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NMCI is a US Department of the Navy program that provides IT services for the Navy and Marine Corps. It consolidated over 6,000 networks, 8,000 applications, and 15,003 logistics systems into a single integrated and secure network.
Learn about the public maritime college in Cork, Ireland, that offers education, training and research to the international shipping industry. Find out its history, facilities, programmes and partnerships with the Naval Service and other organisations.
The Office of Public Works (OPW) is a major Irish Government agency that manages state property, heritage, and engineering. It was formed in 1831 to consolidate various functions of public works, such as barracks, inland navigation, and public buildings.
Kilmainham Gaol is a former prison and museum in Dublin, Ireland, where many Irish revolutionaries were imprisoned and executed. Learn about its history, architecture, and role in the 1916 Easter Rising and the Irish Civil War.
Learn about the Irish Naval Service, the maritime component of the Defence Forces of Ireland, and its role in fisheries protection, sea patrol, and humanitarian missions. Find out the names, history, and status of the six ships in the service, including the new LÉ George Bernard Shaw.
It opened to the public in 2005, [33] and spans over 1,700 square metres of exhibition space. The exhibition is organised chronologically, with the phases of military occupation and development in Ireland covered, as well as the role of Irish soldiers in armies around the world up to modern-day peace-keeping activities with the United Nations ...
An Act to authorise the Commissioners of Public Works in Ireland to acquire from the Dublin Royal Society and others Lands for the Erection of a Science and Art Museum in Dublin, and to establish a National Library in Dublin; and for other purposes. Citation: 40 & 41 Vict. c. ccxxxiv: Dates; Royal assent: 14 August 1877: Text of statute as ...
Swords Castle is an early medieval castle in Swords, Dublin, built by the first Anglo-Norman Archbishop of Dublin in the 13th century. The castle was abandoned in the 14th century, but later used as a rendezvous by Catholics in the 1641 Rebellion and restored as a national monument.