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Military History: Battleground Dublin, Remembering the O’Connell Street Landmarks of 1916

Posted on 23 March 2016 by The Tactical Hermit

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“To commemorate the 100th anniversary of the Easter Rising, the Irish building supply company Chadwick’s is offering MilitaryHistoryNow.com this infographic exploring some of the O’Connell Street landmarks that were damaged and destroyed during the battle.”

 

FOR MANY, Dublin’s famous O’Connell Street is considered ‘ground-zero’ for the Easter Rising of 1916.

At the start of the five-day insurrection, which ran from April 24 to 29 of that year, rebel forces stormed the General Post Office headquarters on the city’s legendary main thoroughfare, known then as Sackville Street, and transformed the handsome Georgian-era office building into a fortified stronghold.

After rebel leader Patrick Pearse read aloud a declaration proclaiming an independent Irish Republic from the post office steps, more than 1,200 insurgents fanned out across Dublin to occupy strategic points and to seize weapons from local armouries.

Within 48 hours, British reinforcements moved in to retake the capital. Fighting raged in a number of spots across Dublin with much of the violence concentrated on Sackville Street. In fact, British artillery zeroed in on the rebel-controlled postal building specifically – a gunboat on the River Liffey lobbed dozens of shells onto the area. By the time the battle was over, thousands of Dubliners were dead or wounded and the city’s main boulevard looked like a Western Front war zone.

To commemorate the 100th anniversary of the Easter Rising, the Irish building supply company Chadwick’s is offering MilitaryHistoryNow.com this infographic exploring some of the O’Connell Street landmarks that were damaged and destroyed during the battle.

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Read the Original Article at Military History Now

 

0 thoughts on “Military History: Battleground Dublin, Remembering the O’Connell Street Landmarks of 1916”

  1. Pingback: Military History: Battleground Dublin, Remembering the O’Connell Street Landmarks of 1916 | Rifleman III Journal
  2. PARTNERING WITH EAGLES says:
    23 March 2016 at 20:56

    I know Ireland became a republic in 1921, though we know it did not stop the violence. I’m sketchy about how long Ireland was a British possession; except that it dates back several centuries. They even fought amongst themselves (massacre of Glencoe) regarding allegiance to British royalty. Interesting pictures; thanks.

  3. Hammerhead says:
    24 March 2016 at 05:40

    I have studied guerilla warfare and insurgencies for a long time…the early years of the IRA and the History of Ireland is a favorite topic of mine, M. Collins too… especially his intelligence/counter-intelligence methods.

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