Nelson's Pillar Caretaker, Ireland 1966

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  • Опубликовано: 2 фев 2025

Комментарии • 236

  • @tonymurphy6227
    @tonymurphy6227 2 года назад +50

    What a lovely, easy going man, shame he lost his job soon after this, hope he was looked after. I went up the pillar everytime we went back to Dublin on holiday in the early 60's, fantastic view of Dublin from the top.

    • @laurencesmith2199
      @laurencesmith2199 2 года назад +3

      My Ma wouldn't let me go up it , for ideological reasons .

    • @TomTermini
      @TomTermini 2 года назад +2

      I'd say he got a right nice pension, after all the fireworks...

    • @fred66665
      @fred66665 Год назад

      @@TomTermini I think I saw him in the aftermath video that CR put up.

  • @finolaomurchu8217
    @finolaomurchu8217 2 года назад +93

    His Dublin accent is lovely, it's an old fashioned Dublin accent. ☘

    • @jamesbradshaw3389
      @jamesbradshaw3389 2 года назад +22

      I love an accent, it gives greater individuality to the person, It will be a sad loss when all the world people speak with a mid-Atlantic accent

    • @martinmcdonald4207
      @martinmcdonald4207 2 года назад +7

      @@jamesbradshaw3389 It happened just at turn of the new millelium, the year 2000, just ask any Dublin taxi driver who`s been around long enough! Girls and guys from all over the country losing their local brogue accents when they arrived to work and live in the big city, you had to become cityised! and learning South Dublin/West Coast America and you have your mid-Atlantic accent and it really is comical! In this year 2022 it gives me great fun to hear all the different brogues on some radio channels and it`s there you hear the false silly put on mid-Atlantic accents, both male and female. These folk should own their accents with pride or maybe just stay with local radio, Cheers, Martin, South Dublin.

    • @finolaomurchu8217
      @finolaomurchu8217 2 года назад +6

      @@martinmcdonald4207 That DORT speak accent is so grating on the ears. Even Montrose accent is more authentic. I remember being in London years ago, and being told at a job interview I had an "Eamonn Andrews" accent. Oh I laughed at that. He was an old fogey to me, a likeable old fogey. He had a programme called "This is your Life "🙋🏻‍♀️

    • @martinmcdonald4207
      @martinmcdonald4207 2 года назад +4

      @@finolaomurchu8217 Just like his old buddy Gay Byrne he got a bit of elocution in Synge Street C.B.S. just like 'meself'!

    • @breezey8932
      @breezey8932 2 года назад

      That's not a Dublin accent it's a northern accent

  • @kieran.stafford
    @kieran.stafford 2 года назад +30

    Always look forward to CR Video Vaults posting a new video. What a treasure of an archive.

  • @PtolemyJones
    @PtolemyJones 2 года назад +7

    A delightful film, a nice slice of history.

  • @petermurphy9968
    @petermurphy9968 2 года назад +77

    It was so wasteful to have it blown up. All they had to do was remove the statue and replace it with a figure of Padraig Pearse or James Connolly.. The column itself was a magnificent building attracting many Dubliners and outsider interest and would have been a far more interesting piece of landscape than what replaced it today which is an eyesore. Blowing this magnificent structure up was cutting one's nose off to spite one's face. Such a shame, that man lost his income and charities lost a decent funding from it. It was one of the most senseless operations that the IRA committed in my opinion. And I say that as a staunch Republican.

    • @antseanbheanbocht4993
      @antseanbheanbocht4993 2 года назад +17

      Well I kind of agree they should not have blown it up, but we can't blame anyone else for the shite we've put there since. 🙄

    • @nigelraporam6917
      @nigelraporam6917 2 года назад +2

      Ugly view on an otherwise beautiful steet

    • @markburke2853
      @markburke2853 2 года назад +7

      Agreed re keeping the picturesque pillar, however there were plans for a PP statue but this was quietly, and rightly, dropped when it was accepted that his poetry, prose and general behaviour in the boys school he founded was highly questionable. Swapping Nelson for Connolly was also debatable, or any other person associated with the rising as this would have ended in argument as to who should go up. Leaving it empty and making it a viewing platform would have been more sensible till an agreed figure, perhaps neutral like Cuchulainn or another ancient Irish person might have done. They'd have had to carve it to suit the pillar's style, of course, and avoid the 'modern art' look that replaced it.

