- IE DCUA C2/1/3/1
- Item
- 1 January 1901
Part of Kenny Family Collection
Periodical described as a 'pan-Celtic monthly magazine’.
Part of Kenny Family Collection
Periodical described as a 'pan-Celtic monthly magazine’.
Part of Kenny Family Collection
Newspaper cutting includes a report of a meeting of the National Holiday Committee campaigning for St Patrick’s Day to be made a national holiday. Those reported as present included Kevin J Kenny. Cutting also includes letter received from Archbishop of Dublin, William J Walsh in support of the campaign.
Sinn Féin: The Oldcastle Monthly Review, Volume 13.
Part of Kenny Family Collection
Note from Roger Casement to 'the Manager' of The Nationist newspaper.
Part of Kenny Family Collection
Undated note from Roger Casement to 'The Manager, The Nationist, 53 Middle Abbey Street, Dublin'. Note reads: 'Dear Sir, I should be obliged if you would now send my copy of The Nationist to the Quay, Ballycastle, Antrim, instead of to the English address hitherto given. Yours faithfully, Roger Casement.'
The note is handwritten on headed paper from Exchange Station Hotel (Lanc & York Rly), Liverpool [the address is scored out]. The Nationist, edited by Tom Kettle, was a weekly newspaper that appeared in 1905 and 1906. Kenny was the business manager of the newspaper.
The Peasant and Irish Ireland, Volume 2, Number 57.
Part of Kenny Family Collection
A section of pages seven and eight has been cut out of the newspaper. Price: one penny.
Notice from R McKenna, Treasury Chambers, London regarding the payment of wages in gold.
Part of Kenny Family Collection
Part of Kenny Family Collection
Undated printed page which reads:
'Personal note from Major-General Aylmer Hunter-Weston, C.B., D.S.O., to each man of the 29th Division on the occasion of their first going into action together. The Major-General Commanding congratulates the division on being selected for an enterprise the success of which will have a decisive effect on the War. The eyes of the world are upon us and your deeds will live in history. To us now is given an opportunity of avenging our friends and relatives who have fallen in France and Flanders. Our comrades there willingly gave their lives in thousands and tens of thousands for our King and Country, and by their glorious courage and dogged tenacity they defeated the invaders and broke the German offensive. We must also be prepared to suffer hardships, privations, thirst, and heavy losses, by bullets, by shells, by mines, by drowning. But if each man feels, as is true, that on him individually, however small or however great his task, rests the success or failure of the expedition, and therefore the honour of the empire and the welfare of his own folk at home, we are certain to win through to a glorious victory. In Nelson’s time it was England, now it is the whole British Empire, which expects each man of us will do his duty. A. H-W.' Major-General Aylmer Hunter-Weston was commander of the British 29th Division on the Gallipoli peninsula in April 1915. 'Keep this and never loose [sic] it' is written in pencil underneath Hunter-Weston's message. Another lightly written and mostly illegible note in pencil is also visible on the reverse of the page.
The Spark, volume 1, number 4.
Part of Kenny Family Collection
Issue I (no. 4), dated 28 February 1915. The Spark was edited by 'Ed. Dalton', a pseudonym used by James W Upton.
Part of Kenny Family Collection
Letter from James Creed Meredith to Kevin J Kenny
Part of Kenny Family Collection
Letters from Kevin J Kenny to the Cork Constitution newspaper and an unidentified editor
Part of Kenny Family Collection
Part of Kenny Family Collection
Statement made by Thomas MacDonagh during his court martial following the Easter Rising, 1916.
Part of Kenny Family Collection
Typed copy of statement. The statement was circulated in a pamphlet after the Rising and was denounced by the authorities as a fake. It would appear from MacDonagh's court martial file that he did not give such a statement.
Part of Kenny Family Collection
Leaflet reads as follows: 'Lá na Marbh, 1916, All Souls’ Day, 1916. Your prayers are earnestly requested for the repose of the souls of the following Irishmen who were executed by Military Law this year: [includes list of 16 names] Also for the repose of the souls of the following men who were killed whilst fighting for Ireland, during Easter Week, 1916: [includes list of 52 names] Go nDeinidh dia trocaire ar a nAnamaibh'.
Pass made out to Kevin J Kenny by the British Intelligence Office.
Part of Kenny Family Collection
Flyer for an address by Eóin Mac Néill [Eóin MacNeill] and concert at the Antient Concert Rooms.
Part of Kenny Family Collection
Two copies of a flyer advertising a concert in the Antient Concert Rooms, [52 Great Brunswick Street (now Pearse Street), Dublin] at which the flyer states, Eóin Mac Néill, President of the Irish Volunteers, will deliver 'an important address' on 'the present crisis'. The concert date is given as 'Sunday Night, April 9th' meaning that the flyer is most likely from 1916.
Note from Arthur Griffith to Kevin J Kenny.
Part of Kenny Family Collection
Design for the front-page of a periodical called Listen!
Part of Kenny Family Collection
Hand-drawn design on a scrap of torn paper. Subtitle included in the design describes the periodical as 'Ireland’s best story paper'. Part of what appears to be a printed letter is visible on the reverse of the page and is signed off with the printed name 'T.M. Kettle' [Thomas Michael Kettle].
