User : Smirkybec/100wikidays
Albert Bibby (1877–1925), Capuchin priest and republican born Thomas Francis Bibby
Mary Bolton (counsellor)
Alive Barry, 1st countess of Barrymore (1608–c. 1667)
Elizabeth Boyle, countess of Cork and Burlington (1613–1691)
Margaret Boyle, 1st countess of Orrery (1623–1689)
José Browne artist, wife of Denis Browne, 10th Marquess of Sligo
Timothy Corcoran (cultural historian) un-redirect
Ellen Courtenay
Maeve Curtis (1911–71), journalist and teacher
Constance Delap
Marie Louise Dickie (1871–1947), public servant
P. V. Doyle hotelier and builder
Robert Emmet (state physician) (1729–1802)
James Esdall (d. 1755), printer, publisher, and bookseller
George Furlong
Denis Guiney
Timothy Hallissy
John Harding (printer)
Cathy Henderson (undo redirect?) (1963–2014), artist
Mary Hennessey Sister of Charity and pioneer in primary education
Elizabeth Holmes (philanthropist)
John Ingram (educationalist) (1887–1973), engineer, educationalist, and civil servant
Florence Irwin (1883–1965), educator
Theophilus Jones (printer)
Alice Keenan (1836–1914), Sister of Mercy and educator
Iris Kellett (1926–2011), showjumper and horse trainer
Rosaline Kelly (1922–2013), union official and media professional
Sarah Kelly (landowner) (1801–56), landowner and murder victim
Brigid Lynch (1757–1830), sixth abbess of the Ypres Benedictine convent
Máire MacDermott Roe (d. 1739?), patron of Turlough Carolan
Berna McIvor (1932–2010), political and community activist
Maud McKee (1954–2014), medical doctor and therapist
Anne Maher (c.1845–1924), servant
Marie Moore (republican activist) (1936–2009)
Catherine Louisa Morgan (c.1838–1886), divorcée
Máire O'Brien (civil servant) (1882-1958), republican activist, civil servant and translator
Miriam Thérèse O'Brien (1945–2006), religious sister, educator, and aid worker in west Africa
Veronica O'Brien (spiritual adviser) (1905–98), Legion of Mary worker and spiritual adviser
Maura O'Donohue (1933–2015), missionary doctor and public health campaigner
John Grey Vesey Porter son of Margaret Grey Porter
Eileen Randles (1937–2015), teacher, education leader and nun
Mary Redmond (solicitor) (1950–2015), solicitor and founder of the Irish Hospice Foundation
Agnes Ryan (businesswoman) (1890–1971), businesswoman
Etienne Rynne (1932–2012), archaeologist
William Tighe (MP) (1766–1816), politician, topographer, and landowner, father of Theodosia Blachford
William Theobald Wolfe Tone son of Matilda Tone and Wolfe Tone
Paddy Trench (1905–48), Trotskyite socialist
Terry Trench (1909–2005), founder of An Óige, author and businessman
Wilbraham Trench (1873–1939), academic
Eibhlín Uí Choisdeailbh (1870–1962), folksong collector, Irish language enthusiast, and political activist
Patricia Walsh (nurse) (1942–2015), missionary nurse
Danuta Wejchert (1938–2014), architect
Katie Gifford Wilson , Gifford sister
William Wright (professor) former dean of engineering at TCD
Janie Beamish (1856-1930)
Robert Cresswell Boak
John Nunn Bolton
John Bourke (sculptor)
Howard Bowen (artist)
Charles Braithwaite (artist)
Peter Brennan (sculptor)
Meredith Brosnan
Nicholas A. Brophy
Nassau Blair Browne
Robert Burke (artist) (1909-1991)
Thomas Burke (British painter) (1906-1945)
Michael Byrne (Irish artist) (1923-1989)
John Carey (Irish artist)
Joseph S. M. Carré (fl. 1900-1914)
Mina Carney (1892-1974)
Aloysius J. Cashen (1896-1972)
Hugh C. Charde (1858-1946)
Katherine Clausen (1886-1936)
Terence Clarke (Irish artist) (1917-1968)
Brian Coghlan (Irish artist) (1903-1978)
Eileen Coghlan (1909-1990)
Alexander Colles (artist) (1850-1945)
Annie Colthurst (1855-1930)
Helen Colvill (1856-1953)
Margaret Condon (1884-1969)
Emily D. Corry (1873-1942)
Oswald Hamilton Cunningham (1883-c.1935)
Leslie Curtis (artist) (1918-1974)
Joseph Cusack (Irish artist) (1906-1983)
John Day (Irish artist) (1854-1931)
Vincent de Gernon (1856-fl.1909)
Sally de Montfort (1929-1996)
Michael Dignam (c.1874-1934)
Seán Dixon (1905-1946)
Gerard Donnolly (1911-1975)
Christopher M. Doran (1900-1981)
