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The original house on the site dates from around 1730 when it was owned by [[Thomas_Pearce (British_Army_officer)|Thomas Pearce]] but was largely rebuilt by descendants around 1770.<ref>{{cite web |title=Altidore Castle, ALTIDORE DEMESNE, WICKLOW |url=https://www.buildingsofireland.ie/buildings-search/building/16401201/altidore-castle-altidore-demesne-wicklow |website=Buildings of Ireland |access-date=21 November 2024}}</ref> |
The original house on the site dates from around 1730 when it was owned by [[Thomas_Pearce (British_Army_officer)|Thomas Pearce]] but was largely rebuilt by descendants around 1770.<ref>{{cite web |title=Altidore Castle, ALTIDORE DEMESNE, WICKLOW |url=https://www.buildingsofireland.ie/buildings-search/building/16401201/altidore-castle-altidore-demesne-wicklow |website=Buildings of Ireland |access-date=21 November 2024}}</ref> |
||
By 1773, the house was owned by Reverend [[William Blachford]], librarian of [[Marsh's Library]]. |
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From around 1901, the house reverted to use as a sanitorium.<ref>{{cite web |title=Dictionary of Irish Architects |url=https://www.dia.ie/works/view/6107 |website=www.dia.ie |access-date=21 November 2024}}</ref> |
From around 1901, the house reverted to use as a sanitorium.<ref>{{cite web |title=Dictionary of Irish Architects |url=https://www.dia.ie/works/view/6107 |website=www.dia.ie |access-date=21 November 2024}}</ref> |
Revision as of 10:48, 22 November 2024
- Uppercross (barony)
- Pidgeon House Fort also a redirect from Pigeon House, Dublin
- United Presbyterian Church, Dublin - [1]
- List of market houses in the Republic of Ireland
- List of public art in Dublin
- List of market crosses in Ireland
- List of public fountains and troughs in Dublin
- List of religious shrines and statues in Dublin
- Wiliam Lawrence - photographer
- Irish housing crisis - User:Financefactz/sandbox/Irish housing crisis
- List of historic houses in the Republic of Ireland
- List of missing persons in Ireland
- List of unidentified persons found in Ireland
- Pensions in the Republic of Ireland
- Europa Nostra
- Cuffsborough House
- Stackallan House
- Joseph Jarratt
- Dublin Civic Exhibition (1914)
- William J Flynn - Mutual of America
- Ursuline Thurles
- Template:Golf Courses in Ireland
- The Follies Trust - Folly Fellowship
- List of family seats of Irish nobility
- David Digges La Touche[1]
- Template:Newspapers in the Republic of Ireland - possibly add a section in for trade journals? or start a new template for trade journals
- Template:Ireland newspapers - possibly add a section in for trade journals? or start a new template for trade journals
- Template:Trade journals in Ireland
- Wayflyer
- Grand Canal Harbour not to be confused with Grand Canal Dock
- List of demolished buildings and structures in London - List of demolished buildings and structures in Dublin
- St Annes House
- Belgard Castle
- List of Private member's clubs in Ireland
- Christine Casey (historian)
- Ruadhán Mac Cormaic
- 1772 Foundation
- 1659 Census of Ireland
- Hibernian United Services Club
- Stephen’s Green Club
- La Touche Bank
- Portmarnock Brick and Terracotta Works - established 1881
- William Conolly & Son - Builders and contractors at 37, 38 and 39 Upper Dominick Street
- W&R Morrogh - collapsed Cork stockbroker
- Destruction of Irish country houses (1924–2000)
- Temple Street, Dublin
- List of data centres in Ireland
- Foster Place
- Samuel Frederick Brocas and Select Views of Dublin
- Thomas Sherrard
- North Brunswick Street
- North Dublin Union
- Altidore Castle
Altidore Castle
Altidore Castle is a Georgian house and estate near Kilpeddar, County Wicklow.
The original house on the site dates from around 1730 when it was owned by Thomas Pearce but was largely rebuilt by descendants around 1770.[2]
By 1773, the house was owned by Reverend William Blachford, librarian of Marsh's Library.
From around 1901, the house reverted to use as a sanitorium.[3]
The house was later owned by the Emmet family, a relation of the Irish rebel Robert Emmett, who was hung for treason in 1803 after an attempted rebellion.[4]
North Dublin Union
The North Dublin Union was a workhouse off North Brunswick Street and Morning Star Avenue in Dublin, Ireland which was founded in 1773 in an old malthouse.
It was named the House of Industry from its establishment until the passage of the Irish poor laws in 1838 when it became the North Dublin Union.
The complex of buildings which were developed in the surrounding area make up much of present day Grangegorman. The original institutional buildings constructed in the 1790s were demolished in the 20th century.
Thomas Sherrard
Thomas Sherrard (c.1750–1837) was an Irish surveyor, cartographer and city planner who was active in the late 18th and early 19th century as a member of the Wide Streets Commission.[5] Through this position he was influential in the development and layout of modern Dublin.
Sherrard Street in Dublin is named after him.
Foster Place
Foster Place is a Georgian street in Dublin, Ireland.
The street was created in the 1780s with the widening and renaming of Turnstile Lane which had lead through to Fleet Street in Temple Bar.
List of data centres in Ireland
Number | Image | Name and location | County | Coordinates | Owner | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Example | DB4 Northwest Business Park, Ballycoolen | County Dublin | Example | Equinix | |
2 | Example | DB3 Northwest Business Park, Ballycoolen | County Dublin | Example | Equinix | |
3 | Example | DUB12 Clonshaugh Crescent, Priorswood, Dublin 17 | County Dublin | Example | Digital Realty | |
4 | Example | DUB02 Grange Castle Business Park, Old Nangor Road, Kilmahuddrick, Dublin 22 | County Dublin | Example | EdgeConnex | |
5 | Example | DUB13 1 Profile Park, Kilcarbery | County Dublin | Example | Digital Realty | |
6 | Example | DUB14 2 Profile Park, Kilcarbery | County Dublin | Example | Digital Realty | |
7 | Example | DUB11 Clonshaugh Industrial Estate, Priorswood, Dublin 17 | County Dublin | Example | Digital Realty | |
8 | Example | Portan, Clonee | County Meath | Example | Meta | |
9 | Example | Example |
Irish National Senior Track and Field Championship.
Maybe just call it the Irish Athletics Championships - this currently just links to Athletics Ireland with no further detail.
The Follies Trust
The Follies Trust is an architectural conservation and preservation established in 2006 with a focus on Follies. The trust operates in both the Republic of Ireland and Northern Ireland. The organisation is registered as a charity in Northern Ireland.
Restoration Projects
The trust has been restored various buildings with a folly element over the past 20 years. Notable projects include;
2008-09
- The Greg and Rainey Mausolea, Knockbreda, Belfast
2010-11
- Stroan Fountain, Kilkenny
- Lord Limerick’s Follies, Bryansford, Co. Down
- Waddell Cunningham Mausoleum, Knockbreda, Belfast
- Cast Iron Mausoleum, Clonbern, Co Galway
2012-13
- O’Grady Mausoleum, County Limerick
2014-15
- Ardglass bathing house, County Down
- Beresford obelisk, Derry
- Moorish Tower, County Down
- The Tower on Mullagh Hill, County Offaly
- Stephenson mausoleum, Kilbride, County Antrim
- Tullylish watch houses, County Down
2016-18
- Gloster House folly
- O'Brien column, Liscannor
- The Rossglass Pig Crews, Killough, County Down
- Ardnacraa well, County Clare
- Beehive Mausoleum, County Westmeath
- A Folly Fort, County Down
- Lion at Mote Park, County Roscommon
2019-20
1772 Foundation
The 1772 Foundation is an architectural conservation and preservation organisation based in New Jersey, United States and named for the original date of construction of its first restoration project at Liberty Hall. The property was originally built by the first elected representative of New Jersey, William Livingston and passed down through his descendants before being bequeathed to the trust.
