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Visible Women 2020 - Making Visible the Invisible - Department of Foreign Affairs

Making Visible the Invisible By Dr Antonia Hart One of the things #VisibleWomen2020 champions is making visible those women whose stories have never been told. Close to my heart are those nineteenth- and early twentieth-century women in business, who have had little or no share in recent reassessments of women’s historical role in Ireland. There’s endless pleasure to be had, too, in exploring similarities with their entrepreneurial Belgian sisters, as creative, as hardworking, as tenacious.  The official record, in Ireland, can hide the truth of such women’s stories. The census recorded Kathleen Daly as having no occupation at a time when we know from her letters to her future husband, Tom Clarke, that she was running a hugely successful dressmaking business in Limerick. Someone struck through the space allowed for ‘Occupation’ for Mary Andrews although she was running a shop in Terenure and, in the words of her son Todd Andrews, ‘made enough to provide a rent-free ho

Born to play: Aine McAllister on life as a dual player

Born to play: Aine McAllister on life as a dual player The Derry dual star feels all players must strive to wear the county jersey Aine McAllister in action for Derry camogs in their All-Ireland Quarter-Final defeat to Meath last month (Pic: Cathal McOscar) Reporter: );   ); The dual player has become an endangered species at county level. Ballinascreen s Aine McAllister played both camogie and football for Derry this season. She tells Michael McMullan about her love and passion for playing both codes. With a day of teaching in Eglinton s Broadbridge Primary School done and dusted, Aine McAllister s mind is still racing. Her voice remains charged with energy. A passion for sport hugs every dancing word.

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