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3126  
14 May 2002 06:00  
  
Date: 14 May 2002 06:00 Reply-To: irish-diaspora[at]bradford.ac.uk Sender: From: irish-diaspora[at]Bradford.ac.uk Subject: Ir-D RIC Stations in County Dublin - Thanks MIME-Version: 1.0 Content-Type: text/plain Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit Message-ID: <1312884592.8F3f83068.5704[at]bradford.ac.uk> [IR-DLOG0205.txt]
  
Ir-D RIC Stations in County Dublin - Thanks
  
Forwarded on behalf of...

From: D.M. Leeson
leesondm[at]mcmail.cis.mcmaster.ca
To: Patrick O'Sullivan
Subject: Re: FW: Ir-D RIC Stations in County Dublin



Hi Paddy,

I think I have the missing stations located. Could you please forward my
thanks to everyone on the Irish Diaspora list for their quick and
enthusiastic responses? And thank you for forwarding my query to the
list.

Dave Leeson
PhD candidate
McMaster University
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3127  
14 May 2002 06:00  
  
Date: 14 May 2002 06:00 Reply-To: irish-diaspora[at]bradford.ac.uk Sender: From: irish-diaspora[at]Bradford.ac.uk Subject: Ir-D CFP Economic & Social History Society of Ireland Conference MIME-Version: 1.0 Content-Type: text/plain Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit Message-ID: <1312884592.fe281b3067.5704[at]bradford.ac.uk> [IR-DLOG0205.txt]
  
Ir-D CFP Economic & Social History Society of Ireland Conference
  
Richard Jensen
  
From: "Richard Jensen"
Subject: Fw: CfP: Economic and Social History Society of Ireland 2002
Conference


The Economic and Social History Society of Ireland's annual conference
will be held 8-9 November 2002, at Mary Immaculate College, Limerick.
Papers are invited on the theme of "Popular cultures in Ireland."

Papers should be on any aspect of the subject, and presentations will
be approximately 30 minutes in length. Proposals of no more than 300
words should be sent to:

Dr. Maura Cronin
History Department
Mary Immaculate College
South Circular Road
LIMERICK
Republic of Ireland

The deadline for submissions is 31 July 2002.
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3128  
14 May 2002 06:00  
  
Date: 14 May 2002 06:00 Reply-To: irish-diaspora[at]bradford.ac.uk Sender: From: irish-diaspora[at]Bradford.ac.uk Subject: Ir-D O'Donnell, 1001 Things Everyone Should Know... MIME-Version: 1.0 Content-Type: text/plain Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit Message-ID: <1312884592.4F121f633071.5704[at]bradford.ac.uk> [IR-DLOG0205.txt]
  
Ir-D O'Donnell, 1001 Things Everyone Should Know...
  
Email Patrick O'Sullivan
  
From Email Patrick O'Sullivan

Notice of a new book about Irish-American history...

Edward T. O'Donnell
1001 Things Everyone Should Know About Irish-American History

It is one of Broadway Books' '1001 Things' series - so it is pitched at a
specific market and niche.

There is further information, including some extracts from the book, at the
Broadway Books web site - web address and extract from the publisher's blurb
below. On the web site there are also some extracts from the book...

(The way to make the web site work seems to be to use the search facility
and find O'Donnell...)

North American readers will be familiar with the 1001 Things format - it is
a popular reference book style. The challenge for Edward O'Donnell was,
then, to stay within that style and structure - but to remain faithful to
the complexities of Irish-American and Irish history.

He has really done remarkably well. I have not read the book all the way
through, of course. It is perhaps not that kind of book. But you can read
it as a bringing together of Irish-American 'stream of consciousness' - the
1001 questions that ever bubble away - with up to date scholarship and
critiques of received wisdom. A very hard thing to do. There is
simplification, but it is not over-simplification - so far, in every entry I
have read, the line that Edward O'Donnell has taken can be defended...

P.O'S.


From the Web site...

http://www.randomhouse.com/broadway/

1001 Things Everyone Should Know About Irish-American History

Edward T. O'Donnell
History - Reference | Broadway | Trade Paperback | February 2002 | $15.95 |
0-7679-0686-1

ABOUT THIS BOOK

Virtually every chapter of American history has been shaped by the millions
of immigrants who have arrived on these shores over the centuries. And none
more so than the Irish. As historian Edward T. O?Donnell documents in 1001
Things Everyone Should Know About Irish American History, Irish immigrants
have played a central role in the defining the American character and
identity. For more than four hundred years the Irish have fled British
oppression, religious persecution, and during the famine years in the 1840s,
mass starvation to begin a new life in America. Here, while enduring poverty
and discrimination, the Irish released their long-suppressed talents as
entrepreneurs, leaders, scholars, soldiers, builders, athletes, writers, and
artists.

1001 Things Everyone Should Know About Irish American History is a
comprehensive and vividly illustrated celebration of Irish enterprise,
talent, and courage. Organized around such broad subjects as culture,
politics, business, religion, and sports, it engagingly profiles the Irish
American presidents and Congressional Medal of Honor recipients and
highlights the ten most important works of Irish American fiction, while
offering many surprises. Alongside the exploits of Irish American soldiers
like General Philip Sheridan, O?Donnell tells the incredible story of Jennie
Hodgers, a Belfast-born woman who served in the Union Army disguised as a
man. Elsewhere Bing Crosby shares the stage with Willis O?Brien, the
brilliant pioneer of film animation and the man who brought Nat King Cole to
life. Entrepreneur Henry Ford is featured with Rose O?Neill, inventor of the
wildly popular Kewpie Doll. And throughout readers will find answers to
questions like who was the Murphy who dreamed up ?Murphy?s Law??; why is a
do-over shot in golf called a ?mulligan??; what exactly does it mean to
?scream like a banshee??; and did Mrs. O?Leary?s cow really start the Great
Chicago Fire of 1871?

Written with the understanding that so much of the Irish experience in
America is inseparable from the history of the Emerald Isle, 1001 Things
also devotes substantial coverage to the history of Ireland.