The organisation was founded in 1984 by Stewart Barney Kean, a descendant of Livingston.[6][7] As of 2022, the foundation had over $80m of assets.[8]
Notable donations made by the foundation include $1m to the Coastal Community Foundation of South Carolina in 2022.
The following is a list of Private members' clubs in Ireland, including those that are now defunct. Historically, these clubs were exclusively for men, but most now admit women. Traditionally these were referred to as Gentlemen's clubs while others were more akin to working men's clubs. Modern private members' club have evolved to include gym and leisure facilities to replace a position that was previously filled by bath houses and Turkish baths while also competing with the expanding role of hotels.[9]
Name | Established | Location | Located Since | Affiliation | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Daly's Club | 2015 | College Green | 2015 | Located on College Green from about 1750 to 1823. It was located next to the Irish parliament at the time and hence was known to be frequented by politicians and dignitaries of the era. | |
Royal Dublin Society | Ballsbridge | Formerly located at Grafton Street, Hawkins Street and laterly at Leinster House before moving to Ballsbridge. | |||
Dublin Conservative Club | Camden Row | Closed in 2024. | |||
The Monks of the Screw (Order of St. Patrick) | |||||
The Irish Times Club | |||||
Club na Múinteoirí (The Teachers’ Club) | 36 and 37 Parnell Square | ||||
City of Dublin Working Men’s Club | |||||
UCD Common Room Club | Belfield | ||||
The Garda Club | Harrington Street, Portobello | ||||
United Arts Club | 1907 | ||||
St Stephen's Green Club | St Stephen's Green | Origins in Daniel O'Connell's Union Club. | |||
Hibernian United Services Club | Merged with the St Stephen's Green Club in the early 2000s. | ||||
Royal Irish Automobile Club (RIAC) | Dawson Street | ||||
Kildare Street and University Club | 1857 | St Stephen's Green | 1991 | Earlier located at Kildare Street. |
Company type | Private company |
---|---|
Industry | Banking Commercial finance |
Founded | 2019 |
Founders |
|
Headquarters | Dublin, Ireland |
Key people |
|
Website | wayflyer |
Wayflyer is an Irish non-bank lender and inventory finance company which was founded in 2019. It provides finance through invoice discounting and factoring with a focus on revenue-based financing. The company mainly lends to e-commerce and technology based companies which generate income from advertising and non-recurring revenue streams.[10][11]
As of April 2023, it has offices in Dublin, London, Atlanta, New York and Sydney.
History
Wayflyer was established by Jack Pierse and Aidan Corbett in 2019 to provide alternative financing to technology companies.
In May 2021 Wayflyer initially raised $76m in a Series A funding round lead by Left Lane Capital.[12]
In February 2022, it was announced that Wayflyer had raised $150m in a Series B funding round lead by DST Global.[13] At that point Wayflyer was said to have become one of Ireland's few Unicorns.
In May 2022 Wayflyer agreed a $300m debt funding round with JP Morgan while later in September 2022, it agreed a $253m debt funding round from Credit Suisse.[14][15][16]
In September 2022, Wayflyer was said to have approximately 1,500 clients globally and had provided over €1 billion of loans since its inception.[17]
See also
External links
References
- ^ "La Touche, David Digues I | Dictionary of Irish Biography". www.dib.ie. Retrieved 5 August 2022.
- ^ "Altidore Castle, ALTIDORE DEMESNE, WICKLOW". Buildings of Ireland. Retrieved 21 November 2024.
- ^ "Dictionary of Irish Architects". www.dia.ie. Retrieved 21 November 2024.
- ^ Webber, Jude (21 November 2024). "'It takes a particular kind of madness': new life for Ireland's Big Houses". Financial Times. Retrieved 22 November 2024.
- ^ "Sherrard, Thomas". www.dib.ie. Retrieved 18 November 2024.
- ^ "Paid Notice: Deaths KEAN, STEWART BARNEY". The New York Times. 9 June 2002. Retrieved 20 June 2023.
- ^ "History". Liberty Hall Museum. Retrieved 20 June 2023.
- ^ "Historic Preservation". 1772 Foundation Org. Retrieved 20 June 2023.
- ^ "Private Bars and Social Clubs in Dublin". Come Here To Me!. 2015-09-23. Retrieved 2022-12-31.
- ^ "eCommerce Financing | About Us | Wayflyer". www.wayflyer.com. Retrieved 16 December 2022.
- ^ "Wayflyer beefs up team as it targets further global growth". The Irish Times. Retrieved 16 December 2022.
- ^ Azevedo, Mary Ann (27 May 2021). "Wayflyer raises $76M to provide 'revenue-based' financing to e-commerce merchants". TechCrunch. Retrieved 16 December 2022.
- ^ Gain, Vish (1 February 2022). "Wayflyer flies way past $1bn valuation to become Ireland's latest unicorn". Silicon Republic. Retrieved 16 December 2022.
- ^ "Wayflyer Raises $253m from Credit Suisse in Latest Funding Round". businessplus.ie. 1 September 2022. Retrieved 16 December 2022.
- ^ Lunden, Ingrid (1 February 2022). "Wayflyer raises $150M on a $1.6B valuation for a new spin on providing loans to e-commerce merchants". TechCrunch. Retrieved 16 December 2022.
- ^ Halpin, Padraic (12 May 2022). "Wayflyer to fund rapid growth with $300 mln J.P. Morgan debt line". Reuters. Retrieved 16 December 2022.
- ^ "Wayflyer social media commercial whips up a storm". 8 September 2022. Retrieved 1 June 2023.
