We investigate dust in the nuclear regions of radio galaxies on the basis o
f 120 images of 3CR radio galaxies in the redshift range 0 < z < 0.5, taken
with the WFPC-2 on the Hubble Space Telescope. At least 40 of these radio
galaxies show evidence for absorption due to clumpy dust features; a large
range of morphologies is observed for these dust features, including diskli
ke and filamentary structures. No difference in host galaxy properties was
found between the radio galaxies with clumpy dust and those without. Where
dust absorption is detected, the morphological properties of the dust depen
d strongly upon the Fanaroff & Riley (FR) classification of the source. The
dust in FR I host galaxies is generally situated in sharply defined disks
on small (<2.5 kpc) scales, and for eight out of the nine FR I galaxies wit
h dust disks, the radio source lies nearly perpendicular to the dust disk.
In contrast, FR II host galaxies have dust that varies both in morphology a
nd in linear size, and the correlation between the dust and radio orientati
on only exists (and less strongly) for the sources that have a significant
mass of dust in disks within a distance of 2.5 kpc of the center of the gal
axy. The derived dust masses also correlate with the FR type of the host ga
laxy: high masses of clumpy dust are not seen in FR I radio galaxies, while
they are present in FR II radio galaxies. Further, FR I galaxies have deri
ved dust masses that are typically larger than the dust masses found in a m
atched sample of radio-quiet ellipticals. We suggest that the observed diff
erences between FR I and FR II radio galaxies are produced due to differenc
es in their formation.