House - 18th/19th century, Dublin South City, Co. Dublin

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House

House – 18th/19th century, Dublin South City, Co. Dublin

Ward's Hill is not a name that appears on most modern maps of Dublin, yet a mansion once stood there, built around 1700 and significant enough to earn a mention in local historical records.

The building occupies a quiet corner of the documentary record, noted by Walsh in 1973 as a substantial residence constructed at the turn of the eighteenth century, when the expansion of prosperous households southward from the city was already well underway. That a mansion of this period existed here at all points to the area having carried more social and architectural weight than its current profile might suggest.

Walsh's account, published in 1973 and drawing on earlier sources, places the construction of the mansion at approximately 1700, situating it within a broader pattern of Georgian and late-Stuart building activity across Dublin's southern districts. The eighteenth century saw considerable private building by merchant families, professional men, and minor gentry who sought to establish themselves at a remove from the denser fabric of the city. A mansion in this context would typically have meant a substantial detached house with some surrounding grounds, built to signal permanence and prosperity rather than simply to provide shelter. The reference to Ward's Hill as a place-name is itself of interest, suggesting either an earlier family association with the land or a topographical feature that shaped how local people understood the landscape around them.

For anyone trying to locate the site today, the chief difficulty is that Ward's Hill as a named place has largely dissolved into the surrounding urban fabric of Dublin's south city. The mansion itself does not appear to survive in any recorded form, and the area has been subject to the usual pressures of development over three centuries. Visitors interested in this kind of early eighteenth-century suburban building history might find more context by consulting the local studies collections at Dublin City Library and Archive, where Walsh's original work and related sources are held. The surrounding streets retain occasional fabric from the period, and the general topography, the low rise of ground that would have made such a site attractive to a prosperous builder, can still be read in the landscape if you know to look for it.

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