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Fairview, Dublin

Fairview (Irish: Fionnradharc)[1] is an inner coastal suburb of Dublin in Ireland, in the jurisdiction of Dublin City Council and in the city's D03 postal district. Part of the area forms Fairview Park, a recreational amenity laid out on land reclaimed from the sea.

Fairview
Fionnradharc
Suburb
Fairview pictured from a pedestrian bridge, with Fairview Park to the left
Fairview
Location in Ireland
Coordinates: 53°21′54″N 6°13′48″W / 53.365°N 6.23°W / 53.365; -6.23
CountryIreland
ProvinceLeinster
CountyDublin
Local authorityDublin City Council
Elevation
4 m (13 ft)
Time zoneUTC+0 (WET)
 • Summer (DST)UTC-1 (IST (WEST))

Location edit

Modern-day Fairview is a popular inner suburb of Dublin that stretches northeast from the River Tolka to Clontarf Road DART Station along Fairview Park to the south, and along the redbrick Victorian part of Philipsburgh Avenue to the north. It is bounded by Marino which was developed in 1924 in the area of Fairview on the former estate lands of Lord Charlemont. The grounds of St. Vincent's Hospital, Fairview and Drumcondra are to the west.

Fairview is reached on a main road artery from Dublin city via North Strand, which continues on as the Malahide, Howth and Clontarf Roads. It is served by the Clontarf Road DART station. The area can also be reached by way of several Dublin Bus routes from the city centre, including 14, 15, 27/ABNX, 29A/N, 31/B, 32/ABX, 42/N, 43, 123, 130 and the "H" bus corridor. It will include the segregated cycle path that goes from Amiens Street to Sutton, which began construction in 2022.

Neighbouring districts include Marino to the north, North Strand and Ballybough to the west, East Wall to the southwest, and Clontarf to the east.[2]

Name edit

 
Fairview Strand street sign using Baile Bocht

Until the end of the 18th century, the area was known as Ballybough, with many street signs still giving the Irish name of the area as Baile Bocht. The parish of Fairview was created in 1879, when it was separated from Clontarf,[3] reputedly named for the local church, Our Lady of Fair View[4] dedicated to Our Lady of Pulchro Aspectu vulgo Fairview in 1819.[5] Administratively, Fairview and Marino were part of the old townland of Clonturk, which also included Drumcondra.[6]

History edit

Along with large areas of Ballybough, Dorset Street, Clonliffe Road, and Lower Drumcondra, much of Fairview was part of the farmland owned by St Mary's Abbey in the 14th century.[7] During the dissolution of the monasteries,[8] St Mary's was given to Earl of Desmond and the tithes of the area then known as Ballybough were given to William Howth. The area was later owned by a proprietor, John Bathe.[9] The Bathe family held large areas of land for a long period, including Drumcondra Castle, until the end of the reign of Charles I,[10] with Walter Peppard leasing Ballybough and the area now known as Fairview. After the 1641 Rebellion and the following wars, the population of Fairview remained low.[11]

Around 1718, one of Dublin's earliest Jewish communities was established in the area, then known as Annadale.[12][13] The communities originated in Portugal and Spain to Dublin during the Cromwellian era due to his tolerance of Jews. They were escaping the Spanish Inquisition and initially settled near Crane Lane in Dublin city. Their village at Annadale was connected to Fairview by Ellis's Lane, which later became Philipsburgh Avenue[14] from the mid-1700s.[15] The community left the area, moving to the south side of the city, in the late 1800s and early 1900s. On Fairview Strand, near Luke Kelly bridge, is Dublin's oldest Jewish Cemetery, Ballybough Cemetery.[12] The graveyard was built in 1718 on land leased on a peppercorn rent from Chichester Phillips, but it was a different, prominent Jew also named Philips for whom Philipsburgh Avenue is most likely named.[14] The mortuary chapel was added in 1857 and contains more than 200 graves. The last burial there was in 1958.[12] Before the extension of Philipsburg Avenue for the Marino housing estate, the northern end was a lane called Sally Park. In the mid-1800s it is reputed there was a Baptist chapel and congregation on Philipsburgh Avenue.[16]

The Richmond Road connects Fairview with Drumcondra on the northern side of the River Tolka and was laid out to provide access to Drumcondra Castle. The thoroughfare was a laneway until reputedly a jeweller and merchant, Francis Jacob Grose, built a house called Richmond House in the mid-1700s,[17] from which the road is thought to take its name. His house was on the site now occupied by St. Vincent's Hospital. Kingston suggests that he named his house for Richmond, London, and that his building of his house in this area led to it becoming more fashionable with the merchant class. Grose's son was the antiquarian, Francis Grose, who is buried at Drumcondra Church.[18] Richmond House was bought by the Daughters of Charity and incorporated into St Vincent's.[17] Kingston reports that reputedly some Huguenots who sought refuge in Dublin built houses along the Richmond Road.[19]

