This article includes a list of references, related reading, or external links, but its sources remain unclear because it lacks inline citations. (October 2020) |
Riversdale was the last home of William Butler Yeats. It is located in the Dublin suburb of Rathfarnham off the Ballyboden Road.
W. B. Yeats
editHe took a 13-year lease on the house in 1932. He lived there with his wife and children. It was at Riversdale that he mourned for Lady Gregory after her death, that he had his last meeting with Maud Gonne (1938) and that he met with Irish fascist Eoin O'Duffy.
Two of his poems, "What Then?" and "An Acre Of Grass" are about Riversdale.
Recent developments
editDevelopers bought the house in the late 1990s and applied for planning permission to build "60 High Quality Residential Units" on the site. As a result of action by local residents the planning permission was refused.
Eventually the developers succeeded in getting planning permission for three four-bedroom luxury detached homes and three single storey two-bedroom mews-type houses.
External links
edit- Macarthy's Auctioneers Riversdale page - note this page refers to the original planning application. The completed development was significantly different.
- Irish Times article on Riversdale at time of its sale
- University of Delaware Library's WB Yeats page - The University of Delaware has correspondence of Yeats' from Riversdale.
- Yeats Chronology - Mentions Riversdale in passing.
- Article in Irish Architecture on Riversdale - This article refers to a planning permission which was later revoked. The final development was significantly different.