March 17, 1920, was a good day for a parade in Columbus, and all who were Irish -- or felt they should be Irish for a day -- turned out to march. The march to observe, commemorate and celebrate St.
Can you help identify this man? A colorized video of a County Clare man searching for his son in the United States in the 1920s went viral on Twitter. Posted by the "Old Ireland in Colour" Twitter ...
Shot by an American ornithologist in the early years of Irish independence, the footage turned up in the archives of the Chicago Academy of Sciences and is being restored. By Claire Fahy DUBLIN — ...
I BEGIN by saying that the common belief in America that the present movement in Ireland is a spontaneous eruption of a people smarting under tyrannous oppression is not well-founded. The movement, ...
CANNES, France – British director Ken Loach’s “The Wind That Shakes the Barley,” a saga set amid Ireland’s struggle for independence in the early 1920s, won top honors Sunday in a unanimous vote at ...
The violent birth and subsequent splintering of the Irish Republican Army is the subject of a new film called The Wind That Shakes the Barley. Director Ken Loach's uncompromising stance on class ...
Editor’s note: In celebration of the department’s centennial anniversary, the Showcasing the DNR feature series will highlight one story each month during 2021 that recalls various accomplishments of ...
Bias in reporting isn't something that's new as evidenced in these accounts from 1920. Oftentimes it depends on who is writing an article or what agency is reporting on a story which "facts" are ...
Editor’s note: In celebration of the department’s centennial anniversary, the Showcasing the DNR feature series will highlight one story each month during 2021 that recalls various accomplishments of ...