1780s – No.45 Lower O’Connell Street, Dublin
The end of a unified Wide Street Commission terrace at the corner of Abbey Street and O’Connell Street.
The end of a unified Wide Street Commission terrace at the corner of Abbey Street and O’Connell Street.
Celbridge Abbey was built by Bartholomew Van Homrigh, Lord Mayor of Dublin,
Designed by the architect Thomas Ivory in 1781,
A long established school, opened in 1667 under the auspices of James Ormonde,
Mulligan’s pub was founded in 1782 and retains much of its original character with its low ceiling and wooden bar.
Recently restored by the Historic Heart of Dublin, No.9 Merchants Quay has some interesting original features including plasterwork,
The Dunsink Observatory is an astronomical observatory established in 1785 in what was then outside of Dublin by Trinity College Dublin.
Designed by Richard Evans, a canal engineer,
Belcamp dates from the mid-1780s when it was built for Sir Edward Newenham,
In 1784 William Smyth, a Dublin merchant, founded the Bethesda Chapel in Dorset Street in connection with a female orphanage and,