Linenhall, Dublin
{{Short description|Former market hall and barracks in North Dublin city}}
{{Use dmy dates|date=April 2022}}
{{Infobox building
| name = The Linen Hall
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| native_name_lang = ga
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| image = File:To the very respectable the linen merchants and manufactures of Ireland, ... this perspective view of the Linen Hall in Dublin with the boxes and bales of linen ready for exportation, the LCCN2003674111.tif
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| image_caption = A view of the Linenhall from around 1782 by the engraver Robert Pollard
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| building_type = Market Hall
| architectural_style = Georgian
| classification = Demolished
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| location_country = Ireland
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| est_completion = 1722
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| opened_date = 14 November 1728
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| renovation_date = 1784
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| demolition_date = 1916 by fire and later demolition
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| material = granite arcades and quoins and plain red brick
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| floor_count = 3
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| architect = Thomas Burgh (1722), Thomas Cooley (1784)
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| developer = The Linen Board
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| other_designers = Henry Darley (1759) - stonemason, Charles Thorp
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The Linenhall along with the adjacent Yarnhall was a large complex of Georgian buildings and streets associated with the linen and cloth trade in Dublin, Ireland which later gave its name to a surrounding area. It was also temporarily a barracks and as a result, was largely destroyed during the Easter Rising in 1916.{{Cite news|last=Clark|first=Bruce|date=6 May 2016|title=Linen and the fabric of history: An Irishman's Diary on flax and fibres|newspaper=The Irish Times|url=https://www.irishtimes.com/culture/heritage/linen-and-the-fabric-of-history-1.1784305|access-date=31 August 2021}}
Today surrounding streets which were built on or beside the site include Linenhall Street, Linenhall Parade and Linenhall Terrace as well as Yarnhall Street.
History
=Foundation=
File:Linen Yard office, April 1786.png
The complex was located to the rear of Henrietta Street, Bolton Street and North King Street.
The selection of this three-acre site as a centralised Linen Hall for Dublin was decided by the Board on 17 March 1722 following the rejection of sites in Drumcondra and Ballybough. Thomas Burgh was chosen as architect and the first Linenhall constructed was opened for business on 14 November 1728.{{cite news |last1=Hopkins |first1=Frank |title=The Very Fabric Of Dublin's Past |url=https://www.independent.ie/regionals/herald/entertainment/the-very-fabric-of-dublins-past-27884232.html |access-date=31 August 2021 |work=Irish Independent |date=4 September 2008 |language=en}} Yarnhalls and cottonhalls and other manufactories were later constructed and opened over the following years.
Many linen traders would stay in the inns and taverns in the environs of Capel Street at this time.
The complex was later extensively enlarged in 1784 by Thomas Cooley.{{cite web |title=1728 – Linen Hall, Yarnhall St., Dublin |url=https://www.archiseek.com/2011/1728-linen-hall-yarnhall-st-dublin/ |website=Archiseek - Irish Architecture |access-date=31 August 2021 |date=13 December 2011}} A Yarn Hall and Cotton Hall were also constructed nearby.
The complex was modelled on Blackwell Hill, London, and the Cloth Hall of Hamburg. The Dublin Linenhall housed 550 bays for storage, a large trading space, and a boardroom. Following the opening of the Belfast Linen Hall in 1783, the Dublin Hall went into decline.
In 1821, George IV visited the Linenhall on his trip to Ireland and a statue of him was commissioned by the linen merchants and sculpted by Thomas Kirk.{{Cite web |title=Statue of George IV · RDS |url=https://digitalarchive.rds.ie/items/show/3854 |access-date=2025-01-14 |website=digitalarchive.rds.ie}}{{Cite web |title=Dictionary of Irish Architects |url=https://www.dia.ie/works/view/36687/building/CO.+DUBLIN,+DUBLIN,+YARNHALL+STREET,+NO.+001+(LINEN+HALL) |access-date=2025-01-14 |website=www.dia.ie}}
=Barracks=
From the 1870s, the Hall was used as a British Army barracks. The Board of Works took over the buildings in 1878.
