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Ruth Cannon BL barrister

Ruth Cannon BL, Barrister, Four Courts History

Sharing old stories from Ireland's historic centre of justice.

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Ruth Cannon BL, Barrister, Four Courts History

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A site set up to share the history of the Four Courts, Dublin, Ireland, home of the Irish legal system since 1796. Click here for an introduction.

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  • Barristers (89)
  • Exciting Events (45)
  • The Neighbourhood of the Four Courts (33)
  • Intriguing Cases (32)
  • The Four Courts Building (29)

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  • Legal Eccentrics (7)
  • Solicitors (2)
  • Tim Healy QC (2)
  • 18th century Dublin police (1)
  • 19th century photographs of Four Courts (1)

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Watch the trial of Dublin cabman John Curran for assault on governess Louisa Jolly unfold in the Green Street Courthouse of 1861, via You Tube

Past Posts

  • Chief Baron Palles at Home, 1898
  • Suffragette Stones Home of Lord Chief Justice of Ireland, 1913
  • A Morning at the Dublin Police Courts, 1871
  • Vacation Destinations of the Irish Bar and Bench, 1910
  • Father of the Munster Bar Falls Prey to Thieves While Holidaying in London, 1865
  • Carson Cross-Examines in Waterford, 1880
  • Raising the Wind by Raising Ghosts, 1841
  • Celebrity Lion Hunter Arrested for Indecent Exposure on Sandymount Strand, 1858
  • The Abduction of ‘Pretty Annie Cloury’, 1891
  • The Judge Who Was Mistaken for a King, 1908
  • English Divorce Granted After Errant Wife Run to Earth in Four Courts Hotel, 1904
  • Slander Action over Michael Collins’ Death Ends in Ha’penny Damages, 1958
  • Irish Barrister and Historian Falls Victim to the Alps, 1908
  • Bicycle Theft from Four Courts Yard Ends in Probation Act for Fifteen Intrepid Pre-Teens, 1957
  • Jephson v Brenon, 1909, Pt 4: The Outcome
  • Jephson v Brenon, 1909, Pt 3: The Evidence of Edward St. John Brenon
  • The Strange, Sad Case of Jephson v Brenon, 1909 – Pt 2, The Cache of Letters
  • Discovered in a Garret in Naples: The Case of Jephson v Brenon, 1909, Pt 1
  • Country Litigants, and Other Frequenters of the Four Courts, 1822
  • The Battle of Pill Lane, 1829
  • Sudden Deaths at the Angel Hotel, Inns Quay, 1852-1882
  • Defenders of the Home Front: The Four Courts Veteran Volunteer Corps in 1916
  • Mr Dunn BL Goes to Law, 1840
  • The King’s Inns Commission, 1871-2
  • A Daring Escape from Green Street Courthouse, 1904
  • The Divorce of a Deputy Crier, 1885-91
  • Rushing to Court across the Rubicon, c.1790
  • The Trial of Luke Dillon for the Rape and Seduction of Anne Frizell, 1831
  • Attainted Aristocrat Dies in Private Lodgings on Inns Quay, 1726
  • Tailor Arrested for Dancing the Polka in Sackville Street, 1844
  • Patrick Pearse and the Name on a Dray, 1905-1916
  • Seven Bagfuls of Stolen Briefs, 1875
  • John Philpot Curran’s Lucky Brief, 1779
  • An Unusual Ballina Libel Action, 1955
  • What’s under the Chancery Place Flowerbed?
  • A Trip Around the Four Courts, Dublin
  • A Six-Year-Old Prosecutes, 1837
  • The Barrister’s Boots That Went to Mass and Came Back Lucky, 1910-1991
  • To Fake a Death, 1861
