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He also organised a lecture series for the Northern Ireland Community Relations Council. He was a member of the National Famine Committee and the Nomadic Project Board. He was a Trustee of the Ulster Historical Foundation. [14]
The Maxwells of Finnebrogue and the gentry of Co. Down, c. 1600-1963: a resident and responsible elite, Ulster Historical Foundation (2023). Malcomson, A.P.W., Nathaniel Clements, 1705-77: Politics, Fashion and Architecture in Mid-Eighteenth Century Ireland, Four Courts Press (2015).
History of the Irish Parliament, 1692–1800, Publisher: Ulster Historical Foundation (28 Feb 2002), ISBN 1-903688-09-4 T. W. Moody, F. X. Martin, F. J. Byrne, A New History of Ireland 1534-1691 , Oxford University Press, 1978
The Famine in Ulster (joint editor with Trevor Parkhill and contributor, Belfast: Ulster Historical Foundation, 1997 and 2014) This Great Calamity. The Irish Famine 1845-52 (Dublin: Gill and Macmillan, 1994; Colorado: Roberts Reinhart, 1995) Making Sense of Irish History. Evidence in Ireland for the Young Historian.
An information board outside the cemetery contains some of the key historical elements of the story of the cemetery, as seen in recent pictures. [14] There are a variety of groups offering tours of the cemetery and committed to the preservation and enhancement of his historic site. [15] [16]
Colonel Frederick Hugh Crawford, CBE, JP (21 August 1861 – 5 November 1952) was an officer in the British Army.A staunch Ulster loyalist, Crawford is most notable for organising the Larne gun-running which secured guns and ammunition for the Ulster Volunteers (UVF) in 1914, [1] [2] [3] which made him a hero for Northern Ireland's unionists.
Joseph Gillis Biggar (c. 1828 – 19 February 1890), commonly known as Joe Biggar [1] or J. G. Biggar, was an Irish nationalist politician from Belfast.He served as an MP in the House of Commons of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland as member of the Home Rule League and later Irish Parliamentary Party for Cavan from 1874 to 1885 and West Cavan from 1885 to his death in 1890.
On the steps of Ard Righ c. 1914: Bigger (centre), Roger Casement (back row, left) and what may be a west Belfast troop of Na Fianna Éireann. Francis Joseph Bigger (1863 – 9 December 1926 [1] [2]) was an Irish antiquarian, revivalist, solicitor, architect, author, editor, Member of the Royal Irish Academy, and Fellow of the Royal Society of Antiquaries of Ireland.