2 hours
We will begin at City Hall the start of coffee and tea culture in Dublin. The port was near and merchants and traders gathered to see what was happening. Our walk takes us through beautiful streets and we visit curious 1700's sites. Transport was slow and wit was quick! Dublin was a hotbed of intrigue and the Second City in the old British Empire. Yet it was difficult to find the action with censorship.
Coffee Houses were where the news was printed! Known as penny universities, centres of commerce and trade where so much of Dublin life was lived.
We will tour for an hour stopping at significant points where duels were fought, merchants traded, information was exchanged and coffee was drunk. Was there tea & chocolate? Let's find out! We will immerse ourselves in the characters such as Johnathon Swift and how he closed the curtains with the drapers.
We will learn about the people who published, public auctions and lives which were lived by the new rich of 1700's Dublin. We will see how they influenced the arts, public thinking and commerce. We will have quotes and drama to understand the players in a very different time.
This is fun and light-hearted Tour has a Coffee Tasting Experience to imagine what 1700's Dublin felt, looked, smelled and tasted. Our tasting location is the oldest shop in Dublin 1670
For tea lover we have a 1700s tea party, with silver pots & china cups.
Fairly easy, some steps all abilities welcome we will be chatting all the way
Meet at the front steps of City Hall, overlooking Parliament St
Hello guest,
Thanks for booking the Coffee Tour and Tastings. I am looking forward to meeting you outside City Hall at the Cork Hill side. Please be aware that there are three entrances to City Hall and we will meet beside the side steps on the right. You will have the entrance to Dublin Castle behind you and Newcomen Bank on your left.
If you have any questions, please feel free to ask. If you like the sound of this tour maybe you could check out the other tours I offer, Hidden History of Dublin Homes and Mostly Medieval.
Kind Regards
Ruth
Walk Dublin