This series contains records relating to the death of members of the Trench family and their extended family.
File of records relating to the death of Henry Trench.
Included in the file is a copy of Henry Trench's will and codicil dated 18 January 1877 and codicil dated 29 January 1881.
Also included is a copy of the summarized account of the receipts and payments of the estate from 7 March 1881 to December 31 1884 for executors and trustees of the estate of the late Henry Trench.
A copy of the translation of certificate on postmortem examination of body of Mr Herbert B. Turnor made on 3rd August 1881 at Duryn, Ladak [India]. Also included in the file is a statement made by Domingo Francis Fernandez regarding Turnor's death.
Short extract from letter from Dom Alhed with instructions on the correct wearing of the amice, a liturgical vestment.
File of material relating to the life of Pat Moran, (1894-1971), once a lay brother at Tullabeg (1924-1926), afterwards cobbler at Central House of the De la Salle brothers at Castletown, county Laois. Includes copies of his biography entitled, ‘Pat Moran - The Saintly Cobbler of Castletown’.
File relating to the rental of accommodation for the summer villa of the Tullabeg community. Mainly includes material relating to the rental of Classiebawn Castle, county Sligo, such as correspondence between Fr Brendan Lawler SJ and Commander W.F.V. North, Estate Office, Romsey, Hampshire, acting on behalf of the owner, Countess Mountbatten of Burma.
Letter to Fr Paul Andrews SJ, Special Secretariat, from Fr Richard Coyne SJ, Tullabeg, concerning courses in adult education being run at various institutes.
Sans titreBook of Mass intentions received at Tullabeg. Each page records the number of intentions, who they were received and satisfied by, and the amount of money donated.
Cleaning and restoration of the stained glass windows by Evie Hone after their removal from the domestic chapel at Tullabeg. Negative prints. Printed out colour positives. 10 x 15cm each.
Extracts from Irish Province News concerning the Stations of the Cross by the French artist Robert de Villiers which were installed in the domestic chapel at Tullabeg.
The Irish Province News, Vol. V, No.3, July 1947, p.227, has the following:
'New Stations of the Cross have been installed in our Domestic Chapel. They are in terra cotta and were made by the French artist Roger de Villiers. Originally designed for a small church of Cardinal Verdier's in Paris, they came into the hands of Mr. Colquhoun, Protestant minister of St. John's, Sandymount, Dublin, and from there have finally come to rest in our chapel through the generosity of the father of one of Ours. They are noteworthy for their appeal and their simplicity, and indeed would seem to have been specially designed for our chapel.'
According to the benefactors book of St Stanislaus College, Tullabeg, Offaly, Senator Joseph Brennan purchased the Stations, and gave them to Tullabeg. He had two sons in the Society of Jesus, Jack and Joseph. On the closure of Tullabeg in 1991, the stations went to University Hall, Hatch Street, Dublin. With its closure in 2004, they were put up for auction, whereupon they were bought by St John's. When the Jesuits realised the previous connection to St John's, they donated the Stations.