William Dowling (Irish artist) (1907-1980)
Mary Duncan (artist) (1885-1964)
William Earley (Irish artist) (1872-1956)
Phyllis Eason (1896-1974)
Paul Egestorff (1906-1995)
Robert Elliott (Irish artist) (1863-1910)
Michael Farrell (Irish artist) (1893-1948)
Richard Faulkner (Irish artist) (1917-1988)
George Drummond-Fish (fl 1906-1938)
Dorothy Fitzgerald (1888-1979)
Ian Friers (1909-1975)
Stella Frost (1890-1962)
William H. Fry (artist) (1883-1962)
Seamus Furlong (1920-1998)
Theodora Harrison (1890-1969)
Phyllis Hayward (1903-1985)
Gwendolen Herbert (1878-1966)
Clara Irwin (1853-1921)
Cecilia Keyes (1873-1941)
Alice M. Latimer (1874-1964)
Nettie McCormick (Irish artist) (fl. 1906-1936)
Phylis Moore (1879-1976)
Gertrude O'Flynn (1895-1946)
Elsie O'Keefe (1877-fl. 1916)
Frida Perrott (fl. 1899-1946)
Daphne Pitt-Taylor (1889-1945)
Maureen Collins Ryan (1909-1977)
Margaret Saunders (artist) (1851-1918) portrait and figure painter
Georgie McCutcheon George (Georgie) McCutcheon (1958-2015)
Trish Reilly Irish Traveller activist and performer
Rose Marie Maughan human rights activist and Accommodation Policy Officer with the Irish Traveller Movement
Martin Warde Traveller, comedian, writer, podcaster
Fitzwilliam Street, Dublin
Bridge Street, Dublin
Castle Street, Dublin
James Joyce Street
Church Street, Dublin
Delville House
Hainault House
St Teresa's Church, Clarendon Street
Exchequer Street
North Brunswick Street (Dublin Workhouse)
Joseph Bewley (1795–1851), philanthropist
Henry Bewley (1804–76), businessman and evangelist
Joshua Bewley (1819–1900), tea and coffee merchant
Henry Theodore Bewley (1860–1945), physician and lecturer, son of Henry Bewley
Geoffrey Bewley (1894–1981), physician, son of Henry Theodore Bewley
Kenneth Bewley (1890–1943), civil servant, son of Henry Theodore Bewley
Ernest Bewley (1860–1932), founder of Bewley's Oriental Cafés (son of Joshua)
Victor Bewley (1912–99)
Public housing in the Republic of Ireland base on Public housing in the United Kingdom
Bungalow Bliss by Jack Fitzsimons
Jude Sherry
Frank O'Connor (designer)
Gillian Darley
free! (magazine)
The Outing Festival
Pat Wallace
Irish Yeast Company
Frank Feely (city manager)
Rachel Evelyn Butler (1826-1898) author
John Coll (artist)
Linda Brunker
Caoimhe Kilfeather
Elizabeth O'Kane
Elizabeth McLaughlin (artist)
Alice Rekab
Sandra Bell
Betty Newman
Geraldine Creedon (artist)
Refugee and Migrant Solidarity Centre Ireland
Cooking for Freedom
Our Table
Sanctuary Runners
Tolü Makay
Felispeaks
Lorraine Maher curator of I am Irish
Anthony Ekundayo Lennon
Zithelo Bobby Mthombeni
Dublin Sketching Club now the Dublin Painting and Sketching Club
Irish Decorative Art Association
Irish National Ballet
Cork Orchestral Society
Cork Ballet Company
Andrea Jameson (born Norway 1953)
Patricia Jorgensen (born 1936)
Louisa Glascott
Laura Stephens (linguist) (1875-1958)
Bridget Dudley Edwards suffragette and a member of Cumann na mBan
Geraldine Leeson Lady Milltown
Annie Brophy Irish photographer
Edward William O'Flaherty Lynam curator in the British Library
Susie Kennedy
Mary Garrioch
Gráinne Uí Mhaitiú
Frank Twomey (actor)
Mai Lambert
Cecil F. Ford
Nino Bartholomew
The Jimmy Cake Irish band
Aran Heritage Centre
Ardara Heritage Centre
Athenry Heritage Centre
Bantry Museum
Battle Of Aughrim Interpretative Centre
Belcarra Eviction Cottage
Berkeley Costume and Toy Museum
Bray Heritage Centre
Burren Centre
Cape Clear Museum
Carrick Craft Basketry Museum
Cruachan Aí Heritage Centre
Douglas Hyde Centre
Doagh Famine Village
Donaghmore Famine Workhouse Museum
Dunlewey Centre
Glebe House and Gallery
Hillview Museum
Jackie Clarke Library and Archives
Mountmellick Museum
Thurles Castle
Henry Hawley (naturalist)
James Wilson (Irish naturalist)
John Adams (naturalist)
Walter Mead Rankin
Frances Proskitt , born in England
Patrick Dowling (engineer) (1904-1999) electrical engineer
John Horn (shipbuilder) (1814-1895)
John Henry Synge (1788-1845) educator
Francis Nevill (c.1648 - 1727) geologist
Maura O'Crohan (Q19882701) Irish writer?
