JAMES CONNOLLY AND THE ISRP

Sir,—I’ll let readers judge the relative merits of my Platform piece (HI 33.3, May/June 2025), ‘Greaves, Connolly and the British Army’, and Anthony Coughlan’s response in the last issue. However, I would like to comment on the May 1901 photograph of James Connolly and other members of the Irish Socialist Republican Party (ISRP), reproduced on … Read more

FRANCIS JOSEPH BIGGER AND PIPING CLUB BANNERS

Sir,—I am writing to request assistance from History Ireland readers in tracking down a significant collection of historical artefacts connected to the Irish cultural revival. Specifically, I am researching ceremonial banners that were gifted by Francis Joseph Bigger MRIA (1863–1926) to various Irish piping clubs during the formative years of these organisations. Francis Joseph Bigger … Read more

BRIAN HANLEY AND ANTI-SEMITISM

Sir,—Brian Hanley (HI 33.3, May/June 2025, Letters) construed an editorial response to Zionist defenders of the Gaza genocide who were critical of Michael D. Higgins as an ‘attempt to whitewash anti-Semitism here in the past’. That characterisation is as much mistaken as it is surprising. Brian’s extended homily on anti-Semitism and ‘the complexities of our … Read more

REX INGRAM’S FATHER’S LOSS

Sir,—‘On this day’ (HI 33.4, July/August 2025, p. 7) mentions the film director Rex Ingram (Reginald Ingram Montgomery Hitchcock). His father suffered what must be the most dreaded experience for authors. Revd Francis Ryan Montgomery Hitchcock (1867–1951) was a Church of Ireland rector at Kinnitty in the then King’s County. He had also established himself … Read more

‘JOHNNY, I HARDLY KNEW YE’

Sir,—Your brief mention of the song ‘Johnny, I Hardly Knew Ye’ (HI 33.4, July/August 2025, Bite-sized History, p. 10), caught my attention. It is, and has been, constantly thought of and written about as a quintessentially Irish song and as an early example of an anti-war song. Both of these assumptions are mistaken. The song … Read more