National Library of Ireland on The Commons

  • 4,160 photos
  • 122M views
  • Member since 2011
  • Last upload was
    5 hours ago
  • 🇮🇪
Here at the National Library of Ireland we look after the largest collection of Irish printed, manuscript, and visual material in the world, and our collections span almost 1,000 years of Irish art, culture, history and literature. We first started on flickr in February 2010 with a range of items from our Ephemera Collections. These printed items - originally produced to be almost as quickly thrown away - are invaluable as a means of gaining snapshots of different periods in Ireland's social, political, economic and cultural history. Though transient items, they're sometimes very beautiful to look at, occasionally fascinating, and often unintentionally funny...

When were these photos taken?

211
1749
2091

 

Where were these photos taken?

76% of these photos are geotagged.

These links will take you to Flickr.com. For now.

Photos of interest

These photos have had lots of views, comments, and favourites.

Recent uploads

The last upload was 5 hours ago.

Conversations

Here’s a selection of the conversations happening on these photos::

The Bonaventure gang

  • 13 older comments, and then…
  • beachcomber australia said:
    25 July 1948 was a Sunday ...

    Don't look at the carpet !
  • beachcomber australia said:
    A couple more, and an address ...
    catalogue.nli.ie/Record/vtls000595244
    catalogue.nli.ie/Record/vtls000595245

    "Sister Bonaventure, c/o Mrs. Kavanagh, 14, Barrack Street"
  • seikinsou said:
    Beautifully staged. It must have taken quite a while (probably days) to make this photograph happen.
  • National Library of Ireland on The Commons said:
    beachcomber australia What Carpet?
  • National Library of Ireland on The Commons said:
    seikinsou I would have thought that Poole would not have given more than 1 hour to get the whole process completed?

Farrell's Barricade

  • 11 older comments, and then…
  • Carol Maddock said:
    Love when this happens! We have a copy of that EASTER WEEK REPEATS ITSELF poster here at Library Towers, so deffo 1922... :)
  • domenico milella said:
    Congratulation for your beautiful Album.
  • Carol Maddock said:
    There's a Peter Farrell, job coach and undertaker establishment at 66 Marlborough Street (also 49-52 Corporation Street) in Thom's Directory, 1922.
  • Rory Sherlock said:
    Could this photo be taken from Upper Gloucester Street (now Sean McDermott Street) with Marlborough Street extending southwards behind the barricade and St Thomas's Church out of sight behind the railings and the disused graveyard out of sight behind the curving wall?
    maps.osi.ie/publicviewer/#V2,715905,734970,12,9
  • Niall McAuley said:
    The gate at left of this archive drawing of the front of St. Thomas's looks exactly like the gate pictured here.

Cúchulainn loved the Mód Direach!

  • 10 older comments, and then…
  • Mike Grimes said:
    Established in 1859, Dundalgan Press is one the oldest printing works in Ireland. The firm was started by William Tempest, and expanded under his son Henry (1881–1964).

    [From Facebook and Oxford Reference]
  • Mike Grimes said:
    Meet the founder.

    www.dib.ie/biography/tempest-william-a8491
  • National Library of Ireland on The Commons said:
    Here's Mr Tempest's shop (posted 15 years ago!).

  • Niall McAuley said:
    Tempest's Annual for 1905
  • beachcomber australia said:
    Can anyone find the charts online ?
    Please !

No comments. Yet.

Do you know anything about what’s in these photos?