seamus dubhghaill

Promoting Irish Culture and History from Little Rock, Arkansas, USA

About

As a descendant of Joshua Doyle (b. 1775, Dublin, Ireland), I have a strong interest in Irish culture and history, which is the primary focus of this site. I am a retired IT professional living in Little Rock, Arkansas, USA. I am a member of the Irish Cultural Society of Arkansas, a 501(c)(3) non-profit organization (2010-Present, President 2011-2017) and a commissioner on the City of Little Rock’s Public Safety Commission (2024-Present). I previously served as a commissioner on the City of Little Rock’s Arts and Culture Commission (2015-2020, 2021-2024, Chairman 2017-2018).

61 thoughts on “About

  1. Martin Dreyer's avatar

    Hi Jim

    I wanted to talk with you about Christy Ring – could you send me an email I could writ to you at please.
    Thank you.

    Like

  2. Ann V Quinlan's avatar

    Good morning, Jim
    My name is Ann Quinlan. I am native Irish from Co Meath (Boyne Valley) I live in Portland, Maine and am founder/owner (c. 1988) of Spiral Journeys, LLC a small land tour company focused exclusively on Ireland. I came across your blog this morning while doing some research on Brehon Law. I use some of this history when I offer my presentations on Hidden Ireland. All of this to say, if you ever wanted to put a group together for a land tour of Ireland I can arrange it for you. I offer a very broad spectrum on my homeland from ancient history, Megalithic to Solar energy. I just do the land portion and my groups are limited to 12 travelers (max 14) We stay in less traditional lodgings or Manor House Hotels…these tend to be off the main roads and offer land walking, bird/wildlife sanctuaries and more.
    Kindest regards.
    Ann V Quinlan

    Spiral Journeys, LLC
    16 Wilson Street
    Portland, Maine 04101
    http://www.spiraljourneys.com

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  3. Charles Duggan's avatar

    Dear Seamus. I am looking for a hi-res digital image of Sir Henry Lucius O’Brien for reproduction in a book on Henrietta Street, DUblin, Ireland, called The Best Address in Town, by Dr Melanie Hayes. I would be grateful for the source of the image you have. Regards, Charles

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    • Jim Doyle's avatar

      All of the photos I use are located on the internet, primarily Wikipedia, and are credited whenever possible. To be honest, I am not sure exactly where I found that photo. A Google search returns only one instance of that photo – the one on this site.

      Like

    • Mike Power's avatar

      Hi Charles.

      How have you got on with your book on Henrietta St?

      1990-2000 I lived in Dublin city and very much enjoyed rambling up to this beautiful remnant of Irish aristocracy. Shades of former greatness indeed!

      Rgds.

      Mike power.

      Like

  4. Eugene B. Sullivan's avatar

    Dia do bheatha! I’m also very interested in Irish history. I live in Las Vegas Nevada. I was born in Co. Cork, but have been out of Ireland for most of my life. Keep up the good work! Gene Sullivan

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  5. John Ranelagh's avatar

    Dear Jim, Can you tell me where you got the date – 23 June 1919 – for Collins becoming President of the IRB? John

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  6. Jans Bock-Schroeder's avatar

    He Seamus, my name is Jans Bock-Schroeder. I represent the photographic archive of German Photo Journalist. Peter Bock-Schroeder. My father was in Ireland in 1956 where he took photos. Here is the link to the pictures and the story. Greetings, JBS
    https://bock-schroeder.com/ireland

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  7. Liam Foley's avatar

    I am the author of The Buttevant Blog on Facebook and would like your permission to reproduce the article on Major Geoffrey Lee Compton-Smith on the blog ( fully credited). Regards, Liam Foley

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    • Jim Doyle's avatar

      Absolutely! I have no copyright on any of this material. In fact, most is just a rehash of Wikipedia posts timed to appear on the anniversary date of the event. I look forward to checking out your blog! Best wishes, Liam, and stay safe!

      Like

  8. Janet's avatar

    Hi Jim, love your site and your writings. My ancestors date back to arriving in the 1760s! I can’t help but notice just one article about a woman! Would love to read about the women who’ve also played major roles in making Ireland so great.
    Humbly,
    Janet

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  9. Anthony O'Brien's avatar

    Dear Jim, I am doing research for a book on our old family home, Cahermoyle House, Ardagh, County Limerick, where my father grew up. You have an article about Charlotte Grace OBrien, my great great aunt, including an oval portrait photo of her, which I would love to include. Can you please tell me where you found that image.

