Connect Magazine of the Ireland Fund (Spring/Summer 2013), 108pp.
Letter from Senator Gordon Wilson to Maurice Hayes, thanking him and the other directors of Independent Newspaper Ltd. for their hospitality and that he would be more than happy to attend the function in Pittsburgh that they proposed.
File containing detailed discussions on engaging Prof. John Horgan in the work of writing a history of the “Irish Independent”, including a memorandum of agreement and some discussion as to the structure etc. of the proposed publication. Also correspondence associated with the possible purchase of a number of newspaper titles in Northern Ireland by Independent Provincial Newspapers (Ireland) Ltd.
Remittance slips and some correspondence re. payments from Independent Newspaper Media to Maurice Hayes for articles written for the papers.
Typescript copy of articles for the “Belfast Telegraph”, mainly in the run up to the Good Friday Agreement but also dealing with policing and health cuts.
Typescript draft of Section Two, 1973-1986 of ‘The Irish Independent: A History’.
Notebook giving article title, date published, and amounts received, for those published in the “Irish Independent” and “Sunday Independent”.
From 1987 Maurice Hayes served as a member on various commissions, conducted reviews and authored reports. These covered the areas of policing, community affairs, industrial relations and administrative practices.
An account of the murders of Gerard and Rory Cairns.
Press cuttings, papers and some correspondence in relation to policing and Northern Ireland, in particular the report of Maurice Hayes into the possibility of a policing Ombudsman. Includes Conflict Research by Maurice Hayes, Centre for the Study of Conflict, UU (1990); ‘Neither Orange March nor Irish Jig’, Institute of Irish Studies, Liverpool; letter from Chris [Patten] to Maurice Hayes saying that their report had received ‘some (not so faint) praise in unexpected areas’, thanking Maurice for his role. ‘You know that it would have been impossible without you’. (10 Nov 1999).