
Edward Carson: Hurler, Gaeilgeoir ,Dubliner.
Come Here To Me has always aimed to cover the broadest aspects of Dublin’s social and political history possible, featuring historical pieces as diverse as the Grand Orange Lodge of Ireland plaque on Dawson Street and the plaque marking the home of Edward Carson on Harcourt Street. The history of Dublin is all the more remarkable of course when one considers the political journey she has been on, once regarded as the second city of the British empire, she now carries the nickname ‘The City Which Fought An Empire’.
Working in the tourism business, with Historical Insights tours of Dublin, I always try capture the tug-of-war at the heart of Irish political history in tours. Beginnng in Trinity, one of the first things visitors see on a tour of Dublin is the always-overlooked war memorial that is today home to the Post-Graduate Reading Room. Likewise, the old Parliament across the street tells a remarkable story of a very British city, with the lion and the unicorn proudly gazing over College Green, and who could forget tales of the Guinness family and their confrontations with Daniel O’Connell? Below the romantic and nationalist ‘Carolls Gift Shop’ side of tourism, our political history is a complex one.
A friend who also works in the same line of work told me she recently encountered a rather unusual walking tour on the streets of the capital, in the form of Dublin Royal and Loyal Tours.
Checking them out online out of curiousity, I came across their site:
Dublin Loyal Guided Tours can provide your Club, School, College, Lodge, with a memorable day out in Dublin, see Dublin’s Royal and Loyal passed. Old Orange Grand Lodge building, (Pernell Sq) Wellington monument, National War Memorial, Royal Hospital, Dublin Castle and Parliament House.
The tour certainly looks like an unusual one, and turns the spotlight onto the ‘other side’ of our history. While many believed the Dublin Rangers Supporters Club website which proclaimed “The members of Dublin Loyal RSC realise how desparate you all are to learn the words of Follow, Follow and The Billy Boys in Irish”(!) may have looked like more than a tad tongue in cheek to many of us,this looks like a more serious attempt at shining a light on the otherside of our identity.