O'Connell Street Guide, Meaning , Facts, Information and Description
, 19th century nationalist leader, whose statue stands on the street named after him.]]O'Connell Street is Dublin's main thoroughfare. One of Europe's widest streets, it was created by the Wide Streets Commission in the eighteenth century through the joining and widening of two earlier streets. It was known as 'Sackville Street' until the early twentieth century, when Dublin Corporation renamed it in honour of Daniel O'Connell, a nationalist leader in the early nineteenth century, whose statue stands at the lower end of the street, facing O'Connell Bridge. The street is located on Dublin's north side.
is the large building in the centre-left.]]The street itself largely consisted of Georgian and Victorian buildings. However the Easter Rising in 1916, when a small band of Irish republicans seized the General Post Office (GPO) and proclaimed an Irish republic, led to the street's bombardment by artillery. Much of the street was reduced to rubble. Many of those rebuilt were then destroyed again during the Irish Civil War (1922–1923). As a result, only one surviving Georgian building exists on the street. The General Post Office itself was destroyed and has been rebuilt. Today, most of the buildings on the street date from the 1920s and 1930s. Apart from the GPO, the most famous buildings on the street include the Gresham Hotel, the Royal Dublin Hotel and Clerys department store. However poor planning controls in the 1970s allowed cheap shops and burger joints to open. After a couple of decades of neglect, the street has being undergoing a form of renaissance, with new street furnishings and the Spire of Dublin, the world's tallest sculpture, which was erected in January 2003.
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The street has a number of major monuments, including statues of late nineteenth century Irish political leader Charles Stewart Parnell, radical early twentieth century trades union leader Jim Larkin and Daniel O'Connell, who was the dominant force in Irish politics from the late 1820s until his death in 1847. One monument in particular, Nelson's Pillar, honouring British Admiral Horatio Nelson, dominated the streetscene, offering an unparalleled viewing platform to which people could climb and see the city. The monument, which stood at the junctions of Henry Street, Talbot Street and Henry Street, was controversially blown up by Irish republicans in 1966. The controversial Spire of Dublin, has been erected on the site of the pillar.
- Dublin's most prominent monument, until it was blown up by Irish republicans in 1966. It was replaced in 2003 by the Spire of Dublin.]]
Among the major buildings near to O'Connell Street on Dublin's northside are the GPO, the Pro Cathedral (the church which serves as Dublin's de facto Roman Catholic cathedral, though it has never been raised formally to cathedral status, hence the name) and the Rotunda Hospital which serves as North Dublin's main maternity hospital. From the lower end of the street, facing O'Connell Bridge, one can see the famous James Gandon-designed Custom House while looking directly over O'Connell Street, one can see Trinity College Dublin and the Irish House of Lords entrance to the old parliament building. The north of the street links into Parnell Square (formerly Ruthland Square) while the south meets Dublin's quays.
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