Workhouse Drawings Collection


The Workhouse Drawings collection contains a representative sample of drawings, plans, and documents drawn from the Irish Architectural Archive's Workhouse Collection. The Workhouse Collection (reference 85/138) in the Irish Architectural Archive includes surviving drawings for workhouses built in Ireland to provide relief for the poor. Built between 1839 and 1847, the workhouses were designed in a Tudor domestic idiom by architect George Wilkinson. Occasionally drawings are accompanied by other documents including the standard printed specification or, more rarely, items of correspondence. Many are in extremely poor condition and their extreme fragility precludes public access. This online collection provides access to drawings and documents relating to the Mallow, Castleblayney, Lismore, and Gorey workhouses. The drawings for Mallow Workhouse may be considered a representative set of the surviving drawings for the Tudor style workhouses built by Wilkinson. The majority of the drawings were produced mechanically (engraved and printed). The inclusion of drawings from Castleblayney, Lismore, and Gorey, in addition to those of Mallow, ensures that this online collection includes samples of each printed drawing.

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Dublin Town Planning Competition 1914


The Dublin Town Planning Competition was held in 1914, with the aim to "elicit Plans and Reports of a preliminary and suggestive character, and thus obtain contributions and alternatives which may be of value towards the guidance of the future development of the City in its various directions". The Dublin civic survey report refers to the competition as the Aberdeen Competition, probably due to the prize for the best design which was presented by the Marquis of Aberdeen and Temair. Eight entries were submitted in total, each relating to the Greater Dublin area, taking in Howth, Glasnevin, Ashtown, Dundrum and Dalkey. The main headings for the proposals included: 1. Communications; 2. Housing; and 3. Metropolitan improvements. The submission by Patrick Abercrombie, Sydney Kelly and Arthur Kelly was awarded the prize in 1916. Due to major political and historical events, the winning entry was not officially published until 1922, with the final Civic Report not published until 1925. Out of the eight entries, only three are known to have survived.

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Domestic Architecture of Georgian Dublin Collection


Selection of 35mm slides from the collection of the School of Art History and Cultural Policy, focusing on the domestic architecture of eighteenth-century Dublin.

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Sections & details of certain parts in the development of the city


Drawing submitted by F.A. Cushing Smith to the town plan for Dublin international competition organised by the Civics Institute of Ireland in 1914. Cushing Smith was the sole US entrant and also one of only two single-person entrants. His address at the time of the competition was the University Club, Urbana, Illinois. To ensure anonymity during the adjudication process his entry was give the designation 'B'. Aside from the winners, the adjudicators were unanimous in giving Honourable Mention to four entries including Cushing Smith's. This drawing includes perspective drawings of "The Civic Centre" and "The Water Approach to the City" as well as street sections and a section and half-plan for a recreation park.

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Desmond FitzGerald Photographs


This collection of photographic prints forms part of the papers of Desmond FitzGerald (P80). The majority of theses photographs arise out of the Civil War but other smaller series relate to the aftermath of the Easter Rising and to the War of Independence. There are also other series of army portraits and of historical occasions photographs.

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Richmond Hospital Medical Illustrations


The Richmond Hospital Medical Illustrations is a collection of illustrations depicting medical conditions treated at the Richmond Hospital, Dublin. The illustrations mainly date from the 19th century, with a small number from the early 20th century, and many depict diseases that are now not commonly seen. The illustrations are accompanied by two catalogues listing the drawings. The artist is not identified for many of the illustrations but known artists include J. Connolly, J.H. Burnside, Miss B. O'Farrell, and Sydney A. Sewell. The cases depicted include those treated by surgeons associated with Richmond Hospital such as Robert Adams, Edward Hutton, Christopher Fleming, John Hamilton, and Robert William Smith. This collection will be of interest to medical educators and practitioners, public health specialists, historians of medicine, social historians and humanities scholars more generally.

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Thirtieth Annual Chicago Architectural Exhibition exhibit label


Label for the an exhibit submitted by F.A. Cushing Smith to the Thirtieth Annual Chicago Architectural Exhibition, Art Institute of Chicago, 5-29 April, 1917. The title of the exhibit is given as: "General plan and details. A town plan for Dublin, Ireland. Honorable mention plan. Only American competitor".