    Thank you,

    Kind regards,

    Anthony OBrien

    Like

    • Jim Doyle's avatar

      I had to have found it on the Internet…that’s where I get everything (primarily Wikipedia). Searching images for Charlotte Grace O’Brien, I now only find the instance posted on this site. I always strive to give proper credit if an image is copyrighted so, apparently, this one was in the public domain. I have no ownership of the image so, as far as I am concerned, feel free to use it. Best wishes on the book!

      Like

  10. John Doyle's avatar

    I just wish to inform you that your banner / header image of the charming old town with the stone bridge is most certainly not located in Ireland. The buildings are not in anyway similar to vernacular Irish architecture, and unfortunately, no Irish town is as pristine, protected, or maintained as the one in your image. Irish heritage and vernacular architecture is not protected as well as on the European Continent or Britain, and most towns and villages are seriously degraded spaces with market places taken over by car parks, old bridges widened for traffic, poor design and incongruous unsympathetic modern buildings often replacing demolished older architecture. I wish Irish-America would focus more on promoting a realistic view of Ireland and it’s problems, and also in doing more to promote a more enlightened view towards conservation of our heritage, since much of our most scenic countryside and historic towns and villages are destroyed by developments such as B&Bs, hotels, golf clubs, and other such business trying to capitalize on the Irish-American Tourist market.

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    • Jim Doyle's avatar

      Thank you for your comment! All I can say is that the image came from a website of Irish desktop wallpapers. Anyway, I try to change out the header image on a fairly regular basis and this one is past due for changing. Perhaps a little project for this weekend! Best wishes!

      Like

    • Tallaght Girl's avatar

      Greetings from Tallaght. Amazing blog. I keep a handwritten database of interesting Irish figures, but you have outdone me. Looking forward to reading through all of your wonderful work!

      Interestingly, a friend whose grandfather emigrated from Wexford to the U.S. many years ago said the Ozarks, more than anywhere in the U.S., reminded him of Ireland.

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      • Jim Doyle's avatar

        Hello and thank you for visiting my blog! Regarding the Ozarks, I have heard some of my friends who emigrated from Ireland years ago make that very same comment. Sláinte!

        Like

  11. Marjorie Doyle's avatar

    I am a relative of Seamus O Dubhghaill who was involved in the Easter Week Rising. He was my grandmother’s brother. Her name was Mary Doyle and she married John Doyle. They immigrated to Canada in 1912 we believe. While searching for information on this side of the Doyle family it was interesting to come across someone with almost exactly the same name.

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  12. Alex Sergeant's avatar

    Hello Jim and his followers,

    I am a film historian and I am currently conducting a research project on the silent film director Herbert Brenon.

    The project is in its early stages, with the information gathered so far relating largely to his early life in London before he travelled to the United States. I have also the pleasure of reading the limited work on Brenon that exists out there, including Ian Graham’s book.
    I would be very interested in making a connection with anyone out there who has any interest in or knowledge of this important director from Hollywood’s history. I would love to share any information I have with them in the hope of learning more.

    You can contract me at : alexander.sergeant@port.ac.uk

    Like

  13. Michael J. Daley's avatar

    Hi Jim,
    Could you contact me via email?
    re: Theobald Wolfe Tone genetic research project

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  14. 11sixtynine's avatar

    Hi from Dublin, Jim!
    Thanks for the follow – appreciated!
    GRMA!
    Sharon,
    11sixtynine,
    Dublin,
    🇮🇪!

    Like

  15. Brigid's avatar

    Dear Seamus,
    Could I send you a private email?
    Kind regards,
    Brigid

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  16. Alicia Guidone's avatar

    Hello Jim and Seamus: My mother was a Crampton and related to a lord Crampton I was told. I would love to know more about the Crampton’s more recent family tree. Do you have any sites I should explore?
    The information from an ancestry site indicates that we are related to some of the original colonists in Connecticut and 2 of King Henry’s wives… We have lineage in Ireland , Scotland and England.
    Thank you Alicia

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    • Jim Doyle's avatar

      Hello, Alicia,

      Thank you for visiting my site! Unfortunately, I have no additional information on the Crampton family at this time. Should I come across any information, I will gladly pass it along! Best wishes!

      Like

  17. Al Geraty's avatar

    Hi Seamus,
    I recently discovered your blog & certainly impressed by your knowledge of Irish history and writing skills. I manage a non-profit Irish photo site where my late uncle Brendan Doyle contributed his 1960’s photographs of the Aran Islands https://irelandposters.com/oldphotos/inismaan_aran_islands_pictures.html
    I worked on the Michael Collins film set during filming in 1995 and there are some photos of it with historical information included at https://irelandposters.com/irish_movies/
    Hope the above is of interest.
    Regards,
    Al

    Like

    • Jim Doyle's avatar

      Hello, Al,
      Thank you for visiting my site and thank you for the information! I look forward to visiting both of the links you provided! Best wishes!