These ingredients combine to demonstrate how the Irish have shaped
America?and make 1001 Things Everyone Should Know About Irish American
History the ideal book for Irish Americans eager to discover more about
their rich heritage.

AUTHOR BIOGRAPHY

Edward T. O?Donnell is a professor of American history at the College of the
Holy Cross in Worcester, Massachusetts. He is the author of numerous
articles and essays about Irish American history, including a weekly history
column for the Irish Echo newspaper. He lives in Holden, Massachusetts with
his wife and four daughters. Please visit his Web site
www.EdwardTODonnell.com.
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3129  
14 May 2002 06:00  
  
Date: 14 May 2002 06:00 Reply-To: irish-diaspora[at]bradford.ac.uk Sender: From: irish-diaspora[at]Bradford.ac.uk Subject: Ir-D Web Resource: Launch of e-Keltoi MIME-Version: 1.0 Content-Type: text/plain Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit Message-ID: <1312884592.d2281D3070.5704[at]bradford.ac.uk> [IR-DLOG0205.txt]
  
Ir-D Web Resource: Launch of e-Keltoi
  
Email Patrick O'Sullivan
  
From Email Patrick O'Sullivan

I have pasted in below a message from Bettina Arnold, about the launch of
e-Keltoi, a free online journal of Celtic Studies.

I am very much in favour of these high-quality free-access scholarly
projects. I have asked Bettina some of the obvious questions. I was
anxious to establish that the project is properly supported - and not
another of those projects taken on by scholars in their 'spare time'...

Anyway, Bettina is very persuasive - and I think I am now on the Advisory
Board...

Paddy O'Sullivan



From: Bettina Arnold
barnold[at]uwm.edu
Subject: e-Keltoi


The University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee Center for Celtic Studies is
developing an electronic journal entitled e-Keltoi: Journal of
Interdisciplinary Celtic Studies. The journal will be an integral part of
the Center?s mission to promote and disseminate research and communication
related to Celtic cultures, past and present, in the academic arena as well
as for the general public. Web resources on Celtic culture that are
content-rich, reliable and current are rare, and are very much in demand.
The mission of the journal is to provide free access to high-quality,
peer-reviewed articles solicited to address specific themes from several
different cross-disciplinary and international perspectives.

e-Keltoi is:

Thematic
Interdisciplinary
Cross-cultural
Peer-reviewed
Free


Disciplinary categories include:

Archaeology
Folklore
History
Languages/Linguistics
Literature
Performing Arts
Political Science/Economics
Visual Arts


The themes for the first five issues are:

Nationalism
Diaspora
Gender
Warfare
Cultural Survival


The goal of e-Keltoi is to present several general themes (for example,
Nationalism) within the framework of the Celtic world to which various
academic disciplines can contribute, producing a synergy and opening up an
avenue for dialogue. The electronic format of the journal will make it
possible for several media to be accessible simultaneously ? for example, a
visitor to the site could read an exegesis on Scottish nationalism and then
click on the passage to hear a recording of the Corries singing ?Come O?er
the Stream Charlie?, or an article on French nationalism could include video
clips of French politicians giving speeches on the summit of a Celtic
hillfort.

Rather than following the traditional print format of sequential issues that
appear according to a set schedule once a sufficient number of submissions
have been through the editing and review process, e-Keltoi will operate on a
more flexible and open-ended basis, with five themed issues open to
submissions simultaneously. As articles are submitted they will be sent out
for review by at least three members of the Review Board. Based on reviewer
recommendations, articles will be revised or rejected. If approved for
revision, they will go on-line in the appropriate issue in the order in
which they were received. When an issue on a particular theme contains a
sufficient number of articles (minimum ten, maximum 15), it will be archived
and replaced by a new theme.

There is a General Editor for e-Keltoi, but themed issues may be organized
and edited by individual editors whose proposals for themed issues have been
reviewed by the Advisory Board and the General Editor. For example, small
conferences held at other institutions in the United States or elsewhere may
consider using e-Keltoi as a venue for publishing their conference
proceedings rapidly while ensuring that they will reach the widest possible
audience. Suggestions for individual issues can be submitted to the Advisory
Board by a potential issue editor for approval before any papers have been
solicited. The issue editor then contacts potential contributors and edits
the papers before submitting them for review by the General Editor and
members of the Review Board.

The Web address for the journal is: http://www.uwm.edu/celtic/ekeltoi/

Bettina Arnold

Co-Director, Center for Celtic Studies

http://www.uwm.edu/Dept/celtic
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3130  
14 May 2002 06:00  
  
Date: 14 May 2002 06:00 Reply-To: irish-diaspora[at]bradford.ac.uk Sender: From: irish-diaspora[at]Bradford.ac.uk Subject: Ir-D Book Review: Gaelic Ireland MIME-Version: 1.0 Content-Type: text/plain Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit Message-ID: <1312884592.471e63072.5704[at]bradford.ac.uk> [IR-DLOG0205.txt]
  
Ir-D Book Review: Gaelic Ireland
  
Email Patrick O'Sullivan
  
From Email Patrick O'Sullivan

The Following review appeared on the H-Albion list...

P.O'S.


Patrick J. Duffy, David Edwards, and Elizabeth Fitzpatrick. Gaelic Ireland:
Land, Lordship and Settlement, c 1250-c 1650. Dublin: Four Courts Press,
2001. 454 pp. Tables, maps index. $55.00 (cloth), ISBN 1-85182-547-9.
Reviewed by Thomas Finan, Departments of History and Religious Studies,
Webster University, St. Louis.
Published by H-Albion (July, 2001)


The Lost Gaelic Middle Ages Re-found
Gaelic Ireland is one of the most under-studied fields of all medieval
history. To be precise, though, Gaelic Ireland refers to that period after
the arrival of the Anglo-Normans at the end of the twelfth century. There is
no lack of scholarship concerning the period before the Anglo-Normans, but
the history, archaeology, and literary history of Gaelic Ireland have been
remarkably neglected. The editors and authors of this volume concerning
settlement and geography in Gaelic Ireland attempt to respond to this state
of affairs with a variety of approaches meant to fill in blanks left by
years of neglect, and in the process have produced an exceptional volume
that should attract more scholars to such a fertile field waiting to be
harvested.