In 1914, the Hall, along with the nearby Temple Gardens in front of the King's Inns, was host to one its last events, the Dublin Civic Exhibition.{{cite web |title=Watch Dublin Civic Exhibition |url=https://player.bfi.org.uk/free/film/watch-dublin-civic-exhibition-1914-online |website=BFI Player |access-date=14 February 2022 |language=en}}
It is mentioned in the 1958 song "Monto (Take Her Up to Monto)", which references events of the late 19th century: "You've seen the Dublin Fusiliers, / The dirty old bamboozeleers, / De Wet'll kill them chiselers, one, two, three. / Marching from the Linen Hall / There's one for every cannonball, / And Vicky's going to send them all, o'er the sea."{{Cite web|url=https://www.irishcentral.com/roots/history/monto-dublin-song-history|title=60-years-old this year, the tales behind "Take me up to Monto"|date=August 21, 2018|website=IrishCentral.com}}{{Cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=A8hH-5lK2j4C&q=Marching+from+the+Linen+Hall+/+There's+one+for+every+cannonball|title=Play 50 Irish Ballads|first1=Music Sales|last1=Corporation|first2=Ossian Publications|last2=Staff|date=February 28, 1997|publisher=Ossian Publications Limited. Incorporating|isbn=9780946005635|via=Google Books}}
On 26 April 1916, Linenhall Barracks was seized by the Irish Volunteers. The Barracks was largely occupied by unarmed clerks.{{cite news |last1=Connell |first1=Joseph EA |title=A 1916 streetmap: Dublin 7 and 3 |url=https://www.irishtimes.com/culture/heritage/a-1916-streetmap-dublin-7-and-3-1.2264280 |access-date=31 August 2021 |newspaper=The Irish Times |date=27 June 2015 |language=en}} The Barracks was set on fire by 1st Dublin Battalion Irish Volunteers to prevent the British Army using the site. The fire spread to adjacent buildings on North Brunswick Street and North King Street. During the fire, Volunteer Paddy Holohan reported the fire leading to the explosion of several barrels of oil, creating large plumes of thick smoke.{{cite web |title=The Destruction of Dublin |url=https://www.rte.ie/centuryireland/index.php/articles/the-easter-rising-and-destruction-of-dublin |website=Century Ireland |publisher=RTÉ |access-date=31 August 2021}}
Area
The area known as Linenhall built up around the historical market hall, and the series of streets which now comprise the area reflect those connections, particularly with northern counties and areas of Ireland connected with the linen and cloth trade. Extant streets include Coleraine Street, Lurgan Street, and Lisburn Street.{{Cite book |last=M'Cready |first=C. T. |url=https://www.worldcat.org/oclc/263974843 |title=Dublin street names dated and explained |date=1987 |publisher=Carraig |isbn=1-85068-005-1 |location=Blackrock, Co. Dublin |pages=59 |oclc=263974843}} Derry Street to the north of Linenhall was built over when the hall expanded in 1781. There are also streets named for the building, Linenhall Street, Linenhall Terrace, Linenhall Parade, and Yarnhall Street.{{Cite book |last=Clerkin |first=Paul |url=https://www.worldcat.org/oclc/48467800 |title=Dublin street names |date=2001 |publisher=Gill & Macmillan |isbn=0-7171-3204-8 |location=Dublin |pages=108 |oclc=48467800}}
Present
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Remnants of the original complex can be seen in the Linenhall campus of the Technological University Dublin off Yarnhall Street.{{cite web |title=In search of the Linen Hall Barracks |url=https://thearchaeologyof1916.wordpress.com/2016/04/05/in-search-of-the-linen-hall-barracks/ |website=thearchaeologyof1916 |access-date=31 August 2021 |language=en |date=5 April 2016}}{{Cite web |last= |title=DIT Faculty of Engineering, Henrietta Place, Yarnhall Street, Dublin, DUBLIN |url=https://www.buildingsofireland.ie/buildings-search/building/50011173/dit-faculty-of-engineering-henrietta-place-yarnhall-street-dublin-dublin |access-date=2022-11-16 |website=Buildings of Ireland |language=en-US}}
=Gallery=
File:Linen Hall Barracks, July (sic) 17 1916 3b5918923.jpg|Front of the Linenhall
File:Linenhall Barracks, Dublin (8243049545).jpg|After its destruction in 1916.
File:Linen Hall Barracks, July (sic) 17 1916 3b591893c.jpg|Gates with children playing
File:Linen Hall Barracks, July (sic) 17 1916 95947855k.jpg|Boundary wall
File:Linen Hall Barracks, July (sic) 17 1916 959478549.jpg|Gate
References
{{Reflist}}
{{History of Dublin}}
{{Coord|53|21|3.89|N|6|16|12.19|W|display=title}}
Category:1910s fires in Europe
Category:Demolished buildings and structures in Dublin
Category:Buildings and structures in Dublin (city)
Category:Buildings and structures demolished in 1916
Category:Places in Dublin (city)