  • The Bells of St Bartholomew’s and Serjeant William Bennett Campion, 1882-1907
  • Discoveries at the Four Courts Bookstalls, 1796-1886
  • The Barrister and the ‘Charley,’ c.1780
  • A Objectionable Dress, 1909
  • The Tall Hat as Mandatory Off-Duty Legal Wear, 1800-1934
  • There and Gone: Pill Lane, The Vanished Street Behind the Four Courts (Part 1)
  • A Curious Career, 1901
  • A Poet and Inventor’s Last Will, 1906
  • Attorney’s Apprentice Eschews Physical Combat in favour of Private Prosecution, 1821
  • The Lion, the Unicorn, the Harp and the Little Knobule, 1931-2023
  • The Tragic Tale of Charlotte Lodge
  • The Story of Mary Ha’penny
  • Two Tragic Barrister Trip and Falls at Wilton Place, 1882-1911
  • An Order of Habeas Corpus
  • A Bull Lane Girl’s Day Out, 1876
  • The ‘Hard-Swearers’ of Henrietta Street, 1844 
  • The Dangers of Wedding an Improvident Bride, 1832-1849
  • Gurgles from the Grave as Judicial Rivalry Continues into the Afterlife, 1882-1979
  • The Arran Quay Ghost, 1837
  • Wife Sued for Libel by Estranged Husband After Circulating Hand-Bills Seeking Name of her Predecessor, 1862
  • ‘Briefless Junior’ Secures Life-Changing Career Success by Standing in for Senior Detained on Field of Honour, 1815
  • Witchcraft in Waterford, 1886
  • The Great Dublin Lodging House Theft, 1847
  • From the Four Courts to Buenos Aires, 1790-1830
  • Eight Days in a Lifeboat for Author of Indispensable Irish Criminal Law Text Torpedoed off Africa, 1941
  • Kidnapped Fermoy Solicitor Negotiates his own Ransom, Subsequently Sues for its Recovery, 1922-26
  • The Judge’s Son Who Shelled the Four Courts, 1922
  • A Wizard in Court, 1856-1870
  • Revolving Doors Require No Hands, 1954
  • The Time They Tried to Move the Four Courts to London, 1850
  • Note of Thanks Left Behind as Sweet-Toothed Rebels Vacate Requisitioned Solicitor’s Office, 1916
  • Portico Problems, 1786-1925
  • Sandymount Lady Sues English Lieutenant for Breach of Promise, 1920
  • A Robbery at the White Cross Inn, 1814
  • The Barrister Who Fell in Love With his Witness, 1908-1915
  • Snowballing in Peace and War, 1867-1945
  • Howth Tea-Smuggler Escapes as Revenue Routed by Pill Lane ‘Mob,’ 1764
  • Woman-on-Woman* Fight Behind the Four Courts Reduces Combatants’ Clothes to Ribbons, 1879
  • Hats On, Hats Off: Non-Horsehair Headgear in Court, 1785-1971
  • Shouldering Guns Like Gentlemen: Irish Lawyers to the Front, 1914-18
  • A Barrister’s Mysterious Death, 1844
  • Midlands Circuit Judge Throws Himself Between Combatants to End Free Fight in Boyle Court, 1907
  • British Soldiers Routed by Dublin Amazons, 1871
  • More on the Milltown Outrage, 1861
  • Fawn-Smuggling on Inns Quay, 1838
  • Newspaper-Reading in Court, 1867-1998
  • Lord Chancellor’s Emissary Saves Lady from Singed Cat, Incurs Husband’s Wrath, 1838
  • Scouts say ‘Great Scott’ as Irish Barrister Repeatedly Risks Life in Breathtaking Powerscourt Waterfall Rescues, 1942-44
  • Flags and the Four Courts, 1885-1922
  • The Milltown Outrage, 1861
  • Irish Barrister Beheaded on Banks of Bosphorus, c.1825
  • Not Putting a Ring on it, 1937
  • A She-Judge, 1830
  • A Barrister’s Account of the Easter Rising, 1916
  • The Misfortunes of Judge Linehan’s Criers, 1913-29
  • Relocating the Encumbered Estates Court, 1850-60
  • Irish Barrister Escapes Prison, Elopes to France in a Barrel, 1820
