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‘The radicals in these Reform times’: Politics, Grand juries, and Ireland’s Unbuilt Assize Courthouses, 1800–50
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 12 January 2016
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It is the aim, in this article, to identify the reasons why certain designs for courthouses in early-nineteenth-century Ireland remained unexecuted, and to do so by analysing surviving drawings and placing them in the political context at this time of Irish local government and of the efforts of Westminster politicians to institute reform. The funding and erection of courthouses were managed by grand juries, an archaic form of local government which gave few rights to smaller taxpayers and was widely perceived as an unaccountable institution associated with the ancien régime. In addition to hosting court sittings, courthouses were used by these grand juries for their private meetings and functions. By exploring the agendas and pretensions of these bodies, and by looking at the fluctuating availability of funding sources that were needed to initiate building work, I will argue through a series of Irish case studies that a renewed focus on elite patronage and its associated politics allows a new insight into courthouse building, which places less emphasis than is often the case on, for example, the role played by the changing legal profession in the architectural development of the courthouse.
In nineteenth-century Ireland, courthouses demarcated the visible and tangible presence in the urban landscape of the law and state-sanctioned justice. Laws passed by the Irish parliament and then, after its abolition in 1800, by the Westminster government, were enforced in assize courthouses by travelling judges on established ‘circuits’, visiting each city or county town twice a year (in the spring and summer). These judges travelled with great splendour through the countryside, and were welcomed by a high sheriff at the county border and escorted with military pageantry, ritual, and procession to their destination.
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31 Disused Public Buildings (Ireland) Act, 1808 (48 Geo. III, c. 113).
32 Hansard, 9 (20 April 1807), cc. 499–502; journal of the House of Commons, 64 (24 May 1809), p. 341; Hansard, 14 (24 May 1809), cc. 668–70; Journal of the House of Commons, 65 (21 February 1810), p. 113Google Scholar. A Bill To Amend the Laws In Ireland Respecting … Grand Juries (House of Commons papers, 1810 (118), i).
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40 IAA, Ace. 92/46.16-17, RIAI Murray Collection, Francis Johnston, elevations and plans for our Scheme ‘C’, May 1807.
41 IAA, Ace. 92/46.18, RIAI Murray Collection, Francis Johnston, plans for our Scheme ‘D’, c. 1807
42 Francis Johnston to James Norris Brewer, 29 February 1820; in Henchy, Patrick, ‘Francis Johnston, Architect, 1760–1829’, Dublin Historical Record, 11, no. 1 (December 1949-February 1950), pp. 1–16 (pp. 12–13)Google Scholar. McParland, , ‘The public work of architects in Ireland during the neo-classical period’, 1, p. 241.Google Scholar
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44 Report from the Select Committee on Grand Jury Presentments of Ireland, minutes of evidence and appendix (House of Commons papers 1814–15 (283),vi); Report from the Select Committee on Grand Jury Presentments (House of Commons papers 1816 (374), ix); Second Report from the Select Committee on Grand Jury Presentments (House of Commons papers 1816 (435), ix).
45 Journal of the House of Commons, 70 (28 April 1815), pp. 253 Google Scholar; 71 (29 April 1816), p. 317; and 72 (23 May 1817), p. 306.
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62 A set of four drawings has survived: IAA, Acc. 96/68.5.1.1–4, Guinness Collection, Henry, Mullins & McMahon, Kilmainham Courthouse (Dublin), elevations and plans, 5 Oct. 1817. See also Brett, , Court Houses and Market Houses of the Province of Ulster, p. 88.Google Scholar
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67 Obtaining loans for purchasing land was explicitly prohibited: Public works loan (Ireland) Act 1820 (1 Geo IV c. 81), s.13.
