Beautiful coaches and carriages were built for those who could afford them.
New kinds of springs were invented which made coach travel more pleasant. Long journeys were broken into stages of about 20 km.
Coach horses on long journeys had to be changed or rested at stages. They often stopped at inns along the road. The Salmon Leap Inn offered refreshments for tired travellers and stables for their horses.
The Salmon Leap Inn
The Salmon Leap Inn offered refreshments for tired travellers and stables for their horses.
The Salmon Leap Inn
The Salmon Leap Inn offered refreshments for tired travellers and stables for their horses.
This picture of the Salmon Leap Inn was taken over a hundred years ago.
Staging Posts
These people used horses that were kept at stages along the road. In the 1800's Leixlip was a post town on the Dublin-Galway mail coach route.
Letters arrived from Dublin in the morning and in the evening.
The stables at Main Street Leixlip
The extensive stables were used as a staging post on the road to the west.
The stables at Main Street Leixlip
The extensive stables were used as a staging post on the road to the west.
The extensive stables within what is now the Courtyard Hotel in Main Street, Leixlip, were used as a staging post on the road to the west.
James Hartley operated one of the stagecoaches that passed through Leixlip. Here his tired horses were changed for fresh ones.