Boundary Commission
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106 Documents found | Page 3 of 3
Volume 4
No. 143
E.J. Harding (London) to ()

Conversation with Walshe
28/10/1932

Walshe realised the constitutional difficulties, but obviously favoured the solution of a Commission of Three consisting of the President of the Senate, the Speaker of the Dáil, and Mr.[...]
Volume 5
No. 143
Minutes of British-Irish Conference (London) to ()

British-Irish Conference
23/02/1938

Public opinion would ask what the United Kingdom was to get in return, and would have to be told that the principal contribution to be made by Éire was the establishment of a Prices Commission to review Éire's protective duties, which might or might no... View the full document
Volume 5
No. 234
Maurice Moynihan (Dublin) to Joseph P. Walshe (Dublin)

Irish cultural interest in the USA
13/10/1938

1922); Free State representative on Boundary Commission (1923-25); Professor of Early and Medieval Irish History at University College Dublin (1909-41); brother of James McNeill.[...]
Volume 5
No. 240
John Leydon (Dublin) to Joseph P. Walshe (Dublin)

Co-operation with Northern Ireland
12/11/1938

11, he thought that difficulty would arise in connection with Lough Foyle because of controversy as to where the Boundary should be drawn.[...]
Volume 7
No. 24
Joseph P. Walshe (Dublin) to ()

Memorandum by Walshe
14/03/1941

2 A reference to the Boundary Commission of 1924-5.[...]
Volume 7
No. 173
Department of External Affairs (Dublin) to Irish Legations ()

Telegram from External Affairs to Washington DC and Holy See Legations and High Commission, London
27/01/1942

In one-half of the area, including the city of Derry and the whole territory adjoining the Boundary with the twenty-six counties, a majority of the inhabitants are against partition.[...]