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
ɹǝqɯoɔɥɔɐǝq
Lots of information and interesting comments from former residents here - comeheretome.com/2012/10/05/the-dublin-working-boys-home-...
ɹǝqɯoɔɥɔɐǝq
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/
suckindeesel
earth.app.goo.gl/DNsSdm #googleearth
ɹǝqɯoɔɥɔɐǝq
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...
Carol Maddock
Carol Maddock
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)
suckindeesel
www.buildingsofireland.ie/buildings-search/building/50020...
suckindeesel
Note the two non electric tram tracks, so likely between 1892 (hostel opened) and 1899 (trams electrified)
suckindeesel
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
ɹǝqɯoɔɥɔɐǝq
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...
Architecture of Dublin
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...
an poc
Kevin Dalton's memoir That Could Never Be (Columba Press, 2003) includes an account of 'the Ranch'
Architecture of Dublin
Wide angle https://www.flickr.com/photos/186395973@N06/52256748673/in/photolist-2nBKuMp-2o8PQJv-2oLyPRM-2jRrTWz-2nBVD1M-2nAqSHr-2oxx4np-2jRqq1G-2mJWdFE
Architecture of Dublin
https://www.flickr.com/photos/britishlibrary/11136306615/in/gallery-186395973@N06-72157720155631370/