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County Dublin, Ireland
Villages
Dundrum
description from Lewis's Topographical Dictionary of Ireland, 1837
See Rathdown Civil Registration District BMD refs (vital records)
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DUNDRUM, a village, in the parish of TANEY, half-barony of RATHDOWN, county of DUBLIN, and province of LEINSTER, 3/4 miles (S.) from Dublin city centre, on the road to Enniskerry; containing 680 inhabitants.
This village, in which are a number of very pretty cottages, is pleasantly situated on a sheltered declivity near the base of the fine mountain range that extends along the south side of the county, It is a favourite place of resort for invalids from Dublin, for whom the mildness of its climate and the purity of the air are peculiarly favourable; and is noted for numerous herds of goats, which, browsing among the mountain pastures, afford milk of very excellent quality. An office for the penny post from Dublin has been established in the village, in which are a chapel belonging to the Roman Catholic union of Booterstown, a school, and a dispensary.
The environs abound with pleasing and strikingly diversified scenery, and are embellished with numerous gentlemen's scats and elegant villas, most of which are situated in tastefully ornamented grounds and command fine views of the bay of Dublin and the country adjacent. Of those in the more immediate neighbourhood the principal are Wickham, the seat of W. Farran, Esq., a handsome residence containing a richly stored museum of natural curiosities; Sweetmount, of W. Nolan, Esq.; Dundrum House, of J. Walshe, Esq ; Churchtown, of W. Corbet, Esq. Churchtown House, of D. Lynch, Esq.; Sweetmount Villa, of J. Burke Esq.; and Sweetmount House, of M. Ryan, Esq.
The ruins of Dundrum castle consist of one tower covered with ivy
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