place

St Patricks Tower

1757 establishments in IrelandBuildings and structures in Dublin (city)Defunct distilleries in IrelandSmock millsTowers in Dublin
St. Patrick's Tower
St. Patrick's Tower

St Patricks Tower is a former smock windmill that was built to power the Thomas Street Distillery. It is on Thomas Street, near the corner with Watling Street and is now part of the Digital Hub. The mill was originally built in 1757 and rebuilt in 1815.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article St Patricks Tower (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

St Patricks Tower
Watling Street, Dublin

Geographical coordinates (GPS) Address Nearby Places
placeShow on map

Wikipedia: St Patricks TowerContinue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 53.34401 ° E -6.28408 °
placeShow on map

Address

Saint Patrick's Tower (windmill tower)

Watling Street
D08 R596 Dublin (Ushers B ED)
Ireland
mapOpen on Google Maps

St. Patrick's Tower
St. Patrick's Tower
Share experience

Nearby Places

Rory O'More Bridge
Rory O'More Bridge

Rory O'More Bridge (Irish: Droichead Ruaraí Uí Mhóra) is a road bridge spanning the River Liffey in Dublin, Ireland and joining Watling Street (by the Guinness grounds) to Ellis Street and the north quays. The original wooden bridge on this site, built in 1670, was officially named Barrack Bridge because of the proximity of the Royal Barracks. However, it became known locally as Bloody Bridge, following an incident in which ferrymen attempted to destroy the bridge on several occasions (in an ill-fated attempt to protect their livelihoods). Twenty men were arrested and while they were being transferred to the Bridewell Prison, a rescue attempt was made resulting in the death of four men.The timber bridge was replaced by a stone bridge in 1704, and in 1811, a stone and masonry gateway known as the Richmond Tower was constructed beside it by the architect Francis Johnston. This tower was later relocated to the Royal Hospital, Kilmainham after traffic congestion increased with the arrival of the railway in 1847. The Barrack Bridge was replaced in 1859 by the cast-iron structure which is present to this day.Designed by George Halpin, the bridge was fabricated at the foundry of Robert Daglish in St Helens, Lancashire, from cast iron (with a wrought iron deck) and is supported on granite abutments. Both the upstream and the downstream sides of the bridge were transported by ship and brought up river to be manoeuvred into position at the site. The bridge was completed in 1859 and opened to the public in 1861 by Queen Victoria and Prince Albert as the Victoria & Albert Bridge (or the Queen Victoria Bridge).The bridge was renamed in the 1930s for Rory O'More, one of the key figures from the plot to capture Dublin as part of the Irish Rebellion of 1641.