SAINT LAURENCE O’TOOLE CHURCH

SEVILLE PLACE DUBLIN DOCKLANDS

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THE GREEN MENU OPTIONS ARE MOBILE FRIENDLY AND ARE FASTER SO THEY ARE RECOMMENDED. THE RED MENU OPTIONS ARE SOMEWHAT SLOWER DEPENDING ON YOUR DEVICE OR BROWSER AND ARE MORE SUITABLE FOR DESKTOPS AND LAPTOPS. THE BLUE OPTIONS ARE PAGE LINKS AND WILL BE PHASED OUT GOING FORWARD

SAINT LAURENCE O’TOOLE CHURCH


SORRY FOR THE DELAY
This church was begun in 1844 by John B. Keane and completed in 1858 by John Bourke, occupying a triangular site at the intersection of Seville Place and Spencer Dock, donated to the church in the mid nineteenth-century.

The church was constructed to serve the growing community in the area who were housed in large numbers of brown brick houses and cottages built for the population of dockworkers and their families.

The design skilfully exploits the limited site with the four-stage steeple providing an important vertical emphasis. The interior was stripped of much of its decoration in 1975 enlivened only by the retained stained glass windows by Casey Bros c.1958.

The spire of the church was said to have been the last landmark visible to emigrants leaving Ireland from the North Wall in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries and remains a local landmark and a social focal point of the local community.

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