The below list contains details of notable buildings and structures in Dublin, Ireland which have been demolished as of 2022.[1][2][3][4]
Name |
Date of construction |
Date of destruction |
Image | Location | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Molyneux House | 1711 | 1943 | Peter Street | Constructed by Sir Thomas Molyneux as his main Dublin dwelling house. It marked the beginning of a change in the architectural character of Dublin houses away from the favoured gabled Dutch style of previous decades.[5] | |
Lever Brothers factory (Castleforbes Works) | 1927 | 1980s | Sheriff Street | Dublin Glass Bottle Company manufactory, It was later taken over and rebuilt by Lever Brothers and became its main Dublin site before closing and being demolished. The factory was noted as employing 300 people by 1929. | |
30 Jervis Street | 1600s | 1913 | Jervis Street | Large twin gabled, paneled and wainscoted house likely dating from the late 1600s. | |
Newland's House | 1800s | 1981 | Newlands Cross | Served as the clubhouse of Newlands Golf Club for a period before being demolished. | |
Tracton House | 1744 | 1912 | St Stephen's Green | Constructed for the surveyor general, Arthur Jones Nevill between 1744 and 1746. It was demolished around 1912 to make way for a new branch of the Bank of Ireland and the ceiling stucco work was transferred the state apartments. | |
Foster Aqueduct | 1796 | 1951 | Broadstone | Originally carried the spur of the Royal Canal over the street to the canal basin. The spur was later filled in with the last remaining section being Blessington Street Basin and most of the remainder forming a park area. It was named for John Foster, 1st Baron Oriel the last speaker of the Irish House of Commons. | |
Church of Ireland Training College | 1886 | 1970 | Kildare Street | An impressive Victorian building which was demolished to make way for the offices of the Department of Agriculture. | |
Simpson's Hospital | 1786 | 1978 | Parnell Street | It was established through a bequest from a Dublin merchant by the name of Mr George Simpson and bookended Jervis Street. It was a 7-bay 4-storey Georgian Structure erected in 1784-87. The Building was taken over by Williams & Woods around 1876 and demolished in 1978. | |
Foundling Hospital | 1704 | Kilmainham | The hospital was closed in 1835. Pictured here is an illustration of the dining hall. | ||
Strand Street Presbyterian Church, Dublin | 1764 | 2008 | Great Strand Street | Located at 64/65 Great Strand Street, the building operated as sheds for a mechanic before being demolished in 2008. | |
Fortfield House | 1785 | 1934 | Terenure | Demolished to make way for housing in the 1930s and 1940s. The name of the house now only survives in the name of the various housing estates built on the former estate lands. | |
Kirwan House | 1793 | 1969 | North Circular Road, Dublin | Demolished to make way for office blocks after the orphanage closed in the 1950s. | |
Marrowbone Lane | 1703 | Marrowbone Lane | An impressive Dutch Billy style gabled house likely owned by a merchant in the area. The illustration is taken from the Dublin Penny Journal in 1833. | ||
Royal Hibernian Marine School | 1773 | 1979 | Sir John Rogerson's Quay | Featuresd in one of James Malton's prints of Dublin. The remains of the building including the flanking wings were finally demolished in 1979. | |
Bethesda Chapel | 1785 | 1839 | Dorset Street | Replaced with later iterations and ultimately with a cinema which was only finally demolished in 2005 and has now been replaced with a budget hotel. | |
Mercer's Hospital | 1724 | 1759 | Stephen Street | Replaced with an updated Georgian building in 1759. | |
Mercer's Hospital | 1759 | 1884 | Stephen Street | Largely replaced with a Victorian building in 1884 with only the front facade being retained. | |
St. Bride's Church | 1684 | 1898 | Bride Street | The church had fallen into ruin and it was demolished to make way for the new Iveagh Trust accommodation at Bull Alley in 1898, along with the adjacent primary school built around 1837. | |
Church of St. John the Evangelist, Dublin | 1769 | 1878 | Fishamble Street | St John the Evangelist church, this version was constructed on the site in 1769 and demolished at the same time as Christchurch cathedral was being revamped in the 1870s.[6] | |
Royal Dublin Society | 1796 | Hawkins Street | The site was later occupied by the Theatre Royal. | ||
Offices of the Dublin Society at 112-113 Grafton Street | 1767 | Grafton Street | Ereceted on a vacant site opposite the Provost's House at the bottom of Grafton Street. It was designed by Christopher Myers and executed by a William Stokes. In 1796 the society sold their buildings at Grafton Steeet for £3,000 and moved to their new premises on Hawkins Street. | ||
Navigation House - Offices of the Grand Canal Company | 1766 | Grafton Street | Erected on a vacant site immediately next to the premises of the Dublin Society at 112-113 Grafton Street. | ||
Jammet Restaurant | 1800s | 1926 | St Andrew's Street | Demolished to make way for an Italian Gothic Revival bank building in 1928 which stands today housing the Irish flagship branch of H&M. | |
Deanery House | 1732 | 1884 | Fishamble Street | House for the dean of Christchurch Cathedral designed by Edward Lovett Pearce.[7] | |
Church of St. Nicholas Within | 1707 | 1900s | Skinners Row | The steeple of the church was removed in 1825. The remaining base of the church was relocated by Lord Iveagh to facilitate road widening in the early 1900s. | |
The Old Custom House, Dublin | 1707 | 1815 | Wellington Quay | Replaced by The Custom House in 1791. | |
Row of Georgian and Victorian Houses at 10-14 Molesworth Street | 1800-1900 | 1970s | Molesworth Street | Demolished to make way for the passport office, this building was itself demolished to make way for the headquarters of AIB in 2018. | |
St. Matthias' Church | 1842 | 1959 | Hatch Street | Originally constructed as part of a larger square called Wellinton Square or Waterloo Square which was never built. | |
St. Werburgh's Church | 1719 | 1810 (spire removed) | Werburgh Street | The Steeple was removed around 1810 by the Dublin Castle authorities due to concerns it would negatively impact the security of Dublin castle and could be a spot from which snipers could take up position. | |
St Anns School | 1857 | 1978 | Molesworth Street | Demolished to make way for European Union House. This was itself demolished in 2018 to make way for the Irish headquarters of Barclays Bank. | |
43 and 44 O'Connell Street Upper | 1800 | 1916 | O'Connell Street | Both destroyed in 1916. 43 housed the headquarters of the Irish National League. | |
Tivoli Variety Theatre | 1897 | Burgh Quay | The original Conciliation Hall on the site was actually built in 1843 but this was substantially re-built when it became a theatre. Demolished in the 20th century. | ||
Theatre Royal | 1935 | 1963 | Hawkins Street | Art Deco version, demolished to make way for Hawkins House. | |
Theatre Royal | 1896 | 1934 | Hawkins Street | Replaced and earlier theatre and itself replaced with another theatre. | |
Last wooden cage work house in Dublin | 1812 | Castle Street | None of these types of buildings remain in Ireland today despite there being several remaining in the main UK provincial cities. London being the exception due to laws enacted following the great fire of London requiring all buildings to be predominantly made of stone or other non-flammable materials. Demolished by the Wide Streets Commissioners.[8] | ||
GPO | 1781 | 1824 | College Green | Located opposite Parliament House on College Green. Replaced in 1808 with the GPO on O'Connell Street. The building was demolished and the site was later replaced around 1824 by George Home's Royal Arcade.[9] | |
Royal Arcade | 1824 | 1837 | College Green | Another speculative investment by George Home, a Scottish immigrant who was also behind Home's Hotel on Usher's Quay. It burned down spectacularly within 13 years after enjoying much commercial success. In the early hours of the 24th April 1837 the hotel, arcade and adjacent buildings went up in flames. It was later replaced with a Royal Arcade Hotel and the National Bank. | |
Molesworth Hall | 1867 | 1978 | Molesworth Street | Demolished to make way for European Union House. This was itself demolished in 2018 to make way for the Irish headquarters of Barclays Bank.[10] | |
Dublin Fish Market | 1892 | 2005 | Smithfield | Demolished and now forms a car park and service area.[11] | |
Ormond Market | 1682 | 1890 | Ormond Square | Demolished to make way for Ormond Square.[12] | |
Chapelizod House | 1600s | Chapelizod | Unknown location and date of destruction. Thomas Burgh is recorded as having carried out works on the house in 1709. | ||
