third son, Stephen O’Mara Junior, was born on 5 January 1884.  He entered the family business in 1903 when he travelled to Canada to work in the bacon factory established by the O’Mara family in Ottawa.  In 1923, he became Managing Director of O’Mara Limited and created numerous employment opportunities by establishing bacon factories in Claremorris, County Mayo, and Letterkenny, County Donegal, in the 1930s.  The three bacon companies were amalgamated in 1938 and formed into the Bacon Company of Ireland.  Stephen O’Mara Junior remained the company’s chairman until his death in 1959.  In 1987, the Bacon Company of Ireland merged with Hanley of Rooskey and Benesford UK (Castlebar) with assistance from the Industrial Development Agency Ireland (IDA) to form Irish Country Bacon.  Shortly afterwards the old O’Mara factory in Limerick was closed down.  It was subsequently demolished to make way for a multi-storey car park.<lb/><lb/>Throughout his life, Stephen O’Mara Junior played a prominent role in both local and national affairs.  Unlike his father and elder brother James, Stephen was opposed to the Anglo-Irish Treaty but in a conciliatory manner.  He was prominently identified with the Sinn Fein movement after the Easter Rising.  He was one of Eamon de Valera’s strongest supporters and a member of his Fianna Fail Party since its formation in 1926.<lb/><lb/>When George Clancy, Lord Mayor of Limerick, and his predecessor Michael O’Callaghan were murdered by the British military forces in March 1921, Stephen decided to stand for election and became Mayor.  He was re-elected in 1922 and in 1923 but resigned before the expiration of his term of office.<lb/><lb/>In 1921, Stephen O’Mara Junior was selected to go to America as Special Envoy appointed by Dáil Éireann to the United States to oversee one of the country’s biggest fundraising drives to finance the first Dáil and was made Trustee of the funds.  The funds-drive was terminated following the signing of the Anglo-Irish Treaty.  Considering himself as the exchequer to the Irish Free State, O’Mara refused to hand over the collected funds to the pro-Treaty administration which resulted in his imprisonment in 1922-1923.  He had also been imprisoned for seven days in 1921 for refusing to pay a fine of £10 for non-compliance with a military summons.<lb/><lb/>The bulk of the money collected during the Bond Drive was left in various banks in New York and remained untouched for a number of years.  In 1927, following legal action between the Irish Government and Eamon de Valera, a court in New York ordered that money outstanding to bond holders must be paid back.  Having anticipated such a ruling, de Valera’s legal team invited bond holders to sign over their bonds to de Valera, for which they were paid 58 cents to the dollar.  The monies so accumulated were used to launch the national daily newspaper *The Irish Press*.  Stephen O’Mara served on the paper’s Board of Directors until his resignation in 1935.<lb/><lb/>In 1932, Stephen O’Mara was once again sent to America on a mission involving the various consular and diplomatic offices maintained in the country by the Irish Government.  Two years later, he was appointed a member of the Commission on Vocational Organisation, on which he served until 1943.  In 1959, he was created a member of the Council of State following de Valera’s inauguration as President of Ireland.  Stephen O’Mara died less than two months after his appointment, on 11 November 1959.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara Junior married in 1918 Anne O’Brien, third daughter of Thomas O’Brien of Boru House, and the couple had an adopted son, Peter O’Mara.  Anne’s youngest sister, Kate O’Brien, became one of the most prominent novelists in 20th-century Ireland and a voice of the respectable Irish Roman Catholic middle class.</p>
            </note>
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            <p>Press cuttings relating to the stage adaptation of *That Lady*, including reviews of its performances in America.</p>
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          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Reviews of ‘Teresa of Avila’</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="IE" repositorycode="2135">P40/3/10/2/3/15</unitid>
            <unitid type="alternative" label="Original number">P40/853</unitid>
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        3 items    </physdesc>
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              <corpname>Special Collections and Archives Department</corpname>
              <address>
                <addressline>GL0-051, Glucksman Library, University of Limerick</addressline>
                <addressline>Limerick</addressline>
                <addressline>Ireland</addressline>
                <addressline>V94 DPY6</addressline>
                <addressline>Telephone: +353-61-202690</addressline>
                <addressline>Fax: +353-61-213415</addressline>
                <addressline>Email: specoll@ul.ie</addressline>
                <addressline>https://specialcollections.ul.ie/</addressline>
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            <langmaterial encodinganalog="3.4.3">
              <language langcode="eng">English</language>
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              <famname id="atom_124690_actor">O'Mara family of Strand House, Limerick</famname>
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            <note>
              <p>The history of the O’Mara family of Strand house and O’Mara’s Bacon Company go hand in hand.  The factory was founded in 1839 by James O’Meara (1817-1899), who originated from the village of Toomevaara in county Tipperary.  Having worked for some years in the woollen mills in Clonmel, he got a job as a clerk with Matterson’s Bacon Factory in Limerick and in 1839 founded O’Mara’s Bacon Company in his house on Mungret Street.  It is said that he dropped the ‘e’ from his surname as he felt that O’Meara was too long for commercial purposes.  James initially sold for Matterson’s but soon began to cure his own bacon in the basement of his house.  As his business grew, he acquired dedicated premises for the purpose near the top of Roche’s Street.<lb/><lb/>In 1841, James O’Mara married Honora Fowley (d. 1878), who worked in the bacon business alongside her husband.  A devoted nationalist, James was one of the early supporters of Isaac Butt’s Home Rule movement.  He was High Sheriff of Limerick City in 1887, and acted as Town Councillor on Limerick Corporation at least from 1888 to 1898.<lb/><lb/>James and Honora O’Mara had 13 children, of whom the two eldest surviving sons, Stephen O’Mara (1844-1926) and John (Jack) O’Mara (1856-1919) were instrumental in building up the O’Mara’s Bacon Factory into a great success.   The youngest son, Joseph (Joe) O’Mara (1864-1927) became a celebrated opera singer.<lb/><lb/>When James O’Mara retired from business his son John (Jack) O’Mara became manager of the O’Mara Bacon Factory.  In the late 1880s, Jack was invited to Russia by Tsar Alexander III to provide instruction on bacon curing.  He stayed in St Petersburg to supervise the construction of a bacon factory.  In 1891, his father bought the rights of the Russian Bacon Company and the family imported bacon from Russia into London until 1903.  James (Jim) O’Mara (1858-1893) acted as agent for O’Mara’s in London until his untimely death from heart disease.  His nephew James O’Mara (1873-1948), son of Stephen O’Mara Senior (1844-1926), took over the agency and held it until 1914.<lb/><lb/>When John (Jack) O’Mara died in 1919, his younger brother Stephen O’Mara (1844-1926) became Managing Director of O’Mara Limited and remained in that capacity until 1923.  Having entered into the family business at the age of fifteen, his great business acumen established O’Mara’s Bacon Factory as one of the most prominent commercial enterprises in Limerick city.  He also purchased a bacon factory in Palmerston, Ontario, Canada, which was managed by his son Joseph (Joe) O’Mara (1878-1950) until the business was wound up in the 1940s.<lb/><lb/>Like his father, Stephen O’Mara was a strong supporter of Isaac Butt’s Home Rule movement and a member of the committee which secured Butt’s election for Limerick city in 1871.  He later developed a close association with Charles Stewart Parnell and was elected Member of Parliament for Upper Ossory in Kilkenny South for the Irish Parliamentary Party in February 1886.  When the Irish National League split from Irish Parliamentary Party in December 1890, O’Mara took the Parnellite side.  He continued to act as trustee of the Party funds until 1908, when he resigned from his trusteeship.  Towards the end of his life, his moderate political views became more radicalised under the influence of his sons James (1873-1948) and Stephen Junior (1884-1959).  He had agreed with his son James’s decision to resign from the Irish Parliamentary Party in 1907 in order to join Sinn Fein, and personally supported the party in the 1918 General Election.  Both Stephen and his son James were strong supporters of the 1921 Anglo-Irish Treaty but were on friendly terms with Eamon de Valera who, it is said, spent the night at the O’Mara family home, Strand House, as the Treaty was being signed in London.  In the 1925 election, Stephen O’Mara was elected as Senator to the Free State Seanad.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara was also a prominent figure in local politics.  He became a Town Councillor on Limerick Corporation in the 1880s and was elected Mayor of Limerick in 1885.  He was the first Mayor of Limerick to be elected on a Nationalist ticket.  He also served as High Sheriff of Limerick city in 1888, 1913 and 1914.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara married Ellen Pigott in 1867, and the couple had 12 children of whom the eldest three died tragically of diphtheria in 1872.  From c. 1909 onwards, the family lived at Strand House.  Their third son, Stephen O’Mara Junior, was born on 5 January 1884.  He entered the family business in 1903 when he travelled to Canada to work in the bacon factory established by the O’Mara family in Ottawa.  In 1923, he became Managing Director of O’Mara Limited and created numerous employment opportunities by establishing bacon factories in Claremorris, County Mayo, and Letterkenny, County Donegal, in the 1930s.  The three bacon companies were amalgamated in 1938 and formed into the Bacon Company of Ireland.  Stephen O’Mara Junior remained the company’s chairman until his death in 1959.  In 1987, the Bacon Company of Ireland merged with Hanley of Rooskey and Benesford UK (Castlebar) with assistance from the Industrial Development Agency Ireland (IDA) to form Irish Country Bacon.  Shortly afterwards the old O’Mara factory in Limerick was closed down.  It was subsequently demolished to make way for a multi-storey car park.<lb/><lb/>Throughout his life, Stephen O’Mara Junior played a prominent role in both local and national affairs.  Unlike his father and elder brother James, Stephen was opposed to the Anglo-Irish Treaty but in a conciliatory manner.  He was prominently identified with the Sinn Fein movement after the Easter Rising.  