  • Served up on a Staffordshire Platter: The Four Courts, c.1820
  • As It Was: Images of the Inns Quay/Arran Quay Junction, 1753-present
  • A Bear in the Dock, 1875
  • Future Judge Brings Legal Proceedings to Recover Dognapped Pet, 1830
  • Called to the Bar, June 1914
  • The Mysterious Folding Doors of the Supreme Court, 1937-73
  • Aristocratic Insolence in the Dublin Police Court, 1830
  • As It Was: Images of 145-151 Church Street, 1860 to date
  • Dublin Solicitor Helps Couple Elope, Sends Them Bill of Costs, 1905
  • Solicitor Tarred in South William Street Wine Cellar, 1875
  • Inns Quay Before Áras Uí Dhálaigh: Images of the Four Courts Hotel
  • The Marital Misadventures of a Master of the Rotunda, 1890
  • Former British Intelligence Officer and Would-Be Barrister Drowns at North Wall, 1921
  • Barrister’s Vacation Ends in Litigation, 1885
  • The Square Hall Scandal, 1947
  • The Rush to the Bar, 1840-1841
  • A Place of Trees: Dublin 7, 1066-1750
  • Half a Century After Renouncing Monastic Vows, Septuagenarian Barrister Magistrate Marries his Nurse, 1908
  • The War of the Motions: Silk Precedence in the Court of Exchequer, 1834-39
  • Mother of Bride Dies of Apoplexy as Officer Groom Exposed as Fraudster, 1857
  • Lord Chancellor’s Mace-Bearer Fined for Assaulting Dublin United Tramways Conductor, 1902
  • Laughter at Under-the-Table Police Chase in Rolls Court, 1857
  • Dublin Solicitor Dies in Lover’s House of Ill-Fame, 1879
  • Inquest in 158 Church Street After Unexpected Courtship Tragedy, 1858
  • Irish Barristers and the Dáil Courts, 1920
  • Mayo Courtship Ends in Substantial Award of Damages, 1925
  • ‘Our Judges:’ Critiquing 24 Sitting Irish Judges, 1889-90
  • A Visit to the 1890 Law Library
  • A Day in the Four Courts, 1890
  • Lord Leitrim’s Hearse Attacked by Mob in Church Street, 1878
  • Judge Gets the Boot on his First Day in Court, 1890
  • Taken by the Fairies, 1840-1924
  • Much Guarding, Little Action, Scrambling Breakfasts: the Irish Lawyers’ Corps and the Rebellion of 1798
  • Singing for its Supper: The Choir of Christ Church Pays Homage to the Court of Exchequer, 1851
  • The Four Courts as a Sightseeing Destination, 1816-1919
  • Derry Recorder Tests Lady’s Raincoat for Water Ingress, 1929
  • A Barrister’s Privilege Against Physical Retribution for Hurt Feelings, 1821
  • Leonard McNally, Barrister Lyricist, 1787-9
  • Take Off That Ugly Mask: The Problem of Barristers’ Hirsute Appendages, 1866-1896
  • The Mythical Miss Staveley and the Bamboozled Bar Benevolent Fund, 1927
  • Bride Arrested for Shoplifting on Eve of Wedding, 1826
  • The Dome(s) of the Four Courts, 1785-2020
  • QC v JC: Junior Bar Privilege, 1836-1912
  • Barrister’s Son Returns from the Dead, 1896
  • In the Footsteps of Kings: Chancery Place, 1224-1916
  • Marry a Former Chief Justice of Tobago in Haste, Repent at Leisure, 1840-55
  • The Irish Bar and Bench at Home, 1784-1890
  • A Pleading Two-Step, Part 2: The Proper Business of the Junior Bar, 1856-64
  • A Rare Bird at the Four Courts, 1888
  • A Pleading Two-Step, Part 1: The Dangers of Dispensing With Counsel, 1866
  • The Brats of Mountrath Street, 1867-1890
  • The Man of Many Wives, 1884-1895
  • The Bar Cricket Club in Season, 1889-1890
  • Boys’ Night In Ends in Three Months’ Hard Labour for Elderly Barrister, 1892
