Hooker, Craigmyle and Company Limited, fundraising consultants
- Corporate body
Harpenden, Hertfortshire, England and Old Burlington Street, London England.
Hooker, Craigmyle and Company Limited, fundraising consultants
Harpenden, Hertfortshire, England and Old Burlington Street, London England.
Hong Kong Vice-Province, 1966-
Vice Province of Hong Kong, 1966-1980
Vice Province of Macau-Hong Kong, 1980-1985
Province of Macau-Hong Kong, 1985-1991
Macau-Hong Kong Region of the Chinese Province, 1991-2002
Hong Kong has Provincial delegate, 2002-2005
See: Irish Jesuit Mission to Hong Kong, 3 December 1926-3 December 1966
Hong Kong Catholic Diocesan Archives
1/F., Block C, Caritas House, 2-8 Caine Road, Hong Kong.
Hispanae Province of the Society of Jesus
Hibernian Fire and General Insurance Company, 1908-
Helvetiae Province of the Society of Jesus
Hardwicke Street Chapel, 1821-1829
The church in Hardwicke Street (where the Jesuits had been since the 1730s) had opened in 1821, but by 1829 had become too small for the congregation. Previously had be a nunnery for the order of St Clare, who moved to Harold' Cross. The Jesuits opened a school in the church in Hardwicke Street in 1832 and in 1841, they purchased Belvedere House (Belvedere College).
Hardwicke Fever Hospital, 1803-1987
Hamilton and Hamilton Estates Ltd, 1950-1994
Gonzaga University, Spokane, Washington, 1887-
Gonzaga College SJ, Dublin, 1950-
In 1947, the decision to open a Jesuit school on the south side of Dublin was taken. The purchase in 1949 of Sandford Lodge and Sandford Hill belonging to the Bewley Estate consisted of 15 acres in Ranelagh, two miles south of Dublin city centre. The college opened on 8 September 1950, with 52 boys registering. The founding Jesuit Superior (and later first Rector) was Fr Charles O' Conor SJ (The O' Conor Don) (1906-1981) and the first Prefect of Studies was Fr Bill White SJ (1912-1988).
Gonzaga College Past Pupils Union
Goana Province of the Society of Jesus, 1549-
Irish Province of the Society of Jesus task force on the apostolate through Irish
Glencree Centre for Peace and Reconciliation
Gibbs, Bright & Co., trading company, 1802-2005
Germaniae Province of the Society of Jesus
George Brown & Son Ltd, pharmacists
General Council of Medical Education and Registration of the United Kingdom, 1858
In Ireland, Medical Council of Ireland (Medical Registration Council) since 1927.
Gallo-Belgii Province of the Society of Jesus, 1612-
Galliae Province of the Society of Jesus
Galicianae Province of the Society of Jesus
Funchal College, Madeira, Portugal, 1569-
Freeman's Journal, newspaper, 1763-1924
Freeman and Company Limited, photographers
Franciae Province of the Society of Jesus, 1552-
Foilseacháin Ábhair Spioradálta, 1956-
Flanders Province of the Society of Jesus, 1612-
Fitzpatrick and Sons, monumental masons, 1896-1952
Evening Press, newspaper, 1954-1995
English College, Douai, 1561–1793
Egleston Bros., photographers, 1904-
The Egleston Bros. Studio was established in 1904, Limerick.
Edward N. Smith and Partners, architects
Earley and Company, church decorators and stained glass artists, 1861-1975
Duhamel-Marette, glassmaker and painter
Dublin Metropolitan Police, 1836-1925
Dublin Institute for Advanced Studies, 1940-
Dublin Food Supply Society, 1916-1926
Dublin Evening Standard, newspaper
Dublin City Library and Archives
Drogheda Independent, newspaper
Donal O'Buachalla & Co. Ltd, property advisor, 1954-
Dominic Collins House, Morehamption Road, Dublin
Department of Education, Ireland
Department of Agriculture and Technical Instruction for Ireland, 1900-
Davison & Associates Limited, 1991-
Daniel Purcell & Son, Solicitors
Daily Express, newspaper, 1900-
Crumlin Historical and Preservation Society
Crescent College Comprehensive SJ, 1859-
The first Jesuit school in Limerick was founded by Father David Wolfe SJ (1528-c.1578) in 1565. Over the next three hundred years, the Jesuits presence in Limerick ebbed and flowed. By 1640, a Jesuit residence was established at Castle Lane and by 1672, a school was opened near St Mary’s Cathedral. After an interval of eighty-six years from the Suppression of the Society in 1773, the Jesuits returned to Limerick in 1859 after Bishop John Ryan (1784-1864) had invited the Society to establish a school in the city. The school initially opened in 1859 as St Munchin's College on Hartstonge Street. The pioneer Jesuit community in 1859 were Frs. Edward Kelly (1824-1905) (Rector), Thomas Kelly (1829-1898), Peter Foley (1826-1893), Edmund Hogan (1831-1917), Matthew Saurin (1825-1901) and one scholastic, Mr. Matthew Russell (1834-1912). In January 1862, the Jesuits purchased a neighbouring residence, Crescent House. The church building was started in 1864, opened in 1868 and named after the Sacred Heart in 1869. The college had ceased to be a seminary for the diocese in 1867 and was renamed the Sacred Heart College in 1873. Commonly known as the Crescent College, it ceased to be a fee paying school in 1971 and became the Crescent College Comprehensive SJ. In 1973 the Comprehensive moved to a modern greenfield site at Dooradoyle. Later it became a co-educational school and the Crescent Preparatory School was closed in 1976.