Article titled " It is worth finding money to spend on our archives" in Irish Times, 18th May, 2013 by Catriona Crowe draws attention to a less well known website "of a hugely important collection covering 1818 to 1922. The collection relates to the Chief Secretary's office in Ireland. His office oversaw every aspect of the administration of the country, such as appointments to jobs ; hospitals and asylums; the judicial, penal and transportation systems; public infrastructure; fisheries; trade and manufacture; trade unions; famines; emigration; political disaffection; and Catholic emancipation. Catriona states - "It is the single most comprehensive archival collection relating to 19th and early 20th century Ireland anywhere in the world. The papers were supposed to have been transferred to the public record office in the Four Courts in time to be burned in 1922, but due to bureaucratic inertia, they remained in Dublin Castle and thus survived. A generous bequest from Professor Francis Crowley has enabled the National Archives to allow access online. The website is at - csorp.nationalarchives.ie.