He was one of Eamon de Valera’s strongest supporters and a member of his Fianna Fail Party since its formation in 1926.<lb/><lb/>When George Clancy, Lord Mayor of Limerick, and his predecessor Michael O’Callaghan were murdered by the British military forces in March 1921, Stephen decided to stand for election and became Mayor.  He was re-elected in 1922 and in 1923 but resigned before the expiration of his term of office.<lb/><lb/>In 1921, Stephen O’Mara Junior was selected to go to America as Special Envoy appointed by Dáil Éireann to the United States to oversee one of the country’s biggest fundraising drives to finance the first Dáil and was made Trustee of the funds.  The funds-drive was terminated following the signing of the Anglo-Irish Treaty.  Considering himself as the exchequer to the Irish Free State, O’Mara refused to hand over the collected funds to the pro-Treaty administration which resulted in his imprisonment in 1922-1923.  He had also been imprisoned for seven days in 1921 for refusing to pay a fine of £10 for non-compliance with a military summons.<lb/><lb/>The bulk of the money collected during the Bond Drive was left in various banks in New York and remained untouched for a number of years.  In 1927, following legal action between the Irish Government and Eamon de Valera, a court in New York ordered that money outstanding to bond holders must be paid back.  Having anticipated such a ruling, de Valera’s legal team invited bond holders to sign over their bonds to de Valera, for which they were paid 58 cents to the dollar.  The monies so accumulated were used to launch the national daily newspaper *The Irish Press*.  Stephen O’Mara served on the paper’s Board of Directors until his resignation in 1935.<lb/><lb/>In 1932, Stephen O’Mara was once again sent to America on a mission involving the various consular and diplomatic offices maintained in the country by the Irish Government.  Two years later, he was appointed a member of the Commission on Vocational Organisation, on which he served until 1943.  In 1959, he was created a member of the Council of State following de Valera’s inauguration as President of Ireland.  Stephen O’Mara died less than two months after his appointment, on 11 November 1959.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara Junior married in 1918 Anne O’Brien, third daughter of Thomas O’Brien of Boru House, and the couple had an adopted son, Peter O’Mara.  Anne’s youngest sister, Kate O’Brien, became one of the most prominent novelists in 20th-century Ireland and a voice of the respectable Irish Roman Catholic middle class.</p>
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            <p>Reviews of Kate O’Brien’s biography *Teresa of Avila*.</p>
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            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Reviews of ‘The Flower of May’</unittitle>
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                <addressline>GL0-051, Glucksman Library, University of Limerick</addressline>
                <addressline>Limerick</addressline>
                <addressline>Ireland</addressline>
                <addressline>V94 DPY6</addressline>
                <addressline>Telephone: +353-61-202690</addressline>
                <addressline>Fax: +353-61-213415</addressline>
                <addressline>Email: specoll@ul.ie</addressline>
                <addressline>https://specialcollections.ul.ie/</addressline>
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            <langmaterial encodinganalog="3.4.3">
              <language langcode="eng">English</language>
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              <p>The history of the O’Mara family of Strand house and O’Mara’s Bacon Company go hand in hand.  The factory was founded in 1839 by James O’Meara (1817-1899), who originated from the village of Toomevaara in county Tipperary.  Having worked for some years in the woollen mills in Clonmel, he got a job as a clerk with Matterson’s Bacon Factory in Limerick and in 1839 founded O’Mara’s Bacon Company in his house on Mungret Street.  It is said that he dropped the ‘e’ from his surname as he felt that O’Meara was too long for commercial purposes.  James initially sold for Matterson’s but soon began to cure his own bacon in the basement of his house.  As his business grew, he acquired dedicated premises for the purpose near the top of Roche’s Street.<lb/><lb/>In 1841, James O’Mara married Honora Fowley (d. 1878), who worked in the bacon business alongside her husband.  A devoted nationalist, James was one of the early supporters of Isaac Butt’s Home Rule movement.  He was High Sheriff of Limerick City in 1887, and acted as Town Councillor on Limerick Corporation at least from 1888 to 1898.<lb/><lb/>James and Honora O’Mara had 13 children, of whom the two eldest surviving sons, Stephen O’Mara (1844-1926) and John (Jack) O’Mara (1856-1919) were instrumental in building up the O’Mara’s Bacon Factory into a great success.   The youngest son, Joseph (Joe) O’Mara (1864-1927) became a celebrated opera singer.<lb/><lb/>When James O’Mara retired from business his son John (Jack) O’Mara became manager of the O’Mara Bacon Factory.  In the late 1880s, Jack was invited to Russia by Tsar Alexander III to provide instruction on bacon curing.  He stayed in St Petersburg to supervise the construction of a bacon factory.  In 1891, his father bought the rights of the Russian Bacon Company and the family imported bacon from Russia into London until 1903.  James (Jim) O’Mara (1858-1893) acted as agent for O’Mara’s in London until his untimely death from heart disease.  His nephew James O’Mara (1873-1948), son of Stephen O’Mara Senior (1844-1926), took over the agency and held it until 1914.<lb/><lb/>When John (Jack) O’Mara died in 1919, his younger brother Stephen O’Mara (1844-1926) became Managing Director of O’Mara Limited and remained in that capacity until 1923.  Having entered into the family business at the age of fifteen, his great business acumen established O’Mara’s Bacon Factory as one of the most prominent commercial enterprises in Limerick city.  He also purchased a bacon factory in Palmerston, Ontario, Canada, which was managed by his son Joseph (Joe) O’Mara (1878-1950) until the business was wound up in the 1940s.<lb/><lb/>Like his father, Stephen O’Mara was a strong supporter of Isaac Butt’s Home Rule movement and a member of the committee which secured Butt’s election for Limerick city in 1871.  He later developed a close association with Charles Stewart Parnell and was elected Member of Parliament for Upper Ossory in Kilkenny South for the Irish Parliamentary Party in February 1886.  When the Irish National League split from Irish Parliamentary Party in December 1890, O’Mara took the Parnellite side.  He continued to act as trustee of the Party funds until 1908, when he resigned from his trusteeship.  Towards the end of his life, his moderate political views became more radicalised under the influence of his sons James (1873-1948) and Stephen Junior (1884-1959).  He had agreed with his son James’s decision to resign from the Irish Parliamentary Party in 1907 in order to join Sinn Fein, and personally supported the party in the 1918 General Election.  Both Stephen and his son James were strong supporters of the 1921 Anglo-Irish Treaty but were on friendly terms with Eamon de Valera who, it is said, spent the night at the O’Mara family home, Strand House, as the Treaty was being signed in London.  In the 1925 election, Stephen O’Mara was elected as Senator to the Free State Seanad.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara was also a prominent figure in local politics.  He became a Town Councillor on Limerick Corporation in the 1880s and was elected Mayor of Limerick in 1885.  He was the first Mayor of Limerick to be elected on a Nationalist ticket.  He also served as High Sheriff of Limerick city in 1888, 1913 and 1914.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara married Ellen Pigott in 1867, and the couple had 12 children of whom the eldest three died tragically of diphtheria in 1872.  From c. 1909 onwards, the family lived at Strand House.  Their third son, Stephen O’Mara Junior, was born on 5 January 1884.  He entered the family business in 1903 when he travelled to Canada to work in the bacon factory established by the O’Mara family in Ottawa.  In 1923, he became Managing Director of O’Mara Limited and created numerous employment opportunities by establishing bacon factories in Claremorris, County Mayo, and Letterkenny, County Donegal, in the 1930s.  The three bacon companies were amalgamated in 1938 and formed into the Bacon Company of Ireland.  Stephen O’Mara Junior remained the company’s chairman until his death in 1959.  In 1987, the Bacon Company of Ireland merged with Hanley of Rooskey and Benesford UK (Castlebar) with assistance from the Industrial Development Agency Ireland (IDA) to form Irish Country Bacon.  Shortly afterwards the old O’Mara factory in Limerick was closed down.  It was subsequently demolished to make way for a multi-storey car park.<lb/><lb/>Throughout his life, Stephen O’Mara Junior played a prominent role in both local and national affairs.  Unlike his father and elder brother James, Stephen was opposed to the Anglo-Irish Treaty but in a conciliatory manner.  He was prominently identified with the Sinn Fein movement after the Easter Rising.  He was one of Eamon de Valera’s strongest supporters and a member of his Fianna Fail Party since its formation in 1926.<lb/><lb/>When George Clancy, Lord Mayor of Limerick, and his predecessor Michael O’Callaghan were murdered by the British military forces in March 1921, Stephen decided to stand for election and became Mayor.  He was re-elected in 1922 and in 1923 but resigned before the expiration of his term of office.<lb/><lb/>In 1921, Stephen O’Mara Junior was selected to go to America as Special Envoy appointed by Dáil Éireann to the United States to oversee one of the country’s biggest fundraising drives to finance the first Dáil and was made Trustee of the funds.  The funds-drive was terminated following the signing of the Anglo-Irish Treaty.  Considering himself as the exchequer to the Irish Free State, O’Mara refused to hand over the collected funds to the pro-Treaty administration which resulted in his imprisonment in 1922-1923.  He had also been imprisoned for seven days in 1921 for refusing to pay a fine of £10 for non-compliance with a military summons.<lb/><lb/>The bulk of the money collected during the Bond Drive was left in various banks in New York and remained untouched for a number of years.  In 1927, following legal action between the Irish Government and Eamon de Valera, a court in New York ordered that money outstanding to bond holders must be paid back.  Having anticipated such a ruling, de Valera’s legal team invited bond holders to sign over their bonds to de Valera, for which they were paid 58 cents to the dollar.  The monies so accumulated were used to launch the national daily newspaper *The Irish Press*.  Stephen O’Mara served on the paper’s Board of Directors until his resignation in 1935.<lb/><lb/>In 1932, Stephen O’Mara was once again sent to America on a mission involving the various consular and diplomatic offices maintained in the country by the Irish Government.  Two years later, he was appointed a member of the Commission on Vocational Organisation, on which he served until 1943.  In 1959, he was created a member of the Council of State following de Valera’s inauguration as President of Ireland.  Stephen O’Mara died less than two months after his appointment, on 11 November 1959.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara Junior married in 1918 Anne O’Brien, third daughter of Thomas O’Brien of Boru House, and the couple had an adopted son, Peter O’Mara.  Anne’s youngest sister, Kate O’Brien, became one of the most prominent novelists in 20th-century Ireland and a voice of the respectable Irish Roman Catholic middle class.</p>
