Latest Posts
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Apprentice Solicitor Barred from Lectures by Officious Porter Pens Letter to Newspaper, 1885
An 1885 letter of complaint written to the Freeman’s Journal by James Hamerton, apprentice solicitor, bemoaning the door-closing policy of ‘Chew.’ the over-officious porter in the Solicitors’ Building, Four Courts, Dublin, Ireland. Compulsory lectures had been introduced for Irish apprentice… Continue reading
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The Dublin Scandals: The Rise and Fall of Inspector James Ellis French, 1858-1884
Out of the eight men put on trial for homosexual offences in the Dublin Scandals of 1884, two of them – Gustavus Cornwall, the head of the Irish Post Office and James Ellis French – head of the Intelligence Department… Continue reading
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The Dublin Scandals – Timeline and Dramatis Personae
That phenomenon of litigation and prosecution which became known as ‘the Dublin Scandals’ commenced in 1883 with a series of articles published by William O’Brien M.P. in his journal ‘United Ireland’. The articles were directed at James Ellis French, chief… Continue reading
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Nothing New Under the Sun: 56 Rathmines Road, James Pillar and the Prosecution Brief in the Dublin Scandals of 1884
Ireland had its own Epstein scandal in 1884. No island was involved, but rather a grocery shop run by James Pillar at 56 Rathmines Road, Dublin, where, in the evening, its owner offered to a different set of customers the… Continue reading
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The Four Courts and its Vicinity in Medieval Times, 1224-1540
The Four Courts site and surrounding area in medieval times, as depicted in a map prepared by the Friends of Medieval Dublin and printed by the Ordnance Survey. A full zoomable version of the map is available here. Visible on… Continue reading









