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Originally known as Abbey House with a stucco front from 1825 and containing a building from the 17th and 18th centuries. There is a central projection, Gothic porch with renaissance moulds. Inside there is a room with 17th- and 18th-century panelling and a staircase with turned balusters, square newel and moulded string.
The street is served by two Luas light rail stops, one at Jervis Street and Abbey Street Luas stop near O'Connell Street. About 1 km in length, it is divided into Abbey Street Upper (west end), Abbey Street Middle and Abbey Street Lower (east end). Abbey Street Old is a laneway to the rear of the buildings on the south side of Abbey Street Lower.
Wynn's Hotel is a historic hotel located on Abbey Street in Dublin, Ireland. Originally opened as a boarding house in 1845, the hotel played a vital role leading up to the 1916 Easter Rising and other significant Irish events. The hotel was rebuilt and opened on 17 December 1926 and is one of the best-known hotels in Dublin.
[1] [6] [7] By 1204 the Benedictine Priory of St. Andrew of the Ards was built about 2 miles north of Ballyhalbert in the Ards Peninsula. It became known as Blackabbey from the colour of the clothes worn by the monks, and to distinguish it from the Cistercian house of Grey Abbey nearby, on the shores of Strangford Lough.
The John B. McCreary House, also formerly known as the Christian Science Society and most recently The Abbey, is an historic Victorian building located at 34 Gurney Street, corner of Columbia Street, in Cape May, New Jersey.
Henry de Aldithley (or Audley) endowed the Cistercian Abbey of St. Mary at Hulton, near the site of Heighley Castle in 1223, donating a large amount of land, some of which was an inheritance from his mother and some of which was purchased. The endowment consisted of the villages of Julton and Rushton to the south of Burslem with "Manesmore", a ...
Abbey House may refer to several houses in England: Abbey House, Baker Street, London, a possible location of 221B Baker Street, the fictional residence of Sherlock Holmes; Abbey House, Barrow-in-Furness, a 1914 house by Edwin Lutyens; Abbey House, Cambridge, a 17th-century house; Abbey House, Cirencester, Gloucestershire, a former country house
The Abbey Gateway, St Albans was built in 1365 and is the last remaining building (except for the Abbey itself) of the Benedictine Monastery at St Albans, Hertfordshire. [ 1 ] It was besieged during the Peasants' Revolt in 1381, and was used as a prison following the dissolution of the Abbey in 1539.