BITE-SIZED HISTORY

‘AFTER HOURS’ FUNDING SCHEME ANNOUNCED Cultural institutions will be delighted by news of more funding for the Night-Time Economy Support Scheme and the new ‘After Hours’ strand. Members of the Irish Museum Association and the Museum Standards Programme for Ireland can now apply for up to €10,000 in funding to host late-night events in their … Read more

‘WITH AN ARTIST’S EYE: THE PHOTOGRAPHY OF MARY ALICE YOUNG OF GLENGORM CASTLE, BALLYMENA’

Mid-Antrim Museum, The Braid, Ballymena, Mon.–Sat. 10am–4pm, until 30 September 2023 Mary Alice Macnaghten was born in 1867, the eldest child of the Rt Hon. Sir Francis Edward Workman-Macnaghten and Alice Mary Russell. They lived at Dundarave House, Bushmills, Co. Antrim. On 26 August 1893 Mary married William (‘Willie’) Robert Young, eldest son of the … Read more

ON THIS DAY

JULY 02/1850 Sir Robert Peel (62), founder of the Conservative Party and British prime minister, died. In nationalist Ireland Peel would perhaps be best remembered as Daniel O’Connell’s nemesis, the man with the chilling smile ‘like the silver plate on a coffin’ who was forced to concede Catholic Emancipation (1829), who suppressed the Repeal movement … Read more

WHAT’S IN A TITLE?

By Denis Fahey When a British monarch dies, an Accession Council, consisting mainly of members of the Privy Council, assembles to proclaim the successor, and so, on 10 September 2022, Prince Charles was declared to be king of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland and of his other realms and territories. The … Read more

Commemorating the tricolour

In this issue, and in this year, the 175th since the ‘first’ flying of the Irish tricolour from the Wolfe Tone Confederate Club in Waterford on 7 March 1848, Sylvie Kleinman (pp 16–17) outlines the slightly more complicated evolution of the flag over the previous 50 years. She also reminds us that Thomas Francis Meagher … Read more