After national independence

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Also known as: Baile Átha Cliath, Dubh Linn, Dyfflin
Irish:
Dubh Linn
Norse:
Dyfflin (“Black Pool”)
Also called:
Baile Átha Cliath (“Town of the Ford of the Hurdle”)

Between 1922 and 1932 the first administrations of the new Irish Free State were preoccupied with trying to establish new government institutions and to repair the damage inflicted on the economy by the Troubles of 1916–23. Housing took a low priority, and it was not until the advent of Eamon de Valera’s Fianna Fáil government in 1932 that a concerted program of home building got under way. Some of the worst inner-city slums were cleared, and the residents were moved to new housing projects on the city’s outskirts. With the introduction of better health care, old-age pensions, and children’s allowances, the condition of Dublin’s poor began to improve.

The outbreak of World War II halted housing construction because of a shortage of building material, much of which was imported. As Ireland remained neutral, Dublin escaped the worst effects of the war, although there were isolated German bombing incidents. Food, with some exceptions, was plentiful, but the scarcity of gasoline made private transportation nonexistent and severely limited public transportation. Politically, Dublin had the mysterious atmosphere of other neutral “whispering galleries” such as Madrid and Lisbon, heightened by the presence of both Allied and Axis diplomats.

After the war, as shortages eased, new suburbs began to spread. In 1969 high-rise apartment blocks were built in new satellite developments in the towns of Ballymun and Ballyfermot; unfortunately, these proved no more immune to the crime and vandalism that plagued such buildings practically everywhere. Recognizing this, in the early 21st century Dublin City Council approved the demolition of nearly all the tower buildings in Ballymun as part of a new civic development.

The surge in building was a symbol of the prosperity that rejuvenated the city in the 1960s and ’70s. Tourism started to become a major industry, and Ireland’s membership in the EU brought more international organizations and firms to the city. Fighting in Northern Ireland in the 1970s spilled over to Dublin in February 1972 when a crowd protesting the Bloody Sunday killings in Londonderry burned down the British embassy in Merrion Square. In July 1976 the British ambassador and a young assistant were murdered in Sandyford by the IRA as they drove to work. Development slowed with the onset of the economic recession in the early 1980s, but it quickened again as the economy improved later in the decade. By the mid-1990s Ireland, whose robust economy earned it the nickname the “Celtic Tiger,” was flourishing, and this drove a further revival and new construction in Dublin.

The social and economic changes that came about after the end of World War II inevitably put pressure on historic Dublin, and an energetic conservation movement developed. In 1988 Dublin celebrated its millennium, arousing much thought and comment about its past and future, especially concerning the quality of its urban life. The city’s regeneration was recognized in 1991, when Dublin was designated that year’s European City of Culture.

John O'Beirne Ranelagh