John Redmond’s Woodenbridge Speech

When the First World War started, John Redmond, leader of the Irish Parliamentary Party, came to a decision aimed at delivering Home Rule at the war’s end. After the foreign secretary, Edward Grey, made his famous speech in the Commons about ‘the lamps going out all over Europe’, Redmond intervened in the debate: ‘I say … Read more

The Rising of Bella Casey

I gaze as I write at two photographs, presented to me by their subjects’ grandchildren: one of Seán O’Casey’s sister Isabella (the ‘Ella’ of his semi-fictionalised autobiographies), and the other of her husband, Nicholas Beaver—or, as O’Casey called him, Benson. The photographs appear to have been taken in the mid-1890s. Her face, framed above her … Read more

Glenstal Abbey Gardens

Garden history was long the province of the amateur. In recent decades it has become more the activity of the professional academic, with chairs and lectureships in a number of universities in both the US and the UK. The results of research are published in two principal scholarly journals, Garden History and Studies in the … Read more

MYTH AND THE IRISH STATE

This significant and provocative book raises many questions about history-writing in Ireland. It is based on previously published articles by John Regan concerning the Treaty, Michael Collins and Southern nationalism, sectarianism during the Irish revolution and the intellectual influence of Conor Cruise O’Brien. Regan’s contention is that since 1968 Irish historians have laboured under the … Read more