Máirín Ní Rodaigh (Q13157586) Irish language teacher
Sarah Jane Carr (Q43928546)
Sister Agnes (Q27833494) Irish nun and hymn-writer
The Big Snow of 1982 large snowfall in Ireland, weather event
William Edward Steele director of the National Museum of Ireland
George Tindall Plunkett director of the National Museum of Ireland
Breandán Ó Ríordáin director of the National Museum of Ireland
Margaret Murphy (suffragette)
Leslie Owen (academic) and Linguist
Mary Rynne , Abbey playwright and author
Sherd
Potsherd ref 1 ref 2 ref 3
Walsh Whiskey Distillery
Conservation and restoration of fluid preserved specimens
Tempo Manor County Fermanagh
John Dunville (distiller) (1866 - 1929), Whiskey Distiller And Balloonist
Violet Anne Blanche Dunville née Lambart (Mrs. John Dunville) (1861-1940)
Mir Aulad Ali TCD professor 1866-1890
Dick Joynt
Francis Sandys
Percy Wood (sculptor)
Niall Montgomery
Jakki McKenna
Daithí Hanly
C. J. McCarthy Dublin city architect
William Sedgwick Keatinge architect
James Toomey (architect)
Fergus O'Ryan painter (1911-1989)
Brian J. Goggin historian
Donal Cregan
Max Zaska musician
Lucille Redmond
Sara E. Hampson Nurse, the first lady superintendent of the Rotunda Hospital, Dublin fl. 1860-1908
Honoria Galwey
Frances Cassandra Hawke wife of Lawrence Parsons, 4th Earl of Rosse
Patrick Laver diplomat
Irish badminton players
edit
Dorothy Cunningham (image on Museum of Badminton site)
M. Obre possibly Mary Obre/é from Armagh and living at 35 Morehampton Road, Dublin in 1901. Later Mrs Latham/Letham/Lathem, possibly under the name Hope.
H. Pigot possibly Helen Pigot of Dundrum
Nina Coote (1883–1945), croquet champion
Janet Jackson (golfer)
Phoebe Blair-White (1894-1991), tennis player, wife of Arthur Blair-White
Maire Quinn (fl.1900–47), actress and nationalist
Eveline Burchill dance teacher
Betty de Courcy Ireland wife of John de Courcy Ireland
Kathleen O'Connell (1888–1956), personal secretary to Éamon de Valera
Teresa Mullen (1938–89), paralympic athlete
Alice Reeves (1874–1955), matron of Dr Steevens’ Hospital
Mary Butters (c.1770–c.1850) witch
Sarah Leech (b. 1809), poet
Róise Mhic Ghrianna (1879–1964), traditional Irish-language singer and storyteller
Mary E. Balfour poet
Lily Anderson (campaigner) , social campaigner and communist
Anne Crone (1915–72), novelist and teacher
Florence Culwick (1877–1929), director of the Culwick choir
Mary McShain (1907–98), landowner and benefactor
Gertrude Keightley (d. 1929), Lady Keightley, local administrator
Kathleen Mulchrone (1895–1973), Celticist
Thomas P. O'Neill (historian)
Janie McCarthy (c.1890–1964), resistance worker and language teacher
Máire Wyse Power (1887–1916), Celtic scholar
A. M. Head
Ellen Grimley (c.1887–1960), trade unionist
Nora Ashe teacher, nationalist, and Irish language enthusiast
Mary Ann Byrne nationalist, wife of Frank Byrne (Irish nationalist)
Margaret Callan (writer) (c.1817–c.1883), writer, teacher, and nationalist
Mary O'Kelly de Galway (1905–99), Belgian resistance operative
Sarah Hyde (d. 1750), printer and bookseller
Eleanor Whitton (1879–1956), campaigner for animal welfare
Elizabeth Pue (fl. 1722–6), printer, publisher, and coffee house proprietor
Sinéad Derrig (1899–1991), civil servant
Clarissa von Ranke (1808–71), poet
Elizabeth Butler, Duchess of Ormond wife of James Butler, 1st Duke of Ormond
Marie Joseph Butler
Ethna Byrne-Costigan (1904–91), academic and writer
Agnes McCullough (1888–1967), teacher and activist and philanthropist
Anne Donnellan friend of Letitia Bushe (c.1700–62), literary critic, and promoter of literature, learning, and the arts
Bridget Connolly Brede Connolly (1890-1981) may have been the only Carlow person at the centre of the action in the GPO during the Rising
Val Vousden (1886-1951) actor, poet and playwright Bill MacNevin (William Francis Maher MacNevin)
Cecilia Betham archer
Jane Ross (collector) (1810–79), folksong collector
Anne Jane Carlile (1775–1864), temperance pioneer and philanthropist
Catherine Fenton Boyle countess of Cork, wife of Richard Boyle, 1st Earl of Cork
Mai Clifford (1913–86), trade union official and laundress
Kathleen Dolan (1921–2003), radio announcer
Monica Sheridan (1912–93), cookery expert, broadcaster, and journalist
Chloe Gibson (1899–1995), theatre and television director
Ellen McKenna (1819–83), Sister of Mercy, American civil war nurse and teacher
Maire MacDonagh (1918–97), trade unionist
Mariga Guinness (1932–89), architectural conservationist and socialite
