Masonic degree promoting Reverend Abraham Stritch Fuller to the position of Prince of the Royal Secret and a member of the 32nd Degree of the Ancient and Accepted Scottish Rite.
Testimony of the Grand Masters of the Grand Royal Arch Chapter of Ireland that Reverend Abraham Stritch Fuller was registered in the Grand Chapter of Royal Arch in Dublin on 26 February in the year of Masonry 5872.
Degree from the Free Masons granting Reverend Abraham Stritch Fuller the title of Sovereign Prince Grand Rose Croix.
Twelve Masonic degrees and one certificate of Knighthood bestowed on Reverend Abraham Stritch Fuller.
‘Mass Book’ listing ‘Masses Received’ and ‘Masses said’ in each month, along with accounts.
Masters degree of William Lamb from Trinity College, Dublin.
Material compiled by Fr Roland Burke Savage SJ relating to the origins of Tullabeg as a school for boys and a novitiate. Includes:
– typescript copies of summaries of replies to queries sent by Fr Burke Savage SJ to Fr Joseph Hurley SJ, House Historian, Tullabeg, comments on those replies and comparisons of the early history of the community, as depicted in Fr John Grene’s ‘A Contribution towards a History of The Irish Province of the Society of Jesus’; the Memorials of the Irish Province and Fr William Molony’s ‘Brief Notices’ of 1831
– notes on Frs Robert and John St Leger and on the original builder at Tullabeg (1955, 23pp)
– letter from Fr Burke Savage SJ to Fr Jerome Mahony SJ (19 November 1955, 3pp) on the ‘strong local tradition that we built Tullabeg’, enclosing copies of early letters relevant to the subject (21 April 1815 – 29 April 1817, 7 items, 9pp).
File of material relating to the life of Pat Moran, (1894-1971), once a lay brother at Tullabeg (1924-1926), afterwards cobbler at Central House of the De la Salle brothers at Castletown, county Laois. Includes copies of his biography entitled, ‘Pat Moran - The Saintly Cobbler of Castletown’.
Maths done by William Lamb, "Wanting to know the angle acb formed by two walls ac and bc I measured dc 840 yards and dc 741 yard and ec 735 yards hence the angle acb = dce".