The introduction of the volume, written by Duffy, Edwards, and Fitzpatrick,
is valuable if only because of the extensive references found in the
footnotes. No book on Gaelic Ireland provides such information. Often other
monographs concerning Gaelic Ireland (particularly Gaelic Ireland by Kenneth
Nicholls) attempt to inform a general audience and hence have not provided
any references; few books on Gaelic Ireland lead new scholars into the
discipline by showing the reader where to turn for sources. Nor do many
books provide the level of interpretation that explains why the subject of
medieval Gaelic Ireland is in the state that it is in. Irish historians have
generally blamed the catastrophic fire in the Public Record House in Dublin
during the Irish Civil War for the supposed lack of documents comparable to
those of Ireland's nearest neighbor, England. But Duffy, et al., rightly
point out that the records held in the Public Record Office (while valuable)
rarely dealt with Gaelic Ireland, and that most of the materials of Gaelic
Ireland had been deposited at the libraries of Trinity College, the Royal
Irish Academy, and other learned societies in Ireland. As well, the
linguistic difficulties of Middle and Early Modern Irish (which still has no
usable grammar) have led some scholars to declare that until more documents
are translated by the linguists, we will not be able to piece together
medieval Gaelic society. Again, Duffy, et al., show that large bodies of
material (including massive collections of bardic poetry) already exist in
translation, but few have considered these materials as historic source
material. And, finally, following a recent work by Kieran O'Conor, the
editors posit that Gaelic Ireland is so understudied because the nation that
evolved from the late nineteenth and early twentieth century saw itself in
terms of a non-English identity.[1] As a result, the greater part of the
twentieth century was spent investigating the archaeology and history of
Early Christian or Early Medieval period in Ireland, as this period was seen
as somehow "purely" Irish.

The seventeen essays in the volume address these supposed limitations and do
so successfully. I must point out that I would like to summarize all of the
essays for this review, as all are vital studies, but I will instead discuss
several notable essays as exemplary of the volume itself.

Kenneth Nicholls treats the question of the extent to which Ireland was
wooded in the late medieval period, and does so with his usual style,
clarity and ability to draw the most out of seemingly disparate sources.
Rather than accepting either the commonly held idea that the primeval
forests of Ireland lasted the Anglo-Normans and were only destroyed in the
Early Modern period as a result of the growing need for wood in the
production of iron, or the newer position that Ireland's primeval forests
were already consumed by the arrival of the Anglo-Normans, Nicholls
describes a complicated system of destruction and re-growth over time, in
which the size of the forests was at least modestly related to the stability
within Irish society. As a result, for instance, reforestation occurred
during the fourteenth century, while by the time of the Tudor reconquest,
the forests were exploited in an unsustainable way.

Valerie Hall and Lynda Bunting have successfully used the study of Icelandic
volcanic ash in the peat bogs of Northern Ireland to date layers within the
bogs with great accuracy. As a result, the pollen found in the layers can
also be dated with the same accuracy, such that Hall and Bunting can show
what species of plants, grains and trees existed around the bog. Their
conclusion, that "...the rural landscape of medieval Ireland was at least as
diverse as its modern counterpart...," (pp. 221-2) of course leads to more
questions than answers, but hopefully this method can give us a much better
picture of the landscape of historic Ireland that has too often been
described as simply a wild forested land.

Katharine Simms has spent the better part of three decades describing Gaelic
Ireland by analyzing the massive corpus of bardic poetry that is still
relatively underutilized by historians. The use of bardic poetry has its
difficulties, to be sure, as does the use of any type of literature as
historic source. But Simms has a unique gift for extracting meanings from
these poems that are often more concerned with flattering a patron than with
providing the modern scholar with information. In her article on "the House
Poems," she analyzes the vocabulary used by the bardic poets in describing
the houses, forts, and "castles" of Gaelic lords. Simms reminds the reader
that taking the descriptions of houses at face value is dangerous indeed;
the houses are often compared to supernatural places, in which case the
analogy is clearly symbolic, while in other cases the vocabulary is simply
ambiguous. On the other hand, she surmises that the language used by the
bards suggests rather complicated structures within the forts of the Gaelic
lords. Her list of bardic vocabulary words analyzed in the article is a very
useful tool for archaeologists and historians not acquainted with the
intricacies of bardic poetry.

By using a variety of different sources, Elizabeth Fitzpatrick has
identified the inauguration sites of two Anglo-Norman lordships, the two
factions of the Connacht Burkes, who, during the course of the fourteenth
century, adopted Gaelic titles, culture, and language. In frontier regions
Anglo-Norman lords adopted Gaelic ways despite the attempts of the
Anglo-Norman colonial government to legislate otherwise (as with the
Statutes of Kilkenny in 1366). In her article Fitzpatrick argues that the
inaugurations of the Mayo Burkes took place at "Ratsecer," and that this
site is also identified as the ringfort of Raheenagooagh. While Gaelic lords
were prone to using hilltops for their inauguration, it seems that
Gaelicized Anglo-Norman lords may have favored ringforts that had gone into
disuse. As she admits, Fitzpatrick is on shakier ground when she argues that
the inauguration of the Clanrickard Burkes took place at Dunkellin, since in
the main the source for this theory is place-name analysis and eighteenth
and nineteenth century folklore. Nevertheless, her argument is strong, and
leads the reader to question the whole process of associating particular
settlement types with particular ethnic identities, or, for that matter, the
use of those ethnic identities to begin with!

Kieran O'Conor examines the morphology of Gaelic high-status habitation
sites in north Roscommon, a region that was controlled by the MacDermot and
O'Conor Gaelic lords of the thirteenth and fourteenth centuries. These lords
used a wide variety of types of fortification and settlement, including
crannogs, moated enclosures, and natural islands. No one type of site was
used more than the other, but in some cases, such as the MacDermot island
fortress at Lough Key and the possible moated site on the shore at Lough
Key, these settlement types are often found in very close proximity.
Ultimately, his article is a prelude and call for future work; the
geographic area that he has researched should yield important information
about medieval Gaelic Ireland. The strength of O'Conor's work lies in his
ability to weave a narrative between archaeological survey and in-depth
analysis of literary sources. Cross-disciplinary analysis can fill gaps in
both fields, as O'Conor has shown in this article.