Part of Kenny Family Collection
Stencil copy petition to King George V from the Protestant British-Israel League regarding Sir Henry Howard's role as the first formal British envoy to the Vatican in over 300 years. Petition warns of a conspiracy to overthrow the Protestant succession and restore a 'Roman Catholic Dynasty' in England. Also warns that the placing the Home Rule Bill on the Statute Book will make Ireland 'a base for Jesuit wirepullers and plotters in the cause of subverting Your Majesty's Throne and Authority'. Lists examples of 'manifestations of Divine displeasure' when past concessions to Rome have been made by the British government, such as the sinking of the RMS Empress of Ireland (29 May 1914) following the passing of the Home Rule Bill, and that the 'Royal assent to the Bill was followed by the sinking of the three Cruisers “Hogue, Cressy and Aboukir.”’ The petitioners are listed as Agusta Cook, President; Heywood Smith MA, MD, Vice President, and CW Burge, Honorary Treasurer.
The petition is undated, but references in the text to the '[Air] Raid' on [Great] Yarmouth and King’s Lynn, [Norfolk, UK] (19 January 1915), and Sir Henry Howard's mission to the Vatican, dates it to between 19 January 1915 and August 1916 (when Howard retired).
Part of Kenny Family Collection
'Documents presented to the U.S. Government on behalf of the Irish Republic'.
Part of Kenny Family Collection
Fragile single-sided printed page, possibly from a newspaper or pamphlet. Document details the declaration presented to the USA Government on behalf of the Irish Republic by Dr Patrick McCartan in July 1917. Includes the complete declaration signed by Irish nationalist leaders such as 'Edward de Valera' [sic], Eóin MacNéill and 'Des Fitzgerald', and a 'note' by McCartan addressed to the President and Congress of the United States. Also includes an '[e]xtract from the trial of A. Stack' [?Austin Stack].
McCartan would go on to serve as the Irish Provisional Government envoy to the USA, 1918-1920. Charles Tansill writes in America and the Fight for Irish Freedom 1866-1922: An Old Story Based Upon New Data (New York: Devin-Adair Company, 1957) that the signatories of the declaration had been released from prison (following their part in the Easter Rising) on 18 June 1917 as a gesture of good will to American public opinion. Tansill notes that the statement was written by MacNéill upon their release and taken by Patrick McCartan to the USA, where it was presented at the White House on 23 July 1917.
Letter from [Isaac] W Bullen of Jeremiah Lyon & Company Limited, London to Kevin J Kenny
Part of Kenny Family Collection
Letter from the Boundary Commission (Ireland), Local Government Board, Dublin to Kevin J Kenny
Part of Kenny Family Collection
Letter from [?Kevin J Kenny] to John T Donovan BL MP, 1 Heathfield Villas, Terenure, Dublin.
Part of Kenny Family Collection
Priority Reference and Classification permit granted to the Irish Recruiting Council.
Part of Kenny Family Collection
Letter from William [John] Henry Brayden, 28 Adelaide Road, Dublin to Kevin J Kenny.
Part of Kenny Family Collection
Ministry of Food Sugar Registration Card for Kevin J Kenny.
Part of Kenny Family Collection
Card includes Kenny's address and other details: '279 North Circular Road, Dublin. Retailer: Geo Ed [?George Edward] Kelly, 348 N.C. Rd. [North Circular Road]. No. of persons: Eleven.'
Part of Kenny Family Collection
Part of Kenny Family Collection
Dáil Éireann Belfast Boycott leaflet.
Part of Kenny Family Collection
Part of Kenny Family Collection
Note from Maírín bean Uí Riain, Department of Foreign Affairs, Dáil Éireann [to Kevin J Kenny].
Part of Kenny Family Collection
Report by the [?Director of Trade and Commerce, Ernest Blythe].
Part of Kenny Family Collection
Note from S Mac Oireachtaigh, Belfast Trade Boycott Central Committee, to Kevin J Kenny.
Part of Kenny Family Collection
Letter from Thomas Rutledge, Under Sheriff, Westport, County Mayo to Kenny's Advertising Agency.
Part of Kenny Family Collection
Note discussing the proposed cessation of Civil War hostilities
Part of Kenny Family Collection
Stencil copy of typed single page. Lists conditions upon which a cessation of hostilities may occur. One of the conditions includes the '[d]eclaration of [Éamon] De Valera and [WT] Cosgrove [sic] that unless requested by two-thirds of new Parliament neither will accept office of head of State.'
Photograph of the first Kenny's Advertising Agency dance, 17 February 1922.
Part of Kenny Family Collection
Part of Kenny Family Collection
Envelope addressed to ‘Kevin J Kenny' with a receipt of payment signed by George Barrett.
Part of Kenny Family Collection
Dublin Civic Week, 17-25 September 1927: general programme.
Part of Kenny Family Collection
The last page of the programme is torn. It is possible that Kevin J Kenny was involved in the organisation of Dublin Civic Week in 1927.
