Blackhall Place

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Native namePlás Blackhall (Irish)
NamesakeSir Thomas Blackhall
LocationDublin, Ireland
Postal codeD07
Blackhall Place
Blackhall Place
Native namePlás Blackhall (Irish)
NamesakeSir Thomas Blackhall
LocationDublin, Ireland
Postal codeD07
north endStoneybatter
south endJames Joyce Bridge

Blackhall Place (Irish: Plás Blackhall)[1] is a street in Dublin, Ireland which was laid out in the 1780s on the area which previously formed Oxmantown green.

It runs from Stoneybatter in the north to the River Liffey and the James Joyce Bridge.

Blackhall Place, along with the adjoining Blackhall Parade, Blackhall Street, Blackhall Green, and Blackhall Row in Dublin 7 are all named for Sir Thomas Blackhall, a former Lord Mayor of Dublin in 1769-70 and governor of the Blue Coat School at the time of the new building's construction. Blackhall Place first appears on maps in 1822 while earlier Blackhall Street appears from 1789 and Blackhall market and row from 1787.[2] It broadly follows the plan for the area surrounding the school first set out by Thomas Ivory in 1775 and continued after his death in 1786.[3] The main school building has been occupied by the Law Society of Ireland since the 1970s after being vacated by the school in 1969.[4]

Much of the area around the street was originally occupied by the nearby St. Paul's Church and churchyard from around 1700 onwards.

The original street did not meet the river, and was extended to meet Benburb Street in 1886.[5]

Most of the original Georgian houses have been demolished, with a small number of surviving examples. On the corner of Blackhall Place and Hendrick Street, there is a former Methodist chapel, known as the Gravel Walk Methodist Church.[5] This was rebuilt in 1841.[6]

The area around Blackhall Place, and the construction of the James Joyce Bridge was part of the 1996 Historic Area Rejuvenation Project.[7]

Housing scheme

Modern housing

References

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