Teresa Mulally (1728–1803), educationist, businesswoman, and philanthropist
Anne Lee Guinness (1839–89), philanthropist
Máirín Ní Mhuiríosa (1906–82), Irish scholar, poet and journalist
Muriel MacDonagh , Gifford sister, wife of Thomas MacDonagh
Mary Pike (1776–1832), quaker heiress
Gladys Roy wingwalker
Rachel Burrows actress, broadcaster, and teacher
Paula Lambert (puppeteer)
Hector Grey
Lady Mairi Bury gardener and philatelist
Edith Best (musician) musician
Olivia Elder (1735?–1780), poet
Margaret Montgomery Pirrie (1857–1935), Viscountess Pirrie, public figure and philanthropist
Katty Barry restaurateur and famous Cork character
Elaine O'Beirne-Ranelagh (1914–96), writer and folklorist
Mary Elizabeth Cunningham (1868–1939), philanthropist and war worker
Mary Clare Moore (1814–74), Sister of Mercy, foundress, Crimean war nurse, and teacher
Violet Conolly (1899–1988), authority on Soviet Russia and traveller
Eibhlín Nic Niocaill (1884–1909), Gaelic League activist
Anna Gaynor Sister of Charity and first superior of Our Lady's Hospice, Harold's Cross
Aloysius Doyle (1820–1908), nun
Anna Kelly (1891–1958), journalist
Teresa Cowley Sister of Mercy, Boer war nurse, and educator
Mary Gertrude Joyce (1884–1964), Sister of Mercy and musician
Bridget Dirrane nurse, centenarian and memoirist
Mary Baird (nurse) nurse and health service administrator
Julia McGroarty (1827–1901), nun and educator
Maureen Charlton (currently a dubious redirect) (1930–2007), playwright, poet and broadcaster
Maurice O'Connell (Hunting Cap) uncle of Daniel O'Connell
Angela Hughes (1806–66), Sister of Charity
Rachael Baptist expanding from stub for streaming event
Mabel Bagenal countess of Tyrone
Geraldine Scholastica Gibbons founder and first superior of the Community of the Good Samaritan
Vera McWeeney (1909–81), sportswoman and sports journalist
Melosina Lenox-Conyngham traveller and writer
Isabel Deane Mitchell (1879–1917), presbyterian missionary in China
Lucy O'Brien (doctor) (1923–2006), missionary sister and doctor in Africa
Mary Agnes O'Connor (1815–59), Sister of Mercy, foundress, and social worker
Lydia Mary Foster (1867-1943), writer and schoolteacher
Theodosia Wingfield (1800–36), Viscountess Powerscourt, evangelical religious writer
Cecil Mary Nowell Dering Craig (1883–1960), Viscountess Craigavon, unionist
Máire Rua O'Brien (1615?–1686), Gaelic aristocrat and figure in Irish folklore
Cecily Dillon co-foundress and first abbess of the Irish Poor Clares in Dublin, Bethlehem and Athlone
Emily Wynne (1872–1958), textile artist and author
Hilary Heron (1923-1977), sculptor
Elizabeth Dillon (1865–1907), diarist
Eileen O'Faolain (1900–88), author of children's books, and wife of writer Sean O'Faolain
May Keating (1895–1965), socialist, feminist and human rights campaigner
William Coppin sailor, shipbuilder, and inventor
Louisa Coppin ‘Little Weesy’
Sarah Harding (printer) printed A Modest Proposal
Lucinda Sullivan (1831-81), philanthropist, writer and promoter of children's welfare
Anne Margaret Rowan (1832–1913), novelist, historian, and political activist
Terry O'Connor (musician) (1897–1983), musician and music teacher
Mary Eucharia Ryan (1860–1929), Loreto sister and pioneer of women's higher education
Rosaleen Mills (1905-93), activist and educator
Jean O'Neill (1915–2008), plantswoman and horticulturalist
Anne Bushnell singer
Anne Daly superior general of the Sisters of Charity, Australia
Alexandra Wejchert (1921–95), sculptor
Micheline Kerney Walsh (1919–97), archivist and historian
Martha McTier (1742–1837), writer of letters
Maureen Constance Guinness (1907–98), countess of Dufferin and Ava, socialite and charity worker
Henrietta Frances de Grey (1784–1848), Countess de Grey, political hostess and philanthropist
Elizabeth Watts (printer) (d. 1794), printer, stationer, and ‘bookseller to the courts of law’
Alice Reilly (1702/3–1778), printer and publisher
Elaine Feldman public figure and founder of a secondary school for the Jewish community
Susan Lecky (1837-1896) Irish botanical artist
Daniel Graisberry
Ann Saddlemyer
Mary Drelincourt , wife of Peter Drelincourt
Ruth Graisberry printer
Mary Byrne (witness) witness of Knock apparition
Helen Moloney (1926–2011), artist in stained glass and other media
Delia Moclair (1895–1971), obstetrician
Arabella Jeffereyes (c.1734–c.1810), landowner and social radical
Maisie McDaniel (1939–2008), singer
Lady Mary Burke (consort) wife of Brian O'Rourke
