5,441 research outputs found

    Letter from Bishop J. Whyte to Hagan

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    Holograph letter from Bishop J. Whyte, Bishop's House, Rattray Street, Dunedin, New Zealand, to Hagan, enclosing a bank draft; he will send the second document separately

    Letter from Bishop J. Whyte to Hagan

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    Holograph letter from Bishop J. Whyte, Bishop's House, Rattray Street, Dunedin, New Zealand, to Hagan, thanking him for his kindness to Fr. O'Neill who is in Rome for two years. Fr. Coffey will visit Rome later in the year

    Letter from Bishop J. Whyte to Hagan

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    Holograph letter from Bishop J. Whyte, Dunedin (New Zealand), to Hagan, with congratulations. Enclosing duplicate of a draft. He enjoyed the Roman letter about the island of the saints; glad that Fr. O'Neill is happy

    Letter from Bishop J. Whyte to Hagan

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    Holograph letter from Bishop J. Whyte, Bishop's House, Dunedin, New Zealand, to Hagan, asking about the establishment of a new burse for the Irish College. Commenting that Frank [Terry] sheds light on their little seminary, writing to him from his vacation. Mentioning that he journeys to Invercargill for ordinations next week – 'v. your atlas'

    Letter from Bishop J. Whyte to Hagan

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    Holograph letter from Bishop J. Whyte, St. Joseph's Cathedral, Dunedin, New Zealand, to Hagan, asking if the College can take in Mr. Hugh O'Neill who will be ordained when he arrives in Rome. The Canadian College would be an alternative; the pension is paid by his family

    Letter from Bishop J. Whyte to Hagan

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    Holograph letter from Bishop J. Whyte, Kilkenny, to Hagan. He arrived a week ago. Commenting that the jubilee issue of the Tablet was very good; hoping a copy was sent to Cardinal van Rossum. Praising Hagan's breviary. Concerning the Irish problem he has only heard items so far that would turn him away from the irregulars. Taking exception with a part of Fr. Yorke's booklet on Lord Dunboyne. In deep gratitude for hospitality in Rome; they travelled via Lourdes and are wonderfully edified. Commenting that Bishop Downey is already in high favour with everybody

    Letter from Bishop J. Whyte to Hagan

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    Holograph letter from Bishop J. Whyte, Kilkenny, to (Hagan), glad to hear that he has recovered from his heavy illness. Congratulating him on having gained his wish with regard to Galway. He met Dr. Dempsey, newly installed at Clonliffe, who had just seen (John) McCormack in concert. He also met Fr. O'Neill and Monsignor Hickey. He is trying to recruit postulants for the Dominicans in Dunedin: 'in business parlance, there is a great deal of rivalry'. The republicans are very strong even in Kilkenny, while the government is a little complacent and certain of Cosgrave's success. His reticence on the party question pleased his hearers; he is glad Hagan agrees with that attitude. Inviting words of advice for Dr. Kelly

    Letter from Bishop J. Whyte to Hagan

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    Holograph letter from (Bishop) J. Whyte, Kilkenny, to (Hagan), with season's greetings. Sketching his itinerary from early January; unfortunately, he cannot come to Rome en route as planned. The see of Clonfert is still vacant; giving low opinion on Irish people of the west – 'a mitre in the west is an uncomfortable article of apparel. It is, perhaps, a lucky skull that misses it'. Remarks on Dr. Cleary's projected new weekly paper allegedly by the Pope's command –'you told me how easy it is to drag the Pope's name into "commands" of one sort or another'. It might interfere with Dr. Kelly's holiday plans; more comments on the archbishop's involvement, and Dr. Brodie's low opinion of the paper. Then stating the General Council is likely not held in 1925; while some Italians were created cardinals, no Americans were. Expressing good wishes for developments in Ireland; he sees the 'island of saints (and) doctors' still. Mentioning Jim Crotty's departure from Rome after 25 years. Asking to tell Curran that his efforts to learn Irish brought only amusement to others

    Whyte, J B, 404473

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    This record was harvested from a previous catalogue system and will be withdrawn in 2025. Information in this record may be superseded or incomplete. Visit this record in UMA's new catalogue at: https://archives.library.unimelb.edu.au/nodes/view/425602Surname: WHYTE. Given Name(s) or Initials: J B. Military Service Number or Last Known Location: 404473. Missing, Wounded and Prisoner of War Enquiry Card Index Number: 49319.251711 Item: [2016.0049.57863] "Whyte, J B, 404473

    Donna McIntyre Whyte Interview, 24 May 2013

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    Donna McIntyre Whyte is a Cleveland native, born in 1948, and grew up in the Glenville neighborhood, and then later on to the Mt. Pleasant area. Her father taught her and her sister many domestic and handy skills such as how to work on cars. She lived close to her grandparents, close enough to walk their alone as a child. Her grandparents have interesting stories, and she appreciated them and spent a lot of time with them. She does not recall any distinct instances of segregation, but does remember when the building of John F. Kennedy High School, and that the boundaries they drew for the school district seemed like a racial boundary in order to make Kennedy an all black school. At this time in the early to mid sixties, white families were fleeing the city and created South High School, the white equivalent to JFK. Whyte attended John Adams High School because it had honors programs and because her father went there. She was friends with people who went to JFK because the school was built her junior year. The interview stops at her high school graduation. She provides a great account of what it was like to grow up in the Glenville and Mt. Pleasant areas in the 1950s and 1960s
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