Often passed, much admired...

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Where: Leinster, Dublin City, Ireland

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When: 01 January 1892

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One suspects that anybody who has moved around Dublin's city centre over many years has passed by this lovely building and wondered what it's function was? Citizens or visitors alike will have passed by going about their business or visiting the many tourist attractions in the vicinity. What is the history of the building and what is it used for now?

Photographer: Robert French

Collection: Lawrence Photograph Collection

Date: Circa 1865 - 1914 1892

NLI Ref: L_CAB_06176

You can also view this image, and many thousands of others, on the NLI’s catalogue at catalogue.nli.ie

Info:

Owner: National Library of Ireland on The Commons
Source: Flickr Commons
Views: 4874
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    ɹǝqɯoɔɥɔɐǝq

    • 24/Jul/2023 07:49:10

    Lots of information and interesting comments from former residents here - comeheretome.com/2012/10/05/the-dublin-working-boys-home-...

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    ɹǝqɯoɔɥɔɐǝq

    • 24/Jul/2023 07:54:13

    Flickr is sometimes amazing! In 2018 via https://www.flickr.com/photos/warrenlemay/ https://www.flickr.com/photos/warrenlemay/31617384697/ And a 2005 close-up of the sign under the oriel window via https://www.flickr.com/photos/gaylawns/ https://www.flickr.com/photos/gaylawns/254138087/

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    suckindeesel

    • 24/Jul/2023 08:25:44

    earth.app.goo.gl/DNsSdm #googleearth

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    ɹǝqɯoɔɥɔɐǝq

    • 24/Jul/2023 09:28:27

    Who swiped the oriel window? And the cupola? And the balustrades? The building has been defrillyitusified. Kinlay House on google maps has some interesting interior photos - www.google.com/maps/place/Kinlay+House/@53.3434253,-6.270...

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    Carol Maddock

    • 24/Jul/2023 13:37:32

    BOYS' TECHNICAL SCHOOL The Lord Lieutenant Opens its New Home The new premises of the Dublin Working Boys' Home and Harding Technical School, in Lord Edward street, were opened to-day by the Lord Lieutenant. The institution was established about fifteen years ago, and during that time about 550 boys have availed themselves of its advantages, many of them remaining as long as seven years in the old premises in Denzille street. A most satisfactory feature in connection with the institution "is that three-fourths of the income required — £800 — have been subscribed by the boys themselves. The necessity, however, for suitable premises was for a long time felt, and it was only in 1886 that an opportunity was afforded of providing such buildings as the increasing extension of the good work demanded. In that year an endowment was allocated to the institution by Mr Thomas Spunner and Mr Francis B Ormsby, the trustees of the will of Miss Anne Middleton Harding, on condition a technical and night school should be opened in connection with the home. The conditions were of course agreed to, and the arrangement was subsequently ratified by a scheme framed by the Commissioners of Educational Endowments. The result was the erection of the present commodious buildings. The site selected, as the audience assembled at the opening ceremony were reminded to-day by the Recorder, was at one time occupied by what was known as the Maiden Tower, with countless ramifications and passages leading to nowhere in particular. The building has a frontage of 162 feet, and on each side of the main entrance there are two shops. At the rere, at Copper alley, a plot has been purchased with the object of providing a play-ground for the boys. There is a suggestion of the Elizabethan style in the architecture, an attractive feature of the frontage being a buff terra cotta oriel bay window. Mount Argus bricks have been largely used in the structure. The interior is elaborately fitted up, the dining-room, in particular, being neatly arranged. There are eight tables, each capable of accommodating six boys. This apartment communicates with the kitchen by means of a sliding window, and on the same floor are spacious pantries, lavatories, &c. On the first floor is the lecture hall, capable of seating 150 persons, and containing a fire-place and platform. The board-room and boy' reading room for boys, are on the same floor. On the second floor is the schoolroom, and here also are the dormitories and bath-rooms. The dormitories are capable of affording accommodation for 6O residents, while in the technical and night schools about 100 pupils may be instructed. The boys from Denzille street have already moved into the new premises. The ages of the boys who usually attend the home range from 14 to 19, and they are obliged to pay in fees, which includes board, lodging, and washing, the comparatively small sum of from 5s 6d to 7s 6d per week. Messrs H and J Martin deserve credit for the manner in which they have performed their contract under the supervision of Mr A E Murray, the architect.
    (Evening Herald, 22 February 1892)

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    Carol Maddock

    • 24/Jul/2023 13:48:11

    By 1914, the Home had accommodation for 80 boys, and the amount contributed "by the inmates" out of their own earnings was £1,262 14s 11d! (Irish Independent, 20 May 1914)

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    suckindeesel

    • 24/Jul/2023 20:28:18

    Note the two non electric tram tracks, so likely between 1892 (hostel opened) and 1899 (trams electrified)

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    suckindeesel

    • 24/Jul/2023 21:58:37

    The yellow bricks used in the construction were ‘Mount Argos bricks’, made by a brick works in Kimmage. I used to have a few as garden edging, should have kept them! youtu.be/Ar-9lBj42ko

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    ɹǝqɯoɔɥɔɐǝq

    • 24/Jul/2023 22:11:14

    Possibly nearer 1892 as the downstairs shops (with HUGE windows) are not yet occupied. And the lonely lad (Oliver Twist?) is waiting to be let in, shivering with cold and hunger ... Via Trove from 1886 - His Grace the Archbishop of Dublin has completed the purchase, for the purpose of establishing a Working Boys' Home, of extensive premises situated in a central portion of the city. His Grace has devoted to this most meritorious work a considerable sum, amounting to over ₤1000. From - trove.nla.gov.au/newspaper/article/119443333?searchTerm=D...

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    Architecture of Dublin

    • 25/Jul/2023 11:09:43

    Seems to be taken pre-1895 anyway around the time these 3 Victorian buildings were constructed. Also it doesnt feature the newer exchange building constructed around 1910 www.buildingsofireland.ie/buildings-search/building/50910...

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    an poc

    • 25/Jul/2023 12:52:34

    Kevin Dalton's memoir That Could Never Be (Columba Press, 2003) includes an account of 'the Ranch'

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