Susan Marie Martin - Interdisciplinary Writer & Researcher
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Dublin's Women Street Traders 1882-1932

A ballad about a woman street trader is widely regarded as Dublin’s anthem, yet the city’s relationship with those who traded on its streets was often acrimonious. From 1882 onwards efforts commenced to have street traders banned alongside gentrification projects. A watershed came with the passage of the Street Trading Act of 1926. This book examines the resistance of the traders when those with power refused to recognize them as stakeholders. What the establishment learned was that the women were prepared to engage in civil disobedience, endure violence from Gardaí and serve time in jail to both protect their livelihoods and protest what they characterized as ‘banishment to the slums’.

Available October 2025 from Four Courts Press

Photograph:  South Great George's Street, Dublin, 1927 (public domain)
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