Holles Street - Georgian houses demolished | Holles Street | Replaced with row of facsimile Georgian and Victorian houses. | |||
Royal Charter School | 1748 | Clontarf Road | Later became a bathing house known as Kinsgcourt House. | ||
Chichester House | 1600 | 1728 | College Green | Demolished and replaced with Parliament House on College Green. | |
Oldbawn House | 1635 | 1980s | Tallaght | Fell into a state of disrepair in the early 1900s and gradually deteriorated over time until the remains were demolished by Dublin Corporation in the 1960s. | |
Santry Court | 1703 | 1947 | Santry | Destroyed in a fire and later fully demolished. Santry park now makes up some of what was the grounds of the estate. One of the oldest houses in Dublin when it was demolished. | |
Tallaght Castle | 1400 | 1910 | Tallaght | Formerly the Archbishop's Palace. | |
Milverton Hall | 1880 | 1961 | Skerries | An unusual Italianate-French Château demolished as the inheritance taxes and cost of upkeep became untenable for the owners in the 1960s.[13] | |
Croydon Park House | 1924 | Marino | Demolished to make way for part of the Marino housing scheme. | ||
Moira House | 1752 | 1950s | Usher's Quay | See Mendicity Institution. The gates and front walls of the property as well as some associated stores still stand on Usher's Quay. | |
Row of Georgian buildings on Great Denmark Street and Temple Street demolished by Belvedere College | 1790s | Great Denmark Street | Various buildings demolished by Belvedere College
Numbers 4 and 5 (Kileen House) (1972) | ||
Christian Union Building | 1877 | 1980 | Abbey Street | A substantial Victorian structure used as the headquarters of the YMCA demolished to make way for the Irish Life Centre. | |
Corkagh House | 1650 | 1960s | Clondalkin | A 16th century farmhouse attached to a Georgian House. | |
Moran's Hotel | 1800 | 1922 | Gardiner Street | Located at the corner of Gardiner Street and Talbot Steet. It encompasses two large Georgian Houses which had been converted for hotel usage. | |
Rutland Street Upper | 1820s | 1970s | Seán O'Casey Avenue | All houses on both sides of the street were demolished to make way for social housing destroying a vista which terminated in the Free Church on Great Charles Street. | |
Turkish Baths | 1860 | 1980s | Lincoln Place | Demolished to make way for office buildings. | |
Summerhill Parade | 1981 | Summerhill | Complete terrace of Georgian houses demolished to make way for social housing. | ||
Hardwicke Street | 1805 | 1950s | Hardwicke Street | The street was originally laid out by Francis Johnston as an avenue framing the vista to St George's Church. Almost all of the houses on the street were demolished to make way for social housing in the 1950s. | |
Gardiner Street | 1970s-90s | Gardiner Street | Mass demolition to remove tenement housing of the Georgian era. Replaced with various apartment blocks and facsimile Georgian blocks. Over 100 large houses were demolished. | ||
Fitzgibbon Street - Terrace of Georgian Houses along the West side | 1800 | 1950s | Fitzgibbon Street | 14 four-storey over basement Georgian houses demolished to make way for blocks of social housing constructed by Dublin Corporation likely in the 1950s. | |
Clare Street - various Gerogian Houses | 1780s | 1987 | Clare Street | Buildings now replaced with the National Gallery of Ireland's Millennium Wing. | |
Antrim House | 1775 | 1930s | Merrion Square | The home of the Earl of Antrim was second most impressive house on Merrion Square after Leinster House. It was demolished to be replaced with the current Holles Street Hospital. | |
Merrion Castle | 1300s | 1780 | Merrion Gates | The home of the Fitzwilliam family. | |
Kildare Place - houses at numbers 1-4 | 1756 | 1890s | Kildare Street | Numbers 2 and 3 were demolished in 1957 to make way for a back entrance to Government buildings. Number 1 was demolished for the site of the national museum in the 1890s while number 4 was demolished to make way for the Church of Ireland training college in 1886.[14] | |
Church of Ireland Training College | 1886 | 1970 | Kildare Street | Victorian red brick building replaced with the modernist and brutalist Agriculture House which houses the Department of Agriculture, Food & the Marine.[15] | |
Home's Hotel | 1826 | 1979 | Usher's Quay | The remains of the hotel were only demolished finally in 1979 however the protruding pediment had been demolished much earlier. It was named for Scotsman George Home. | |
Baggotrath Castle | 1290 | 1800-50 | Baggot Street | finally demolished at some stage in the early 19th century when the building was in ruins. | |
Fitzwilton House | 1969 | 2018 | Wilton Terrace | One of Dublin's most impressive brutalist structures.[16] | |
Apollo House | 1969 | 2018 | Tara Street | Demolished for the development of College Square (Dublin). | |
Westmoreland Lock Hospital | 1792 | 1956 | Townsend Street | ||
College House | 1974 | 2018 | Townsend Street | One of Dublin's least impressive brutalist structures. Demolished for the development of College Square (Dublin). | |
River House | 1973 | 2019 | Chancery Street | A brutalist concrete structure which was located near the four courts. Demolished and replaced with a hotel in 2019. | |
Hawkins House | 1964 | 2021 | Hawkins Street | Often cited as the ugliest building in Dublin. It was demolished over the course of a year ending in 2021 due to issues with asbestos and practical usage. Demolished for the development of College Square (Dublin). | |
Nelson's Pillar | 1809 | 1966 | O'Connell Street | Blown up my members of the IRA in 1966 and the base was later entirely demolished. | |
Rathmines Castle | 1635 | 1840 | Dartry | Possibly on the grounds of an earlier castle. It was used as a school and is located close to the spot of current day Palmerston Park. | |
Rathmines Castle | 1820 | 1963 | Rathmines | Replacing an earlier older Rathmines castle which was located near where Palmerston Park is today. | |
Mountjoy Square - various Gerogian Houses | 1790s | 1980s | Mountjoy Square | Multiple houses across the 1970s and 1980s. 35-38, 40-45, 48-52 (Mountjoy Square South) and 55-59 (Mountjoy Square West). Fascimile Georgian replacement housing was later built in its place. | |
North Great George's Street - various Georgian houses | 1770s | 1980s | North Great George's Street | (West side) 22-25
(East side) - Numbers 29-34 Most houses were demolished as they were deemed unsafe in 1983 while most of the windows had already been filled in with blocks. The ground floors and basements remained as makeshift fencing until they were redeveloped as facsimile Georgian apartments in the 1990s.[17] | |
Eccles Street - Various Georgian houses | Eccles Street | Demolished to make way for various extensions and car parks connected with the Mater Hospital. | |||
Langford House | 1699 | 1931 | Mary Street | One of the first big houses to be built on the northside of the city and said to be the oldest big house surviving in Dublin when it was demolished in 1931. | |
Metropole Cinema | 1922 | 1980 | O'Connell Street | It replaced the Hotel Metropole, Dublin when it was destroyed during the Easter Rising. It is now the site of one of the flagship Irish stores of Penneys (Primark). | |
Hotel Metropole, Dublin | 1891 | 1916 | O'Connell Street | Destroyed in the Easter Rising in 1916. It was originally a number of older Georgian houses which had been heavily altered and upgraded in the French style in 1891-93. | |
The Hailing Station | 1907 | 2007 | Britain Quay | Demolished in controversial circumstances at the height of the Celtic Tiger. The site now lies empty at the entrance to the Grand Canal Dock basin. | |
St. Anne's | 1835 | 1968 | Saint Anne's Park | The family home of the Guinness brewers for many generations. It was seriously damaged by fire in 1943 before being finally demolished in 1968. | |
St. Thomas's Church | 1762-58 | 1926 | Gloucester Street | Destroyed during the Easter Rising, it was later demolished to enable a continuous street line from Gloucester Street to O'Connell Street. The church was later replaced in the 1930s with a newer but more modest St. Thomas Church. | |
The Russell Hotel | 1790s | 1974 | St Stephen's Green | Demolished to make way for Russell Court in the 1974, which has housed the offices of KPMG ever since. It was formed by a number of Georgian houses which were joined together and plastered over in a West Regency London style. | |
Royal Hibernian Hotel | 1800s | 1982 | Dawson Street | Demolished in the 1980s to make way for the offices of Davy Group. | |
The Linenhall | 1728 | 1916 | Smithfield | Destroyed during the Easter Rising as it was being used as a makeshift barracks by the British forces. | |
Weavers' Hall | 1745 | 1960s | The Coombe | Demolished in the 1960s. | |
