![]() Sign commemorating the Marrowbone Lane Garrison of 1916 | |
Native name | Lána Mhuire Mhaith (Irish) |
---|---|
Part of | The Liberties |
Namesake | Marylebone |
Length | 700 m (2,300 ft) |
Width | variable, up to 20 metres (66 ft) |
Location | Dublin,Ireland |
Postal code | D08 |
Coordinates | 53°20′24″N6°17′09″W / 53.339949°N 6.285764°W /53.339949; -6.285764 |
north end | Thomas Court, School Street, Earl Street South |
south end | Cork Street |
Other | |
Known for | distillery, infirmary,Easter Rising |
Marrowbone Lane (Irish:Lána Mhuire Mhaith) is a street offCork Street on the south side ofDublin,Ireland.
The street is likely named afterMarylebone in London;Pimlico is located right next to it, and other London-inspired street names are nearby, like Spitalfields. These were brought to Dublin by London wool-workers, who settled in the area afterWilliam III's conquest of Ireland in 1690.[1][2] Marylebone, London, commonly pronounced like "Marrow-bone", is named after the church of St Mary atthe Bourne, later corrupted to "Mary le Bone",Middle French for "Mary the Good." The Irish street name reproduces this error, literally meaning "Lane of Mary the Good."[3] By 1743, the street name was corrupted to Marrowbone Lane.[4][5]
Fighting took place on the street during theEaster Rising of 1916. Thedistillery was used as a strongpoint by a force of more than a hundred rebels under the command ofÉamonn Ceannt, which also held the nearbySouth Dublin Union.[6] Ceannt was executed by theBritish authorities after the rising's failure. His second-in-command wasCathal Brugha, and other participants includedW. T. Cosgrave,Joseph McGrath andDenis O'Brien.[7]
In describing the careers of participants, the terms "fought at Marrowbone Lane" and "fought at theSouth Dublin Union" are used interchangeably.[citation needed]
In 1939, the story and history of Marrowbone Lane was immortalized in a play of the same name which was written by Robert Collis and produced and directed byMichael Mac Liammoir andHilton Edwards. Among the cast was a young Wilfred Bramble, who was later to find TV fame in the UK as Steptoe, in Steptoe & Son. The play depicts the hardship of tenement life in Dublin in typical areas like Marrowbone Lane. It tells the story of a young girl from Mayo who marries into a tenement family and is appalled at the living conditions she and her baby will have to endure. ‘Marrowbone Lane’ was first performed at theGate Theatre in Dublin on the 10th of October 1939[8]
In the mid-17th century linen and silk weavers were a prominent section of the Dublin population.[9] They were mostly FrenchHuguenot, Dutch and Flemish immigrants and lived in the areas around The Coombe including Marrowbone Lane. The emergence of the ‘Dutch Billy’ style of housing was attributed to these workers.[10] This type of housing had many distinctive features and characteristics one of which being the roof ridges that ran at right angles to the street. These residences were constructed of brick and were designed to stand in terraces.[11] Another feature that could be seen in these homes was the shared chimney stacks. This feature was due to the placement of fireplaces in the corner of two neighboring houses resulting in a shared chimney stack.[12] These houses with their unique architecture at the time were common in Marrowbone Lane and the surrounding area, but many have since vanished or have been demolished. However, up to the 1980’s there remained a few examples in Marrowbone Lane and the surrounding streets.[13]
Marrowbone Lane is notable for what the National Inventory of Architectural Heritage describes as an "elegant early social housing scheme", designed by Dublin Corporation's Housing Architect Herbert George Simms, and built in the late 1930s, with curved corners that respond to the curve of Marrowbone Lane. "It is an excellent example of early modernist architecture which employed materials historically used in the area. H.G. Simms was the housing architect of Dublin Corporation from 1932 until 1948. During his time in office, Simms was responsible for the design of some 17,000 new homes."[14]
st mary at the bourne.