'Imperial Preference – Certificate of Origin E' form.
Part of Kenny Family Collection
Form relates to the importation of a '[s]tandard 10 h.p. de luxe saloon [?motor car] by John G McEntagart, Director and Secretary, McEntagart Brothers Limited’. Some of the entries in the form are filled in with typed and handwritten text.
It is likely that this car was purchased by Kevin J Kenny from McEntagart Brothers Limited.
Memorial card for Kevin J Kenny.
Part of Kenny Family Collection
Memorial card commemorating the death of Kevin J Kenny. Kevin died on 14 September 1954 in the Bon Secours nursing home, Glasnevin, Dublin.
‘Council of the Advertising/Press Club 1956-57': photograph.
Part of Kenny Family Collection
Michael B Kenny is visible seated second from left wearing the Chairman's chain.
Photograph of ‘Kenny’s Advertising Limited’ building at 84-86 Baggot Street, Dublin.
Part of Kenny Family Collection
Exterior shot of the building with logo and sign that reads ‘KENNYS ADVERTISING LIMITED’. The company was based at this location between 1963 and 1974.
Letter from Jeremiah Newman, Bishop of Limerick, to Colum Kenny.
Part of Kenny Family Collection
Newman replies to a letter from Kenny, which had included a copy of a book by Alan Watts [according to Colum Kenny, the book was most likely Cloud-Hidden, Whereabouts Unknown: A Mountain Journal (1974). Kenny sent Newman the letter and book in response to some reported comments made by Newman. The letter from Newman discusses Catholic attitudes to sex and warns Kenny about Alan Watts' writings on religion: 'I would like to warn you against getting too involved in that kind of literature'. According to Colum Kenny, Bishop Newman spoke about contraception and the relationship between church and state in an RTÉ interview broadcast on 30 March 1976.
Part of Kenny Family Collection
Photocopy letter describes a radio report by Colum Kenny on the RTÉ Radio 1 radio programme ‘Day by Day’ concerning the imprisonment of Nicky Kelly as ‘biased and prejudiced and totally in favour of the defendant.’ The report included a re-enactment of some of the evidence in the case.
Letter from Liz Forgan, Director of Programmes, Channel 4 to Colum Kenny.
Part of Kenny Family Collection
Discusses the UK service’s attitude to Ireland, the reporting of Irish affairs, and commissioning of programmes by Irish producers.
Part of Kenny Family Collection
Colum joined the School of Communications at the National Institute for Higher Education Dublin [now Dublin City University (DCU)] in 1982.
Letters from Fr Brendan Bradshaw, Queens’ College, Cambridge, UK to Colum Kenny.
Part of Kenny Family Collection
Includes two brief letters from Bradshaw. In the first letter dated 23 September 1988, he thanks Kenny for the ‘offprint and review both of which I read with considerable interest and much to my benefit.’ He notes that '[t]he revisionists here and elsewhere are simply exchanging one distortion with another. Your careful research goes towards correcting both.' In the second letter, with postmark dated 5 November 1990 [according to a pencil annotation by Colum Kenny], Bradshaw thanks Kenny for ‘the encouraging letter regarding my article in I.H.S. [Irish Historical Studies].’ Referencing revisionism again, he adds: ‘I realise that I am swimming against the current and have no doubt that a price will have to be paid in some form or another. For the moment, however, the strategy seems to be to allow the anti-revisionist flak to spend itself before mounting a counter-assault.’
Also includes Kenny’s journal article ‘The Exclusion of Catholics from the legal profession in Ireland, 1537-1829’ published in volume XXV, number 100 (November 1987) of Irish Historical Studies. This is possibly a copy of the ‘offprint’ that Bradshaw references in the first letter. Kenny references Bradshaw’s book The Dissolution of the Religious Orders in Ireland under Henry VIII (Cambridge, 1974) in this article.
Letter from John O’Loan, Head of News, SKY News to Colum Kenny.
Part of Kenny Family Collection
O’Loan replies to Kenny explaining why SKY News had included Ireland under the designation ‘British Isles’ on its standard weather map and states that the practice has now been discontinued as ‘being correct is not always right.
History of Kenny’s Advertising Agency, written by Michael B Kenny.
Part of Kenny Family Collection
Photocopy of a single-page handwritten note. Photocopy includes an inscription by Colum Kenny with regard to the handwritten note that reads: ‘This is in the handwriting of my late father, Michael B. Kenny.’
Part of Kenny Family Collection
Biography mentions that Michael ‘passed away last September’. It was possibly written by Michael’s son Colum Kenny.
Irish Manufacturers’ Directory, 1902.
Part of Kenny Family Collection
Kenny Family (Dublin) Papers at DCU.
Part of Kenny Family Collection
The original finding aid arranges the collection into three parts focussing on Kevin J Kenny, Michael B Kenny and Colum Kenny respectively, as with this present finding aid. The arrangement of the sub-series and descriptions differ mostly, but some have been maintained.
Closed sections of the original finding aid created by Colum Kenny.
Part of Kenny Family Collection
Pages from the original finding aid relating to Colum’s work on certain RTÉ television programmes which are currently closed for access.