The following is a transcript of a talk by Dr Roisín Higgins on the rich history of Dublin's sporting grounds, pitches and clubs and the stories they tell about the social, economic and political life of city and its people. The talk was part of the Sport and the City Seminar held in Dublin City Library and Archive on 11th September, 2010. Listen to the lectureWelcome to the Dublin City Public Libraries and Archive Podcast. In this episode, 'Where Dubliners have played', Dr Roisín Higgins relates the rich history of Dublin's sporting grounds, pitches and clubs and what they tell us about the social, economic and political life of city and its people. Recorded in front of a live audience at Dublin City Library and Archive, Pearse Street on 11 September 2010, as part of the Sport and the City Seminar.Thanks very much for the invitation to speak. As Aideen said I work on the Irish Sporting Heritage Project so I’m always interested in information on particularly grounds. It’s the built heritage that I’m interested in but those grounds contain stories and histories so it’s always great for me to be able to speak to different groups of people who will have experience. It’s right across the country but actually I haven’t done enough work on Dublin yet so any information that comes in I’d be very grateful for.The most striking new building on the Dublin skyline is of course the Aviva stadium. I’ve been told by people who have done - is it called the Dublin Eye or the wheel? – that when you look down it’s just magnificent this new stadium. As Lansdowne Road, it was the oldest rugby ground in Europe, and first hosted athletics in 1872. The original stadium was a multi-sports venue, which included a cinder track for athletics, cricket pitch, croquet green, three football pitches and facilities for archery and lawn tennis. I’ve no photos of that or sketches of that; I’d love to see what it looked like as a multi-sports venue at that time. But now that site on Lansdowne Road has been transformed into a remarkable piece of twenty-first century architecture. The Sunday Tribune last week noted that for the cost of saving Anglo-Irish Bank the country could have built twenty-five state-of-the-art hospitals, or twenty Aviva Stadiums. It’s more expensive than a hospital; €410 million the Aviva Stadium cost.So it’s an obvious part of the built sporting heritage of the city and it can be seen clearly from several vantage points. But some other significant venues are almost hidden from public view, while others have almost vanished altogether. Actually this is part of the evolution from Lansdowne Road to the Aviva Stadium that concrete grandstand very much of its time built in 1925 and then just before demolition and the process of this magnificent glass structure. I remember whenever Castlecourt or maybe it was the Waterfront Hall in Belfast was built and it was just between ceasefires I think and no body could believe that anybody would build a glass structure in Belfast made of glass. It’s a sign of a peaceful society that you could have a signature building in your city built of glass.But that grandstand actually echoes, the one at Lansdowne road echoes in some ways this is the grandstand in Baldoyle Racecourse. Racing in Baldoyle began in 1829 on the Deer Park, on a course laid out by racing enthusiast and landowner, Thomas, Third Earl of Howth. There was a slight hiatus then in the 1840s but racing returned to Baldoyle in 1853. The site was perfect as it was served by Drogheda and Howth Railway Company, which regularly sponsored races. The races at Baldoyle became hugely popular. They were cheap to attend, and the racecourse was not enclosed, so there were also popular with hawkers, tricksters and pickpockets who could work the crowds. And one of the reasons for enclosing sports grounds through the course of the 19th century was to keep the tricksters and hucksters out or at the very least make money out of the money they were going to make. So that regulation of the populace, of those who assembled at racetracks was very much part of the development of sporting sites throughout the 19th century. In the twentieth century, Baldoyle continued to have an important place in Ireland’s sporting history and its reinforced concrete stand (by Donnelly, Moore and Keatinge in 1919) heralded the beginning of the influence of modernism on sporting architecture. This is the first of its kind in Ireland and it was built for Baldoyle in 1918, that bold, plain concrete appearance was radical. But in 1973 the insurers could no longer insure the grandstand and so in part because of that racing ceased at Baldoyle in the 1970s. And now the area, there is an old, we have one hoof of it stands here, you can see on the left and on right - amazingly I think Carlow Rugby Club bought the jockey changing rooms in 1972 and moved them themselves from Baldoyle to Carlow, and they are still there. It’s a lovely little corrugated iron building and we still have that left from the very famous, one of the most famous racecourses in the world and now these are all that remain. There are two thousand houses on the site where Baldoyle racecourse used to be.There was racing as well in the Phoenix Park. Racing began there in 1901, and the Phoenix Plate for two-year-olds was held over five furlongs until 1913 and was the richest race in the country, surpassing even the Irish Derby at the time. But the popularity of racing in Phoenix Park dropped after its heyday in the 1950s, and ceased altogether in 1990. The land is also now apartment blocks.So, the history of sporting sites in Dublin shifts and changes – and this was particularly true of the years of the boom, and it seemed to us that no body was paying any attention as apartment blocks gobbled all before them. That development across the city, nobody - well people did I suppose - I often quote John Healy “but no shouted stop!” So it was clear that a great deal of the Irish sporting landscape was changing and, not only were we not recording this change, we had no clear record of what had been there in the first place. So you can have - it was possible to have vast tracts, the amount of land a racecourse takes up, and that could go and houses could be put up over it and nobody had any real record, it would just disappear from view.So, in setting up the Irish Sporting heritage Project, which was the brainchild of Mike Cronin of Boston College-Ireland, our first aim was to compile a record of the sporting sites of Ireland. The Department of Tourism, Culture and Sport was already attempting to audit its facilities through county councils but we were attempting to do something slightly different: we wanted to map the sporting landscape of Ireland over the last 150 years. Almost impossible a task.We have approached the project as historians and that makes a difference, it gives a different dimension to the audit of facilities that the county councils have undertaken. We see sporting sites as social spaces so we want to reach an understanding of their significance in Ireland historically, politically, economically and culturally. We want to retrieve the stories that these locations hold, the memories, the tensions, the social networks and hierarchies, which they have reinforced or challenged. And actually the two papers which have preceded this one are perfect examples of the way in which sporting clubs and sporting sites operate within communities and form ties and form associations, but create outlets and networks, and as Hilary said at the end of her paper they also reflect, and then also Ciarán very clearly laid out with Bohemian the way in which they reflect the broader history of the city. This is not simply a history of one small group of people they all have to contacts into the broader society and we wanted to use the sites in which sport had been played to tell these stories and to link into the broader social, political and economic history of Ireland.So I’ve got a website, I’ll just do a little plug for it. The Irish Sporting Heritage website irishsportingheritage.com. And you can see we have the database up and this is what it looks like. It’s done by county and by sport, so you can put in search ‘hockey in Dublin’ or ‘tennis in Dublin’ or anywhere around the country. Or you can put in your keyword. So please look it up and if your club is not properly represented or not represented at all or if there is something you know about I’d be really delighted to have the information.And it is important that these, that these sites are recorded I think. I was looking recently through a history of architecture in Dublin and I looked up the Phoenix Park and they have listed every gate lodges and monument in the Phoenix Park and they don’t mention sport. It seemed extraordinary to me. So there’s a real blindness. And I’m also putting together a dictionary entry for the Dictionary of Irish Architecture on sporting sites and it’s really, really hard to get the information. But the information, people in Ireland hold that information; it’s held informally in their heads, in their attics, in their memories and histories. It’s not held in official places so that’s why this archive is hugely important because it will be a common place where people can come to retrieve that information.So I am just going to show you two maps. I won’t spend too much time on them, but I really like these two maps that’s why I’m going to show you them, to give you a sense of how it works on a national scale and then I’ll talk specifically about Dublin. This map I found; 1916 there’s somebody sitting there with their ballpoint pen, it’s like a little manuscript because there’s nothing else to do in 1916 but put all the golf clubs in Ireland onto a map and you can see really clearly on this map how important the railway networks were to the development of sport in Ireland. So that when we think of the sporting map of Ireland we can see multiple maps. It’s all about associations and transport links and networks. And there you have it very clearly I think there are only three that aren’t located very close to a railway line. And this one here as well in terms of the sporting map and landscape. I went through all the sporting calendars through the 19th century and what you see with the racing calendars, what you see is a much more informal process at the end of the 19th century and eventually becomes much more formalized, so that the number of racecourses becomes reduced, reduced and reduced until I think there are 25 or 30 today. But look this is a an all Ireland map, look at the North East and the North West and what you see now is there were point-to-points throughout Ulster. But the racing calendar when I was going through it I was thinking I’m from County Antrim, I was thinking “I’ve not seen anything from County Antrim in this”. You know obscure places but I thought I’d surely know them. So a sporting map of Ireland is also a religious map of Ireland. It will also tell you a story about the relationship between Presbyterianism and gambling in Ireland. So sport can tell us almost anything we ask of it, you know it can tell us about the position of women in society, it can tell us about class politics, about urban development, about the difference between the shipyard culture in Belfast and the less industrialized aspect of Dublin culture. It tells us all of these stories. So if we map and record it we have a whole new way to approach history.So what kinds of stories are being told by the city? I suppose that’s one of the things I’m going to look at today.I will first say something about the way in which history is impacted into the way in which it’s located in the places where sport has been played, even when the name changes or even when stands are changed one by one, and even when the location itself changes, there still is a traceable memory of sport in that area. I suppose I would be interested to hear what you think of that; I’m not saying anything definitive, I’m just throwing out a few thoughts on it.Then I will look at the relationship between sporting sites and social structures in Dublin.Then I will say something briefly about the way in which economic matters influenced the development of sport, and Ciarán has already alluded to some of those things. So it’s just a brief overview and really the interest for me would much more what you have to say and the information that’s held out there, rather than the information I have already.So some places are no longer in existence like Baldoyle racecourse and the Phoenix Park, they are half remembered, and still just about traceable. For others, like the former home of Shamrock Rovers, which was also victim to developers, there is a determination to remember. So the fans erected this little [monument] to Shamrock Rovers, and in my other incarnation, my other interest is the 50th anniversary of the Easter Rising. So I’ve looked at commemorations to the Rising around the country, and I have to say that challenges many of them in its commitment and grandeur, you won’t see a better commemorative monument anywhere in the country really. And it shows these places matter to people, sporting sites matter to the communities in which they take place.So fans do have a strong sense of loyalty to the location and history of the place, if at times, not the name. The Aviva stadium has been described by its architects Populous as ‘the first truly site responsive stadium of its kind in the world. Its form, mass, materials and aspect are defined by the site and its surrounds’. So they see it very clearly located in that part of Dublin. Dublin rugby fans said very little about the renaming of their national stadium on Lansdowne Road but they might have been more exercised if it had been decided to relocate it to Thomond Park in Limerick. There was some talk of the headquarters of rugby - you know there is a perfectly good stadium in Limerick why don’t we relocate it there. They made enough noise about having to travel to the North side of the city for a few years, I don’t know what they, what rugby fans would have said about having to go to Limerick. So you can see these links to places, sometimes it’s the name, sometimes it’s the place, but it’s no accident where these sporting grounds build up. These grounds are embedded in the social, cultural and economic environment in which they are located. They remain as markers of how the city itself evolved.Speaking of the North side a familiar ground, the headquarters of the GAA. Working on Irish sporting heritage, a lot of people think Irish sporting heritage is just the GAA because it’s the Irish Sport, but it’s not of course, everything that takes place in Ireland is part of the Irish heritage. But this is a photo of Croke Park in 1948. Look Croke Park has seen several phases of development and alteration. It is an extraordinary venue. It’s Europe’s oldest modern stadium, it predates the Stade de France by several years. As well as being the first of its type, the building is probably the largest ever built in Dublin in terms of mass.But of course when Frank Dineen bought the ground in 1908 for £3,250 the site in Jones’s Road was very different. He made improvements to the pitch and added terracing, and the ground had already evolved by the time the GAA bought it off him in 1913 and called it Croke Memorial Park.But Croke Park is a very good example of the way in which a site can modernize without losing its sense of history. It has been renovated many times, most dramatically through the four phase development begun in the 1980s, which culminated in 2005 with the opening of the ‘new Hill 16’, that’s what it was called. Even those words give some idea of how successfully Croke Park has negotiated this transition. How much of the original rubble from Sackville Street remains on Hill 16? There can’t be very much. But it’s important to people that some of it’s there and it’s still on the official tour “This is made up of the rubble from Sackville Street”. No matter how unpopular the Catholic clergy becomes in Ireland and I was watching Sky News about how they couldn’t sell their 2,000 tickets to see the Pope. No matter how unpopular the Catholic Clergy is I can’t imagine how GAA fans would respond to the changing of the name Croke Park; say we don’t want a ground called for an archbishop. That sense of history is very, very important. Or how would people respond if Croke Park was to be moved somewhere else? The