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During lockdown, I researched and wrote a long article on the history of gay-friendly pubs and venues in Dublin over a fifty-year period – from the early Irish Free State in 1923 to the emergence of the first proto-gay rights group in 1973. I’m delighted that this work has now been published as a chapter in The Irish Pub: Invention and Re-Invention, the first book-length academic study of the Irish pub. Credit to editors Moonyoung and Perry for sticking with an ambitious project and getting it across the line.

Front cover

My chapter examines the history, importance and legacy of public houses where gay men socialised – primarily Davy Byrnes, the Dawson Lounge, the Bailey, Bartley Dunne’s and Rice’s – in the Grafton Street and St Stephen’s Green area of the south city centre. It also looks at some of the hotel bars, restaurants, late-night cafés, private clubs and basement shebeens that served as meeting points for a small social scene that was criminalised and underground. I’m thrilled that the chapter was given a generous layout, with 29 pages featuring 19 full-colour historical images and advertisements.

Sample two pages from the chapter, part of a press package that has been sent out.

It has its origins in a 2013 CHTM! blog article on Bartley Dunne’s and Rice’s which became one of the website’s most-read articles. It proved that there was a keen audience for this kind of social history.

Why did I take an interest? First, the topic hadn’t been examined in detail before – a strong motivation in itself. Most histories of gay life in Dublin focus on political organising and activism from the early 1970s onwards. A hugely important era but I wanted to uncover the community’s social life before the first campaign groups, early discos, the Hirschfeld Centre (est. 1979), and The George pub (est. 1985). Second, I was drawn to the underground nature of the pre-liberation scene – the coded language, discreet signals, and a community socialising hidden in plain sight. Third, I felt strongly that this was an important part of the city’s wider social fabric, and that gay/LGBT+ history should not be treated as separate from Dublin’s history as a whole.

I was fortunate to interview several older gay men with memories of their social lives in the late 1950s and 1960s. They spoke about the fear of blackmail and arrest, but equally about camaraderie, a lively social calendar, and building lifelong friendships and partnerships. For instance, one couple, whom I interviewed in their Portobello home, met in Bartley Dunne’s in 1966 in their mid-twenties and have been together ever since. Harold Clarke, who passed away in 2022 a year after our interview, met his partner in 1956 and remained with him until his death in 2014.

Ads for Bartley Dunne’s from a talk I gave as part of the Ireland Sexualities in History conference (2022)

The project opened all sorts of avenues to the history of Dublin’s bustling nightlife scene, which will be of interest to Dubliners of all persuasions. I spoke to Wladek Gaj, whose remarkable mother, Margaret Gaj, ran Mrs Gaj’s café on Lower Baggot Street from 1963 to 1980; to Arthur Gilligan Jr, whose father owned the Dawson Lounge from 1951 to 1969; to Eddie Hernon, who worked in the Bailey’s fish restaurant in the early 1960s; to Tara Higgins and her father Reg Woods Jr, whose family operated the Manhattan all-night café from 1951; and to Stephen Corcoran, a former barman at the Wicklow Hotel who later established his own gay bar in Paris.

I encourage you to buy the book or request it at your local library. Onto the next project now!

– Sam McGrath

PS – Others are doing excellent work in this similar field, see Averill Earls’ Love in the Lav: A Social Biography of Same-Sex Desire in Ireland, 1922–1972 which was published in July 2025, and Tom Hulme’s Belfastmen: An Intimate History of Life Before Gay Liberation due in April 2026.

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This is an attempt to document all bars attached to social and private clubs in Dublin – those run by sports clubs, community groups, trade unions, private members’ clubs, residents’ associations, and cultural organisations. Officially referred to as Registered Clubs, these venues do not appear in any centrally held register issued by Revenue. This is a work in progress. If you have any corrections or additions, please email me at matchgrams(at)gmail.com.

To open the full map in a new tab, click here.

Cian Duffy has done a great service for historians, researchers, and genealogists by compiling a map of all licensed premises in Dublin dating back to 1902. His map currently includes over 1,000 operating public bars, 534 pubs that closed before 2010, and 139 that closed after 2010. He is on a mission to visit every open licensed premises on the map – with about 40 to go – and you can follow his progress on his blog.

In late 2023, while home sick with Covid, I began compiling a list of all social clubs, sports clubs, and private members’ clubs with bars on their premises. These fall outside the scope of Cian’s research. Friends have continued to send me tips and updates, so I’ve decided to publish this evolving list as a work in progress.

