06 December 2025

The former Welsh Chapel
on Talbot Street, Dublin,
is beginning to look better
four years after my last visit

The former Welsh Chapel on Talbot Street, Dublin (Photograph: Patrick Comerford, 2025)

Patrick Comerford

During my visit to Dublin this week, I visited three churches in the north inner city: Saint Mary’s Cathedral, known for almost 200 years as the ‘Pro-Cathedral’, on Marlborough Street; Saint Francis Xavier Church, the Jesuit-run church popularly known as Gardiner Street Church, between Mountjoy Square and Dorset Street; and the former Welsh Church on Talbot Street.

I last wrote about the former Welsh Church on Talbot Street almost four years ago (5 January 2022), describing the sad decay of the building and how it was covered with graffiti.

In recent months, comments were posted saying my photographs of the building had become outdated and that work and painting of the two connecting buildings had been completed at the end of last year and the start of this year (2024-2025).

Another reader commented on how just before last Christmas the building had been greatly improved, many of its original fixtures could now be seen, including the stone carving with the words ‘Welsh Church’, graffiti had been removed, and further work was in progress.

So, after visiting the colourful murals by on ‘Memory Lane’ by Fionnuala Halpin in Talbot Lane, I returned to see the former Welsh Church that tells an important part of the story of the cultural diversity of church life in Dublin for many generations.

The lettering ‘Welsh Church’ has been restored on the pediment facing onto Talbot Street (Photograph: Patrick Comerford, 2025)

Welsh chapels are not confined to Wales. I once received a warm welcome in a Welsh chapel in Chester when I was in my teens, and I have since come across Welsh chapels and churches in London and Birmingham. But I was surprised to learn last week that there had been a Welsh chapel in Dublin from 1838 for more than a century.

For over a century, from 1838 to 1942, a Welsh chapel in Dublin, with services in the Welsh language, was a meeting place for sailors in Dublin port and a hub for Dublin’s resident Welsh community.

Before the chapel was built, religiously-motivated Welsh sea-captains, such as Israel Matthew from Holyhead and John Williams from Caer, went from ship to ship and pub to pub inviting Welsh seamen to prayer meetings on board ships in Dublin port. Then, a Welsh congregation began using the Dutch Lutheran chapel on Poolbeg Street, although all collections went to ‘the Dutch.’

The Calvinistic Methodists in North Wales, later known as the Presbyterian Church of Wales, decided in the 1830s to build a chapel in Talbot Street, Dublin, close to the junction with Lower Gardiner Street and close to the port. At first, it was mainly for visiting Welsh sailors, and it was hoped sailors from Holyhead would spend an extra hour in prayer and an hour less in the pubs.

The site for the chapel was secured by John Roberts, a Holyhead businessman, thanks mostly to the efforts of the first pastor, the Revd Robert Williams. The foundation stone of the chapel was laid in 1838, and the new church, named Bethel Church, was 40 ft x 27 ft, built of brick and cornerstone of Whitland granite from south-west Wales, at a cost of £500.

When the chapel opened in 1838, there were 18 registered city members, but it had a seating capacity of 300. Because it was so close to the docks, visiting Welsh seamen could go to church there, finding opportunities to meet other people from Wales and to socialise in their own language.

The sailors mainly worked on merchant and passenger ships from Holyhead, but some also came on ships carrying slate from quarries in Penrhyn and Y Felinheli, beside the Menai Strait. By the mid-19th century, the chapel attracted not only Calvinistic Methodists but sailors from other denominations.

The congregation also drew from the 300 Welsh soldiers stationed in Dublin, patients coming from Holyhead for treatment at the Adelaide Hospital, and Welsh people who moved to Dublin to work as maids, nurses, and other professionals, or who found Trinity College Dublin was the nearest university to many parts of North Wales.

The services were conducted in the Welsh language and the chapel remained under Welsh supervision throughout its existence. Ministers were normally sent from Wales, but at times when the chapel had no resident minister it relied on ministers sent for short periods or who travelled from Holyhead on Sundays to lead the service.

The chapel became a focal point for the small Welsh community in Dublin, and numbers reached 77 by 1861. By then, the chapel was too small for the numbers attending, and a gallery was built over the chapel door in 1862, with additional seating for another 60.

