Wednesday 21 September 2016

St Mary's Church, St Mary's/Jervis St, Heraldry - The Church Cafe Bar & Restaurant

The Church Café, Bar & Restaurant is now operating in what used to be the early 18th century Church of Ireland of St Mary's located at the corner of St Mary Street and Jervis Street in Dublin.

There is a good history of the church given on the cafe's website:

http://www.thechurch.ie/about/history/

And the memorials can all be viewed on:

http://www.darkbirdpictures.com/thechurchabh/index.html

One or two of the coats of arms may not feature that well in the photographs so that is all that we can add here.















Nutley

On the death of Queen Anne, the new King George I removed her Irish judges en bloc. Nutley's patron the Duke of Ormonde nominated him to be deputy steward of Westminster Abbey, but the Dean and Chapter of Westminster vetoed the appointment, and he returned to his practice at the Irish Bar. James Butler, 2nd Duke of Ormonde was Nutley's most powerful patron.

Ormonde's defection to the Jacobite cause, which caused his flight to France in August 1715 and the end of his career, was a great blow to Nutley. It was anticipated, wrongly, that he would follow Ormonde into exile, but it seems that his own political beliefs were not sufficiently strong for him to give up what was still, despite his loss of office, a comfortable enough life in Dublin. 

In 1716 the old controversy between Dublin Corporation and the Crown was revived. Nutley was examined by the Irish House of Commons on the report he had signed in 1712-3. He insisted that he had acted impartially, but the Commons passed a resolution recommending that he be impeached. The issue quickly died down : no further action was taken against Nutley, and in 1723 it was suggested that he might be reappointed to the Bench, although nothing came of this.
He died in Dublin of appendicitis in 1729 and was buried in St Mary's Church, Dublin. He married his beloved wife Phillipa Venables in 1708.

See
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Richard_Nutley











Saturday 17 September 2016

Dublin Mayors - Coats of Arms - Heraldry, Oak Room, Mansion House

On 16 September for Cultural Night a visit was made to the Mansion House, where a treasure trove awaits the visitor to the 'famous oak room' where the coats of arms of Mayors dating back to the 1800s are displayed. Thanks to the Mansion House permission to take photographs was granted. For those who do not have the opportunity to view these arms they are given here.

The Mansion House was built by Joshua Dawson and is of the Queen Anne style architecture. In 2015, the tercentenary of the building was celebrated. On the half landing on the main staircase is a stained-glass window made around 1890 by Dublin firm of Joshua Clarke & Sons in anticipation of Home Rule. The Lord Mayor's Coat of arms is in the centre of the window surround by names of influential Dubliners namely Goldsmith, Burke, Barry and Foley.  


The oak room was built in 1715 as part of the purchase agreement so the Lord Mayor would have a room a big enough to host civic events. It is panelled in oak and the portraits on display of John Foster, Lord mayor Richard Manders and Charles Stewart Parnell relate to the passage of the Act of Union in 1800. The chandeliers are Waterford crystal. The Lord Mayor's Coats of Arms are displayed on the walls dating back to Daniel O'Connell in 1841.