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INDEPENDENT ORDER OF ODD FELLOWS. Independent Order of Odd Fellows. Manchester Unity, Dublin Distric

Currency:EUR Category:Antiques / Books & Manuscripts Start Price:10.00 EUR Estimated At:350.00 - 500.00 EUR
INDEPENDENT ORDER OF ODD FELLOWS. Independent Order of Odd Fellows. Manchester Unity, Dublin Distric

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Auction Date:2012 Oct 20 @ 11:00 (UTC+1)
Location:38 Molesworth Street, Dublin, Dublin, ., Ireland
INDEPENDENT ORDER OF ODD FELLOWS. Independent Order of Odd Fellows. Manchester Unity, Dublin District. Address & presentation to Brother George Mark Mc.Cormick M.D ; F:R.C.S.I : T.C. and Past Provincial Grand Master of the Dublin District …. (Dublin : circa 1877 )The first opening of the Album takes the form of an Address to Brother George Mark McCormack, retiring ‘Medical Officer of our Order in Dublin’, indicating that it formed part of the presentation made that evening to Dr McCormick. The illuminated page is signed by eight Dublin and provincial officers and trustees of the Order. The album consists of some 47 photographic portraits of members of the Dublin society (one in duplicate), together with those of six women who may have been associated with the organization. A few display aprons or other regalia associated with the Order, but most are standard small or postcard-size portraits. The importance of this album is greatly enhanced by a key on the seventh page identifying all the men and three of the six female sitters. Most of the prints are in fair to good condition. By the 1870s there were two orders of Odd Fellows in Britain, the United States and throughout the English-speaking world, and they boasted of huge membership and abundant financial reserves. They constituted one of the most successful of all the friendly societies, offering in effect life and accident insurance to members and membership of an international association. In each branch the medical officer played a prominent role : in Dublin McCormick, who had graduated from the University of Glasgow in 1836, practised for many years as a surgeon and accoucheur at 5, Usher’s Island, and according to the Address had an association with the Odd Fellows spanning forty years. He died four months to the day after this presentation. Of the 47 named and photographed members here, a number can be identified as Dublin traders and minor gentlemen, and they comprise an unusually even mix of Catholic and Protestant families (names include Byrne, Daly, Hurley, Power, Carmichael, Colquhoun, Carnegie and Cochrane, Hosie and Corcoran). They include a watchmaker (Jacob Frengley of Crow Street), a printer (Samuel Downes of Bishop St.), a brass founder (Matthew Connor), and a grocer and spirits merchant (M.J. Ralph of Sheriff St.). The Order had its base at 10 Abbey Street Upper, and contemporary newspapers show that they held public meetings there and fund-raising balls in the Rotunda. A number of those photographed bear German-ssounding names (including Willmann, Zipfel, Meck, Fritzler, and Schultheiss), and most of these were presumably transient residents of Dublin (judging by the local provenance of the commercial photographers identified on the back of the photographs). In the case of at least one Irish Odd Fellow photographed, Samuel Haggerty, he had been an active member (see Irish Times, 18 July 1872), but the key here in 1877 notes that his provenance was now ‘Australia’. The first opening of the Album takes the form of an Address to Brother George Mark McCormack, retiring ‘Medical Officer of our Order in Dublin’, indicating that it formed part of the presentation made that evening to Dr McCormick. The illuminated page is signed by eight Dublin and provincial officers and trustees of the Order. The album consists of some 47 photographic portraits of members of the Dublin society (one in duplicate), together with those of six women who may have been associated with the organization. A few display aprons or other regalia associated with the Order, but most are standard small or postcard-size portraits. The importance of this album is greatly enhanced by a key on the sixth page identifying all men and three of the six female sitters. Most of the prints are in fair to good condition. By the 1870s there were two orders of Odd Fellows in Britain, the United States and throughout the English-speaking world, and they boasted of huge membership and abundant financial reserves. They constituted one of the most successful of all the friendly societies, offering in effect life and accident insurance to members and membership of an international association. In each branch the medical officer played a prominent role: in Dublin McCormick, who had graduated from the University of Glasgow in 1836, practised for many years as a surgeon and accoucheur at 5, Usher’s Island, and according to the Address had an association with the Odd Fellows spanning forty years. He died four months to the day after this presentation. Of the 47 named and photographed members here, a number can be identified as Dublin traders and minor gentlemen, and they comprise an unusually even mix of Catholic and Protestant families (names include Byrne, Daly, Hurley, Power, Carmichael, Colquhoun, Carnegie and Cochrane, Hosie and Corcoran). They include a watchmaker (Jacob Frengley of Crow Street), a printer (Samuel Downes of Bishop St.), a brass founder (Matthew Connor), and a grocer and spirits merchant (M.J. Ralph of Sheriff St.). The Order had its base at 10 Abbey Street Upper, and contemporary newspapers show that they held public meetings there and fund-raising balls in the Rotunda. A number of those photographed bore German-ssounding names (including Willmann, Zipfel, Meck, Fritzler, and Schultheiss), and most of these were presumably transient residents of Dublin (judging by the local provenance of the commercial photographers identified on the back of the photographs). In the case of at least one Irish Odd Fellow photographed, Samuel Haggerty, he had been an active member (see Irish Times, 18 July 1872), but the key here in 1877 notes that his provenance was now ‘Australia’.IRELAND; DUBLIN; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ;