Langrishe Place, Methodist Chapel or Langrishe Hall was a Methodist Chapel established in Langrishe Place, Summerhill, Dublin, it was to provide a place for the congregation from the Free Church, Great Charles Street, Dublin (called the Wesley Chapel),[1] which was too big for their numbers,[2] and the congregation were unable to clear the debt on the Charles St.
Adam Averell,[6] was under the auspices of the Primitive Wesleyan Society (who favoured the movement remaining within the established Church of Ireland), it was the third such chapel.
Jones road Methodist church closed in 1949 and was finally fully demolished following a legal challenge in 2011.
[9][10] The playwright Sean O'Casey worked as a janitor at No 10 Langrishe Place, which had been the methodist chapel, it had subsequently been a parish dispensary, a school and the branch of the Irish National Foresters Society.
Langrishe Hall, was taken over in 1919 by James Larkin's sister Delia[11] along with a number of others including Sean O'Casey, ran as the Irish Workers' Club and used for meetings and performances.