Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Harold's Cross (Irish: Cros Araild, meaning 'Harold's Cross') is an affluent urban village and inner suburb on the south side of Dublin, Ireland [1] in the postal district D6W. The River Poddle runs through it, though largely in an underground culvert, and it holds a major cemetery, Mount Jerome , and Our Lady's Hospice .
Mount Jerome Cemetery & Crematorium (Irish: Reilig Chnocán Iaróm) is situated in Harold's Cross on the south side of Dublin, Ireland. [1] Since its foundation in 1836, it has witnessed over 300,000 burials. Originally an exclusively Protestant cemetery, Roman Catholics have also been buried there since the 1920s.
Church of the Assumption of the Blessed Virgin Mary, Walkinstown 1964 Constituted from Crumlin Walkinstown: 2 Beechwood Avenue Church of the Holy Name, Ranelagh: 1906 Constituted from Rathgar Beechwood Avenue: Harold's Cross: Our Lady of the Rosary, Harold's Cross 1935 Constituted from Rathgar, Rathmines and Terenure Harold's Cross: Mount Argus
St Paul's Retreat, Mount Argus, Harold's Cross, Dublin: Venerated in: Roman Catholic Church: Beatified: 16 October 1988, Saint Peter's Basilica by Pope John Paul II: Canonized: 3 June 2007, Saint Peter's Basilica by Pope Benedict XVI: Major shrine: St Paul's Retreat, Mount Argus, Harold's Cross, Dublin 6W, Ireland: Feast: 5 January: Attributes
Westbank Orphanage at 201 Harold's Cross. It was previously the home where Richard Allen was born in 1803. The Protestant Home for Orphan & Destitute Girls in Harolds Cross, Dublin, was established around 1860 in No. 201 Harolds Cross, in the house where the Quaker, the famous slavery abolitionist Richard Allen was born, in the home of his parents, a large red brick building dating from the ...
There was a St. Kevin's Church (Irish: Eaglais Naomh Caoimhín) in what is now St. Kevin's Park, Camden Row, Dublin, Ireland at least as far as the 13th century. After the Reformation, it became an Anglican church. The original church was replaced around 1750 by a new one, closed in 1912 and now in ruins. [1]
The Russian School of Music was established by the church in Harold's Cross. [13] In September 2009, the Bishop Elisey of Sourozh paid a visit to the Irish parishes of his diocese. [14] In October 2010, the Russian Orthodox Church of Ireland opened two more congregations: in Athlone in Connaught province and Drogheda in Leinster province.
In 1845, Mother Aikenhead had been advised for health reasons to move to the country. She purchased “Greenmount”, a late 18th century house at Harold’s Cross. Renamed "Our Lady’s Mount", it became the motherhouse of the congregation, housing the novitiate and a school. In 1879, the motherhouse was moved to Mount St. Anne's in Milltown.