Fr Frank Browne SJ with clergy at St Joseph’s fishponds, Bristol, England
- IE IJA J/7/161
- Eitem
- 1 March 1949
Rhan oIrish Jesuits
Fr Frank Browne SJ with clergy at St Joseph's fishponds, Bristol, England.
Heb deitl
Fr Frank Browne SJ with clergy at St Joseph’s fishponds, Bristol, England
Rhan oIrish Jesuits
Fr Frank Browne SJ with clergy at St Joseph's fishponds, Bristol, England.
Heb deitl
Rhan oIrish Jesuits
Letters from Fr Francis Browne SJ to the Irish Fr Provincial Thomas V Nolan SJ, written from Germany (28 December 1918-9 February 1919, 4 items), Bishop's House, Queenstown (Cobh), Cork (27 February 1919) and from Warley Barracks, Essex (10 March 1919-6 September 1919, 8 items) including one describing his daily routine as Chaplain to the Irish Guards (6 May 1919, 6pp).
Heb deitl
Letter and photographs from C.C Barham, Kodak Magazine Kingsway, London, to Fr Frank Browne SJ
Rhan oIrish Jesuits
Letter from C.C Barham, Editor of Kodak Magazine Kingsway, London, to Fr Frank Browne SJ, returning the series of photographs of the ‘Angels’ and asking Fr Browne to write a short photographic article on them. Includes photographs of churches in East Anglia (Norfolk and Suffolk) with captions by Fr Frank Browne SJ on reverse, and some photographs of angels (stone) in Ireland.
Heb deitl
Nine photographic albums belonging to Fr Frank Browne SJ containing positives (his own)
Rhan oIrish Jesuits
Nine photographic albums belonging to Fr Frank Browne SJ containing positives (his own). Fr Browne has captioned some of the albums:
Heb deitl
Rhan oIrish Jesuits
Heb deitl
Fr Frank Browne SJ with Fr Joseph Scannell, Arras, France
Rhan oIrish Jesuits
Fr Frank Browne SJ with Fr Joseph Scannell, Arras, France (1917-8) which includes soldiers in France, destruction in Arras, France and Bishop Keating giving Benediction at Corpus Christ, Warley Barracks, England (1919) , postcards and envelopes. Eight large negatives of Frs Joe Scannell, McShane and Fr Frank Browne SJ, Arras (1918) and bomb damage. Photograph of Fr Frank Browne SJ and Monsignor Joseph Scannell taken post-First World War.
Heb deitl