From the end of the 1700s, industries were established in the area, in particular the manufacture of flint glass.[12] One factory was established by Philip Roche.[19] A factory near Ballybough Bridge made glass for Dublin Castle, and Chebsey's glass house produced a chandelier for the Irish Houses of Parliament with 1233 glass pieces. The density of such factories resulted in Factory Lane, which is now Esmonde Avenue.[12] During the reign of James II, the Fairview area was owned by Chicester Phillips and Sir John Eccles. Due to the extensive tidal areas which encompassed the area up the Fairview Strand at this time, there were not many houses built in the area, with the Clontarf strand much more popular for houses and recreation. After the closure of the glass factories, the Coghills of Drumcondra established a green to bleach linen on the Richmond Road which was later replaced with a factory for printing linen. This factory was admired by Mary Delany. Fairview's population was still small, but some notable residents began to move to the area including Joseph Dioderice, the maternal grandfather of Thomas Elrington, in 1748.[20] In 1787 Fairview was described as containing "very neat and elegant houses".[8]

Fairview began to grow after the building of Annesley Bridge in 1797 opened up easy access to the land.[12] Until 1797 there had been no crossing of the River Tolka below Ballybough Bridge.[8] Fairview Strand was formally known as Owen Roe Terrace and Philipsburgh Strand.[8][13] The boundary of Fairview and the area now known as Marino, but historically part of Donnycarney, was delineated by the walls of the demesne of Marino House along Fairview Strand. The house and most of its surrounds are now demolished, apart from the Casino at Marino and the original Georgian entrance gates which have been relocated to Griffith Avenue..[21]

Annadale House was located in an estate that now comprises Melrose Avenue, Lomond Avenue, Waverly Avenue, and Inverness Road.[22] Cadogan and Addison Roads were built in the mid-1800s, and were named for Dublin peers.[23] A number of Georgian houses have since be demolished including Mulberry Lodge, Pennyville,[8] and Woodlands.[24] A Carmelite monastery once stood on Fairview Avenue, on the site of Fairview cinema.[8] Pennyville was a small estate at the end of Fairview Avenue which was later known as Croydon Park.[25] Bushfield House has survived and stands on Philipsburgh Avenue. It was previously known as Cutaldo and dates from c. 1790.[26] From the 1840s, houses were built on Richmond Avenue, which was seen as a fashionable area. The area which is now Merville Avenue was known as the Big Gun after a local tavern. When Fairview Church was opened in 1855 there were 20 houses on Fairview Strand, two on Windsor Avenue, and 41 houses on Philipsburgh Avenue.[24] The horse trams and later the railway trams which crossed over Annesley Bridge and ran up to Clontarf increased the accessibility of Fairview.[23]

From 1832 to 1909, 89 Fairview Strand was a Royal Irish Constabulary Barracks and the now demolished Erlington House was home to Thomas Erlington, and later the opera singer Josephine O'Brien.[8] A burial area for those who died by suicide is thought to have been located at the boundary of Fairview and Ballybough, at the corner of Clonliffe Avenue and the Ballybough Road, and is cited as one of the inspirations for Bram Stoker's Dracula.[12]

Amenities edit

 
Central Fairview

The main commercial areas are Fairview, a busy road alongside Fairview Park, and Fairview Strand,[4] a narrower commercial and residential strip running from Edge's Corner around to Luke Kelly Bridge.

 
Fairview Strand, Fairview

St Vincent's Hospital was founded by the Daughters of Charity in 1857. Located on Richmond Road, it provides psychiatric services for the northeast quadrant of Dublin city.[27]

Parks edit

Fairview Park
 
Fairview Park, Dublin
 
TypeUrban park
LocationFairview, Dublin
Coordinates53°21′42″N 6°13′56″W / 53.36167°N 6.23222°W / 53.36167; -6.23222
Area20 hectares (0.20 km2)
Created1934
Operated byOffice of Public Works
OpenAll year

Fairview Park (Irish: Páirc Fionnradharc) has playing fields, a children's playground and tree-lined walks. Originally a tidal mud flat which was used for land fill in the early 1900s, the park was developed in the late 1920s[28] and bye laws were formally adopted by Dublin Corporation in 1934. The River Tolka runs right past the park, Clontarf Road DART station is located near the park, and across the railway line there is a 400-metre athletics track and a Comhaltas Ceoltóirí Éireann hall.