Aidan O'Sullivan surveys the evidence for later medieval occupation of
crannogs, or defensive island lake settlements, in Gaelic Ireland. If one
considers crannogs from the perspective of the Irish Annals, they seem to be
described uniquely as royal residences or defensive refuges. However, based
upon recent survey and archaeological analysis, O'Sullivan argues that the
crannog is even more enigmatic than we have presumed. Some crannogs were
clearly used in manners described in the Annals, but others were used by
peasants, or for holding cattle, or as seasonal settlements. He concludes by
stating that the most extensive occupation periods of crannogs lie in the
thirteenth and fourteenth centuries, and again in the sixteenth centuries.
Both were periods of stress and social disorder in Ireland, so perhaps these
is more to consider in terms of the crannog's use as a defensive refuge than
normative settlement feature.

This volume is a vital contribution to the study of Gaelic Ireland, and must
be considered by any scholar of medieval history in the British Isles. It is
not without a noticeable fault, however. While the title suggests that the
essays cover the period 1250-1650, only four of the essays are even
moderately concerned with the thirteenth and early fourteenth centuries.
Robin Frame and Sean Duffy have considered the history of medieval Ireland
in the thirteenth century in several monographs and articles, but their
perspectives generally result from using the administrative records of the
Anglo-Norman colony. Both of these scholars have contributed greatly to our
understanding of the political history of thirteenth century Ireland, but,
as shown in this volume, thirteenth century Gaelic Ireland is often
forgotten in terms of culture history or in terms of settlement. One
nevertheless gets the feeling from the present volume that "real" Gaelic
Ireland began in the late fourteenth and fifteenth centuries. While Ireland
was technically divided into English lordships by the end of the thirteenth
century, the West and North were never inhabited to the extent of regions
like Leinster, eastern Ulster and Munster. Certainly the Gaelic lords in the
West and North were not simply dormant from the late twelfth century until
the late fourteenth century? Or could there be a tacit assumption that in
the thirteenth century the Gaelic lords who employed Anglo-Norman
mercenaries and formed political alliances with Anglo-Normans were somehow
not Gaelic? Such a question is outside the purview of a book on settlement;
but it is nevertheless a question that needs to be answered in light of the
fine introduction of Duffy, et al., in this volume.

Four Courts Press has been producing a large number of important new and
reprint volumes in Irish medieval history over the last few years, and the
Press is to be commended for such a fine book. The editors and authors of
this volume, as well, are to be commended for providing starving scholars of
medieval Ireland with plenty of food for thought.

[1]. Kieran O'Connor, The Archaeology Medieval Rural Settlement in Ireland
(Dublin, Discovery Programme Monographs: 1998); 10.

Citation: Thomas Finan . "Review of Patrick J. Duffy, David Edwards, and
Elizabeth Fitzpatrick, Gaelic Ireland: Land, Lordship and Settlement, c
1250-c 1650," H-Albion, H-Net Reviews, July, 2001.
URL: http://www.h-net.msu.edu/reviews/showrev.cgi?path=26474996691688.

Copyright 2001 by H-Net, all rights reserved. H-Net permits the
redistribution and reprinting of this work for nonprofit, educational
purposes, with full and accurate attribution to the author, web location,
date of publication, originating list, and H-Net: Humanities & Social
Sciences Online. For any other proposed use, contact the Reviews editorial
staff at hbooks[at]mail.h-net.msu.edu.
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14 May 2002 06:00  
  
Date: 14 May 2002 06:00 Reply-To: irish-diaspora[at]bradford.ac.uk Sender: From: irish-diaspora[at]Bradford.ac.uk Subject: Ir-D Web Resource: Launch of e-Keltoi 2 MIME-Version: 1.0 Content-Type: text/plain Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit Message-ID: <1312884592.d5Ed3074.5704[at]bradford.ac.uk> [IR-DLOG0205.txt]
  
Ir-D Web Resource: Launch of e-Keltoi 2
  
Dean_Holt@att.net
  
From: Dean_Holt[at]att.net
Subject: Re: Ir-D Web Resource: Launch of e-Keltoi

Thanks for the information on e-keltoi...could someone
give us a good link for it? the one given to the list
does not seem to work. Thanks.
Patrick Holt
Fordham University

>
>
> The Web address for the journal is: http://www.uwm.edu/celtic/ekeltoi/
>
> Bettina Arnold
>
> Co-Director, Center for Celtic Studies
>
> http://www.uwm.edu/Dept/celtic
>
>
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14 May 2002 06:00  
  
Date: 14 May 2002 06:00 Reply-To: irish-diaspora[at]bradford.ac.uk Sender: From: irish-diaspora[at]Bradford.ac.uk Subject: Ir-D JAMES JOYCE SYMPOSIUM, Trieste, 16-22 June MIME-Version: 1.0 Content-Type: text/plain Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit Message-ID: <1312884592.eFacDa13073.5704[at]bradford.ac.uk> [IR-DLOG0205.txt]
  
Ir-D JAMES JOYCE SYMPOSIUM, Trieste, 16-22 June
  
Email Patrick O'Sullivan
  
From Email Patrick O'Sullivan

Forwarded on behalf of
John McCourt
mccourt[at]univ.trieste.it

Please distribute...

P.O'S.

INITIAL PRESS RELEASE for the
EIGHTEENTH INTERNATIONAL JAMES JOYCE SYMPOSIUM,
TRIESTE, 16-22 JUNE 2002.

What do award-winning Austrian scientist and inventor of the contraception
pill Carl Djerassi, renowned Welsh travel writer and author Jan Morris,
celebrated Irish poets Ciaran Carson and Paul Muldoon, world famous literary
critics Edward Said, Hugh Kenner, Margot Norris, J. Hillis Miller, Fritz
Senn, and Denis Donoghue, all have in common?

