The exterior of 14 Henrietta Street, former home of the Encumbered Estates Court, as it appeared some years ago, via Google Streetview. Now refurbished, it currently enjoys a new existence as a museum of Georgian and Dublin tenement life.
An early OS map showing the Four Courts as it was before the building of the Landed Estates Court, via Geohive. The southern side of Pill Lane has already been incorporated into the complex but the northern side survives intact.
Also from Geohive, a later OS map depicting a very different Four Courts later in the 19th century. The Solicitors’ Building shown on the earlier map is now flanked by the Probate Court and Landed Estates Court on the west and Insolvency and Bankruptcy Courts on the east. There is a separate Public Records Building (not yet in place in 1860) further to the west of the Probate Court.
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2 responses to “Relocating the Encumbered Estates Court, 1850-60”

  1. […] fuss about nothing. The Irish Bar survived the post-Famine years with the help of fees generated in the Encumbered Estates Court in Henrietta Street. By the following decade, all talk of moving to Westminster was over and the […]

  2. […] Irish Bar survived the post-Famine years with the help of guineas generated in the Encumbered Estates Court in Henrietta Street. By the following decade, all talk of moving to Westminster was over and the […]

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