The Peasant and Irish Ireland, Volume 2, Number 57.
- IE DCUA C2/1/3/4
- Item
- 7 March 1908
Part of Kenny Family Collection
A section of pages seven and eight has been cut out of the newspaper. Price: one penny.
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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.
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.
The Tailor and Ansty: correspondence
Part of Kenny Family Collection
Mainly consists of correspondence between Kenny and a number of individuals involved in a documentary researched and presented by Colum Kenny for RTÉ television about 'The Tailor and Ansty’ (husband and wife Timothy [‘the Tailor’] and Anastasia ['Ansty'] Buckley). The Tailor and Ansty were the subjects of a book by Eric Cross about their storytelling and home in Gougane Barra, County Cork, which became a hub for notable figures of the Cork arts scene in the 1930s and 1940s such as writers Frank O'Connor and Seán Ó Faoláin, sculptor Seamus Murphy, students of the Irish language, and folklorists. The book was published in 1942 and banned soon after. The RTÉ documentary included interviews with Cross, Ó Faoláin, and the Tailor and Ansty's close friend Nancy McCarthy-Allitt, and recounted the aftermath of the banning; including an episode when the Tailor was forced by three priests to burn a copy of the Eric Cross book in his fireplace. The documentary also included dramatised accounts of debates which took place in Seanad Éireann in December 1942 following the banning of the book. The RTÉ documentary was broadcast on 31 October 1978.
Part of Mary Mulvihill Collection
Mulvihill's audio documentary about the science of time.
Mulvihill, Mary
Part of Mary Mulvihill Collection
Mulvihill's audio documentary about the science of time.
Mulvihill, Mary
To-morrow, volume 1, numbers 1 and 2.
Part of Kenny Family Collection
Two issues of the literary magazine edited by Henry Francis Montgomery Stuart and Cecil Salkeld featuring contributions from Irish poets, writers and artists including WB Yeats, Lennox Robinson and Liam O’Flaherty. Volume 1, number 1 from August 1924 includes: ‘The Madonna of Slieve Dun’ by Lennox Robinson; ‘A Red Petticoat’ by Liam O’Flaherty; ‘Leda and the Swan’ by WB Yeats; ‘The Japanese Pine’ and ‘Just Now’ by Charlotte Arthur; ‘Be a Trembling Petal’ by Henry Francis Montgomery Stuart; ‘“As I was Among the Captives”’ by Joseph Campbell; ‘The Principles of Painting’ (with illustration) by Cecil Salkeld; an editorial by Henry Francis Montgomery Stuart and Cecil Salkeld; ‘Sonnet’ by OF Fleck; ‘Why we Live’ by ‘“Sachka”’; ‘A Primitive’ by LK Emery; Colour by Margaret Barrington, and ‘Alba’ by RND Wilson.
Volume 1, number 2 from September 1924 includes: ‘Honore Dumier’ by Arthur Symons; ‘The Garden’ by ‘Sachka’; ‘Marriage Song’ and an untitled poem by Blanaid Salkeld; ‘Wet Loveliness’ and ‘The Horse-Breaker’ by FR Higgins; ‘Two Poems’ [‘An Etching’ and ‘Gifts’] by Charlotte Arthur; ‘An P’ [in the German language] by OJ Fleck; ‘The Sea’ by RND Wilson; ‘In the Hour before Dawn’ by Henry Francis Montgomery Stuart; ‘The Popular Road’ by Iseult Stuart; ‘The Principles of Painting’ [continued from volume 1, number 1] (and illustration) by Cecil Salkeld, and ‘The Tendencies of the Younger Irish Poetry’ by LK Emery.
The address of the journal publisher is given as 13 Fleet Street, Dublin in volume 1, number 1 and is given as Roebuck House, Clonskeagh, Dublin in volume 1, number 2. Price of the journal is six pence.
Part of Mary Mulvihill Collection
Material used by Mulvihill in the tourism sector, principally her walking tours in Dublin and other parts of the country.
Mulvihill, Mary
Part of Mary Mulvihill Collection
Radio show on RTE, that was presented by Mary Mulvihill. It examined the latest works of Irish scientists and scientific stories from around the world. This programme was recorded in Trinity College, according to the cover label.
Mulvihill, Mary
Part of Mary Mulvihill Collection
Mulvihill, Mary
Part of Mary Mulvihill Collection
Mulvihill, Mary
Part of Mary Mulvihill Collection
Mulvihill, Mary
Transcript of letter from Seán Lester to Hugh McKinnon Wood, p0002
Part of Seán Lester Collection
Part of Mary Mulvihill Collection
Treasurer’s Reports from March 1991, November 1992 and November 1993.
Mulvihill, Mary
Two issues of Honesty journal.
Part of Kenny Family Collection
Part of Mary Mulvihill Collection
Mulvihill, Mary
Washed, Dried and Pressed (Medical Cabinet)
Part of Mary Mulvihill Collection
Guest is Matthew Jebb.
Mulvihill, Mary
Washed, Dried and Pressed (Medicine)
Part of Mary Mulvihill Collection
Radio documentary series examining the flora and fauna of the National Botanic Gardens. Researched and presented by Mulvihill. Produced by Dave McHugh. Guest is Matthew Jebb.
