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Drimnagh

Coordinates: 53°19′35″N 6°19′08″W / 53.32641°N 6.31884°W / 53.32641; -6.31884
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Our Lady of Good Counsel National School, Drimnagh.

Drimnagh (Irish: Droimeanach)[1] is a suburb in Dublin, Ireland. It lies to the south of the city between Walkinstown, Crumlin and Inchicore,[2] bordered by the Grand Canal to the north and east. Drimnagh is in postal district Dublin 12. Drimnagh is in a townland and civil parish of the same name, in the barony of Uppercross.[1]

History

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Video about Drimnagh Castle

Early to medieval

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Drimnagh derives its name from the word druimneach, or country with ridges. A neolithic settlement discovered and a funerary bowl found in a burial site. The site was demolished, but the bowl is on view in the National Museum.

The lands of Drimnagh were taken from their Irish owners by Strongbow, who gave them to the Barnwell family, who had arrived in Ireland with Strongbow in 1167 and had settled in Berehaven in Munster. The people of Munster killed the family except for Hugh de Barnwell, and this youth was given Drimnagh as compensation. The lands and castle were considered safe, as they were relatively far away from the Irish strongholds in the Wicklow Mountains.

Modern history

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Drimnagh was farmland until the mid-1930s, when some of the first tenement clearances brought city centre residents from one-room hovels to terraced and semi-detached houses in a series of roads named after the mountain ranges of Ireland. The suburb consists of one area close to Drimnagh Castle and Lansdowne Valley, with three-bedroom private housing built by Associated Properties, and another area (the larger part) built by Dublin Corporation and consisting of three-bedroom 'Kitchen Houses' and two-bedroom 'Parlour Houses' bordering the Grand Canal and Crumlin. The two areas meet at the parish church, the Church of Our Lady of Good Counsel, in the centre of Drimnagh, built in 1943.

The Dublin Corporation housing area was originally considered part of an area known as North Crumlin from its construction in the mid-1930s until the introduction of the postal code system during the mid-1970s.

Notable people

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Places of interest

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Sport

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  • Guinness Rugby Football Club – based at the Iveagh Grounds.
  • Good Counsel GAA – have operated in the Drimnagh area since 1954.
  • St James Gaels GAA – also based at the Iveagh Grounds.
  • Football Clubs include Mourne Celtic, Drimnagh Celtic and St. John Bosco.
  • Drimnagh Boxíng Club on Keeper road
  • Parkrun every Saturday morning at Brickfield Park.

Education

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  • Drimnagh Castle CBS is a primary and secondary school for boys which was built in 1954 right next to the site of the castle. Over the past 50 years notable students included the politician Charlie O'Connor; footballers Kevin Moran, Niall Quinn, Dean Delaney and Graham Barrett, and radio presenters Rick O'Shea (RTE), Andy Preston (Ian Moore, FM104), and Chris Murray (Anthony Hanlon, LMFM).
  • Our Lady of Good Counsel School on Mourne Road
  • St John Bosco Youth Centre

Transport

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Drimnagh is served by Luas trams, Dublin Bus buses and Go-Ahead Ireland buses.

Tram

Drimnagh is on the Red Line of the Luas tram system.

The area is served by Blackhorse, Drimnagh, Goldenbridge and Suir Road Luas stops.

Bus

The Drimnagh area is served by Dublin Bus routes 27, 56A, 77A, 77X, 122, 123, 150 and 151.

It is also served by Go-Ahead Ireland routes S2 and S4.

See also

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References

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  1. ^ a b "Droimeanach/Drimnagh". Placenames Database of Ireland. Retrieved 15 December 2024.
  2. ^ "Drimnagh - Dublin 12". kwdublin.com. KW Ireland. 25 November 2019. Retrieved 26 October 2024.
  3. ^ "Our Lady of Good Counsel Parish, Mourne Road, Drimnagh, Dublin 12 - Archdiocese of Dublin, Ireland. - Drimnagh, Dublin". www.mourneroad.ie.
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53°19′35″N 6°19′08″W / 53.32641°N 6.31884°W / 53.32641; -6.31884