68 Baker exhibited drawings at the Royal Hibernian Academy in 1826 listed as nos. 245, 253, 259 and 265. See also Return Of All Sums Of Money …In Aid Of Public Works In Ireland, Since the Union (House of Commons papers, 1839 (540), xxxxiv), p. 12. A plaque in the grand jury room gives the architect’s name and the date of opening — 2 October 1820. A mistake in Casey, The Buildings of Ireland: Dublin, p. 686, incorrectly gives the architect as Isaac Farrell, William Farrell’s brother (clarified in correspondence with Christine Casey). See also Harvard University, Houghton Library, RAN 1/N/4, William Farrell Album, Kilmainham Courthouse, Dublin, undated elevation (a photograph copy of which exists in the IAA).
69 Dublin, National Archives of Ireland, OPW 5HC/4/400, Office of Public Works drawings, Kilmainham Courthouse (Dublin), ground floor plans, 16 February 1920.
70 Hansard, 1 (3rd series) (9 December 1830), cc. 909-32.
71 Public Works (Ireland) Act, 1831 (1 & 2 Will. IV, c.33); see Dwyer, Frederick O’, ‘The Architecture of the Board of Works 1829–1923’ (doctoral thesis, Trinity College Dublin, 1996).Google Scholar
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76 King’s County Assizes Act, 1832 (2 Will. IV, c. 60).
77 IAA, Acc.92/46.1174, RIAI Murray Collection, letter from the overseers of the competition to select a design for the new courthouse at Tullamore to William Murray, 15 November 1832. Bury had earlier communicated with Robert Smirke (architect of the Gloucester courthouse) about his plans, but it appears this came to nothing; see Byrne, Legal Offaly, p. 32.
78 Goslin, , ‘A History and Descriptive Catalogue of the Murray Collection’, p. 338Google Scholar; IAA, Acc.92/46.1174–1193, RIAI Murray Collection, Tullamore Courthouse, Co. Offaly, plans, elevations, and sections, December 1832.
79 French haunched and segmental windows were used by C. R. Cockerell at around this time; see Watkin, David, The Life and Work of C. R. Cockerell (London, 1974), p. 228.Google Scholar
80 An objection from a ‘cess-payer’ to a proposed item of expenditure (a presentment) by the grand jury.
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84 Tullamore (Co. Offaly), collection of Mr Michael Byrne, John B. Keane, Tullamore Courthouse, elevation, undated, c. 1833 (a photograph copy of which exists in the IAA).
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86 For crime figures, see the appendices to the annual reports of the Inspectors General of Irish Prisons (House of Commons papers); Freeman’s Journal, 8 March 1833; 2 August 1833; 17 July 1834; and 12 July 1836.
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88 Shanagarry (Co. Cork), collection of the Allen family, Henry Hill, Limerick City Courthouse, plan and elevations, June 1834 (photograph copies in the IAA).
89 Ibid., Henry Hill, ‘Design for a Public Building’, undated (photograph copy in the IAA).
90 Dublin, National Archives of Ireland, CSORP 1827/1453, Henry Westenra to William Gregory, 25 July 1827.
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94 One study, omitted from this article, is of Charles Lanyon’s courthouse at Crumlin Road, Belfast, dating from the late 1840s, for which an unexecuted scheme exists, with an elevation altered in a later design (as built) in a manner very similar to Keane’s revisions at Tullamore. After the long stasis of the Famine we find courthouses at Sligo (in the 1870s) and after a fire at Roscommon (in the 1880s); an unbuilt scheme survives for the latter. For Belfast, see Brett, Court Houses and Market Houses of the Province of Ulster, p. 4. For Sligo, see Mulvin, Lynda, ‘Administering Justice in Gothic Revival Ireland: a Study of the Sligo Assizes Courthouse’, in Studies in the Gothic Revival, ed. McCarthy, Michael and O’Neill, Karina (Dublin, 2008), pp. 180–94Google Scholar; and Irish Builder, 16, no. 349 (1 July 1874), p. 189 Google Scholar. For Roscommon, see Irish Builder, 25, no. 569 (1 September 1883), pp.270 and 275.Google Scholar
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