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Civil service trade unionism in Ireland (part II) 1922-90
A history of the organisation of the irish civil service from the foundation of the independent state to the 1990s.
The Dublin Municipal Officers' Association and the 1916 Rising
The DMOA was the organisation that mobilised the Dublin Corporation officers and formed the national local government officers trade union for the the revolutionary Dáil Éireann in the aftermath of 1916.
Gladstone and the Irish civil service
an analysis of the impact of Gladstone's home rule proposal on the Irish civil service and its organization and their influence on the evolution of British policy on the Irish administration.
Henry (Harry) Nicholls (1887-1975) Assistant City Engineer and Republican Revolutionary
Harry Nicholls was the assistant city engineer to Dublin City, a member of the IRB and the Irish Volunteers active in the College of Surgeons garrison. He was a Protestant and the only graduate of TCD to be on the side ...
Civil service trade unionism in Ireland (part 1) 1801-1922
A history of the organization of the Irish civil service under the Union
The Church of Ireland parochial associations: a social and cultural analysis
a paper delivered to the 2007 conference at NUI Maynooth on the theme "Honouring God and community`; confraternities and sodalities in modern Ireland" and published in Colm Lennon (ed) Confraternities and Sodalities in ...
‘The organisation and activism of Dublin’s Protestant working-class 1883-1935’ in Irish Historical Studies, xxix,no.113 (May 1994).
Based on a range of sources including newly discovered records of the Dublin City and County Conservative Workingmens' Club founded in 1883.
Harry Nicholls and Kathleen Emerson: Protestant Rebels
A history of two figures as an analysis of Protestant republican and feminist radicalism in Ireland in the revolutionary era.
‘Churches and Symbolic Power in the Irish Landscape’
An analysis of the way in which church and other sites of religious significance were appropriated and contested in Irish History
The civil service and the revolution in Ireland, 1912-38: 'Shaking the blood-stained hand of Mr Collins'.
A history of the Irish civil service and its response to revolutionary changes in the State, based on previously unused sources, that challenges previous views of administrative continuity.



