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IE 2135 P51/6/5/2 · Item · 2 April 1929 (date of original)
Part of The Limerick Papers

Photocopy of the death certificate of William Henry Edmond de Vere Sheaffe Pery, [4th] Earl of Limerick, who died at Littlecourt, Surrey on 18 March 1929, copied from the General Registry Office records on 2 April 1929.

Pery family, Earls of Limerick
IE 2135 P13/1/1/5/10 · Item · [1990]
Part of The Robert Stradling Collection

Photocopy of handwritten memoirs of Matthew Beckett, former Legionnaire in ‘C’ Company of Irish Brigade, entitled The Irish Brigade and beginning with the line ‘Since the upheaval in Eastern Europe and the friendship that has arisen between the two Germanies and between the U.S. and Russia’. Records his view on fascism, noting ‘there has been a new thinking about Communism and Socialism and in time this may also show that Fascism (as it was conceived, but perhaps not practiced) may not have been such an evil thing at all, while Communism has been revealed in all its brutalities in Romania, East Germany, Hungary etc’, adding ‘Perhaps also it will show that the Irish Brigade with O’Duffy in Spain was fighting for an ideal far nobler and more important to mankind than the International Brigade’. Refers to recent deaths of other volunteers of Irish Brigade, namely Joe Cunningham, former Lieutenant Quartermaster in ‘D’ Company and Dan Walsh, former Legionnaire in ‘C’ Company. Also notes some of the names of other volunteers and their political persuasions, stating ‘contrary to the usual opinion that all who followed O’Duffy to Spain were Blueshirts, there were many who were identified with other parties like Capt Quinn ‘C’ Cy who was a Fine Gael man, Ward & Meaney, who were Northern Nationalists, Eamon Horan (Kerry), Dermot O’Sullivan (Dublin), [Mich] O’Brien (Dublin) were all prominent in Fianna Fail’. Also records memories of the journey to Spain via Portugal, on board the Ardeola, first night in Spain in place called Badajoz, stating ‘In Badajoz we had the first glimpse of the kind of war we were going into. The town had been captured by the Nationalists and recaptured by the Reds and had again been recaptured by the Nationalists a short time before we arrived. It bore the marks of war on many buildings – blood-stained walls, scribbled mottoes on buildings… The Church had been used a stable for the mules during the Red occupation and it was badly marked & statues burnt and defaced. A number of nuns from the adjoining convent had been tortured and shot’. Also refers to journey to training headquarters in Cáceres, arrival of new volunteers, members of the ‘C’ Company, and an incident involving one of the volunteers and a live grenade. Notes also order to go to the Front, and train journey there, stating ‘The train started off at a break-neck speed… the train was signalled to stop… As it came to a halt the driver & his mate jumped off and ran, but were quickly captured and we were informed that they were Red Army members’, followed by an account of journey to Ciempozuelos and attack by friendly troops from Canary Islands who mistook them for ‘Reds’, casualties, and some of Beckett’s responsibilities stating ‘I was in charge of supplies (as Headquarters Cpl.) and this meant supervision of stores and food preparation when we were in reserve. In the lines, it meant that we brought the food by mule cart & distributed it’, also notes move to [La Marañosa], and his role as Company Clerk which involved drafting routine orders, noting ‘It meant that I drafted coy. Orders, named the orderly officer in charge each day, orderly segt. And the men to go on “Police Duties”. The Routine Orders were then signed by the o/c and posted up.’ Also refers to end of six-month period and talk of going home, ‘At home, though we were not aware of this, the Government (urged on by the League of Nations) demanded the return of the Brigade, under the threat of taking away our right of citizenship’, and also notes the Irishmen that stayed behind to fight with a Spanish Bandera and concludes ‘The end of a dream perhaps, but we saw it as a gesture of Ireland’s gratitude to Spain for what Spain had done for Ireland in past. The cynic might well say – “Both efforts were failures”. We did not feel that way’. Paginated and recorded on loose sheets of a diary.

Stradling, Robert Arthur, scholar
IE 2135 P13/1/1/7/3 · Item · [1975]
Part of The Robert Stradling Collection

Photocopy of memoirs in typescript of Joseph Ó Cuinneagáin [Cunningham] entitled The War in Spain, printed by The Echo, Enniscorthy, county Wexford, with pages missing up to page eighteen, and begins ‘…to concede that Franco’s fine melange of forces, each with its own peculiar idea’, recording his views on Franco and his influence, an attack on the ‘Reds’ in the second week of March, stating ‘With more than 50,000 rounds of rifle and 12,000 of M.G. ammunition, ‘C’ Company had enough materials if judiciously employed, to last them one day’s hard fighting… our only doubts centred on the worthiness of our guns. Rifles, bearing dates ranging from 1890 to 1934 (and there were few as recent as this), are no great boon to modern infantry. None were automatic, and in practice, had carefully to be nursed, for ten rounds in quick succession so heated the breach as to compel a cessation of fire’. In addition, notes the arrival of a company of mixed Moorish and Spanish cavalry, meals, changes in command due to illness, and an attack seven miles from Valdemoro claiming some fifteen casualties stating ‘Even had the aircraft assisted the advance – and the weather forbade that essential aid – it would have been impossible to dislodge the posts in the caves, which held them as in a vice. An assault by night promised some success, by day it was a suicidal sacrifice, however noble its inherent inspiration’, cancellation of movement into village of Titulcia, and arrival of harps from Ireland, ‘It was a few days before the advance that harps arrived from Ireland to be a distinctive feature of our attire. One was worn on each lapel of our tunics, our attached Spanish officers taking particular pride in this emblem’. Also records the attack of a sniper and enhancing security through use of passwords stating ‘To combat this prevalence of sniping an order was issued authorising all sergeants to arrest those who, after 9.30p.m., could not give the night’s password. This had its comic side too as it led to the excruciating torture of Spanish place names.’ Also records celebration of St. Patrick’s Day, with wine, cigarettes and even a football match between young Spaniards and a section of the ‘D’ Company, noting ‘Play conformed to no fixed rules, but the association code was more in evidence than that of any other appellation. No quarter was given or asked but the thurstful Irish attack could not compare with the fine constructive craft of the Spanish combination’, manning the front, and the journey to La Marañosa. Paginated and some paragraphs underlined with notes in margins.

Stradling, Robert Arthur, scholar
IE 2135 P8/2/2/1 · Item · c. 1912-1931 (date of original)
Part of The Edward P. McGrath Papers

Photocopy of a letter from James Joyce to an unknown recipient requesting that she type his material for him. Request in form of three verses beginning ‘Dear, I am asking a favour’ in a parody of the poem Praise by Seumas O’Sullivan.

McGrath, Edward Patrick (1929-1994), journalist and consultant
IE 2135 P8/2/2/2 · Item · 31 January 1931
Part of The Edward P. McGrath Papers

Photocopy of a letter from James Joyce in Paris, France. Addressed to ‘Stephen’, in which he mentions his exhaustion due to his inability to sleep properly for the previous three months.

McGrath, Edward Patrick (1929-1994), journalist and consultant
IE 2135 P13/1/1/5/11 · Item · April 1991
Part of The Robert Stradling Collection

Photocopy of article in Mayo News entitled ‘Death of former Chairman of Westport U.D.C.’, which begins ‘MR. MATT BECKETT, St. Mary’s Crescent, Westport, who had died was a former Fine Gael Councillor on Westport U.D.C’, noting his role as chairman of West Mayo Gaelic Athletics Association Board and County Board, role in Westport Credit Union, parish activities and other commitments and his involvement in Spanish Civil War.

Stradling, Robert Arthur, scholar