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Henry Shaw's Dublin City Directory, 1850 (Alphabetical list)
YATES, John, 13 Eustace street
Yeates, George, 2 Grafton street, and 10 Wellington place, near Clanbrassil street
William, 39 Richmond street, Portobello
Mrs. 3 Catherine villa
Yewen, Widow, 24 Monck place
Yoakley, Thomas, 85 Camden street, Lower
Yore, Patrick, 6 Grattan street
York, Patt, 23 Cross Kevin street
Young and Williamson, 142 Gloucester street, Lr.
Anne, 2 South Anne street
Arthur W. 142 Gloucester street, Lower
George, 14 Suffolk street, and 4 Heytesbury street
James, 16 Grenville street
James, 43 Essex street, East, and 13 Boot lane
Joseph, 65 Camden street, Lower
Lawrence, 4 Albert place, East
Mrs. 44 Hardwicke street
Myles, 43 James' street
Robert, Peeble's buildings, 55 Manor street
Samuel, 23 Park street, East
Thomas, 24 Summerhill
Rev. Charles, Chapel, Upper Gardiner street
Francis, 15 Summerhill parade
John, 12 Mountjoy square, West
Mrs. 9 Anne street, North East
Miss, 5 Portland place
Margaret, 16 Northumberland square
Patrick, 9 Hawkins' street
S. and Co. 151 Thomas street
Thomas, 6 Francis street
Thomas, 20 do.
William, 46 Great Straed street
William, 12 Lower Ormond quay
Yourell, John, 22 Smithfield
James, 173 Townsend street
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Truelove's Journal: A Bookshop Novella
From a sad, comfortless childhood Giles Truelove developed into a reclusive and uncommunicative man whose sole passion was books. For so long they were the only meaning to his existence. But when fate eventually intervened to have the outside world intrude upon his life, he began to discover emotions that he never knew he had.
A story for the genuine booklover, penned by an Irish bookseller under the pseudonym of Ralph St. John Featherstonehaugh.
FREE download 23rd - 27th May
Annals of the Famine in Ireland
Annals of the Famine in Ireland, by Asenath Nicholson, still has the power to shock and sadden even though the events described are ever-receding further into the past. When you read, for example, of the poor widowed mother who was caught trying to salvage a few potatoes from her landlord's field, and what the magistrate discovered in the pot in her cabin, you cannot help but be appalled and distressed.
The ebook is available for download in .mobi (Kindle), .epub (iBooks, etc.) and .pdf formats. For further information on the book and author see details ».
Ireland's Welcome to the Stranger
This book, the prequel to Annals of the Famine in Ireland cannot be recommended highly enough to those interested in Irish social history. The author, Mrs Asenath Nicholson, travelled from her native America to assess the condition of the poor in Ireland during the mid 1840s. Refusing the luxury of hotels and first class travel, she stayed at a variety of lodging-houses, and even in the crude cabins of the very poorest. Not to be missed!
The ebook is available for download in .mobi (Kindle), .epub (iBooks, etc.) and .pdf formats. For further information on the book and author see details ».
Henry Ford Jones' book, first published in 1915 by Princeton University, is a classic in its field. It covers the history of the Scotch-Irish from the first settlement in Ulster to the American Revolutionary period and the foundation of the country.
The ebook is available for download in .mobi (Kindle), .epub (iBooks, etc.) and .pdf formats. For further information on the book and author see details ».
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