The background of the sailors who went to church there was reflected in the customs in the chapel. The ground floor was referred to as the ‘Main Deck,’ and there the men sat on the ‘starboard side’ to the right and the women on the ‘port side’ to the left. The gallery was known as the ‘Quarter Deck’ and only sailors were allowed to sit there. At each end of the gallery were spittoons filled with sawdust so sailors could smoke or chew tobacco during the services.

In fact, only sailors were allowed on this quarterdeck. The story is told of a captain visiting with his wife, but when she tried to enter the gallery she was told: ‘Main deck for you my girl!’

The Revd Evan Lloyd was the chaplain of the ‘Welch Methodist Preaching House’ in 1862. He was popular, although another city centre chaplain accused him of being ‘the father of all the Welsh girls in Dublin.’

The chapel was linked to Anglesey from 1865 on. Further building work in 1894 was supported by donations from Methodists across Wales, a ‘Wesleyan nobleman,’ and a member of the Moravian Church, and ‘even received help from the Papists.’

In the 1901 census, the chaplain, the Revd John Lewis (42), was living at 77 Talbot Street with his wife Elizabeth and their son Alun (1). Later, the Lewis family lived behind the church in Moland Place. Lewis was known to Dubliners as the ‘Welsh bishop,’ and wore a wide, flat hat on his missions around the city. His hat is said to have been hit by a bullet during the Civil War.

There were almost 40 members in 1902, and 60 in 1910. The chapel had 57 baptisms between 1839 and 1923 and 18 marriages, the first in 1892 and the last in 1936.

Members of the chapel came from all social classes. Clerks, domestic servants, sailors, hotel-owners and tailors featured in its records. For example, the chapel members in 1914 included the housekeeper, housemaid, parlourmaid and cook employed by Sir John Purser Griffith (1848-1938), a senior civil engineer and politician, at his home in Rathmines Castle. Almost all these servants were from Anglesey, like their employer. Purser Griffith did not belong to the chapel but he gave it substantial funds.

The housekeeper at Rathmines Castle, Caernarvon-born Mary Parry, married the Revd Owen Selwyn Jones, a widower and Minister of the Gospel with an address at Llanrhos, North Wales. The wedding took place in the Welsh chapel in 1916 and the witnesses were John Lloyd-Jones, who was Professor of Welsh in University College Dublin, and Elizabeth Roberts, the parlourmaid at Rathmines Castle.

The Welsh Chapel on Talbot Street closed in 1942 and was sold in 1944 (Photograph: Patrick Comerford, 2025)

Ernest Blythe (1889-1975), the Minister for Finance (1923-1932) and later managing director of the Abbey Theatre (1941-1967), also had an interest in the Welsh language. He was born into a Church of Ireland and Unionist family near Lisburn, and also became a key figure in the Blueshirts and other pro-fascist and antisemitic organisations.

When Blythe joined the Gaelic League to learn Irish, another member told him of the Welsh community in Dublin with its own church and services in the Welsh language. ‘I went there one Sunday morning to revel in the sound of a language closely related to Irish,’ he later recalled. To improve his knowledge of the Welsh language, Blythe occasionally attended the chapel and took Welsh classes in the 1930s from the minister, the Revd John Lewis.

Chapel membership declined during World War I and fell again after Irish independence, and the church may have been damaged during the War of Independence. There was an explosion outside nearby Moran’s Hotel in July 1922, and several houses and businesses on the street claimed compensation. The many claims in the area at the time include one from William Griffith, a boot merchant next door at 78 Talbot Street.

By the 1930s, the chapel had only about 20 members. The last resident minister, the Revd John Lewis, was minister from 1894 until 1934, when he retired to Wales after 40 years of ministry. After Lewis, visiting ministers came from Anglesey to conduct services in the chapel in Dublin. The last service was held in 1939, before the outbreak of World War II made the crossing between North Wales and Dublin too difficult.

A decision was taken to close the chapel in 1942. When it was sold in 1944, there were only 13 members.

In June 1944, the Irish Independent reported that ‘a regrettable break in the few remaining links binding the Irish people with their fellow Celts, the Welsh, will follow on the closing down of the Welsh Church, Talbot Street. This church, the only one of its kind in the country, will be offered for sale on June 20.’

Professor John Lloyd-Jones said that when the chapel closed ‘the heart of the Welsh community in Dublin had been taken out’. Howell Evans wrote in 1981 that ‘looking back … had there been no Welsh Church I would have lost my language and Welsh interest.’

