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Coordinates: 53°22′N 6°10′W / 53.367°N 6.167°W / 53.367; -6.167
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[[Image:IMGDollymountStrand 3649w.JPG|thumb|right|280px|Dollymount Strand, North Bull Island, looking south]]
[[Image:IMGDollymountStrand 3649w.JPG|thumb|right|280px|Dollymount Strand, North Bull Island, looking south]]


'''Dollymount''' ({{irish place name|Cnocán Doirinne|no_translate=yes}}) is a coastal suburban area on the north coast of Dublin Bay, on the [[Northside (Dublin)|northside]] of [[Dublin]], just south of [[St Anne's Park]].
'''Dollymount''' ({{irish place name|Cnocán Doirinne|no_translate=yes}}) is a coastal suburban area on the north coast of Dublin Bay, within [[Clontarf, Dublin|Clontarf]], on the [[Northside (Dublin)|northside]] of [[Dublin]], [[Republic of Ireland|Ireland]], just south of [[St Anne's Park]].


==Dollymount Strand==
==Dollymount Strand==
The famous Wooden Bridge from [[Clontarf]] links to [[Bull Island]] and the {{km to mi|5|abbr=no|precision=1 }} long stretch of sandy beach and dunes on the island's eastern shore; while the island is located in Clontarf and [[Raheny]], the beach is called '''Dollymount Strand'''. For more on the strand and the island in general, see [[Bull Island|the main article]].
The famous Wooden Bridge from Clontarf links to [[Bull Island]] and the {{km to mi|5|abbr=no|precision=1 }} long stretch of sandy beach and dunes on the island's eastern shore; while the island is located in Clontarf and [[Raheny]], the beach is called '''Dollymount Strand'''. For more on the strand and the island in general, see [[Bull Island|the main article]].


==Amenities==
==Amenities==
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* [[List of towns and villages in the Republic of Ireland|List of towns and villages in Ireland]]
* [[List of towns and villages in the Republic of Ireland|List of towns and villages in Ireland]]


==External links==
{{coord|53|22|N|6|10|W|region:IE_type:city|display=title}}
{{coord|53|22|N|6|10|W|region:IE_type:city|display=title}}

{{Dublin residential areas}}
{{Dublin residential areas}}

[[Category:Towns and villages in County Dublin]]
[[Category:Towns and villages in County Dublin]]
[[Category:Clontarf]]
[[Category:Clontarf]]

Revision as of 10:26, 21 May 2009

Dollymount Strand, North Bull Island, looking south

Dollymount (Irish: Cnocán Doirinne) is a coastal suburban area on the north coast of Dublin Bay, within Clontarf, on the northside of Dublin, Ireland, just south of St Anne's Park.

Dollymount Strand

The famous Wooden Bridge from Clontarf links to Bull Island and the Template:Km to mi long stretch of sandy beach and dunes on the island's eastern shore; while the island is located in Clontarf and Raheny, the beach is called Dollymount Strand. For more on the strand and the island in general, see the main article.

Amenities

Dollymount is primarily residential, having just a few shops and a restaurant, and an ATM, near the fountain pond of St. Anne's Park. Most commercial facilities are found in the main Clontarf centres.

The area has a Roman Catholic Church, St. Gabriel's, the third and last-built of the three Catholic churches in Clontarf which was completed in the 1950s. A much earlier plan to build a second Clontarf Church of Ireland parish church in Dollymount to complement the church on Seafield Road was abandoned in the 1800s.

History

Dollymount lies within the district of Clontarf, which surrounds it (as the citywards part of Bull Island is part of Clontarf). For history before the 1800s, see the relevant article. For details of the origin, from "The Neighbourhood of Dublin" (Weston St. John Joyce, 3rd edition, Dublin, 1920):
"The name of Dollymount would seem to have originated with a house bearing that title which stood on or adjoining the site of Sea Park in Mount Prospect Avenue, and which is shown in Duncan's Map of 1820. "Dollymount House" appears in the Dublin Directory up to 1836, after which it disappears, doubtless having been re-named, and in 1838 the name appears for the first time as that of a district, under the heading of "Green Lanes, Dollymount." It is stated that the designation was adopted in the first instance by a member of the Vernon family as a compliment to his wife, by name Dorothy, or Dolly Vernon." The Green Lanes are still referred to as simply "Clontarf" in Thom's Irish Almanac & Official Directory of 1849.

See also

53°22′N 6°10′W / 53.367°N 6.167°W / 53.367; -6.167