A memorial statue of Seán Russell was unveiled by Cumann Uaigheann Na Laochra Gael, in Fairview Park, in September 1951. A new statue of him was erected in May 2009. The park also features a sculpture by Joe Moran, Family Unit 1.[28] Alongside a number of other sites, Fairview Park was considered as a location for the Garden of Remembrance in the early 1970s.[29]

On 19 March 1983, prior to the first Dublin Pride parade, a march was held from Liberty Hall to Fairview Park. This was in response to the murder of Declan Flynn in the park, and the resulting trial.[30]

Fairview Park was built on reclaimed land.[31][32] It was temporarily reduced in size during the 2000s, due to the development of the Dublin Port Tunnel, the entrance to which is approximately a kilometre beyond the park perimeter. The park has now been restored. It contains two small playgrounds and a larger playground which includes a skate park. The park also contained a bandstand, which was removed during the construction of the Port Tunnel.[33]

The park contains several association football pitches. Both Sheriff Y.C. and Belvedere play home games in the park.[34][35]

A smaller park, Bram Stoker Park, is located in front of the Georgian terrace of Marino Crescent; both the park and the street are in a pocket of neighbouring Clontarf. Stoker was born in number 15 Marino Crescent.[36]

Public services edit

A Garda Síochána station is located in nearby Clontarf and a Dublin Fire Brigade and ambulance station is located just across the Tolka, at Annesley Bridge. A credit union is located on Fairview Strand, and a Post Office on Marino Mart. Dublin City Libraries have a branch on the main road in Fairview.[37]

Education edit

 
Marino college

Past pupils of St. Joseph's Secondary C.B.S., Fairview include former Taoiseach, Charles Haughey.[38] The secondary school Marino College is in nearby Marino. St. Marys national school for girls is close to Richmond Road.

Politics edit

Fairview is in the administrative area of Dublin City Council. It lies in the Dublin North Central Dáil constituency and the Clontarf Local Electoral Area for city council elections. It is served by the Fairview Residents Association.

Religion edit

Fairview is a parish in the Fingal South East deanery of the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Dublin. It is served by the Church of Visitation of the Blessed Virgin Mary.[39] The construction of this church began in 1853,[5] and it was opened on 15 January 1855.[40] Fairview Hall is a Gospel Hall at 13 Annesley Bridge Road, and is part of the Gospel Hall Brethren local assembly.[41]

