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Notes relating to the ESB
IE 2135 P28/3/5/1 · Unidad documental simple · [1979]
Parte de The Simon Dalby Papers

Notes entitled ‘Course Projects Dept of Sociology U of Dublin’, comprising notes relating to the ESB and a bibliography of four books.

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IE 2135 P38 · Fondo · 1784-1824

Bound hardback account book, embossed on the spine 'Limerick Rent Book 180-1824' in gilt lettering. The book contains accounts kept by Francis Arthur, merchant and developer of Limerick city, primarily of rents collected from tenants of properties in his possession, including Arthurs Quay, Francis Street, Patrick Street, Denmark Street, William Street, Market Alley, Market Stalls, Boherboy & Sexton Street, Georges Street, Mary Street, Robert Street, Coloony Street, Pennywell, Coonagh and Mary Field in Limerick together with stores and ‘two extensive & valuable tenements situate in Buckingham Square & White Street' in Cork city. The book also contains accounts of Francis Arthur's annual business income and outgoings and of insurances payable by him, lists of rents assigned by Francis Arthur to his son Patrick Edmond Arthur and his son-in-law Daniel Leahy upon their respective marriages; transactions with various private banks including Robert Shaw & Co; Curtis, Robarts & Co.; and Thomas and William Roche; accounts of various court cases in which Arthur was involved and legal matters relating to the death of his son-in-law Patrick Grene [Greene] and his son Patrick Edmond Arthur; statements concerning bonds, mortgages and dividends; statements concerning rent arrears and other debts due to Arthur; and business accounts of his son-in-law Daniel Leahy. The latter pages contain accounts of financial transactions with individuals and businesses in France, including Luke Callaghan of Paris, Monsieur Everard Surdobbel of St Omer and Dominick Morel & Fils of Dunkerque [Dunkirk]. The accounts conclude with a list of Francis Arthur's funeral expenses added to the book in a different hand.

The back of the book contains a handwritten copy of a conveyance dated 1822 between Francis Arthur of the first part; his daughter Ellen Arthur of the second part; and his son-in-law Daniel Leahy of the third part, in which Arthur transfers the entirety of his property to Daniel Leahy to create a provision for his daughters Ellen Arthur and Margaret Leahy and to create a fund for his own maintenance and support.

The book is paginated but the pagination is irregular. For the accounts part, mirrored pagination has been applied, that is the verso and recto sides of an opening bear the same page number. Pages 1a-4a are missing, as are pages 10b/11a, 31b-35a, 42a/43b (except for the topmost part), 48b/49a, 51b/52a and 70b/71a. About one third of page 61b/62a is missing, while pages 74b/75a and 96b-98a lack bottom halves. From page 147 each page is numbered individually; page 154 appears three times, and from page 155 to book reverts to mirrored numbering until its conclusion with page 165. The pages at the end of the book containing the copy conveyance have been numbered individually, from 1 to 74. The intervening pages between these two sections are blank, except for sketches by a young person. Similar sketches appear on other pages throughout the book and are probably of late nineteenth- or early twentieth-century origin.

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IE 2135 P29/1/7 · Unidad documental simple · 15 March 1815
Parte de The Monsell of Tervoe Collection

Letter from William Bennett, Bishop of Cloyne (1746-1820) in London to the Reverend Samuel Monsell in Fermoy. The letter relates to the Board of First Fruits deeds, which Bennett encourages Monsell to sign. He also assures Monsell that ‘I will not call upon you to build a Glebe House’.

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IE 2135 P29/1/9 · Unidad documental simple · [c. 1800-1813?]
Parte de The Monsell of Tervoe Collection

Last will and testament of the Reverend Samuel Monsell, in which he bequeaths his house in Ballydaheen, Mallow and all its contents to Mary Hodges of Mallow, spinster, for her natural life, except for three hundred of his best books, which he bequeaths to the Right Reverend Joseph Stock, Lord Bishop of Waterford ‘to be by him disposed of to and amongst his Children as he shall think Proper’. The will bears Samuel Monsell’s seal but has not been signed, nor is it written in Monsell's hand, and was presumably never executed. A note on the reverse states: ‘Testamentary Paper found in the Iron chest of the late Samuel Monsell in Waterford 7 November 1818 – Daniel Henry Wall’.

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IE 2135 P29/1/11 · Unidad documental simple · 19 July 1840
Parte de The Monsell of Tervoe Collection

Letter from Edwin Richard Wyndham Quin (1812-1871), Viscount Adare, in Ormeau, Belfast to his sister Lady Anna Maria Monsell née Wyndham Quin (1814-1855), wife of William Monsell of Tervoe, county Limerick, informing her of his and his wife’s safe arrival in Ireland and giving a tentative idea of their forthcoming movements.

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Transcript of P29/1/2
IE 2135 P29/1/13 · Unidad documental simple · 2024
Parte de The Monsell of Tervoe Collection

Transcript of P29/1/2 prepared by the cataloguing archivist, based on the original document and the 1960s transcript (for which see P29/1/12) of same.

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IE 2135 P41 · Fondo · 2011-2013

CD-R containing Excel, JPEG, PDF and Word files of biographical and photographic information relating to the officers of the 10th Royal Hussars (The Prince of Wales’s Own) and their activities in India in 1910-1913 and during the First World War.

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The Tiede Herrema Papers
IE 2135 P22 · Fondo · 1970-2005

The collection comprises correspondence, press cuttings, press releases, reports, TV and radio broadcasts and photographs which reconstruct in considerable detail the events surrounding Herrema’s kidnapping and release and the subsequent trials of his abductors. Included among these items are police surveillance tapes recorded during the siege at Monasterevin and interior photographs of the house in which Herrema was held captive. Also included in the collection are correspondence, press cuttings, speeches, reports, photographs and recordings which illustrate Herrema’s career prior to and following his kidnapping, and his personal interests in later life. These items, in particular the considerable amount of material relating to Herrema’s appearance in the media, reflect the dramatic way in which the kidnapping changed the course of Herrema’s life.

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