Bricklayers' Hall | 1986 | Cuffe Street | Demolsihed in the 1980s, the blocks and bricks were numbered when the building was disassembled and remain in storage as of 2022. | ||
St. Peter's Church | 1867 | 1980s | Aungier Street | Demolished in the 1980s. An earlier Georgian church had been on the site prior to the construction of the newer gothic church. | |
La Touche Bank | 1730s | 1946 | Castle Street | Demolished in 1946, a portion of the facade of the building was still visible on the street up until the 1990s. It was designed by the architect Joseph Jarratt who also designed Weavers' Hall for David LaTouche. | |
The Tholsel | 1660s | 1809 | Christchurch Place | Demolished as it was deemed structurally unsound. The statuary and coat of arms on the front of the building are now stored in the crypt of Christchurch cathedral. | |
Fitzwilliam Street - 16 Houses on a portion of the Georgian mile | 1790s | 1965 | Fitzwilliam Street | Demolished in controversial circumstances to make way for the new headquartered of ESB by Stephenson and Gibney in 1965. This building was later demolished again in 2018 to make for the new headquarters of ESB designed by Grafton architects. | |
31-33 College Green | (31) 1888
(32) Early 1800s |
1974 | College Green | Two Victorian buildings containing the offices of Atkinson & Company Poplin at 31 and the College green post office branch at 33 in what was built as the office of North British and Mercantile Insurance company. Another Wide Streets commissioners building at number 32 was also embellished to made look Victorian and used by Atkinsons. All demolished to make way for new offices of Ulster Bank around 1974.[18][19] | |
Royal Irish Institution | 1829 | 1866 | College Street | Demolished in 1866 to make way for the headquarters of the provincial bank which is now incorporated into the Westin Hotel. | |
Riversdale House | 1725 | 1965 | Kilmainham | Demolished in the 1960s. The whereabouts of the statue of William Shakespeare on the front is now unknown although it was likely destroyed. It was one of a trio of grand early Georgian houses in a terrace which have all since been demolished. | |
Inchicore House | Inchicore | Unknown date of demolition, part of the house dated from the 16th century. | |||
Frescati House | 1739 | 1983 | Blackrock | ||
Trinity College Dublin (West front) | 1699 | 1750 | College Green | Replaced by Regent House, the new west front of the university. | |
Old Campanile, Trinity College Dublin | 1746 | 1798 | Trinity College Dublin | Desinged by Richard Cassels and located in front square it was deemed unstable and partially demolished in 1791 before being entirely demolished in 1798. It was later replaced with the current campanile a few decades later. | |
Blue Coat School (King's Hospital) | 1673 | 1773 | Oxmantown Green | This was replaced by the current Blackhall Place solicitor's chambers. | |
Ormond Quay Presbyterian church | 1847 | 1960s | Ormond Quay | Damaged by fire and effectively destroyed in the 1960s. The base still remains and is incorporated into a 1900s office building. | |
Marino House | 1755 | 1920 | Marino | The grounds of which contain the still extant and more notable folly, the Casino at Marino. | |
Turvey House | 1600s | 1987 | Donabate | Demolished in controversial circumstances in the 1980s. | |
Jury's Hotel | 1820 | 1980s | College Green | Demolished in the 1980s to make way for modern offices. | |
Cornmarket House | 1727 | 1800s | Thomas Street | The area around the former building is still often referred to as Cornmarket. Demolished in the early 1800s. | |
Newgate Prison | 1783 | 1893 | Green Street | There is now a small park in its place. | |
Wesley College | 1879 | 1972 | St Stephen's Green | The school relocated to its current site in Balinteer around 1970 where it remains to this day. | |
Four Courts Marshalsea | 1775 | 1975 | Bridgefoot Street | Used as tenement housing for a period before finally being demolished in 1975. | |
Liverpool, London & Globe Insurance Company | 1867 | 1960s | College Green | Constructed on one of the western wings of Daly's club, it was later itself demolished and replaced with an inferior office building in the 1960s. | |
Royal Exchange Assurance Company | 1880 | 1960s | College Green | 5 College Green, it replaced one of the wings of Daly's club, it was itself later demolished and replaced with an inferior office building in the 1960s. | |
Scottish Provincial Assurance Company offices at 9 O'Connell Street Upper | 1867 | 1922 | O'Connell Street | Rare building designed in a Scottish baronial style. It was destroyed during the war of independence and ultimately removed. It partially replaced what was Drogheda House, the home of the Earl of Drogheda for whom the street was originally named.[20] | |
North British & Mercantile Insurance Company | 1868 | 1974 | College Green | Demolished along with two other buildings to make way for a brutalist building which formed the offices of Ulster Bank. | |
W&A Gilbey's, 46-49 O'Connell Street | 1867 | 1972 | O'Connell Street | It was originally made up of a paid of older houses which were adjusted and made to look Victorian in the 1860s. It was demolished for offices. | |
28-32 O'Connell Street | 1890s | 1973 | O'Connell Street | Headquarters of Findlaters wine and spirit merchants. The replacement building was itself demolished in 1974. | |
Imperial Hotel | 1853 | 1916 | O'Connell Street | Destroyed during the Easter Rising and was later replaced with Clearys. | |
Commercial Buildings | 1799 | 1970s | Dame Street | Demolished to make way for the new central bank building in the 1970s. It was replaced with a facsimile Georgian granite building which was rotated 90 degrees to create a plaza in front.[21] | |
Kenure House | 1710 | 1978 | Rush | Demolished by Dublin corporation. | |
Alexandra College | 1870s | 1970s | Earlsfort Terrace | Demolished to make way for the Conrad Hotel. | |
Canada House, 65-68 St Stephen's Green | 1970 | 2014 | St Stephen's Green | Replaced with a new office block for Aercap in 2015 which was the first office block constructed in Dublin after the property crash.[22][23] Canada House was named in honour of its tenants, who included the Canadian Embassy, Canada Life and the Bank of Nova Scotia.[24] | |
4 Georgian houses on St Stephen's Green West | 1780s | 1970 | St Stephen's Green | Demolished to make way for Canada House. | |
4 Georgian houses on St Stephen's Green East | 1967 | St Stephen's Green | Demolished to make way for Huguenot House. The building has since been significantly revamped but still stands as of 2022.[25] | ||
Hainault House | 1967 | 2017 | St Stephen's Green | Demolished to make way for a new office block called 70 St Stephen's Green in 2018. | |
Various late Georgian houses on the south side of Earlsfort Terrace | 1840s | 1970s | Earlsfort Terrace | Demolished to make way for Saint Stephens Green House, the headquarters of the Irish Sugar Company. | |
Magdalen Asylum Chapel (Denny House) | 1868 | 1960s | Leeson Street | Demolished to make way for Saint Stephens Green House, the headquarters of the Irish Sugar Company.[26] | |
Ardee House | 1719 | 1943 | The Coombe | Constructed by the Earls of Meath as their city townhouse in the 18th century. The house became known as Ardee House owing to its position on Ardee Street. The house was originally twin gabled in the Dutch style before being converted to the more subdued Georgian style in later years. |
See also
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Pensions in Ireland
Personal Retirement Savings Account
Age attained during calendar year | Limit of Tax Relief
(% of Net Relevant Earnings) |
---|---|
Less than 30 | 15% |
30 - 39 | 20% |
40 - 49 | 25% |
50 - 54 | 30% |
55 - 59 | 35% |
60 and over | 40% |
Gross roll-up can also have benefit when buying a property with your pension where rents can be earned tax free as long as they remain in the PRSA and the property can increase in value without accruing any taxes. Leverage can also be used to purchase properties via a pension up to a maximum of 50%.[27][28]
The Georgian Society
List of Street and Trade Directories of Dublin
The Dictionary of Dublin
- The Dictionary of Dublin (1895)[29]
Slaters Directory
- A Compendium of Entertaining Knowledge for the Year - Volume VI (1776)[33]
- A Compendium of Entertaining Knowledge for the Year - Volume VII (1777)[34]
- A Compendium of Entertaining Knowledge for the Year (1781)[35]
- A Compendium of Entertaining Knowledge for the Year (1803)[36]
- A Compendium of Entertaining Knowledge for the Year (1809)
The Gentleman and Citizen's Almanac (Watson's)
The Gentleman's and Citizen's Almanack produced by John Watson, began publication in Dublin in 1736 and continued until 1844.