For many years, the building was used as a shoe shop under the name Griffith’s. The name Griffith’s survives in the tiling at the entrance door.

Today the former chapel is a brightly-coloured ‘Five Star Internet Café,’ with a pool room upstairs. the outline of the original chapel can be seen on the Talbot Street façade. Inside, computers and telephones on the ground floor and pool tables upstairs hide the previous life of this former chapel.

Following a campaign by the Welsh Society in Ireland, the building now has protected status and the sign of the former ‘Welsh Church’ can be seen once again.

The Welsh Chapel on Talbot Street, Dublin, as it looked almost four years ago in January 2022 (Photograph: Patrick Comerford, 2022)

Additional reading:

Blythe, Earnan P, ‘The Welsh Chapel in Dublin,’ Dublin Historical Record, Vol 14, No 3, Old Dublin Society, 1957, pp 74-79, http://www.jstor.org/stable/30102651.

An Advent Calendar with Patrick Comerford: 7, 6 December 2025

Santa in the window of Willis Flower Shop on Stony Stratford’s High Street (Photograph: Patrick Comerford, 2025)

Patrick Comerford

Advent began last Sunday with Advent Sunday (30 November 2025), and tomorrow is the Second Sunday of Advent (7 December 2025). The countdown to Christmas is well and truly under way. At noon each day in Advent this year, I am offering one image as part of my ‘Advent Calendar’ for 2025, and one Advent or Christmas carol, hymn or song.

My choice of a hymn, carol or song today is ‘Hark! a herald voice is calling’, which we sang as the recessional hymn in Saint Mary and Saint Giles Church, Stony Stratford, last Sunday (Advent I, 30 November 2025).

On this day (6 December), the Church traditionally remembers Saint Nicholas of Myra, who played a key role in formulating the agreements at the Council of Nicaea in 325 CE, leading to the Nicene Creed, whose 1700th anniversary we have been celebrating this year. But he is also the real, historical figure we remember today as Santa Claus.

For all who are children – and all of us who are children at heart – waiting for Santa’s visit is still a joyful anticipation. His free gifts and presents are tokens of the free giving and gifts of God in the present and presence of Christ at the incarnation, which we are preparing in Advent to welcome. This hymn, ‘Hark! a herald voice is calling’ is a reminder that we are all children at heart, ‘children of the day’.

This hymn is a translation of a fifth century Ambrosian hymn, Vox clara ecce intonate by Edward Caswall. The original words are probably an allusion to Saint John the Baptist, who said of himself: ‘I am the voice of one crying out in the wilderness, “Make straight the way of the Lord”.’ (John 1: 23).

The priest and hymnwriter Edward Caswall (1814-1878) was born at Yateley, Hampshire, the son of the Revd RC Caswall, sometime Vicar of Yateley, Hampshire. He was educated at Brasenose College, Oxford, and was ordained deacon (1838) and priest (1839) in the Church of England.

He was the curate of Saint Lawrence, Stratford-sub-Castle, near Salisbury, in 1840-1847. After visiting Ireland with his wife Louisa and his brother Tom in 1846, he resigned his curacy and was received into the Roman Catholic Church in Rome by Cardinal Januarius Acton in January 1847, a decision that estranged Caswall from some of his family.

His wife Louisa, who had also become a Roman Catholic, died of cholera on 14 September 1849 while they were staying at Torquay. The following year, Caswall joined the Oratory of Saint Philip Neri under John Henry Newman, and he was ordained priest in 1852. He died at the Birmingham Oratory, Edgbaston, on 2 January 1878.

The tune ‘Merton’ is by William Henry Monk (1823-1889), who also write the tunes for ‘Abide with Me’ and ‘All Things Bright and Beautiful’.

Hark! a herald voice is calling:
‘Christ is nigh,’ it seems to say;
‘Cast away the dreams of darkness,
O ye children of the day!’

Startled at the solemn warning,
Let the earth-bound soul arise;
Christ, her Sun, all sloth dispelling,
Shines upon the morning skies.

Lo! the Lamb, so long expected,
Comes with pardon down from heaven;
Let us haste, with tears of sorrow,
One and all to be forgiven;

So when next he comes with glory,
Wrapping all the earth in fear,
May he then as our defender
Of the clouds of heaven appear.

