Father Mathew Bridge :: Shared Description

Father Mathew Bridge is a road bridge spanning the River Liffey in Dublin, and joining Merchants Quay to Church Street and the north quays. It is approximately on the site of the original, and for many years only, Bridge of Dublin, dating back to the 11th century.
At the beginning of the 19th century, Dublin Bridge was replaced by a three-span, elliptical arch stone bridge. Designed by George Knowles (who also designed O'Donovan Rossa Bridge and Lucan Bridge), the bridge was opened in 1818 as Whitworth Bridge, for Charles, Earl of Whitworth, Lord Lieutenant of Ireland.
As with many other Dublin bridges (particularly those named for British peers), the bridge was renamed following independence by the Free State as Dublin Bridge in the 1920s.
In line with another, later, Dublin tradition of naming bridges for temperance campaigners, the bridge was renamed again in 1938 for Father Theobald Mathew (the Apostle of Temperance) who was born at Thomastown near Golden, County Tipperary.
by N Chadwick
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7 images use this description:

O1434 : Father Mathew Bridge by N Chadwick
O1434 : Father Mathew Bridge by N Chadwick
O1434 : Southern end of Father Mathew Bridge by N Chadwick
O1434 : Father Mathew Bridge by N Chadwick
O1434 : Father Mathew Bridge by N Chadwick
O1434 : Father Mathew Bridge by N Chadwick
O1434 : Father Mathew Bridge by N Chadwick


These Shared Descriptions are common to multiple images. For example, you can create a generic description for an object shown in a photo, and reuse the description on all photos of the object. All descriptions are public and shared between contributors, i.e. you can reuse a description created by others, just as they can use yours.
Created: Wed, 19 Dec 2018, Updated: Wed, 19 Dec 2018

The 'Shared Description' text on this page is Copyright 2018 N Chadwick, however it is specifically licensed so that contributors can reuse it on their own images without restriction.

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