They, along with more than 300 other illustrious speakers, will be taking
part in the biggest Joyce bash since the 1982 Centenary Joyce Celebrations
in Dublin, that is, in

the Eighteenth International James Joyce Symposium,
entitled Mediterranean Joyce,

which is being held from 16-22 June 2002 in the city Joyce called "my second
country", the cosmopolitan Italy seaport city of Trieste, where the writer
lived for over ten years at the beginning of the twentieth century.

The Trieste event, organised by John McCourt and Renzo Crivelli of the
University of Trieste and by Sebastian Knowles of the Ohio State University
and Geert Lernout of the University of Antwerp for the International James
Joyce Foundation, promises to throw up many new insights into Joyce's life
and works and will see critics discussing the newly discovered Eumaeus and
Circe chapters from Ulysses as well as salient new details of Joyce's own
life which have been emerging from the archives of America and Europe. In
addition to up to 11 hours per day of academic sessions on topics ranging
from smut in Joyce to
Joyce in Trieste, in Italy, in Austro-Hungary, to Joyce and Exodus, Joyce
and religion, Joyce and Latin America, Joyce and Ground Zero, there will be
a rich and rewarding evening social programme.

The Irish Ambassador to Italy, Mr Frank Cogan, will host a reception in the
magnificent Prefettura on Trieste?s Piazza Unità in the presence of the
Mayor of Trieste and the British Ambassador to Italy; there will be a
sumptuous Mediterranean Bloomsday dinner; American Actor, Adam Harvey's
stunning solo performance of Finnegans Wake, a concert of the music loved by
Joyce in the Teatro Cristallo featuring the Orchestra, choir, and soloists
from Trieste's renowned Opera Giacosa under the baton of Maestro Severino
Zannerini, as well as countless readings, walking tours, book launches and
two important artistic exhibits featuring the works of Swiss artist, Aldo
Bachmayer and the Triestine painter, Bruno Chersicla.

For further information please contact
John McCourt
Co-Organizer
Trieste Joyce Symposium
Mcourt[at]univ.trieste.it
Or call 0039040272161/00390405587238
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14 May 2002 06:00  
  
Date: 14 May 2002 06:00 Reply-To: irish-diaspora[at]bradford.ac.uk Sender: From: irish-diaspora[at]Bradford.ac.uk Subject: Ir-D Web Resource: Launch of e-Keltoi 3 MIME-Version: 1.0 Content-Type: text/plain Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit Message-ID: <1312884592.Bce87FC3075.5704[at]bradford.ac.uk> [IR-DLOG0205.txt]
  
Ir-D Web Resource: Launch of e-Keltoi 3
  
MacEinri, Piaras
  
From: "MacEinri, Piaras"
To: "'irish-diaspora[at]Bradford.ac.uk'"
Subject: RE: Ir-D Web Resource: Launch of e-Keltoi 2


http://www.uwm.edu/People/pfister/e_keltoi/e-keltoi2.html

This web address seems to work

Regards

Piaras
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Date: 14 May 2002 06:00 Reply-To: irish-diaspora[at]bradford.ac.uk Sender: From: irish-diaspora[at]Bradford.ac.uk Subject: Ir-D Web Resource: Jouvert, 6, 3 MIME-Version: 1.0 Content-Type: text/plain Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit Message-ID: <1312884592.a6c42c3069.5704[at]bradford.ac.uk> [IR-DLOG0205.txt]
  
Ir-D Web Resource: Jouvert, 6, 3
  
Email Patrick O'Sullivan
  
From Email Patrick O'Sullivan

There is a new issue of Jouvert, the Web journal of postcolonial studies -
always an interesting comparative read. And, of course, freely available to
those with full web access.

P.O'S.


From: "Elizabeth DeLoughrey"
Jouvert: a journal of postcolonial studies, Volume 6, Issue 3

http://social.chass.ncsu.edu/jouvert

Table of Contents:
- --Editor's Introduction, "All the World is Global, But Some Places are More
Global than Others"

- --Manjul, Susan Simone, M. M. Thakur, Richard Whisnant, "The People Who Live
In
Shangri-La: Photographs, Poems, Video"

- --Joy Mahabir, "Rhythm and Class Struggle: The Calypsoes of David
Rudder"

- --Andrew Armstrong, "BLOODY HISTORY! Exploring a Capacity for Revision.

Restaging History in Wilson Harris's Jonestown and Caryl Phillips' The
Nature of
Blood"

- --Kevin Cryderman, "Ghosts in the Palimpsest of Cultural Memory: An
Archaeology
of Faizal Deen's Poetic Memoir Land Without Chocolate (a.k.a. 'the art of
writing about authors before they are famous')"

- --Mohammed Ben Jelloun, "Agonistic Islam"

- --Rawi Hage, "Ahmad"

- --Geetha Ganapathy-Doré, "Private Woes in a Public Story: A Study of
Michael Ondaatje's Anil's Ghost"

- --John Hickman and Sarah Bartlett, "Reporting a New Delhi Bias? A
Content Analysis of AP Wire Stories on the Conflicts in Sri Lanka and
Kashmir"

- --Ibrahima Ndiaye, "Space, Time and Empowerment in Ama Ata Aidoo's
Changes"
- --Rick Talbot, "Total Bull and The Buffalo: A Tale from the
Pastureland"

Reviews:
- --Elizabeth DeLoughrey, "Petrarchism in the New World" (Review of
Unrequited Conquests: Love and Empire in the Colonial Americas. By Roland
Greene.)
- --Pramod K. Nayar, "Colonial Ideology and the 'Science' of Medicine"
(Review of Romanticism and Colonial Disease. By Alan Bewell.)
--Tapati Bharadwaj, "Politics of Position" (Review of Going Global.
The Transnational Reception of Third World Women
Writers. Edited by Amal Amireh and Losa Suhair Majaj.)
- --Chimalum Nwankwo, "Celebrating Ghanaian Creativity" (Review of
FonTomFrom : Contemporary Ghanaian Literature,
Theatre and Film. Edited by Kofi Anyidoho and James Gibbs.)
- --David Buuck, "Henry Gamboa and the Contemporary Avant-Garde" (Review of
Urban
Exile: The Collected Writings of Henry Gamboa Jr. Edited by Chon A.
Noriega.)
- --Champa Patel, "Black Gay / Gay Black" (Review of The Greatest
Taboo:Homosexuality in Black Communities. By Delroy Constantine Simms.)
- --Rini Bhattacharya Mehta, National Mythology (Review of Myths and
Nationhood.
Edited by Geoffrey Hosking and George Schöpflin.)
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15 May 2002 06:00  
  
