The Wheels of the World
In 1893, the world came to Chicago in the form of the Columbia Exposition or World’s Fair. This event put Chicago on the world stage like never before. Francis O’Neill Read More …
In 1893, the world came to Chicago in the form of the Columbia Exposition or World’s Fair. This event put Chicago on the world stage like never before. Francis O’Neill Read More …
The above map gives some idea of how rapidly the city developed after the devastating fire of 1871. Note the prominence given to McCormick’s Reaper works and the smoke stacks Read More …
Beginning in 1902, O’Neill recorded a number of prominent traditional Irish musicians on Edison wax cylinders. The story of how they came to be part of the Dunn family collection Read More …
The Emerald Isle is the ship that Francis O’Neill worked as a steward on when he first travelled to New York in the late 1860s. The ship is famous in the annals Read More …
Francis O’Neill loved books all his life. In his autobiography, he finishes his story of life at sea and as a police chief by lovingly describing favourite books in his Read More …
A postcard from another time: Constantinople, Istanbul or Stamboul in the nineteenth century as Francis O’Neill would have seen it. His employer’s ship The Jane Duncan would have navigated the Read More …
Here’s a little write-up in today’s Irish Times about myself as well as a bit on the Chief O’Neill Project.
The above picture is taken from a wonderful collection of hand-painted early photographs from Egypt in the nineteenth century (See the Vincze Miklós article here). Not only does this picture from Read More …
There are many exciting aspects to life at sea in the nineteenth century. Certainly it was a tough calling, but many young men at the time ventured “out on the ocean” Read More …
Cobh, or Queenstown as it was known until 1920, is where Francis O’Neill left Ireland as a teenager destined to travel around the world. The picture above dates from about Read More …