 The Cornelia Connelly travelers will be the guests at St. Patrick’s Cathedral in Dublin on July 3 at 1 pm. Built  in honour of Ireland’s patron saint, Saint  Patrick’s Cathedral  stands  adjacent to the famous well where tradition  has it Saint  Patrick  baptized converts on his visit to Dublin. A church  was built  on this  site in 1191 and in 1991 they  celebrated 800 years of worship.  The  present building dates from 1220  and during the years it had been   extended again and again.
The Cornelia Connelly travelers will be the guests at St. Patrick’s Cathedral in Dublin on July 3 at 1 pm. Built  in honour of Ireland’s patron saint, Saint  Patrick’s Cathedral  stands  adjacent to the famous well where tradition  has it Saint  Patrick  baptized converts on his visit to Dublin. A church  was built  on this  site in 1191 and in 1991 they  celebrated 800 years of worship.  The  present building dates from 1220  and during the years it had been   extended again and again.The Cathedral is today the National Cathedral for the Church of Ireland (Anglican). The basis of the present building was built between 1191 and 1270, though little now remains of the earliest work beyond the Baptistry. Much of the work was overseen by Henry of London, a friend of the King of England and signatory of the Magna Carta, who was also involved in the construction of Dublin's city walls and Dublin Castle. The tower (Minot's Tower) and west nave were rebuilt between 1362 and 1370, following a fire. In 1560, one of Dublin's first public clocks was erected in "St. Patrick's Steeple".
Throughout its long history the cathedral has contributed much to Irish life, and one k
 ey  aspect of this relates to  the writer and  satirist Jonathan Swift,  author of Gulliver's Travels,  who was Dean of  the cathedral from 1713  to  1745. Swift took a great  interest in the building,  its services  and music and in what would now  be called social welfare,  funding an  almshouse for poor women and Saint  Patrick's Hospital.
ey  aspect of this relates to  the writer and  satirist Jonathan Swift,  author of Gulliver's Travels,  who was Dean of  the cathedral from 1713  to  1745. Swift took a great  interest in the building,  its services  and music and in what would now  be called social welfare,  funding an  almshouse for poor women and Saint  Patrick's Hospital.The Choir School, which had been founded in 1432, supplied many of its members to take part in the very first performance of Handel's Messiah in 1742. It continues and although originally all-male, now also admits girls; a Cathedral Girls' Choir was founded in 2000 and sings once or twice a week. The Organ of St. Patrick's Cathedral is one of the largest in Ireland with over 4,000 pipes. Parts of it date from a Renatus Harris instrument of 1695. It was restored in the 1890s and in 1963.
 
 
 
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