City Marshalsea, Dublin

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LocationVarious
StatusDefunct
Security classDebtors
Opened1704
City Marshalsea
LocationVarious
StatusDefunct
Security classDebtors
Opened1704
Closed1842
Managed byDublin Corporation
DirectorDublin City Marshal (to 1796)

The City Marshalsea was a debtor's prison in Dublin, Ireland. Debtors were imprisoned there by order of the Court of Conscience and Lord Mayor's Court of the county of the city of Dublin. The maximum debt was £10 in the Lord Mayor's Court,[1] and 40s. (£2) in the Court of Conscience.

Other debtor's prisons in Dublin which shared the name were the Four Courts Marshalsea, and the Marshalseas of Saint Sepulchre (abolished 1856[2]) and of Thomas Court and Donore (abolished 1826[3]). The original Marshalsea prison from which these were named was built in Southwark south of the City of London, for prisoners from the Marshalsea Court presided over by the Knight Marshal.[4]

Conditions

After the closure of The Black Dog prison in 1794 the City Marshalsea was considered the worst prison in the city.[5] It was run privately for profit; John Thomas Gilbert wrote that "the passers-by were incessantly assailed by the cries of the inmates soliciting charity for their maintenance, or the discharge of their fees".[6] Families of prisoners could also reside there, to protect them from their creditors. In 1823 the inspectors of prisons report improvement from the previous year.[7] In 1836 the Royal Commission on the Poorer Classes in Ireland said the common hall was "a disgrace to the city".[8]

History

Suppression

References

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