            </note>
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            <p>Reviews of Kate O’Brien’s eighth novel *The Flower of May*.</p>
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                <addressline>Ireland</addressline>
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                <addressline>Telephone: +353-61-202690</addressline>
                <addressline>Fax: +353-61-213415</addressline>
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            <note>
              <p>The history of the O’Mara family of Strand house and O’Mara’s Bacon Company go hand in hand.  The factory was founded in 1839 by James O’Meara (1817-1899), who originated from the village of Toomevaara in county Tipperary.  Having worked for some years in the woollen mills in Clonmel, he got a job as a clerk with Matterson’s Bacon Factory in Limerick and in 1839 founded O’Mara’s Bacon Company in his house on Mungret Street.  It is said that he dropped the ‘e’ from his surname as he felt that O’Meara was too long for commercial purposes.  James initially sold for Matterson’s but soon began to cure his own bacon in the basement of his house.  As his business grew, he acquired dedicated premises for the purpose near the top of Roche’s Street.<lb/><lb/>In 1841, James O’Mara married Honora Fowley (d. 1878), who worked in the bacon business alongside her husband.  A devoted nationalist, James was one of the early supporters of Isaac Butt’s Home Rule movement.  He was High Sheriff of Limerick City in 1887, and acted as Town Councillor on Limerick Corporation at least from 1888 to 1898.<lb/><lb/>James and Honora O’Mara had 13 children, of whom the two eldest surviving sons, Stephen O’Mara (1844-1926) and John (Jack) O’Mara (1856-1919) were instrumental in building up the O’Mara’s Bacon Factory into a great success.   The youngest son, Joseph (Joe) O’Mara (1864-1927) became a celebrated opera singer.<lb/><lb/>When James O’Mara retired from business his son John (Jack) O’Mara became manager of the O’Mara Bacon Factory.  In the late 1880s, Jack was invited to Russia by Tsar Alexander III to provide instruction on bacon curing.  He stayed in St Petersburg to supervise the construction of a bacon factory.  In 1891, his father bought the rights of the Russian Bacon Company and the family imported bacon from Russia into London until 1903.  James (Jim) O’Mara (1858-1893) acted as agent for O’Mara’s in London until his untimely death from heart disease.  His nephew James O’Mara (1873-1948), son of Stephen O’Mara Senior (1844-1926), took over the agency and held it until 1914.<lb/><lb/>When John (Jack) O’Mara died in 1919, his younger brother Stephen O’Mara (1844-1926) became Managing Director of O’Mara Limited and remained in that capacity until 1923.  Having entered into the family business at the age of fifteen, his great business acumen established O’Mara’s Bacon Factory as one of the most prominent commercial enterprises in Limerick city.  He also purchased a bacon factory in Palmerston, Ontario, Canada, which was managed by his son Joseph (Joe) O’Mara (1878-1950) until the business was wound up in the 1940s.<lb/><lb/>Like his father, Stephen O’Mara was a strong supporter of Isaac Butt’s Home Rule movement and a member of the committee which secured Butt’s election for Limerick city in 1871.  He later developed a close association with Charles Stewart Parnell and was elected Member of Parliament for Upper Ossory in Kilkenny South for the Irish Parliamentary Party in February 1886.  When the Irish National League split from Irish Parliamentary Party in December 1890, O’Mara took the Parnellite side.  He continued to act as trustee of the Party funds until 1908, when he resigned from his trusteeship.  Towards the end of his life, his moderate political views became more radicalised under the influence of his sons James (1873-1948) and Stephen Junior (1884-1959).  He had agreed with his son James’s decision to resign from the Irish Parliamentary Party in 1907 in order to join Sinn Fein, and personally supported the party in the 1918 General Election.  Both Stephen and his son James were strong supporters of the 1921 Anglo-Irish Treaty but were on friendly terms with Eamon de Valera who, it is said, spent the night at the O’Mara family home, Strand House, as the Treaty was being signed in London.  In the 1925 election, Stephen O’Mara was elected as Senator to the Free State Seanad.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara was also a prominent figure in local politics.  He became a Town Councillor on Limerick Corporation in the 1880s and was elected Mayor of Limerick in 1885.  He was the first Mayor of Limerick to be elected on a Nationalist ticket.  He also served as High Sheriff of Limerick city in 1888, 1913 and 1914.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara married Ellen Pigott in 1867, and the couple had 12 children of whom the eldest three died tragically of diphtheria in 1872.  From c. 1909 onwards, the family lived at Strand House.  Their third son, Stephen O’Mara Junior, was born on 5 January 1884.  He entered the family business in 1903 when he travelled to Canada to work in the bacon factory established by the O’Mara family in Ottawa.  In 1923, he became Managing Director of O’Mara Limited and created numerous employment opportunities by establishing bacon factories in Claremorris, County Mayo, and Letterkenny, County Donegal, in the 1930s.  The three bacon companies were amalgamated in 1938 and formed into the Bacon Company of Ireland.  Stephen O’Mara Junior remained the company’s chairman until his death in 1959.  In 1987, the Bacon Company of Ireland merged with Hanley of Rooskey and Benesford UK (Castlebar) with assistance from the Industrial Development Agency Ireland (IDA) to form Irish Country Bacon.  Shortly afterwards the old O’Mara factory in Limerick was closed down.  It was subsequently demolished to make way for a multi-storey car park.<lb/><lb/>Throughout his life, Stephen O’Mara Junior played a prominent role in both local and national affairs.  Unlike his father and elder brother James, Stephen was opposed to the Anglo-Irish Treaty but in a conciliatory manner.  He was prominently identified with the Sinn Fein movement after the Easter Rising.  He was one of Eamon de Valera’s strongest supporters and a member of his Fianna Fail Party since its formation in 1926.<lb/><lb/>When George Clancy, Lord Mayor of Limerick, and his predecessor Michael O’Callaghan were murdered by the British military forces in March 1921, Stephen decided to stand for election and became Mayor.  He was re-elected in 1922 and in 1923 but resigned before the expiration of his term of office.<lb/><lb/>In 1921, Stephen O’Mara Junior was selected to go to America as Special Envoy appointed by Dáil Éireann to the United States to oversee one of the country’s biggest fundraising drives to finance the first Dáil and was made Trustee of the funds.  The funds-drive was terminated following the signing of the Anglo-Irish Treaty.  Considering himself as the exchequer to the Irish Free State, O’Mara refused to hand over the collected funds to the pro-Treaty administration which resulted in his imprisonment in 1922-1923.  He had also been imprisoned for seven days in 1921 for refusing to pay a fine of £10 for non-compliance with a military summons.<lb/><lb/>The bulk of the money collected during the Bond Drive was left in various banks in New York and remained untouched for a number of years.  In 1927, following legal action between the Irish Government and Eamon de Valera, a court in New York ordered that money outstanding to bond holders must be paid back.  Having anticipated such a ruling, de Valera’s legal team invited bond holders to sign over their bonds to de Valera, for which they were paid 58 cents to the dollar.  The monies so accumulated were used to launch the national daily newspaper *The Irish Press*.  Stephen O’Mara served on the paper’s Board of Directors until his resignation in 1935.<lb/><lb/>In 1932, Stephen O’Mara was once again sent to America on a mission involving the various consular and diplomatic offices maintained in the country by the Irish Government.  Two years later, he was appointed a member of the Commission on Vocational Organisation, on which he served until 1943.  In 1959, he was created a member of the Council of State following de Valera’s inauguration as President of Ireland.  Stephen O’Mara died less than two months after his appointment, on 11 November 1959.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara Junior married in 1918 Anne O’Brien, third daughter of Thomas O’Brien of Boru House, and the couple had an adopted son, Peter O’Mara.  Anne’s youngest sister, Kate O’Brien, became one of the most prominent novelists in 20th-century Ireland and a voice of the respectable Irish Roman Catholic middle class.</p>
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            <p>Press cuttings relating to film and TV adaptations of Kate O’Brien’s novel *That Lady* and the banning of the film in Spain.</p>
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                <addressline>Ireland</addressline>
                <addressline>V94 DPY6</addressline>
                <addressline>Telephone: +353-61-202690</addressline>
                <addressline>Fax: +353-61-213415</addressline>
                <addressline>Email: specoll@ul.ie</addressline>
                <addressline>https://specialcollections.ul.ie/</addressline>
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            <note>
