William Street, Limerick

Summary

William Street (Irish: Sráid Liam) is one of the main thoroughfares of central Limerick City, Ireland. The street starts at a junction with O'Connell Street (Limerick's main thoroughfare) and continues in a south-east direction, where it is called Upper William Street. The street is named after William Pery, 1st Baron Glentworth a relation of Edmund Sexton Pery who is credited with the development of the present day Limerick City Centre area known as Newtown Pery.[1]

William Street
William Street in 2011
Native nameSráid Liam (Irish)
NamesakeWilliam Pery, 1st Baron Glentworth
Length500 m (1,600 ft)
Width18 metres (59 ft)
LocationLimerick, Ireland
Postal codeV94
Coordinates52°39′45″N 8°37′25″W / 52.662625°N 8.623554°W / 52.662625; -8.623554
northwest endO'Connell Street, Sarsfield Street
southeast endMulgrave Street, Old Windmill Road, Roxboro Road
Other
Known forshops, pubs, restaurants, financial institutions

Architectural makeup edit

The street is architecturally Georgian in style like much of the Limerick City Centre area. There was a major fire on William Street in May 1860.[2] Prior to the construction of the Limerick Southern Ring Road the street formed part of the N24 route between Limerick & Waterford. It is now part of the R527 road.

References edit

  1. ^ Joyce, Gerry (14 April 1995). Limerick City Street Names. Limerick Corporation. ISBN 9780905700076 – via Google Books.
  2. ^ Lenihan, Maurice (14 April 1866). "Limerick: Its History and Antiquities, Ecclesiastical, Civil, and Military from the Earliest Ages, with Copious Historical, Archaeological, Topographical, and Genealogical Notes ..." Hodges, Smith, and Company – via Google Books.