New York Girls, Doheny & Nesbitt's Pub, Dublin
Liam Kennedy Fiddle & Pat Goode Guitar, Doheny & Nesbitt's Pub, Dublin, Ireland.
Lisa Singing at Doheny & Nesbitt Pub, Dublin, Ireland
Singing (1) Down By The Sally Gardens & (2) O Mio Babbino Caro...especially for me...
Doheny & Nesbitt pub profits lose their froth
Reported today on Irish Examiner
For the full article visit:
Doheny & Nesbitt pub profits lose their froth
Profits at landmark Dublin pub Doheny and Nesbitt last year decreased by 18.5% to €237,782.Newly-filed accounts for the pub's operating company Swigmore Inns Ltd show that investment costs pulled the profits down, during the 12 months to the end of last January, but the pub's revenues increased.The pub's accumulated profits last year increased from €3.56m to €3.8m.
Doheny & Nesbitt, on Dublin's Baggot Street, was the first pub in Ireland to exchange hands for over £1m, when the Mangan brothers, Tom and Paul, purchased the premises in 1987.The pub's owners said they have been very happy with the performance of the pub - which employs 50 people - this year.An increased food, wine and whiskey offering have boosted customer numbers, they said.The pub has expanded in recent years with the opening of a cellar bar to deal with the crowds attending the pub.Doheny & Nesbitt has long been a favourite haunt of politicians from nearby Leinster House and of lawyers, architects and actors, along with visitors from around the globe.
Doheny and Nesbitt is the flagship operation of the Mangan pub group, which also operates Smyths in Ranelagh.The Swigmore accounts show that the company's cash totalled €29,617 at the end of its last financial year, while the amount owed to the company by debtors totalled €1.98m.Last year's profits take account of non-cash depreciation costs of €79,869, the accounts show.
Guinness Guru review - Doheny & Nesbitt's
Doheny & Nesbitt's on Baggot St.
There are many bars that fall between two stools trying to cater to multiple types of customers but this bar is one of the few that does that very well. At the front, you've got the tight Victorian-style interior with a lovely snug (there are 2 other snugs to settle into as well) and at the back you've more of an open space with large TVs for watching sport and eating.
The barman was very friendly and let us have the snug to film and served us to our seat. The pint was excellent, one of creamiest we got on Baggot St.
One of our favourite pubs that we've visited.
#creamy #shtick #snuglife
Michael Crowe playing the spoons at Doheny and Nesbitt's
August 4th 2014
Make sure to check Michael's youtube channel :
Choir in Doheny & Nesbitt's
Male barber shop choir singing in Doheny & Nesbitt's, Dublin Pub
Toner's Pub in Dublin, Ireland
2013 trip.
GRACES PUB RATHMINES, DUBLIN.. AUGUST 2017..JERRY CRILLY
I was fortunate enough to participate in this session in August 2017 and returned again in August 2018 to find that the singer had passed away..I am posting it in his honour, but if anyone has concerns about this, I will remove it...
Dublin, Balladeer and Folk singer, Gerard (Jerry) Crilly, Dundrum, Dublin 16 died Wednesday 31st January 2018.( Thanks to Michael Crowe)
Sadly, I will never return to the island of Ireland. God Bless.
Irish Pub Awards - 2017 Launch
The launch of the inaugural National Irish Pub Awards 2017, on Wednesday, April 26, 2017 at Doheny & Nesbitt’s in Dublin, Ireland.
Grainneog play Malones Irish Bar, Waiheke Island, New Zealand 4 High Res
Gráinneog Folk Band comprising Alan Knight and Sam Leary of Guitars etc, Ben Cobbett on the Fiddle and Andy Spence on percussion. Available for hire for parties weddings etc for dance ceilidhs etc.
Guinness Guru Review - The Cobblestone
The Cobblestone is a bit of a hidden gem on the outskirts of the chaotic city centre. Located in Smithfield, this old traditional pub is as authentic as they come, so it's no wonder the place is packed every night.
Huge thanks to Tom and everyone at The Cobblestone for making this a Guinness Guru episode for the ages!
Pat Rabitte accosted by protesters in Dublin pub
Communications Minster Pat Rabitte confronted by anti-austerity demonstrators inside Doheny and Nesbitts pub on Baggot Street
On A Beautiful November Afternoon in Dublin
Dublin 02/11/2015
Christmas Ukuhooley
Uke Ireland's Christmas Party in Doheny & Nesbitt's Pub Dublin on December 12th
The Lord Edward Pub, ☘️ Dublin, Ireland. ᄊ.c.