Notable people edit

References edit

  1. ^ Fairview Placenames Database of Ireland. retrieved: 2011-05-23.
  2. ^ Freeman, Michael (8 December 2017). "Your guide to Fairview and Marino: The 'garden city' minutes from the centre (with secret tunnels)". TheJournal.ie. Retrieved 12 March 2021.
  3. ^ Dawson, T. (1976). "The Road to Howth". Dublin Historical Record. 29 (4): 122–132. ISSN 0012-6861. JSTOR 30104383.
  4. ^ a b "Dublin Uncovered: Fairview". Dublin.ie. Retrieved 12 March 2021.
  5. ^ a b Kingston 1953, p. 1.
  6. ^ Samuel Lewis (1837). "CLONTURK, or DRUMCONDRA, a parish". A Topographical Dictionary of Ireland. Retrieved 29 August 2017.
  7. ^ Kingston 1953, p. 12-13.
  8. ^ a b c d e f g h Wren, James (1983). "From Ballybough to Scurlogue's Bridge". Dublin Historical Record. 37 (1): 14–29. ISSN 0012-6861. JSTOR 30100616.
  9. ^ Kingston 1953, p. 18-19.
  10. ^ Kingston 1953, p. 22-26.
  11. ^ Kingston 1953, p. 61.
  12. ^ a b c d e f g h i Hiney, Diarmuid G. (1997). "5618 and All That the Jewish Cemetery Fairview Strand". Dublin Historical Record. 50 (2): 119–129. ISSN 0012-6861. JSTOR 30101173.
  13. ^ a b History of Fairview and Marino 2011-07-10 at the Wayback Machine
  14. ^ a b Kingston 1953, p. 62.
  15. ^ Kingston 1953, p. 67.
  16. ^ Kingston 1953, p. 67-68.
  17. ^ a b "St. Vincent's Hospital, Richmond Road, Dublin 3, DUBLIN". Buildings of Ireland. 2017. Retrieved 20 April 2022.
  18. ^ Kingston 1953, p. 52-53.
  19. ^ a b Kingston 1953, p. 64.
  20. ^ Kingston 1953, p. 64-66.
  21. ^ Kingston 1953, p. 57-59.
  22. ^ Ordnance Survey of Ireland maps, 1847 and 1913
  23. ^ a b Kingston 1953, p. 69.
  24. ^ a b Kingston 1953, p. 68.
  25. ^ a b c Kingston 1953, p. 66.
  26. ^ "Bushfield House, 57 Philipsburgh Avenue, Dublin 3, DUBLIN". Buildings of Ireland. 2017. Retrieved 20 April 2022.
  27. ^ "St Vincent's Hospital, Fairview, Dublin". www.stvincentshospital.ie. Retrieved 12 March 2021.
  28. ^ a b Art in Parks (PDF). Dublin: Dublin City Council. 2020. p. 31.
  29. ^ Whelan, Yvonne (2003). Reinventing modern Dublin: streetscape, iconography, and the politics of identity. Dublin, Ireland: University College Dublin Press. p. 100. ISBN 1-900621-85-1. OCLC 51270664.
  30. ^ "Declan Flynn: The Fairview Park murder that ignited the Irish Pride movement". GCN. 26 June 2020. Retrieved 12 March 2021.
  31. ^ "Fairview Park". fairview-marino.com. Archived from the original on 7 September 2012. Retrieved 4 May 2010.
  32. ^ "Land Reclamation in Dublin Bay". RTÉ Archives. Retrieved 12 March 2021.
  33. ^ "Busy times for Fairview and Marino". Dublin People. 15 September 2012. Retrieved 12 March 2021.
  34. ^ "Club History". www.belvederefc.com. Retrieved 12 March 2021.
  35. ^ Jones, Christopher (3 March 2020). "Dublin By Numbers: All you need to know before moving to Fairview or Marino". DublinLive. Retrieved 12 March 2021.
  36. ^ "Bram Stoker Park". Dublin City Council. Retrieved 22 December 2016.
  37. ^ "Marino Library". Dublin City Countil. Retrieved 20 December 2016.
  38. ^ Maume, Patrick (2009). "Haughey, Charles James (C.J.)". In McGuire, James; Quinn, James (eds.). Dictionary of Irish Biography. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
  39. ^ Official parish website
  40. ^ Kingston 1953, p. 87.
  41. ^ Fairview Hall official site
  42. ^ a b c d e f A.P. Caomhánach (ed.), Scoil Iosaif Marino, Iris Chuimhneacháin 1916-1966. (Dublin, 1966)
  43. ^ "60 years an actor, best loved for 'Fair City' role". The Irish Times. 14 January 2006. Retrieved 12 March 2021.
  44. ^ a b c d James Wren. From Ballybough to Scurlogue's Bridge. Dublin Historical Record, Vol. 37, No. 1 (December 1983), pp. 14-29
  45. ^ "Marino Local History Society". Marino Local History Society. Retrieved 12 March 2021.
  46. ^ "The Executed: Edward Daly" (PDF). The 1916 Rising. National Library of Ireland. Retrieved 8 April 2017.
  47. ^ Duffy, Rónán. "Larry Gogan (1934-2020): Radio icon who provided the soundtrack to Irish life". TheJournal.ie. Retrieved 12 March 2021.
  48. ^ Oireachtas, Houses of the (24 February 1999). "Written Answers. - Company Registration. – Dáil Éireann (28th Dáil) – Wednesday, 24 Feb 1999 – Houses of the Oireachtas". www.oireachtas.ie. Retrieved 12 March 2021.
  49. ^ Newstalk. "Hidden Histories w/Turtle Bunbury; The life and times of Rosie Hackett". Newstalk. Retrieved 12 March 2021.
  50. ^ H. Leonard and R. Clark. Obit: George Henry Kinahan, M.R.I.A. Geological Magazine (Decade V) (1909), 6: 142-143
  51. ^ "Mellows, Herbert Charles ('Barney') | Dictionary of Irish Biography".
  52. ^ "GAA world mourns broadcaster Ó Ceallacháin". Irish Examiner. 17 February 2013. Retrieved 12 March 2021.
  53. ^ Murray, Ken (15 May 2010). "Theatre producer Fred O'Donovan dies". The Irish Times. Irish Times Trust. Retrieved 15 May 2010.
  54. ^ "With warmth and comic genius, she was marked early on for the stage". The Irish Times. 10 April 2004. Retrieved 12 March 2021.
  55. ^ "Noted actress Maureen Toal dies". RTÉ News. 25 August 2012. Retrieved 12 March 2021.

