The Dublin Christian Mission is the amalgamation of three older Missions located in Dublin, Ireland in 1965: the Dublin City Mission (founded 1828), the Dublin Medical Mission (1891) and the Dublin Mission (1953). Dublin (ˈdʌblɨn/ /ˈdʊblɨn or /ˈdʊbəlɪn/, bˠalʲə aːha klʲiəh or cliə(ɸ is both the largest city and capital of Ireland. Ireland (pronounced /ˈaɾlənd/ Éire) is the third largest island in Europe, and the twentieth-largest island in the world Year 1965 ( MCMLXV) was a Common year starting on Friday (link will display full calendar of the 1965 Gregorian calendar. It is the second oldest in the world.
In 1826, David Nasmith founded his first city mission in Glasgow. David Nasmith (March 1799 - 25 December 1839) founded The City Mission Movement in the UK the US and in Europe Glasgow (ˈglæzgoʊ is the largest city in Scotland and third most populous in the United Kingdom Two years later, Naismith founded the Dublin City Mission at Merchants Hall, Wellington Quay in Dublin, a similar organization. Other missions followed throughout Naismith's life, including one in London in 1835. London ( ˈlʌndən is the capital and largest urban area in the United Kingdom.
In 1879, the Mission relocated to Anglesea Street, constructing a main hall and a number of offices. By 1903, seventy five years after its founding, the Dublin Mission had eleven full time missionaries under the leadership of Rev. A missionary is a member of a Religion who works to convert those who do not share the missionary's faith someone who proselytizes. J. C. Irwin.
In December 1939, the Mission once again relocated to newly built headquarters in Cashel Road, Crumlin, an area which had grown to some 13,000 residents in the past thirty years. Crumlin ( is a suburb of Dublin, Ireland, situated not far from the city centre on the Southside of the city between Walkinstown, Perrystown This area was chosen because the Dublin Corporation had built some three to four thousand houses for working-class families nearby. Dublin Corporation (Bardas Bhaile Átha Cliath known by generations of Dubliners simply as The Corpo, is the former name given to the city government and its administrative Another factor came from a fall in attendance at the location at Anglesea Street as people migrated from the center of the city. Crumlin Hall was later sold to the Brethren Assembly in the area. The Brethren are a number of Protestant Christian religious bodies using the word "brethren" in their names Some years after it was sold again to the Dublin Corporation, the current property owner.