Belcamp Park

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

LocationClonshaugh, Dublin, Coolock
Coordinates53°24′25.46″N 6°12′36.13″W / 53.4070722°N 6.2100361°W / 53.4070722; -6.2100361
Area25 Hectares / 62 acres
Belcamp Park
Páirc Belcamp
Belcamp Park is located in Dublin
Belcamp Park
Belcamp Park
Belcamp Park is located in Ireland
Belcamp Park
Belcamp Park
TypePublic park
LocationClonshaugh, Dublin, Coolock
Coordinates53°24′25.46″N 6°12′36.13″W / 53.4070722°N 6.2100361°W / 53.4070722; -6.2100361
Area25 Hectares / 62 acres
Createdlate 20th century (from an estate of the 17th century)
Operated byDublin City Council
OpenYes
Websitewww.dublincity.ie/main-menu-services-recreation-culture-dublin-city-parks-visit-park/belcamp-park

Belcamp Park[1] (Irish: Páirc Belcamp[2]) is a public park in Clonshaugh, Dublin 17, within the broad Coolock area, near Darndale and Priorswood. The park runs south of the N32, along the northern boundary of the city. It is owned by Dublin City Council and operated by the Council's Parks and Landscape Division.

The origins of the park lie in the lands surrounding a house named Belcamp Park in the 17th century.[3] The then Lord Mayor of Dublin, Sir Humphrey Jervis, built a house on a property in what was then a rural area, probably in the 1680s, though he never lived there, dying in debtors prison in 1707. The estate was then sold to the Grattan family, and local tradition holds that Henry Grattan was born there in 1746. Jonathan Swift was acquainted with the Grattans, and their cousins the Jacksons at the nearby Woodlands estate in Clonshaugh, and is known to have visited at least a dozen times between 1714 and 1734. Laetitia Pilkington also stayed at the house in 1730 and later documented anecdotes of this visit concerning Swift in her Memoirs. The Grattan ownership of the estate ended in 1770 and it passed through many hands over the following centuries.[4]

Countess Markievicz rented the property in 1909, to utilise it as a centre for the Fianna Eireann.[1] The centre was known as the 'Belcamp Commune' when an agricultural cooperative was built and operated for a year. The cooperative was not a success, due to problems such as lack of electricity, poor water supply, damp conditions, and overgrown fields and gardens.[5]

The estate was bought in 1969 by Dublin Corporation. Belcamp Park house was damaged by fire in 1977 and subsequently demolished, leaving behind some outbuildings and an ice house.[4]

Belcamp Hall and Belcamp

Facilities

References

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