LADY ABERDEEN’S POPLIN CURTAINS

Sir,—Apropos Sylvie Kleinman’s review of Miles Campbell’s Vicereines of Ireland (HI 30.1, Jan./Feb. 2022), I heard the following story as a child from my grandfather about Lady Aberdeen, which might be of some interest. My grandfather worked in some managerial capacity for Fry Brothers, the poplin manufacturers. Lady Aberdeen ordered poplin from Fry’s for curtains … Read more

BLOODY SUNDAY, 30 JANUARY 1972, IGNORED?

Sir,—It was with great disappointment that I read the recent volume of History Ireland (HI 30.1, Jan./Feb. 2022). The entire magazine omitted any reference whatsoever to one of the most significant historical events to take place in Ireland over the past 50 years. Regardless of one’s perspective, the events of 30 January 1972, known to … Read more

MAYNOOTH ACKNOWLEDGEMENT

Sir,—We wish to acknowledge the generous assistance of Maynooth University in the person of Niall McKeith, who facilitated the preparation and writing of our article on Nicholas Callan (HI 30.1, Jan./Feb. 2022). We are especially grateful for his provision of an image of the ‘Maynooth Battery’ (p. 24) and for relevant literature.—Yours etc., BRIAN HOPKINS … Read more

IRISH FEMALE FAMINE ORPHANS IN COLONIAL AUSTRALIA

Sir,—Anne Casey (‘“Rags and boughs”—daughters of the Great Hunger in Australia’, HI 30.1, Jan./Feb. 2022) bases her criticisms of the Earl Grey famine orphan scheme, under which girls were sent from Irish workhouses to the Australian colonies, on the later experiences of one of these women and her three Australian-born children. Catherine McNeill, a fifteen-year-old … Read more