301:, under the name "Kildare Street and University Club". In 1967 the owner of the Kildare Street premises, Phoenix Assurance, sought permission to demolish half the building and replace it with an office block, having printed the notice in the newspapers in Irish. Dublin Corporation refused permission in June 1967. The next owners, Rampart Holdings, sought permission to redevelop the interior of the building in March 1971, and as only the exterior of the building was protected by a preservation order, this work was allowed to go ahead. The interior of the building was gutted, with the vaulted arcades, stone fireplaces, carved columns, staircase and flying buttresses removed. The work began in 1971, and was finished by 1973, having converted the interior to accommodate 15,500 square feet of office space.
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The club had planned to move from the old to the new building in 1861, but on 11 November 1860, there was a disastrous fire at the old clubhouse. Three maids died, and a fourth was saved by being at the time in the bedroom of the club accountant, from which she was rescued. All of the club's pictures
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The
Kildare Street Club is one of the most important institutions in Dublin. It represents in the most complete acceptation of the word the rent party in Ireland; better still, it represents all that is respectable, that is to say, those who are gifted with an oyster-like capacity for understanding
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By 1840, the club had some six hundred and fifty members, "a large and elegant card-room, coffee, reading, and billiard-rooms". There was a committee of fifteen members, elected annually. Admission to membership was by ballot, with an entrance fee of
111:. This led to an exodus of members from Daly's, who formed a new club which soon rivalled their old one as a fashionable haunt and which in the end eclipsed it. Although by the later 19th century the club was closely associated with the
181:, at a cost of some ÂŁ21,000. This replaced three existing houses on Kildare Street and one on Leinster Street, which were demolished, giving an L-shaped new building, with an internal plan similar to that of the
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awaken the dormant air, the oysters rush to their window – they stand there open-mouthed, real pantomime oysters, and from the corner of
Frederick Street, a group of young girls watch them in silent admiration.
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In 1858, it was decided to build a new clubhouse, as the original premises at 6, Kildare Street, were now too small for the club's needs. In 1859, the club was described in
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this one thing: that they should continue to get fat in the bed in which they were born. This club is a sort of oyster bed into which all the eldest sons of the
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and furniture and a library of fifteen thousand books were destroyed, and the club moved into its new building before completion.
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in a sort of dialect, a dead language which the larva-like stupidity of the club has preserved. The green banners of the
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64:. Its second Kildare Street clubhouse, built between 1859 and 1860, has not been disposed of but, as of 2002, was
92:. In 1786 the club acquired an adjoining house also built by Cavendish, thus completing its original clubhouse.
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84:, the club's first home was a house in Kildare Street built by Sir Henry Cavendish on land bought from
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fall as a matter of course. There they remain spending their days, drinking sherry and cursing
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There is a tradition that what prompted the foundation of the club was the
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459:. He solves the theft at the Kildare Street Club of a hair-brush from an
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173:..." Between 1859 and 1860, the new clubhouse was built, designed by
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Joyce annotated: notes for
Dubliners and A portrait of the artist
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The
Alternative Sherlock Holmes: pastiches, parodies, and copies
269:, while the Kildare Street Club was closely associated with the
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198:
189:. The club committee had altered Deane and Woodward's original
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31:
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850:"Origin of the Words Seltzer and Club Soda for Soda Water"
451:(1997). The story is set in 1873, when before going up to
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In a famous incident at the
Kildare Street Club in 1806,
475:' refers to the Kildare Street Club, which commissioned
447:'s "The Affray at the Kildare Street Club" appeared in
297:, thereafter sharing the premises of the latter at 17,
825:. London: London: Dean & son, limited. p. 87.
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205:. The new building is adorned by "whimsical beasts".
449:The Mammoth Book of New Sherlock Holmes Adventures
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774:. Dublin: Gill and Macmillan. pp. 227–229.
142:, and stalked out of the club, never to return.
520:Decorative carving of monkeys playing billiards
123:, who argued against the creation in 1801 of a
52:between 1782 and 1977, when it merged with the
398:William Lygon Pakenham, 4th Earl of Longford
304:As of 2002, the building was leased to the
125:United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland
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876:Buildings and structures in Dublin (city)
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479:to produce it under trademark in 1877.