Sources edit

  • Kingston, Rev. John (1953). Parish of Fairview. Dundalgan Press.

fairview, dublin, fairview, irish, fionnradharc, inner, coastal, suburb, dublin, ireland, jurisdiction, dublin, city, council, city, postal, district, part, area, forms, fairview, park, recreational, amenity, laid, land, reclaimed, from, fairview, fionnradharc. Fairview Irish Fionnradharc 1 is an inner coastal suburb of Dublin in Ireland in the jurisdiction of Dublin City Council and in the city s D03 postal district Part of the area forms Fairview Park a recreational amenity laid out on land reclaimed from the sea Fairview FionnradharcSuburbFairview pictured from a pedestrian bridge with Fairview Park to the leftFairviewLocation in IrelandCoordinates 53 21 54 N 6 13 48 W 53 365 N 6 23 W 53 365 6 23CountryIrelandProvinceLeinsterCountyDublinLocal authorityDublin City CouncilElevation4 m 13 ft Time zoneUTC 0 WET Summer DST UTC 1 IST WEST Contents 1 Location 2 Name 3 History 4 Amenities 4 1 Parks 4 2 Public services 5 Education 6 Politics 7 Religion 8 Notable people 9 References 9 1 SourcesLocation editModern day Fairview is a popular inner suburb of Dublin that stretches northeast from the River Tolka to Clontarf Road DART Station along Fairview Park to the south and along the redbrick Victorian part of Philipsburgh Avenue to the north It is bounded by Marino which was developed in 1924 in the area of Fairview on the former estate lands of Lord Charlemont The grounds of St Vincent s Hospital Fairview and Drumcondra are to the west Fairview is reached on a main road artery from Dublin city via North Strand which continues on as the Malahide Howth and Clontarf Roads It is served by the Clontarf Road DART station The area can also be reached by way of several Dublin Bus routes from the city centre including 14 15 27 ABNX 29A N 31 B 32 ABX 42 N 43 123 130 and the H bus corridor It will include the segregated cycle path that goes from Amiens Street to Sutton which began construction in 2022 Neighbouring districts include Marino to the north North Strand and Ballybough to the west East Wall to the southwest and Clontarf to the east 2 Name edit nbsp Fairview Strand street sign using Baile BochtUntil the end of the 18th century the area was known as Ballybough with many street signs still giving the Irish name of the area as Baile Bocht The parish of Fairview was created in 1879 when it was separated from Clontarf 3 reputedly named for the local church Our Lady of Fair View 4 dedicated to Our Lady of Pulchro Aspectu vulgo Fairview in 1819 5 Administratively Fairview and Marino were part of the old townland of Clonturk which also included Drumcondra 6 History editAlong with large areas of Ballybough Dorset Street Clonliffe Road and Lower Drumcondra much of Fairview was part of the farmland owned by St Mary s Abbey in the 14th century 7 During the dissolution of the monasteries 8 St Mary s was given to Earl of Desmond and the tithes of the area then known as Ballybough were given to William Howth The area was later owned by a proprietor John Bathe 9 The Bathe family held large areas of land for a long period including Drumcondra Castle until the end of the reign of Charles I 10 with Walter Peppard leasing Ballybough and the area now known as Fairview After the 1641 Rebellion and the following wars the population of Fairview remained low 11 Around 1718 one of Dublin s earliest Jewish communities was established in the area then known as Annadale 12 13 The communities originated in Portugal and Spain to Dublin during the Cromwellian era due to his tolerance of Jews They were escaping the Spanish Inquisition and initially settled near Crane Lane in Dublin city Their village at Annadale was connected to Fairview by Ellis s Lane which later became Philipsburgh Avenue 14 from the mid 1700s 15 The community left the area moving to the south side of the city in the late 1800s and early 1900s On Fairview Strand near Luke Kelly bridge is Dublin s oldest Jewish Cemetery Ballybough Cemetery 12 The graveyard was built in 1718 on land leased on a peppercorn rent from Chichester Phillips but it was a different prominent Jew also named Philips for whom Philipsburgh Avenue is most likely named 14 The mortuary chapel was added in 1857 and contains more than 200 graves The last burial there was in 1958 12 Before the extension of Philipsburg Avenue for the Marino housing estate the northern end was a lane called Sally Park In the mid 1800s it is reputed there was a Baptist chapel and congregation on Philipsburgh Avenue 16 The Richmond Road connects Fairview with Drumcondra on the northern side of the River Tolka