Honour, glory, virtue, merit,
To the Father and the Son,
With the co-eternal Spirit,
While unending ages run. Amen.



Daily prayer in Advent 2025:
7, Saturday 6 December 2025,
Saint Nicholas of Myra

An icon of Saint Nicholas in the tiny chapel on an islet off the coast at Georgioupoli in Crete … in time, he became Santa Claus (Photograph: Patrick Comerford)

Patrick Comerford

The Season of Advent – and the real countdown to Christmas – began last Sunday with the First Sunday of Advent (30 November 2025), and tomorrow is the Second Sunday of Advent. With less than three weeks to go to Christmas, the Church Calendar today celebrates Saint Nicholas of Myra (6 December), the ‘real Santa Claus’.

Later today, I hope to attend Το Στέκι Μας (Our Place), the pop-up Greek café at the Greek Orthodox Church on London Road, between 10:30 and 3 pm, with traditional Greek desserts and seasonal small gifts, as well as the usual: Greek coffees and delicacies. But, before the day begins, I am taking some quiet time this morning to give thanks, to reflect, to pray and to read in these ways:

1, today’s Gospel reading;

2, a short reflection;

3, a prayer from the USPG prayer diary;

4, the Collects and Post-Communion prayer of the day.

An icon of Saint Nicholas in the Church of Saint Nicholas near the harbour and the bus station in Rethymnon (Photograph: Patrick Comerford)

Mark 10: 13-16 (NRSVA):

13 People were bringing little children to him in order that he might touch them; and the disciples spoke sternly to them. 14 But when Jesus saw this, he was indignant and said to them, ‘Let the little children come to me; do not stop them; for it is to such as these that the kingdom of God belongs. 15 Truly I tell you, whoever does not receive the kingdom of God as a little child will never enter it.’ 16 And he took them up in his arms, laid his hands on them, and blessed them.

An icon of Saint Nicholas, the role model for Santa Claus, in a mosaic in the Monastery of Saint John the Baptist, Tolleshunt Knights, Essex (Photograph: Patrick Comerford)

Today’s reflection:

The Gospel reading in the Lectionary for the daily Eucharist today (Matthew 9: 35 to 10: 1, 6-8) tells of Jesus going through cities and villages, teaching, proclaiming the good news of the kingdom, and curing disease and sickness. When he sees the crowds, he sees they are harassed and helpless, like sheep without a shepherd, and tells the disciples: ‘The harvest is plentiful, but the labourers are few; therefore ask the Lord of the harvest to send out labourers into his harvest.’

Jesus gives the 12 authority to cast out unclean spirits and to cure every disease and every sickness. He tells them to go to the lost sheep of the house of Israel, to proclaim the good news that the kingdom of heaven has come near, to cure the sick, raise the dead, cleanse the lepers, and to cast out demons.

But the Gospel reading provided for celebrating Saint Nicholas of Myra (Mark 10: 13-16) is the story of little children being brought to Jesus for blessings, and his reminder that it is ‘to such as these that the kingdom of God belongs’ (verse 14).

Today is the Feast of Saint Nicholas of Myra (6 December 2025). He is, of course, the real Santa Claus, and he is so popular in Greece that almost every town and city in Greece has a church dedicated to Saint Nicholas.

Saint Nicholas is also the patron of sailors, and in the mediaeval period almost every coastal town and city in both England and Ireland also had a church dedicated to Saint Nicholas.

The celebration of Saint Nicholas today is a joyful, child-friendly interruption in the Advent preparations as we wait for Christmas and anticipate all its joys.

Saint Nicholas, whose name means ‘Victory of the People,’ was born in Myra in Lycia, now known as Demre, near Antalya on the south coast of Anatolia in present-day Turkey.

He had a reputation as a secret giver of gifts and the protector of children, so you can see why he has links with our Santa Claus today.

There are stories too of Saint Nicholas and the defence of true doctrine. In the year 325, the Emperor Constantine convened the Council of Nicaea, attended by more than 300 bishops, to debate the nature of the Holy Trinity.

It was one of the most intense theological debates in the early Church. Arius from Alexandria was teaching that Christ was the Son of God but was not equal to God the Father, not God incarnate. As Arius argued at length, Nicholas became agitated, crossed the room, and slapped Arius across the face.