    • @antseanbheanbocht4993
      @antseanbheanbocht4993 2 года назад +8

      @@markburke2853 General behaviour in the Boys school? Any source for this please?
      I have read little lad of tricks and if I'm honest it does make me unneasy but there was no suspicions about Pears during his own lifetime, it seems disingenuous to level these accusations long after his death but if you have proof I'd like to see it.

    • @markburke2853
      @markburke2853 2 года назад +2

      @@antseanbheanbocht4993 Thanks for the reply, and there's a very interesting 2001 RTE documentary, amongst others, and usefully on YT and the title is -
      True lives - Padraig Pearse Fanatic Heart (Documentary) RTE 2001 and the YT link is ruclips.net/video/iEvOzwdFLvE/видео.html If you need to check the point where accusations are levelled, then circa 41.00 mins into the programme it's stated quite clearly. The issue with Pearse was that he went full tilt at everything, including anything Irish, and was a creative spirit, thus, as with many others who saw themselves as superior in intellect, the offset was being allowed to do things that others would not do. He saw no wrong in this, all part of the way Bohemians behaved however the subsequent plans for a statue took into account this aspect, and, rightly decided not to pedestal him. Today, he would have been removed, if there had been one put up, an acknowledgment to behaviour that has since become abhorrent as a result of the detestable few that hid amongst the RC church, and were protected. How many others who worked alongside him knew of his actions, there must have been RC priests who shared it and were never exposed, Ireland being totally devoted to the RC faith.

  • @jodiepreston4397
    @jodiepreston4397 2 года назад +8

    What a nice old gentleman!

  • @MrJckDoo
    @MrJckDoo 2 года назад +8

    I remember going up on it many times in the 50s, and 60s. almost every time I was in Dublin at the time.

  • @alansimpson596
    @alansimpson596 2 года назад +7

    A natural gentleman.

  • @brendancarroll9376
    @brendancarroll9376 2 года назад +19

    After 210 years abiding in Dublin, surely himself must be an Irish citizen by now. Horati O’Nelson?

  • @johnhehir508
    @johnhehir508 2 года назад +22

    Just under 4000 sailors from Ireland served on Nelson's fleet of ships ,including sailors from Dublin cork and Limerick,

  • @hetrodoxly1203
    @hetrodoxly1203 2 года назад +35

    The reason the people of Dublin raised the funds for the column was...
    Nelson’s fleet consisted of 33 ships and approximately 18,000 men, of whom records survive for about 12,000.
    Some 3,573 sailors came from Ireland including 893 from Dublin, 632 from Cork, 187 from Waterford, 154 from Limerick, 116 from Wexford and 112 from Antrim.
    There were 94 Irishmen on the flagship HMS Victory on which Nelson lost his life during the battle. There were 77 Ryans, 59 Murphys and 32 McCarthys involved.
    The problem when a few people make decisions for the majority, there should have been a vote, we shouldn't destroy history because we don't like or agree with what it once represented, they could have replaced the statue with one of Pearse, but that wouldn't have satisfied some on the grounds his father was English.

    • @TomTermini
      @TomTermini 2 года назад +5

      Meh. Destroying an eyesore that's a homage to Imperialists isn't destroying history. Nelson's sea faring antics still happened... It's removing monuments to tyrants.

    • @Mute040404
      @Mute040404 2 года назад +4

      @@TomTermini Since the dawn of man, the only choice tribes/nations had was to conquer or be conquered (England was invaded many times). Being part of the Empire, prevented Ireland from being invaded by others. Likewise, had Ireland been in the position to do so, she would've invaded others. Try looking at the world through the lenses of the time .

    • @johnathanryan2117
      @johnathanryan2117 2 года назад +1

      I remember it well....i was seasick for weeks...

    • @hetrodoxly1203
      @hetrodoxly1203 2 года назад +2

      @@johnathanryan2117 You're lucky, Nelson was seasick his whole life.

    • @tpower1912
      @tpower1912 2 года назад +3

      @Tom Termini
      Nelson had nothing to do with Imperialism, his entire career was fighting other European major powers. Wellington was the one who actually served in India and his column stands no problem

  • @bredamcmahon287
    @bredamcmahon287 2 года назад +27

    Yes a beautiful refined Dublin accent of the time.

  • @m0bob
    @m0bob 2 года назад +7

    Sadly for some, it was blown up the same year as the interview. I am not getting political, but it's sad because he probably lost his job.