  • The ‘Cleansing’ of Bull Lane, 1878
  • Future Supreme Court Judge Unsuccessfully Sued for Negligent Driving, 1924
  • An Aggrieved Apprentice, 1874
  • A Barrister’s Right to Walk Unobstructed, 1893
  • Ormond Quay Prison Break, 1784
  • A Princess Arrested in the Four Courts, 1864
  • The Man Who Married His Mother-in-Law, 1904
  • Carlow Solicitor Takes Down Two IRA Men in Career-Ending Gun Battle, 1923
  • Fun on Circuit, 1909
  • His Only Brief, 1896
  • The Goat of Morgan Place, 1881
  • Legal Monkeys Hire Organ-Grinders to Disrupt Judge’s Party, 1846-66
  • No Catholic Testament in the Four Courts, 1919
  • Enough to make Curls Stand on End: Fee Recovery and the Junior Bar, 1862-present
  • The Fighting Herb Doctors of Church Street and Parnell Street, 1852
  • Sligo Jury Turns Water into Whisky, 1860
  • State Trial Implodes as Attorney General Challenges Opposing Counsel to Duel, 1844
  • To Catch a Thief, 1892
  • Mad Cow Escapade in Chancery Street, 1856
  • The Cruel Master, 1778
  • Malpractices of the Senior Bar, 1862
  • Swallowing the Evidence, 1839
  • Irish Free State Prosecuting Barrister Kidnapped, Tarred and Tied to Railings Outside Arbour Hill Prison, 1934
  • Visiting English Barrister Mistakes Free State Detectives for Gunmen, 1923
  • Something Wicker This Way Comes: Laughter in Court at Child Noise Nuisance Case, 1853
  • Mr Godley BL in Trouble Again, 1948
  • The Marrying Kind, or, Mr Godley BL and the Two Wives, December 1903
  • Mr Godley BL and the Bounced Cheque, October 1903
  • Wife of John Godley BL Catches Fire at Leeson Street Party, 1888
  • Mr Dunn BL Back in Town, 1839-40
  • Mr Dunn BL in Prison for Love, October 1838
  • Mr Dunn BL in Love Again, 1838
  • Judicial Coach Hijacked by Helpful Ennis Local, 1902
  • The Law and the ‘Flu, 1918-22
  • Mr Dunn BL in Love, 1836
  • Beneath the East Wing: The Inns Quay Infirmary, 1728-89
  • Teenager Hoaxes Thirteen Belfast Solicitors, 1925
  • Irish Barrister’s Wife Linked to International Man of Mystery, 1926
  • Early Irish Bar Strike, c.1790
  • Let off for Lunch: Pioneering Women Jurors, 1921
  • Judge Calls Women’s Fashion the Ruin of the Country, 1895
  • The (Would-be) Serial Killer of Church Street, 1861
  • Irish Barristers and their Fees, 1866
  • Tragic Tipstaff Death in Phoenix Park, 1905
  • The Registrar who Knew Joyce, 1937
  • Round Hall Wrestle After Perceived Insult to Barrister’s Mother, 1893
  • A Noise Sensitive Judge at the Cork Assizes, 1864
  • Barrister Sentenced to Six Months’ Hard Labour for Stealing Books from Trinity College Library, 1840
  • No False Telegram, 1928
  • Law Library Staff Member Leaves Bride at Altar, 1842
  • Solicitor Delays Discovery to Protect Morals of Lady Typists, 1906
  • Judicial Assassination Attempt at Corner of Leinster Street and Kildare Street Foiled by Observant Pensioner, 1882
  • Apprentice Solicitor Swordfight on Eve of Qualification, 1717
  • Bomb Outrages in the Four Courts, 1893
  • A Stolen Judicial Lunch Goes Viral, 1912
  • Ballymoney Barrister Treats Servants as Guests, 1913
  • From ‘Back Hair’ to Go-Go Boots: Fashion and the Female Barrister, 1921-1967
  • Irish Solicitor Efficiently Rescued After Falling Off Dublin-Holyhead Ferry mid-Channel, 1932
  • Hot, and More Often Not: Calibrating the Four Courts, 1796-1922
  • Judges Accompanied to Assizes by Armed Convoys, 1920-21