One Starry Night sung live at an acoustic folk session .
Discovering Dublin's amazing pub culture - Travel Guide vs Booking
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10 very cool reasons to add Montreal to your travel list - Travel Guide vs Booking
10 very cool reasons to add Montreal to your travel list - Travel Guide vs Booking
Dublin is so full of craic addicts that I found myself getting irritable. I enjoy lively conversation, but sometimes the drollery gets to you.Especially in the morning. In any case, the word craic is faux-Gaelic, a bogus neologism stolen from the English word 'crack' then borrowed back by the Brits.Iwas on a barstool in Toners pub while my amiable guide Damon was on Baggot Street having a smoke.Another brace of pints arrived. 'Our Guinness,' he said proudly, as he swept back, wreathed in Golden Virginia, 'has a uniquely quaffable flavour thanks to the Liffey water.'He had been talking 20 to the dozen since we set out, and showed no sign of abating, but the fag breaks gave me time to ponder his words of wisdom.The poet W. B. Yeats, he said, went only once to a pub during his whole life. And that was to Toners, for a glass of sherry he failed to finish.Perhaps he did not like the craic. The tone of the day had been set shortly after breakfast, before the taverns had opened their welcoming doors to a fresh harvest of punters.We were heading for The Little Museum to see the latest exhibition, a celebration of Dublin pub culture, would you believe.In pride of place was a magnificent photograph of that shipwreck of a playwright, Brendan Behan, the so-called 'drinker with a writing problem', who was holed below the Plimsoll line before lunch most days.And, of course, James Joyce featured large. This was the man who wrote the script for Dublin in his great novel Ulysses, from the safety of Switzerland.Ifound Ulysses unreadable until I heard some of it read aloud, when the jokes started leaping off the page.A symphony of human nonsense, as alive today as it was a century ago. Only now it is an industry.We were in the grid of Georgian streets between Trinity College and St Stephen's Green, erstwhile stomping ground of Joyce and his gallimaufry of characters.Davy Byrnes was a bar the great man drank in, as did Leopold Bloom, from the pages of the novel.Chalked above the bar was a plug for 'Bloomsday G&T'. Yours for €13.50 (£12.50). The place was expensively tacky.'I think we'll trot along to Doheny & Nesbitt, you'll really like that,' said Damon.'It's where journalists and politicians mingle in cavernous rooms of lacquered antiquity.It really is the finest jewel in Dublin's giant crown. 'And how right he was. All was perfect, even the folk music, which I normally abhor.Carved timber, ornate papier-mâché ceiling, everything burnished as if for parade.The walls exuded more history than drunken blarney. The singing guitarist was at the bar and we were soon talking like old friends — him, me and my new best friend, Damon.There followed a conversational rolling maul with a crowd of drinkers from Cavann, more pints, a slight timewarp, a Lebanese meal and then the Trinity City hotel bar where a small cluster from the university music department sat in front of 10 empty bottles of wine, before ordering another two.Aconversation about the liturgical merits of Irish composer Charles Villiers Stanford was fiercely underway before one of them fell off his pouffe.Idecided enough was enough, pledged my lifelong friendship with Damon and hit the sack.In the morning, my French girlfriend, Ana, wafted in from Nice and we were about to explore Ireland's Atlantic coast.She is a teetotaller and takes no nonsense, so I was on parade sharpish, eating fruit with muesli and zeal.But I just wish she had come to Dublin earlier. It's a fine and inspiring place for a weekend — even for someone who only drinks sparkling water.
Guinness Guru review - The Palace Bar
The Palace Bar on Fleet Street.
Although in Temple Bar, the Palace doesn't target the tourist market as strongly as it's neighbours and it's a better experience for locals as a result.
The Victorian-era decor is very nice inside although some might find the long and narrow layout a little claustrophobic.
The pint was spot on, with seeerious #seriousshtick going on. 8.6 final score.
Pubs of Dublin
Famous traditional pubs in Dublin which have the characteristics outlined above include O'Donoghue's, Mulligan's, Doheny & Nesbitt's and The Brazen Head, which bills itself as Ireland's oldest pub (a distinction actually held by Sean's Bar in Athlone). Some pubs are named after famous streets, such as Sober Lane in Cork, which is named because of Father Matthew's Hall of Abstinence. Individual pubs are also associated with famous Irish writers and poets such as Patrick Kavanagh, Brendan Behan and James Joyce.