Date: 15 May 2002 06:00 Reply-To: irish-diaspora[at]bradford.ac.uk Sender: From: irish-diaspora[at]Bradford.ac.uk Subject: Ir-D Young Ireland on RTE MIME-Version: 1.0 Content-Type: text/plain Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit Message-ID: <1312884592.bCf6563080.5704[at]bradford.ac.uk> [IR-DLOG0205.txt]
  
Ir-D Young Ireland on RTE
  
Bryan P. McGovern
  
From: "Bryan P. McGovern"
Subject: Young Ireland program on RTE

Does anyone know how/where I could get a copy of the recent RTE program
on Young Ireland?
Any info would be greatly appreciated. You can email me directly at
bpm8d2[at]mizzou.edu

Best wishes,

Bryan McGovern
PhD Candidate
Dept. of History
University of Missouri
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3136  
15 May 2002 06:00  
  
Date: 15 May 2002 06:00 Reply-To: irish-diaspora[at]bradford.ac.uk Sender: From: irish-diaspora[at]Bradford.ac.uk Subject: Ir-D O'Leary, Irish in Wales, in paperback MIME-Version: 1.0 Content-Type: text/plain Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit Message-ID: <1312884592.D4dDFDcC3079.5704[at]bradford.ac.uk> [IR-DLOG0205.txt]
  
Ir-D O'Leary, Irish in Wales, in paperback
  
Email Patrick O'Sullivan
  
From Email Patrick O'Sullivan

A number of people in recent months seem to have had difficulty in getting
hold of a copy of Paul O'Leary's book on the Irish in Wales.

Apparently the hardback version had sold out.

University of Wales Press has now brought out a paperback edition -
details...

Paul O'Leary
Immigration and Integration:
The Irish in Wales, 1798-1922
pp xvi340 paperback April 2002 £14.99
0-7083-1767-7
University of Wales Press, Cardiff

Contact point...

http://www.uwp.co.uk/

I find this site quite hard to navigate...

A search for 'O'Leary' does not seem to find the book - but a search for
'Irish' does...

Remember that its title is Immigration and Integration - which gives the
game away, I thought...

I do recommend this book to the Irish-Diaspora list...

Paddy

- --
Patrick O'Sullivan
Head of the Irish Diaspora Research Unit

Email Patrick O'Sullivan
Email Patrick O'Sullivan
Personal Fax 0044 (0) 709 236 9050

Irish-Diaspora list
Irish Diaspora Studies http://www.brad.ac.uk/acad/diaspora/
Irish Diaspora Net Archive http://www.irishdiaspora.net

Irish Diaspora Research Unit
Department of Interdisciplinary Human Studies
University of Bradford
Bradford BD7 1DP
Yorkshire
England
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3137  
15 May 2002 06:00  
  
Date: 15 May 2002 06:00 Reply-To: irish-diaspora[at]bradford.ac.uk Sender: From: irish-diaspora[at]Bradford.ac.uk Subject: Ir-D Web Resource: Launch of e-Keltoi 4 MIME-Version: 1.0 Content-Type: text/plain Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit Message-ID: <1312884592.0fB43076.5704[at]bradford.ac.uk> [IR-DLOG0205.txt]
  
Ir-D Web Resource: Launch of e-Keltoi 4
  
Dean_Holt@att.net
  
From: Dean_Holt[at]att.net
Subject: Re: Ir-D Web Resource: Launch of e-Keltoi 3

Thanks for the corrected E-Keltoi Address, the first one
for the journal was a dead link.

Patrick Holt


> From: "MacEinri, Piaras"
> To: "'irish-diaspora[at]Bradford.ac.uk'"
> Subject: RE: Ir-D Web Resource: Launch of e-Keltoi 2
>
>
> http://www.uwm.edu/People/pfister/e_keltoi/e-keltoi2.html
>
> This web address seems to work
>
> Regards
>
> Piaras
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3138  
15 May 2002 06:00  
  
Date: 15 May 2002 06:00 Reply-To: irish-diaspora[at]bradford.ac.uk Sender: From: irish-diaspora[at]Bradford.ac.uk Subject: Ir-D JAMES JOYCE SYMPOSIUM 2 MIME-Version: 1.0 Content-Type: text/plain Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit Message-ID: <1312884592.6dAA3077.5704[at]bradford.ac.uk> [IR-DLOG0205.txt]
  
Ir-D JAMES JOYCE SYMPOSIUM 2
  
Email Patrick O'Sullivan
  
From Email Patrick O'Sullivan

The programme for

EIGHTEENTH INTERNATIONAL JAMES JOYCE SYMPOSIUM,
TRIESTE, 16-22 JUNE 2002

is displayed at...

http://www.cohums.ohio-state.edu/english/organizations/ijjf/trieste_conferen
ce.htm

(I have checked this web address - it works... Honest.)

P.O'S.

- --
Patrick O'Sullivan
Head of the Irish Diaspora Research Unit

Email Patrick O'Sullivan
Email Patrick O'Sullivan
Personal Fax 0044 (0) 709 236 9050

Irish-Diaspora list
Irish Diaspora Studies http://www.brad.ac.uk/acad/diaspora/
Irish Diaspora Net Archive http://www.irishdiaspora.net

Irish Diaspora Research Unit
Department of Interdisciplinary Human Studies
University of Bradford
Bradford BD7 1DP
Yorkshire
England
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3139  
15 May 2002 06:00  
  
Date: 15 May 2002 06:00 Reply-To: irish-diaspora[at]bradford.ac.uk Sender: From: irish-diaspora[at]Bradford.ac.uk Subject: Ir-D Offer: Swift, Irish Migrants in Britain MIME-Version: 1.0 Content-Type: text/plain Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit Message-ID: <1312884592.ccc83078.5704[at]bradford.ac.uk> [IR-DLOG0205.txt]
  
Ir-D Offer: Swift, Irish Migrants in Britain
  
Email Patrick O'Sullivan
  
From Email Patrick O'Sullivan

Forwarded on behalf of Cork University Press...