  • Breach of Promise Proceedings by Smitten Solicitor’s Clerk, 1892
  • Slanging it Out: The Vernacular in the Courtroom, 1872-1942
  • Popular Killarney Solicitor Disappears after Derby Win, Turns Up Decades Later in South Africa, 1886-1906
  • The Sentinel with the Sonorous Voice: Bramley of the Law Library, 1869-1904
  • The Wimple Life, 1908
  • Barrister Overboard, 1873
  • Bullet-Piercings, Bombs, Whiskey and Cigars: The Four Courts after the Rising, May-June 1916
  • Derry Girl’s Application to Become Barrister Rejected by Benchers of King’s Inns, 1901
  • The Todd Brothers, 1917-18
  • The Great Golfing Days of the Irish Bar, 1904-14
  • Dry Rot, Destitute Juniors and the Law of Cause and Effect: Improving the Second Law Library, 1897-1909
  • A Mysterious Assault on a Four Courts Registrar, 1916
  • The Female Barrister – Fair, Feared and ‘Finished at Forty,’ 1896
  • If Cats Could Talk: The Fatal Fall of a Donegal Solicitor, 1916
  • Manager of Four Courts Coffee Room Prosecuted for Adulterating Spirits, 1921
  • The Musket and the Brief, 1798
  • Law Library ‘Boy’ Sues for Damaged Bicycle, 1910
  • Schoolgirls Ordered Out of Court, 1915
  • Barristers Play the Market, 1900
  • Barrister’s Daughter Elopes in Mother’s Dress, 1878
  • Like Strokes of a Stick on a Carpet, 1891
  • Old Barristers Swoop In to Claim Seats in New Law Library, 1897
  • Bloodhound Sent Out After Father of the Irish Bar Disappears in Scottish Highlands, 1889
  • Compliments from a Four Courts’ Prisoner, 1916
  • Irish Woman Barrister Secures Acquittal for Client on Murder Charge, 1931
  • Son of Court 2 Housekeeper Kills Son of Court 3 Housekeeper in 22 Rounds at Bully’s Acre, 1816
  • Barrister Rescues Sheep, Sued by its Owner, 1907
  • The Prime of Miss Averil Deverell BL, 1937
  • Plumber’s Assistant Dies in Bankruptcy Court Explosion, 1888
  • Barrister Goes on Fire in Ballina Circuit Court, 1934
  • A Four Courts Hold-Up, 1920
  • Along for the Ride, Pre-Railway
  • Lady Law Clerks Strike Out, 1920
  • Dressed to Kilt, 1930
  • The Elephant in the Yard, 1906
  • The Disappearance of an Official Assignee, 1885
  • The New Law Library, 1895
  • Barrister Shoots Himself While Practising for Lawyers’ Corps, 1803
  • A Redundant Crier, 1900
  • Law Student Shoots Solicitor, Barrister Touts for Defence Brief, 1926
  • A Strange Bequest, 1913
  • A Barrister’s Johnnie, 1924
  • Barristers Successfully Challenge Exclusion from Side Passages of Court, 1848
  • Doing ‘Circuit’ in a Motor, 1907
  • Three Legal Men and a Baby, 1832
  • Solicitor Restrained from Breaking Through Judicial Procession Sues for Assault, 1898
  • Barrister Railway Fatalities, 1862-1921
  • Barristers’ Term-Time Immunity from Arrest for Debt, 1860
  • House Party with Legal Associations Ends in Accusations of Theft, 1844
  • Tardy Judge Fines Solicitors Who Fail to Wait, 1899
  • ADR Irish Style, Pre-1850
  • Young Bar Protest Against Judicial Unpunctuality, 1919
  • A Railway Mystery, 1905
  • Solicitor Caned in Four Courts Yard Over Missed Deed, 1846
  • No Palles: Health Crisis in Court 3, 1877
  • Barrister Convicted of Knocker-Wrenching, 1870
  • The Lord Chief Justice-v-Anna Liffey, 1870-1875
  • Cab Driver Convicted of Overcharging a Barrister, 1895
  • Mr Bushe BL Elopes, 1885
  • Four Courts Bag-Carriers and the Great Robing-Room Heist, 1882
