The Harrington Hall hotel is located in Dublin in Ireland. To book this Hotel click here.
It is my pleasure to introduce you to Harrington Hall Our hotel has an excellent location, nestled beside St Stephens Green and less than a ten minute walk to the shops, restaurants and pubs of Grafton Street. Plus, we have our own private and secure car park. Take a look at our website, which includes a location page with map and directions, as well as a tourism page detailing the attractions, restaurants, pubs, and shopping within the hotels vicinity.
At Harrington Hall we have become renowned for the individual and personalised attention we offer our guests and ensure they have a comfortable and enjoyable stay it its calm and relaxed atmosphere. This year, we added to our standard of service by revising and expanding both our breakfast menu and our wine list. We have also brought onto our team several new highly qualified members of staff.
| Hotel Address |
Harrington Hall70 Harcourt Street Dublin Ireland 2 |
All of the rooms in the hotel are now equipped with fan-assisted air conditioning and double glazed soundproofing, once again ensuring that you don't have to sacrifice modern comforts for traditional Georgian surroundings. I very much hope to have the pleasure of welcoming you to Dublin in the near future, and to greeting you at the door of Harrington Hall. Yours, Henry King Proprietor Harrington Hall has undergone complete refurbishment to restore the beauty of its Georgian architecture.

Single room, Standard room (double/twin), Superior room (double/twin/treble), Suite (rates for two people). Harrington Hall is now named after its most famous former resident, Timothy Charles Harrington. His mother was an O'Sullivan Beare and Harrington grew up a nationalist. In 1877 he founded and edited the Kerry Sentinel. Entering politics, he became secretary of the Land League in 1882.
As Honorary Secretary to the Irish Parliamentary Party he devised the famous Plan of Campaign for the land war, which he published in United Ireland on 23rd October 1886 and thereafter, with John Dillon and William O'Brien played a leading role in the agitation, and twice went to prison for his activities. He was M.P. for Kerry (1880), for Co. Westmeath (1833) and for the Harbour Division, Dublin (from 1885).
Harrington was called to the bar in 1897 and acted as counsel for Charles Stewart Parnell during the sittings of the commission on 'Parnellism and Crime' (1888-89). He was on a fund-raising tour of the USA with Dillon on behalf of the Plan when the split occurred in the Parnellite party. He supported his leader from the USA and continued his allegiance on his return, but after Parnell's death fell in with Richmond.
He was secretary of the Irish National League (1882-95). He was Lord Mayor of Dublin from 1901 to 1903, married in 1892 to Elizabeth, second daughter of the late Dr. E. O'Neill, of Dublin and issued two sons and three daughters. He continued to sit as a member of the Irish Redmonite party until his death. He suffered a seizure in the House of Commons in 1910 and died in 70 Harcourt Street, now Harrington Hall.
MPs earned little then and the family were split up and had to leave the house. One son, Niall, went to relatives in Kerry and later became a lieutentant colonel in the Irish army and wrote a famous book about the civil war, the Kerry Landings. In later years Harrington Hall was turned into a high-class family hotel known as the County Hotel. In 1943 the Sisters of the Holy Child purchased the property and provided accommodation for girls who came to work and study in Dublin. |