The Grenville Place Turkish Baths in Cork
 


                

The Greville Place Turkish Baths

< Photo: courtesy of the National Library of Ireland

 

The Grenville Place Turkish Baths were the first to be built by Dr Richard Barter after those at St Ann's Hydropathic Establishment at Blarney. This photograph of the baths (on the left) is from the Lawrence Collection of 40,000 glass plate negatives taken between 1870 and 1914 so it shows the building after the rebuilding which took place in 1863.

It is not known how much rebuilding was actually undertaken but if, as seems most likely, the rebuilding was only of the inside—the baths themselves—then the façade in the photograph is probably the original one.

It is interesting to note that, perhaps influenced by his nephew's fact-finding visit to Rome, the building sports a classical portico rather than ogee windows and fake minarets. Clearly to be seen at the front of the building are the separate doors for males (on the left) and females (on the right).*

 

* Information about the entrances from an advertisement for the baths appearing in the Cork examiner (1 July 1859)  p.1


 

Sara Smyth and Sandra McDermott at the National Library of Ireland


This page enlarges an image or adds to the information found on the following page:

Cork Turkish Baths: 8 Grenville Place
 

Victorian Turkish Baths:
their origin, development,
and gradual decline

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The right of Malcolm Shifrin to be identified as the author of this work has been asserted by him
in accordance with the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988