Letter from Susan Fitzgerald to Michael Gorman, 17 April 1916
for your nice letter. Im
getting on nicely & I expect
to be able to go home
for Easter-so don't you
hurry out of the city too
quickly put off going until
to the end of the week anyway.
I'm longing to be knocking about
Grafton St. again. I'm dead
sick of doctors, nurses pointless
medicines etc. But I'm very
lucky to get out of this
illness so quickly. I'll
tell you all about it
when we meet. Yesterday
I was allowed sit on
an armchair in dressing
gown & blankets, for 20
minutes. Mrs.Luigale Came into
see me, she is coming
again this afternoon. I wonder when will I
be let out, I feel the
time so long and if I dare
cough it mean not letting
me up so I needn't tell
you every time I am asked
how I am. Oh! I'm feeling
all right, not a bit
weak. Tell me some new
news when you write. I
haven't any. This is the
'Long Sunday.' I wish I was
able to go out. How is
Glasnevin looking? Remember
me to Kearns & Drew. & give
my love to & . I'm longing
to see you again. With much love
from your own little girl 2 IF USED FOR TRANSMISSION TO ANY PLACE ABROAD TO WHICH THE 1d RATE
OF LETTER POSTAGE DOES NOT APPLY, THE ADDITIONAL POSTAGE REQUIRED
SHOULD BE PREPAID BY MEANS OF ADHESIVE STAMPS 3 M J Gormon Esq Albert College Glasnevin Dublin
Letter from Susan Fitzgerald (d.1980) to Michael Gorman. The letter card was written while Susan was working as a voluntary nurse for the Voluntary Aid Detachment (V.A.D.), a voluntary organisation providing nursing to wounded British army soldiers, in Dublin. She refers mainly to being kept in owing to an illness and her desire to get out again. She also asks Michael to send her love to 'Stevie', Albert Stephenson, who was a staff lecturer in the Albert College.Michael Gorman was one a large Catholic family living at a farm in Ballinalug, County Laois (then Queen's County). Susan Fitzgerald (d. 1980) was one a Church of Ireland family living in Raheenahone House near Stradbally, County Laois, also in the Slieve Bloom mountains. At the time the letter was written they were involved in a courtship but owing to the religious difference the love affair had to be kept secret. Eventually both were in Dublin: he in the Albert Agricultural College in Glasnevin (where he eventually became Professor of Agricultural Botany and Biochemistry) and she as a volunteer nurse in the Royal Hospital in Baggot Street. They eventually went to London to marry.
How to cite
Letters 1916, published by the Austrian Centre for Digital Humanities, Vienna, 2026 (https://letters1916static.github.io/letters1916-static/item__1282.html)
- Place
- Albert Agricultural College, Glasnevin, Dublin
- Mentioned in
- Letter from Susan Fitzgerald to Michael Gorman, 8 January 1916
- Letter from Susan Fitzgerald to Michael Gorman, 17 April 1916
- Letter from Susan Fitzgerald to Michael Gorman, 23 May 1916
- Letter from Susan Fitzgerald to Michael Gorman, 25 July 1916
- Letter from Susan Fitzgerald to Michael Gorman, 10 November 1915
- Letter from Susan Fitzgerald to Michael Gorman, 22 January 1916
- Letter from Susan Fitzgerald to Michael Gorman, 12 October 1916
- Letter from Susan Fitzgerald to Michael Gorman, 12 January 1916
- Letter from Susan Fitzgerald to Michael Gorman, 1916
- Place
- Ballsbridge, Dublin
- Mentioned in
- Letter from Susan Fitzgerald to Michael Gorman, 17 April 1916
- Mentioned in
-
- Letter from Susan Fitzgerald to Michael Gorman, 8 January 1916
- Letter from Susan Fitzgerald to Michael Gorman, 2 February 1916
- Letter from Susan Fitzgerald to Michael Gorman, 17 April 1916
- Letter from Susan Fitzgerald to Michael Gorman, 23 May 1916
- Letter from Susan Fitzgerald to Michael Gorman, 25 July 1916
- Letter from Susan Fitzgerald to Michael Gorman, 10 November 1915
- Letter from Susan Fitzgerald to Michael Gorman, 22 January 1916
- Letter from Susan Fitzgerald to Michael Gorman, 12 October 1916
- Letter from Susan Fitzgerald to Michael Gorman, 12 January 1916
- Letter from Susan Fitzgerald to Michael Gorman, 1916