GAA knows very well that its place in Irish society is also connected to its place in Irish history. It is a core part of the GAA brand, which is not to diminish it, it’s also a core part of its culture. As with the national stadium, GAA clubs across the country use the naming of grounds and clubs as a way of remembering both historical and religious figures and William Murphy had that brilliant list of the names of clubs in the 1920s in the wake of the Rising and during the War of Independence and currently there’s Parnell Par and the Wild Geese, Thomas Davis and Round Tower, being some of the names that are used to connect GAA grounds and clubs very clearly to the broader history of the country.And that’s Croke Park today. I mean that’s quite, that’s quite a journey really. But there’s the new Nally stand so you keep the name.Think again of an aerial view of Dublin and some of the expansive areas in which sport has been played, they tell us about which groups had access to land in some ways in nineteenth century Ireland. We can see the ways in which formalized sport with its built facilities were first part of an elite leisure culture. And if we think in particular I suppose a good example of that is the Phoenix Park. The first recorded cricket match in Ireland took place in the Phoenix Park in 1792 for a wager of 500 guineas between the Garrison and “All Ireland”. The future Duke of Wellington, who was then the aide-de-camp to the Lord Lieutenant, is reputed to have participated on the Irish side. And with that kind of elite background nevertheless the Phoenix Park is now the most important multi-sports venue of Dublin. Despite the fact that when people tell the history of it and when you do the tours they’ll take you to the Zoo but they won’t take you to the sporting sites. Even though that’s how most people experience the Phoenix Park. So we have this great variety of things happening: motor racing, speed trials – in terms of the modern world coming to Ireland sport was one of the things that really did that. The Gordon Bennett motor race that was held in 1903 in Carlow, Kildare and Laois. They reckon there were about 300 cars in Ireland in 1903 and 350 cars came over on one boat to see the Gordon Bennett Motor Race. I mean imagine what that does to a society. And they had speed trials a lot in the Phoenix Park in the early 20th century and the motor racing in 1929 was the precursor of the Grand Prix and 100,000 people turned up in the Phoenix Park to see that. So the spectacle of sport and the memory, because we all remember the big sporting moments, I’d say people from Tipperary will be talking about last Sunday for a long time; but we remember those moments.Look at this, another space within Dublin that tells you about I suppose where an elite played at one point but now there’s more general access. Games had been prohibited in the college by Trinity’s seventeenth century statues, but to prevent students taking their exercise outside college walls, the authorities acceded to the demands for sporting facilities over the next 300 years and now it’s one of the key things that visitors notice about Dublin when they look over the wall on the 46a and see people playing cricket and they see the Pavilion. So it’s very much part of Dublin’s heritage and it’s history. The cricket ground was laid out there in 1842 and, just over ten years later, the football ground was also laid out in Trinity.Sports such as cricket and rugby, associated at the outset with English public schools and the middle classes, spread across Ireland at the end of the nineteenth century and we can see through this, not just the social networks of the landed gentry, the British army and railway lines, but also the way in which Irish society was becoming increasingly regulated, and the way it began to adopt sports that were more formalized. What we can see, at the end of the nineteenth century, is the increasing realization that regulating leisure practices benefits and facilitates regulation of society itself. And the GAA was part of that, it was in the game at a particularly important level.So, it is part philanthropy and part common sense that has some employers sponsor teams and, in the case of Guinness, this eventually led to the opening of Iveagh Grounds on the Crumlin Road in 1928. The Brewery had supported the establishment of the St James Gate Athletic and Cycling Union in 1905 but its activities had been limited by the lack of grounds. The Union petitioned the Brewery in the years following the First World War a Trust was formed and eventually the ground was opened by Rupert Guinness in 1928. And at the point at which it was opened it contained a football field, bowling green, grass courts and a pavilion with a grandstand. So you can see in many ways they are international sports, they have a local history, they are as local as Guinness and all the people who worked in the brewery and were part of that. And sports grounds develop out of lots of different reasons communities coming together, employers coming together, the patronage of the landed gentry, all of these different things and each one has a different story to tell.Just very quickly then to signal some of the cricket, tennis clubs, these aren’t as visible as the stadiums but they are part of the community and they show an incredible commitment on the part of people who participate in them. So you have Clontarf and Leinster and these change and evolve. I suppose that is the difficulty for me really, they change but we haven’t necessarily recorded it. You know they’ll say in club histories, it’ll say the Victorian Pavilion was knocked down due to dry rot in whatever year, and then we’ve got this brilliant…and there’s no photo of the Victorian Pavilion and I could weep really. Or somewhere like Herbert Park there’s some great examples of this horseshoe throwing area and the croquet and bowls and tennis, you know all in this part of South Dublin.Another building and Jimmy Magee apparently mentioned it earlier today, I don’t think I have a slide of it, no I don’t, sorry, The National Boxing Stadium. It tells it’s own story. Now boxing is an international sport and fist fighting, pugilism, was one of the most popular sports I suppose in Ireland in the eighteenth century. It was one of the first sports to have a written code. But by the nineteenth century it was seen as very much an unruly, it was difficult to control so the official view of it was that people who attended fistfights were participating in riotous assemblies. So it became quite difficult for it until the introduction of the Queensbury Rules in 1867. So it’s actually an interesting sport in terms of one that was seen as a working class sport, and the class issue is always there in sport but you know, that working class male aggression, it was a danger and then actually it was something that if it was controlled and put into productive use, could actually serve the society. So and we can see that very much then in Ireland, that shift and we see lots of Catholic Young Men’s Societies build boxing clubs and boxing halls. And then with the formation of the Free State boxing actually became quite a central feature as it was seen as a way of training the new police and army. And I suppose it still has…and Jimmy Magee, I saw him launch the Fighting Irish exhibition in Croke Park, you know Ireland has had more success in boxing than in any other sport and yet it isn’t seen as a mainstream sport, and probably isn’t given the recognition it deserves. Anyway with the formation of the Free State and this recognition that in order to be healthy and in order to maintain the strength of the State it was necessary to maintain the physicality of the police and the army, boxing had a particular focus.In 1936 it was decided to build this National Stadium and Frank Aiken who was the Minister of Defence as was the Police Commissioner so it has support at a very high level. Ground from Griffith Barracks was given over to it and it was opened in 1939. And what Jimmy Magee has said what is the most remarkable thing about it is that this building is the fact, that the Irish Amateur Boxing Association is the only amateur boxing association in the world to control, run and own its own National Arena and Stadium.So you can see you know, from the croquet club in Herbert Park, to the National Boxing Stadium on South Circular Road, the number of stories that that tells us about the city. And when they were building the National Stadium it explicitly said in The Irish Times give money because this is a poor person’s sport, so we need to have money. So there was always a recognition of those divisions of class within the sporting environment.Just then as a last example I’ll say something about a very commercial sport, I’m just throwing out some different kinds of sports that you might not necessarily think about whenever you think about Dublin’s heritage. Greyhound racing is a twentieth century invention. It grew in the 1920s and just spread like wildfire from North America, to Britain through Ireland. Flann O’Brien, writing of it in 1940, said that it ‘seemed to fill perfectly a void which (in the absence of horse-racing at night) had existed in the spiritual and intellectual consciousness of the people’. So that desperate need to be able to gamble in the evenings. But what Greyhound Racing had it was, it was very cheap to develop that’s why it became so popular because it didn’t need its own grounds. So you could put the gambling machines, or the gambling areas and the track around existing football grounds and that’s what they did. And at Shelbourne you’ll see that, you know, it’s seen as the headquarters of Greyhound Racing in Ireland. And it’s always been very commercially driven and now I suppose we can see that very much in the way Greyhound Stadiums have developed. Although there are still some that share tracks, the Galway Greyhound Track shares its grounds. So there are lots of different ways, so you can see also the Speedway that was quite a short lived but quite an important part of Shelbourne’s experience in Dublin.So we can see if we think of the Dalymount Parks, the Croke Parks, Shelbourne, the private clubs, the Phoenix Park, Trinity College, the Boxing Stadium there are hundreds of stories of Dublin’s heritage that really we are trying to collect and get as much information about as we can. And in turn these sites tell us something about the changes in social lives, economics, attitudes to health, and to leisure. So that the history of sport in Dublin is also the story of how the city and its people have grown and developed over time. Thank-you for listening to the Dublin City Public Libraries and Archive Podcast. To hear more, please subscribe on iTunes or SoundCloud. You can also visit our website - dublincitypubliclibraries.ie and follow us on Twitter and Facebook.
The following is a transcript of a talk by Hilary McDonagh on the history of Maids of the Mountain Hockey Club's and on some of the Maids who made it on and off the pitch. The talk was part of the Sport and the City Seminar held in Dublin City Library and Archive on 11th September, 2010. Listen to the lectureWelcome to the Dublin City Public Libraries and Archive Podcast. In this episode, 'The Maids Who Made it' Hilary McDonagh looks at the history of the Maids of the Mountain Hockey Club 1918-1999 and at some of the Maids who made it on and off the pitch. Recorded in front of a live audience at Dublin City Library and Archive, Pearse Street on 11 September 2010, as part of the Sport and the City Seminar.Ladies and Gentlemen - Good afternoon, Maids I should also say; it’s nice to see a few of you here.I would like to begin by thanking Dublin City Archives for inviting me here today to talk to you about the Maids of the Mountain Hockey Club. This club was founded in 1918 and after a very interesting and a very illustrious history; we merged with Three Rock Rovers HC in 1999. As Aideen said to mark the 81 year history of this very unique club, myself and another Maid, Órla McKeown, who is sitting in the audience down there along with a number of other Maids and a former Vice- President, we co-wrote the book entitled “The Lilac Years” (the name will become a little bit more obvious as my talk proceeds!). As I said Órla is also here today, so although I’m the one who drew the short straw and is standing up here talking, so any difficult questions you can put them that way!The structure of today’s talk will begin with a look at the start of the Club, the Maids who made it, the history, our achievements (on and off the pitch) as well as the other Maids who made it.... in other walks of life!When myself and Órla began researching the book, we were struck by the fondness that so many Maids looked back on their years with the Club. And we were also struck by the level of deep friendships that were made and continue, even to this day. There was definitely something very special about Maids Hockey Club.When we went to research the book we found that the Official records dated back to 1929 which we thought was actually very impressive. But since then; the book was published 10 years ago, since then we have actually unearthed the records going back right to 1918 so right to the start of the club. We are delighted that they are now being housed in the Dublin City Archives and we’ve been liaising with Ellen and they should be on show I think it’s next year they should be ready for all to see, which is great.So as I said Maid was established in 1918, and if we think of 1918 it was an era of real turmoil in Irish history. We had many young Irish men fighting in France, and indeed many of the early Maids had family members and friends who were actually caught up in this war. It was also only 2 years since the 1916 rising and the year that Sinn Féin won the big landslide General Election. So times were really changing...Now the founder of the Club seems to have been, certainly from the research, the prime mover was a woman called Hilda O’Reilly. She actually herself married a WWI veteran (Gerald Martin). Other names that are associated with the establishment of the club are Mary Martin (who was a sister-in-law of Hilda), a woman called Dorothy Avery (nee McCann), Evie O’Kelly, Mary Mahony, Vera McWeeney (nee Mahony), Dorothy O’Reilly (nee Martin), Nancy Barry (nee Pigot) and Marjorie Martin. The common theme was the link that these people had with Three Rock Rovers HC, as many were wives, sweethearts, sisters or children of Rover players. Hilda herself was born in 1898 and she was the youngest of eight children, and from what we can gather was a happy and optimistic sort of person who seems to have been well liked by most. Hockey was a very popular past time within her own family, and both her father and brothers playing the sport. And indeed, her brother went on to captain the Irish hockey team when it won the Triple Crown in the 1920’s. Hilda herself was a very talented hockey player and she went on to win many caps for her country as well as being given the Captaincy of the Irish Ladies Hockey team in the 1920’s. So I’d say that the O’Reilly parents would have been very proud of their children.Although the name of the Club has been varied in many ways – “Maids of the Mountain”, also known as “Hags of the Hill”, “Hoors of the Moores”, “the Bitches in the Ditches”, (I’m just quoting!) “the Tarts of the Town” and so on. The actual correct name originates from an operetta entitled “The Maid of the Mountains”, which was being performed at the Gaiety Theatre in Dublin in the August, of 1918. Now other shows that were running at that time were “Society’s Driftwood” and “Bought & Paid For”. But they were deemed not to be obviously appropriate! The operetta itself was written by the Englishman, Harold Fraser – Simson (1878-1944) and it’s a musical comedy in three acts. Very popular – because I’d say none of us have ever heard of it! The colours then chosen, as I said remember ‘The Lilac Years’, the colours chosen to represent this new club were a purple tunic with a mauve shirt, corresponding with the colours of the heather on the mountain.If you played hockey for Maids in the 1929/1930 season, subscriptions were £1-3s-0d, about approximately €1.40 in today’s terms. In 1965 the subscription was £2-15s-0d. After decimalisation the sub had only increased to £3.25 in the 1971/1972 season with a late fine payment of 25p. Things have changed a bit now.The Irish Ladies Hockey Union was founded in 1894, and it actually is the very first women’s hockey association established throughout the world. I know the hockey players here will remember but we hosted the 1994 Hockey World Cup and it was for the reason to celebrate the centenary of the Irish Ladies Hockey Union. By 1918, the sport of ladies hockey was fairly strong but there were a limited number of clubs in existence and they were mainly “closed”, for people who were either past pupils or employees. So with virtually no “open” clubs available we can only assume that Hilda, along with her friends, decided to establish their own clubs. In 1920, with the club having only completed two seasons, Maids won the treble of the Irish Senior Cup, the Leinster Senior Cup and the Leinster Senior League. That’s very impressive for a very new club. But it also shows how silly the other clubs, which were closed were for not having such wonderfully gifted players playing for them.This proved not to be once off and the club became a dominant player in Irish hockey over the next 15 years, winning Irish Senior Cups, Leinster Senior Cups and Leinster League. In 1923, the Club won the Irish Junior Cup, now known as the White Cup with their 2nd XI. So you can see that in a very short space of time the club had increased its playing membership.Now that [text] is quite small and I appreciate that you might not see all that but it was hard to include all the international Maids. Because members of the club achieved a lot of success at both international and interprovincial level with all the provinces represented. In old Irish Hockey we would have 6 provinces but I won’t go into that. A total of 32 Maids achieved international success with the honour of the top-capped player going to Ros Huet who won 22 caps between 1931-47, and then we have a Dorothy Lavery (1920-26) and Joan Shaw (1967-75) who both won 13, and a H. Wallis who won 10 caps between 1923-26.Now bearing in mind the links that Maids had with Three Rock Rovers, it is not surprising that the club’s first grounds were actually that of the grounds of Three Rock Rovers. They were located at Foxrock, near the Stillorgan station on the Harcourt Street Railway line. Those grounds had actually been given to Three Rock Rovers by Sir John Power of Power’s Distillers. In 1930, Three Rock Rovers moved to Londonbridge Road, the Headquarters of the Irish Hockey Union, down in Ringsend. Maids however remained in Foxrock until 1934, when the club submitted a written application to the Men’s Hockey Union for participation in the Templeogue grounds and pavilion scheme. It was a relative of a Maids member, a man called Mr. De Vere White, again a theatre connection, undertook to produce a play at the Peacock Theatre to raise the funds for the grounds guarantee. Maids was the first tenant club of the female part of the Templeogue grounds. Many happy years in Templeogue followed. A pavilion was made available for the use of the tenant clubs with a social area and a changing room. However it was only in the late 1950’s that showering facilities were provided for the women, and thanks for this development was due to the determination of one of the members Joan Matthews who later became Joan Blackmore. Upon joining, she was shocked to find that the showers were only available to the men. So she took her views to the next grounds meeting with very little success. So the following week, she marched, with soap and towel in hand, into the men’s dressing rooms to use their showers. Not surprisingly, the following week a shower had been installed in the women’s changing rooms. By the early 1980’s, Maids’ permanent home at the Templeogue grounds had been targeted by builders for development, some things never change and was finally sold during the 1985/86 season. Maids was homeless at that stage and they travelled around to hired pitches for both training and for matches. Part of the proceeds of the sale was divided between the three ladies tenant clubs. And a development of the Three Rock Rovers grounds at Grange Road gave Maids the opportunity to invest this money, together with the Leinster Ladies Hockey Union in the building of a second artificial pitch at Grange Road. The club moved to Grange Road under a licence agreement with Three Rock Rovers in 1988. Maids remained in Grange Road as licensees until a decision was taken in the spring of 1999 by Maids of the Mountain and Three Rock Rovers to merge their assets and become one club and the name of Maids was lost forever; not really though!When women started to play hockey in the last years of the nineteenth century, the activity was regarded as being somewhat outrageous. It was therefore important to avoid parental and society disapproval, so participating in hockey activities had to be carried out very discreetly. Hockey players wore a hat secured with a pin, a long sleeved blouse buttoned to the neck, a stiff linen collar, a loose flowing cravat type tie and a voluminous skirt long enough to conceal the ankles and high enough at the waist to tuck in the tie. No doubt they also played in stiff corsetry, elaborate petticoats and heavy woollen stockings. Their hair was worn in elaborate styles on the top of the head or back of the neck. When Maids HC was established in 1918, skirt lengths had started to rise to just above the ankle but otherwise the early players were attired much as described. We obviously don’t have a picture from the late 19th century unfortunately but that’s one of the players from the 1920 team so you can see the type of stuff they had to wear. God love them. By 1927 players were wearing loose fitting tunics, with pleats, which were cut just above the knee, no doubt encouraged by the upwardly creeping hemlines of the twenties.In 1936 the first pair of tights made their debut in Maids, courtesy of Doris Findlater, who has just turned 101, am I right? Still alive and kicking. While on tour with the Irish team to Philadelphia, Doris made the purchase of a pair of tights. She found they were a highly effective way to avoid what was termed the “smile” which was the gap between the top of the stockings and the bottom of the drawers - which was sometimes on view. For the rest of the Maids, they were forced to continue wearing the stockings until well into the 1950s.By 1959 the touring team to Llandudno had disposed of the ties, opened their collars casually and had shed their stockings or tights in favour of knee high socks. When socks became part of the official uniform, the colour chosen was that of lilac, to match the shirts. You can imagine lilac socks were not something that would be very easy to find. So white socks had to be purchased and then they were dyed the official colour. But the socks had to imported from Northern Ireland, and due to customs, could only be imported half dozen at a time. In the 1970’s short shirtsleeves became the norm. The tunic was finally abandoned in favour of the wrap skirt worn by hockey players today.So what about the Maids who made it... in other walks of life? They were many, but today time is limited so I’m only going to mention a small few.The first one is a woman named Vera Mahony later to become Vera McWeeney. She joined Maids in the 1920’s and rapidly made herself known in Irish hockey circles being selected to play for Leinster in 1927 for the first time. She went on to become an Irish International, gaining her first cap in 1932. Her playing days in Maids were accompanied by some of the greatest successes the Club has known in its history. She was twice Leinster President between 1948-49 and again in 1955-1956. She is the only person ever to hold that position twice.She made a unique contribution to Irish sport, firstly as a multi-discipline athlete – as well as representing Ireland in hockey, she also represented them in tennis, and in croquet and in squash; but also after her playing days she was particularly instrumental in bringing publicity to women’s involvement in sport through her reporting career. And I’m sure some people would remember her today. After her husband died, her husband Arthur died in 1958, he was a sports journalist, she started then to report on a free lance basis for the Irish Independent, later moving to the Irish Times and she reported on women’s hockey, she reported on women’s tennis, badminton and squash. Her name is actually commemorated in the Vera McWeeney Shield, which was presented by the Irish Times in 1981, just after her death to the Leinster Indoor Under 21 Interprovincial Tournament as a tribute to her contribution to hockey in Ireland. As a journalist she was always said very fair to up and coming players and if she ever had a criticism to make of their play, her comments were always finished in a very positive and constructive note.She was very professional in her approach she made sure to watch everything that she reported on. Former international tennis player colleagues described her coverage of Wimbledon during the 1970’s as brilliant. She also reported on all major tennis events in Fitzwilliam Lawn Tennis Club, then a bastion of male membership only. She is recalled fondly in Irish feminist circles for her no-nonsense approach to matters in the environs of Fitzwilliam. A report was reported after her death of an incident in Fitzwilliam when about to take a short cut through the men’s changing room to get to a match, she was stopped. She told the steward that she had to get through and if that bothered anybody the steward was to tell them that she had seen better elsewhere.When Vera died suddenly in January 1980, those who knew her would not have been surprised to hear that she died with the coming week’s sports fixtures marked in her diary.Uniquely among the Notable Maids, Edith Hudson never actually played hockey for Maids, her main interest lay in the umpiring area. She was Principal of Ling Physical Education College for many years; many of those graduates went on to join Maids. She was renowned for her professional approach and a very meticulous attention to detail and a scrupulous sense of fairness and integrity in all her dealings. After Ling closed in 1973 and all the Physical Education College moved to Limerick, she found herself without a Club and she was at that stage invited to join Maids. And when she did she immediately became involved in the Club’s umpiring. Although involved in Maids her main energy was in the wider field of Irish and Leinster hockey. She was a Grade A Umpire who examined aspiring umpires for their exams. She also travelled with both Irish and Leinster Touring Teams, represented Ireland at International Symposiums on Umpiring, she was a member of the FIH Rules Committee and was appointed a Judge at the FIH Intercontinental Tournament in 1983 in Kuala Lumpur, which I’m hoping that many remember it was a tournament that we actually won. She held the office of president, and I don’t think the Men’s hockey could actually say that - sorry. She held the office of President of ILHU from 1981 to 1982, having been Treasurer from 1945 to 1959. She also held the office of President of the Irish Umpires Association and was honoured with Honorary Life Membership of the Irish Ladies Hockey Union, the Leinster Ladies Hockey Union and the Irish Umpires Association; a very, very fine woman.But this is one of my favourites, it’s a woman called Muriel Gahan. And her inclusion in the selection of Maids, notable Maids, actually does not come from her hockey activities, we don’t really know how good she is, but she certainly played for Maids and you can find her in the records, but really it’s her non-hockey activities which you could fairly say that she had an enormous influence on the craft industry in Ireland. She herself was born in Donegal in 1897 and reared in Castlebar, Co. Mayo. Her father worked for the Congested District Board, and when he retired they moved to Dublin in the 1920’s and it was at that stage that she joined Maids.She joined the United Irishwomen in 1929 (which was later to become the Irish Countrywomen’s Association). One of her first major contributions to the movement was in the establishment of the Country Shop Restaurant and Country Workers in 1930. Again many of you probably remember The Country Shop, it was located at 23 St. Stephens Green, and was the meeting place for Maids Hockey Club until its closure in 1978. She was directly responsible for the establishment of the Country Markets Ltd, a co-operative formed jointly by the ICA and the Homespun Society, and she also was involved in the establishment of the Country Craftsmanship Scheme. She became the only female member of Ireland’s first Arts Council in 1952. In 1971 she set up the Crafts Council of Ireland.Throughout the years, Muriel was very involved with the Royal Dublin Society (RDS), and once again history was made when she became the first woman ever elected Vice President of the RDS. She was awarded an honorary doctorate from Trinity College Dublin in 1978. In her long career with the United Irishwomen and the ICA, Muriel Gahan was elected chairwoman of the National Executive on many occasions. It was through her contact with the Kellogg’s Foundation that a grant was actually given to the ICA for the establishment of their residential centre, Grianán. The Irish American Cultural Institute endowed an annual development grant in her name – The Muriel Gahan Scholarship – and it is awarded at the annual RDS Craft Competition during the RDS Horse Show.It won’t be surprising to know that she was known as “M.G.” to all her friends because it paraphrased her dynamic character. She died in 1995 at the age of 97.But nothing would be complete for Maids without Rita. Rita was always very easy to spot coming to Maids matches, because she invariably travelled in a pony and trap. She was a daughter of one of the founders of Three Rock Rovers Hockey Club, and she joined Maids in September 1941. Although a successful hockey and lacrosse player, gaining international recognition in both, it was actually as Chairperson of the Irish Country Markets Association, a position that she held for 14 years, that she was better known. It was Muriel Gahan who got her actually, who asked her to take on that role. She also served as President of the Irish Horticultural Society. When Maids merged with Three Rock Rovers it was fitting that Rita, given her deep connections to both Clubs, became its first female President in 2001.A total of 20 Maids achieved provincial and international success in a wide variety of other sports such as lacrosse, cricket, windsurfing, golf, tennis, Olympics, badminton, fencing, swimming, netball, croquet and squash.As I said at the outset, the level of respect and fondness for the club of Maids, even given the name was quite striking, both from within the Club itself but also from other Clubs. This is probably best illustrated by the poem that was penned for the Club by Ann Cox in 1982, the then Leinster Hockey President, and it goes as follows:We are the Maids of the MountainWe hide in the gores and the fenAnd someday we hope if God spares usTo capture some wild mountain menWe’ll teach them the art of good hockeyWe’ll take off their trousers and shirtsWe’ll put on some wigs and some make-upAnd dress them in blouses and skirts.And when we have won all before usWe’ll treat them to some mountain dewAnd help them relax in the heatherAs Maids of the Mountain should doThe archival material that has been lodged by Maids Hockey Club as I said is very impressive. However these archives are much more valuable than just recording an 81-year history. They also provide a rare insight into women in sport, it really helps to chart the socio-economic life in Ireland, the changing role of women in Irish society, and also the contributions made by so women to so many aspects of Irish life – these all were the Maids who Made it! Thank-you for listening to the Dublin City Public Libraries and Archive Podcast. To hear more, please subscribe on iTunes or SoundCloud. You can also visit our website - dublincitypubliclibraries.ie and follow us on Twitter and Facebook.
Transcript of a talk by Ciarán Priestley on the history of Bohemian Football Club, spanning the founding of the club in 1890, some of the club's influential players and matches and the how the history of one of Dublin's most influential clubs is connected with both the history of the city and the history of soccer in Ireland.
The following is a transcript of a talk by Dr Paul Rouse on the history of hurling and the vital role Dublin played in developing hurling as we know it. The talk was part of the Sport and the City Seminar held in Dublin City Library and Archive on 11th September, 2010.There have been few propagandists for hurling as committed as the Limerick GAA official, journalist and historian, Séamus Ó Ceallaigh. Year after year, he waxed lyrical in honour of a game with which he was besotted. In 1937, for example, he wrote:‘Hurling is indeed a game for the Gods. Hurling, which can claim to be the parent of every game played with a stick and ball, stands still unapproached as the greatest game ever devised for the diversion of men. Like the race that begot it, it is old, yet young, virile and fascinating, and though its origin dates away back in prehistoric eras, could Oisín come back again today from Tír na nÓg, he would find in an all-too-changed world, by Lee and Suir and Nore and Shannon, at least one familiar sight to gladden his heart.’Today, I would like to focus on a river which he doesn’t mention. Because more than what happened on the banks of the Lee or the Suir, the Nore or the Shannon, it was what happened on the banks of the River Liffey which most influenced the invention of the modern game of hurling. The heartlands of hurling are always portrayed as rural, not urban, but it is arguable that without Dublin there would be no modern game of hurling at all. To make that argument, I would like to look at three distinct moments in hurling history. The first relates to what happened in Trinity College Dublin in the 1870s and early 1880s; the second relates to Michael Cusack and his promotion of hurling before the GAA was founded; and the third relates to hurling in Dublin immediately after the founding of the GAA.From Hurley to HurlingHurling, famously, is not a modern game, or, at least not entirely a modern game. Its antiquity in Ireland stretches back centuries, into history and on still further into myth and legend. By the second half of the nineteenth century the game was under immense pressure. It never disappeared, but the frequency with which it was played was greatly diminished. This was the consequence of famine, emigration and cultural change. Amidst that cultural change was the emergence in Ireland of a new approach to playing sport. In the second half of the nineteenth century, the social and cultural life of towns across Britain and Ireland was transformed by the establishment of clubs to cater for men and women who wished to play sport. It proved an enduring social phenomenon which redefined how people passed the hours between work and sleep. This phenomenon gathered extraordinary momentum in the 1880s and 1890s, when many thousands of sports clubs were established. Some clubs catered for long-established sports such as cricket and golf; others catered for newly-codified versions of old games, such as rugby and soccer; and still more catered for newly-invented sports such as badminton and lawn tennis. These clubs were usually associated with a centralised governing body which regulated the manner in which a particular sport should be played.As with so much else in modern Irish sport, Trinity College was involved in changing the way in which hurling was organised in Ireland. It was at Trinity that the first rugby club in Ireland was established in 1854; at Trinity too that the first modern athletics meeting was staged in 1857. In general, there was a culture of organised sporting clubs for cricket, rowing, swimming, gymnastics and much more besides.Part of this sporting world was a game called ‘hurley’. It had been played by a club at the college at least since the late 1860s. Officially called the Dublin University Hurley Club, it published its first rules in the Handbook of Cricket in Ireland in 1870. The influence of those boys who had passed through English public schools on their way to Trinity College is evident. Initially, as the only club in Ireland, the Trinity boys resorted to such internal matches as ‘Smokers v Non-smokers’, and ‘The First Team v The Philosophical Society’.Amongst the players to have played the game was Edward Carson, the father of modern unionism. Carson’s involvement in the hurley club has led to several generations of myth. At their apparent peak these myths imagined that Carson had played Fitzgibbon Cup hurling for Trinity. Not to be outdone, Gerry Adams recently claimed that his hurling in Trinity meant that Edward Carson ‘was a Gael’.Hurley, through, was not hurling. The rules of the game, which include provisions for off-side, hitting off one side of the stick only, might be considered a forerunner to modern hockey, rather than to modern hurling. Through the 1870s the game was spread out of the university and into the city by Trinity graduates. Hurley never exploded onto the Dublin sporting scene rather its story is one of steady progress. It became an important part in the life of various schools in Dublin, including those of High School, Rathmines School, and King’s Hospital, where students and teachers played regular matches. Rugby clubs such as Lansdowne took on the game and clubs were also formed from workplaces such as the Royal Bank. The growth in the number of clubs led to the establishment of the Irish Hurley Union at Trinity College on 24 January 1879.In the early 1880s, the Hurley Union sought to draw its own rules closer to the game of hockey as played in England. The impact of these changes was to make the game of hurley progressively less physical and this seems to have led to a disaffection amongst certain players. Several of these players were instrumental in founding a new club: the Dublin Hurling Club. The plan was to develop a game that was more robust than hurley was considered to be.The first meeting of the club took place in the College of Surgeons on York Street on 30 December 1882 in the lecture room of Dr. Hugh Alexander Auchinleck. The meeting, it was recorded in the minutes, was ‘for the purpose of taking steps to re-establish the national game of hurling.’ A provisional committee of eight – included Auchinleck and, crucially, a certain Michael Cusack – was established to draw up the rules for the proposed club. At a meeting in Auchinleck’s room, five days later on 4 January 1883, the Dublin Hurling Club was formally established and a set of rules adopted. Auchinleck was elected president, and Cusack was chosen as his vice-president.With a few exceptions, the rules were largely the same as those which governed hurley. The great difference was to be in the equipment used. The Dublin Hurling Club resolved to replace the long, narrow sticks of hurley, with broader, shorter sticks. It was here that the first problems for the club arose. It proved impossible to get sticks suitable for hurling in Dublin, because, as Cusack wrote, ‘no hurling has been played in Dublin … within the memory of the oldest inhabitant.’ Eventually, it was necessary to order sticks from Fitzsimons’ Factory in the city but they had not arrived in time for the first planned practices which had to be postponed.The first practice finally took place on Thursday, 25 January 1883 and then, on three Saturdays during February 1883, the Dublin Hurling Club played matches amongst themselves in the Phoenix Park. Around twenty players turned up, most of whom were part of the established hurley clubs of the city. For the internal matches, Michael Cusack and Lloyd Christian picked two teams which played against each other. The games were well-contested and considered to be very enjoyable. Despite the apparent promise of the club, it disintegrated as suddenly as it had formed. Following the third internal match on Saturday 24 February 1883, the Dublin Hurling Club never played again. The club committee met once more, in mid-April, but the club was then wound-up, never to re-appear.The reason for the sudden demise of the Dublin Hurling Club was clear-cut. Following its establishment, hurley clubs had immediately sensed the threat of a rival organisation which would poach its players. They immediately launched a counter-attack through the press. The Irish Sportsman noted how those who played hurley had changed ‘the swiping game of the savage to a scientific recreation which may be indulged in by anyone without being in constant dread of having one’s brains dashed out by an adversary’s hurl.’ Michael Cusack responded by accusing hurley clubs of trying to smother hurling before it had arrived beyond a chrysalis state. The ensuing bitterness destroyed the prospects of the Dublin Hurling Club developing. In founding the Dublin Hurling Club, several members had spoken of the necessity to cultivate good relations with hurley clubs and had been at pains to stress they wished to avoid any hostility. Indeed, initially, several players had taken part in both hurling and hurley matches on the same weekend, hoping to combine the two games. Facing with confrontation between rival bodies, those players drifted away and the Dublin Hurling Club collapsed.Michael Cusack and the MetropolitansThe failure of the Dublin Hurling Club brought liberation for Michael Cusack. Cusack was an extraordinary character. From an impoverished background in Clare, he had constructed a career for himself as a schoolteacher in prestigious secondary schools such as Clongowes Wood, Blackrock College, and Kilkenny College. Within these schools he had developed a passion for sport which had seen him emerge as a champion athlete and which had also seen him develop a passion for cricket and rugby. By the time he had reached his mid-30s, Cusack was able to recall his involvement in ‘many a hard-fought match’. His passion for the game was obvious. He wrote once that it would help cricketers to pass away the dark days of winter, by dreaming of the wonderful six that they had hit in mid-summer, and of feeling pride at having walked to the crease, the forlorn hope of their parish, before saving the day with a memorable performance. He wrote of the advisability of setting up cricket clubs in every parish in Ireland. For Cusack this was not simply a matter of boys getting exercise to enhance their health – it was also a matter of ideology. He wrote in July 1882: ‘You may be certain that the boy who can play cricket well, will not, in after years, lose his head and get flurried in the face of danger.’If Cusack loved cricket in the summer, he also loved rugby in the winter. By the time Cusack began playing rugby in the 1870s, the game had finally begun to establish itself on a solid footing in Ireland. In October 1877, in imitation of the section of the school in which he had worked in Blackrock, he set up his own academy in Dublin to prepare students taking civil service and other public examinations. Sport was an essential part of the activities at his school. For the 1879-80 season, he founded the Cusack’s Academy Football Club and affiliated it to the Irish Rugby Football Union. The team played out of the Phoenix Park. Cusack was club secretary, trainer, as well as playing in the forwards, where he built a reputation as a powerful operator. Indeed, Cusack seems to have acquired something of a reputation for the black arts in his play, leading one journalist later to observe darkly: ‘Everybody knows what Cusack is in a scrummage.’ He also referred to himself as ‘a sterling lover of the game’.Following his involvement with the Dublin Hurling Club, however, he left all other sporting engagement behind him and became consumed with the idea of reviving hurling and was now determined to do it his own way. In early September 1883 he arranged for a handful of enthusiasts to join him on a Saturday afternoon in the Phoenix Park on ground beside the Wellington monument. He brought with him the spare hurleys left over from the Dublin Hurling Club. In the beginning there were just four of them – Cusack, L.C. Slevin from Armagh, and Paddy and Tom Molohan from Clare – hitting the ball around. The hurlers came back every Saturday afternoon for the rest of the autumn of 1883. Slowly, their numbers grew. Interested spectators – generally country people living in Dublin – gathered to watch what was happening. ‘They were told to fall in and slash away,’ Cusack later recalled. He used the newspaper column in he was then writing in the Shamrock newspaper to advertise the fact that hurling was now being played for two hours every Saturday afternoon. Men who worked in the commercial and composing sections of that newspaper were cajoled to come to the park and take part in the hurling.Cusack also persuaded (or worse) the students from his academy to join in the hurling. These students came from all across Ireland and were sufficient in number for Cusack to consider them as ‘the nucleus of a fairly good club’. By October 1883 he was sufficiently sure of them to establish the Cusack’s Academy Hurling Club. The hurlers continued to come to the Phoenix Park every Saturday, now with Cusack’s Academy lining up against whatever combination of others appeared for the 3pm start. Those others were an assorted bunch of countrymen and hurley players, men who came together, according to Cusack, ‘regardless of rank, or creed, or calling’. The logical step was for all the other hurlers to unite as a club. This they did at a meeting in Cusack’s Academy at 4 Gardiner Place on 5 December 1883 when the Metropolitan Hurling Club was formed. It was a momentous event. Michael Cusack was later in no doubt that this was the club ‘out of which the GAA sprang.’Some reports survive of the initial matches between the Cusack’s Academy hurlers and those of the Metropolitan Hurling Club. One report, written by Cusack, records a ‘gloriously enjoyable game’ played on 1 December 1883: ‘During the third and fourth quarters the hurling became so fast and furious, the goals were so threatened on the one hand and defended on the other, that spectators expected to be called on after each charge to help the disabled to Steeven’s Hospital.’ The Metropolitans continued to play with the students every Saturday without heed to the ‘blinding snow, or bruising hail, or the famishing sleet.’ By the spring of 1884 there were sometimes 50 hurlers on the field, the scene of which was captured by a cartoonist in the London-based, Illustrated Sporting and Dramatic News in March 1884. Less than six months after he had begun hurling in the Phoenix Park, Cusack could now look to the fact that there were two clubs in existent and a genuine interest in hurling. It was enough to suggest to him that it was time to expand his horizons.The opportunity for expansion came from Co. Galway. In the stretch of East Galway that bordered the River Shannon, hurling had never died. From Ballinasloe across to Loughrea and down to Portumna and Gort, hurling matches remained a regular feature of the social life of the people. Press reports of the revival of hurling in Dublin were noted in Galway and a leading hurler in the village of Killimor, Patrick Larkin, invited The Metropolitans down to play against his own team, which was considered to be the best in East Galway. Cusack accepted the challenge and the match was arranged for the Fair Green in the middle of Ballinasloe on Easter Monday, 13 April 1884. Two Ballinasloe businessmen commissioned a special silver trophy for presentation to the winners.The list of Metropolitans players to travel to Galway was chosen and published in the Dublin press on the week before the game. The players were instructed to be at Broadstone Station for the 9am train. They arrived in Ballinasloe shortly after 1pm and were met by cheers from the many locals who had turned out at the station in anticipation of their arrival. The Metropolitans were brought to the local Agricultural Hall where they were given refreshments and a place to change into their hurling clothes. The Killimor team had arrived by jaunting cars and long horse-drawn coaches. The local press had noted that a mere look at them would ‘give an assurance that their opponents from the ‘Big Smoke’ would have a hard nut to crack to win the cup.’ Their captain, F.W. Lynch, met Michael Cusack and the pair agreed a set of rules for the game. No wrestling was to be allowed; the match was to played across four half-hours and the winner would be the team which scored the greater number of goals in that time. A number of men were also appointed to act as linesmen and goal-umpires.A huge crowd had turned out for the match not least because advertisements in the Galway papers had heralded the arrival of ‘the Dublin champion club’. At 2.15pm the ball was thrown in to huge excitement and the 22 players on each team were soon bunched together attempting to drive the ball forwards. The play opened out after a while and the Killimor men quickly gained the upper-hand. They scored a goal as ‘cheer after cheer rent the air.’ Before they could score a second goal, Michael Cusack intervened. The play of the Galway men, he said, was ‘too rough’. His biggest complaint was that they ‘slashed in a reckless and savage manner.’As if to emphasise his point, Cusack then asked that the field be cleared so that The Metropolitans could play an exhibition match in order to demonstrate the rules of the game to the Killimor men. When this exhibition was complete, the Killimor men came back onto the field and played an exhibition of their own. An admittedly biased Western News journalist claimed that ‘to the keenest judge no material difference could be detected in the style of either team.’ Despite the wishes of several of his players to play out the match, Cusack refused. The decision was scorned by those who believed that Cusack had withdrawn so as to avoid seeing his team badly beaten. The Killimor team were then declared victorious. It was, wrote the Western News, a thoroughly deserved success, ‘as the physique and bearing of our own men was vastly superior.’As the day’s sport on the Fair Green continued with pony races and tug-of-war contests, the Killimor team set off for home. All along the way they were met by bonfires lit in celebration of their victory. By the time they had reached Killimor, the townspeople were out on the streets and bonfires blazed at every corner. A fife-and-drum band paraded the team through the town and speeches were made lauding the hurlers for the honour which they had brought to their home town. The Metropolitans returned to Dublin under something of a cloud, but the day was not without success for Michael Cusack. A letter to the Western News made a public plea for the nationwide revival of hurling, ‘a sport which we all love ... as a relic of a time that was the golden age of Ireland.’ Even before the trip to Ballinasloe at Easter 1884, it seems certain that Michael Cusack was planning the revival of hurling on a national scale. He continued to develop hurling in Dublin in the following months, helping to develop a third club in the city, the Dublin Workingmen’s hurling Club, based in Christchurch Place.The Early Years of the GAA in DublinAfter the GAA was founded in November 1884, it published its first rules for hurling in January 1885. Through February and early March 1885 clubs across the country experimented with the new hurling rules by playing matches amongst themselves. Clubs in areas where hurling had retained or regained a presence – Tipperary, Galway, Cork and Dublin – were the first into the field. Although it is impossible to be certain, it appears that the first hurling matches played under GAA rules between separate clubs took place on Sunday 22 March 1885. In Galway a team from the Meelick area (known as The Shannon District) played against a team from Lusmagh which was directly across the River Shannon in King’s County. On that same day, a match was played between Nenagh and Silvermines in Tipperary.There was difficulty in spreading a game which had been lost to so many areas of Ireland, however. Cusack hit upon the idea staging a major match in Dublin to capture the imagination of the national press. In October 1885 Cusack wrote in United Ireland of his plan to bring two teams of seasoned hurlers to Dublin – one from Tipperary, the other from Galway. The Nenagh club, led by Frank Moloney, began preparations to bring a representative team from the clubs across north Tipperary by holding a tournament from which the best players from the area would be chosen. Reacting to this, Cusack called on the men of Galway to send up a team of first-class hurlers to Dublin to play a challenge against them. By the end of December, he had his answer. Twelve hurling clubs from south Galway came together to play a series of matches in the town of Gort and, afterwards, they sent word to Cusack that they were ready to meet the North Tipperary challenge in late January or early February 1886.Cusack arranged for the game to be played in the Phoenix Park on Tuesday, 16 February 1886. It is not clear why the match was played on a Tuesday, but it was played in the Phoenix Park only because Cusack was unable to secure the use of Lansdowne Road or any other enclosed ground in the city. In advertising the game, he said its object was to show the citizens of Dublin what hurling was really like. It was a chance, he said, to see the most sublime game ever played, short of warfare. On the week of the match, the newspapers billed the game as the ‘Championship of Ireland’ and Michael Cusack afterwards declared it ‘the first great hurling match organised by the Gaelic Athletic Association.’The North Tipperary team had arrived by train to Broadstone train station at 5pm on the evening before the game. They went first to their lodgings on Marlborough Street, and then went to Dan Lowery’s Star of Erin theatre [check name] on Dame Street. At 9.30pm Cusack called for them at the theatre and brought them back to Broadstone station to meet the Galway men who were arriving on the 10pm train. The two teams exchanged cordial greetings and mutual admiration, before something of a disagreement arose over the ball. The Galway men viewed the ball used by the Tipperary men as being too big and too soft. They retired to the Clarence Hotel where they were staying. On the morning of the match, they made a ball which was smaller and harder, and headed to the Phoenix Park.The press reported that despite the damp, cold day, a very big crowd turned out, with ‘every class being represented’, and that ‘quite a large number of vehicles fringed the ground.’ The North Tipperary men wore green and orange striped jerseys, stockings and caps; the South Galway men wore white jerseys, corduroy knicks, grey stockings and green caps. The jerseys for the Galway team had been knitted for them by nuns in Gort at their knitting factory, while their knicks had been sewn by a local tailor, Packie Shaughnessy. It was decided that the Tipperary ball would be used for the first half and the Galway one for the second. When the two teams lined up in the middle of the field, they made an arch in the air with their hurleys and the hurlers let out a huge cheer. The ball was then thrown in by the referee. The clash of styles immediately became apparent. The Tipperary men sought to move the ball first-time by hitting it on the ground or in the air. The Galway preferred to dribble the ball forward on the ground in front of them. It was also clear that the Tipperary team was stronger and, for almost all the first half, they pinned the Galway men close to their own goal without managing to score. The highpoint of the match when one of the Tipperary hurlers doubled on a high ball which came his way through the air and drove it towards the Galway goal. No score resulted, but the spectators were lost in admiration. As it was, the only score of the game came when Martin Gleeson drove the ball into the Galway goal midway through the second half. It was considered by all that North Tipperary were the better team. In fact, it passed into folklore in North Tipperary that they were considerably superior to their rivals. Their goalkeeper on the day was Pat Gleeson from Gow and he was reported to have roared at his teammates: ‘For God’s sake, will ye let the ball come this way. I’m dying with the cowld.’Cusack was clearly relieved that the match had passed without a fight or a serious injury. He wrote that the rules of the GAA had been ‘observed with a scrupulousness which was almost religious’ and that the GAA had ‘passed triumphantly through the most critical ordeal of its existence.’ The journalist for the Dublin weekly sports newspaper called Sport, which up until that day had largely ignored the GAA, was not nearly as effusive. He praised the fine physique of both teams and overall deemed the match to be a ‘great success’. Nonetheless, he viewed the general standard of play as ‘crude and primitive’, and that there was ‘a regrettable absence of science’ in the match.Cusack was not interested in such barbs from those whom he described in his match report as ‘the haters and traducers of our race.’ He was buoyant at the success of the match and wrote that the championship of Ireland now rested with the North Tipperary team and that any club which wished to wrest it from them should send a challenge to Frank Moloney, Castle Hotel, Nenagh, Co. Tipperary. For the team from South Galway there was nothing but recriminations. There had been local dissatisfaction at the team selected to travel to Dublin and in the days before the match several key players had withdrawn. Local tradition in Gort has it that those hurlers who had travelled now preferred not to take the train home and face their public. Others offer a more mundane explanation. Many of the players had missed the train home because they had been taken by horse-and-car to the wrong station in Dublin.On top of staging a match in Dublin, Cusack and the Metropolitan hurlers worked to foster the game outside the city. The Metropolitans (in tandem with the hurlers of other newly-formed Dublin clubs) also began to travel outside of Dublin to play exhibition matches. Along with hurlers from the Faughs and Dunleary clubs, they travelled by train to Dundalk and played matches there. The first time they travelled, the game was abandoned after ten minutes, with the crowd rushing onto the field in ignorance of the rules. Time and persistence brought better fortune. In early 1887 a hurling club was established in Dundalk and another team of hurlers from various Dublin clubs went up and played a match. They lauded the patriotism of the Dundalk men in their efforts for hurling and offered advice on how to progress. P.P. Sutton, from the Dublin Metropolitans, noted that their faults were the same as those of inexperienced hurlers everywhere: stopping the ball with their feet and then scraping it forward along the crowd, instead of hitting it a hard, quick blow. He offered a coaching lesson: ‘Get a few balls and puck them about indiscriminately. Strike both left and right as hard and as fast as possible, and let no-one stop the ball with his feet.’In 1887, too, the Dublin county board was the first in the country to successfully stage a county championships for its clubs. Fittingly, it was won by the Metropolitans and first championship did much to promote the growth of hurling in Dublin through 1887. New clubs were formed in various parts of the city. These included Raparees hurling club from the Lower Bridge Street area, the Celtic hurling club from around Cork Street, Erin’s Hope from the Marlborough Street teacher training college and Brian Boru’s from Clontarf. Despite hurling invariably being overshadowed by Gaelic football, it gained a foothold in the city which it never again lost.And all told, such was the importance of Dublin in taking the ancient game of hurling and squeezing it onto a modern playing field that it might be considered that Dublin was the crucible of the modern game of hurling. While Thurles was the formal birthplace of the GAA, the idea of the association was forged on the grass of the Phoenix Park in Dublin. It was there, after all, that Michael Cusack had fixed the revival of hurling even before he founded the GAA
The following is a transcript of Dublin City Public Libraries 1884-2009: 125 years of service to the community, a talk to commemorate 125 years of Public Library Service in Dublin City by Deirdre Ellis-King, Dublin City Librarian as part of Local History Day 26th September, 2009.
The following is a transcript of a talk to coincide with the launch of the publication, Early Modern Dubliners, by Dr Maighread Ní Mhurchadha on 28th August, 2008.
The following is a transcript of Rediscovering Emmet's Dublin through the Collections of Dublin City Libraries, the 8th Annual Emmet and Devlin Spring Lecture by Dr Máire Kennedy, at Dublin City Library and Archive on Monday 15th March 2010.
The following is a transcript of Commodious temples: Catholic church building in nineteenth-century Dublin, the thirteenth Sir John T. Gilbert Commemorative Lecture by Brendan Grimes, at Dublin City Library and Archive on 21st January 2010.
The following is a transcript of 'River, rivalry and revolt: history of the built fabric of Dublin City', the eleventh Sir John T. Gilbert Commemorative Lecture by Dr Christine Casey , at Dublin City Library and Archive on 23rd January 2008.
The following is a transcript of the tenth Sir John T. Gilbert Commemorative Lecture by Michael Corcoran, at Dublin City Library and Archive on 23 January 2007. AudioWelcome to the Dublin City Public Libraries and Archive Podcast. In this episode, "Through streets broad and narrow", Michael Corcoran discusses the history of Dublin’s trams, the men who drove them and how they intersected with events in Dublin's history such as the 1913 Lockout and the 1916 Rising. The tenth annual Sir John T. Gilbert Commemorative Lecture, was recorded in front of a live audience at Dublin City Library and Archive, Pearse Street on the 23rd of January 2007.In the 19th century, the early 19th century, getting around cities became an increasing problem as the population grew and as the only form of transport was horse-drawn vehicles of one sort or another. In France the 18-teens there appeared the bus. It had the title ‘Omnibus’ on the side which meant for all and the idea was imported into London in 1829 and reached Dublin in 1832 and unfortunately ran foul of the jarveys and it was some years before a proper bus service or a regular bus service was introduced in Dublin. Now, in the meantime, it had to be recognised that horses weren’t able to deal very well with pulling solid-tyred or iron-tyred vehicles over the bad roads at the time and people got rattled to bits and in 1832 in New York an Irish coach builder named John Stephenson invented the tram. This was a vehicle on rails which were laid in the street and which could carry far more passengers than the bus and it was also of course far smoother and easier for the horse to pull. And I have here Stephenson’s tram, the first one ever. Now it took some time for the idea to cross to Europe. It did in the 1850s and in the meantime the double deck bus had been invented in London and they put a ladder on the back of the vehicle and a few boxes on the top and people sat up there and by the time that the tram arrived in Britain and Ireland it had come in double deck form. And the first trams were introduced in Dublin in 1872. Now there had been a previous attempt in 1867 but this failed and on the 1st of February 1872 Dublin’s first trams ran between College Green and Rathgar. The line was afterwards extended both ways to Nelson Pillar and to Terenure – the present number 15 bus route. The trams, as you can see, were open top double deckers and they had the railings along the top deck which soon had to be covered with boards because when women wanted to travel on the first trams it was decided that their ankles couldn’t be seen (laughter) and there were panels erected along the sides of the trams which were called decency boards (laughter) and of course they afterwards became the receptacle for advertisements.Now the Dublin Tramways Company opened several routes over the next few months from the first one in February. They had one on the south quays called The Three Stations route which ran from King’s Bridge, now Heuston Station, down through the centre of the city, up D’Olier Street and out by what’s now Pearse Street and Westland Row and went up to Harcourt Street Station. They also opened a line to Sandymount which went by Bath Avenue, it went out as far as Ballsbridge, turned down at Haddington Road to Bath Avenue and went to Sandymount. They opened one to Clontarf. The opened another one to Donnybrook and their final line in Dublin at that time was on the North Quays, that opened in 1874. Now, there were a number of routes that they had proposed to do, but they didn’t do them and these were exploited by two other companies. In 1875 the North Dublin Street Tramways Company came into existence and they opened lines to Drumcondra, to Phoenix Park, to Glasnevin. They opened a very unusual line from College Green via Dame Street and Capel Street, Dorset Street to Drumcondra and they also went out of their territory really and they opened a line in 1878 which ran up to Inchicore from College Green. Nelson Pillar became the hub of the tramway system but College Green was always a very important secondary terminus and it was also used by the third company that appeared on the scene just after that and opened lines in 1879 to Harold’s Cross and on from Harold’s Cross to Rathfarnham. They opened a line to Palmerston Park which went up through Ranelagh and they also opened a branch off that later which went from Ranelagh to Clonskeagh. Now this was a rather small company.The companies were all relatively successful but they were all on a comparatively small scale and in 1881 the three of them amalgamated to form the Dublin United Tramways Company Limited. Now the Dublin United Tramways Company through the Central brought in one of the most powerful figures in the history of the tramways, William Martin Murphy. Born in County Cork in 1845, he was partly trained as an Architect when he had to give up his studies to take over the business at home, building business, on his father’s death and he became very, very much involved in tramways and railways after that. One of the things about William Martin Murphy that he doesn’t get any credit for was the fact that he was a very early IDA man. He decided that he would import into this country nothing that could be made within it and in 1882 he established the Spa Road Works in Inchicore to build trams for the company and most of Dublin’s trams after that were built in Spa Road. From 1905 Spa Road only supplied the trams and they started building buses there in 1925 and it remained as a bus factory right after CIE sold it to Van Hools in 1973 until 1978, provided great employment and established a wonderful reputation for engineering excellence.Now when the Dublin United Tramways Company was formed one other problem was to integrate the three systems they had taken over. They managed to do this and oddly enough over the next few years apart from opening connections between the previous three systems the only new route that they opened was to Dolphin’s Barn. It branched off from the line to Rathfarnham at the top of Camden Street and went as far as Dolphin’s Barn and in the 1880s the company had about 33 miles of tramway route and they had about ... they nominally had 186 trams but the actual operational number was about 162. Now they had a huge stud of horses. It was reckoned that you needed 10 horses for each tram. There were two horses on a team and they were replaced several times during the day and you had to have a spare horse as well in case any of the horses fell sick and you also had to have trace horses at the bottom of the steep hills to give the ones that were on the tram an extra pull up these hills. And the horses were actually treated better than the men. They had a veterinary surgeon to look after them. Staff could be taken on and dismissed. There were rule books in all the companies which emphasised the men’s duties and the company’s rights but there was never any talk of the men having any rights at all. They worked very long hours and their families usually brought their meals down to them at the termini and they had to eat as best they could during the day. So life on the trams was very tough. They were also expected to ... the trams trotted along at about 5, perhaps 6, miles an hour and the conductor was expected to call out to people walking ‘Car Sir?’ or ‘Car Madam?’ and try to persuade them to come on the tram (laughter) and it was ... now the penny fare resulted in a lot of extra people. At first the fares were rather high but the penny fare was introduced in 1884, applied on most routes, and even in the suburbs, and of course the trams went out across the canals into the townships that were formed at that time. On the south side you had Rathmines and Pembroke and on the north side you had Clontarf and Drumcondra and on the west you had New Kilmainham and the trams served these places but the penny fare was sacrosanct in Dublin from 1884 right through to 1949 and there was a terrible row when they increased it in 1949.The company built new trams progressively at Inchicore but they had taken over a rather mixed bag from the other companies. For instance the North Dublin Street Tramways had some single deckers of which you see one here and these were one man operated, they only carried 18 to 20 passengers. You paid the driver as you got in, as you do today, and very similarly the money went into a glass box so the driver didn’t touch the fare at all and it persuaded him to be honest. George Shillibeer who had introduced buses to London in 1829 reckoned that in the early years of the trams and buses before they had bell punches and properly issued tickets about 10% of the money went into the pockets of the conductors instead of coming into the companies. But anyway that’s long in the past. Now they also had what you might call the Dublin United Tramways Company standard tram, built from 1882 onwards in Spa Road, it had a knifeboard seat on the top deck where the passengers sat back to back and it had long seats inside the windows – longitudinal seating on the lower deck – and there was a very large number of these trams built and some of them even survived into the electric era, rebuilt as electric trams. This particular one as photographed I believe in 1892 in Baggot Street and you’ll also notice the three balls of the pawnbroker shop above the horses.Now steam was being used on tramways in the north of England particularly and in a few other places and there were two very important steam tramways that opened in the 1880s. In 1883 a narrow gauge line was built from Cunningham Road. There was a Dublin tramways terminus at the Phoenix Park entrance on Parkgate Street and just from opposite where Cunningham Road Garage is now a narrow gauge tram went to Lucan steam hauled two or three trailers and so on and it was fairly successful and it lasted in that form until 1897. I’ll be going back to it a little bit later. On the south side of the city you had the Dublin and Blessington which ran from the Tramway Company’s terminus at Terenure via Templeogue to Blessington, nearly 19 miles, and that was extended in 1895 to Poulaphouca which was on the premier tourist attractions in the Dublin area at the time. Now this line worked with double deck tram, double deck trailers, and they had a roof which was to prevent the sparks and the cinders from the engine from descending on the passengers. And you can see the engine in this picture has a very tall chimney to take the smoke from the exhaust above the level of the carriages. Now that was so much for independent lines outside the city but there was an even more important group of tramways on the south east side. From the junction of Northumberland Road and Haddington Road where the Dublin trams turned off for Sandymount there was the terminus of the Dublin Southern Districts Company. This company set up in 1879 and they built two lines. First of all they built one from what was then Kingstown Town Hall which came up Marine Road, turned left and went to Dalkey. And unlike the Dublin Tramways which were on the 5ft 3 gauge, the same gauge as the railways, this was narrow gauge. They opened a second line later in the same year from Haddington Road to Blackrock. There was a gap between them and the Dublin South Eastern Railway were cleaning up because you could get to Dun Laoghaire or Kingstown or to Bray on the train without having to change whereas if you wanted to go to Dalkey or to Kingstown you had to walk some of the distance between Blackrock and Kingstown. But in 1885 another company, the Blackrock and Kingstown, they filled this gap with another tramway but you had to go on a Dublin United Tram to Haddington Road, a Dublin Southern District to Blackrock, Blackrock and Kingstown to Kingstown and then another Dublin Southern District to Dalkey. It took you 2½ hours and needless to say that wasn’t very popular with people. Now the Dublin United were interested in electric tramways. The first ever long electric tramway in the world opened in Ireland between the Giants Causeway and Portrush in 1883 and they studied this very deeply. The whole problem was current collection which was by a side rail on this and if you sat on the rail you could be electrocuted and there was animals killed and all that sort of thing. And in 1887 a man called Frank Sprague he perfected the overhead trolley system in Virginia in the United States and that made electric tramways in the cities a very practical job or a very practicable job I should say and the first electric tramway in these islands in an urban setting was in Blackpool in 1885 and there was another one in Leeds in 1891.The Blackrock and Kingstown was bought out by the Imperial Tramways of Bristol who also owned the Dublin Southern Districts Company and they appointed a man named Clifton Robinson as manager in 1892. A trained engineer, a great business man, he took it in hand and he electrified the whole line from Haddington Road to Dalkey. He built a depot in Shelbourne Road and a power station where Ballsbridge Motors are now. The power plant there was capable of driving 50 trams weighing 10 tonnes each at 8 miles an hour which at that time was a great achievement and as I say he opened for business on the 16th May 1896.At that time you had the horse tram still trotting around in Dublin. The Corporation did everything they could to stop the Dublin United Company from bringing in electrics and the result was that you had that sort of a mess in O’Connell Street or what was then Sackville Street into the 1890s. I reckon that picture was taken in 1892. That incidentally is a map of the Dublin tramways in the horse days as owned by the different companies, not very clear but if anybody wants to get a look at it it’s outside I think on the exhibition stand. Now here’s Clifton Robinson on his tram on the 16th May 1896 outside the Town Hall in what was then Kingstown. The platform party have all been identified in photographs, as has the conductor on that tram, somebody took the trouble to write the names of these people underneath, and the man on the top deck is Davy Stephens who was a noted character in Dun Laoghaire. Each of these trams hauled a trailer and there was an equal number of trams and trailers, 30 and 30. A very serious accident occurred in Merrion Square. When the line was ... sorry I should have said the line could not be extended into the city, the Corporation objected to overhead wires. Now the Dublin United Company were very anxious to electrify their systems but they were told that this couldn’t be done and at that time the canals and the circular roads formed a lot of the city boundary but on the north side it was extended out to take in Fairview and the city boundary was actually at Annesley Bridge and the route to Dollymount was electrified in as far as Annesley Bridge in 1897. You have here an electric tram number 31 which is about to go back to Clontarf and on the left hand side there’s a horse tram and another electric beyond it and outside the wall where Fairview Park is now there was an appalling slob lands which had been created when the railway embankment was built in 1844 and the sewage of Drumcondra and all sorts of other horrible things including the outfall from a vitriol factory in Poplar Row went into that place. It was brought back on each incoming tide and it was a fairly messy place. But anyway that’s as far as the trams got in 1897.The differences with the Corporation were overcome and on the 19th of March 1898 the first electric tram reached Nelson Pillar but it came in from the north side and it was 4 months later before the first one was extended in from the south side. In the meantime William Martin Murphy had moved very smartly to knock out any possibility of competition with the Dublin Southern District, he bought them out, and thus was formed the Dublin United Tramways Company 1896 Limited. And he immediately set about trying to electrify the whole system. Clontarf was driven by a power station in where the bus garage is now in Clontarf. It was only capable of driving 25 trams so with the combined forces of Ballsbridge and Clontarf you couldn’t have more than 75 electric trams running in the city but when he started the electrification he was also starting to build a vast power station at Ringsend and in the meantime they put on extra trams and at one time I reckon that the capacity of 75 that Ballsbridge and Clontarf could drive was actually increased to about 125 which was a wonderful achievement and it shows how well these power stations were constructed. Anyway as I say the first electrics reached the pillar in 1898 and from then on the Dublin United Tramways Company they just went from strength to strength.The Dublin and Lucan steam tram which I told you about they decided the future lay in electricity as well and they electrified their line from Conyngham Road to Lucan in 1900 and they rebuilt the whole lot to a gauge of 3ft 6. Now the Dublin Tramways were 5ft 3, they stuck to 3ft 6, and the main reason was they were afraid that the Dublin United Tramways would try to take them over and they didn’t want that, they wanted to remain an independent company. It was the first of three new tramway companies to start operating in that year. You also had the Clontarf and Hill of Howth. From the Terminus of the Dublin United Tramways Line at Dollymount a line was built to the east pier in Howth along the line of James Larkin Road and along by Kilbarrack and so on out to Howth, the coast road, and this line opened in July 1900 and although it was a separate company the trams were actually numbered in the DUCT fleet and the DUCT did a lot of work. There was a change of staff at first at Dollymount which was known as the Junction but later on the DUCT took over the running of the line and they ran it with their own staff and it was very successful. And you have a picture here of a Dublin Howth tram going under the over bridge at Howth which carried the third major electric tramway and the only other one to open in Dublin in 1901 which was the Great Northern Railway’s Hill of Howth. Sutton and Howth are only 2 miles apart on the railway but this line was opened in two stages in 1901 to serve the Hill which at the time was very, very important tourist wise and also for insipient suburban development.For some reason that I don’t know nobody has ever satisfactorily explained it, a picture of two Howth trams, two Hill of Howth trams, in the very early years decorated for some purpose and with a Japanese flag on the front of the top deck, we don’t know why. And incidentally it also shows the very elaborate uniforms that were worn by tramway men at the time. The drivers who had worked on the horse trams were all trained to drive electric trams in Dublin and their status went up and now they were called motor men instead of drivers and it was a very important social distinction at the time because the driver of a horse vehicle was regarded as unskilled whereas the driver of an electric tram was a highly skilled operative so that was it.Now over the next few years the Tramway Company as their business increased and their lines grew they had a great problem with keeping up a supply of new trams because the tram builders in England and their own works couldn’t cope with everything so a large number of horse trams were converted. About 80 horse trams were converted to electric. You’ll see them in a lot of old photographs and you’ll always know them by the seven windows on the side. It’s a great way incidentally of dating photographs, this type of thing. That particular one was photographed in Rathfarnham and it’s going to go back to Drumcondra over the Harold’s Cross line. Once again the people in the picture are very interesting. You have the passenger sitting on the step. You have the motor man and the conductor and the little chap on the left is known as the ticket picker, the ticket boy. They employed boys to pick up the tickets and clean the trams at the termini and these afterwards became conductors and often drivers and they were a very important feature of the Dublin trams right up to the Second World War.This is one of the converted trailers following an accident that I mentioned to you what happened in 1898 was, November 1898, a tram was coming in from Dalkey towing a trailer and there was a married couple sitting on the top deck of the tram and they got off at Holles Street and the wife went down the stairs fairly quickly. The husband was a little bit slow getting down and he tripped on the stairs and he fell between the motor tram and the trailer and he was killed and as a result of that the use of trailers was banned and the trailers were all rebuilt as motor trams as this one here, photographed at Whitehall terminus.Now after they’d electrified the existing lanes the tramway company extended a lot of the services and they built some new lines. They extended the Dolphin’s Barn line to Rialto in 1905. They built what was known as the Whitehall extension from Drumcondra Bridge to where the Garda station is now in Whitehall in 1903. They built a new line through Baggot Street in 1906 and there were various other things like that. They also introduced two brand new lines. Sandymount was served via Bath Avenue and Haddington Road until 1900 but in 1900 they built a new line which came through Pearse Street and another thing they did was a very important line that ran from Ballybough to Parkgate Street via Parnell Street. Now this was in a way sort of a sop to Clifton Robinson who had threatened to extend the Dublin Southern District system into town and he said that he would serve all the areas because the Dublin United Tramways Company’s clientele were largely middle class. They had no trams in the Liberties or the North Wall or places like that where poor people lived whereas in Belfast and in other cities that have used simple systems the trams served everybody and they were regarded as a social service rather than a money making thing, to a great extent. And as I say a photograph taken at Whitehall, probably around 1910, and once again the crew are very prominent. Incidentally the driver in that photograph appears in a lot of other pictures of trams and it has been said that the reason he was photographed so often was that he had a striking resemblance to King Edward the VII. (laughter)At the Dartry route which was opened in 1905 it was a branch off the Terenure line from Rathmines and this photograph shows again the very interesting summer gear of the conductor and the inspector who wore straw boater hats in the summer. The driver always wore a cabbie because it was less inclined to blow off his head and he was out on the front platform where he was exposed to the weather. The lady on the stairs is very possibly a member of the Murphy family because they lived up beside the tramway terminus in Dartry and it’s been said that she may have been a member of the family. Now the other thing I’d like to point out in this particular picture is the wonderful array of ads that appear on the trams, Millar & Beatty is there. Donnelly’s advertised on the trams and indeed on the buses for many years afterwards and a study of the advertisements is very often a most interesting exercise in social history as you will see a little bit later on. These ads here are all enamelled. They were done by the Dublin Japan Works in Jervis Street, they were beautiful works of art in their own right and today they’re worth a fortune if you can get your hands on one of them.Now the other development was to vestibule the tram, in other words to put a windscreen around the driver and extend the top deck out over it. Now this is an exceptional tram because this was built at Spa Road in 1901 for the exclusive use of the directors and their guests. The Dublin Tram Company was very, very much a consultancy as well as an operating company. They advised people in other cities on how to build up their tramway systems and so on and they had this special tram built which brought the directors on their tours of inspection and also brought the visiting dignitaries around. A very interesting thing about it was as originally built it had decency boards but it had a magnificent wrought iron railings behind that board and the boards were taken off afterwards to show the glory of the iron work. This tram had a wine cabinet inside. It had beautiful cluster lamps, curtains on the windows and anything that could be done well was done well in it. It’s regarded as being to transport what the custom house was or is to architecture.The next stage in the development of the Dublin tram was to try and put a top cover on it because on a wet day you got the full benefit of whatever was blowing and this was one of the original open fronted ones, rebuilt with windscreens with a primitive cover on the top deck and probably the most important feature of this, you’ll notice the shamrock, in 1903 the Dublin United Tramways Company introduced a system of symbols for the different routes. Now it was partly a style thing and it was partly because of the high incidence of illiteracy at the time, there were a lot of people who just couldn’t read where the tram was going. The Dalkey route had a shamrock, there was various things, in a couple of moments a thing will turn up that will show you what the symbols were and the symbols were accompanied at night ... you’ll notice that above the destination box below the symbol there are two lights, these were coloured lights and the colour code at night told you what route the tram was on. This is referred to in Ulysses where he describes a tram in Amien Street as a dragon or something like that, typical Joycean hyperbole but it’s there anyway, he does refer to the symbols.So the top cover tram as I say appeared in 1904 and here you have the symbols from a 1913 timetable. There are a couple of routes there that didn’t survive. Now you had the main routes. There were three very big cross city routes: Drumcondra to Rathfarnham, Phoenix Park to Donnybrook and Glasnevin to Dolphin’s Barn, later Rialto – they carried most of the city traffic but the Drumcondra one was regarded as the backbone of the city system which carried more passengers than any of the others. It was a really heavily traversed route and there are stories of people who wanted to go home, say a man working in George’s Street and he wanted to go home to Harold’s Cross in the evening, he couldn’t get on a tram going out so he took a tram down to the Pillar where he could more easily get one that was going out the full way you know that was how heavy the traffic was on the trams, it was unbelievable.There’s one route there that ... or two routes I should say that deserve more explanation, so down at the bottom almost, College Green and Whitehall, which has the inverted heart, the white heart, and that was a route that didn’t survive for reasons I’ll explain in a couple of minutes. And you’ll notice that there are two that have or three that have white squares and that was very simple because those routes didn’t cross each other at any time. One of them was the Hatch Street Route. Another was O’Connell Bridge to the Park and the third was Kenilworth Road and Lansdowne Road. Now this particular route which started at Ballsbridge went right over to Kenilworth Square and it crossed the services of the lines of about eight other routes on its way, it was known as the cross tram for many, many years. And the only other thing from that period I’d mention is that when the Bath Avenue line was electrified in January 1901 on account of the low bridge at Bath Avenue they couldn’t operate double deckers. They could operate double deck horse trams which sat lower on their trucks but double deck electrics were out of the question and it was the only route in Dublin as a result that had single deck trams. And incidentally the last horse tram on the 13th of January 1901 knocked down what was known as a gentleman’s gentleman, probably a butler or somebody like that, and the driver and the conductor of the tram were charged with injuring him but luckily for them there was a police inspector on board who saw what happened and they were exonerated at the hearing of the court. So that was the very early days of the electric system.Now I have a couple of pictures here that will really intrigue you, O’Connell Street, I reckon the date is 1899 or 1900, you’re standing with your back to the portico of the GPO, you’re looking up the street, Parnell hasn’t arrived yet, he didn’t come until 1908. You have a variety of trams and the most important feature of that picture is the building there that you can see past the tram standard with the turret on it, that was the head office of the Dublin United Tramways Company which unfortunately was totally destroyed in the Civil War in 1922 and with it went a vast archive of all sorts of things including a huge collection of photographs from the earlier days. This is a picture from the same era taken looking across O’Connell Bridge and in this picture, which was taken to show how effective the overhead was and how unobtrusive it was, it was taken by the people who erected it, you also had the beautiful arc lamp standards that were erected in 1903 and in the background you have the DBC, the Dublin Bread Company’s building, which was only opened in 1899 and was destroyed in 1916. This is a slightly later picture taken again from the portico of the GPO, you’re looking over past the Pillar, now there’s wonderful activity in this and one of the things you’ll notice is there’s a hand cart over there beside the Dalkey tram and this was from the Parcels Express. From 1883 on you could hand in a parcel at any terminus of the Tramway Company or at the offices to go to any of the outer places that they served and for tuppence or thruppence the parcel would be taken, you could collect it at the other end. That was at a time when there was very, very little commercially available transport in Dublin. You had a lot of people in the business we’ll say of moving furniture, stuff like that, but you didn’t have anybody who provided a parcel service unlike today where you’ve all the couriers.The top cover tram that I showed you a few minutes ago that developed on the Dalkey line into massive eight wheelers which were able to carry 71 seated passengers plus a number standing and there was a large fleet of these built before the First World War from 1906 up to about 1912/1913. They were known as windjammers for various reasons and the Dalkey windjammer became a very famous title of this particular type of tram and they operated an express service. Now in the mornings on the Howth line in 1903 and in the evenings you had express trams that overtook ordinary trams at Dollymount and at Fairview and got you into the city quicker and incidentally in 1954 a man who travelled on these very frequently he said that the normal time allowed for the nine miles from Nelson Pillar to Howth was 50 minutes, 40 minutes was the time allowed for the express and he said he timed one one day and it went from Nelson Pillar to Howth in 35 minutes. Now even driving a car today that would be quite a feat but it was the way that things were done. But if that was good the expresses on the Dalkey line were something else again, they ran morning and evening, there were sidings and points put in at Ballsbridge and Booterstown and Blackrock to enable the expresses to overtake the ordinary trams and the expresses travelled non-stop from Merrion Square to Blackrock. Now you know the mind boggles today thinking of doing that but they did and they were an incredible service and there were trams of this type and these were the trams of which the poet Æ wrote:“My eyes behold new majesties; my spirit (soul) greets the trams, the high-built galleons of the street”So they really did impress people. The Dublin United Tramways Company at the time was one of the wealthiest companies in the land and probably one of the wealthiest tramway companies anywhere. They were now operating a nominal fleet of 330 trams, actually there were probably no more than about 280 of them in service at any one time, over a route mileage of about 54 miles which was some achievement.Now in addition to the passenger trams you had other wonderful vehicles that operated on the tramways such as water trams. This one photographed on O’Connell Bridge with the Ballast Office in the background and the time ball on time of the Ballast Office that dropped at a particular time every day to show when it was noon at Dunsink Observatory. You also had Dublin Corporation use of the tramways. Now I mentioned Fairview to you and the appalling sloblands where the park is now. The Corporation built an incinerator. Now note I’m telling you an incinerator at Stanley Street and all the city refuse was brought to that and was burned and the cinders and the ash were loaded into trains of wagons and they were hauled out. The Corporation bought three locomotives as well as seventy wagons and at night after normal traffic had ceased on the tramways these trains made their way out to Fairview, there were sidings laid into various parts of the sloblands and they dumped the stuff. And this went on from 1907 until 1925 or thereabouts when motor lorries took over the collection of refuse and it’s hard to believe that where Fairview Park is today was such an awful mess 100 years ago.The trams had to be maintained and the Ballsbridge workshops they were really great. I knew the last foreman in the Ballsbridge workshops, Charlie Ross, and he told me a lot about what life was like in the early years of the century. Charlie had trained as a fitter in the Pembroke Tech which afterwards became the infamous spike on York Road in Ringsend and at the time that the trams ceased in 1949 he was 64 years of age but he was a mine of information on all sorts of things that happened in the early years of the century. This would have been his workplace in about 1908 or 1909. Two trams, a converted horse tram and an original electric hoisted off their trucks while the various jobs were done on the under frames and a water tram in the background. Ballsbridge was one of only two depots that had a very narrow entrance and it had a traverser. This was a moving platform, it moved sideways, the tram was driven in off the road onto this and the platform was then moved sideways to line the tram up with the particular track on which it was to go. The other one that had this was Phibsborough or Cabra whichever you prefer to call it, it was up there behind the shops at Doyle’s Corner. And incidentally it may explain for younger people when you hear match commentaries from Dalymount they refer to the tramway end and the school end, the tramway end was the end nearest to the depot.Now in 1909 the Tramway Company which had been carrying parcels for years they also discovered that they could carry other things – sand, gravel, they took in a lot of farm produce and even animals from the Dublin and Blessington which were brought to the Cattle Market on North Circular Road up there at Aughrim Street. And they had old trams which were converted into electric locomotives like the one shown here and they hauled four or five wagons at the maximum and this was a very lucrative business and it lasted until 1925 once again when motor competition made it uneconomic and probably unsuitable in the traffic conditions as well. The Dublin and Blessington also had ideas of advancing before the First World War and they considered electrifying the route from Terenure as far as Jobstown and it was envisaged that Dublin trams might run right through to Jobstown but they experimented with a couple of petrol electric trams like this one here. They weren’t a great success and the idea was dropped and they reverted to steam haulage.Now as I said before the First World War the Dublin United Tramways Company was almighty but things changed in 1913. You had the terrible Lockout in August 1913 and any trams that remained in service were driven by either supervisory staff or by strike breakers. The one thing that prevented the strike from being totally successful was that the staff in the generating station at Ringsend refused to come out. They were better paid than the platform staff, the drivers and conductors, and they were careful of their jobs and they didn’t want to get involved in the strike. And you had scenes like this where trams had to be accompanied by members of the Dublin Metropolitan Police who by that time had unfortunately dirtied their bib with most of the citizens after the baton charges in August and September of 1913. It’s one of a whole series of events that was very bad for the tramways over the next 10 years or so. William Martin Murphy was a confirmed Nationalist, he was a follower of John Redmond and when war broke out in 1914 he encouraged Irish men to join the British Army and tram number 242 was converted into a recruiting car that went around the city and it was photographed here in College Green in an effort to try and get people to join, and there is quite a queue of men there waiting to go on the rear platform to give their names in.This is a particularly interesting shot, it shows number 308 in the depot yard at Clontarf, the conductor on the left, but the man on the right is Patrick Clifford who was the Depot Inspector in Clontarf and on the day of the Howth gun-running he managed to thwart the military and the police who wanted to get to Howth to stop the landing of the guns from the Asgard. He thought up all sorts of excuses – the phone went dead in the depot, he couldn’t get in touch with his superiors, all this sort of thing – and he managed to hold them there until the guns had cleared Howth. So that was his contribution to what was to happen afterwards. Now as you can see it’s number 308 and this is the same tram in Easter week 1916, it was destroyed by a direct hit at the junction of North Earl Street and Sackville Street and also in that week one of the more shameful incidents in the Rising was Dublin Tramway employee named James Malone where the CIE Club is now on Earl Place behind Clery’s there was a stables where the Company kept their few remaining horses they used on cartage and stuff like that and the horses had to be looked after during Easter week and James Malone was persuaded by his foreman to go in and look after the horses and he had to try and get out a couple of times for food and on the Thursday as he went down North Earl Street the poor man was shot. He was the only Dublin United Tramways employee to be killed in Easter week and in contrast to a lot of others he was just a man who was going about his job. Anyway that was it.Now the war, the Rising and the First World War were a terrible time for people in general and particularly for tramway staff and there was also the War of Independence then in 1920. And here you have a Dalkey tram outside Clery’s which is being rebuilt in the background, an armoured car and a raid on the trams. Now my late neighbour and friend Joe Greely described in graphic detail what went on at that time. He was a conductor in those years and he said the instructions to the staff were if the Black and Tans pulled in in front of tram, which they were liable to do, you were to let your feelings go away and you were to treat these people promptly and courteously, get them through the tram as quickly as possible so that nobody would be injured and no property would be damaged. And Joe described how one day he was conducting an open top tram coming down George’s Street and a Black and Tan tender pulled in in front and as he made his way towards the stairs to try and get there before any patriot would attack these guys a revolver landed in his cash bag and he didn’t know what to do and he thought very fast and he put the revolver into the destination box which is of course up at the front of the tram and he went down, he was shaky, he was very fearful, he showed the Black and Tans through the tram, they went off, they didn’t get what they wanted and he went back up to take the revolver out and to give a good tongue lashing to whoever it was that had compromised him and when he opened the box two revolvers fell out. (laughter) He turned both of them in as lost property and he never heard anything about them so (laughter).Now as I said there was a lot of interaction between the Dublin United Tramways Company and the Dublin and Blessington and here at Terenure Cross you have a driver or conductor carrying a churn across to the Blessington line. A lot of the dairy produce came in, it was put on the trams and went to outlying shops on the lines all over the city and that’s what this particular thing portrays. That was right at the end of the era of the symbols because in 1918 they decided to change the whole thing and they brought in a system of route numbers and they started on the south east side at number 1 with Ringsend and they went around clockwise until it reached 31 at Howth. There were a few blank numbers that weren’t used at the time, they came into use afterwards, and incidentally about 10 of those numbers are still in use today on the buses. So you know there’s a continuity there, it was one of those things that happened. Now 1918 was a very severe year, they had to cut back a number of things. The Dorset Street and Capel Street route was closed. They introduced cuts on various other routes and so on. They increased fares but they didn’t interfere with the penny fare, you might have got a shorter distance but the penny fare was absolutely sacrosanct, and there were various other changes took place at the time.Now there were two trams destroyed in Easter week, others were damaged, and both of those were replaced after 1918 but they started to build a new type of tram at that time that I’ll describe to you in a moment. I just put in a map here showing the electric system as it was after 1906 and I think it’s on one of the things outside anyway you can study it. I also put on the M50 on this map to try and give you an indication of where you are. Now there were trams of different heights operating in certain routes and there were a lot of bridges in the city that certain types of tram couldn’t get under and these balcony trams that they had started building in 1904 they were too high to go under several of the bridges and in 1922 they brought out a new lower type of tram which was called a standard and which could get under all the bridges except one, Bath Avenue was the only one that was closed to it. Now they built a huge number of these and they converted others. They built new ones and they converted other ones to these new balcony cars and they became the most numerous type of tram on the system, there were 91 of them. And once again could I draw attention to the crew here or the staff who are now wearing cheese cutter type caps that were introduced after the First