Mary Anne Cosgrave pioneer nurse in Rhodesia, educationist, and Dominican prioress
Catherine Finn printer of Finns Leinster Journal
Patricia Boylan actor and journalist
Mary Anne Locke (1831–89), distiller and philanthropist
Mary "Muds" Locke (1863–1943)
Martha Wilmot
Sarah Pue (d. p.1776?), printer, publisher, and patent medicine seller
Gay Firth author, journalist and political campaigner
Sheila Dowling (c.1896–1957), republican, socialist, trade unionist, and feminist
Sarah Cotter (fl. 1751–92), printer and bookseller
John Mandeville (Land Leaguer) un-divert
Valerie Place (1969–93), nurse and overseas aid worker
Mary Bryan (badminton)
List of nature reserves in the Republic of Ireland
Angela Russell (doctor) (1893–1991), physician and social reformer
Eleanor Dillon nun
Women Artist Action Group
Pauline Cummins
Society of Dublin Painters also known as Dublin Painters' Society
Clare Marsh
Mary Crooke (fl. 1657–92), printer and bookseller
Jane Jones (printer)
Anne Esdall (1718–1795), printer and publisher
Jean Crawford Cochrane educator and activist for women's education
Ola Majekodunmi radio presenter and Irish language activist
Black Pride Ireland
Movement of Asylum Seekers in Ireland
Irish Refugee Council
Migrants and Ethnic-minorities for Reproductive Justice
Immigrant Council of Ireland
Migrant Rights Centre Ireland
Irish Network Against Racism
Denise Chaila
Irish Traveller Movement
Ebun Joseph
Spirasi
Zainab Boladale RTÉ presenter
Erica Cody
National Traveller Women's Forum expanded from a stub for live stream
Samantha Kay Soulé (singer)
Volunteer Ireland
Doras (NGO)
Bulelani Mfaco
Ellie Kisyombe
Nasc (NGO)
Lucky Khambule
Kathleen Lynch (academic)
Christchurch Place formerly Skinner Row
Film Company of Ireland
Barbara Stokes paediatrician and disability campaigner 1922–2009
Mary Dunlop (1912–2003), campaigner for the welfare of the blind
Sarah Clarke (nun) nun and civil rights campaigner
Emma Duffin (1883–1979), nurse, diarist and welfare worker
Brigid McCole (1942–96), hepatitis C campaigner
Catherine Cummins Sister of Charity and founder member of Cappagh Orthopaedic Hospital
Josie Airey , legal-aid campaigner
Joyce McCartan (1929–96), community worker
Patricia Hoey (1883-1930), journalist, suffragist and nationalist
Beatrice Dixon (1916–2005), pioneer of women's participation in public life
Mary Aquinas Monaghan (1919–85), Missionary Sister of St Columban and physician
Kevin Scannell
Maighréad Ní Annagáin (1875–1952), folk music collector and performer
Metal Man (beacon) County Sligo
Olive Wilson badminton player
Yvonne Kelly badminton player
Mary Dinan
Barbara Beckett
Jean Lawless (later Jean Sharkey )
T. D. Good Dr Thomas Douglas Good
Ada Good Ada Baillee Good nee Carroll (born c. 1880)
Barbara J. Good
Derreen Good (born c. 1905)
Norman D. Good (born c.1907)
Nora Conway
Lena Rea
Mona-Lxsa
Chiamaka Enyi-Amadi
Farah Elle
Celaviedmai
Hare Squead
Williams & Son, Dublin taxidermists
Joan Horan (1918-65), paralympian
Marie Fleming campaigner for assisted suicide
Eileen Gallagher Ireland's first female commercial traveller for Urney Chocolates
Henry Gallagher (businessman)
Veronica Ryan (teacher) (1921–1966), founder and headmistress of the Children's House Montessori School
Mary Purcell (biographer) (1906–91), teacher, religious biographer, and archivist
Edith Newman Devlin lecturer in English
Fanny Forrester (poet) poet, daughter of Ellen Forrester
Geraldine Mary Harmsworth (1838–1925), matriarch
Ballynastaig Wood
Ballyarr Wood
Oldhead Wood
Ballykeeffe Wood
Vera Klute
Marjorie Fitzgibbon (1930-2018)
Vale of Clara
Fenor Bog
Ballyteigue Burrow
Ballygilgan
Glenealo Valley
Balnagowan House
Knocksink Wood
Alexander Strain architect and builder
Celeste Bowe Daughter of Charity and nurse
Mary de Lourdes Gogan Medical Missionary of Mary
Keelhilla, Slieve Carron
Clochar na gCon
Derrycrag Wood Nature Reserve
Leam West Bog
Pollnaknockaun Wood
Rosturra Wood
Richmond Esker
Knockmoyle Sheskin
Owenboy (nature reserve)
Easkey Bog
Pollardstown Fen
Fiddown Island
Timahoe Esker
Coolacurragh Wood
Grantstown Wood and Grantstown Lough
Scragh Bog
The Raven Nature Reserve
Deputy's Pass
Ballyteigue
Cahermurphy Nature Reserve
Knockadoon Head
Kilcolman Bog
Knockomagh Wood
Castlemaine Harbour
Cummeragh River Bog
Derrycunnihy Wood
Eirk Bog
List of Special Protection Areas in the Republic of Ireland
Sheheree Bog
Redwood Bog
Duntally Wood
Lough Barra Bog
Meenachullion Bog
Pettigo Plateau