and was laid out to provide access to Drumcondra Castle The thoroughfare was a laneway until reputedly a jeweller and merchant Francis Jacob Grose built a house called Richmond House in the mid 1700s 17 from which the road is thought to take its name His house was on the site now occupied by St Vincent s Hospital Kingston suggests that he named his house for Richmond London and that his building of his house in this area led to it becoming more fashionable with the merchant class Grose s son was the antiquarian Francis Grose who is buried at Drumcondra Church 18 Richmond House was bought by the Daughters of Charity and incorporated into St Vincent s 17 Kingston reports that reputedly some Huguenots who sought refuge in Dublin built houses along the Richmond Road 19 From the end of the 1700s industries were established in the area in particular the manufacture of flint glass 12 One factory was established by Philip Roche 19 A factory near Ballybough Bridge made glass for Dublin Castle and Chebsey s glass house produced a chandelier for the Irish Houses of Parliament with 1233 glass pieces The density of such factories resulted in Factory Lane which is now Esmonde Avenue 12 During the reign of James II the Fairview area was owned by Chicester Phillips and Sir John Eccles Due to the extensive tidal areas which encompassed the area up the Fairview Strand at this time there were not many houses built in the area with the Clontarf strand much more popular for houses and recreation After the closure of the glass factories the Coghills of Drumcondra established a green to bleach linen on the Richmond Road which was later replaced with a factory for printing linen This factory was admired by Mary Delany Fairview s population was still small but some notable residents began to move to the area including Joseph Dioderice the maternal grandfather of Thomas Elrington in 1748 20 In 1787 Fairview was described as containing very neat and elegant houses 8 Fairview began to grow after the building of Annesley Bridge in 1797 opened up easy access to the land 12 Until 1797 there had been no crossing of the River Tolka below Ballybough Bridge 8 Fairview Strand was formally known as Owen Roe Terrace and Philipsburgh Strand 8 13 The boundary of Fairview and the area now known as Marino but historically part of Donnycarney was delineated by the walls of the demesne of Marino House along Fairview Strand The house and most of its surrounds are now demolished apart from the Casino at Marino and the original Georgian entrance gates which have been relocated to Griffith Avenue 21 Annadale House was located in an estate that now comprises Melrose Avenue Lomond Avenue Waverly Avenue and Inverness Road 22 Cadogan and Addison Roads were built in the mid 1800s and were named for Dublin peers 23 A number of Georgian houses have since be demolished including Mulberry Lodge Pennyville 8 and Woodlands 24 A Carmelite monastery once stood on Fairview Avenue on the site of Fairview cinema 8 Pennyville was a small estate at the end of Fairview Avenue which was later known as Croydon Park 25 Bushfield House has survived and stands on Philipsburgh Avenue It was previously known as Cutaldo and dates from c 1790 26 From the 1840s houses were built on Richmond Avenue which was seen as a fashionable area The area which is now Merville Avenue was known as the Big Gun after a local tavern When Fairview Church was opened in 1855 there were 20 houses on Fairview Strand two on Windsor Avenue and 41 houses on Philipsburgh Avenue 24 The horse trams and later the railway trams which crossed over Annesley Bridge and ran up to Clontarf increased the accessibility of Fairview 23 From 1832 to 1909 89 Fairview Strand was a Royal Irish Constabulary Barracks and the now demolished Erlington House was home to Thomas Erlington and later the opera singer Josephine O Brien 8 A burial area for those who died by suicide is thought to have been located at the boundary of Fairview and Ballybough at the corner of Clonliffe Avenue and the Ballybough Road and is cited as one of the inspirations for Bram Stoker s Dracula 12 Amenities edit nbsp Central FairviewThe main commercial areas are Fairview a busy road alongside Fairview Park and Fairview Strand 4 a narrower commercial and residential strip running from Edge s Corner around to Luke Kelly Bridge nbsp Fairview Strand FairviewSt Vincent s Hospital was founded by the Daughters of Charity in 1857 Located on Richmond Road it provides psychiatric services for the northeast quadrant of Dublin city 27 Parks edit Fairview Park nbsp Fairview Park Dublin nbsp TypeUrban parkLocationFairview