The Lost Tribes of the Irish in the South / An Address at the Annual Dinner of the American Irish Historical Society, January 6, 1917

AN ADDRESS
IRVIN S. COBB
AT THE
ANNUAL DINNER OF THE AMERICAN IRISH HISTORICAL SOCIETY, WALDORF-ASTORIA HOTEL, JANUARY 6, 1917.
Office of Edward H. Daly, Secretary-General, 52 Wall Street.
NEW YORK
1917
The after-dinner address of Mr. Irvin S. Cobb of Kentucky—so well known throughout the length and breadth of the land as an American of Americans and writer of vivid stories of American life, throbbing with pathos, alive with infectious humor, keen observation and dramatic force; as a war correspondent and picturer of the naked horrors of war; as a lecturer and general publicist—will be hailed with interest and pleasure everywhere. The American Irish Historical Society does itself the honor of issuing the address in this form in advance of its appearance in the Quarterly Review of the Society, that it may be more widely known and the facts it sets forth more widely grasped. It treats its subject—the Irish share in the early upbuilding of the Southern States-in a masterly way, in direct line with the Society’s motto, “To make better known the Irish chapter in American history.”
Editors are cordially invited to reproduce the address in whole or in part.
JOSEPH I. C. CLARKE, President-General, American-Irish Historical Society.
New York, January, 1917.

Irvin S. Cobb
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Язык

Английский

Год издания

2019-01-26

Темы

Irish Americans -- Southern States

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