Rathmullen Wood
Myra Kathleen Hughes (1877-1918) Wexford illustrator
Frances MacCurtain (1936–98), speech therapist and voice coach
Erica O'Donnell (1920–99), art historian and SOE officer
Geraldine Plunkett Dillon
Katherine O'Doherty and Séamus O'Doherty
Kathleen Napoli McKenna (1897–1988), republican and administrator
Patricia O'Connor (playwright) (1905-83), writer and teacher
Amy Curtis (1894–1970), administrator
Kay McDowell (1897–1975), trade union leader
Kathleen Barry Moloney (1896–1969), republican and trade unionist
Nora Harkin (1910–2012), republican socialist
Thomas Sinclair (politician, 1838–1914)
F.E. Crichton
Sheila Conroy (1918–2012), trade unionist, social activist and administrator
Florence Armstrong , pioneer of multi-denominational education in Ireland
Cecil Crawford O'Gorman Irish artist, father of Juan O'Gorman
Geraldine Penrose Fitzgerald (1846–1939), novelist and catholic convert
Cecil Ffrench Salkeld artist
Samuel Clossy (c.1724-1786) anatomist
Elizabeth O'Shea Dillon and Marion O'Shea Roosevelt
Lil Nic Dhonnchadha (1891–1984), Irish language scholar and language activist
Maighréad Nic Mhaicín (1899–1983), translator
Padraic Breslin
Harold G. Leask architect and archaeologist
Kitty MacCormack (1892-1975) design with the Dun Emer Guild
Dun Emer Guild
Sinéad McCoole
Edmund Finn (printer) printer
Doreen Corcoran local historian
George Canning father of George Canning
Desmond FitzGerald (architect)
Madeleine O'Rourke (1951–2006), aviator and organiser of aviation events
Peggy Hogg (1919–94), camogie player
Katherine Everett writer of Bricks and Flowers wife of John Everett
Oscar Mac Carthy (1815 - 1894) geographer and explorer of Irish heritage
Kay Keohane-O'Riordan (1910–91), communist
Marguerite Palmer , suffragette
Edward Gerrard & Sons taxidermists
Carolyn Mulholland undo redirect
Hawkins Street
Apollo House (Dublin)
Margaret Williamson Rea b. 1875 botantist
Margarita Dawson Stelfox 1886-1971
Thomas Dillon (chemist) husband of Geraldine Plunkett Dillon
Maureen Mockford Northern Irish, played for Ireland
William Boyton Kirk (1824–1900) sculptor
Thomas Stewart Kirk (1848–79) sculptor
Monica Farrell protestant evangelist
John D. M. McCallum (1883-1967)
Tullow Museum
Samuel Frederick Brocas (c. 1792–1847)
James Brocas
Kate Stone (engineer) for Pride in STEM day!
James Henry Brocas
William Brocas
Henry Brocas (junior)
Máirín Beaumont teacher and nationalist
Eileen Morris (1919–93), Medical Missionary of Mary
Mary Teresa Cullen (nun) nun and founder of the magazine Virgo Potens
Margaret Dowling Dominican Sister and foundress
List of buildings designed by architect Andrew Devane
Thomas Joseph Byrne OPW architect
James Gwim (c. 1720–1769)
William Howis (1804–1882)
Hans Iten (born Switzerland 1874-1930)
Sir John Langham (1894–1972) Irish botanical artist
James Mannin (Died 1779)
Isaac Whitehead (c.1819-1881)
David Wilson (1873–1935)
Betty Lombard tennis player
Walter G. Strickland
Con Leventhal husband of Ethna MacCarthy
Seamus Clandillon musician, civil servant, and first director of radio broadcasting at 2RN
Robert Perceval (1756 - 1839), chemist
James Emerson Reynolds (1844 - 1920) chemist
William Ringrose Gelston Atkins (1884-1959)
Robert Collins (physician) (1800-1868) physician in 1824, master of the Rotunda hospital
Stephen Mitchell Dixon (1866-1940) civil engineer
Edward Edwin Glanville (1873-1898) physicist, wireless telegraphy pioneer
William James Knowles father of Matilda Knowles
Richard Orpen architect and painter
Joseph Raftery director of the National Museum of Ireland
George F. Beckett (1877–1961), architect
Primrose McConnell (1906–1991), missionary
H. Ormonde McConnell
Spectacle Bridge
Ninian Niven
Thomas Drummond Lambert (1837–1911), veterinary surgeon
Richard Lane Joynt
Isaac Swain
Arthur Wynne Foot
Arthur Humphreys Foord
George William Chaster
Nathaniel H. Alcock
David Callender Campbell (naturalist)
Rayna Katsarova
Mary Guiney (1901–2004), businesswoman and centenarian
Patricia Cockburn (1914–89), author and artist, granddaughter of Henry Arthur Blake and Edith Blake
Marjorie Hasler (c.1887–1913), suffragist
Mina Robinson (fl. 1893–1910), founder of the Irish Decorative Art Association
Eva McKee (1890–1955), craftswoman
Maud Aiken director of the Dublin Municipal School of Music
Mary Anne Holmes (1773–1805), poet and writer, sister of Robert Emmet
Elizabeth Emmet Lenox-Conyngham
Maura Breslin trade unionist and feminist