  • @staffy4389
    @staffy4389 2 года назад +13

    I was brought up the pillar when I made my communion, I know it's on super 8. ..Probably lying in some relatives attic.... always loved the story, that the Irish army did more damage to surrounding buildings cleaning up the mess that the I.R.A. left.

    • @peadarocolmain4850
      @peadarocolmain4850 2 года назад

      People are still saying that the IRA blew up Nelson's Pillar. No matter how many times the history is pointed out to them. The group who blew up the pillar were called "Saor Uladh" and were led by a man called "Liam Sutcliffe". The IRA didn't even know about it.

    • @tonymurphy6227
      @tonymurphy6227 2 года назад +1

      The British army didnt clean up the mess, it was the Irish Army...1966 is the clue.

    • @staffy4389
      @staffy4389 2 года назад +1

      @@tonymurphy6227 I said IRISH army... don't get you ?

    • @tonymurphy6227
      @tonymurphy6227 2 года назад

      Nope, you said British army, you've edited your original comment.

    • @69Jackjones69
      @69Jackjones69 2 года назад +2

      @@tonymurphy6227 If she had edited her original comment it would say (edited) above aforementioned comment.
      It's pristine.
      She is victorious.

  • @fergusmurphy8521
    @fergusmurphy8521 2 года назад +10

    That gentleman is the father of Eddie bailham the rovers centre forward

  • @ciaran5588
    @ciaran5588 2 года назад +11

    Tour Guide "I've been doing this job for 40 year's & I'll be doing it for another 20
    A few minutes later.......

  • @elizdonovan5650
    @elizdonovan5650 2 года назад +8

    Is that a young Frank Hall? The voice, I know I know it, but can’t be sure whose it is.
    ☘️🌝🌲

    • @AnselmGriffin
      @AnselmGriffin 2 года назад +2

      Definitely Frank Hall

    • @elizdonovan5650
      @elizdonovan5650 2 года назад +2

      @@AnselmGriffin Thanks.
      ☘️🌝🌲

    • @Spscc23998
      @Spscc23998 2 года назад

      That's Frank Hall alright

    • @davidlally592
      @davidlally592 Год назад +1

      Yup some years later he had his own funny RTE show and later still he was the Irish Film Censor..!!

  • @fredthemagnificent
    @fredthemagnificent Год назад +2

    Thre remains must exist somewhere?

  • @sean864
    @sean864 2 года назад +16

    Thats interesting never knew there were actual stairs going up to it

    • @petermurphy9968
      @petermurphy9968 2 года назад

      They didn't have elevators back in 1808.

    • @sean864
      @sean864 2 года назад +4

      @@petermurphy9968 u dont say? I didn't know it had stairs inside it.

    • @Jotari
      @Jotari 2 года назад

      @@petermurphy9968 Actually I reckon they probably did. Not electric powered elevators of course, but like the technology for a pulley system that modern elevators still work under surely existed.

  • @conorlane1
    @conorlane1 2 года назад +21

    If this was filmed in 1966 then it must have been before March, as it underwent a big remodeling job around then...
    Shame we couldn't have just repurposed the monument to commemorate something related to Ireland, the Spire is a very poor replacement.

    • @lameduck3630
      @lameduck3630 2 года назад +1

      Do you want Jerry Adams up there?

    • @connoroleary591
      @connoroleary591 2 года назад

      @@lameduck3630 who's Jerry Adams?

    • @lameduck3630
      @lameduck3630 2 года назад +3

      Maybe it should have been Waterloo hero the Duke of Wellington as he was a Paddy.

    • @peadarocolmain4850
      @peadarocolmain4850 2 года назад +3

      @@lameduck3630 Artie Colley was born here but he didn't regard himself as Irish. His family were originally called "Colley". That surname sounded a bit too Irish for them so they changed their name to "Wesley". Then he changed his name from "Arthur Wesley" to the more aristocratic sounding "Arthur Wellesley, Duke of Wellington".
      We could always put Padraig Pearse on the pillar.
      The Duke of Wellington didn't fight in the 1916 rising.
      Then again Pearse didn't get a pair of rubber boots called after him.
      If the Duke of Wellington were on that pillar it would have been blown up anyway. I reckon we should rebuild it and put Saint Patrick on the top. So whether it's Pearse or Saint Patrick, the Dubs could call it "Paddy's Pillar". It's a pity Liam Sutcliffe didn't come back in 2016 for the 100th anniversary and blow up that bloody spire too.

