Episcopal Chapel and Asylum for Penitent Females, Baggot Street, Dublin
Episcopal Chapel and Asylum for Penitent Females, was Protestant asylum for "fallen women" and an Episcopal Chapel[1] on Upper Baggot Street in Dublin.[2] It was on the corner of Baggot Street and Waterloo Road, in Dublin, the asylum could accommodate 50 penitent women[3] and the chapel could accommodate 1200 worshipers,[4] it was run by a committee of benevolent donors, it was built between 1832 and 1835, it opened in 1835 and closed in 1945.[5]
In 1858 a trust was set up for Episcopal Chapel and Asylum for Penitent Females Upper Baggot St., Dublin. This Asylum was described as being one of the first activities of the Church of Ireland's, Dublin City Mission.[6] It could accommodate 30 women.[7]
The building was demolished and offices and retail outlets, built on the property.
The Very Rev. Hamilton Verschoyle, future Bishop of Kilmore, Elphin and Ardagh, served as a chaplain in Baggot Street.[8] Rev. J Sandford, served as Assistant Chaplain as did Rev. J. J. Frew. Rev. Ambrose Wellesley Leet, D.D. served as Chaplain.
References
- Prostitution and Irish Society, 1800-1940 By Maria Luddy
- history of area
- 'The Parliamentary Gazetteer of Ireland: Adapted to the New Poor-law, Franchise, Municipal and Ecclesiastical Arrangements, as Existing in 1814-45, Volume 2', A. Fullarton and Company, 1846
- Episcopal Church Waterloo Road - Dublin’s Lost Treasures: Vanished Places in Dublin, By Hugh Oram.
- Baggot Street An Irishman's Diary, by Hugh Oram, Irish Times, February 25, 2008.
- 'The Females' advocate [afterw.] The Female mission record London female mission, 1840
- Dublin Female Penitentiaries www.libraryireland.com
- ' Sermons preached in the Episcopal Chapel Upper Baggot-Street' by Hamilton Verschoyle (Bishop of Kilmore, Elphin, and Ardagh.) 1843.