1792 – Fitzwilliam Place, Dublin
Fitzwilliam Place is the continuation of Fitzwilliam Street after it passes through Fitzwilliam Square.
Fitzwilliam Place is the continuation of Fitzwilliam Street after it passes through Fitzwilliam Square.
Named after the Fitzwilliam family, Earls of Merrion, who developed this land as part of their great estate on the southside of the Liffey.
Dating from 1792, the fountain is a commemoration of the Duke of Rutland, Charles Manners who commissioned the piece before his untimely death at the age of thirty-three.
The architect of the Westmoreland Lock Hospital is uncertain. The archives of the Irish Architectural Archive mention drawings by Francis Johnston for wings and rear additions.
Built between 1791 and 1793 as a single 32-metre span arch bridge. Originally named after Sarah, Countess of Westmoreland, wife of the then Lord Lieutenant of Ireland,
The former Debtors Prison on Green Street is adjacent to the current Court House and site of Newgate Gaol. It is a U-shape in plan with the two arms visable from the rear on Halston Street.
A wooden bascule bridge constructed to continue Brunswick Street, now Pearse Street over the Grand Canal at their docks near Ringsend.
In 1796 the Dublin Society moved from their building on Grafton Street,
In 1789 Dublin Corporation commissioned the Royal Canal and a harbour built on Constitution Hill, connected to the main canal at Phibsboro by a spur.
The Earl of Camden opened the docks and one of the large locks, which separate the docks from the Liffey, was named after him.
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