This special issue of The Shanachie is titled Ireland, Irish-America and the Titanic. Commemorating the 100th anniversary of the sinking of Titanic, the issue includes a timeline of the sinking, illustrations and portraits, and historical reports of Irish who survived and those who did not
This menu for lunch on the 14th. April 1912 is the day before the ship sank (15th. April 1912). The ...
voiceCollected by Irene Carlisle Transcribed by Mary C. Parler Irving Anglin Springdale, Arkansas Ap...
Out of the 771 people on board the Leinster, 501 died when it was torpedoed on 10 October, 1918. To ...
This 16-page issue of our newsletter commemorates the 100th anniversary of the armistice which ended...
The Irish Sea which separates Great Britain and Ireland has often been written about in terms of div...
The Titanic was originally called the ship that was “unsinkable” and was considered the most luxurio...
On April 14, 1912, the unsinkable RMS Titanic struck an iceberg off the coast of Newfoundland, desce...
The RMS Titanic is perhaps one of the most famous disasters in United States history. Despite being ...
In this issue: Two memorable anniversaries for 2020; Thoughts about The Shanachie & the Ethnic Herit...
On Saturday, July 29, several dozen Irish currach rowers, turned the clock back to the 6th century o...
The future of the Great Hunger Museum at Quinnipiac University in Hamden --In the 1650s a group of E...
Meriden: A Connecticut Irishtown: In 1836, Paddies laid rail tracks to future industrial city --Iris...
Neil Hogan and Patrick J. Mahoney have co-authored a book that commemorates the role of Connecticut ...
This issue is titled A Treasure Trove of Connecticut Irish History from the 1870s . A rich vein of...
A century after the historic ship sank in the Atlantic Ocean with massive loss of life, the memory s...
This menu for lunch on the 14th. April 1912 is the day before the ship sank (15th. April 1912). The ...
voiceCollected by Irene Carlisle Transcribed by Mary C. Parler Irving Anglin Springdale, Arkansas Ap...
Out of the 771 people on board the Leinster, 501 died when it was torpedoed on 10 October, 1918. To ...
This 16-page issue of our newsletter commemorates the 100th anniversary of the armistice which ended...
The Irish Sea which separates Great Britain and Ireland has often been written about in terms of div...
The Titanic was originally called the ship that was “unsinkable” and was considered the most luxurio...
On April 14, 1912, the unsinkable RMS Titanic struck an iceberg off the coast of Newfoundland, desce...
The RMS Titanic is perhaps one of the most famous disasters in United States history. Despite being ...
In this issue: Two memorable anniversaries for 2020; Thoughts about The Shanachie & the Ethnic Herit...
On Saturday, July 29, several dozen Irish currach rowers, turned the clock back to the 6th century o...
The future of the Great Hunger Museum at Quinnipiac University in Hamden --In the 1650s a group of E...
Meriden: A Connecticut Irishtown: In 1836, Paddies laid rail tracks to future industrial city --Iris...
Neil Hogan and Patrick J. Mahoney have co-authored a book that commemorates the role of Connecticut ...
This issue is titled A Treasure Trove of Connecticut Irish History from the 1870s . A rich vein of...
A century after the historic ship sank in the Atlantic Ocean with massive loss of life, the memory s...
This menu for lunch on the 14th. April 1912 is the day before the ship sank (15th. April 1912). The ...
voiceCollected by Irene Carlisle Transcribed by Mary C. Parler Irving Anglin Springdale, Arkansas Ap...
Out of the 771 people on board the Leinster, 501 died when it was torpedoed on 10 October, 1918. To ...