  • Junior Barrister Piqued by Omission of his Name from News Report, 1871
  • Acid Attack on Solicitor Charged with Indecent Assault, 1884
  • Sailing Fatalities among the Irish Bar, 1872-1907
  • Fighting over Girls in the Yard, 1836
  • First Law Library Ended by Typhoid and Solicitors, 1894
  • Sumptuous Connaught Bar Dinner, 1831
  • Letting off Steam: Heating Problems in Court 2, 1860
  • Down by the (neglected) Four Courts Gardens, 1904
  • The Irish Barrister’s Dead Sweetheart’s Belongings, 1900
  • The Four Courts on Fire, 1805-1922
  • Led to be Bled: The Painful Duty of Junior Counsel, 1899
  • The Terrifying Tale of the Tipstaff’s Niece, 1835
  • Briefless Barristers as Marriage Prospects, 1870
  • Gallant Liffey Rescue by Solicitor, 1872
  • A Most Offensive Stench: Court 3, 1831-54
  • Tipstaff Bōjutsu, 1837
  • Lord Norbury’s Playground: Court 2, 1800-1827
  • Life-Threatening Law Library Lavatories, 1874
  • A Successful Haunted House Defence, 1885
  • Two Nights with Rose Lovely, 1823
  • The Affair of the White Waistcoat, 1899
  • The Devil’s Own, or, the Bar and the Boers, 1900
  • Lawyer Relieved of Silk Handkerchief by Female Cutpurses, 1818
  • Attorney-General Arranges Bare-Knuckle Boxing Bout, 1824
  • By Dublin Central Station We Nearly Sat, 1863
  • Whacksation of Costs, 1848
  • The Problem of Paging Barristers, 1846
  • Cockfighting in Arran Square, 1844
  • Juror Arrested, Blames Seagull-Shooting Lodger, 1866
  • Lord Chief Justice Declared Too Good to Live, 1822
  • A Shortened Period of Apprenticeship, 1836
  • Round Hall Ablutions Averted, 1808
  • Solicitors Meet to Discuss the General Impossibility of Barristers, 1843
  • Court Documents Stolen for Possible Sale as Toilet Paper, 1860
  • Mr Finn’s Four Courts Coffee-Room, 1839
  • The Bigamist Barrister, 1846
  • Bookstalls, Showmen and Dancing Dogs, 1821-1840
  • Armed Footpad Overpowered in Church Street, c. 1800
  • Case Citations and Personal Law Libraries, pre-1836
  • The Pill Lane Fishwives, 1835
  • The Litigant who became a Barrister, 1853
  • Long Hours for Law Clerks, 1865
  • The Lord Chief Justice’s Phantom Coach, 1803-
  • Gatecrashing a Bar Meeting, 1830
  • Barrister’s Spouse Violated by Briefing Solicitor, 1842
  • The Hammond Lane Explosion, 1878
  • The Perils of Personal Service, 1834
  • Do Not Covet a Barrister’s Wife, 1862
  • The Wandering Law Library Ventilator, 1879
  • Human Remains Beside the West Wing, 1834
  • Unacceptable Sanitary and Timekeeping Arrangements, 1874
  • A Judicial Levee in a Haunted House, 1901
  • Young Bar Fracas, 1829
  • Mob Attack, Inns Quay, 1830
  • The Law Librarian’s Office Burgled, 1857
  • Health and Safety Issues in the Round Hall, 1853
  • The Unwitting Dining Companions, 1784
  • Mr Hooks, 1862
  • A Pressing Communication, 1881
  • The Wigmaker of Arran Quay, 1862

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  • Welcome
  • Historical Views of the Four Courts – East Side
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Ruth Cannon BL, Barrister, Four Courts History A WordPress.com Website.

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This site shares the history of the Four Courts, Dublin, centre of Ireland's legal system since 1796. Click here to find out more!
 

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