    • @staffy4389
      @staffy4389 2 года назад +1

      Absolutely, maybe a statue of Gay Byrne...or Bang Bang....someone who was IRISH.

  • @neildaly2635
    @neildaly2635 2 года назад +16

    “Admiral Nelson took a powder and he blew!”

  • @niallgerardjosephoconnells7097
    @niallgerardjosephoconnells7097 2 года назад +4

    Lovely Dublin guy. Niall. Dundalk.

  • @tomhayes4782
    @tomhayes4782 2 года назад +23

    40% of Nelsons navy was Irish......."Wooden on the outside, Cork on the inside"...

    • @markdami
      @markdami 2 года назад +1

      I've seen figures of ~20% (navy in general during Nelson's time) to ~30% (Trafalgar).
      In any case still a hugely significant proportion and the second largest nationality.
      Especially significant if you include Stephen Maturin ;)

    • @tomhayes4782
      @tomhayes4782 2 года назад +3

      @@markdami Your right..The army was 40% Irish.....Including Wellington.

  • @rivolinho
    @rivolinho 2 года назад +2

    My Dad often mentioned his trips up to the big schmoke in the mid 60s visiting his brother. Spent many an afternoon looking out from the top of Nelson's column.

  • @martingrefen7792
    @martingrefen7792 2 года назад +22

    It was a real Dublin landmark,sad it's no longer there,pitty

    • @ireland2657
      @ireland2657 2 года назад +15

      Eh not it's not.. although the spire is rubbish..

    • @SeanKiernan420
      @SeanKiernan420 2 года назад

      You’re missing a lot of context with that comment… I hope

    • @SeanKiernan420
      @SeanKiernan420 2 года назад +2

      @@seanquinn5483 original comment, although im confused with yours? How is the spire a symbol of British imperialism?

  • @alexcaffrey8299
    @alexcaffrey8299 2 года назад +9

    I wonder what the kids watching in the back are up to now

    • @Geshreeyeh
      @Geshreeyeh 2 года назад +1

      Still waiting for the superglue on their ears to wear off

    • @josephcampbell2478
      @josephcampbell2478 2 года назад +2

      There his age now

  • @christiancowper9508
    @christiancowper9508 2 года назад +10

    The Spire's alright but you can't go up it. With that sort of stuff you've got to go up it

    • @tpower1912
      @tpower1912 2 года назад

      The heroin needle is hideous and meaningless. Awful sight

    • @johnhehir508
      @johnhehir508 2 года назад +1

      You can stick all the EU red tape on it

    • @Paul5520
      @Paul5520 11 месяцев назад +1

      Definitely a poor replacement agreed

  • @newshades7009
    @newshades7009 2 года назад +10

    at least you could go up the dublin pillar unlike the one in london

  • @nipperparr6709
    @nipperparr6709 2 года назад +1

    Have you any shots of the inside of the piller bro?

  • @laurencesmith2199
    @laurencesmith2199 2 года назад +2

    All around O'Connell street the stones and rubble flew ....................

    • @davidlally592
      @davidlally592 Год назад +1

      Aaah from the then song: "Up Went Nelson (In Old Dublin)"...

  • @turloughkennedy6579
    @turloughkennedy6579 2 года назад +7

    Lovely accent

  • @Goldedguy
    @Goldedguy 2 года назад

    Amazing

  • @seamusburke9101
    @seamusburke9101 2 года назад +14

    Fair play to Joe Pilkington, he saw him off. RIP Joe the right people will never forget you. We could do with a few men like yourself here right now.

  • @GreenOval_Adventurers
    @GreenOval_Adventurers 2 года назад +6

    The reporters attitude is very poor, very uneducated approach, an awl chip on his shoulder, If only nelsons pillar was still there it would be better than the spire.

    • @nigelraporam6917
      @nigelraporam6917 2 года назад

      West brit

    • @AnselmGriffin
      @AnselmGriffin 2 года назад +2

      @@nigelraporam6917 Frank Hall was certainly no west brit.

    • @noodlyappendage6729
      @noodlyappendage6729 Год назад

      @@nigelraporam6917It was built by West Brits. The Irish built the monument to celebrate Nelson and the thousands of Irishmen who served under him. You think you’re Irish? You sound like a communist to me.

  • @lmc4964
    @lmc4964 2 года назад +12

    Is the reporter Frank Hall? very distinctive voice

    • @finolaomurchu8217
      @finolaomurchu8217 2 года назад +5

      So it is. Hall's pictorial weekly, he's young there. Very familiar voice though.

