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THE AULD DUBLINER Heritage

17 ANGLESEA STREET AND 24/25 TEMPLE BAR BASEMENT AND GROUND FLOOR AND, THE EXTENSIONS TO AND ADJOINING THE FIRST AND SECOND FLOOR, Dublin

Address17 ANGLESEA STREET AND 24/25 TEMPLE BAR BASEMENT AND GROUND FLOOR AND, THE EXTENSIONS TO AND ADJOINING THE FIRST AND SECOND FLOOR
CountyDublin
EircodeD02 DX09
Licence refS0064
♿ Limited wheelchair access

🏭 Heritage-listed building

NIAH building record

Built: c.1830 · NIAH rating: Regional

Temple Bar was named after Sir William Temple and his son Sir John Temple who acquired the land between the River Liffey and Dame Street in the seventeenth century. The area was fully reclaimed and developed by the early eighteenth century and became a mixed residential and commercial quarter. Commercial directories record a ‘grocer and spirit dealer’ here, owned in the 1840s by Thomas Hunt, and in the 1890s by Thomas Murphy, indicating a continuity of use for over one hundred and seventy years. This building retains much of its early form and fabric, with timber sliding sash windows...

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PubHub lore

Local notes

Established

Built between c.1830 and c.1850.

Architecture

Temple Bar was named after Sir William Temple and his son Sir John Temple who acquired the land between the River Liffey and Dame Street in the seventeenth century. The area was fully reclaimed and developed by the early eighteenth century and became a mixed residential and commercial quarter.

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