A few weeks back I posted the picture here, wondering if
anyone could identify it. All I knew was that it was from an old glass plate
negative from my grandfather’s collection, and that he lived in Dalkey, Co
Dublin. I also knew that he’d taken similar photos of the area from around late
1870’s to the early 1900’s. The general treeless landscape, not to mention the
woman’s dress, put in mind an early date, and I knew those italianate blinds
were popular in the area in the 1890’s, my grandfather’s own house Monte
Alverno in Dalkey being similarly equipped.
Barely was the photo online than up popped Aoife Sherwin
@tweetiesherwin to identify it as St German’s, Vico Road, Dalkey. And she put
up the picture of the house as it is today. The blinds have gone, the iron
gates stay the same.
Next step, I told myself, who are those people?
Back in Ireland this week and passing thro Dublin I
visited the Irish Architectural Archive @Arch-Archive and The National Library @NLIreland. It seems the
house was occupied up until 1886 by one Henry Williams. Of him, I found
nothing, other than that he was presumably son of James Williams who had lived
there in 1879. But then in 1891 it was occupied
by one D.C.Ferguson CE.
A man by name of D.C.Ferguson was ‘Architect and Surveyor’
(in 1877) at 45 North Great Georges Street, and (in 1879) at Leinster Road
Rathmines. And a D.C.Ferguson was in St Alban’s, a house in Dalkey’s Nerano Road
in 1886.
The 1901 census shows St Germans occupied by one Duncan
Campbell Ferguson, aged 56, his 48 year old wife, and their nine children.
Now here’s the thing. A Duncan Campell Ferguson was a
noted architect, and all about can he read him here.
But, noted or not, he certainly wasn’t 56 in the year
1901, having been old enough in the 1820’s to have received architectural
prizes. But..the same Duncan had a son of the same name, Duncan Campbell
Ferguson. An accountant in Guinness, he was married to a Scottish lady with the
strange given name, for a woman, of Douglas. Strange in our times, but in
earlier centuries used also by girls.
Anyway, obviously, there were two Duncan Campbell
Fergusons. My surmise...the architect older owned St German’s in 1891, or it was
held in his name anyway. The accountant younger lived round the corner in St
Albans. By 1901 the younger had moved into his father’s residence. With the
nine children!
Something along those lines.
The woman in the dress?
Douglas Ferguson? Most likely. But would a forty eight
year old woman have worn a dress like that around 1900?
Being Scottish, and married to an accountant, in
Guinness, no doubt..
The owners of St Germans at the time, had a wall erected to block public access to the Vico Road and you can see it in the older photograph. This was not removed until 1889 when the road was made public, hence this would date the photo to an earlier year than 1900 - great photograph
ReplyDeleteSt Albans was occupied (given address) by the German spy, Hermann Goertz, in the early 1940's, and later occupied (given address) by shipping director Henry Patrick Leneghan (spelling has proved contentious) in 1944 and for a few subsequent years. Can anyone help me with additional information please. 0871370286, royjstokes@gmail.com
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