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Archive of the Month

An Important Map Showing the Development of Glasnevin, in Dublin

 by Bryan Whelan

 

The Archive of the Month for March shines a spotlight on a beautiful map that makes up part of Ms 1104, a recent addition to the RCB Library’s extensive manuscript collection. This collection contains the papers of the Hon. Rt Revd Charles Dalrymple Lindsay (1760–1846), Dean of Christ Church Cathedral, Dublin, & Bishop of Kildare (1804–46). It also contains a fascinating diary of the Bishop’s wife, Catherine Eliza Coussmaker (died 1837) who detailed the family’s journey from England to Ireland in 1801, to start the family’s new life in Ireland.

The map of Glasnevin that accompanies the deed. RCB Library Ms 1104/8.
The map of Glasnevin that accompanies the deed. RCB Library Ms 1104/8.

 

 

Although beautifully illustrated, there is little doubt that this map was executed for legal purposes. It was located with a deed dated 22 October 1833, between “The Right Reverend Father in God, Charles, Lord Bishop of Kildare of the Cathedral Church of the Holy and Undivided Trinity, Dublin, of the one part, and The Honorable William John Gore of the City of Dublin on the other part”. The map was surveyed by John Longfield in 1807, and was certainly not intended as a guide to the area for an early 19th–century traveller. Parcels of land are divided accordingly, and much care is given to denoting the land value and rates, as well as the owners of neighbouring parcels of land, and in some instances, their relationship with Christ Church Cathedral. It is also significant that prominent buildings that were in existence at the time – including the Bishop’s own residence – are not shown. This residence, Glasnevin House, would have been an imposing presence in the town, being located north of the Tolka river and north–west of the small cluster of houses that formed Glasnevin at this time. Indeed, it remains an imposing building today, being the Convent of the Holy Faith complex, albeit with significant additions.

The map is focused primarily on the area surrounding Glasnevin village, incorporating areas that would be familiar to Dubliners today, such as Cross Guns, as well as references to Drumcondra to the east and the ‘Lands of Finglass’ towards the north. What is striking is what is not visually depicted. For example, although the Botanic Gardens were founded here in 1795, the only reference that the map makes to their presence is a plot of land labelled ‘The Dublin Society under Christ Church’. The Illustrated Dublin Journal (No. 10, November 1861) notes that the Bishop of Kilmore, on behalf of a Committee composed of members of the Dublin Society (the Society would not adopt the ‘Royal’ prefix until 1820) was intricately involved in choosing a site for the future Botanic Gardens. It states that ‘after examining several sites [the Bishop and the Committee] had found none so eligible as ground at Glasnevin, held by Major Tickell from the Dean and Chapter of Christ’s Church Cathedral’.

A portion of the deed. RCB Library Ms 1104/8.
A portion of the deed. RCB Library Ms 1104/8.

 

The river Tolka is of course a prominent feature, displayed in blue running diagonally from west to east, also in view is the then recently–constructed Royal Canal. Work on the momentous canal had begun some 17 years before John Longfield surveyed the area for this map. Indeed, construction work began at Westmoreland Bridge – now known as Cross Guns Bridge, shown at the bottom of this map. It is interesting to note that at the time when the area was surveyed, the Royal Canal was not yet fully–constructed and would only be completed when it reached the River Shannon in 1817.

This map – much like the Lindsay collection of which it is a part – is an important document for historians as well as for genealogists researching family members who lived in the area at this time. It provides visual cartographic evidence that predates the Ordnance Survey maps for this area, in which detailed lists of landowners or tenants who lived in this area at the beginning of the 19th century are included. We can see clearly where future streets would be placed, based on the boundaries of the plots of land that we see here on this map. A good example of this would be the plot of land to the west of the lands marked St Mary’s Abbey. The south–western line of this map would form Claude Road, with the land on the other side of the border forming the graveyard for St George’s parish church.

Ms 1104 was gifted to the Library by Dr John Knightly, who – in the course of his PhD research on the Godrey family of Kilcolman Abbey, Co. Kerry – had been gifted it by the late Dermot Edwards of Bushfield, Lismore. The Godfreys were a Church of Ireland family with a connection to the Gore family. The link between the Lindsay and Gore families had been firmly established a few years before this deed (and map) was produced. On 3 September, 1828 George Hayward Lindsay – the only son of Bishop Lindsay’s marriage to Catherine Coussmaker – married Mary Catherine Gore in St Werburgh’s church, Dublin. The entry recording the marriage in the St Werburgh’s register shows that the marriage was solemnised between the two in the presence of Charles Kildare and William John Gore.

The record of the marriage of George Hayward Lindsey and Mary Catherine Gore in St Werburgh's church, Dublin, 3 September 1828. Note the signatures of the Hon. Rt Revd Charles Dalrymple Lindsay and the Hon. William John Gore as witnesses. RCB Library P.0326.1.1.
The record of the marriage of George Hayward Lindsey and Mary Catherine Gore in St Werburgh's church, Dublin, 3 September 1828. Note the signatures of the Hon. Rt Revd Charles Dalrymple Lindsay and the Hon. William John Gore as witnesses. RCB Library P.0326.1.1.

 

You can read more about the RCB Library’s collection of papers of the Hon. Rt Revd Charles Dalrymple Lindsay here

Catherine Eliza Coussmaker’s fascinating diary has been transcribed by Dr John Knightly, and you can read this here.

   

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