              <p>The history of the O’Mara family of Strand house and O’Mara’s Bacon Company go hand in hand.  The factory was founded in 1839 by James O’Meara (1817-1899), who originated from the village of Toomevaara in county Tipperary.  Having worked for some years in the woollen mills in Clonmel, he got a job as a clerk with Matterson’s Bacon Factory in Limerick and in 1839 founded O’Mara’s Bacon Company in his house on Mungret Street.  It is said that he dropped the ‘e’ from his surname as he felt that O’Meara was too long for commercial purposes.  James initially sold for Matterson’s but soon began to cure his own bacon in the basement of his house.  As his business grew, he acquired dedicated premises for the purpose near the top of Roche’s Street.<lb/><lb/>In 1841, James O’Mara married Honora Fowley (d. 1878), who worked in the bacon business alongside her husband.  A devoted nationalist, James was one of the early supporters of Isaac Butt’s Home Rule movement.  He was High Sheriff of Limerick City in 1887, and acted as Town Councillor on Limerick Corporation at least from 1888 to 1898.<lb/><lb/>James and Honora O’Mara had 13 children, of whom the two eldest surviving sons, Stephen O’Mara (1844-1926) and John (Jack) O’Mara (1856-1919) were instrumental in building up the O’Mara’s Bacon Factory into a great success.   The youngest son, Joseph (Joe) O’Mara (1864-1927) became a celebrated opera singer.<lb/><lb/>When James O’Mara retired from business his son John (Jack) O’Mara became manager of the O’Mara Bacon Factory.  In the late 1880s, Jack was invited to Russia by Tsar Alexander III to provide instruction on bacon curing.  He stayed in St Petersburg to supervise the construction of a bacon factory.  In 1891, his father bought the rights of the Russian Bacon Company and the family imported bacon from Russia into London until 1903.  James (Jim) O’Mara (1858-1893) acted as agent for O’Mara’s in London until his untimely death from heart disease.  His nephew James O’Mara (1873-1948), son of Stephen O’Mara Senior (1844-1926), took over the agency and held it until 1914.<lb/><lb/>When John (Jack) O’Mara died in 1919, his younger brother Stephen O’Mara (1844-1926) became Managing Director of O’Mara Limited and remained in that capacity until 1923.  Having entered into the family business at the age of fifteen, his great business acumen established O’Mara’s Bacon Factory as one of the most prominent commercial enterprises in Limerick city.  He also purchased a bacon factory in Palmerston, Ontario, Canada, which was managed by his son Joseph (Joe) O’Mara (1878-1950) until the business was wound up in the 1940s.<lb/><lb/>Like his father, Stephen O’Mara was a strong supporter of Isaac Butt’s Home Rule movement and a member of the committee which secured Butt’s election for Limerick city in 1871.  He later developed a close association with Charles Stewart Parnell and was elected Member of Parliament for Upper Ossory in Kilkenny South for the Irish Parliamentary Party in February 1886.  When the Irish National League split from Irish Parliamentary Party in December 1890, O’Mara took the Parnellite side.  He continued to act as trustee of the Party funds until 1908, when he resigned from his trusteeship.  Towards the end of his life, his moderate political views became more radicalised under the influence of his sons James (1873-1948) and Stephen Junior (1884-1959).  He had agreed with his son James’s decision to resign from the Irish Parliamentary Party in 1907 in order to join Sinn Fein, and personally supported the party in the 1918 General Election.  Both Stephen and his son James were strong supporters of the 1921 Anglo-Irish Treaty but were on friendly terms with Eamon de Valera who, it is said, spent the night at the O’Mara family home, Strand House, as the Treaty was being signed in London.  In the 1925 election, Stephen O’Mara was elected as Senator to the Free State Seanad.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara was also a prominent figure in local politics.  He became a Town Councillor on Limerick Corporation in the 1880s and was elected Mayor of Limerick in 1885.  He was the first Mayor of Limerick to be elected on a Nationalist ticket.  He also served as High Sheriff of Limerick city in 1888, 1913 and 1914.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara married Ellen Pigott in 1867, and the couple had 12 children of whom the eldest three died tragically of diphtheria in 1872.  From c. 1909 onwards, the family lived at Strand House.  Their third son, Stephen O’Mara Junior, was born on 5 January 1884.  He entered the family business in 1903 when he travelled to Canada to work in the bacon factory established by the O’Mara family in Ottawa.  In 1923, he became Managing Director of O’Mara Limited and created numerous employment opportunities by establishing bacon factories in Claremorris, County Mayo, and Letterkenny, County Donegal, in the 1930s.  The three bacon companies were amalgamated in 1938 and formed into the Bacon Company of Ireland.  Stephen O’Mara Junior remained the company’s chairman until his death in 1959.  In 1987, the Bacon Company of Ireland merged with Hanley of Rooskey and Benesford UK (Castlebar) with assistance from the Industrial Development Agency Ireland (IDA) to form Irish Country Bacon.  Shortly afterwards the old O’Mara factory in Limerick was closed down.  It was subsequently demolished to make way for a multi-storey car park.<lb/><lb/>Throughout his life, Stephen O’Mara Junior played a prominent role in both local and national affairs.  Unlike his father and elder brother James, Stephen was opposed to the Anglo-Irish Treaty but in a conciliatory manner.  He was prominently identified with the Sinn Fein movement after the Easter Rising.  He was one of Eamon de Valera’s strongest supporters and a member of his Fianna Fail Party since its formation in 1926.<lb/><lb/>When George Clancy, Lord Mayor of Limerick, and his predecessor Michael O’Callaghan were murdered by the British military forces in March 1921, Stephen decided to stand for election and became Mayor.  He was re-elected in 1922 and in 1923 but resigned before the expiration of his term of office.<lb/><lb/>In 1921, Stephen O’Mara Junior was selected to go to America as Special Envoy appointed by Dáil Éireann to the United States to oversee one of the country’s biggest fundraising drives to finance the first Dáil and was made Trustee of the funds.  The funds-drive was terminated following the signing of the Anglo-Irish Treaty.  Considering himself as the exchequer to the Irish Free State, O’Mara refused to hand over the collected funds to the pro-Treaty administration which resulted in his imprisonment in 1922-1923.  He had also been imprisoned for seven days in 1921 for refusing to pay a fine of £10 for non-compliance with a military summons.<lb/><lb/>The bulk of the money collected during the Bond Drive was left in various banks in New York and remained untouched for a number of years.  In 1927, following legal action between the Irish Government and Eamon de Valera, a court in New York ordered that money outstanding to bond holders must be paid back.  Having anticipated such a ruling, de Valera’s legal team invited bond holders to sign over their bonds to de Valera, for which they were paid 58 cents to the dollar.  The monies so accumulated were used to launch the national daily newspaper *The Irish Press*.  Stephen O’Mara served on the paper’s Board of Directors until his resignation in 1935.<lb/><lb/>In 1932, Stephen O’Mara was once again sent to America on a mission involving the various consular and diplomatic offices maintained in the country by the Irish Government.  Two years later, he was appointed a member of the Commission on Vocational Organisation, on which he served until 1943.  In 1959, he was created a member of the Council of State following de Valera’s inauguration as President of Ireland.  Stephen O’Mara died less than two months after his appointment, on 11 November 1959.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara Junior married in 1918 Anne O’Brien, third daughter of Thomas O’Brien of Boru House, and the couple had an adopted son, Peter O’Mara.  Anne’s youngest sister, Kate O’Brien, became one of the most prominent novelists in 20th-century Ireland and a voice of the respectable Irish Roman Catholic middle class.</p>
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            <p>Reviews of and other press cuttings relating to Kate O’Brien’s ninth and final novel *As Music and Splendour*.  In three folders.</p>
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                <addressline>Ireland</addressline>
                <addressline>V94 DPY6</addressline>
                <addressline>Telephone: +353-61-202690</addressline>
                <addressline>Fax: +353-61-213415</addressline>
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          <bioghist id="md5-be03d29153491160a15961757089b84f" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>The history of the O’Mara family of Strand house and O’Mara’s Bacon Company go hand in hand.  The factory was founded in 1839 by James O’Meara (1817-1899), who originated from the village of Toomevaara in county Tipperary.  Having worked for some years in the woollen mills in Clonmel, he got a job as a clerk with Matterson’s Bacon Factory in Limerick and in 1839 founded O’Mara’s Bacon Company in his house on Mungret Street.  It is said that he dropped the ‘e’ from his surname as he felt that O’Meara was too long for commercial purposes.  James initially sold for Matterson’s but soon began to cure his own bacon in the basement of his house.  As his business grew, he acquired dedicated premises for the purpose near the top of Roche’s Street.<lb/><lb/>In 1841, James O’Mara married Honora Fowley (d. 1878), who worked in the bacon business alongside her husband.  A devoted nationalist, James was one of the early supporters of Isaac Butt’s Home Rule movement.  He was High Sheriff of Limerick City in 1887, and acted as Town Councillor on Limerick Corporation at least from 1888 to 1898.<lb/><lb/>James and Honora O’Mara had 13 children, of whom the two eldest surviving sons, Stephen O’Mara (1844-1926) and John (Jack) O’Mara (1856-1919) were instrumental in building up the O’Mara’s Bacon Factory into a great success.   The youngest son, Joseph (Joe) O’Mara (1864-1927) became a celebrated opera singer.<lb/><lb/>When James O’Mara retired from business his son John (Jack) O’Mara became manager of the O’Mara Bacon Factory.  In the late 1880s, Jack was invited to Russia by Tsar Alexander III to provide instruction on bacon curing.  He stayed in St Petersburg to supervise the construction of a bacon factory.  In 1891, his father bought the rights of the Russian Bacon Company and the family imported bacon from Russia into London until 1903.  James (Jim) O’Mara (1858-1893) acted as agent for O’Mara’s in London until his untimely death from heart disease.  His nephew James O’Mara (1873-1948), son of Stephen O’Mara Senior (1844-1926), took over the agency and held it until 1914.<lb/><lb/>When John (Jack) O’Mara died in 1919, his younger brother Stephen O’Mara (1844-1926) became Managing Director of O’Mara Limited and remained in that capacity until 1923.  Having entered into the family business at the age of fifteen, his great business acumen established O’Mara’s Bacon Factory as one of the most prominent commercial enterprises in Limerick city.  He also purchased a bacon factory in Palmerston, Ontario, Canada, which was managed by his son Joseph (Joe) O’Mara (1878-1950) until the business was wound up in the 1940s.<lb/><lb/>Like his father, Stephen O’Mara was a strong supporter of Isaac Butt’s Home Rule movement and a member of the committee which secured Butt’s election for Limerick city in 1871.  He later developed a close association with Charles Stewart Parnell and was elected Member of Parliament for Upper Ossory in Kilkenny South for the Irish Parliamentary Party in February 1886.  When the Irish National League split from Irish Parliamentary Party in December 1890, O’Mara took the Parnellite side.  He continued to act as trustee of the Party funds until 1908, when he resigned from his trusteeship.  Towards the end of his life, his moderate political views became more radicalised under the influence of his sons James (1873-1948) and Stephen Junior (1884-1959).  