The shocked bishops stripped Nicholas of his episcopal robes, chained him and jailed him. In the morning, the bishops found his chains on the floor and Nicholas dressed in his episcopal robes, quietly reading his Bible. Constantine ordered his release, and Nicholas was reinstated as the Bishop of Myra. Which probably also makes it appropriate that the Church of Saint Nicholas on the corner of Priskosoridi street and Emmanouil Kefalogianni avenue, near the bus station in Rethymnon, is not only close to both an old fishing harbour but also close to the Church of Saint Constantine and Saint Helen.

Saint Nicholas defended doctrines that are central to the Incarnation and that make Christmas worth celebrating … the word homoousios (ὁμοούσιος) means ‘same substance,’ while the word homoiousios (ὁμοιούσιος) means ‘similar substance’. As the debate went on, the Council of Nicaea agreed with Nicholas and his views and decided against Arius. The Council of Nicaea affirmed the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit are of the same substance, rather than of a similar substance, and agreed on the Nicene Creed, which remains the symbol of our faith.

This year marks the 1700th anniversary of the First Ecumenical Council of Nicaea in the year 325 CE and it has been another opportunity for the churches to bear witness to the growing communion that already exists among all who are baptised in the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit.

Ecumenical Patriarch Bartholomew and Pope Leo XIV signed a Joint Declaration in the Patriarchal Church of Saint George last weekend affirming their commitment to the path towards restoring full communion and rejecting the use of religion to justify violence.

In the text, they recalled the 1700th anniversary of the First Council of Nicaea, calling it ‘a providential event of unity’, and noted that Christians are united by the faith professed in the Nicene Creed: ‘This is the saving faith in the person of the Son of God, true God from true God, homoousios with the Father, who for us and our salvation was incarnate and dwelt among us, was crucified, died and was buried, arose on the third day, ascended into heaven, and will come again to judge the living and the dead.’

‘Endowed with this common confession, we can face our shared challenges in bearing witness to the faith expressed at Nicaea with mutual respect, and work together towards concrete solutions with genuine hope,’ they said in their Joint Declaration.

The First Council of Nicaea by Mikhail Damaskinos (1591) in the Museum of Christian Art, Iraklion … Saint Nicholas played a key role in the credal formulation at the council (Photograph: Patrick Comerford)

Today’s Prayers (Saturday 6 December 2025):

The theme this week (30 to 6 December 2025) in Pray with the World Church, the prayer diary of the Anglican mission agency USPG (United Society Partners in the Gospel), has been ‘The Kingdom is for All’ (pp 6-7). This theme was introduced last Sunday with a programme update from the Revd Magela, Vicar of Cristo Redentor Parish in Tocantins, Brazil and coordinator of Casa A+, a place of hope and healing for people living with HIV.

The USPG Prayer Diary today (Saturday 6 December 2025) invites us to pray:

Let us pray for courage and compassion in public policies, so that governments, institutions and international organisations prioritise life over profits, and care over power.

The Collect:

Almighty Father, lover of souls,
who chose your servant Nicholas
to be a bishop in the Church,
that he might give freely out of the treasures of your grace:
make us mindful of the needs of others
and, as we have received, so teach us also to give;
through Jesus Christ your Son our Lord,
who is alive and reigns with you,
in the unity of the Holy Spirit,
one God, now and for ever.

The Post-Communion Prayer:

God, shepherd of your people,
whose servant Nicholas revealed the loving service of Christ
in his ministry as a pastor of your people:
by this eucharist in which we share
awaken within us the love of Christ
and keep us faithful to our Christian calling;
through him who laid down his life for us,
but is alive and reigns with you, now and for ever.

The Collect on the Eve of Advent II:

O Lord, raise up, we pray, your power
and come among us,
and with great might succour us;
that whereas, through our sins and wickedness
we are grievously hindered
in running the race that is set before us,
your bountiful grace and mercy
may speedily help and deliver us;
through Jesus Christ your Son our Lord,
to whom with you and the Holy Spirit,
be honour and glory, now and for ever.

Yesterday’s Reflections

Continued Tomorrow

Saint Nicholas in a stained-glass window in Saint Mary’s Cathedral, Limerick (Photograph: Patrick Comerford)

Scripture quotations are from the New Revised Standard Version Bible: Anglicised Edition copyright © 1989, 1995 National Council of the Churches of Christ in the United States of America. Used by permission. All rights reserved worldwide. http://nrsvbibles.org