World War and they had a white top which could be put on in the summer and this was worn from May to September each year.The next stage was to enclose the tram completely. The Standard Saloon, introduced in 1924, and there were 91 of them built and they were very successful. They were 60 seaters, sorry 62 seaters, and they could run on any route on the system. Very successful trams indeed and this particular shot, for those who don’t know the area, was taken opposite the Black Lion pub in Inchicore which was the tram terminus and the little Morris car on the right was the car of the photographer, a wonderful tramway photographer named William Camwell from Birmingham who came to Dublin several times in the 1930s and has left us a wonderful record of trams at the time.Now the only new tramway opened after the First World War if you could call it a new one was the Dublin and Lucan. The Dublin and Lucan Company were taken over by the government during the First World War because they were a mail carrier and anything that carried mail was put under government control. After the First World War motor vehicles became much more reliable, they became much easier to get and there were a number of people who started up in the bus business. And the Spendlove brothers started the Tower Bus Company operating between Dublin, Lucan and Clane and in a very short time they ran the Dublin and Lucan out of business. Around that time the Dublin United Tramways Company were seeking powers to operate buses themselves and they did a quid pro quo with the authorities in 1925 after the Lucan line closed. They agreed to take it over, rebuild it and integrate it with the city system and it was rebuilt to the standard gauge and the trams now ran from Lucan right through to O’Connell Bridge and they built a fleet of 9 new trams for it of which this is one, seen in 1938 climbing out of Lucan. That line incidentally ran most of the way on the side of the road and if you drive along past the Phoenix Park and look at the lamp standards on the Lucan Road you’ll even see where the line crossed from one side to the other because the standards are still in use as lighting poles and they’ve survived all that time and it was before its time unfortunately. Lucan was still a small village and of all the tramways in the Dublin area the one that the LUAS people would most love to have today would be that particular line. Anyway, the company got their permission or they got their authority to operate buses and they were now operating trams and buses and it was envisaged that some of the bus routes that they opened would become tram routes when the traffic developed. Now I should mention to you from 1897 when the company was going electric they had two very successful general managers. They had Charles Gordon who came in 1897. He was killed in an accident in 1915 and he was succeeded by an even more remarkable man called George Marshall Harris. Harris was an electrical engineer, he was also a part-time lecturer in Trinity College. He was an incredibly good business man and even after the buses came he was still pro tram and as long as Marshall remained in office there was absolutely no danger of the trams being abandoned but there were more and more buses coming on the road, they had to abandon, as I said, the freight business. The parcels express continued with motor vans for another few years but the streets were getting very congested.Now Dublin and Blessington, they really went to town on trying to modernise. Steam wasn’t a viable proposition so they bought a couple of Model T Fords and they built these rather Heath Robinson type bodies on them and needless to say they hadn’t got a ghost against the buses of the Paragon Company and the line closed in two stages – the Poulaphouca extension in 1928 and the main line from Terenure in 1932 and there was no talk of the tramway company taking this over. Now the paragon company was owned ... it was a subsidiary of the General Omnibus Company which was owned by A.P. Reynolds. A.P. Reynolds was an accountant who on carrying out an audit in 1927 discovered that there was money in buses and he set up the General Omnibus Company and he became very successful and he’ll come back into the picture a little bit later. The Dublin United Tramways Company on the other hand they decided that they’d have to build modern trams which could compete with the buses and from 1931 to 1936 they turned out 57 luxury trams from the works in Inchicore of which this was one of the last. There were 37 four wheelers and 20 bogie cars, the bogies were divided 15 to the Dalkey line and 5 to Howth. They maintained the winter service on Howth whether the open top trams would be considered a little bit obsolete at that time but were wanted for the normal summers and for people that travelled out in the summer. These trams were 76 seaters, they had a huge standing capacity and they really were something and in my opinion they were the most comfortable tramway vehicles or the most comfortable vehicles of any sort until the City Swift Buses arrived in 1996. That’s the interior top deck of one of them. Beautiful white ceilings, lamp reflectors, bulk head seats with lovely chromed handrails and chrome seat grabs and everything like that and they were really the apex of travel at the time. Now there was four wheelers as well as I said.Now I’d like to draw attention to the ads again. Every week the Theatre Royal which was a wonderful institution of course it had the change of programme on the trams so you could see what there was without having to look up the papers or anything like that. We’ve been able to date that particular picture to sometime in 1938, I forget the exact date but I know it was dated by somebody who was very familiar with what went on in the Royal. Now as I say adverts they showed up social mores and all that sort of thing and this is a dilly:For your throat’s sake smoke Craven “A”(laughter) Can you imagine that happening now today? (laughter) That’s a Dollymount line tram, they started from just north of the Pillar and they went down North Earl Street. Now traffic was becoming a serious problem as I said in the 1930s. Here you have O’Connell Bridge from Bachelor’s Walk. You have a taxi rank beside the river. You have a bus coming around the corner from the bridge onto Bachelor’s Walk and the man with the white top cap is the unfortunate tram conductor trying to turn the trolley of the Lucan tram before it goes back. He’s in grave danger there and as are all the jaywalkers because people just didn’t realise how bad traffic was getting and it’s not today or yesterday that traffic was a problem, there was a Dublin Traffic Act as long ago as 1875 and in the 1930s they were getting really worried about it and a lot of people maintained that the trams were a hindrance to traffic. Well they were in a certain way but the system should have been developed and adapted to suit the conditions at the time. Now just how you took your life in your hands is illustrated here, a tram at Stephen’s Green, just opposite the Stephen’s Green Centre, and the passengers have to go out into the middle of the road to get on and they’re in dangers of being mown down by the opposing bus which would like to get the passengers but it’s not getting them there. So the tramways really did need to modernise, the track should have been realigned and they should have been put in new places, all that sort of thing, and unfortunately that wasn’t done.Now George Marshall Harris retired through ill health but he was fairly well advanced in years in 1934 and around that time the independent buses had become such a threat that the government had passed legislation in 1932/33 first to license them and second in 1933 to enable the statutory companies, the railway companies and the tramway companies, to buy out the independents compulsorily. And the General Omnibus Company of A.P. Reynolds was bought out in 1935 but he was a very powerful man. At that time he had 40 odd buses on the road and it was a very well run company in fairness but there was a reverse takeover because Marshall Harris had retired and Reynolds came in and became the general manager and he was very much anti-tram and it wasn’t long before he got the idea that he would replace all the trams. Now buses at that period or up to that period mostly single deck in Dublin and petrol engine, they were a bit uneconomic to run, but at that time two things happened. Leyland Motors introduced the metal frame bus body which was very light, very easy to build, and they also introduced the diesel engine and when the diesel engined 56 seater bus became available Reynolds ordered it in large numbers and tramway abandonment began with the Ballybough route in 1938 and it proceeded very rapidly over the next few years. And by 1941 when we were well into the war about 220 trams had been replaced by an equal number of buses and the only lines that remained at that stage were the Dalkey line with its branches and the Terenure and Dartry lines and they just couldn’t risk taking those off during the war and in fact they refurbished 90 trams because they knew they were going to have to run the trams for a number of years.Now recognising the changeover in its operations the Tramway Company changed its name to the Dublin United Transport Company in 1941, adopted a new livery and the famous flying snail symbol that decorated theirs and later CIE vehicles after the war. CIE was formed on the 1st January 1945 to take over the Great Southern Railways and the Dublin United Transport Company and the hope was that the very efficient Transport Company management would sort of reinvigorate the Great Southern Railways which was, except for its bus department, rather moribund, it was a bureaucracy and they were very, very fearful of what might happen with the railways but unfortunately that didn’t happen. Now they went into the new peace time world in 1945 still running 113 trams. They had about 240 buses in Dublin and this was a typical Dublin street scene in 1946/47 where you have a hustle of buses and trams in College Green, a couple of lorries, one or two horse drawn vehicles. And so distinctively incidentally were the ads on the trams that in this particular picture well the number is visible that was actually the last tram from Howth in 1941 and the two behind it that one has been identified and the one behind it again was what was to be the last tram from Terenure when that line was closed in 1948. Now I’ll draw your attention to one other thing in this, not to do with trams but it’ll give you an idea of what religious rectitude could do at the time, if you look at the third bus down, the one behind the lamp, you’ll see two eyes at each side of the destination box and those two eyes advertised a magazine called ‘Picture Post’ every Wednesday, four pence every Wednesday. And at that time a magazine could be banned solely just because somebody objected to it and all the buses that happened to have this ad for ‘Picture Post’ were based in Summerhill Garage and there was an incredibly conscientious superintendent in Summerhill at the time and every week the ‘Picture Post’ was banned the buses appeared with brown paper pasted over the ad. (laughter) Now I am not joking, that is the truth, I saw them, I lived through that era, I saw them myself. He did this on the grounds that it was even illegal to advertise the magazine that was banned and this man was right up to the minute, he knew what to do. (laughter)Anyway, the trams they continued their painful way for another few years. I just threw this in to show you some more of the ads, one is Barnardo’s furs and Boland’s bread and Shaw’s bacon. That’s a photograph taken in Cabra or Phibsborough Depot and it shows the traverser here in front on which the trams were moved over to line up with the particular track they were to go in on. A wonderful picture – another Camwell picture. There were a couple of interesting survivors in the 1930s. This was known as the Submarine, it was based in Clontarf Depot until 1936 when the Corporation did a drainage plan for Clontarf for floods. The tide often came in over the road. The promenade didn’t exist at that time and trams were liable to get stuck in the floods. If you get the combination of an easterly wind, heavy rain and high tide you were in dead trouble in Clontarf. So this tram was designed with its motors over the axels so that they wouldn’t be interfered with by the rain. It was the body of an old horse tram put onto this truck and it was kept in Clontarf to tow out trams that had got into trouble in the floods and it actually lasted until 1938 or 1939 when there was only a few trams left in Clontarf for the Howth route. The director’s tram came down in the world, it was used to advertise the Whitehall Carnival in 1937/38, Dublin’s only illuminated tram ever. (laughter) And even the water trams had got a little bit more modernised, there was now a shelter over the driver, okay, he got the rain into the front but it didn’t come down straight on top of him. (laughter) This is the number 4 photographed at Donnybrook, it also doubled up as a snow plough, you’ll see the v shaped boards under the platforms. Anyway CIE took over, they decided to get rid of the last trams, the Terenure and Dartry lines closed at the end of October in 1948 and the Dalkey line continued until July 1949. It closed on the Saturday night of the 9th/10th of July 1949 amid scenes of the most appalling destruction. This is number 252 which was the last tram and it had to be turned at the Ballast Office, it wasn’t able to get through to the Pillar on account of the crowds and that is it photographed as it was going into the depot in the early hours of the Sunday morning. Now the trams were gone, they were sold off, but there was one thing that we still had and it got even more important after this, the Hill of Howth still working. A shot taken of the Summit in 1953, there were two types of tram, 8 of the blue ones and 2 of these magnificent teak ones, numbers 9 and 10.The Great Northern Railway was in serious financial difficulties in the 1950s and it was taken over jointly by the governments of the Republic and Northern Ireland and in 1958 they decided to cease this type of operation and the fixed assets were divided between the transport authorities in the two parts of the island. And the Hill of Howth tramway came under the jurisdiction of CIE whose Chairman was still A.P. Reynolds and needless to say there was no hope for it, there was a big economy drive and eliminating losses and so in 1959 when the line was threatened with closure you had these enormous queues at Sutton waiting to get on the trams. They probably carried more people in the last couple of months than they had done in years previously and you had those crowds day in day out, it was a very fine summer, and that incidentally is tram number 7. The line was dismantled after the closure and this wonderful vehicle, number 11, it started at the Howth end and it carried all the materials back to Sutton, a shorter journey each day. Now this could be used as a goods tram, it could be used as a breakdown tram, an overhead wagon, but its most unusual feature was that it had a telephone on one platform which could be plugged in to the overhead telephone wires anyway along the line to enable the crew to talk back to the depot (laughter) so it was a very early form of mobile phone if you’d like to call it that. (laughter) Anyway the line closed, the trams were disposed of and number 7 that you saw earlier that’s it being broken up in Sutton in 1960.That was probably the end of trams in Dublin until thank God 2004 and here you have one of the first LUAS trams but if you notice there’s a ghost behind it and this ghost is a very beautiful survivor which I show you here photographed at Stephen’s Green on the day that the Sandyford line opened and if it wasn’t for the modern car and the dress of the people in that photograph you could probably falsify it to make it look as if it was a 100 years earlier. And we’re very glad that that particular one has survived. Now there have been a couple of other survivors. That was what happened to number 9, the last Howth tram. It was exposed to the elements and to vandals and so on for several years and it was in that form until 1979 and after a 13 or 14 year refurbishment there it is in Howth being inspected by Tom Redmond who was the last surviving driver from the Hill of Howth line and he gave it his blessing. Another survivor from the Dalkey line, number 253, photographed outside the National Museum about 2 years ago. And the last survivor of all but in an appalling state rescued from Dalkey in 1988 and awaiting restoration the director’s tram, that’s what happened to it. Now to conclude, architecturally the DUTC didn’t contribute very much to Dublin but there were two depots that were built, one in 1905 in Dartry and a new depot in Blackrock in 1908, which had very pleasant architectural features and that is Blackrock with the luxury tram coming out and I understand that building is either threatened or being demolished at the moment somebody said to me, I haven’t been in Blackrock for a while so I don’t know. So last of all memo tickets, they were a wonderful form of collection for young people when I was young, when I was in my teens and so on, ranging from a horse tram ticket right up to the last ones that were issued by CIE. Now as I say you’ve only had a brief look at the tramways, like there was so much that I wanted to put in and I couldn’t, there just wasn’t the time to get it in and I only hope that you enjoyed coming down those routes with me for those number of years and I’d like to thank you all very much for your patience with me and your time. (Applause) Thank you. Thank-you for listening to the Dublin City Public Libraries and Archive Podcast. To hear more, please subscribe on iTunes or SoundCloud. You can also visit our website - dublincitypubliclibraries.ie and follow us on Twitter and Facebook.