He had agreed with his son James’s decision to resign from the Irish Parliamentary Party in 1907 in order to join Sinn Fein, and personally supported the party in the 1918 General Election.  Both Stephen and his son James were strong supporters of the 1921 Anglo-Irish Treaty but were on friendly terms with Eamon de Valera who, it is said, spent the night at the O’Mara family home, Strand House, as the Treaty was being signed in London.  In the 1925 election, Stephen O’Mara was elected as Senator to the Free State Seanad.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara was also a prominent figure in local politics.  He became a Town Councillor on Limerick Corporation in the 1880s and was elected Mayor of Limerick in 1885.  He was the first Mayor of Limerick to be elected on a Nationalist ticket.  He also served as High Sheriff of Limerick city in 1888, 1913 and 1914.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara married Ellen Pigott in 1867, and the couple had 12 children of whom the eldest three died tragically of diphtheria in 1872.  From c. 1909 onwards, the family lived at Strand House.  Their third son, Stephen O’Mara Junior, was born on 5 January 1884.  He entered the family business in 1903 when he travelled to Canada to work in the bacon factory established by the O’Mara family in Ottawa.  In 1923, he became Managing Director of O’Mara Limited and created numerous employment opportunities by establishing bacon factories in Claremorris, County Mayo, and Letterkenny, County Donegal, in the 1930s.  The three bacon companies were amalgamated in 1938 and formed into the Bacon Company of Ireland.  Stephen O’Mara Junior remained the company’s chairman until his death in 1959.  In 1987, the Bacon Company of Ireland merged with Hanley of Rooskey and Benesford UK (Castlebar) with assistance from the Industrial Development Agency Ireland (IDA) to form Irish Country Bacon.  Shortly afterwards the old O’Mara factory in Limerick was closed down.  It was subsequently demolished to make way for a multi-storey car park.<lb/><lb/>Throughout his life, Stephen O’Mara Junior played a prominent role in both local and national affairs.  Unlike his father and elder brother James, Stephen was opposed to the Anglo-Irish Treaty but in a conciliatory manner.  He was prominently identified with the Sinn Fein movement after the Easter Rising.  He was one of Eamon de Valera’s strongest supporters and a member of his Fianna Fail Party since its formation in 1926.<lb/><lb/>When George Clancy, Lord Mayor of Limerick, and his predecessor Michael O’Callaghan were murdered by the British military forces in March 1921, Stephen decided to stand for election and became Mayor.  He was re-elected in 1922 and in 1923 but resigned before the expiration of his term of office.<lb/><lb/>In 1921, Stephen O’Mara Junior was selected to go to America as Special Envoy appointed by Dáil Éireann to the United States to oversee one of the country’s biggest fundraising drives to finance the first Dáil and was made Trustee of the funds.  The funds-drive was terminated following the signing of the Anglo-Irish Treaty.  Considering himself as the exchequer to the Irish Free State, O’Mara refused to hand over the collected funds to the pro-Treaty administration which resulted in his imprisonment in 1922-1923.  He had also been imprisoned for seven days in 1921 for refusing to pay a fine of £10 for non-compliance with a military summons.<lb/><lb/>The bulk of the money collected during the Bond Drive was left in various banks in New York and remained untouched for a number of years.  In 1927, following legal action between the Irish Government and Eamon de Valera, a court in New York ordered that money outstanding to bond holders must be paid back.  Having anticipated such a ruling, de Valera’s legal team invited bond holders to sign over their bonds to de Valera, for which they were paid 58 cents to the dollar.  The monies so accumulated were used to launch the national daily newspaper *The Irish Press*.  Stephen O’Mara served on the paper’s Board of Directors until his resignation in 1935.<lb/><lb/>In 1932, Stephen O’Mara was once again sent to America on a mission involving the various consular and diplomatic offices maintained in the country by the Irish Government.  Two years later, he was appointed a member of the Commission on Vocational Organisation, on which he served until 1943.  In 1959, he was created a member of the Council of State following de Valera’s inauguration as President of Ireland.  Stephen O’Mara died less than two months after his appointment, on 11 November 1959.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara Junior married in 1918 Anne O’Brien, third daughter of Thomas O’Brien of Boru House, and the couple had an adopted son, Peter O’Mara.  Anne’s youngest sister, Kate O’Brien, became one of the most prominent novelists in 20th-century Ireland and a voice of the respectable Irish Roman Catholic middle class.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Reviews of Kate O’Brien’s travelogue *My Ireland*.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
      </c>
      <c level="subseries">
        <did>
          <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Other Press Cuttings Relating to Kate O'Brien</unittitle>
          <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="IE" repositorycode="2135">P40/3/10/2/4</unitid>
          <unitdate normal="1930-01-01/1987-12-31" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1930-1987</unitdate>
          <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        2 files and 1 item    </physdesc>
          <langmaterial encodinganalog="3.4.3">
            <language langcode="eng">English</language>
          </langmaterial>
          <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
            <famname id="atom_109952_actor">O'Mara family of Strand House, Limerick</famname>
          </origination>
        </did>
        <bioghist id="md5-be03d29153491160a15961757089b84f" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
          <note>
            <p>The history of the O’Mara family of Strand house and O’Mara’s Bacon Company go hand in hand.  The factory was founded in 1839 by James O’Meara (1817-1899), who originated from the village of Toomevaara in county Tipperary.  Having worked for some years in the woollen mills in Clonmel, he got a job as a clerk with Matterson’s Bacon Factory in Limerick and in 1839 founded O’Mara’s Bacon Company in his house on Mungret Street.  It is said that he dropped the ‘e’ from his surname as he felt that O’Meara was too long for commercial purposes.  James initially sold for Matterson’s but soon began to cure his own bacon in the basement of his house.  As his business grew, he acquired dedicated premises for the purpose near the top of Roche’s Street.<lb/><lb/>In 1841, James O’Mara married Honora Fowley (d. 1878), who worked in the bacon business alongside her husband.  A devoted nationalist, James was one of the early supporters of Isaac Butt’s Home Rule movement.  He was High Sheriff of Limerick City in 1887, and acted as Town Councillor on Limerick Corporation at least from 1888 to 1898.<lb/><lb/>James and Honora O’Mara had 13 children, of whom the two eldest surviving sons, Stephen O’Mara (1844-1926) and John (Jack) O’Mara (1856-1919) were instrumental in building up the O’Mara’s Bacon Factory into a great success.   The youngest son, Joseph (Joe) O’Mara (1864-1927) became a celebrated opera singer.<lb/><lb/>When James O’Mara retired from business his son John (Jack) O’Mara became manager of the O’Mara Bacon Factory.  In the late 1880s, Jack was invited to Russia by Tsar Alexander III to provide instruction on bacon curing.  He stayed in St Petersburg to supervise the construction of a bacon factory.  In 1891, his father bought the rights of the Russian Bacon Company and the family imported bacon from Russia into London until 1903.  James (Jim) O’Mara (1858-1893) acted as agent for O’Mara’s in London until his untimely death from heart disease.  His nephew James O’Mara (1873-1948), son of Stephen O’Mara Senior (1844-1926), took over the agency and held it until 1914.<lb/><lb/>When John (Jack) O’Mara died in 1919, his younger brother Stephen O’Mara (1844-1926) became Managing Director of O’Mara Limited and remained in that capacity until 1923.  Having entered into the family business at the age of fifteen, his great business acumen established O’Mara’s Bacon Factory as one of the most prominent commercial enterprises in Limerick city.  He also purchased a bacon factory in Palmerston, Ontario, Canada, which was managed by his son Joseph (Joe) O’Mara (1878-1950) until the business was wound up in the 1940s.<lb/><lb/>Like his father, Stephen O’Mara was a strong supporter of Isaac Butt’s Home Rule movement and a member of the committee which secured Butt’s election for Limerick city in 1871.  He later developed a close association with Charles Stewart Parnell and was elected Member of Parliament for Upper Ossory in Kilkenny South for the Irish Parliamentary Party in February 1886.  When the Irish National League split from Irish Parliamentary Party in December 1890, O’Mara took the Parnellite side.  He continued to act as trustee of the Party funds until 1908, when he resigned from his trusteeship.  Towards the end of his life, his moderate political views became more radicalised under the influence of his sons James (1873-1948) and Stephen Junior (1884-1959).  He had agreed with his son James’s decision to resign from the Irish Parliamentary Party in 1907 in order to join Sinn Fein, and personally supported the party in the 1918 General Election.  Both Stephen and his son James were strong supporters of the 1921 Anglo-Irish Treaty but were on friendly terms with Eamon de Valera who, it is said, spent the night at the O’Mara family home, Strand House, as the Treaty was being signed in London.  In the 1925 election, Stephen O’Mara was elected as Senator to the Free State Seanad.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara was also a prominent figure in local politics.  He became a Town Councillor on Limerick Corporation in the 1880s and was elected Mayor of Limerick in 1885.  He was the first Mayor of Limerick to be elected on a Nationalist ticket.  He also served as High Sheriff of Limerick city in 1888, 1913 and 1914.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara married Ellen Pigott in 1867, and the couple had 12 children of whom the eldest three died tragically of diphtheria in 1872.  From c. 1909 onwards, the family lived at Strand House.  Their third son, Stephen O’Mara Junior, was born on 5 January 1884.  He entered the family business in 1903 when he travelled to Canada to work in the bacon factory established by the O’Mara family in Ottawa.  In 1923, he became Managing Director of O’Mara Limited and created numerous employment opportunities by establishing bacon factories in Claremorris, County Mayo, and Letterkenny, County Donegal, in the 1930s.  The three bacon companies were amalgamated in 1938 and formed into the Bacon Company of Ireland.  Stephen O’Mara Junior remained the company’s chairman until his death in 1959.  