E-Book, Englisch, 336 Seiten
Fallon Three Castles Burning
1. Auflage 2022
ISBN: 978-1-84840-873-9
Verlag: New Island
Format: EPUB
Kopierschutz: 6 - ePub Watermark
A History of Dublin in Twelve Streets
E-Book, Englisch, 336 Seiten
ISBN: 978-1-84840-873-9
Verlag: New Island
Format: EPUB
Kopierschutz: 6 - ePub Watermark
DONAL FALLON is a historian of Dublin, with a particular interest in the social history of the city. A founder of the popular Come Here To Me! blog in 2009, since 2019 he has presented the Three Castles Burning podcast, exploring the many histories of the Irish capital. His previous publications include 14 Henrietta Street: From Tenement to Suburbia (2021) and he is formerly Historian-in-Residence to Dublin City Council.
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Henrietta Street
Henrietta Street c.1970 (National Library of Ireland)
If one street can tell us of Dublin’s rise and demise, it is Henrietta Street. It also has an unrivalled story of rebirth, a slice of Georgian Dublin reborn when so much was irreversibly lost. The most exclusive address in the Georgian city, it was initially home to what one authority on the street has described as, ‘the leading figures from church, military and state, sophisticated socialites, agents of culture and arbiters of taste.’1
By the time of the 1911 Census, however, the street was a picture of poverty, with 835 people residing in just fifteen homes. In less than two centuries, subdivided tenements had replaced the fashionable abodes of the rich and powerful.
Henrietta Street, for a street so important in the development of the Irish capital, spends a lot of its time playing the role of somewhere else entirely. In the popular television series Penny Dreadful, a horror drama featuring characters like Dr Victor Frankenstein and a reimagined Dorian Gray, the cobbled street was used to evoke a feeling of place – but that place was Victorian London. Similarly, we see Henrietta Street in Ripper Street, a series which takes dramatic licence with the tale of London’s most infamous killer, Jack the Ripper. Macabre walking tours take to the streets of Whitechapel and Spitalfields nightly in London, exploring the gruesome history and lore around the Ripper, but television production companies feel this Dublin street offers a better sense of Victorian London than that city itself can muster. To a resident of the street, it seems that, ‘Henrietta Street has been used to represent the Dickensian squalor of London… It’s not representing Dublin, it’s not representing Ireland and it’s a massive inconvenience to the local residents.’2
The prop red post boxes and the acting Victorian Bobbies come and go, but that Henrietta Street should be considered a quintessential London street is no doubt something its early residents would delight in. The emulation of the great city, the undisputed capital of the Empire, was a preoccupation of the Georgian Dubliner. To Jonathan Swift, who privately reckoned ‘no man is thoroughly miserable unless he be condemned to live in Ireland’, London represented a place of stimulating social and political life, and was worthy of not only admiring but copying:
If you have London still at heart,
We’ll make a small one here by art;
The difference is not much between
St. James’s Park, and Stephen’s Green.3
Whatever the differences in her green spaces, Henrietta Street represented a direct imitation of the fashionable streets of the neighbouring metropolis by Dublin. With its two opposing rows of red-brick houses, and with a beautiful commonality on street level that conceals the unique decorated interiors behind each door, Henrietta Street looked unlike anything the city had witnessed before. Dublin’s first Georgian terraced street, it was to mark the beginning of a very real influence over the shaping of the eighteenth-century city by one Luke Gardiner.
A treasury official, parliamentarian and property developer – perhaps today someone we would label a property tycoon – the early life of Luke Gardiner remains something of a mystery, but his beginnings were seemingly relatively humble, being the son of a merchant. In a city where so many defined themselves by the pedigree of a family line or title, Gardiner was ‘a self-made man of obscure origins’.4 It was his marriage to Anne Stewart in 1711, niece to Viscount Mountjoy, a prominent Anglo-Irish peer, which opened doors in Georgian society, lending Gardiner what historian Melanie Hayes has described as ‘a gloss of nobility’.5
While Gardiner’s plan to develop Henrietta Street was ambitious, its development proved slow. Still, it was helped by the fact that the street’s arrival in the 1720s coincided with the opening of a new parliament on College Green, which meant that the street attracted the political class from its infancy. Within three decades – by the time the final house on the street, number 3, was completed in the late 1750s – it was home to what David Dickson has termed ‘a remarkable concentration of political power and factional rivalry within a small physical space.’6 Gardiner did not live to see the street’s completion, having died in 1755, but his sons would continue to play a central role in the development of Dublin’s northside.