- The Gentleman and Citizen's Almanac compiled by John Watson Stewart (1772)[37]
- The Gentleman and Citizen's Almanac compiled by John Watson Stewart (1800)
- The Gentleman and Citizen's Almanac compiled by John Watson Stewart (1802)[38]
- The Gentleman and Citizen's Almanac compiled by John Watson Stewart (1808)
- The Gentleman and Citizen's Almanac compiled by John Watson Stewart (1809)
- The Gentleman and Citizen's Almanac compiled by John Watson Stewart (1836)
- The Gentleman and Citizen's Almanac compiled by John Watson Stewart (1837)
- The Gentleman and Citizen's Almanac compiled by John Watson Stewart (1838)
- The Gentleman and Citizen's Almanac compiled by John Watson Stewart (1839)
- The Gentleman and Citizen's Almanac compiled by John Watson Stewart (1840)
- The Gentleman and Citizen's Almanac compiled by John Watson Stewart (1841)[39]
- The Gentleman and Citizen's Almanac compiled by John Watson Stewart (1842)[40]
- The Gentleman and Citizen's Almanac compiled by John Watson Stewart (1843)[41]
- The Gentleman and Citizen's Almanac compiled by John Watson Stewart (1846)[42]
The Treble Almanack
The first true trade directories in Ireland were those published by Peter Wilson for the city of Dublin, beginning in 1751 and continuing until 1837, with a break from 1754 to 1759. From the outset these were considered as supplements to Watson's Almanack and were regularly bound with it. In 1787 the two publications were put together with the English Court Registry, and, until it ceased publication in 1837, the whole was known as The Treble Almanack.
- Wilson's Dublin Directory (1765)[43]
- Wilson's Dublin Directory (1766)[44]
- Wilson's Dublin Directory (1767)[45]
- Wilson's Dublin Directory (1768)[46]
- Wilson's Dublin Directory (1771)[47]
- Wilson's Dublin Directory (1774)[48]
- Wilson's Dublin Directory (1775)[49]
- Wilson's Dublin Directory (1777)[50]
- Wilson's Dublin Directory (1778)[51]
- Wilson's Dublin Directory (1788)[52]
- Wilson's Dublin Directory (1795)[53]
- The Treble Almanack - (John Watson Stewart's Almanack, The English Court Registry, Wilsons Dublin Directory with a New correct Plan of the City) (1798)[54]
- Wilson's Dublin Directory (1801)[55]
- The Treble Almanack - (John Watson Stewart's Almanack, The English Court Registry, Wilsons Dublin Directory with a New correct Plan of the City) (1802)[56]
- The Treble Almanack - (John Watson Stewart's Almanack, The English Court Registry, Wilsons Dublin Directory with a New correct Plan of the City) (1804)[57]
- The Treble Almanack - (John Watson Stewart's Almanack, The English Court Registry, Wilsons Dublin Directory with a New correct Plan of the City) (1806)
- The Treble Almanack - (John Watson Stewart's Almanack, The English Court Registry, Wilsons Dublin Directory with a New correct Plan of the City) (1810)
- The Treble Almanack - (John Watson Stewart's Almanack, The English Court Registry, Wilsons Dublin Directory with a New correct Plan of the City) (1812)[58]
- The Treble Almanack - (John Watson Stewart's Almanack, The English Court Registry, Wilsons Dublin Directory with a New correct Plan of the City) (1813)
- The Treble Almanack - (John Watson Stewart's Almanack, The English Court Registry, Wilsons Dublin Directory with a New correct Plan of the City) (1814)[59]
- The Treble Almanack - (John Watson Stewart's Almanack, The English Court Registry, Wilsons Dublin Directory with a New correct Plan of the City) (1815)[60]
- The Treble Almanack - (John Watson Stewart's Almanack, The English Court Registry, Wilsons Dublin Directory with a New correct Plan of the City) (1816)
- The Treble Almanack - (John Watson Stewart's Almanack, The English Court Registry, Wilsons Dublin Directory with a New correct Plan of the City) (1817)[61]
- The Treble Almanack - (John Watson Stewart's Almanack, The English Court Registry, Wilsons Dublin Directory with a New correct Plan of the City) (1818)[62]
- The Treble Almanack - (John Watson Stewart's Almanack, The English Court Registry, Wilsons Dublin Directory with a New correct Plan of the City) (1819)[63]
- The Treble Almanack - (John Watson Stewart's Almanack, The English Court Registry, Wilsons Dublin Directory with a New correct Plan of the City) (1820)[64]
- The Treble Almanack - (John Watson Stewart's Almanack, The English Court Registry, Wilsons Dublin Directory with a New correct Plan of the City) (1821)[65]
- The Treble Almanack - (John Watson Stewart's Almanack, The English Court Registry, Wilsons Dublin Directory with a New correct Plan of the City) (1822)[66]
- The Treble Almanack - (John Watson Stewart's Almanack, The English Court Registry, Wilsons Dublin Directory with a New correct Plan of the City) (1823)
- The Treble Almanack - (John Watson Stewart's Almanack, The English Court Registry, Wilsons Dublin Directory with a New correct Plan of the City) (1824)[67]
- The Treble Almanack - (John Watson Stewart's Almanack, The English Court Registry, Wilsons Dublin Directory with a New correct Plan of the City) (1825)[68]
- The Treble Almanack - (John Watson Stewart's Almanack, The English Court Registry, Wilsons Dublin Directory with a New correct Plan of the City) (1826)[69]
- The Treble Almanack - (John Watson Stewart's Almanack, The English Court Registry, Wilsons Dublin Directory with a New correct Plan of the City) (1827)[70]
- The Treble Almanack - (John Watson Stewart's Almanack, The English Court Registry, Wilsons Dublin Directory with a New correct Plan of the City) (1828)[71]
- The Treble Almanack - (John Watson Stewart's Almanack, The English Court Registry, Wilsons Dublin Directory with a New correct Plan of the City) (1829)[72]
- The Treble Almanack - (John Watson Stewart's Almanack, The English Court Registry, Wilsons Dublin Directory with a New correct Plan of the City) (1830)[73][74]
- The Treble Almanack - (John Watson Stewart's Almanack, The English Court Registry, Wilsons Dublin Directory with a New correct Plan of the City) (1831)[75]
- The Treble Almanack - (John Watson Stewart's Almanack, The English Court Registry, Wilsons Dublin Directory with a New correct Plan of the City) (1832)[76]
- The Treble Almanack - (John Watson Stewart's Almanack, The English Court Registry, Wilsons Dublin Directory with a New correct Plan of the City) (1833)[77]
- The Treble Almanack - (John Watson Stewart's Almanack, The English Court Registry, Wilsons Dublin Directory with a New correct Plan of the City) (1834)[78]
- The Treble Almanack - (John Watson Stewart's Almanack, The English Court Registry, Wilsons Dublin Directory with a New correct Plan of the City) (1835)[79]
- The Treble Almanack - (John Watson Stewart's Almanack, The English Court Registry, Wilsons Dublin Directory with a New correct Plan of the City) (1836)
- The Treble Almanack - (John Watson Stewart's Almanack, The English Court Registry, Wilsons Dublin Directory with a New correct Plan of the City) (1838)[80]
- The Treble Almanack - (John Watson Stewart's Almanack, The English Court Registry, Wilsons Dublin Directory with a New correct Plan of the City) (1844)[81]
- The Treble Almanack - (John Watson Stewart's Almanack, The English Court Registry, Wilsons Dublin Directory with a New correct Plan of the City) (1849)[82]
Smith's City and Country Almanac
- Smith's City and Country Almanac (1822)
- Smith's City and Country Almanac (1830)
Pettigrew and Oulton (1834 -1849)
- The Dublin Almanac and General Register of Ireland (1834) - (Pettigrew and Oulton)[83]
- The Dublin Almanac and General Register of Ireland (1835) - (Pettigrew and Oulton)
- The Dublin Almanac and General Register of Ireland, 3rd Annual Impression (1836) - (Pettigrew and Oulton)
- The Dublin Almanac and General Register of Ireland, 4th Annual Impression (1837) - (Pettigrew and Oulton)[84]
- The Dublin Almanac and General Register of Ireland, 5th Annual Impression (1838) - (Pettigrew and Oulton)
- The Dublin Almanac and General Register of Ireland, 6th Annual Impression (1839) - (Pettigrew and Oulton)
