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Messages - deccam

Pages: [1] 2 3 4 ... 7
1
Dublin / Re: WW 1 & WW2 Irish Listing
« on: Thursday 18 October 12 18:36 BST (UK)  »
If you are looking for somebody on that WW2 Irish Army deserters list,I have a copy of a list and will check it for you if you want.My old man is one of those listed.

2
Dublin / Re: coombe street
« on: Wednesday 07 March 12 20:59 GMT (UK)  »
Gary,Coombe St.was just off the Coombe,so two different streets.

3
Dublin / Re: Rope Walk,Arran Quay
« on: Wednesday 22 February 12 21:13 GMT (UK)  »
That must be it Shane,once again many thanks.

4
Dublin / Re: Rope Walk,Arran Quay
« on: Wednesday 22 February 12 20:55 GMT (UK)  »
Thanks's Shane,I had noticed the parish of St. Paul's but didn't realize the parish would have extended up as far as Parkgate St.,widens out the search a bit.I was thinking Rope Walk might have been tucked in somewhere around Smithfield/Bow St. area but haven't a clue.I'm thinking that parish would have stretched up to Church St. bridge and back towards Nth King St. as well,I have family going back living in that part of Nth King St. who would have been married etc. in St.Paul's.Thanks again for your help.

5
Dublin / Rope Walk,Arran Quay
« on: Wednesday 22 February 12 20:03 GMT (UK)  »
A friends family listed here on the census in 1911,haven't had any luck trying to find exactly where it was.I would know the area quite well,can't seem to find this though,any help appreciated.

6
Dublin / Re: McAuley Family - Dublin
« on: Thursday 11 August 11 21:27 BST (UK)  »
Ohhhh I just found something...

My grandfathers old driving licences..They are British ones...but its in an envelope...from Dublin.

Now i suspect my grandfather had been to visit Billy his brother, like he often did, as the return address on the back states:

Mr W McAuley
belview beds?
thomas st
dublin 8

The beginning of the envelope is torn, so if its a number on belview beds then i cant see..or a st thomas st? not sure...

Oh how i wish it has my grandfathers DOB on the licence but it just has his name and signature...

Tiny little red book....two of them....


This would be Belview Buildings,they were just off Thomas Street,they are long gone.

7
Dublin / Re: john johnson
« on: Sunday 06 March 11 19:09 GMT (UK)  »
The Tenter fields would have taken their name from where the weavers in the area would have their cloth stretched out for drying.
Here's a bit of history of the area:

The Tenters:
At a later stage in its history the Liberties became a Huguenot settlement. The Huguenots were French Protestants who suffered religious persecution and fled to Ireland in 1685. They were skilled weavers who created an industrial centre in the area. They started their business around the area now called Weaver’s Square. They taught the people of Dublin how to weave silk and poplin. At first, everything seemed to prosper and many more people came to live in the area. However, difficulties arose because of the Irish weather. The cloth needed to be stretched and dried on tenter hooks in the fields between what is now O’Curry Avenue and Clarence Mangan Road. In 1814 Thomas Pleasants built a stone Tenter House on the land between Cork Street, Brickfield Lane, Brown Street and Ormond Street. The success of Dublin poplin was disastrous for the English cotton and woolen industries. The English Government issued new rules (no material may come to Ireland without first coming through England) and new taxes. This eventually caused the weaving industry in Dublin to decline. This area was still an open field at the beginning of this century. After the decline of the linen trade, the land was used for market gardening until the houses in the Tenters were built around 1922; the year of construction has been marked on the front walls of some of the houses. Many of the street names in the Tenters have literary associations, e.g. Oscar Square (after Oscar Wilde), Clarence Mangan (after James Clarence Mangan, the poet), Ingram Road (after Sir John Kells Ingram, the poet). The houses in Rutledge Terrace were built between 1898 and 1910 by Robert and Andrew Rutledge, the same builder who built houses in Francis Street and Golden Lane.

On another note before the Lamplighter pub on the Coombe took that name it was known as The Weavers.



8
Dublin / Re: Cork Street in 1874
« on: Friday 04 December 09 16:12 GMT (UK)  »
You don't get too many wrong in fairness. ;)

9
Dublin / Re: Cork Street in 1874
« on: Friday 04 December 09 15:53 GMT (UK)  »
I suspect that in this case the RC parish is also St. Catherine's. The parish church is on St. Catherine's Lane off Thomas St


Shane,the present RC parish church of St. Catherine is in Meath St.,it's an old church but couldn't say when it was built,so unsure of how far back the records stretch.

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