P.O'S.

From: Hawkes, Nancy
N.Hawkes[at]ucc.ie


Cork University Press is delighted to offer you as a member of the Irish
Diaspora mailing list a saving of EUR17.25 or £11 off the list price Irish
Migrants in Britain, 1815-1914: Documentary History. In addition all orders
recieved before May 31st, 2002 will enjoy free postage.

Irish Migrants in Britain, 1815-1914: A Documentary History

By Roger Swift

An edited collection of documents relating to the Irish experience in
Britain in the nineteenth and early twentieth century.

Description:

The past twenty years have witnessed notable developments in the scholarly
study of Irish migration and settlement in nineteenth-century Britain, as a
burgeoning historiography and the emergence of specialist courses in British
colleges and universities serve to illustrate. The first of its kind, this
documentary history seeks to support the study and teaching of the subject
by using a range of contemporary documents, including extracts from
parliamentary papers, social surveys, newspapers, letters and reminiscences
to explore the experiences of Irish people in urban and rural Britain
between 1815 and 1914. By reference to themes of migration, settlement,
employment, social conditions, religion and politics, the sources contained
in this collection not only provide insights into the causes, features and
consequences of Irish migration. The book also demonstrates that while the
experiences of Irish migrants were complex and diverse, varying in time and
place, so too were contemporary attitudes towards them.

Each chapter comprises a contextual commentary, a selection of primary
sources and notes pointing to further reading. This unique anthology, which
also includes a comprehensive bibliography, will be of particular interest
to students and teachers of modern British and Irish social history. It is
also relevant to the study of immigrants and minorities in modern British
Society.


Market: Academic and Undergraduate

Subject Classification: Irish History

Key Features:

· Reproduces critical documents relating to Irish people in Britain
· Provides a useful tool for the burgeoning British Irish studies
market
· A invaluable source for students of Irish History in general

Published May 2002, ISBN 1 85918 236 4, Cloth, EUR57.25, 234 x 156mm, 360pp

Professor Roger Swift is Director of the Centre for Victorian Studies at
Chester College and a Fellow of the Institute of Irish Studies at the
University of Liverpool.

--------------------------------------------------------------------------
Order Slip

Irish Migrants in Britain, 1815-1914: Documentary History is available to
you at the special price of $40 or EUR40 or £25. This offer is available to
all pre-paid orders received before 31th May 2002. Postage free (surface
mail).
Published May 2002. ISBN: 1 85918 236 4, Cloth, EUR57.25, UK£37, US$59.95,
234 x 156mm, 360pp

Detailed contents will appear soon at http://www.corkuniversitypress.com

You can order your copy in any one of three ways:

1. Contact our customer orderline: Tel: + 353 (0)21 4902980;Fax: + 353
(0)21 4315329

2. E-mail your order: corkunip[at]ucc.ie

3. Complete and return this slip to: Cork University Press, Crawford
Business Park, Crosses Green, Cork , Ireland

Please send me _____ copies of Irish Migrants in Britain, 1815-1914:
Documentary History

Name:.......................................................................
..............................................

Address:
............................................................................
............................................................................
............................................................................
............................................................................
............................................................................
............................................................................
....................................

Tel/e-mail:
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Please charge my Visa/Mastercard:
............................................................................
.....

Card
number......................................................................
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Expiry
date........................................................................
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Signature...................................................................
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Or

Please send me a proforma -------------------------------------------------


Nancy Hawkes
Publicity and Promotions Executive
Cork University Press
Crawford Business Park
Crosses Green
Cork
Ireland
Tel: + 353 (0)21 4902980
Fax: + 353 (0)21 4315329
Mobile: 087 9272153
www.corkuniversitypress.com
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3140  
16 May 2002 06:00  
  
Date: 16 May 2002 06:00 Reply-To: irish-diaspora[at]bradford.ac.uk Sender: From: irish-diaspora[at]Bradford.ac.uk Subject: Ir-D J.J.O'Kelly's THE MAMBI-LAND MIME-Version: 1.0 Content-Type: text/plain Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit Message-ID: <1312884592.C6E33ea3081.5704[at]bradford.ac.uk> [IR-DLOG0205.txt]
  
Ir-D J.J.O'Kelly's THE MAMBI-LAND
  
Sender: P.Maume[at]Queens-Belfast.AC.UK
Subject: J.J. O'Kelly's THE MAMBI-LAND

From: Patrick Maume
Some time ago I saw a newspaper story which stated that
THE MAMBI-LAND, J.J. O'Kelly's account of his experiences as a
journalist with Cuban insurgents in the 1870s, had been
republished in Cuba and that it was one of Castro's favourite
books. I tried looking it up on Amazon.com a few weeks ago and
there was no sign of it. Can anyone shed light on this?
{O'Kelly was a Fenian activist who became a Home Rule MP for
Roscommon 1880-92 and 1895-1917; his brother Aloysius was an
artist whose career has been researched by Niamh O'Sullivan.
I've recently come across some articles J.J. wrote about the
Spanish-American war and I would like to find out how much of
the material in them was simply lifted from the book.)
Best wishes,
Patrick





----------------------
patrick maume
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3141  
16 May 2002 06:00  
  
Date: 16 May 2002 06:00 Reply-To: irish-diaspora[at]bradford.ac.uk Sender: From: irish-diaspora[at]Bradford.ac.uk Subject: Ir-D J.J.O'Kelly's THE MAMBI-LAND 2 MIME-Version: 1.0 Content-Type: text/plain Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit Message-ID: <1312884592.Ed5A48d13082.5704[at]bradford.ac.uk> [IR-DLOG0205.txt]
  
Ir-D J.J.O'Kelly's THE MAMBI-LAND 2
  
Brian McGinn
  
From: "Brian McGinn"
Subject: Re: Ir-D J.J.O'Kelly's THE MAMBI-LAND

Dear Patrick,

Have not seen this, but did note the following citation in Peadar Kirby's
_Ireland and Latin America: Links and Lessons_ (Trocaire/Gill & Macmillan,
1992), p. 182:

For James J. O'Kelly, see La Tierra del Mambi, introduction by Fernando
Ortiz (Centenario 1868, Instituto del Libro, Havana, 1968).