      Like

  18. E Bourke's avatar

    Noel Lemass,

    Ernie O’Malley notebooks record an interview 76/100 p21 with Paddy O’Connor The notebooks are in the UCD archives

    On 28 June 1922 during the Fourcourts battle a staff car was ambushed at Leeson Street Bridge in Dublin. Col Mandeville and Capt Vaughan were killed by a grenade and the driver Spud Murphy wounded. As he was being stretchered away he said “Hello Noel” to one of the bystanders and Noel Lemass emptied his revolver into the injured man.
    Surgeon Banville saved him and used show visitors a jar with six bullets and 50 grenade splinters taken from Murphy.
    Noel Lemass was wanted for this foul deed and paid the price when he was captured.
    The full story behind many incidents of The War Of independence and civil war deserves to be followed up and i have tried to assemble details of infiltration and spies in “Murder by the Throat” covering the war of Independence.

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    • Jim Doyle's avatar

      That is fascinating! Is “Murder by the Throat” still in print? I see it was initially published in March 2020. I do not see it listed on Amazon. I would love to buy a copy! Thank you for visiting the site and for the information! Best wishes!

      Like

      • E Bourke's avatar

        kennys galway and teh bookshop.ie do it on mailorder

        amazon had become both impossible and greedy

        Liked by 1 person

      • Jim Doyle's avatar

        Thanks so much! I just ordered a copy from thebookshop.ie. I can’t wait to read it! Best wishes!

        Like

      • E Bourke's avatar

        There is an equally interesting antidote to teh Republican narrative of Ballyseedy

        the republican irregulars planted the mine according to an account in notebooks which was always the Free state position but denied by two kerry officers who had a spleen with their CO O’Daly

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      • Edward Bourke's avatar

        if you email me directly i can send the ballyseedy story

        Like

  19. johnmedici's avatar

    It is regretfully late to come across a writer on Irish History and more so the recent decades of Irish disfunction. The Darkley piece is well researched and leaves no bones about the basic destructive violence Irish on Irish I’ve detested all my life. I will explore your writings further and the words at a distance reverberate here in Belfast where I live. Best regards John Graham

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  20. John Spies's avatar

    Hello Seamus, just stumbled on this whilst looking for info re: the Loftus family. I am in Arkansas and my mother’s side are Loftis….Loftus….Lofthus going way back. I see a direct line to the first provost of Trinity!

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  21. Tlachtga's Sons's avatar
    less than five minutes the real story of Éire. In fortitude we conquer.

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  22. Bernie Scallon's avatar

    Hi Jim.  I too just discovered your site.  Thank you for doing what you do. 

    I have to suspect that you may be interested in a story I just put to writing.  On one hand it has to do with the families of three Furlong sisters (one being my second great grandmother) from the far southeast of County Wexford, Ire that had to basically sneak out of Ireland after the 1848 uprising – each family taking a different route – with the hope of rendezvousing in Dubuque, Iowa.  On the other hand the story tells how they were influenced in real time by an ongoing search by Mount Melleray monks for a new site in America AND also by their first cousin, Fr. Thomas Hore, who led more than 1100 followers to New Orleans, Little Rock, Fort Smith, St. Louis, and finally northeast Iowa – where he established a new settlement that they named Wexford.  The husbands of the three sisters checked out potential farms around both New Melleray Monastery in Dubuque County and around the new Wexford settlement in NE Iowa – and chose the monastery area, where they bought farms just over a mile from the monks. Because Fr. Hore, the monks, and all three of my ancestral families ended up in Iowa, the title begins ‘From Ireland to Iowa’. 

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  23. Bernie Scallon's avatar

    …In a related but separate story, the son of one of those Furlong sisters, Capt. John J Lambert, is a story by himself…  His father died when he was 14 so he supported the family by getting a job at the Dubuque Herald newspaper (he would later own his own successful newspaper in Colorado), served during the Civil War and then out on the western frontier, would be knighted by Pope Pius X in 1911, etc.  He apparently was a boyhood friend of Capt. Myles Keogh – and the two of them were delighted when, by chance, they crossed paths at Fort Reynolds, Colorado.  I know about this thanks to Capt. Lambert years later sharing his stories with a priest that paid Lambert a remarkably detailed published tribute after Lambert died in 1916. Anyway, I have an idea of where Lambert and Keogh may have met in Ireland, and if correct, would speak to where Keogh went to school. I’m trying to look into that.  I bring this up because I saw that you wrote about Keogh in June 2021. 

