Abstract of correspondence between the Army Command in Dublin and the British Home Office, headed "Sinn Fein Rebellion" |
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Copy of the court martial papers for Constance de Markievicz following the Easter Rising of 1916 |
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Correspondence and newsclippings re Dublin coal porters' strike |
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Correspondence between General Sir John G. Maxwell, John Redmond and T.P. Hanna, concerning Redmond’s efforts to secure the release of prisoners detained after the Easter Rising |
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Correspondence between Sir Horace Plunkett and Theodore Marburg, Paul D. Marratt, R.B. Marston, D.P. Martin, James Edward Masterton-Smith, John Matthai, Maunsel & Co. Ltd., John Grenfell Maxwell, P.J. McAndrew, and James McCarron. |
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Correspondence concerning Norman Leslie's duel with S.Yousry Pasha |
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Correspondence of Joseph Brennan with Sir John Anderson, General Maxwell and Sir Hamar Greenwood re attack by Crown forces on his parents' home, Kilbrogan House, Bandon, Co. Cork |
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Draft letter to Mr Asquith explaining public opinion and change of attitudes to the events surrounding the Rising |
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Draft report on the recruitment of Irish men for the British military forces, the possibility and consequences of conscription and the shortages of Irish recruits |
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General order issued by General J. G. Maxwell, Commanding-in-Chief, The Forces in Ireland, thanking the British Army troops, especially the Irish Regiments, who fought against the rebels in Dublin during the Easter Rising |
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Handwritten letter from Maxwell to his wife Louise Selina Bonynge Maxwell, concerning his leaving Ireland and opinion in Ireland of his actions |
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Handwritten report to the Chief Secretary on the military and security situation in Ireland |
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John Redmond Papers |
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Letter from Arthur Henderson to Thomas Johnson enclosing a copy letter from General Maxwell regarding arrests following the 1916 Easter Rising |
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Letter from Edward Villiers Stanley, War Office, Whitehall, London, to John Redmond, regarding an enclosed letter from Sir John Maxwell to Stanley concerning the consideration of a free pardon for Patrick Mahon |
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Letter from Eoin Mac Neill to General John Maxwell, 'General officer Commanding the Forces in Ireland', regarding an interview he had organised with him but was arrested after his arrival at the headquarters |
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Letter from General John G. Maxwell, Headquarters, Irish Command, Parkgate, Dublin, to T. J. Hanna, informing Redmond that Thomas O'Brien and James Fitzgerald have been interned under the provisions of the Defence of the Realm Regulations |
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Letter from John Maxwell to Hanna Sheehy-Skeffington, regarding property which had been seized after the death of Francis Sheehy-Skeffington |
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Letter from Maxwell to Lord Monteagle regarding clemency and sentencing of the accused |
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Letter from Maxwell to Mr Duke concerning the confiscation and return of weapons to the National Volunteers, and their status |
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Letter from Maxwell to Mr Samuel commenting on Irish-American feelings, the Plunkett family, and news of a cattle drive in Ballinasloe |
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Letter from "Mrs. Knight", North Bank, Skerries, Co. Dublin, to Sir John Maxwell, assuring Maxwell that her brother Thomas O'Reilly, took no part in the rioting in Dublin |
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Letter from R. H. L. Thomas, on behalf of General John G. Maxwell, Richmond Barracks, Dublin, to John Redmond, regarding the case of Patrick Gantly(?) |
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Letter from Sir John Maxwell to Mrs. Lillie Connolly [widow of James Connolly] regarding her attempts to retreive her husband's personal affects |
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Letters from Thomas Cassidy, David Campbell, Thomas McPartlin, Arthur Henderson and others to Thomas Johnson regarding the Irish Labour Pary and Trade Union Congress and the Scottish Trade Union Congress |
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Letters to Colonel Maurice Moore from various correspondents, many with copies or drafts of replies, concerning the Irish National Volunteers and many other topics of public interest |
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Notice from General John Grenfell Maxwell that flag day collections to raise funds for the Irish Volunteer Dependents' Fund shall result in arrest and prosecution |
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Official form, signed by Sir John Grenfell Maxwell, forbidding Mary Josephine Plunkett, Countess Plunkett, from entering or residing in Ireland without written consent from a military figure, and for her to report her proposed new place of residence for approval |
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Order : I, General the right honourable Sir J. G. Maxwell, K.G.B. ; C.V.O. ; D.S.O. ; Commanding-in-Chief the Forces in Ireland, In exercise of power ... Regulations hereby prohibit the manufacture, sale, transfer or disposal of firearms, part of fire-arms, Military arms, parts of Military arms, ammunition or explosive substances...[dated] 30th March, 1916 |
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Papers regarding British administration in Ireland, including 'Public Attitude and Opinion as to the Recent Outbreak' and 'State of Public Feeling in Ireland', and the confiscation of weapons |
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Pass issued by General Sir John Maxwell, Commandant in Chief, Ireland, for Joseph Brennan, permitting him to travel anywhere in Ireland |
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Public notice arms and ammunition |
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Public notice-Conveyance of letters out of Ireland ... [applying Regulation no. 24 of the Defence of the Realm (Consolidation) Regulations 1914 to the transmission of mail from Ireland to abroad] |
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Public notice. Passengers leaving Ireland ... no person shall embark as a passenger on board any vessel except at one of the following ports ... [dated] 2nd May, 1916. |
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Report on State of Ireland Since the Rebellion |
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Report on the British War Office, Secretary of States for War and persons involved in decision making in the British Government during the War |
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Special Irish command order : message from H. M. The King... |
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Summary of evidence in the court-martial of George Oliver Plunkett |
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Third Supplement to the London Gazette of Tuesday |
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Typescript letter from John Grenfell Maxwell to Walter Long regarding military intelligence and the legality of volunteer organisations in Ireland |
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Typescript letter from Maxwell to Herbert Asquith requesting his position to be regularised and redefined, giving an overview of the political situation |
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Typescript letter from Wingate to Maxwell regarding the situations in Ireland, Hejaz, India, Ottoman Empire, North Africa and the Western Front |
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Typescript letter to Mr Asquith concerning convicting the accused, detention of women, and the shooting and burial of people by the British Army |
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Typescript letter to Mr Asquith explaining the actions of Bishop O'Dwyer of Limerick and some Roman Catholic priests after the Rising |
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Typescript letter to the Secretary of State for War relaying the events of the Easter Rising and the reactions of the British Army |
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