DublinCoordinates53 21 42 N 6 13 56 W 53 36167 N 6 23222 W 53 36167 6 23222Area20 hectares 0 20 km2 Created1934Operated byOffice of Public WorksOpenAll yearFairview Park Irish Pairc Fionnradharc has playing fields a children s playground and tree lined walks Originally a tidal mud flat which was used for land fill in the early 1900s the park was developed in the late 1920s 28 and bye laws were formally adopted by Dublin Corporation in 1934 The River Tolka runs right past the park Clontarf Road DART station is located near the park and across the railway line there is a 400 metre athletics track and a Comhaltas Ceoltoiri Eireann hall A memorial statue of Sean Russell was unveiled by Cumann Uaigheann Na Laochra Gael in Fairview Park in September 1951 A new statue of him was erected in May 2009 The park also features a sculpture by Joe Moran Family Unit 1 28 Alongside a number of other sites Fairview Park was considered as a location for the Garden of Remembrance in the early 1970s 29 On 19 March 1983 prior to the first Dublin Pride parade a march was held from Liberty Hall to Fairview Park This was in response to the murder of Declan Flynn in the park and the resulting trial 30 Fairview Park was built on reclaimed land 31 32 It was temporarily reduced in size during the 2000s due to the development of the Dublin Port Tunnel the entrance to which is approximately a kilometre beyond the park perimeter The park has now been restored It contains two small playgrounds and a larger playground which includes a skate park The park also contained a bandstand which was removed during the construction of the Port Tunnel 33 The park contains several association football pitches Both Sheriff Y C and Belvedere play home games in the park 34 35 A smaller park Bram Stoker Park is located in front of the Georgian terrace of Marino Crescent both the park and the street are in a pocket of neighbouring Clontarf Stoker was born in number 15 Marino Crescent 36 nbsp Flowers in Fairview Park nbsp Statue of Sean Russell nbsp Fairview Park playground nbsp Eastern side of Fairview ParkPublic services edit A Garda Siochana station is located in nearby Clontarf and a Dublin Fire Brigade and ambulance station is located just across the Tolka at Annesley Bridge A credit union is located on Fairview Strand and a Post Office on Marino Mart Dublin City Libraries have a branch on the main road in Fairview 37 Education edit nbsp Marino collegePast pupils of St Joseph s Secondary C B S Fairview include former Taoiseach Charles Haughey 38 The secondary school Marino College is in nearby Marino St Marys national school for girls is close to Richmond Road Politics editFairview is in the administrative area of Dublin City Council It lies in the Dublin North Central Dail constituency and the Clontarf Local Electoral Area for city council elections It is served by the Fairview Residents Association Religion editFairview is a parish in the Fingal South East deanery of the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Dublin It is served by the Church of Visitation of the Blessed Virgin Mary 39 The construction of this church began in 1853 5 and it was opened on 15 January 1855 40 Fairview Hall is a Gospel Hall at 13 Annesley Bridge Road and is part of the Gospel Hall Brethren local assembly 41 Notable people editCathal Brugha revolutionary and politician born at 13 Richmond Avenue 42 Brendan Cauldwell actor 43 Eamonn Ceannt one of the seven signatories of the Proclamation of the Irish Republic lived at 23 Fairview Avenue 42 44 Kathleen and Tom Clarke lived at 31 Richmond Avenue 12 42 Sean Connolly captain in the Irish Citizen Army and Abbey Theatre actor lived at 108 Philipsburgh Avenue 42 45 Ned Daly Irish revolutionary 46 Larry Gogan broadcaster 47 Cathal Goulding Irish republican lived at 15 Cadogan Road 48 Rosie Hackett actively involved in the trade union movement 1913 Lockout and 1916 Rising lived in Fairview 49 Frank Henderson captain in the Irish Volunteers 42 James Joyce lived at a number of addresses in Fairview between 1896 and 1901 12 44 George Henry Kinahan geologist lived at Woodlands Philipsburgh Avenue 50 Charles Lever writer lived on Philipsburgh Avenue 8 Henry Loftus 1st Earl of Ely 25 Charles Lucas the patriot physician lived at Pennyville 44 25 Thomas McDonagh one of the seven signatories of the Proclamation of the Irish Republic lived at Woodlands Philipsburgh Avenue 42 44 Liam Mellows and Barney Mellows Irish revolutionaries whose childhood home was 10 Annadale Avenue 51 Sean og o Ceallachain broadcaster and former Gaelic footballer and hurler 52 Fred O Donovan theatre and radio producer 