Brian McGinn
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3142  
16 May 2002 06:00  
  
Date: 16 May 2002 06:00 Reply-To: irish-diaspora[at]bradford.ac.uk Sender: From: irish-diaspora[at]Bradford.ac.uk Subject: Ir-D CFP Montserrat Conference MIME-Version: 1.0 Content-Type: text/plain Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit Message-ID: <1312884592.35cECc5a3083.5704[at]bradford.ac.uk> [IR-DLOG0205.txt]
  
Ir-D CFP Montserrat Conference
  
Email Patrick O'Sullivan
  
From Email Patrick O'Sullivan

Forwarded on behalf of...

Simone Augier
saugier[at]uwimona.edu.jm

The School of Continuing Studies of the University of the West Indies
(UWI)will
be holding the fourth conference in its Country Conference Series in
Montserrat,
November 13-14, 2002.

The Montserrat Conference is a multi-disciplinary conference focusing on
issues
relevant to Montserrat.

Papers are invited from persons with a research interest in Montserrat.

Please submit a cover sheet containing the title of the paper and the
author's
contact information and a short summary; a 250-word abstract and a short
biography of the author. Abstracts must be received by August 19,2002.

For further information contact Simone Augier simone.augier[at]uwimona.edu.jm
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3143  
16 May 2002 06:00  
  
Date: 16 May 2002 06:00 Reply-To: irish-diaspora[at]bradford.ac.uk Sender: From: irish-diaspora[at]Bradford.ac.uk Subject: Ir-D J.J.O'Kelly's THE MAMBI-LAND 3 MIME-Version: 1.0 Content-Type: text/plain Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit Message-ID: <1312884592.7f55ec3084.5704[at]bradford.ac.uk> [IR-DLOG0205.txt]
  
Ir-D J.J.O'Kelly's THE MAMBI-LAND 3
  
patrick maume
  
From: patrick maume
Sender: P.Maume[at]Queens-Belfast.AC.UK
Subject: Re: Ir-D J.J.O'Kelly's THE MAMBI-LAND 2

From: Patrick Maume

Thank you, Brian.

This, I am afraid, looks suspiciously like the reprint mentioned
by the newspaper. I'm afraid it never occurred to me that the
reprint might be in Spanish!
Best wishes,
Patrick

On 16 May 2002 06:00 irish-diaspora[at]Bradford.ac.uk wrote:

>
> From: "Brian McGinn"
> Subject: Re: Ir-D J.J.O'Kelly's THE MAMBI-LAND
>
> Dear Patrick,
>
> Have not seen this, but did note the following citation in Peadar Kirby's
> _Ireland and Latin America: Links and Lessons_ (Trocaire/Gill & Macmillan,
> 1992), p. 182:
>
> For James J. O'Kelly, see La Tierra del Mambi, introduction by Fernando
> Ortiz (Centenario 1868, Instituto del Libro, Havana, 1968).
>
> Brian McGinn
>
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3144  
17 May 2002 06:00  
  
Date: 17 May 2002 06:00 Reply-To: irish-diaspora[at]bradford.ac.uk Sender: From: irish-diaspora[at]Bradford.ac.uk Subject: Ir-D Database Update 1: DIRDA & DIDI MIME-Version: 1.0 Content-Type: text/plain Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit Message-ID: <1312884592.4Ce7dF3085.5704[at]bradford.ac.uk> [IR-DLOG0205.txt]
  
Ir-D Database Update 1: DIRDA & DIDI
  
Email Patrick O'Sullivan
  
From Email Patrick O'Sullivan

We have quite a few new members, and I thought it time to remind people
about access to our databases...

For access to the RESTRICTED area of irishdiaspora.net...

Go to
Irish Diaspora Net Archive http://www.irishdiaspora.net

Click on Special Access, at the top of the screen.

Username irdmember
Current Password corkery

Note the changed password.

That gets you into our RESTRICTED area.

Click on RESTRICTED, and you have access to our two databases...

DIRDA - the Database of the Ir-D Archive...
DIDI - the Database of Irish-Diaspora Interests...

Log out by clicking on irishdiaspora.net at the top of the screen.

Scholars who are using the guest username need to contact me directly,
because that username's password has also changed.

P.O'S.


- --
Patrick O'Sullivan
Head of the Irish Diaspora Research Unit

Email Patrick O'Sullivan
Email Patrick O'Sullivan
Personal Fax 0044 (0) 709 236 9050

Irish-Diaspora list
Irish Diaspora Studies http://www.brad.ac.uk/acad/diaspora/
Irish Diaspora Net Archive http://www.irishdiaspora.net

Irish Diaspora Research Unit
Department of Interdisciplinary Human Studies
University of Bradford
Bradford BD7 1DP
Yorkshire
England
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3145  
19 May 2002 06:00  
  
Date: 19 May 2002 06:00 Reply-To: irish-diaspora[at]bradford.ac.uk Sender: From: irish-diaspora[at]Bradford.ac.uk Subject: Ir-D I willingly give my life for South Carolina MIME-Version: 1.0 Content-Type: text/plain Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit Message-ID: <1312884592.bA623Ece3088.5704[at]bradford.ac.uk> [IR-DLOG0205.txt]
  
Ir-D I willingly give my life for South Carolina
  
Email Patrick O'Sullivan
  
From Email Patrick O'Sullivan

"I willingly give my life for South Carolina; Oh! that I could have died for
Ireland."

The following item has been sent to us...

Recently one of the Confederate Re-enactors societies in S.C. carried out a
ceremony at the grave of Capt John C. Mitchel at the Magnolia Cemetery at
Charleston S.C. One of the ladies involved sent the address of their
website. Click on the images for full size. You might be able to print off
the
enlarged image but perhaps not.

{http://www.scocr.org/snowden/PhotoGallery/02_03IronCross.htm}
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