Then & Now is a temporary exhibition of photographs from the Mason Photograph Collection from the turn of the Twentieth Century.
The photographs are shown in situ around the Cathedral, allowing the visitor the opportunity to compare and contrast historic views of the Cathedral.
This view was taken from the eastern end of the wooden box pews. Notice the old lamps in the Choir Stalls, the High Altar wooden reredos (now found in the AV area in the South Transept), and the lack of gates separating the Crossing from the Choir Stalls.
This view was taken from where the shop is located today. Notice the wooden chairs (some of which we still have in the Transepts), the Union Flag and other regimental banners flying from the triforium level, and the intricate light units descending from each arch.
This view was taken from the High Altar looking towards the West End. Notice the lectern standing in the centre of the frame, the flags on the West Wall (now conserved in frames hanging in the same position), the carpets on the floor in the Nave, and the old lamps.
This view was taken from the South Choir Aisle. Notice the hole in the floor revealing an old well, the cover leaning against the step next to it, and the wooden box pews in the South Transept. Today, the well is sealed and little is known about its present state.
This view was taken from the north-eastern end of the park. Notice the different layout of the paths, the now-demolished housing opposite the Cathedral, and the flag poles extending from the turrets of the tower. Today, the benches face away from the Cathedral.
This view was taken from the North Choir Aisle. Notice how similar the view was then to how it is today. Maintenance work to the walls has been undertaken in recent years and the furniture in the bottom right has been replaced to be more durable and multi-purpose.
This view was taken from the eastern end of the North Aisle. Notice the different layout of the statues, the Door of Reconciliation leaning against the wall, and the decorative pattern on the West Wall, concealed by the shop today.
This view was taken from the South Aisle looking towards the entrance to the Minot Tower. Notice the flags (most of which are now in the North Transept), the position of Captain Boyd’s statue, the old chairs, and most noticeably the lack of today’s Cathedral shop.
Contributed by Turlough O’Riordan. Originally published October 2009 as part of the Dictionary of Irish Biography.
Mason, Thomas Holmes (1877–1958), photographer, naturalist, meteorologist, and businessman, was born 9 September 1877, eldest among three children of Thomas Mason, optical manufacturer, and Sarah Mason (née Barry) of Dublin. Having worked in the family business in Parliament St., Dublin, since the 1890s, Mason succeeded his father on his death (3 July 1913) becoming the fifth generation of the family to lead the business. Expanding both the premises and scope of the business, Mason established a photographic materials department alongside the developing and printing works started by his father. He expanded these complementary areas, taking advantage of the growing contemporary interest in photography. He enlarged (1914) the premises at 5 & 6 Dame St., to which the firm had moved in 1894, as well as converting the business from a sole trader into a limited liability company. On 23 May 1923 (Ir. Times, 24 May 1923) he was appointed a peace commissioner by the Free State government.
Mason was a keen cyclist; his tours through the Irish countryside as a youth, as well as his interest in photography from the age of twelve (he would take over 20,000 pictures by his death), led him to the study of the natural world and Irish archaeology. This culminated in his publication of The islands of Ireland: their scenery, people, life and antiquities (1936), visually recording the minutiae of Irish folk life and the natural beauty of the island landscapes.
Mason did not restrict his interests to any one discipline and was involved in a multifarious range of organisations: member of the Dublin Field Club, one-time president of the Irish Society for the Protection of Birds, member of the Dublin Zoological Council (serving as honorary vice-president from 1952), member and president (1926) of the Photography Society of Ireland, member of the Geographical Society of Ireland, and member of the National Monuments Council as well as president (1951) of An Taisce. He was also president of the Dublin Mercantile Association (1923) and the Dublin Rotary Club and a fellow of the RSAI.
He was elected MRIA (1931) and contributed numerous articles to the Academy’s Transactions and Proceedings on subjects ranging from the history of the optical profession in Dublin to Celtic archaeology. Mason provided meteorological information to Irish newspapers from his home observatory at 39 Kenilworth Square before the establishment of the Irish meteorological service (1936). His other interests included Irish moths as well as Irish lantern slides, on which he published Catalogue of photographic lantern slides of Irish scenery and antiquities [n.d.] and Catalogue of lantern slides of Irish antiquities(1928).
Mason was the seventh member of his family to be made an honorary freeman of the city of Dublin (29 April 1903), one of the last such hereditary appointments. His wife Margaret Evelyn, whom he married c.1909, was a fellow presbyterian. Three of his four sons succeeded him in the family business, which celebrated its bicentenary in 1980 and traded into the third millennium. He died on 12 February 1958, leaving his library to the Old Dublin Society and TCD.