As these are private members’ clubs with licensed bars, it’s generally required that all members and guests sign in at the door – though practices vary by venue. This list may be useful for those seeking unique venues for birthdays, retirements, or other gatherings.

I’ve divided the map pins into three categories:

1. Sports
2. Non-Sports
3. Closed

1. Sports
As you can imagine, sports clubs with bars comprise a huge number. The majority are what you expect – soccer, GAA, rugby, tennis, cricket and golf clubs. More uncommon would be bars found at hockey clubs (e.g. Three Rockers Rovers in Rathfarnham and Pembroke Wanderers in Ballsbridge), athletics clubs (Donore Harriers in Chapelizod and Clonliffe Harriers in Santry), a pigeon club (Sarsfield Pigeon Club in Ballyfermot), rowing clubs (Commercial and Neptune near Phoenix Park), a badminton club (Terenure Badminton Centre), and a bridge club (Regent Bridge Club in Ballsbridge).

Clonliffe Harriers Athletics Club, Santry


2. Non-Sports
Many of these are associated with jobs, professions and industry. There are a lot of public service sectors represented, including:

Gardaí – The Dublin Metropolitan Garda Recreation Club at Westmanstown Sports & Conference Centre, Westmanstown, D15. There are also separate bars for Garda officers and other ranks (nicknamed “Wet Canteen”) at Garda Headquarters in Phoenix Park. The Garda Club on Harrington Street closed back in 2014.

Dublin Bus/Bus Éireann workers – The Coldcut Club, Clondalkin, D22.

An Post – The Postal Club, Old Bawn, Tallaght, D24.

Teachers – The Teachers Club, Parnell Square, D1. Ran by The Irish National Teachers’ Organisation (INTO)

Prison Officers – Millmount House, Drumcondra, D9. Ran by the Prison Officers Association.

Dublin Airport Airport Leisure Social Athletic Association (ALSAA), Old Airport Rd, Co Dublin

RTÉ – RTÉ Sports & Social Club in Donnybrook, D4 (closed?)

Defence Forces -Three bars in Cathal Brugha Barracks, Rathmines and one (?) in McKee Barracks, Cabra.

There are also the various bars on different university and college campuses.

Although they don’t retain a connection today, Sportslink in Santry was originally formed by staff from Telecom Éireann in 1993. The Transport Sports & Social Club in Crumlin was established by members of the ITGWU in 1974. In Inchicore, the Inchicore Sports and Social Club (formerly CIE Social Club) and Inchicore United Workman’s Club both had connections to local railway workers. The Glue Pot venue was originally the social club for workers from the now-closed Clondalkin Paper Mills.

Transport Sports & Social Club, Crumlin

Solicitors have a bar in the Law Society of Ireland, Blackhall Place, D7 while Barristers have the “The Sheds” bar at The Bar Council of Ireland, Distillery Building, Church Street, D7.

Private Members Clubs
Then there are the long-established clubs including the Kildare Street and University Club, the Royal Irish Automobile Club, the Royal Dublin Society (RDS) members club, the Stephen’s Green Hibernian Club and the United Arts Club. All are in St Stephen’s Green area besides the RDS in Ballsbridge.

Irish culture
You also have a number of venues associated with the Irish language and music including Club Chonradh na Gaeilge (closed for renovation) on Harcourt Street, Áras Chrónáin in Clondalkin and Cultúrlann na hÉireann in Monkstown. Note that Comhaltas Ceoltóirí Éireann’s Clasaċ venue on the Alfie Byrne Road near Clontarf has a theatre licence.

Interestingly, a number of residents’ associations and community organisations run bars. On the Northside, there’s:
The Ayrfield Club, Donaghmede, Dublin 13
Grange Woodbine Club bar, Raheny, Dublin 5
River Valley Community Centre bar, Swords, North Co Dublin
Artane Beaumont Family Recreation Centre bar, Dublin 5
And in South/West Dublin, there is:
Greenhills Community Centre bar, Walkinstown, Dublin 12
Firhouse Community Centre bar, Firehouse, Dublin 24.
Kilnamanagh Family Recreation Centre bar, Tallaght, Dublin 24.

Some of the most atypical premises would include
The Hells Angels MC clubhouse in Mulhuddart.
The Italian community’s Club Italiano in the Dublin Mountains
The Dún Laoghaire Club (Elbana)
Freemason’s Hall bar, Molesworth Street

Billiards room in the Dún Laoghaire Club (Elbana).

3. Closed
The final list contains a list of closed venues, including interesting spots such as the British Legion, the Revenue Social Club, the Irish Times Staff Club, the RAF Association Club, and bars associated with different political parties and groups.

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