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A Century of Treaty Trauma

By Brian Dooley

July 9, 2020 by Leave a Comment

Every Friday during the 1970s The Irish Post was delivered to our house. It was the newspaper for Irish people living in Britain, for families like us. As a teenager I loved laughing at old people getting worked up on the letters page about The Treaty which, for God’s sake, had happened half a century before. Let it go, I thought, there’s a new war in Northern Ireland to be … [Read more...] about A Century of Treaty Trauma

Devil Women: How the Church Wrote the Irish Constitution 

July 9, 2020 by 1 Comment

Article 45.4.2 The State shall endeavour to ensure that the inadequate strength of women and the tender age of children shall not be abused, and that women or children shall not be forced by economic necessity to enter avocations unsuited to their sex, age or strength. From the 1937 Irish Constitution “In the Name of the Most Holy Trinity and of our Lord Jesus Christ, the … [Read more...] about Devil Women: How the Church Wrote the Irish Constitution 

Sinn Féin’s Path to Power Blocked

Leaders of the two centrist parties shun Sinn Féin

July 8, 2020 by Leave a Comment

Deaglán de Bréadún Ever since the Anglo-Irish Treaty of 1921, on which the State was founded, analysts and observers have complained that Irish politics was based on the conflict, which erupted over the terms of that agreement, rather than normal left-right issues. The forebears of the two dominant parties, Fianna Fáil (‘Soldiers of Destiny’) and Fine Gael (‘Tribe of the … [Read more...] about Sinn Féin’s Path to Power Blocked

Leaders of the two centrist parties shun Sinn Féin

Father-Son Sea Saga

60 Years in the Making

July 8, 2020 by Leave a Comment

By Tom Deignan This past Father’s Day, Kelly Walsh went a long way to pay tribute to his Dad – almost 40,000 feet under the sea. Kelly’s father, Don, is one of only a handful of other human beings who have explored the ocean at such great depth. “It’s been such a once in a lifetime experience, to complete this circle with my dad,” said Kelly Walsh, 52, speaking to Irish … [Read more...] about Father-Son Sea Saga

60 Years in the Making

Photo Album:
4th of July Picnic

July 3, 2020 by Leave a Comment

After the Civil War, Philip Cummins, a coal miner from Loon, Clogh, Co. Kilkenny, took his wife Mary Smith (Rakenny, Co. Cavan) and family from the troubling times of the Molly Maguires and Schuykill County, Pennsylvania, and settled in western Massachusetts to work at the Richmond Furnace factory and try his hand at farming. The photo is of the family of Philip's oldest son, … [Read more...] about Photo Album:
4th of July Picnic

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July 12, 1690

Protestant William of Orange and his forces defeated Catholic James II on this day in 1690 at Battle of the Boyne. William’s victory rendered James II’s attempt to regain the British throne unsuccessful and allowed for a continuation of Protestant ascendancy in Ireland. The battle was fought across the River Boyne near Drogheda. July 12 is also known as “The Twelfth” or “Orange Day” in Belfast.

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