Jervis Street
Jervis Street is a street in Dublin in the Republic of Ireland. it runs from Parnell Street in the north to Ormond Quay Lower in the south. It is crossed by Mary Street, Abbey Street Upper, and Strand Street Great.
The street is part of the area developed by Humphrey Jervis after 1674 and named after him.
A house in Jervis Street was for many years the home of the surgeon Samuel Croker-King, first president of the Royal College of Surgeons in Ireland, and his wife, the noted beauty Miss Obre.
Over 900 people were listed as living in Jervis Street in the 1911 Irish Census.
In 1913, Jervis Street was one of the streets photographed by John Cooke, Honorary Treasurer of the National Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Children, for presentation to the Dublin Housing Inquiry into the conditions of housing of the working classes of Dublin.
It was once the location of the Jervis Street Hospital which has since become the Jervis Shopping Centre which opened in 1996.