As for the origins of the street’s name, it is somewhat disputed. Street names in the Georgian city often commanded a sense of power, with developers frequently bestowing their own names – or allusions to their titled positions – upon the streetscape. The most ludicrous example of this was the case of Earl Henry Moore of Drogheda, responsible for North Earl Street, Henry Street, Moore Street, Drogheda Street (which in time became Sackville Street and later O’Connell Street) and even Of Lane. Gardiner’s new fashionable street was likely named in honour of Henrietta Paulet, Duchess of Bolton, wife (third wife, no less) of former Lord Lieutenant Charles Paulet, though some have suggested Henrietta Fitzroy, Duchess of Grafton. Either Henrietta would give the street a sense of exclusivity and a closeness to power, which was undoubtedly the desired effect.
Those who lived in these houses lived significant lives, yes, but what of those who laboured in them? Behind each wealthy household was a working staff. Mary Wollstonecraft, an early advocate of women’s rights, whose 1792 text A Vindication of the Rights of Woman is considered one of the pioneering works of feminist philosophy, worked as governess to the daughters of the Kingsborough family in number 15 from 1786. Only 27 years of age at the time she assumed the post, Wollstonecraft had a life-long impact on Margaret, one of the children in her care, with historian Jenny McAuley writing that, ‘Margaret energetically lived out Wollstonecraft’s democratic and feminist ideals, becoming a major Irish Patriot hostess, and subsequently pursuing a literary career and the independent study of medicine.’7
***
Walking up Henrietta Street today from the busy Bolton Street, the houses have a commanding presence. An urban myth in many cities with such fine Georgian architecture has long maintained that the smaller windows of Georgian houses’ upper floors were those of servants quarters, but in truth it tells us more about the architectural style of the Georgian period than any penny-pinching on the part of the wealthy. The smaller windows on the top floor gave the illusion of height, and contributed to the perceived scale of the homes.
But beyond the impressive homes themselves, the feeling of the street is also created by the cul-de-sac effect of having the King’s Inns at its western end, along with the striking archway designed by Francis Johnston, an architect best remembered for the General Post Office and the doomed Nelson’s Pillar. Dating from 1820, it is a powerful closing presence to the street, and above the archway we see the Royal Coat of Arms, complete with a lion representing England and a unicorn for Scotland. This symbol of empire, ever-present in British cityscapes, is a rare thing in Dublin now, largely replaced upon independence. This cul-de-sac meant that unlike other inner-city streets, the people of Henrietta Street did not contend with the hustle and bustle of constant traffic. The street had its own unique soundscape.
The presence of King’s Inns, a training institution for barristers of the law, would come to shape Henrietta Street itself, and provide it with something of a lifeline in a time of steep decline for the city. A street which drew the political class could hardly be expected to survive the shock of the Act of Union between Britain and Ireland in 1800, when the Irish Parliament voted for its own abolition. It was the end product of a parliament which, in the words of the eminent historian Lecky, fell victim to a ‘virus of corruption which extended and descended through every fibre and artery of the political system’.8
Entrance to King’s Inns, 1986 (Courtesy of Dublin City Library and Archive)
The political effects of the Act of Union were obvious, with London assuming greater and more direct control over Irish affairs, but the economic effects of it in Dublin were more multifaceted. After the union, Thomas Pakenham noted, ‘some people predicted that grass would grow in the streets of Dublin. The future was to be less theatrical.’9 Many streets did quickly succumb to tenements, as parliamentarians and the economy that flourished around them and their social calendar left the city. More than 200 parliamentarians called Dublin home in 1800 – just six Irish MPs had Dublin addresses by 1823, less than a quarter of a century later.10
Henrietta Street found a new purpose for a time, directly connected to the presence of the King’s Inns. Attorneys, barristers and judges were drawn to the street, which a nineteenth-century observer described as having ‘the air of a legal university’.11
The great disruptor of this harmony – and perhaps the event which would most directly shape the future of the street – was the arrival of the Dublin Militia, a reserve force of the army intended to defend the capital, which took up...




