Pádraig Óg Ó Ruairc is no stranger to this podcast. While his latest book explores 'The Disappeared' (launching this month from Merrion Press), he has also been undertaking a study of the far-right in Ireland historically. Moving beyond the familiar, like the Army Comrades Association ('the Blueshirts'), Pádraig's study begins with some more overlooked groups. Even before Oswald Mosley, the British Fascisti were a force with surprising connections to Dublin, and an active branch in the city.
Frank McDonald: A Fighter For Dublin
From The Four Courts to The Quiet Man: Ernie O'Malley (Part 2)
Bohemian Revolutionary: Ernie O'Malley (Part 1)
The Hellfire Club: Fact and Folklore
(Episode 100) Eustace Street: A Street of Ideas
Merchant's Arch Then and Now
Benches of Reflection
Bang Bang Shoots The Buses
Factory Girls: The Working Lives of Dublin Women
A School For Young Radicals
"Long Live the Rolling Stones!"- Dublin,1965
A Rush and a Push and the Land Is Ours
Fig Rolls, Charles Haughey and the Road to IMMA
The Great Escapes: George Gilmore, Mountjoy and Dundrum
The Dublin That Never Was: Abercrombie and Others
Forza Azzurri: A Busy Night in Dublin 7
It's the End of the War as We Know It (With Pádraig Óg Ó Ruairc)
Living With Pride: Christopher Robson's Photography (with Tonie Walsh)
The Press, The Pubs, The Camac: The Dublin of Con Houlihan
Lord Carson of Harcourt Street (With Cormac Moore)
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