Originally posted by Rashers
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Old B&W Photos Of Dublin - Part 1
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Originally posted by bigby View Postwonder has the little one got brain freezeWe'll sail be the tide....aarghhhh !!
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Originally posted by DAMNTHEWEATHER View PostWhere is it exactly Rashers...I'll label it up.Attached Files'Never look down on a person unless you're helping them up'.
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Originally posted by Rashers View PostThis is a view from Lr Rutland Street. The kids would have been about where that lamp is.... though looking away from Rutland Street. The view through the railings is actually Nth Gloucester Place. If you followed that lane it would pass on the left Our Lady of Lourdes church Sean McDermott St, just past that was where they used to play the 7-a-side football, and to the right was the 27 Steps. Walking on would bring you to Lower Gardiner Street.We'll sail be the tide....aarghhhh !!
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I dune nuttin!!
lord Edward st.
steins opticians holdin back the big builders, only closed down last week or so.
st josephs mansions 81.
manor st 86.in god i trust...everyone else cash only.
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Ollie Goldsmith; What a learned Irishman, and him with his stacha in front of Trinity.
"Life is a journey which must be traveled no matter how bad the roads or accommodations"
Oliver Goldsmith was an Anglo-Irish novelist, playwright and poet, who is best known for his novel The Vicar of Wakefield, his pastoral poem The Deserted Village, and his plays The Good-Natur'd Man and She Stoops to Conquer.
Born: November 10, 1730, Ballymahon, Republic of Ireland.
Died: April 4, 1774, Brick Court, London.Buried: Temple Church.
Plays: She Stoops to Conquer, The Good-Natur'd Man.
Education: Leiden University (1756), Trinity College, Dublin (1750),University of Edinburgh.Attached FilesWe'll sail be the tide....aarghhhh !!
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Molyneux Yard through 54a Thomas Street.
Saw Rashers ask a question about the location of this this first pic at another place, (no not dat place another one)...and I remembered I had some in me stash.....
The first one is someones bad attempt at making a 'young' pic look old. The second pic would be more like it. The 3rd pic is still 'young' but looks right in...The 4th pic is as it was way back and pic 5 is more up to date.
I think the place must be connected in some way with William Molyneux of Peter Street (big house) fame, there can't have been many Mollynuxes in Dublin loike, now can der. Love the 3 wheeled barrow and the handcart. The street sign says Molyneux Yard.
A point of interest; The round stones up the lane, and which we used to see all over the city at one time....are called Jostle Stones....put there in days of yore to stop horse cart wheels jostling the corners and brickwork of the buildings.We'll sail be the tide....aarghhhh !!
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Originally posted by DAMNTHEWEATHER View PostSaw Rashers ask a question about the location of this this first pic at another place, (no not dat place another one)...and I remembered I had some in me stash.....
The first one is someones bad attempt at making a 'young' pic look old. The second pic would be more like it. The 3rd pic is still 'young' but looks right in...The 4th pic is as it was way back and pic 5 is more up to date.
I think the place must be connected in some way with William Molyneux of Peter Street (big house) fame, there can't have been many Mollynuxes in Dublin loike, now can der. Love the 3 wheeled barrow and the handcart. The street sign says Molyneux Yard.
A point of interest; The round stones up the lane, and which we used to see all over the city at one time....are called Jostle Stones....put there in days of yore to stop horse cart wheels jostling the corners and brickwork of the buildings.
maybe they were also to stop the axle hubs from gouging grooves in the walls.....Here Rex!!!...Here Rex!!!.....Wuff!!!....... Wuff!!!
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where
Originally posted by DAMNTHEWEATHER View PostOllie Goldsmith; What a learned Irishman, and him with his stacha in front of Trinity.
"Life is a journey which must be traveled no matter how bad the roads or accommodations"
Oliver Goldsmith was an Anglo-Irish novelist, playwright and poet, who is best known for his novel The Vicar of Wakefield, his pastoral poem The Deserted Village, and his plays The Good-Natur'd Man and She Stoops to Conquer.
Born: November 10, 1730, Ballymahon, Republic of Ireland.
Died: April 4, 1774, Brick Court, London.Buried: Temple Church.
Plays: She Stoops to Conquer, The Good-Natur'd Man.
Education: Leiden University (1756), Trinity College, Dublin (1750),University of Edinburgh.
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