The Lansdowne Road Stadium was the brainchild of
Henry Dunlop, the organiser of the first All Ireland
Athletics Championships. Dunlop, a decorated track walker and engineering graduate of
Trinity College, Dublin, founded the Irish Champion Athletic Club in 1871. After an initial meeting at Trinity College, the
Provost of the college banned any further meetings on campus. Dunlop had to find a new home for his sporting endeavours. Dunlop founded
Lansdowne Football Club in 1872 and that club has played rugby union ever since at the grounds, being one of the most prominent and successful rugby clubs in
Leinster and Ireland.
Wanderers Football Club, founded in 1869, joined Lansdowne at the grounds later. The two clubs were tenants since that time and also use the new Aviva Stadium. Some 300 cartloads of soil from a trench beneath the railway were used to raise the ground, allowing Dunlop to utilise his engineering expertise to create a pitch envied around Ireland. Rugby gradually became the main use of the grounds: the first representative rugby match was an interprovincial fixture between
Leinster and
Ulster in December 1876, and on 11 March 1878, Lansdowne Road hosted its first international rugby fixture, against England, making it the world's oldest
rugby union Test venue. Dunlop charged the IRFU £5 and half of any profits over £50 after expenses. The first victory Ireland had at the ground took place on 5 February 1887, against England. Around this time, the treasurer of the IRFU, Harry Sheppard, acquired the lease from Dunlop and when Sheppard died in 1906, the union paid his estate £200 for the lease. The IRFU built the first covered stand in 1908, alongside the railway. An uncovered stand was built over the Lansdowne club pavilion at the northwest corner of the ground. The first international soccer match at the venue took place between
Ireland and
England on
Saint Patrick's Day, 17 March 1900, when the Belfast-based
Irish Football Association controlled that game throughout the island. England won by 2–0. In 1926, the
Irish Free State played an international game against
Italy at Lansdowne Road and this was to be the last soccer game at the stadium until
Waterford United played
Manchester United in a
European Cup tie in September 1968. The day after the United Kingdom declared war in August 1914, 350 rugby players, of middle-class and professional backgrounds with solicitors and barristers and many working in banks and insurance companies, assembled on the ground. They were addressed by
FH Browning, the President of the IRFU, and they decided to volunteer to join the 7th
Royal Dublin Fusiliers as a
"pals" company, D Company. They marched from the grounds through the city on their way to the
Curragh Camp. Some were shortly commissioned as officers, others became NCOs and many of the others became specialists in the battalion, such as signallers, machine-gunners and medical orderlies. This unit saw action at
Suvla Bay in the
Dardanelles on 7 August 1915, when many of them died. A memorial to the IRFU members who died in the Great War was erected on the inside of the external wall of the stadium after the war. It was to be preserved in any rebuilding by condition of the planning permission, and is now located just outside the new Aviva Stadium media centre. After the First World War, the members of Lansdowne and Wanderers reclaimed land from the nearby
River Dodder and created enough ground for two back pitches to be formed, enabling the main pitch to be turned out around to the configuration used ever since. In 1927, the old East Stand was built and a terrace created under it. Soldiers of the National Army filled the stand to test its strength. Unfortunately, the roof of the stand was not erected in time for the first match against Scotland. The day of the match saw torrential rain, soaking the spectators and the day was long remembered for the appalling conditions. The Irish poet
Louis MacNeice evokes the atmosphere at Lansdowne Park in the late 1930s in
Rugby Football Excursion, a poem first published in 1938. MacNeice does not specify the actual occasion, but the details provided in the sixth
stanza of the poem - "Eccentric scoring - Nicholson, Marshall and Unwin, / Replies by Bailey and Daly" - suggest that MacNeice was at Lansdowne Park on 12 February 1938 for a match between Ireland and England in the
1938 Home Nations Championship.
Pathé News made a
newsreel of this match. The newsreel shows the English and Irish teams running onto the pitch, watched by a huge crowd, followed by various shots of the match in progress. Lansdowne Lawn Tennis Club was a tenant at the grounds and had grass tennis courts where the South Terrace was later located. During international rugby matches, the tennis courts were covered with planks of wood to allow spectators to stand and watch the rugby matches. In 1930, Lansdowne LTC left the ground to move across the Dodder river to Londonbridge Road, taking the turf from the tennis courts with them. The IRFU, which had its offices within the stadium complex, allowed occasional other uses of the ground, including athletics (a crowd of 40,000 witnessed Olympic gold medalist
Ronnie Delany run there in an international athletics meeting in the 1950s). In 1952 Lansdowne Road hosted the first
colours match between
University College Dublin and
Trinity College, Dublin.
UCD took the honours. In 1954, the arrangement whereby Ireland matches were shared between
Ravenhill Stadium and Lansdowne Road ended with the building of the Upper West Stand at Lansdowne creating 8,000 additional seats. In future, all Ireland internationals were to be played at Lansdowne Road. In September 1968 the first football match was played at IRFU headquarters as
Waterford played
Manchester United in the
1968–69 European Cup In 1977, the old West Lower Stand was demolished and the new West Lower Stand opened in 1978. The uncovered stand at the corner of the North Terrace was demolished and terracing extended. Lansdowne FC moved their clubhouse from under that stand to a new clubhouse within the grounds, near Herbert Bridge, beside the Dodder. The mock-Tudor tearooms of Lansdowne FC reverted to the IRFU. The East Stand replaced the Old East Stand in 1983, being financed by the sale of ten-year tickets. In October 2005, a small fire in the north terrace put the terrace out of commission for all of Ireland's Autumn internationals. This meant that people who had travelled from as far away as Australia and New Zealand could not attend the match. The terrace reopened for the first game of the 2006
Six Nations Championship. On 20 November 1988,
Boston College beat
Army 38–24 in the
Emerald Isle Classic, the first major
NCAA American football game ever played in Europe, played before 42,525 fans at the stadium. The Irish Government estimated at the time that the game brought nearly US$30 million in spending to the local economy. The
Football Association of Ireland first leased the ground for international
soccer matches in 1971, and from 1990 to 2006, the ground was used for the vast majority of home fixtures by
the Republic of Ireland soccer team. The reason for this was that
Dalymount Park, the traditional home of Irish soccer was no longer considered an adequate venue for hosting internationals due to its lower capacity and fewer seats. It was primarily to allow midweek international soccer matches to take place in the evening that floodlights were installed in Lansdowne in 1993. On 15 February 1995, following the 1994 IRA ceasefire, English football hooligans
caused the referee to abandon a friendly international after just 27 minutes. Orchestrated by
Combat 18, a
neo-Nazi organisation and members of the hooligan group
Chelsea Headhunters. English spectators threw debris (including seats, wood and metal) down at Irish fans in response to a goal being scored by Ireland's
David Kelly. and following defeat in Spain in the second leg, Shels would host their
UEFA Cup first round tie against
Lille at Lansdowne as well. That match finished 2:2. The last international rugby match before demolition was a 61–17 Ireland win over the
Pacific Islanders on 26 November 2006. The final football international was a 5–0 win for the Republic of Ireland over
San Marino on 15 November 2006. The last football game ever before redevelopment was
Derry City's
FAI Cup Final win against
St. Patrick's Athletic on 3 December 2006. The last contest in the old Lansdowne Road Stadium was a rugby match that took place on 31 December 2006.
Leinster beat
Ulster 20 points to 12 in a
Celtic League game that set a record attendance of 48,000 for such a league match. Demolition of the stadium began in May 2007. ==Replacement==