    • @AnthonyAfrikaans
      @AnthonyAfrikaans 2 года назад

      No. It’s Tony Hayers.

    • @lmc4964
      @lmc4964 2 года назад

      @@AnthonyAfrikaans cheers, that name isnt familiar to me

    • @martinmcdonald4207
      @martinmcdonald4207 2 года назад +2

      @@AnthonyAfrikaans It`s Frank Hall. I`m old enough to remember Hall`s Pictorial Weekly and the boys from Ballymagash on D` telly in real time! Cheers.

    • @FinleyHills
      @FinleyHills 2 года назад +1

      @@lmc4964 I think Mister Afrikaans is joking - Tony Hayers is a television executive in "Alan Partridge"!

  • @sanchoodell6789
    @sanchoodell6789 2 года назад

    Would be great to see that and go up to the top when I'm next in Dublin. I would assume the Office of Public Works would oversee it's upkeep nowadays.

    • @inspectec
      @inspectec 2 года назад

      The IRA blew it up.

    • @Jotari
      @Jotari 2 года назад

      I'm guessing from the name that you're bring ironic.

    • @sanchoodell6789
      @sanchoodell6789 2 года назад

      @@Jotari Well it's not as if the Irish are known for their humour! ("The sheep out there are far far way"!)

    • @Jotari
      @Jotari 2 года назад

      @@sanchoodell6789 I think they're just small.

  • @headgroundsman1650
    @headgroundsman1650 2 года назад +4

    the Pillar was older than the Column.....the army made a balls of blowing up the remains. Love the old mans voice. up da dubs!

  • @joelarkin4268
    @joelarkin4268 2 года назад +3

    I love the videos about lreland 🇮🇪☘️☘️☘️🌈

  • @Driver2616
    @Driver2616 2 года назад +6

    It would have been a simple task to remove the likeness of Lord Nelson from the top and replace it with an Irish Hero either from mythology or history - Cuchulainn or Fionn McCumhaill or Padraig Pearse or Michael Collins or some other great Irish figure. Sadly, though shortsighted low intellect (what’s new there?) Republican extremists destroyed this magnificent edifice, constructed by Irish hands with stunning Irish granite that had been hewn from the Wicklow Mountains. What a terrible shame.

    • @martinbyrne6643
      @martinbyrne6643 2 года назад

      Put Bertie on top if we had it .

    • @Driver2616
      @Driver2616 2 года назад

      @@martinbyrne6643 : No. For it’s time, it’d have to be a more historical figure..,

    • @None-zc5vg
      @None-zc5vg 2 года назад

      Why not erect a pillar with a likeness of Charles Haughey on top ("...our sort of nice crook", as someone said of him) ?

    • @antseanbheanbocht4993
      @antseanbheanbocht4993 2 года назад +1

      Put Ursula von de lyon on it, we don't have Irish hero's anymore. Would the Trioka fit on it, large IMF sign or just the amount of money borrowed by the Finné Foolies between 2007 and 2022 , 223 billion, probably a bit big to fit up there.

    • @Driver2616
      @Driver2616 2 года назад +1

      @@antseanbheanbocht4993 : Would you ever shut up ye whinger…

  • @kawtarmouhib668
    @kawtarmouhib668 2 года назад +1

    I was told years ago that the Pillar's caretaker was actually Dicky Rock's old man!

    • @acb7074
      @acb7074 2 года назад

      No it was John Thomas

  • @ianhjan
    @ianhjan 2 года назад +3

    The last time I saw this pillar it was all over O'Connell Street, after it was remodeled by a different syndicate. I think Nelsons hat will be well past the moon by now.

  • @jimmymcjimmyvich9052
    @jimmymcjimmyvich9052 2 года назад +3

    Methinks one of ours did actually go up there. A bit of the way...

  • @1916jamesconnolly
    @1916jamesconnolly 2 года назад +4

    Great wee job this man had. Probably had the strongest legs in Dublin. Hope he got another energetic job later on. Like caretaker of the stone tower on the summit of Slieve Donard.

  • @bredaokeeffe4702
    @bredaokeeffe4702 2 года назад

    Made it half way up had to come back down on my behind think it was blown up that same year

  • @kenb1899
    @kenb1899 2 года назад +3

    Pity the Irish wouldnt get rid off some off the dirt been allowed to congregate in our city in 2021...

