Correspondence of William O'Brien,
[1892-1927].
The letter writers mainly discuss the political situation and their views on the causes of the current difficulties, with some personal references also. Several letters deal with the publication of O'Brien's book 'The Irish Revolution' and O'Brien discusses various issues arising from this with Timothy Healy and De Valera.
Saved in:
Show/hide more info.
Main Creator: | |
---|---|
Contributors: | |
Format: | Manuscript |
Language: | English |
Subjects: | |
Notes: | Circa 25 letters, the majority of which are between O'Brien and Timothy Healy. Other correspondents are John Dillon, Joseph Devlin, William Redmond, John Redmond, Eamon De Valera, Edward Carson, Horace Plunkett, Henry Campbell-Bannerman and Lord Dunraven. Also 2 newspaper cuttings and a copy of "The Irish Revolution / Dublin, Maunsel & Roberts / 1923". Physical description: 1 folder + 1 volume. more |
Arrangement: | Fonds |
Loading...
Letter from William O'Brien to Timothy Healy,
1922 May 23.
In Collection: | Correspondence of William O'Brien,1892-1927 |
---|---|
Description: | O'Brien gives his opinion on the divisions over the Treaty and how he thinks the current political situation should be handled. He has words of praise for a judge named Shaw. |
Main Creator: | |
Language: | English |
Extent: | 1 item. |
Format: | Manuscript |
Call Number: |
MS 50,544/13
(Manuscripts Reading Room) |
Rights: | Reproduction rights owned by the National Library of Ireland. |