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    • Ursuline Convent in Blackrock

      • Seven letters from Nano Nagle to Eleanor Fitzsimons were stored in the archives of the Ursuline Convent in Blackrock. After the Ursuline Sisters moved from the South Presentation convent to the Blackrock convent in 1825, the letters must have travelled with them.
      nanonagleplace.ie/the-letters-of-nano-nagle/
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  2. The digital collection comprises of seventeen manuscript letters; the letters are from Nano Nagle to Eleanor Fitzsimons (later Sr. Angela Fitzsimons), an Irish religious novice in Paris, and from Nano Nagle to Teresa Mulally, educator of the poor, in Dublin.

  3. Seven letters from Nano Nagle to Eleanor Fitzsimons were stored in the archives of the Ursuline Convent in Blackrock. After the Ursuline Sisters moved from the South Presentation convent to the Blackrock convent in 1825, the letters must have travelled with them.

  4. Sep 1, 2021 · Nano begins by acknowledging the receipt of two letters from Eleanor, who was then a novice at an Ursuline Convent in Paris. The second section of the letter is an expression of compassion so characteristic of Nano. The essential meaning of compassion is to feel the suffering of another.

  5. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Nano_NagleNano Nagle - Wikipedia

    Venerable Honora Nagle (c. 1718 – 26 April 1784), known informally as Nano Nagle, was a pioneer of Catholic education in Ireland despite legal prohibitions.

  6. The digital collection comprises of seventeen manuscript letters; the letters are from Nano Nagle to Eleanor Fitzsimons (later Sr. Angela Fitzsimons), an Irish religious novice in Paris, and from Nano Nagle to Teresa Mulally, educator of the poor, in Dublin.

  7. In 1718, Nano Nagle was born into a family of wealthy Catholic landowners, in Ballygriffin, County Cork. As a consequence of the penal laws, and the lack of education provision for Catholics in...

  8. The digital collection comprises of seventeen manuscript letters; the letters are from Nano Nagle to Eleanor Fitzsimons (later Sr. Angela Fitzsimons), an Irish religious novice in Paris, and from Nano Nagle to Teresa Mulally, educator of the poor, in Dublin.