11,955 research outputs found

    Finding Aid to the Collection of James Brendan Connolly Materials

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    The Connolly Collection contains the writings and personal library of James Brendan Connolly (1868-1957). The collection includes Connolly\u27s reminiscences, newspaper articles, and galley and page proofs as well as scrapbook clippings. There are also notebooks containing holograph notes on schooners and the navy, letters from Connolly\u27s personal correspondence, and books from Connolly\u27s personal library. James Brendan Connolly (1868-1957) was an Irish-American author of sea-related stories, novels, and nonfiction such as The Book of the Gloucester Fishermen. Born in South Boston, he attended Harvard and was a medal-winning athlete in the first modern Olympics, held in Athens in 1896. He participated in the Siege of Santiago as a member of the 9th Regiment, ran for the 12th Congressional District (South Boston) seat as a member of the Progressive Party in 1914, and worked as a correspondent for such publications as Scribner\u27s, Harper\u27s and Collier\u27s

    ?The Confluence? by James B. Connolly

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    Manuscript concerns the Fort Union-Fort Buford area near the confluence of the Yellowstone and Missouri rivers in northwestern North Dakota. Includes a bibliography (2 p.) and letter written to Roy Johnson from Mr. Connolly

    Opeas albaniense Connolly 1919

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    <p> <i>albaniense,</i> <i>Opeas</i> Connolly 1919a: 217; text fig. 2. Cape Province, Alicedale [locality of author’s ‘type’, <i>vide</i> Connolly 1939: 352]; Grahamstown. Two paratypes [Alicedale] EE.5411 {Spence ex Connolly}.</p>Published as part of <i>McGhie, Henry, 2008, Catalogue of type specimens of molluscs in the collection of The Manchester Museum, The University of Manchester, UK, pp. 1-46 in ZooKeys 4 (4)</i> on page 5, DOI: 10.3897/zookeys.4.32, <a href="http://zenodo.org/record/576421">http://zenodo.org/record/576421</a&gt

    Connolly, Lehman P. interview

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    Oral History interview of Lehman Connolly. Interview conducted by Jennifer Staton at University of Central Florida

    The CPGB, the Connolly Association and Irish communism, 1945–1962

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    This article examines the relationship between the Communist Party of Great Britain and Irish communists in both Ireland and Britain in the post-war era. It argues that the British party’s strategic interest in Ireland gradually waned as it became apparent that Irish communism would remain divided by the border. The article also argues how, in Britain, competition between the nationalist Anti-Partition League and the communist dominated Connolly Association led the latter to abandon cold war sectarianism and to adopt a ‘broad strategy’ championing civil rights in Northern Ireland. The article draws out the key role played by Charles Desmond Greaves in this process, whilst noting the importance of factionalism and external factors, notably the Irish Republican Army’s Border Campaign

    American career of James Connolly

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    So badly wounded that he had to be propped up in a chair to face the firing squad, James Connolly was executed by the British on May 10, 1916 in Dublin\u27s infamous Kilmainham Jail. He had been one of the leaders of the abortive Easter \u27Rising against English control of Ireland. This event in itself was sufficient to guarantee him a significant place in Irish history but Connolly had achieved prominence in other activities as well. Besides being a revolutionary nationalist he had been a Marxist and a labor leader, had founded the Irish Socialist Republican Party and had played a major role in the general strike in Dublin from August, 1913 through March, 1914. Altogether, it is not surprising that all the biographies of Connolly have concentrated on his role in Irish history and that little if any attention has been given to his significance in the history of American radicalism

    Reverend Peter Connolly (1927-1987)

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    Reverend Peter Connolly (1927-1987) . In: Études irlandaises, n°12-2, 1987. p. 14

    Gulella dautzenbergi Connolly 1928

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    <i>Gulella dautzenbergi</i> Connolly, 1928 <p>Fig. 27</p> <p> <i>Gulella dautzenbergi</i> Connolly,1928: 534, pl. 18, fig. 3.</p> <p>LOCALITÉ TYPE. — Panguma, Sierra Leone.</p> <p> <b>FIG. 27</b>. <i>Gulella dautzenbergi</i> Connolly, 1928. Coquille embryonnaire lisse et brillante à suture crénelée.</p> <p> <i>FIG. 27</i>. Gulella dautzenbergi <i>Connolly, 1928</i> <i>. Shell in embryo smooth and glossy with crenated suture.</i></p> <p>DESCRIPTION. — Coquille de petite taille (4,6 × 2,3 mm). Spire composée de 6-7 tours. Coquille embryonnaire de 1 3/4 tour lisse et brillante à suture crénelée. Les tours suivants sont ornés de stries microscopiques, obliques et régulières. Ouverture subquadrangulaire à bords évasés. Seulement une dent pariétale.</p> <p> DISTRIBUTION. — Habite la Sierra Leone et le Liberia. Au mont Nimba, signalé par Binder (1963: 30, fig. 21) sous le nom de <i>Gulella (Paucidentina) dautzenbergi</i>, en provenance de Ziéla.</p>Published as part of <i>Résumé, Jacques Daget, 2003, Les Mollusques terrestres et fluviatiles du mont Nimba, pp. 183-210 in Mémoires du Muséum national d'Histoire naturelle 190</i> on pages 206-20
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