
P.H Pearse, one of the signatories of the 1916 proclamation, executed for his role in the rebellion.
The afterlife of the Nelson Pillar on O’Connell Street is every bit as interesting as its lifespan, and from the late 1960s onwards various committees and campaign groups lobbied with the aim of placing a monument in the location where Nelson had stood. One reaccuring proposal was to replace Nelson with a monument to Patrick Pearse. Indeed, the idea of putting Pearse on top of the monument was even floating around before the destruction of the Pillar, with a motion calling for Nelson to be removed and replaced by the revolutionary leader brought before Dublin Corporation in August 1948.
In 1979, architect Yann Goulet brought forward a controversial model for a proposed Pearse monument to the City Council.

Architect Yann Goulet with his proposed monument to Patrick Pearse, photographed at City Hall in 1979.
Higher than the GPO, and containing over £150,000 worth of bronze, the proposal was ridiculed when brought towards the City Council, with Councillor Frank Sherwin stating “it should be thrown in the Liffey”, while Councillor Hanna Barlow described it as “the yoke”. The proposed 100-foot-high abstract monument did not enjoy significant support from any quarters, but it is was just one proposed monument in honour of Pearse for the site. An earlier proposal in the same year came from the Pearse Commemoration Committee, who proposed a much more traditional style monument, to be carried out by sculptor Gary Trimble. The Irish Independent newspaper totally opposed any monument to Pearse in an editorial which noted:
If anything is to replace the Pillar, it should be something which will bring people together, and not something which will caused divisiveness and bitterness, as the proposed Pearse statue is clearly destined to do.
There were wild scenes at one meeting to discuss a proposed Pearse monument, when Lord Mayor Paddy Belton condemned the Pearse Commemoration Committee as “a bunch of Provos”, insisting that members of Sinn Féin were to the fore of the campaign to honour Pearse on O’Connell Street. This was a hugely controversial remark, as the Pearse committee had come from a very broad spectrum of Irish society, including Gael Linn and other Irish language groups. Bord Fáilte also objected to any planned memorial to Pearse, a surprise blow to the campaign, on the grounds that “it may interfere with the view of the GPO which is the vocal point of O’Connell Street.”
Trimble’s proposed monument was comparable in size to the monument to Parnell, and would show Pearse reading from a book, surrounded by children:
Various points of view on any proposed monument to Pearse were reported in the media, ranging from over-the-top praise (“The messiah of the nation’s revival” in the words of Frank Sherwin) to calls for a monument that would be inclusive of the other 1916 leaders. Tomas Mac Giolla for example noted that James Connolly should not be forgotten in any monument at the site. The Pearse pressure group continued to campaign for the placing of a monument to Pearse on O’Connell Street, even if the Pillar site itself was off-limits. Councillor Pat Carroll reportedly pondered if it would be possible “to take down one of the monuments in O’Connell Street, such as that of John Gray, which did not seem to be too important.” However with Gray’s leading role in establishing a clean water supply for much of Dublin, I’d argue today he is far from unimportant!
Today, James Connolly remains the only one of the seven signatories of the proclamation with a statue in Dublin city centre.
If i’m not mistaken, Paddy Belton was one of O’Duffy’s blueshirts who went to spain but then again I may be mixing him up with another Belton.
As for Patrick Pearse being surrounded by children, I’d hold off on that too
Patrick Belton was one of O’Duffy’s Blueshirts but he died in 1945:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Patrick_Belton
I think it’s his son Paddy who is mentioned in this piece:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Paddy_Belton
The Irish Indo newspaper was as much a blue shirt bugle then as now. It’s a disgrace how the Proclaimation signatories have been neglected to this day but sure the aims and aspirations of the Proclaimation have likewise been neglected.
There’s a bust of Pearse in St Enda’s park and a neglected + graffitti’ed bridge to the Pearse Brothers at Rathfarnham…..any other memorials?
And while there’s a Pearse Street and a Sean MacDermott Street in Dublin, there’s no MacDonagh Street, Plunkett Street, Clarke Street, Ceannt Street or Connolly Street.
Reblogged this on Socialist Fight and commented:
The source of some of the stuff on statues in Dublin’s O’Connell Street.