In 1987, the Bacon Company of Ireland merged with Hanley of Rooskey and Benesford UK (Castlebar) with assistance from the Industrial Development Agency Ireland (IDA) to form Irish Country Bacon.  Shortly afterwards the old O’Mara factory in Limerick was closed down.  It was subsequently demolished to make way for a multi-storey car park.<lb/><lb/>Throughout his life, Stephen O’Mara Junior played a prominent role in both local and national affairs.  Unlike his father and elder brother James, Stephen was opposed to the Anglo-Irish Treaty but in a conciliatory manner.  He was prominently identified with the Sinn Fein movement after the Easter Rising.  He was one of Eamon de Valera’s strongest supporters and a member of his Fianna Fail Party since its formation in 1926.<lb/><lb/>When George Clancy, Lord Mayor of Limerick, and his predecessor Michael O’Callaghan were murdered by the British military forces in March 1921, Stephen decided to stand for election and became Mayor.  He was re-elected in 1922 and in 1923 but resigned before the expiration of his term of office.<lb/><lb/>In 1921, Stephen O’Mara Junior was selected to go to America as Special Envoy appointed by Dáil Éireann to the United States to oversee one of the country’s biggest fundraising drives to finance the first Dáil and was made Trustee of the funds.  The funds-drive was terminated following the signing of the Anglo-Irish Treaty.  Considering himself as the exchequer to the Irish Free State, O’Mara refused to hand over the collected funds to the pro-Treaty administration which resulted in his imprisonment in 1922-1923.  He had also been imprisoned for seven days in 1921 for refusing to pay a fine of £10 for non-compliance with a military summons.<lb/><lb/>The bulk of the money collected during the Bond Drive was left in various banks in New York and remained untouched for a number of years.  In 1927, following legal action between the Irish Government and Eamon de Valera, a court in New York ordered that money outstanding to bond holders must be paid back.  Having anticipated such a ruling, de Valera’s legal team invited bond holders to sign over their bonds to de Valera, for which they were paid 58 cents to the dollar.  The monies so accumulated were used to launch the national daily newspaper *The Irish Press*.  Stephen O’Mara served on the paper’s Board of Directors until his resignation in 1935.<lb/><lb/>In 1932, Stephen O’Mara was once again sent to America on a mission involving the various consular and diplomatic offices maintained in the country by the Irish Government.  Two years later, he was appointed a member of the Commission on Vocational Organisation, on which he served until 1943.  In 1959, he was created a member of the Council of State following de Valera’s inauguration as President of Ireland.  Stephen O’Mara died less than two months after his appointment, on 11 November 1959.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara Junior married in 1918 Anne O’Brien, third daughter of Thomas O’Brien of Boru House, and the couple had an adopted son, Peter O’Mara.  Anne’s youngest sister, Kate O’Brien, became one of the most prominent novelists in 20th-century Ireland and a voice of the respectable Irish Roman Catholic middle class.</p>
          </note>
        </bioghist>
        <odd type="publicationStatus">
          <p>Published</p>
        </odd>
        <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
          <p>This sub-series contains newspaper interviews with and articles about Kate O'Brien, and obituaries and other newspaper cuttings relating to her death.</p>
        </scopecontent>
        <arrangement encodinganalog="3.3.4">
          <p>The material is grouped by subject matter and the groups arranged chronologically by date.</p>
        </arrangement>
        <phystech encodinganalog="3.4.3">
          <p>Paper documents in good condition.</p>
        </phystech>
        <accessrestrict encodinganalog="3.4.1">
          <p>Unrestricted access to all items.</p>
        </accessrestrict>
        <c level="file">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Assorted press cuttings relating to Kate O’Brien</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="IE" repositorycode="2135">P40/3/10/2/4/1</unitid>
            <unitid type="alternative" label="Original number">P40/858</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1930-01-01/1973-12-31" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1930-1973</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        42 items    </physdesc>
            <langmaterial encodinganalog="3.4.3">
              <language langcode="eng">English</language>
            </langmaterial>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <famname id="atom_124706_actor">O'Mara family of Strand House, Limerick</famname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-be03d29153491160a15961757089b84f" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>The history of the O’Mara family of Strand house and O’Mara’s Bacon Company go hand in hand.  The factory was founded in 1839 by James O’Meara (1817-1899), who originated from the village of Toomevaara in county Tipperary.  Having worked for some years in the woollen mills in Clonmel, he got a job as a clerk with Matterson’s Bacon Factory in Limerick and in 1839 founded O’Mara’s Bacon Company in his house on Mungret Street.  It is said that he dropped the ‘e’ from his surname as he felt that O’Meara was too long for commercial purposes.  James initially sold for Matterson’s but soon began to cure his own bacon in the basement of his house.  As his business grew, he acquired dedicated premises for the purpose near the top of Roche’s Street.<lb/><lb/>In 1841, James O’Mara married Honora Fowley (d. 1878), who worked in the bacon business alongside her husband.  A devoted nationalist, James was one of the early supporters of Isaac Butt’s Home Rule movement.  He was High Sheriff of Limerick City in 1887, and acted as Town Councillor on Limerick Corporation at least from 1888 to 1898.<lb/><lb/>James and Honora O’Mara had 13 children, of whom the two eldest surviving sons, Stephen O’Mara (1844-1926) and John (Jack) O’Mara (1856-1919) were instrumental in building up the O’Mara’s Bacon Factory into a great success.   The youngest son, Joseph (Joe) O’Mara (1864-1927) became a celebrated opera singer.<lb/><lb/>When James O’Mara retired from business his son John (Jack) O’Mara became manager of the O’Mara Bacon Factory.  In the late 1880s, Jack was invited to Russia by Tsar Alexander III to provide instruction on bacon curing.  He stayed in St Petersburg to supervise the construction of a bacon factory.  In 1891, his father bought the rights of the Russian Bacon Company and the family imported bacon from Russia into London until 1903.  James (Jim) O’Mara (1858-1893) acted as agent for O’Mara’s in London until his untimely death from heart disease.  His nephew James O’Mara (1873-1948), son of Stephen O’Mara Senior (1844-1926), took over the agency and held it until 1914.<lb/><lb/>When John (Jack) O’Mara died in 1919, his younger brother Stephen O’Mara (1844-1926) became Managing Director of O’Mara Limited and remained in that capacity until 1923.  Having entered into the family business at the age of fifteen, his great business acumen established O’Mara’s Bacon Factory as one of the most prominent commercial enterprises in Limerick city.  He also purchased a bacon factory in Palmerston, Ontario, Canada, which was managed by his son Joseph (Joe) O’Mara (1878-1950) until the business was wound up in the 1940s.<lb/><lb/>Like his father, Stephen O’Mara was a strong supporter of Isaac Butt’s Home Rule movement and a member of the committee which secured Butt’s election for Limerick city in 1871.  He later developed a close association with Charles Stewart Parnell and was elected Member of Parliament for Upper Ossory in Kilkenny South for the Irish Parliamentary Party in February 1886.  When the Irish National League split from Irish Parliamentary Party in December 1890, O’Mara took the Parnellite side.  He continued to act as trustee of the Party funds until 1908, when he resigned from his trusteeship.  Towards the end of his life, his moderate political views became more radicalised under the influence of his sons James (1873-1948) and Stephen Junior (1884-1959).  He had agreed with his son James’s decision to resign from the Irish Parliamentary Party in 1907 in order to join Sinn Fein, and personally supported the party in the 1918 General Election.  Both Stephen and his son James were strong supporters of the 1921 Anglo-Irish Treaty but were on friendly terms with Eamon de Valera who, it is said, spent the night at the O’Mara family home, Strand House, as the Treaty was being signed in London.  In the 1925 election, Stephen O’Mara was elected as Senator to the Free State Seanad.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara was also a prominent figure in local politics.  He became a Town Councillor on Limerick Corporation in the 1880s and was elected Mayor of Limerick in 1885.  He was the first Mayor of Limerick to be elected on a Nationalist ticket.  He also served as High Sheriff of Limerick city in 1888, 1913 and 1914.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara married Ellen Pigott in 1867, and the couple had 12 children of whom the eldest three died tragically of diphtheria in 1872.  From c. 1909 onwards, the family lived at Strand House.  Their third son, Stephen O’Mara Junior, was born on 5 January 1884.  He entered the family business in 1903 when he travelled to Canada to work in the bacon factory established by the O’Mara family in Ottawa.  In 1923, he became Managing Director of O’Mara Limited and created numerous employment opportunities by establishing bacon factories in Claremorris, County Mayo, and Letterkenny, County Donegal, in the 1930s.  The three bacon companies were amalgamated in 1938 and formed into the Bacon Company of Ireland.  Stephen O’Mara Junior remained the company’s chairman until his death in 1959.  In 1987, the Bacon Company of Ireland merged with Hanley of Rooskey and Benesford UK (Castlebar) with assistance from the Industrial Development Agency Ireland (IDA) to form Irish Country Bacon.  Shortly afterwards the old O’Mara factory in Limerick was closed down.  It was subsequently demolished to make way for a multi-storey car park.<lb/><lb/>Throughout his life, Stephen O’Mara Junior played a prominent role in both local and national affairs.  Unlike his father and elder brother James, Stephen was opposed to the Anglo-Irish Treaty but in a conciliatory manner.  He was prominently identified with the Sinn Fein movement after the Easter Rising.  He was one of Eamon de Valera’s strongest supporters and a member of his Fianna Fail Party since its formation in 1926.<lb/><lb/>When George Clancy, Lord Mayor of Limerick, and his predecessor Michael O’Callaghan were murdered by the British military forces in March 1921, Stephen decided to stand for election and became Mayor.  He was re-elected in 1922 and in 1923 but resigned before the expiration of his term of office.<lb/><lb/>In 1921, Stephen O’Mara Junior was selected to go to America as Special Envoy appointed by Dáil Éireann to the United States to oversee one of the country’s biggest fundraising drives to finance the first Dáil and was made Trustee of the funds.  