Latest Posts
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Irish Barrister of the Week: Pleasant Ned Lysaght (1763-1810)
This is a series to record Irish barristers of days gone by who, for one reason or the other, were never elevated to the position of judge (the shades of those so elevated can look forward to their own series).… Continue reading
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A New Song on the Insanity and Doings of the Poor Judge, 1878
The ‘Poor Judge’ of the above ballad was none other than William Nicholas Keogh, Judge of the Court of Common Pleas in Ireland, 1856-78. “Oh! There’s another good man gone wrong, burreo hurreoWho is well known to you, it’s true,… Continue reading
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A Wide Street Commissioners Map of 152-155 Church Street, c.1820
The Wide Street Commissioners map above depicts former buildings on the site 152-55 Church Street, Dublin, Ireland now occupied by Kings Building (image of the site today here) The area on the opposite side of May Lane on the map… Continue reading
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Solicitor Charged with Unheard-of Cruelties to Teenage Daughter, 1840
A remarkable story from the College Street Magistrates’ Court, Dublin, 1840, involving cruel treatment by a solicitor and sub-sheriff of Dublin, John Robert Malone, of his teenage daughter. Locked in her room at 5 Fitzwilliam Street, Dublin, without change of… Continue reading
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Female Forger Surprised by Judge at her Lodgings in Church Street, Dublin, 1803
Forgery near the Four Courts, Dublin, Ireland in 1803, when the very active Mr Justice Bell, who carried out many arrests of criminals in Dublin in the first decade of the 19th century, apprehended Mrs Kearns at her lodgings in… Continue reading