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Housing Plans for Greater Dublin


Drawing submitted by F.A. Cushing Smith to the town plan for Dublin international competition organised by the Civics Institute of Ireland in 1914. Cushing Smith was the sole US entrant and also one of only two single-person entrants. His address at the time of the competition was the University Club, Urbana, Illinois. To ensure anonymity during the adjudication process his entry was give the designation 'B'. Aside from the winners, the adjudicators were unanimous in giving Honourable Mention to four entries including Cushing Smith's. This drawing includes plans and elevations for various types of housing and a block plan of suburban house arrangements.

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Greater Dublin: a general plan for the development of the city


Drawing submitted by F.A. Cushing Smith to the town plan for Dublin international competition organised by the Civics Institute of Ireland in 1914. Cushing Smith was the sole US entrant and also one of only two single-person entrants. His address at the time of the competition was the University Club, Urbana, Illinois. To ensure anonymity during the adjudication process his entry was give the designation 'B'. Aside from the winners, the adjudicators were unanimous in giving Honourable Mention to four entries including Cushing Smith's. This map details the proposed development plan for the city including residential, institutional, and working men's tracts.

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Dublin of the future: the new town plan, being the scheme awarded the first prize in the international competition


Dublin of the future: the new town plan, being the scheme awarded the first prize in the international competition

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Papers of the Kevin Barry Memorial Committee


This collection comprises the papers and correspondence of the Kevin Barry Memorial Committee. The Committee was formed to raise funds to create a memorial to Kevin Barry (20 January 1902–1 November 1920). Barry, a medical student at University College Dublin, was executed for his part in an ambush which resulted in the deaths of three British Army officers. The Committee commissioned Harry Clarke Stained Glass Limited to create a stained glass window dedicated to Kevin Barry and the other students and graduates of University College Dublin who lost their lives in the struggle for Irish Independence. The window, designed by Richard King, was erected in Earlsfort Terrace and unveiled on 1 November 1934. In 2010, the window was conserved, restored and relocated in the Charles Institute at Belfield, the current campus of University College Dublin.

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The Dublin civic survey report


The Dublin civic survey report

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The civic survey: Dublin and environs


Maps from The Dublin civic survey report / Prepared by Horace T. O'Rourke, & the Dublin Civic Survey Committee for the Civics Institute of Ireland. The loose maps were bound together in this volume by UCD Library.

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Homemade Toy Drawings


Story collected by Neil Daly, a student at Ceann Tuirc (B.) school (Kanturk, Co. Cork) (no informant identified).

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The new Dublin: a study in civics


Original typescript of his highly recommended entry in the Dublin Town Planning Competition of 1914, which was won by Patrick Abercrombie.

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[Geographical maps and drawings by Collins.]


[Geographical maps and drawings by Collins.]

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Negative of Seán O'Sullivan's portrait of Eoin MacNeill.


Negative of Seán O'Sullivan's portrait of Eoin MacNeill.

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Photograph of a sketch of Eoin MacNeill by his son Seamus.


Photograph of a sketch of Eoin MacNeill by his son Seamus.

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[Geography notes and papers including several maps drawn by Collins.]


[Geography notes and papers including several maps drawn by Collins.]

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List of drawings belonging to the museum of the Richmond Hospital Dublin


Unbound handwritten and typed catalogue entitled 'The National University of Ireland. University College Dublin. Department of Pathology. List of Drawings Belonging to the Museum of the Richmond Hospital Dublin.' Initials T.T.O'F are on the front and may relate to the compiler.

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[Letter from Thomas J. Westropp (Royal Dublin Society Members’ Room) to William Frazer, with a list of localities in Clare, of which he has made sketches.]


[Letter from Thomas J. Westropp (Royal Dublin Society Members’ Room) to William Frazer, with a list of localities in Clare, of which he has made sketches.]

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[Letter from Margaret Stokes (Carrig Brear, Howth) to William Frazer, concerning Mr. Young’s work on pencil drawings for an unspecified publication.]


[Letter from Margaret Stokes (Carrig Brear, Howth) to William Frazer, concerning Mr. Young’s work on pencil drawings for an unspecified publication.]

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[Copybook 21. RJS School]


[Copybook 21. RJS School]

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Newspaper cutting of a sketch of John Marcus O'Sullivan by Oscar Lazar, Geneva.


Newspaper cutting of a sketch of John Marcus O'Sullivan by Oscar Lazar, Geneva.

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