Monday 31 October 2022

An Irishman's Diary on Henry Ford's Irish connections

The founder of the Ford Motor Company, Henry Ford (1863-1947), visited the south of Ireland in 1912. It was a sort of homecoming because his father, William Ford (1826-1905), was born in County Cork. He emigrated to America in 1847. Read my Irishman's Diary in today's Irish Times newspaper to find out more. See it here.

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A life size replica of a Ford Model T in Ballinascarthy, Co. Cork, Ireland. Image source

The Ford plant in the Marina in Cork opened in 1919 and employed many thousands over the years. It eventually closed in 1984 with the loss of 800 jobs but the building still remains even if it is used for other purposes these days. You can get a glimpse of it when things were in full flow on the Henry Ford website. See it here. This site has other interesting items linked to Henry Ford and Ireland, such as maps of where William Ford came from and photographs of people working at the Marina plant over the years.

If you are interested in the history of Ford in Ireland, there is a good short article by Dr Leanne Blaney, entitled 'When Ford Motors Came to Cork', on the Century Ireland website. Read it here.  

There is also a PhD thesis by Dr Thomas Grimes, completed at NUI Maynooth, entitled 'Starting Ireland on the Road to Industry: Henry Ford in Cork'. Read it here

Wednesday 12 October 2022

Jan Łukasiewicz Exhibition Launch in Dublin

I was delighted to be invited by the Polish embassy in Ireland to the launch of a new exhibition in the Royal Irish Academy (RIA) on the life of the Polish philosopher, Jan Łukasiewicz (1878-1956). It was fitting that the event took place in the room where Prof Łukasiewicz delivered his lectures as Chair of Mathematical Logic at the RIA.

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Launch of the exhibition in the RIA, Dawson Street, Dublin. 11 Oct. 2022.

In 2019, I wrote an article for the Irish Times about the Polish philosopher and how he came to live in Ireland in 1946. You can read it here. When he died in Dublin in 1956, he was buried in Mount Jerome Cemetery in Harold's Cross. His funeral was attended by the man who helped to bring him to Ireland in the first place, Éamon de Valera. We learned at the exhibition launch that there are plans in place to repatriate his remains to Poland. I look forward to seeing the exhibition when it travels around Ireland in the coming months.