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History Archive

Canada Recognizes Irish Famine Memorial

The Irish in Canada have won a major victory over the Canadian Government on how…

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Elizabeth Taylor Greenfield
Found her Voice in Ireland

In Elizabeth Taylor Greenfield: The Abolitionist “Black Swan”, Professor Christine Kinealy (Ireland’s Great Hunger Institute,…

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Remembering Alice James

When William of Albany, as he came to be known, left County Cavan in 1789…

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More Articles

Wild Irish Women: The Reporter Who Wouldn’t Go Away
History ArchivesJune July 2017 IssueWild Irish Women

Wild Irish Women: The Reporter Who Wouldn’t Go Away

By Rosemary Rogers, Contributor
June / July 2017
May 24, 2017 9 min read
Dorothy is Back! Dorothy Kilgallen was a TV and radio star, a columnist who wrote about theater and film, the rich and famous, but more than anything, she was a crime […]
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The Forgotten Irish American Artist of the Capitol Building
History ArchivesJune July 2017 Issue

The Forgotten Irish American Artist of the Capitol Building

By Geoffrey Cobb, Contributor
June / July 2017
May 24, 2017 9 min read
Geoffrey Cobb writes about Thomas Crawford, who sculpted the figure of Liberty and Freedom on top of the U.S. Capitol in Washington, DC.    People around the world recognize the […]
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Window on the Past:The Georgia Healys
History ArchivesJune July 2017 IssueWindow on The Past

Window on the Past:The Georgia Healys

By Ray Cavanaugh, Contributor
June / July 2017
May 24, 2017 6 min read
In antebellum Georgia, the Healy children, born legal slaves to an Irish immigrant father and his black common-law wife, had to be smuggled out of the state to avoid being […]
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Weekly Comment: The Great Tate Caper
History Archives

Weekly Comment: The Great Tate Caper

By Aidan Lonergan
April 14, 2017
Apr 13, 2017 9 min read
On April 12, 1956, two young Irish men walked into the Tate Gallery in London with one brazen objective in mind – to seize an £8 million impressionist masterpiece in […]
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Jimmy McAleer’s Opening Day Legacy
April May 2017 IssueHiberniaHistory ArchivesSports Archives

Jimmy McAleer’s Opening Day Legacy

By Cathal Coyle, Contributor
April / May 2017
Mar 12, 2017 4 min read
The Irish American baseball legend who introduced the concept of the opening day pitch by the President of the United States. James Robert, “Jimmy,” McAleer, the youngest of eight children, […]
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Window on the Past: Victoria & the Battering Ram (Photos)
April May 2017 IssueHistory ArchivesWindow on The Past

Window on the Past: Victoria & the Battering Ram (Photos)

By Christine Kinealy, Contributor
Mar 12, 2017 11 min read
Sean Sexton’s photographic archive, considered the finest privately-held collection of Irish photographs in the world, provide a poignant photo-history of evictions in the final decades of the 19th century. These […]
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