- The Dublin Almanac and General Register of Ireland, 7th Annual Impression (1840) - (Pettigrew and Oulton)
- The Dublin Almanac and General Register of Ireland, 8th Annual Impression (1841) - (Pettigrew and Oulton)[85]
- The Dublin Almanac and General Register of Ireland, 9th Annual Impression (1842) - (Pettigrew and Oulton)[86]
- The Dublin Almanac and General Register of Ireland, 10th Annual Impression (1843) - (Pettigrew and Oulton)[87]
- The Dublin Almanac and General Register of Ireland, 11th Annual Impression (1844) - (Pettigrew and Oulton)
- The Dublin Almanac and General Register of Ireland, 12th Annual Impression (1845) - (Pettigrew and Oulton)[88]
- The Dublin Almanac and General Register of Ireland, 13th Annual Impression (1846) - (Pettigrew and Oulton)[89]
- The Dublin Almanac and General Register of Ireland, 14th Annual Impression (1847) - (Pettigrew and Oulton)
- The Dublin Almanac and General Register of Ireland, 15th Annual Impression (1848) - (Pettigrew and Oulton)
- The Dublin Almanac and General Register of Ireland, 16th Annual Impression (1849) - (Pettigrew and Oulton)[90]
- Thom's Irish Almanac and Official Directory with the Post Office Dublin City and County Directory, 1st Annual Publication (1844) - (Alexander Thom)
- Thom's Irish Almanac and Official Directory with the Post Office Dublin City and County Directory, 2nd Annual Publication (1845) - (Alexander Thom)
- Thom's Irish Almanac and Official Directory with the Post Office Dublin City and County Directory, 7th Annual Publication (1850) - (Alexander Thom)[91]
- Thom's Irish Almanac and Official Directory with the Post Office Dublin City and County Directory, 8th Annual Publication (1851) - (Alexander Thom)[92]
- Thom's Irish Almanac and Official Directory with the Post Office Dublin City and County Directory, 9th Annual Publication (1852) - (Alexander Thom)[93]
- Thom's Irish Almanac and Official Directory with the Post Office Dublin City and County Directory, 13th Annual Publication (1856) - (Alexander Thom)
- Thom's Irish Almanac and Official Directory with the Post Office Dublin City and County Directory, 14th Annual Publication (1857) - (Alexander Thom)[94]
- Thom's Irish Almanac and Official Directory with the Post Office Dublin City and County Directory, 16th Annual Publication (1859) - (Alexander Thom)[95]
- Thom's Irish Almanac and Official Directory with the Post Office Dublin City and County Directory, _th Annual Publication (1861) - (Alexander Thom)
- Thom's Irish Almanac and Official Directory with the Post Office Dublin City and County Directory, _th Annual Publication (1862) - (Alexander Thom)
- Thom's Irish Almanac and Official Directory with the Post Office Dublin City and County Directory, _th Annual Publication (1865) - (Alexander Thom)
- Thom's Irish Almanac and Official Directory with the Post Office Dublin City and County Directory, _th Annual Publication (1866) - (Alexander Thom)
- Thom's Irish Almanac and Official Directory with the Post Office Dublin City and County Directory, _th Annual Publication (1868) - (Alexander Thom)
- Thom's Irish Almanac and Official Directory of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland, 27th Annual Publication (1870) - (Alexander Thom)[96]
- Thom's Irish Almanac and Official Directory with the Post Office Dublin City and County Directory, 28th Annual Publication (1871)
- Thom's Irish Almanac and Official Directory of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland, 30th Annual Publication (1873) - (Alexander Thom)[97]
- Thom's Irish Almanac and Official Directory of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland, 31st Annual Publication (1874) - (Alexander Thom)[98]
- Thom's Irish Almanac and Official Directory of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland, 33rd Annual Publication (1876) - (Alexander Thom)[99]
- Thom's Official Directory of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland, 34th Annual Publication (1877) - (Alexander Thom)[100]
- Thom's Official Directory of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland, 35th Annual Publication (1878) - (Alexander Thom)[101]
- Thom's Official Directory of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland, Annual Publication (1881) - (Alexander Thom)[102]
- Thom's Official Directory of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland, Annual Publication (1882) - (Alexander Thom)
- Thom's Official Directory of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland, Annual Publication (1883) - (Alexander Thom)[103]
- Thom's Official Directory of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland, Annual Publication (1884) - (Alexander Thom)[104]
- Thom's Official Directory of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland, Annual Publication (1886) - (Alexander Thom)
- Thom's Official Directory of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland, Annual Publication (1887) - (Alexander Thom)
- Thom's Official Directory of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland, Annual Publication (1891) - (Alexander Thom)
- Thom's Official Directory of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland, Annual Publication (1896) - (Alexander Thom)
- Thom's Official Directory of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland, Annual Publication (1901) - (Alexander Thom)
- Thom's Official Directory of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland, Annual Publication (1903) - (Alexander Thom)
- Thom's Official Directory of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland, Annual Publication (1906) - (Alexander Thom)
- Thom's Official Directory of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland, Annual Publication (1909) - (Alexander Thom)
- Thom's Official Directory of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland, Annual Publication (1911) - (Alexander Thom)
- Thom's Official Directory of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland, Annual Publication (1912) - (Alexander Thom)
- Thom's Official Directory of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland, Annual Publication (1913) - (Alexander Thom)
- Thom's Official Directory of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland, Annual Publication (1916) - (Alexander Thom)
- Thom's Official Directory of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland, Annual Publication (1921) - (Alexander Thom)
- Thom's Official Directory of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland, Annual Publication (1926) - (Alexander Thom)
- Thom's Official Directory of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland, Annual Publication (1931) - (Alexander Thom)
- Thom's Official Directory of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland, Annual Publication (1936) - (Alexander Thom)
- Thom's Official Directory of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland, Annual Publication (1941) - (Alexander Thom)
- Thom's Official Directory of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland, Annual Publication (1946) - (Alexander Thom)
- Thom's Official Directory of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland, Annual Publication (1951) - (Alexander Thom)
- Thom's directory: Dublin city, county and Bray (1960)
Irish Registry of Deeds
- Deeds from 1708 - 1969 (manual, micro-film and electronic formats)
- Deeds from 1870 - present (electronic format or land registry electronic format)
- Griffith's Valuation – 1868 land survey of Ireland
The Gentleman's Magazine
Falconer's railway, coach, car and steam navigation guide for Ireland
- Falconer's railway, coach, car and steam navigation guide for Ireland (1863)[105]
- Falconer's railway, coach, car and steam navigation guide for Ireland (1864)[106]
- Falconer's railway, coach, car and steam navigation guide for Ireland (1865)[107]
References
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- ^ Mitchell, Flora H. (1966). Vanishing Dublin. Allen Figgis.
