Letter to Walsh from Radio Éireann (signature indecipherable), General Post Office, Dublin, regarding Lieutenant Chambers. States that he could not get any information on him. Sir John Maffey (British minister in Ireland) had made enquiries and was informed that the Red Cross was investigating. Another source failed to obtain anything.
Walsh, Maurice (1879-1964), writerLetter from R. Mackey, Circulation Manager, Thomas Crosbie & Co. Ltd., 95 Patrick Street, Cork, to M[aureen]. C. Ahern, 34 Shannon Drive, Corbally[, Limerick City], enclosing a copy of the 29 July 1960 issue of the Cork Examiner (now not present) containing a reference to Condell.
Condell, Frances née Eades (1916-1986), first female Mayor of LimerickLetter from R. Harvey, President of the Limerick Chamber of Commerce, relating to a petition respecting the renewal of the East India charter.
Rice, Thomas Spring, 1st Baron Monteagle of BrandonLetter to Walsh from R. G. Kirk, Los Angeles, praising The Dark Rose (American title of And No Quarter) ‘in this day when so much swill gets into print’.
Walsh, Maurice (1879-1964), writerLetter from Pierce Beazley, Manchester Prison to Madge Daly, thanking her for a delivery of books and making brief references to the conditions in Manchester Jail and the current state of affairs in Ireland.
Daly Family of Limerick CityLetter from Pierce Beazley, 'An Claidheamh Soluis', 25 Parnell Square, Dublin to Madge Daly relating to a lecture he is prepared to give in Limerick on the Irish Revolution, adding the proviso that ‘I would prefer not to talk about my prison experiences, nor indeed to strike a personal note at all.’
Daly Family of Limerick CityLetter from Pierce Beazley, 'An Claidheamh Soluis', 25 Parnell Square, Dublin to Madge Daly, regretting that he must keep his visit to Limerick as brief as possible owing to his busy schedule.
Daly Family of Limerick CityLetter from Philomena Plunkett, 13 Belgrave Road, Dublin to [Madge?] Daly, relating to a plan to have a special mass said in Dublin for ‘the men’ on All Souls Day and asking Daly to arrange one in Limerick.
Daly Family of Limerick CityLetter to Walsh from Philip E. Kubel, J. W. Robinson Company, Los Angeles. States that he has ‘been selling books for thirty years come this December and I am plenty hard-boiled’, but Walsh deserves great praise for his work and is too modest. He has ‘given the world a galaxy of fine decent people to associate with and enjoy the companionship thereof’. Notes the ‘homecoming of David and Father Senan’ in Blackcock’s Feather and the ‘courtroom scene’ in The Road to Nowhere. Kubel is trying to ‘tell the movie people that The Small Dark Man was written for Ronald Coleman’.
Walsh, Maurice (1879-1964), writerLetter from Peter Straus, Senior Editor, Hodder & Stoughton Paperbacks enclosing a proof jacket of Duffy Is Dead (now not present).
O’Neill, Jeremiah Michael (1921-1999), novelist and playwright