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  24. Trish Feehan's avatar

    Wonderful website, Jim! So much interesting history. John Edward Pigot was my great-grandfather’s older brother. I enjoyed reading about him. Thank you.

    Like

    • Jim Doyle's avatar

      Hello, Trish!
      Thank you for visiting my site. I always love to hear from people who knew (or know) or are related to a subject of a post, or experienced or know of someone who experienced an event. Best wishes!

      Like

  25. Ruairí Nolan's avatar

    Hi Jim, I love you’re work here, it’s is great to have a blog dedicated to Irish history and culture. I myself also write a blog about Irish history which you may like. I focus on the Irish experience during the Age of Revolutions – so people and events c. 1770-1850. Here is the link: https://aorireland.substack.com/

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    • Jim Doyle's avatar

      Hello, Ruairí! Thank you for visiting my site and for providing me with the link to your Irish history blog. I have subscribed and look forward to reading it. Sláinte!

      Like

  26. Mark Bulik's avatar

    Hi, Jim. Just stumbled across your blog. Here’s a a largely unknown bit of history that might be of interest — am ambush by the Irish Republican Army in New York: https://www.amazon.com/Ambush-Central-Park-When-Came/dp/1531502601

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  27. John crotty's avatar

    Hi Jim, I’d love to run a Clan na Gael question by you, are you on Twitter?

    Like

  28. ciaranburke81's avatar

    Hello Jim.

    I feel like I should apologise for only finding your site recently. I’m very impressed with your work and the research you’ve done on each subject. I’m a native of Co.Cork and can remember alot of these topics being briefly mentioned in my school days. However, these same topics were constantly brought up by my grandfather. Your pieces are genuinely the closest I’ve found that mirror the stories that were told to me as a child and were reinforced as a teen and young adult.

    I just wanted to say thank you for your work and I’m glad I found your site.

    Le gach deamhéin agus beir bua,

    Ciarán.

    Like

    • Jim Doyle's avatar

      Thank you for the kind words and for visiting my site, Ciaran! My goal is to draw attention to an event on the anniversary of its occurrence. Most of my information is from Wikipedia or the Dictionary of Irish Biography. Best wishes!

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  29. stevenmoysey2's avatar

    Dear Jim – I am a writer and researcher based outside Boston MA – originally from London. I am working on a new book as a follow up to an early work on the London ASU and the Balcombe street siege. This new work expand the coverage of the core group to the England campaign, and looks at the parallel events of the Guildford 4, M7, B6 and Judith ward. You have some excellent photos on your page and i would love to be able to feature some with your permission. Hope we can chat offline. Dr. Steve Moysey

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    • Jim Doyle's avatar

      Hello, Steve,
      Thank you for visiting my site! All photographs that I use I have picked up on the internet – I have no ownership. I maintain this site out of a love of Irish history and to raise awareness of events on the anniversary of their occurrence. You are welcome to use any photos from my posts. Best wishes on the new book and I look forward to reading it once it is published!
      Jim Doyle

      Liked by 1 person

  30. stevenmoysey2's avatar

    File sent! Hope you like it enough to post a short review!

    Cheers – Steve

    Like

  31. Pingback: Birth of George Simms, Archbishop in the Church of Ireland | seamus dubhghaill

  32. Mike Power's avatar

    Hi Seamus!

    I’m Mike Power, a local historian working here in Swords(near Dublin Airport), Ireland. My book Swords:History and Mysteries. A Community Guide. Is due to be published soon.I run heritage walks around Swords, which people seem to like.

    My special interests are the history of Swords-Prehistoric Stone Tools and celtic Christianity.

    What an impressive site you have here Seamus.! A great forum within which to share all aspects of Irish history.

    Best Wishes to all.

    Mike Power.

    Like

    • Jim Doyle's avatar

      Hello, Mike!

      Thank you for visiting my site and for the kind words! Good luck with the publication of your book. I will keep an eye out for its release!

      Best wishes!
      Seamus

      Like

  33. Mary Jones's avatar

    Hello Jim/Seamus,

    I came across your site yesterday while researching X-ray pioneers, the Stoney sisters Florence + Edith from Dublin.

    I credited your work on my LinKedin post.

    Your information was accurate, comprehensive and concurred with many other pieces I located.

    kudos!!

    Mary Jones , Dublin, Ireland.

    Like

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