- ^ Pearson, Peter (2000). The Heart of Dublin: Resurgence of an Historic City. O'Brien Press. ISBN 978-0-86278-668-7.
- ^ McDonald, Frank (1985). The Destruction of Dublin. Gill and Macmillan. ISBN 978-0-7171-1386-6.
- ^ "Making A House A Home For All Sorts". independent. Retrieved 30 November 2022.
- ^ "West Front of St John's Church, Fishamble Street, Dublin, (now demolished),(from 'Gentleman's Magazine', August, 1785)". onlinecollection.nationalgallery.ie. Retrieved 2022-12-07.
- ^ "Archiseek - Irish Architecture - 1733 - The Deanery House, Fishamble Street, Dublin". Archiseek - Irish Architecture. 2013-04-25. Retrieved 2022-12-03.
- ^ "Ancient Houses of Dublin". www.libraryireland.com. Retrieved 2022-12-08.
- ^ Ferguson, Stephen (2018-07-26). The Post Office in Ireland: An Illustrated History. Merrion Press. ISBN 978-1-78855-054-3.
- ^ "CO. DUBLIN, DUBLIN, MOLESWORTH STREET, NO. 039-40 (MOLESWORTH HALL) Dictionary of Irish Architects -". www.dia.ie. Retrieved 1 December 2022.
- ^ "Fish market to close after 100 years". The Irish Times. Retrieved 2022-12-08.
- ^ Casey, Christine (2005). Dublin : the city within the Grand and Royal Canals and the Circular Road with the Phoenix Park. New Haven, Conn.: Yale University Press. pp. 86, 111. ISBN 9780300109238.
- ^ "CO. DUBLIN, MILVERTON HALL (SKERRIES) Dictionary of Irish Architects -". www.dia.ie. Retrieved 29 November 2022.
- ^ "Archiseek - Irish Architecture - 1756 - Nos 1-4 Kildare Place, Dublin". Archiseek - Irish Architecture. 21 November 2014. Retrieved 29 November 2022.
- ^ "Archiseek - Irish Architecture - 1886 - Church of Ireland Training College, Kildare St., Dublin". Archiseek - Irish Architecture. 2 October 2012. Retrieved 29 November 2022.
- ^ "Fitzwilton House". #SOSBRUTALISM. Retrieved 2022-12-09.
- ^ "North Great Georges Street ACA" (PDF). dublincity.ie. Retrieved 30 November 2022.
- ^ "CO. DUBLIN, DUBLIN, COLLEGE GREEN, NO. 028 (NORTH BRITISH & MERCANTILE INSURANCE CO.) Dictionary of Irish Architects -". www.dia.ie. Retrieved 2022-12-06.
- ^ "1868 – North British & Mercantile Insurance Co, College Green, Dublin". Archiseek - Irish Architecture. 2013-03-11. Retrieved 2022-12-06.
- ^ "CO. DUBLIN, DUBLIN, O'CONNELL STREET UPPER, NO. 009 (SCOTTISH PROVINCIAL ASSURANCE CO.) Dictionary of Irish Architects -". www.dia.ie. Retrieved 2022-12-06.
- ^ "CO. DUBLIN, DUBLIN, DAME STREET, COMMERCIAL BUILDINGS Dictionary of Irish Architects -". www.dia.ie. Retrieved 2022-12-03.
- ^ "Landmark office development to set benchmark for Dublin rents". The Irish Times. Retrieved 2022-12-09.
- ^ "Work starts on first 'spec' offices since crash". The Irish Times. Retrieved 2022-12-09.
- ^ G. & T. Crampton (Firm) (2017-06-12), Canada House, St. Stephen's Green, replacement of cladding, G. & T. Crampton (Firm), retrieved 2014-06-28
- ^ "Archiseek - Irish Architecture - 1968 - Hugenot House, St. Stephen's Green, Dublin". Archiseek - Irish Architecture. 2012-04-07. Retrieved 2022-12-09.
- ^ "1868 – Magdalen Asylum Chapel, Leeson St., Dublin". Archiseek - Irish Architecture. 6 December 2011. Retrieved 1 December 2022.
- ^ "pension property".
- ^ "pension property".
- ^ Cosgrave, Ephraim MacDowel; Strangways, Leonard Richard Fleming (1895). "The dictionary of Dublin : being a comprehensive guide to the city and its neighbourhood". Dublin : Sealy, Bryers & Walker : London : Simpkin, Marshall, Hamilton, Kent. Retrieved 12 January 2022.
- ^ "The commercial directory of Scotland, Ireland, and the four most Northern counties of England, for 1820-21 & 22 ... with ... maps, etc". Manchester. 1820. Retrieved 20 October 2022.
- ^ Slater, Isaac (1846). "Slater's National Commercial Directory of Ireland; Including in Addition to the Trades' Lists, Alphebetical Directories of Dublin, Belfast, Cork and Limerick. To which are Added Classified Directories of the Important English Towns of Manchester, Liverpool, Birmingham, West Bromwich, Leeds, Sheffield and Bristol, and in Scotland, Those of Glasgow and Paisley". I. Slater. Retrieved 3 November 2021.
- ^ Shaw, Henry (1988). "The Dublin pictorial guide & directory of 1850". Belfast : Friar's Bush. Retrieved 20 October 2022.
- ^ Day, Robert; Naylor, Paul; Westby, Edward (1771). "The Hibernian magazine, or Compendium of entertaining knowledge, [electronic resource] : for ." Dublin [Ireland] : printed by James Potts, at Swift's-Head, in Dame-street. Retrieved 6 January 2022.
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- ^ Day, Robert; Naylor, Paul; Westby, Edward (1771). "The Hibernian magazine, or Compendium of entertaining knowledge, [electronic resource] : for ." Dublin [Ireland] : printed by James Potts, at Swift's-Head, in Dame-street. Retrieved 6 January 2022.
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- ^ Peter Wilson (1765). Wilson's Dublin Directory, for the Year 1765. ... Peter Wilson.
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- ^ Wilson's Dublin Directory, for the Year. Peter Wilson. 1777.
- ^ Wilson's Dublin Directory, for the Year 1778. Containing an Alphabetical List of the Names, Occupations, and Places of Abode ... of the Merchants and Traders of ... Dublin ... Together with a List of the Hospitals, Infirmaries, Public Buildings, Offices. 1778.
- ^ Wilson's Dublin Directory for the Year 1788. William Wilson. 1788.
- ^ Wilson's Dublin Directory, for the Year 1795. William Wilson. 1795.
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- ^ "Watson's, or, The gentleman's and citizen's almanack. 1835". HathiTrust. Retrieved 12 February 2021.
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- ^ "Thom's Directory 1850".
- ^ "Thom's Directory 1851".
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- ^ "Thom's Directory 1857".
- ^ "Thom's Directory 1859".
- ^ "Thom's Directory 1870".
- ^ "Thom's Directory 1873".
- ^ "Thom's Directory 1874".
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