Mulvihill, Mary
Washed, Dried and Pressed (Shamrock)
Part of Mary Mulvihill Collection
Guest is Matthew Jebb.
Mulvihill, Mary
Washed, Dried and Pressed (Wollemi Pine)
Part of Mary Mulvihill Collection
Guest is Peter Wyse Jackson.
Mulvihill, Mary
While Stocks Last: fishermen, fish and fisheries science
Part of Mary Mulvihill Collection
Deals with the topics of over-fishing, conservation and regeneration and narrated by Mick Lally. Mulvihill is not featured.
Marine Institute Ireland
WITEC (Women in Technology in the European Community) and other European initiatives
Part of Mary Mulvihill Collection
Letters, programmes and reports from various organisations with ties to the European Union or European funding.
Includes: Letter from JTH Stewart (Commission of European Communities) to Mulvihill (27 March 1991) approving financial contributions to a WITS seminar to be held in Dublin late that year, invitation and subsequent conference report to the WITEC-UETP (Women in Technology in the European Community-University Enterprise Training Partnership) conference in Dublin Castle, 2-4 May 1991, WITEC document, Gender Issues in Technology - Guidelines for Action, a document outlining COMETT, the European Commission’s programme for high-level technology training.
Mulvihill, Mary
Part of Mary Mulvihill Collection
Segments about WITS on Irish evening news (00'10'' - 01'20''). Mulvihill is part of a seperate programme package in the Irish language about the Young Scientists Exhibition, (05'50'' - 07'40'').
Mulvihill, Mary
WITS Organisation, Structures and Administration
Part of Mary Mulvihill Collection
WITS Organisation, Structures and Administration
Mulvihill, Mary
Part of Mary Mulvihill Collection
Non-continuous run of newsletters published by WITS from nos. 1-48. The newsletters report on AGM meetings, interaction with universities in Ireland and in mainland Europe as well as regional reports and a noticeboard for members to publicise seminars and other meetings. Membership applications are also included in the newsletters along with contemporary accounts of female participation in fields of science and technology.
Mulvihill, Mary
Part of Mary Mulvihill Collection
On 15-16 February 1993, the European Community Directorate General for Science Research and Development (DG XII) organised a workshop to assess the position of women working in science and technology research in Europe. This report is an outline of the workshop proceedings for WITS and for those who provided information on women in S&T research in Ireland for presentation to the workshop.
Mulvihill, Mary
Women in Technology and Science (WITS)
Part of Mary Mulvihill Collection
WITS is a voluntary, independent organisation advocating, connecting and acting for women to be full and vital participants in science, technology, engineering, and mathematics (STEM). As a founder of WITS in 1990, Mulvihill was central to the organisation’s vision and overall aims. She also played a vital role in highlighting the often neglected role of women in the history of Irish science. This series of papers comprises of several sub-series detailing the various structures, governance, publications, correspondence and outreach of WITS from its foundation to its contemporary achievements.
Mulvihill, Mary
Part of Seán Lester Collection
Concerns League of Nations and Seán Lester from pp.14-27
World Order Papers, No. 2 (1940), p0002
Part of Seán Lester Collection
World Order Papers, No. 2 (1940), p0003
Part of Seán Lester Collection
World Order Papers, No. 2 (1940), p0004
Part of Seán Lester Collection
World Order Papers, No. 2 (1940), p0005
Part of Seán Lester Collection
World Order Papers, No. 2 (1940), p0006
Part of Seán Lester Collection
World Order Papers, No. 2 (1940), p0007
Part of Seán Lester Collection
World Order Papers, No. 2 (1940), p0008
Part of Seán Lester Collection
World Order Papers, No. 2 (1940), p0009
Part of Seán Lester Collection
World Order Papers, No. 2 (1940), p0010
Part of Seán Lester Collection
World Order Papers, No. 2 (1940), p0011
Part of Seán Lester Collection
World Order Papers, No. 2 (1940), p0012
Part of Seán Lester Collection
World Order Papers, No. 2 (1940), p0013
Part of Seán Lester Collection
World Order Papers, No. 2 (1940), p0014
Part of Seán Lester Collection
World Order Papers, No. 2 (1940), p0015
Part of Seán Lester Collection
World Order Papers, No. 2 (1940), p0016
Part of Seán Lester Collection
Part of Mary Mulvihill Collection
Mulvihill produced and edited two books about historic Irish women scientists: Lab Coats and Lace (Dublin, 2009) and Stars, Shells and Bluebells (Dublin, 1997), (as its publisher, see WITS series for research material for this book). She also wrote a guide for more sustainable living in Drive like a Woman, Shop like a Man (Dublin, 2009). There are some research materials relating to this title within this series but the bulk of its material relates to her seminal book Ingenious Ireland: A County-by-County Exploration of Irish Mysteries and Marvels, which was originally published in 2002 and again after her death in 2019.
It is widely recognised as an outstanding piece of individual research that gave life to the memory of people and places in Ireland associated with scientific, medical and engineering achievements. Other writings within this series are poems written by Mulvihill soon after she left Trinity College in the 1980s and some preparation material for her Ingenious Dublin guidebook. However, the exhaustive research undertaken by Mulvihill for her seminal work provides the content for the most part.
Mulvihill, Mary