The Plunket Street Meeting house was established in 1692, from the presbyterian congregation in Bull Alley.
James Arbuckle ministered in Plunket Street, but left with some of the congregation in 1713 and joined Ushers Quay Church.
The dissenting church (Presbyterian) existed on the site the eighteenth century which closed,[4] with its new minister Rev.
William Cooper (secretary of the Irish Evangelical Society), who was presented with a Silver Cup for use as a Tabernacle in the chapel, by Town Major Henry Charles Sirr.
Simpson G. Morrison (ordained an Independent Minister, he had earlier been a Methodist in Armagh, he was also from the Irish Evangelical Society), became minister and began reviving the fortunes of the chapel,[9] Morrison became Presbyterian minister of Union Chapel, Lower Abbey Street, and the Plunket Street Congregation joined up with the Union Chapel.
The meeting house closed in 1882, in 1885 the area was redeveloped by the Dublin Artisan Dwelling Company.
The legacy of the Plunket Street Meeting House was split between those who went with Morrison, joined the Union Chapel and became Presbyterians, and in 1918 merged with the Abbey Presbyterian Church on Parnell Square, and those who stayed independent and eventually became Unitarians, there are records of the meeting house held by the Dublin Unitarian Church.