Damer Hall
Damer Hall, also known as Damer Theatre and An Damer, is a former theatre and former school located in the basement of the Dublin Unitarian Church at 112 St Stephen's Green in Dublin, Ireland.
Building history
From ca. 1718, Damer Hall served as Damer School, a co-educational primary school for Unitarian and Jewish children.It was funded by the Damer Endowment, a trust bequeathed by wealthy landowner and banker Joseph Damer, great-uncle to Joseph Damer, 1st Earl of Dorchester. His bequests also helped to establish the Damer Institute for destitute widows of St Mary's parish at 27 Parnell Street in 1724.
The school had 3 classrooms and up to 150 pupils. The current building dates from 1863. In a 1905 report, the school was assessed by Sir Charles Alexander Cameron, Professor of Hygiene at the Royal College of Surgeons in Ireland, and rated positively. The school closed in June 1954.
In 1955, the space was leased to Gael Linn who founded the Irish-language Damer Theatre, staging amateur productions. The theatre was described as small, cold and poorly lit but praised for its unique atmosphere. In 1969, Breandán Ó hEithir reported for Raidió Teilifís Éireann's Féach that the Damer had joined with the Abbey Theatre to form An Club Drámaíochta to produce and promote plays in Irish. Gael Linn withdrew from the project in 1976 but in 1978 it was re-formed as a professional theatre company. The theatre's closure in 1981 was described as the end of the Golden Age of Irish-language theatre. The space continued to be used sporadically for short productions and events such as the Dublin Theatre Festival. It is in regular use by the Royal College of Surgeons in Ireland.