The funds-drive was terminated following the signing of the Anglo-Irish Treaty.  Considering himself as the exchequer to the Irish Free State, O’Mara refused to hand over the collected funds to the pro-Treaty administration which resulted in his imprisonment in 1922-1923.  He had also been imprisoned for seven days in 1921 for refusing to pay a fine of £10 for non-compliance with a military summons.<lb/><lb/>The bulk of the money collected during the Bond Drive was left in various banks in New York and remained untouched for a number of years.  In 1927, following legal action between the Irish Government and Eamon de Valera, a court in New York ordered that money outstanding to bond holders must be paid back.  Having anticipated such a ruling, de Valera’s legal team invited bond holders to sign over their bonds to de Valera, for which they were paid 58 cents to the dollar.  The monies so accumulated were used to launch the national daily newspaper *The Irish Press*.  Stephen O’Mara served on the paper’s Board of Directors until his resignation in 1935.<lb/><lb/>In 1932, Stephen O’Mara was once again sent to America on a mission involving the various consular and diplomatic offices maintained in the country by the Irish Government.  Two years later, he was appointed a member of the Commission on Vocational Organisation, on which he served until 1943.  In 1959, he was created a member of the Council of State following de Valera’s inauguration as President of Ireland.  Stephen O’Mara died less than two months after his appointment, on 11 November 1959.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara Junior married in 1918 Anne O’Brien, third daughter of Thomas O’Brien of Boru House, and the couple had an adopted son, Peter O’Mara.  Anne’s youngest sister, Kate O’Brien, became one of the most prominent novelists in 20th-century Ireland and a voice of the respectable Irish Roman Catholic middle class.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Assorted press cuttings relating to Kate O’Brien, mainly interviews with the author and accounts of lectures delivered and functions attended by her.  In two folders.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Copy of ‘Irish Illustrated’</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="IE" repositorycode="2135">P40/3/10/2/4/2</unitid>
            <unitid type="alternative" label="Original number">P40/859</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1956-09-01/1956-09-30" encodinganalog="3.1.3">September 1956</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        1 item    </physdesc>
            <repository>
              <corpname>Special Collections and Archives Department</corpname>
              <address>
                <addressline>GL0-051, Glucksman Library, University of Limerick</addressline>
                <addressline>Limerick</addressline>
                <addressline>Ireland</addressline>
                <addressline>V94 DPY6</addressline>
                <addressline>Telephone: +353-61-202690</addressline>
                <addressline>Fax: +353-61-213415</addressline>
                <addressline>Email: specoll@ul.ie</addressline>
                <addressline>https://specialcollections.ul.ie/</addressline>
              </address>
            </repository>
            <langmaterial encodinganalog="3.4.3">
              <language langcode="eng">English</language>
            </langmaterial>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <famname id="atom_124709_actor">O'Mara family of Strand House, Limerick</famname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-be03d29153491160a15961757089b84f" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>The history of the O’Mara family of Strand house and O’Mara’s Bacon Company go hand in hand.  The factory was founded in 1839 by James O’Meara (1817-1899), who originated from the village of Toomevaara in county Tipperary.  Having worked for some years in the woollen mills in Clonmel, he got a job as a clerk with Matterson’s Bacon Factory in Limerick and in 1839 founded O’Mara’s Bacon Company in his house on Mungret Street.  It is said that he dropped the ‘e’ from his surname as he felt that O’Meara was too long for commercial purposes.  James initially sold for Matterson’s but soon began to cure his own bacon in the basement of his house.  As his business grew, he acquired dedicated premises for the purpose near the top of Roche’s Street.<lb/><lb/>In 1841, James O’Mara married Honora Fowley (d. 1878), who worked in the bacon business alongside her husband.  A devoted nationalist, James was one of the early supporters of Isaac Butt’s Home Rule movement.  He was High Sheriff of Limerick City in 1887, and acted as Town Councillor on Limerick Corporation at least from 1888 to 1898.<lb/><lb/>James and Honora O’Mara had 13 children, of whom the two eldest surviving sons, Stephen O’Mara (1844-1926) and John (Jack) O’Mara (1856-1919) were instrumental in building up the O’Mara’s Bacon Factory into a great success.   The youngest son, Joseph (Joe) O’Mara (1864-1927) became a celebrated opera singer.<lb/><lb/>When James O’Mara retired from business his son John (Jack) O’Mara became manager of the O’Mara Bacon Factory.  In the late 1880s, Jack was invited to Russia by Tsar Alexander III to provide instruction on bacon curing.  He stayed in St Petersburg to supervise the construction of a bacon factory.  In 1891, his father bought the rights of the Russian Bacon Company and the family imported bacon from Russia into London until 1903.  James (Jim) O’Mara (1858-1893) acted as agent for O’Mara’s in London until his untimely death from heart disease.  His nephew James O’Mara (1873-1948), son of Stephen O’Mara Senior (1844-1926), took over the agency and held it until 1914.<lb/><lb/>When John (Jack) O’Mara died in 1919, his younger brother Stephen O’Mara (1844-1926) became Managing Director of O’Mara Limited and remained in that capacity until 1923.  Having entered into the family business at the age of fifteen, his great business acumen established O’Mara’s Bacon Factory as one of the most prominent commercial enterprises in Limerick city.  He also purchased a bacon factory in Palmerston, Ontario, Canada, which was managed by his son Joseph (Joe) O’Mara (1878-1950) until the business was wound up in the 1940s.<lb/><lb/>Like his father, Stephen O’Mara was a strong supporter of Isaac Butt’s Home Rule movement and a member of the committee which secured Butt’s election for Limerick city in 1871.  He later developed a close association with Charles Stewart Parnell and was elected Member of Parliament for Upper Ossory in Kilkenny South for the Irish Parliamentary Party in February 1886.  When the Irish National League split from Irish Parliamentary Party in December 1890, O’Mara took the Parnellite side.  He continued to act as trustee of the Party funds until 1908, when he resigned from his trusteeship.  Towards the end of his life, his moderate political views became more radicalised under the influence of his sons James (1873-1948) and Stephen Junior (1884-1959).  He had agreed with his son James’s decision to resign from the Irish Parliamentary Party in 1907 in order to join Sinn Fein, and personally supported the party in the 1918 General Election.  Both Stephen and his son James were strong supporters of the 1921 Anglo-Irish Treaty but were on friendly terms with Eamon de Valera who, it is said, spent the night at the O’Mara family home, Strand House, as the Treaty was being signed in London.  In the 1925 election, Stephen O’Mara was elected as Senator to the Free State Seanad.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara was also a prominent figure in local politics.  He became a Town Councillor on Limerick Corporation in the 1880s and was elected Mayor of Limerick in 1885.  He was the first Mayor of Limerick to be elected on a Nationalist ticket.  He also served as High Sheriff of Limerick city in 1888, 1913 and 1914.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara married Ellen Pigott in 1867, and the couple had 12 children of whom the eldest three died tragically of diphtheria in 1872.  From c. 1909 onwards, the family lived at Strand House.  Their third son, Stephen O’Mara Junior, was born on 5 January 1884.  He entered the family business in 1903 when he travelled to Canada to work in the bacon factory established by the O’Mara family in Ottawa.  In 1923, he became Managing Director of O’Mara Limited and created numerous employment opportunities by establishing bacon factories in Claremorris, County Mayo, and Letterkenny, County Donegal, in the 1930s.  The three bacon companies were amalgamated in 1938 and formed into the Bacon Company of Ireland.  Stephen O’Mara Junior remained the company’s chairman until his death in 1959.  In 1987, the Bacon Company of Ireland merged with Hanley of Rooskey and Benesford UK (Castlebar) with assistance from the Industrial Development Agency Ireland (IDA) to form Irish Country Bacon.  Shortly afterwards the old O’Mara factory in Limerick was closed down.  It was subsequently demolished to make way for a multi-storey car park.<lb/><lb/>Throughout his life, Stephen O’Mara Junior played a prominent role in both local and national affairs.  Unlike his father and elder brother James, Stephen was opposed to the Anglo-Irish Treaty but in a conciliatory manner.  He was prominently identified with the Sinn Fein movement after the Easter Rising.  He was one of Eamon de Valera’s strongest supporters and a member of his Fianna Fail Party since its formation in 1926.<lb/><lb/>When George Clancy, Lord Mayor of Limerick, and his predecessor Michael O’Callaghan were murdered by the British military forces in March 1921, Stephen decided to stand for election and became Mayor.  He was re-elected in 1922 and in 1923 but resigned before the expiration of his term of office.<lb/><lb/>In 1921, Stephen O’Mara Junior was selected to go to America as Special Envoy appointed by Dáil Éireann to the United States to oversee one of the country’s biggest fundraising drives to finance the first Dáil and was made Trustee of the funds.  The funds-drive was terminated following the signing of the Anglo-Irish Treaty.  Considering himself as the exchequer to the Irish Free State, O’Mara refused to hand over the collected funds to the pro-Treaty administration which resulted in his imprisonment in 1922-1923.  He had also been imprisoned for seven days in 1921 for refusing to pay a fine of £10 for non-compliance with a military summons.<lb/><lb/>The bulk of the money collected during the Bond Drive was left in various banks in New York and remained untouched for a number of years.  In 1927, following legal action between the Irish Government and Eamon de Valera, a court in New York ordered that money outstanding to bond holders must be paid back.  Having anticipated such a ruling, de Valera’s legal team invited bond holders to sign over their bonds to de Valera, for which they were paid 58 cents to the dollar.  The monies so accumulated were used to launch the national daily newspaper *The Irish Press*.  Stephen O’Mara served on the paper’s Board of Directors until his resignation in 1935.<lb/><lb/>In 1932, Stephen O’Mara was once again sent to America on a mission involving the various consular and diplomatic offices maintained in the country by the Irish Government.  Two years later, he was appointed a member of the Commission on Vocational Organisation, on which he served until 1943.  In 1959, he was created a member of the Council of State following de Valera’s inauguration as President of Ireland.  Stephen O’Mara died less than two months after his appointment, on 11 November 1959.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara Junior married in 1918 Anne O’Brien, third daughter of Thomas O’Brien of Boru House, and the couple had an adopted son, Peter O’Mara.  Anne’s youngest sister, Kate O’Brien, became one of the most prominent novelists in 20th-century Ireland and a voice of the respectable Irish Roman Catholic middle class.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Copy of *Irish Illustrated*, vol. I, no. 2 (September 1956) which features an article on Irish writers, including Kate O’Brien.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