53 Maureen Potter actress singer and performer grew up on St Joseph s Terrace off Philipsburgh Avenue 54 Maureen Toal stage and television actress 55 References edit Fairview Placenames Database of Ireland retrieved 2011 05 23 Freeman Michael 8 December 2017 Your guide to Fairview and Marino The garden city minutes from the centre with secret tunnels TheJournal ie Retrieved 12 March 2021 Dawson T 1976 The Road to Howth Dublin Historical Record 29 4 122 132 ISSN 0012 6861 JSTOR 30104383 a b Dublin Uncovered Fairview Dublin ie Retrieved 12 March 2021 a b Kingston 1953 p 1 Samuel Lewis 1837 CLONTURK or DRUMCONDRA a parish A Topographical Dictionary of Ireland Retrieved 29 August 2017 Kingston 1953 p 12 13 a b c d e f g h Wren James 1983 From Ballybough to Scurlogue s Bridge Dublin Historical Record 37 1 14 29 ISSN 0012 6861 JSTOR 30100616 Kingston 1953 p 18 19 Kingston 1953 p 22 26 Kingston 1953 p 61 a b c d e f g h i Hiney Diarmuid G 1997 5618 and All That the Jewish Cemetery Fairview Strand Dublin Historical Record 50 2 119 129 ISSN 0012 6861 JSTOR 30101173 a b History of Fairview and Marino Archived 2011 07 10 at the Wayback Machine a b Kingston 1953 p 62 Kingston 1953 p 67 Kingston 1953 p 67 68 a b St Vincent s Hospital Richmond Road Dublin 3 DUBLIN Buildings of Ireland 2017 Retrieved 20 April 2022 Kingston 1953 p 52 53 a b Kingston 1953 p 64 Kingston 1953 p 64 66 Kingston 1953 p 57 59 Ordnance Survey of Ireland maps 1847 and 1913 a b Kingston 1953 p 69 a b Kingston 1953 p 68 a b c Kingston 1953 p 66 Bushfield House 57 Philipsburgh Avenue Dublin 3 DUBLIN Buildings of Ireland 2017 Retrieved 20 April 2022 St Vincent s Hospital Fairview Dublin www stvincentshospital ie Retrieved 12 March 2021 a b Art in Parks PDF Dublin Dublin City Council 2020 p 31 Whelan Yvonne 2003 Reinventing modern Dublin streetscape iconography and the politics of identity Dublin Ireland University College Dublin Press p 100 ISBN 1 900621 85 1 OCLC 51270664 Declan Flynn The Fairview Park murder that ignited the Irish Pride movement GCN 26 June 2020 Retrieved 12 March 2021 Fairview Park fairview marino com Archived from the original on 7 September 2012 Retrieved 4 May 2010 Land Reclamation in Dublin Bay RTE Archives Retrieved 12 March 2021 Busy times for Fairview and Marino Dublin People 15 September 2012 Retrieved 12 March 2021 Club History www belvederefc com Retrieved 12 March 2021 Jones Christopher 3 March 2020 Dublin By Numbers All you need to know before moving to Fairview or Marino DublinLive Retrieved 12 March 2021 Bram Stoker Park Dublin City Council Retrieved 22 December 2016 Marino Library Dublin City Countil Retrieved 20 December 2016 Maume Patrick 2009 Haughey Charles James C J In McGuire James Quinn James eds Dictionary of Irish Biography Cambridge Cambridge University Press Official parish website Kingston 1953 p 87 Fairview Hall official site a b c d e f A P Caomhanach ed Scoil Iosaif Marino Iris Chuimhneachain 1916 1966 Dublin 1966 60 years an actor best loved for Fair City role The Irish Times 14 January 2006 Retrieved 12 March 2021 a b c d James Wren From Ballybough to Scurlogue s Bridge Dublin Historical Record Vol 37 No 1 December 1983 pp 14 29 Marino Local History Society Marino Local History Society Retrieved 12 March 2021 The Executed Edward Daly PDF The 1916 Rising National Library of Ireland Retrieved 8 April 2017 Duffy Ronan Larry Gogan 1934 2020 Radio icon who provided the soundtrack to Irish life TheJournal ie Retrieved 12 March 2021 Oireachtas Houses of the 24 February 1999 Written Answers Company Registration Dail Eireann 28th Dail Wednesday 24 Feb 1999 Houses of the Oireachtas www oireachtas ie Retrieved 12 March 2021 Newstalk Hidden Histories w Turtle Bunbury The life and times of Rosie Hackett Newstalk Retrieved 12 March 2021 H Leonard and R Clark Obit George Henry Kinahan M R I A Geological Magazine Decade V 1909 6 142 143 Mellows Herbert Charles Barney Dictionary of Irish Biography GAA world mourns broadcaster o Ceallachain Irish Examiner 17 February 2013 Retrieved 12 March 2021 Murray Ken 15 May 2010 Theatre producer Fred O Donovan dies The Irish Times Irish Times Trust Retrieved 15 May 2010 With warmth and comic genius she was marked early on for the stage The Irish Times 10 April 2004 Retrieved 12 March 2021 Noted actress Maureen Toal dies RTE News 25 August 2012 Retrieved 12 March 2021 Sources edit Kingston Rev John 1953 Parish of Fairview Dundalgan Press Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Fairview Dublin amp oldid 1187881548 Parks, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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