A Wanderer's Photo Gallery
One of the things that gets me exploring Britain and Ireland is the prospect of bringing away some pleasing photos of my own making with me. Not only has that fostered the growth of an interest in hillwalking and cycling but it also has driven me to further the photography itself. All that has created the library of images from which the collections that you find here have been drawn.

St. Stephen's Green, Dublin, Éire

St. Stephen's Green, Dublin, Éire

St. Stephen's Green dates from the time of King Charles I but has had a wide and varied history. Having a house around it became fashionable by the late seventeenth century, when plots of land became available for the building of two-story buildings. The diminishing chance of attack from the native Irish helped. During the eighteenth century, mansions for nobles were built and some survive today. At that time, the green was unfenced and could be used for all sorts of undesirable purposes: hangings, riots and so on. In 1815, it received the current iron railing to commemorate Waterloo. In 1880, philanthropist Lord Ardilaun landscaped it largely as we see it today, even if the Easter Rising in 1916 did the place no favours, and gave it to the city.

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