418:William Humble Ward, 2nd Earl of Dudley
261:. The most popular Dublin club for the
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665:The architecture of Deane and Woodward
86:James FitzGerald, 20th Earl of Kildare
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649:A hand book for travellers in Ireland
633:A topographical dictionary of Ireland
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393:William Cole, 3rd Earl of Enniskillen
881:Organisations based in Dublin (city)
350:Robert Stewart, Viscount Castlereagh
154:, and an annual subscription of ÂŁ5.
58:Kildare Street & University Club
201:, and the outcome was described as
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835:Peter Ridgway Watt, Joseph Green,
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737:The Irish establishment, 1879–1914
544:Kildare Street and University Club
403:Edward Gibson, 1st Baron Ashbourne
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901:1977 disestablishments in Ireland
886:Politics of pre-partition Ireland
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423:James Bernard, 4th Earl of Bandon
413:David Plunket, 1st Baron Rathmore
30:is a historical member's club in
819:Hesilrige, Arthur G. M. (1921).
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388:Abraham Creighton, 2nd Earl Erne
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896:1782 establishments in Ireland
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686:The companion guide to Ireland
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370:Hugh Gough, 1st Viscount Gough
220:wrote scathingly of the club:
161:as "an institution famous for
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754:Sean Sheehan, Patricia Levy,
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289:of 1921, and again after the
891:Gentlemen's clubs in Ireland
617:Club Makers and Club Members
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441:new Sherlock Holmes stories
193:design, insisting on large
80:Founded in the year of the
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807:Wellington:Pillar of State
568:The Irish quarterly review
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340:Society of United Irishmen
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771:The destruction of Dublin
615:Thomas Hay Sweet Escott,
263:Irish Parliamentary Party
22:The building in the 1910s
768:McDonald, Frank (1985).
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271:Irish Conservative Party
197:windows divided by thin
101:William Burton Conyngham
735:Fergus J. M. Campbell,
496:Portico of the building
477:Cantrell & Cochrane
457:Trinity College, Dublin
281:Redevelopment and reuse
275:Irish Unionist Alliance
267:St Stephen's Green Club
705:Parnell and his Island
295:Dublin University Club
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239:cries of a new Ireland
214:Parnell and his Island
54:Dublin University Club
38:, at the heart of the
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331:Lord Henry FitzGerald
306:State Heraldic Museum
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175:Thomas Newenham Deane
140:Montague James Mathew
136:Catholic Emancipation
113:Protestant Ascendancy
48:The Club remained in
43:Protestant Ascendancy
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856:. 28 September 2012.
379:Henry Arthur Herbert
374:First Anglo-Sikh War
326:Sir Jonah Barrington
287:partition of Ireland
121:Sir Jonah Barrington
82:Constitution of 1782
663:Frederick O'Dwyer,
455:Holmes is visiting
365:Sir William Gregory
310:Genealogical Office
28:Kildare Street Club
803:Elizabeth Longford
314:Alliance française
299:St Stephen's Green
70:Alliance Française
62:St Stephen's Green
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237:are passing, the
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179:Benjamin Woodward
159:The Building News
134:, a supporter of
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741:pp. 163–164
669:pp. 329–330
621:pp. 329–333
572:pp. 295–296
532:Daly's Club
251:Anglo-Irish
183:Reform Club
163:aristocracy
109:Dame Street
105:Daly's Club
40:Anglo-Irish
870:Categories
461:Irish duke
429:In fiction
285:After the
247:Protestant
473:Club Soda
467:Club Soda
372:, of the
231:Gladstone
203:Byzantine
839:, p. 122
790:60079186
739:(2009),
723:(1982),
707:(1887),
688:(2001),
635:(1840),
619:(1913),
570:(1853),
526:See also
383:Muckross
312:and the
265:was the
216:(1887),
483:Gallery
433:In the
338:of the
199:columns
76:History
68:to the
36:Ireland
809:(1982)
788:
778:
637:p. 541
453:Oxford
255:caviar
235:League
195:arched
167:claret
150:26, 10
66:leased
32:Dublin
725:p. 58
709:p. 31
690:p. 16
550:Notes
436:genre
171:whist
786:OCLC
776:ISBN
308:and
249:and
177:and
169:and
115:and
26:The
439:of
381:of
212:In
185:in
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103:at
99:of
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165:,
152:s.
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148:ÂŁ
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