Caroline Agnes Gray (1848–1927) wife of Edmund Dwyer Gray (Irish politician)
Margaret Dockrell (1849–1926), suffragist, philanthropist, and councillor
Maud Joynt (1868–1940), Celtic scholar and linguist
Lucy Anne FitzGerald (1771–1851), radical
Dolly Robinson (1901–77), artist and theatre designer
Rosanna Johnson (1891–1987), street trader
Margaret Pender (1850–1920), writer
Maude Clarke (1892–1935), historian
Anna Maria Chetwode (fl. 1827), novelist
Kate Jordan (1862–1926), novelist and playwright
May Guinness (1863–1955), painter
Elizabeth Mernin (1886–1957), intelligence agent
Margaret Grey Porter (d. 1881), philanthropist
Barbara McDonnell (1847?–1928), philanthropist
Sarah Venie Barr political and community activist
Eliza Kirk (b. 1812) sculptor
Mary Mathew (1724–77), diarist
Harriet Kirkwood (1880–1953), landscape and still life painter
Katherine Conolly (c.1662–1752), political hostess, landowner, and philanthropist
Anne Deane (c.1834–1905), businesswoman, philanthropist, and nationalist
Mary Ann Costello (1747–1827), actress and mother of the British prime minister George Canning
Matilda Tone (1769–1849), wife of Theobald Wolfe Tone
Mary O'Connell (1778-1836) (1778–1836), wife of Daniel O'Connell
Claire Madden (feminist) (1905–98), feminist and political activist
Etain Madden (1939–82), feminist and political activist
Eileen Reid (painter) (1894–1981), painter and musician
Clementina Robertson (1795–1853?), miniature-painter
Ellen Forrester (1828 – 1883), nationalist and poet
Caroline Douglas (1821–1904), marchioness of Queensberry, nationalist benefactor
Ethna MacCarthy (1903–59), poet and paediatrician
Lily Williams portrait painter, 1874 -1940
Rosy Gibb (1942–97), social worker, clown, and magician
Frances O'Brien (1840–83), poet and novelist
Ballykealy House
Ada Leask (1899–1987), historian and antiquary
Emily Crawford (1841–1915), journalist
Adela Orpen (1855–1927), writer
Lilla Minnie Perry (1888–1974), landscape painter
Harriet Bagwell
Fay Sargent (1890/91–1967), singer, actress, and journalist
Mary Hobhouse (1864–1901), novelist and poet
Mary Downing (c.1815–1881), poet and nationalist
Theodosia Blachford philanthropist and leading methodist
Kathleen Behan republican
Gertrude Gaffney (d. 1959), journalist
Lucy Franks (1878–1964), president of the Irish Countrywomen's Association
Josephine McNeill (1895–1969), diplomat
Nesca Robb (1905–76), author
Máire Ní Dhonnchadha Dhuibh (d. 1795?), poet
Mary Devenport O'Neill (1879–1967), poet and playwright, ended up merging into existing article
Emily Cordner-Pinkerton (c.1859–1902), publisher
Lucy Cane (c.1866–1926), public servant
Molly Barton (1861–1949) artist
Kathleen Cruise O'Brien (1886–1938), teacher, suffragist, and Irish language enthusiast
Anna Maria Ball philanthropist, sister of Frances Ball
Dorothea Conyers (1869–1949), novelist
Letitia Overend (1880–1977), philanthropist and motor enthusiast
Sheila Murphy (diplomat) (1898–1983), diplomat
Naomi Overend
Mary Barry O'Delaney (1862–1947), journalist and nationalist
Deirdre O'Connor (architect) (1951–99), architect
Margaret Barrington writer and journalist
Kathleen Quigly (1888–1981), artist
Emily de Burgh Daly (1859–1935), traveller and writer
Catherine Drew (1832–1910), journalist and writer
Mary Pollard of the Trinity Pollard collection
Isabella Charlotte de Rohan-Chabot (1784–1868) aristocrat and diarist
Jane Mitchel (c.1820–1899), nationalist
Betty Chancellor (1910–84), actress
Barbara Fitzgerald (1911–82), novelist
Mary Ann Hutton (1862–1953), Irish-language scholar and writer
Dick's Coffee House early Irish coffee house
Richard Pue (d. 1722), newspaper publisher, bookseller, and coffee house proprietor
Mary Cosgrave (c.1877–1941), social worker and local politician
Erne Palais Ballroom
Elizabeth Somers (1881–1934), republican and industrial revivalist
Maude Rooney (1902–1974), consumers' and women's rights activist
Mary O'Donovan Rossa (Q18529222) Irish nationalist, poet (1845–1916)
Ballon Hill Co. Carlow
Brisinga
Brisinga endecacnemos
Arts and Crafts Society of Ireland
Newtown Anner House County Tipperary
Royal Horticultural Society of Ireland
August Weckbecker
Pauline Clotworthy (1912–2004), teacher of fashion design at The Grafton Academy
Máire Ní Scolaí (1909–85), traditional singer
Eibhlín Ní Bhriain (1925–86), journalist
Marianne Trotter (1752–1777), artist
John Trotter (painter)
Eliza H. Trotter
Altamont House , Co. Carlow, well known gardens with associated house.
