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Reunion Negotiations
Read Article: Reunion NegotiationsJohn Redmond’s Parnellite followers opened formal communications with their former anti-Parnellite opponents as pressure intensified to repair the divisions created by the fall of Charles Stewart Parnell. Since the parliamentary split of 1890, Irish constitutional nationalism had broken into competing groups whose leaders differed over authority, organisation and political strategy. Redmond led the principal Parnellite…
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Reunion Talks
Read Article: Reunion TalksJohn Redmond’s Parnellite followers entered formal discussions with their former anti-Parnellite opponents as pressure mounted to end nearly a decade of nationalist division. Redmond had led the minority that remained loyal to Charles Stewart Parnell after the Irish Parliamentary Party split in December 1890. The larger anti-Parnellite body was principally associated with John Dillon, while…
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Headlines Divided
Read Article: Headlines DividedDublin newspapers published extensive political and military coverage on 25 January 1900, placing Ireland’s internal nationalist divisions beside the continuing conflict in South Africa. Reports on the recent Mansion House conference examined attempts to reunite the parliamentary factions separated since the fall of Charles Stewart Parnell. In adjoining columns, readers encountered military dispatches, troop movements…
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Veteran Dies
Read Article: Veteran DiesSergeant James Pearson, an Irish-born recipient of the Victoria Cross, died at Poonamallee near Madras on 23 January 1900, aged seventy-seven. Born at Rathdowney in Queen’s County on 2 October 1822, he had spent much of his adult life in India. Pearson first entered military service with the 86th Regiment of Foot, later associated with…
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Veteran Dies
Read Article: Veteran DiesLieutenant-Colonel Abraham Boulger, one of Ireland’s earliest recipients of the Victoria Cross, died at Moate, County Westmeath, on 23 January 1900, aged sixty-four. Born at Kilcullen, County Kildare, on 4 September 1835, he entered the British Army and rose from the ranks during a long career of active service. His reputation rested principally upon his…
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Painter Born
Read Article: Painter BornMaurice Joseph MacGonigal was born in Ranelagh, Dublin, on 22 January 1900, the only son and third child of Francis MacGonigal and Caroline Lane. His father was a painter and decorator from County Sligo, while his mother belonged to a family already connected with Irish craftsmanship and art. Growing up within that environment exposed him…
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Reunion Advances
Read Article: Reunion AdvancesNegotiations to reunite Ireland’s divided nationalist parliamentarians advanced formally during the Mansion House conference held on 17 January. Representatives associated with the rival factions created by the fall of Charles Stewart Parnell met in Dublin to consider practical terms for restoring a single parliamentary organisation. Nearly a decade of internal conflict had weakened nationalist influence…
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Artist Born
Read Article: Artist BornHarry Aaron Kernoff was born in London on 9 January 1900 into a Jewish family whose origins reached across eastern and southern Europe. His father, Isaac Kernoff, was a furniture maker of Russian-Jewish background, while his mother, Katherine, came from a Sephardic Jewish family. The household combined skilled craftsmanship with the experience of migration, placing…

