Four Courts Marshalsea Explained

Prison Name:Four Courts Marshalsea
Location:Marshalsea Lane (previously Werburgh Street and Molesworth Court)
Coordinates:53.3449°N -6.2823°W
Status:defunct
Classification:remand and debtors
Closed:1874
Managed By:Dublin Castle administration
Director:Constable of Dublin Castle (from 1546)
Prisoners:Daniel O'Carroll[1] George Francis Train[2]

The Four Courts Marshalsea was a prison in Dublin, Ireland until 1874. The keeper of the prison was the Marshal of the Four Courts, a role filled after 1546 by the Constable of Dublin Castle.[3]

Name

Other debtor's prisons in Dublin which shared the name were the City Marshalsea, and the Marshalseas of Saint Sepulchre (abolished 1856[4]) and of Thomas Court and Donore (abolished 1826[5]).

The original Marshalsea prison from which these were named, was built in Southwark south of the City of London, for prisoners from the Marshalsea Court presided over by the Knight Marshal.[6]

Buildings

In 1580 the Four Courts Marshalsea was built on Werburgh Street.[3]

By 1750 it was in Molesworth Court on the site of the current Dublin Civic offices (between Fishamble Street and Winetavern Street), which was abandoned in 1777 in disrepair.[7] This location was close to the four courts which were at that time located adjacent to Christchurch Cathedral off Skinners Row and St Michael's Hill.[8]

1775 building

The final building was in Marshalsea Lane (no longer extant) off Marshal Lane (now Robert Emmet Close), off Bridgefoot Street, off Thomas Street and was likely constructed around 1775.[9] It was described by Samuel Lewis as "a large building ... the prison has two court-yards, two chapels, several common halls and a ball-court."[10]

Conditions

John Dillon said in 1898:[11]

I remember the Marshalsea Prison in Dublin, and in that gaol we had a nice suite of rooms, and we had balls there, and many a pleasant hour I have spent there, in the society of many of the most delightful men in Dublin, who were in the habit of spending some time at that resort. This was 25 years ago, and it was perfectly well recognised then that there was no kind of punishment in the debtors' gaol. They were held there until they made an arrangement with their creditors, but they had everything that their means would allow them to have in prison.

Prisoners

Originally the Four Courts Marshalsea was a remand prison for criminal trials in the Four Courts, and a debtor's prison for cases brought to the Court of King's Bench (one of the Four Courts) from all over Ireland.[10] [12] In 1842, the Four Courts Marshalsea received remaining prisoners from three closing prisons:[13]

In 1856, the Four Courts Marhsalsea received remaining prisoners from the Marshalsea of the abolished Manor of St. Sepulchre.[4]

Closure

Short Title:Four Courts Marshalsea Discontinuance Act 1874
Type:Act
Parliament:Parliament of the United Kingdom
Long Title:An Act for the discontinuance of the Four Courts Marshalsea (Dublin), and the removal of Prisoners therefrom.
Year:1874
Citation:37 & 38 Vict. c. 21
Royal Assent:30 June 1874
Collapsed:yes

The Four Courts Marshalsea was abolished by the Four Courts Marshalsea Discontinuance Act 1874 (37 & 38 Vict. c. 21),[14] because of "the very small and diminishing number of persons in that prison, and to the very large prison staff in proportion to the number of prisoners".[15]

The Dublin Militia used it as a barracks in the later 19th century.[16] It was used as a tenement for some years before being fully vacated in 1970 and demolished in 1975.

Some of the calp stone went to repair the City wall at Cook Street.

As of 2023, much of the complex is occupied by Bridgefoot Street Park with some of the remaining prison walls separating the park from nearby housing.

References

Sources

Citations

External links

Notes and References

  1. Book: Complete Baronetage: Great Britain and Ireland, 1707-1800, and Jacobite, 1688-1788. 1906. W. Pollard & Company, Limited. 14.
  2. Book: Train, George Francis. My Life in Many States and in Foreign Lands: Dictated in My Seventy-Fourth Year. 5 October 2017. 1902. Appleton. New York. 316.
  3. Gilbert 1854, p.43
  4. Book: Britain, Great. The statutes of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland. https://books.google.com/books?id=SlZDAAAAcAAJ&pg=PA275. 5 October 2017. 1856. 274–277 : 275 §§6, 7. 19 & 20 Vict. c. 57 : Manor Court of St. Sepulchre Abolition Act 1856.
  5. Book: Commissioners Appointed to Inquire into the Municipal Corporations In ireland (MCI) . Appendix To The First Report : Report on the City of Dublin, Part II . There was formerly a marshalsea for the liberty; but it has been abolished since the Prison Act, 7 Geo. IV. c. 74. . 1835 . William Clowes for HMSO . London . 30 September 2017.
  6. The Little Green: Part I . Thos. King . Moylan . . Old Dublin Society . June–August 1946 . 81–91 . VIII . 3 . 30080073.
  7. Gilbert 1854, p.61
  8. Web site: CO. DUBLIN, DUBLIN, ST MICHAEL'S HILL, FOUR COURTS (OLD) Dictionary of Irish Architects - . www.dia.ie . 6 July 2023.
  9. Web site: Ordnance Survey of Ireland . Ordnance Survey of Ireland . Ordnance Map of the City of Dublin, Sheet 20 . 2nd . Digital Library . University College Dublin . 22 April 2021 . English . 1864.
  10. Web site: Dublin Inns of Court. Lewis. Samuel. 1837. A Topographical Dictionary of Ireland. libraryireland. 5 October 2017.
  11. Prisons Bill . 27 July 1898 . House of Commons . 63 . 85–86 . 6 October 2017.
  12. Book: Inspectors General of Prisons . First report on general state of prisons of Ireland . 1823 . Appendix . 22 . https://archive.org/stream/op1243915-1001#page/n21.
  13. Book: Public General Statutes. https://books.google.com/books?id=YE8vAAAAIAAJ&pg=PA979. 5 October 2017. 1842. Eyre and Spottiswoode. 979–983, esp. the preamble. 5 & 6 Vict. c.95 : An Act for consolidating the Four Courts Marshalsea Dublin, Sheriff’s Prison Dublin, and for regulating the Four Courts Marshalsea, in Ireland.
  14. Book: Public General Statutes. https://books.google.com/books?id=tdQQAAAAYAAJ&pg=PA160. 30 June 1874. G.E. Eyre and W. Spottiswoode, printers to the Queen's most excellent majesty.. 160–162. 37 & 38 Vict. c.21 : An Act for the discontinuance of the Four Courts Marshalsea (Dublin), and the removal of Prisoners therefrom. .
  15. Law And Justice— Four Courts Marshalsea, Dublin.—Question . 14 July 1873 . House of Commons . 217 . 303 . 6 October 2017.
  16. Book: Bennett, Douglas. Encyclopaedia of Dublin. 1991. Gill and Macmillan. 9780717115990. 131.