Childers Papers.

The collection compiled after the death of Erskine Childers by his wife Mary Childers, consists of correspondence and papers relating to the Anglo-Irish Treaty and the Civil War. Included are documents relating to Cumann Léigheacht an Phobail and Dáil Éireann, transcripts of speeches on the Anglo-Irish Treaty, correspondence between Alice Stopford Green and Mary Alden Childers, an album of family photographs, and letters from friends of Dr. Hamilton Osgood, formerly in the possession of Margaret Cushing Osgood.

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Bibliographic Details
Main Creator: Childers, Mary Alden Osgood, 1875-1964
Contributors: Childers, Erskine, 1870-1922
Format: Manuscript
Language:English
Subjects:
Notes:Related Materials: Erskine Childers Papers, MSS 48,052-48,105 held in the Department of Manuscripts, National Library of Ireland.

Robert Erskine Childers was born in London on 25 June 1870, second son of Robert Caesar Childers and Anna Mary Henrietta Barton, whose family were from Glendalough House, Annamoe, Co. Wicklow. He was a clerk in the House of Commons, and served as a volunteer in the army expeditionary force in the Boer War. He married Mary Alden Osgood in Boston in 1904 and they had three sons, one of whom died in infancy. During the First World War, he served with the Royal Naval Air Service and was decorated by George V in 1917. After spells in the secretariat of the Irish Convention and with the Intelligence wing of the Royal Air Force, he became a convert to Home Rule and Irish independence. He was a skillful propagandist during the Irish War of Independence and was appointed secretary to the Irish delegation to London to discuss a treaty with Britain. He subsequently aligned himself with the anti-Treaty forces during the Irish Civil War. Childers was arrested at Glendalough House on 10 November 1922 and charged with possession of a small pistol, actually given to him as a keepsake by Michael Collins. On 24 November 1922 Childers was duly executed by firing squad. The execution was justified as coming under the terms of the public safety act.

Physical description: 3 boxes.

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Arrangement:Fonds
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Letters addressed to Erskine Childers, mainly relating to the Anglo Irish Treaty,

1921-1922.
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Bibliographic Details
In Collection: Childers Papers.
Description:Poem by Seán Etchingham titled "Comrades." Letter from P. Browne addressed to Erskine Childers, with two draft copies of an essay titled 'Extremists.' Carbon copy of a note addressed 'A Chara', from A. MacLoclainn. Two letters from Ella Young, addressed to Molly [Mary Alden Childers], with a carbon copy of two essays entitled 'The Choice', signed Ella Young, and 'The Prophecy', signed FÁIS. Carbon copy of letter from Constance de Markievicz, addressed to the Editor of 'Republic of Ireland', titled 'Mr Griffith's Pledge to the Southern Unionists.' Draft and carbon copy of essay entitled 'The International Aspect of the Anglo-Irish Treaty', by Seán T O'Ceallaigh. Also includes, notes and documents accumulated by him in connection with political activities and republican propaganda, including references to the Anglo Irish treaty, Dáil Éireann, the Civil War. With associated documents.
Main Creator: Childers, Erskine, 1870-1922
Language:English
Extent:1 folder (14 items).
Format:Manuscript
Call Number: MS 15,444/1 (Manuscripts Reading Room)
Rights:Reproduction rights owned by the National Library of Ireland.