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1994

Roddy Doyle Has The Last Laugh

By Frank Shouldice

January / February 1994

January 7, 1994 by Leave a Comment

Irish writer Roddy Doyle's book, Paddy Clarke Ha Ha Ha [Viking Press] won the prestigious Booker Prize last month, and the next day 28,000 copies were sold in England alone. Frank Shouldice profiles the Dublin author, whose movie The Snapper, directed by Stephen Frears, is currently being distributed in the U.S.  by Miramax films. Just seven years ago he worked as a primary … [Read more...] about Roddy Doyle Has The Last Laugh

An American in Ireland: From Madison Avenue to Bruckless, Donegal 

By Kathleen Tierney O'Connell

January / February 1994

January 7, 1994 by Leave a Comment

Kathleen Tierney O'Connell, a third-generation Irish American and former editor at Vogue magazine, left the bright lights of Madison Avenue to be with the love of her life, Packie McFadden, a farmer in County Donegal. As a third generation American with Irish forebears on both sides of the family tree, I was always curious about Ireland and even flirted briefly with the idea … [Read more...] about An American in Ireland: From Madison Avenue to Bruckless, Donegal 

Irish Roots: Barry, Berry and Beirn 

By James G. Ryan

January / February 1994

January 7, 1994 by Leave a Comment

The Barry name is mainly of Norman origin and is very closely associated with County Cork. There is also a less common Gaelic origin from the Irish family O'Beargha, which was Anglicized as O'Barry or Barry. This family was also of Munster origin. Even today around 50 percent of the Barrys in Ireland are in Cork or other parts of Munster. A current prominent member of the … [Read more...] about Irish Roots: Barry, Berry and Beirn 

Denis & The Kids

Story and photographs by Oistin MacBride

January / February 1995

January 7, 1994 by Leave a Comment

It's long, long way from St. Patrick's School on the edge of Belfast's New Lodge Road to the sky scrapers of New York, never mind the plains of the Midwest and the fantasy of Disneyland, but that is precisely the journey made by some 900 children from the North of Ireland on a six week trip of a lifetime under the auspices of Project Children. In the playground of St. … [Read more...] about Denis & The Kids

Mission Dolores

By Jim Sullivan

January / February 1994

January 7, 1994 by Leave a Comment

A Californian Mission's Irish Past Mission Dolores, the oldest building in San Francisco, was the sixth of twenty-one missions, built under the direction of Father Junipero Serra and the Franciscan fathers, that would eventually stretch "about a hard day's drive [ride] from one to the next," from the Mexican border to an area north of San Francisco now known as Sonoma … [Read more...] about Mission Dolores

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March 22, 1848

The artist Sarah Purser was born in Dun Laoghaire, County Dublin on this day in 1848. She was raised in Dungarvan, County Waterford and educated in Switzerland. She went on to study at the Metropolitan School of Art in Dublin, and in Paris at the Académie Julian. Working primarily as a portrait artist, she also became associated with the stained glass movement. Purser opened a stained glass workshop in 1903, and some of her work was commissioned from as far away as New York City. Successful as she was in the arts, her wealth was accumulated primarily through investments. In 1923, she became the first woman to be made a member of the Royal Hibernian Academy.

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