Thomas Cobden , English architect known for his work in Ireland.
Katherine Sophia Kane nee Katherine Sophia Bailey wrote the first guide to Ireland's flowering plants in 1833.
Margaret Clarke (artist)
Carlow County Museum
Alexander Carte
Ye Olde Hurdy Gurdy Museum of Vintage Radio
Gulielma Lister
Irish Agricultural Museum
John S. Jackson geologist and environmentalist.
Kilmallock Abbey Co. Limerick.
Arigna Mining Experience
Kathleen King
Cavan County Museum
Evelyn Booth
County Museum Dundalk
Doris Reynolds
Monaghan County Museum
Catherine Gage
Roscommon County Museum
Sligo County Museum
Waterford County Museum
Enniscorthy Castle was Wexford County Museum.
Máirin de Valéra (1912–1984), Professor of Botany at University College, Galway.
Allihies Copper Mine Museum
James Mitchell Museum Geological Museum at NUI Galway.
Mary Leebody
Clare Museum
Sarah Mary Fitton
County Carlow Military Museum
Ethel Rhind
Catherine Amelia O’Brien
Number Twenty Nine - Georgian House Museum
Cork Butter Museum
Carmel Humphries first woman professor of zoology at UCD.
Michael Keogh (soldier) fought on both sides of the war in WWI, from Tullow.
Fanny Currey
Alfred E. Child
Gaulstown Portal Tomb
Vinegar Hill Windmill Co. Wexford.
Elphin Windmill
Thomas Antisell
James Edwin Duerden
National 1798 Rebellion Centre
James Bayley Butler
Katherine Butler
Robert Bell (Irish geologist)
Evelyn Gleeson
Charles Bent Ball
Mallow Castle Co. Cork.
Threecastles Castle Co. Wicklow.
Patrick Pollen stained glass artist.
Milford Mills, County Carlow
Mary Swanzy
Edith Blake (1845–1926), botanical illustrator and writer, wife of Henry Arthur Blake .
Catherine Isabella Osborne (1818–80), artist and patron.
Letitia Bushe (c.1710–1757), watercolourist and miniature painter.
Florence Ross (1870–1949), artist, cousin of John Millington Synge .
Marianne-Caroline Hamilton (1777–1861), artist and memoirist, great-grandmother of Letitia Marion Hamilton .
Mercy Hunter (1910–89), artist.
Kathleen Fox (1880–1963), painter, enamellist, and stained-glass artist.
Moyra Barry (1886–1960), artist.
Kathleen Bridle (1897–1989), artist and art teacher.
Grace Henry (1868–1953), painter.
Piper's Stones Co. Wicklow.
Elish Lamont (1816–70), artist and writer.
Norma Borthwick (1862–1934), artist, writer, and Irish-language activist.
Alice Jacob (1862-1921) Irish botanical artist.
Marianne Fannin (1848–1938), later (Mrs Roberts).
Frances Anne Edgeworth (1769–1864) artist.
Diana Conyngham Ellis (1813–1851) née Monsell botanical artist.
Catherine Teresa Cookson (née Catherine Teresa Murray), also known as Mrs James Cookson, botanical artist.
Caroline Pounds (née Elam) (fl. c.1846-c.1880).
Mary Manning
Kathleen Cox (1904–72), artist, sculptor, and mystic.
Harriet Kavanagh artist, traveller, and antiquarian.
Ruth Brandt (1936–89), artist and teacher, daughter of Muriel Brandt .
Kathleen Coyle (1886–1952), novelist.
Helen Mabel Trevor (1831–1900), artist.
Dungarvan Castle Co. Waterford.
Glengowla Mines
Mary Alment (1834–1908) artist.
Helen Sophia O'Hara (1846–1920).
Joan Jameson (1892–1953), still life, figure and landscape painter.
Lilian Davidson (1879–1954), landscape and portrait artist, art teacher, and writer.
Ellice Pilkington (1869–1936), women's activist and artist.
Harriet Osborne O'Hagan (1830–1921), portrait painter.
Mia Cranwill (1880–1972), design and metal artist.
Dorothy Blackham (1896–1975), artist and teacher.
Mabel Young (1889–1974), artist.
Yvonne Jammet (1900–67), landscape painter and sculptor.
Althea Gyles (1868–1949), poet and artist.
Bea Orpen painter.
Dairine Vanston (1903–88), artist.
Sophia St John Whitty (1877–1924), woodcarver, teacher, and cooperativist.
Florence Vere O'Brien (1854–1936), diarist, philanthropist, and craftswoman.
Nelly O'Brien (1864–1925), miniature and landscape artist, and Gaelic League activist.
Lilla Vanston artist.
Helen Hooker (1905–93), sculptor, wife of Ernie O'Malley .
Mary Mulvihill (1960 - 2015) writer, broadcaster, and science communicator.