Safe house on the mountain
The 1798 connection
Johnnie Fox's was established in 1798 - the year of the United Irishmen's rebellion against British rule. The original establishment on the mountain road served as a gathering point and shelter during the rebellion. Whether specific rebel meetings took place here is the kind of claim that improves with retelling, but the pub's age is genuine, and the road through Glencullen was a real escape route between the coast and the Wicklow Mountains.
Dublin stops at the ridge
The county line
Glencullen sits in the administrative county of Dún Laoghaire-Rathdown, and the village is technically Co. Dublin. But the ridge above belongs to Wicklow - the county boundary runs along the mountain top. Walk ten minutes uphill and you are in a different county. The Glencullen River flows south into Wicklow. The administrative line on the map and the landscape's logic point in the same direction.
The Liberator, passing through
Daniel O'Connell slept here
Johnnie Fox's claims Daniel O'Connell - 'The Liberator', the 19th-century barrister and politician who secured Catholic Emancipation in 1829 - as a regular visitor. The mountain road between Dublin and Wicklow was well-used by those who needed to move between the two, and O'Connell had connections across both counties. The claim is plausible; the documentation is thin; the pint is the same either way.