        <c level="file">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Obituaries and related press cuttings</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="IE" repositorycode="2135">P40/3/10/2/4/3</unitid>
            <unitid type="alternative" label="Original number">P40/860</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1974-01-01/1987-12-31" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1974, 1984, 1987</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        26 items    </physdesc>
            <repository>
              <corpname>Special Collections and Archives Department</corpname>
              <address>
                <addressline>GL0-051, Glucksman Library, University of Limerick</addressline>
                <addressline>Limerick</addressline>
                <addressline>Ireland</addressline>
                <addressline>V94 DPY6</addressline>
                <addressline>Telephone: +353-61-202690</addressline>
                <addressline>Fax: +353-61-213415</addressline>
                <addressline>Email: specoll@ul.ie</addressline>
                <addressline>https://specialcollections.ul.ie/</addressline>
              </address>
            </repository>
            <langmaterial encodinganalog="3.4.3">
              <language langcode="eng">English</language>
            </langmaterial>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <famname id="atom_124712_actor">O'Mara family of Strand House, Limerick</famname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-be03d29153491160a15961757089b84f" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>The history of the O’Mara family of Strand house and O’Mara’s Bacon Company go hand in hand.  The factory was founded in 1839 by James O’Meara (1817-1899), who originated from the village of Toomevaara in county Tipperary.  Having worked for some years in the woollen mills in Clonmel, he got a job as a clerk with Matterson’s Bacon Factory in Limerick and in 1839 founded O’Mara’s Bacon Company in his house on Mungret Street.  It is said that he dropped the ‘e’ from his surname as he felt that O’Meara was too long for commercial purposes.  James initially sold for Matterson’s but soon began to cure his own bacon in the basement of his house.  As his business grew, he acquired dedicated premises for the purpose near the top of Roche’s Street.<lb/><lb/>In 1841, James O’Mara married Honora Fowley (d. 1878), who worked in the bacon business alongside her husband.  A devoted nationalist, James was one of the early supporters of Isaac Butt’s Home Rule movement.  He was High Sheriff of Limerick City in 1887, and acted as Town Councillor on Limerick Corporation at least from 1888 to 1898.<lb/><lb/>James and Honora O’Mara had 13 children, of whom the two eldest surviving sons, Stephen O’Mara (1844-1926) and John (Jack) O’Mara (1856-1919) were instrumental in building up the O’Mara’s Bacon Factory into a great success.   The youngest son, Joseph (Joe) O’Mara (1864-1927) became a celebrated opera singer.<lb/><lb/>When James O’Mara retired from business his son John (Jack) O’Mara became manager of the O’Mara Bacon Factory.  In the late 1880s, Jack was invited to Russia by Tsar Alexander III to provide instruction on bacon curing.  He stayed in St Petersburg to supervise the construction of a bacon factory.  In 1891, his father bought the rights of the Russian Bacon Company and the family imported bacon from Russia into London until 1903.  James (Jim) O’Mara (1858-1893) acted as agent for O’Mara’s in London until his untimely death from heart disease.  His nephew James O’Mara (1873-1948), son of Stephen O’Mara Senior (1844-1926), took over the agency and held it until 1914.<lb/><lb/>When John (Jack) O’Mara died in 1919, his younger brother Stephen O’Mara (1844-1926) became Managing Director of O’Mara Limited and remained in that capacity until 1923.  Having entered into the family business at the age of fifteen, his great business acumen established O’Mara’s Bacon Factory as one of the most prominent commercial enterprises in Limerick city.  He also purchased a bacon factory in Palmerston, Ontario, Canada, which was managed by his son Joseph (Joe) O’Mara (1878-1950) until the business was wound up in the 1940s.<lb/><lb/>Like his father, Stephen O’Mara was a strong supporter of Isaac Butt’s Home Rule movement and a member of the committee which secured Butt’s election for Limerick city in 1871.  He later developed a close association with Charles Stewart Parnell and was elected Member of Parliament for Upper Ossory in Kilkenny South for the Irish Parliamentary Party in February 1886.  When the Irish National League split from Irish Parliamentary Party in December 1890, O’Mara took the Parnellite side.  He continued to act as trustee of the Party funds until 1908, when he resigned from his trusteeship.  Towards the end of his life, his moderate political views became more radicalised under the influence of his sons James (1873-1948) and Stephen Junior (1884-1959).  He had agreed with his son James’s decision to resign from the Irish Parliamentary Party in 1907 in order to join Sinn Fein, and personally supported the party in the 1918 General Election.  Both Stephen and his son James were strong supporters of the 1921 Anglo-Irish Treaty but were on friendly terms with Eamon de Valera who, it is said, spent the night at the O’Mara family home, Strand House, as the Treaty was being signed in London.  In the 1925 election, Stephen O’Mara was elected as Senator to the Free State Seanad.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara was also a prominent figure in local politics.  He became a Town Councillor on Limerick Corporation in the 1880s and was elected Mayor of Limerick in 1885.  He was the first Mayor of Limerick to be elected on a Nationalist ticket.  He also served as High Sheriff of Limerick city in 1888, 1913 and 1914.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara married Ellen Pigott in 1867, and the couple had 12 children of whom the eldest three died tragically of diphtheria in 1872.  From c. 1909 onwards, the family lived at Strand House.  Their third son, Stephen O’Mara Junior, was born on 5 January 1884.  He entered the family business in 1903 when he travelled to Canada to work in the bacon factory established by the O’Mara family in Ottawa.  In 1923, he became Managing Director of O’Mara Limited and created numerous employment opportunities by establishing bacon factories in Claremorris, County Mayo, and Letterkenny, County Donegal, in the 1930s.  The three bacon companies were amalgamated in 1938 and formed into the Bacon Company of Ireland.  Stephen O’Mara Junior remained the company’s chairman until his death in 1959.  In 1987, the Bacon Company of Ireland merged with Hanley of Rooskey and Benesford UK (Castlebar) with assistance from the Industrial Development Agency Ireland (IDA) to form Irish Country Bacon.  Shortly afterwards the old O’Mara factory in Limerick was closed down.  It was subsequently demolished to make way for a multi-storey car park.<lb/><lb/>Throughout his life, Stephen O’Mara Junior played a prominent role in both local and national affairs.  Unlike his father and elder brother James, Stephen was opposed to the Anglo-Irish Treaty but in a conciliatory manner.  He was prominently identified with the Sinn Fein movement after the Easter Rising.  He was one of Eamon de Valera’s strongest supporters and a member of his Fianna Fail Party since its formation in 1926.<lb/><lb/>When George Clancy, Lord Mayor of Limerick, and his predecessor Michael O’Callaghan were murdered by the British military forces in March 1921, Stephen decided to stand for election and became Mayor.  He was re-elected in 1922 and in 1923 but resigned before the expiration of his term of office.<lb/><lb/>In 1921, Stephen O’Mara Junior was selected to go to America as Special Envoy appointed by Dáil Éireann to the United States to oversee one of the country’s biggest fundraising drives to finance the first Dáil and was made Trustee of the funds.  The funds-drive was terminated following the signing of the Anglo-Irish Treaty.  Considering himself as the exchequer to the Irish Free State, O’Mara refused to hand over the collected funds to the pro-Treaty administration which resulted in his imprisonment in 1922-1923.  He had also been imprisoned for seven days in 1921 for refusing to pay a fine of £10 for non-compliance with a military summons.<lb/><lb/>The bulk of the money collected during the Bond Drive was left in various banks in New York and remained untouched for a number of years.  In 1927, following legal action between the Irish Government and Eamon de Valera, a court in New York ordered that money outstanding to bond holders must be paid back.  Having anticipated such a ruling, de Valera’s legal team invited bond holders to sign over their bonds to de Valera, for which they were paid 58 cents to the dollar.  The monies so accumulated were used to launch the national daily newspaper *The Irish Press*.  Stephen O’Mara served on the paper’s Board of Directors until his resignation in 1935.<lb/><lb/>In 1932, Stephen O’Mara was once again sent to America on a mission involving the various consular and diplomatic offices maintained in the country by the Irish Government.  Two years later, he was appointed a member of the Commission on Vocational Organisation, on which he served until 1943.  In 1959, he was created a member of the Council of State following de Valera’s inauguration as President of Ireland.  Stephen O’Mara died less than two months after his appointment, on 11 November 1959.<lb/><lb/>Stephen O’Mara Junior married in 1918 Anne O’Brien, third daughter of Thomas O’Brien of Boru House, and the couple had an adopted son, Peter O’Mara.  Anne’s youngest sister, Kate O’Brien, became one of the most prominent novelists in 20th-century Ireland and a voice of the respectable Irish Roman Catholic middle class.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
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          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Obituaries and other press cuttings relating to the death of Kate O’Brien.  Also posthumous press cuttings relating to the legacy of her work.</p>
          </scopecontent>
        </c>
      </c>
    </dsc>
  </archdesc>
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