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Kinsealy

Outlying suburb of Dublin, Ireland From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Kinsealymap
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Kinsealy (officially Kinsaley; Irish: Cionn Sáile)[1] is an outer suburb of Dublin in Fingal, Ireland. Kinsealy is on the northside of the city, about 13 km from the city centre,[2] on the Malahide Road, in the green belt between the suburbs of Balgriffin, Portmarnock and Malahide.

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Farmland at Kinsealy from the air

Kinsaley is also the name of the surrounding electoral division[1] and of a civil parish in the ancient barony of Coolock within the traditional County Dublin.[1] The urban area of Kinsealy crosses into the electoral division of Balgriffin.

Kinsealy gives its name to Kinsealy–Drinan, an urban area outside Swords, treated by the Fingal County Council development plan as part of Swords.[3]

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History

Samuel Lewis' 1837 Topographical Dictionary describes the parish of Kinsealy as "well cultivated", with a limestone quarry and a holy well.[4]

Features

One of the most notable structures in the area is Abbeville, a partially 17th century but mainly Georgian house, for many years owned by Charles Haughey, including during his time as Taoiseach. Haughey's lavish lifestyle earned him the nickname, "the Squire of Kinsealy".[5][6]

Kinsaley House is another of the earliest houses in the area constructed around 1736 in the fashionable Georgian style. As of 2023, the house is surrounded by a 21st-century housing estate.[7]

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Amenities

Kinsealy is served by Dublin Bus routes 42, 42N, and 43.[8] It has a Roman Catholic church named after St. Nicholas of Myra, by a secondary road to Portmarnock. The church site originally held the school and this was relocated to its current site in 1952.[9]

Demographics

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References

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