  • @robertdoyle687
    @robertdoyle687 2 года назад +2

    UP WENT NELSON . . . 🤔

  • @danbreen6946
    @danbreen6946 2 года назад +11

    Nelson the first man in space 💣💥

  • @Marlondurran
    @Marlondurran 10 месяцев назад +1

    Winnie Mandela loved going up and down on Nelsons piller..

  • @eugenecussen3735
    @eugenecussen3735 2 года назад +1

    Should have just cropped nelson and kept the rest of the column

  • @GG-jw8pt
    @GG-jw8pt 2 года назад +1

    Need subtitles on anything Dublin now.
    ROIGHT!

  • @richardmoloney689
    @richardmoloney689 10 месяцев назад

    I have a piece of it to this day

  • @augustinedennis4865
    @augustinedennis4865 2 года назад +2

    I walked it three times.and would repeat if I were allowed.

  • @TT_1221
    @TT_1221 2 года назад +1

    The IRA probably watched this program and thought .... hmmm ....

  • @anntifurz
    @anntifurz 2 года назад

    That’s so obviously who Bob de Niro modelled himself on for The Irishman - method acting

    • @freebornjohn2687
      @freebornjohn2687 2 года назад

      The strange thing about the Irishman was that they spent a fortune on trying to make de Niro look younger but no effort on making come across as Irish.

    • @anntifurz
      @anntifurz 2 года назад

      @@freebornjohn2687 to be sure

  • @khiggins7231
    @khiggins7231 2 года назад +3

    The blowing up of a statue celebrating the life of Nelson Mandela is an absolute disgrace.
    What were they thinking.

  • @paddydiskin3645
    @paddydiskin3645 2 года назад +1

    I wonder what Mr Bailham did for a living afterwards...

  • @thomasreid6123
    @thomasreid6123 2 года назад +6

    I could not understand why they had to blow up the whole pillar. They could have got rid of Nelson and replaced him with an Irish Hero..

    • @chrisclark1761
      @chrisclark1761 2 года назад +3

      They blew it up because a group of yobs didn't like it.

    • @Falscaidh
      @Falscaidh Год назад +1

      They (Dublin Corporation) were arguing for years and couldn't come to any agreement on a replacement.

    • @fred66665
      @fred66665 Год назад

      I think if I remember right there was something about the statues in the 1921 Treaty. They couldn't be removed from the Irish Army Barracks without the British Governments permission. So a statue of Queen Victoria was made into a urinal at one of the Dublin barracks (Collins maybe) and after the British Government didn't grant its removal. Soon after the British arranged for it removal. Maybe it applied to statues in the public square too.

  • @markburke2853
    @markburke2853 2 года назад +9

    I remember the explosion in 1966 when in Rathmines and the subsequent mess it made, incl. the Oirish army's demolition of the stump. Wholly unnecessary other than the fenians needed to commemorate the 50th anniv' of the 'rising' with destruction, later visited on NI in full. I can't recall being up it, one if those things you plan to do till it's too late, however the view of the mountains and the then city would have been wonderful. There is still on YT old footage of O'Connell St, incl. the Pillar, from the 50's etc., and can't help thinking that today's 'look' is very downmarket to the street that once was part of a city that vied with London in the 1800's.....cue angry replies to my 'middle of the road' (get it!) comments from the usual shinner types with chips on their shoulders. P.S, Dublin was founded by the Vikings and their name was not Dubh Linn (black pool), which the Gael called it, and was a trading post that grew under their tutelage, and later Norman expansion, into what it is today...just like all the other ports..

    • @IRISHATLANTIC
      @IRISHATLANTIC 2 года назад +5

      As someone who cannot stand the Shinners myself, your own comment comes across just as bad as what you might accuse them of. Bigotry isn't a good look, whichever direction it comes.

    • @davekeating.
      @davekeating. 2 года назад +2

      Up the Shinners, Up yours Mark Burke, and “Up went Nelson.” : )

    • @eamonosullivan2702
      @eamonosullivan2702 2 года назад +3

      The Vikings called Dublin, Dyfflin which was there version of the Irish Dubhlinn. So its a pretty semantic point your making. Terrible to blow up an historic feature of Street.

    • @markburke2853
      @markburke2853 2 года назад +2

      @@eamonosullivan2702 Thanks for the reply and the Vikings founded the settlement, there not being anything there to identify, so debatable as to whether the water itself gave its name to the Gaelic pronunciation. Nevertheless Dubh Linn is much more descriptive, and better, than the Baile Atha Cliath that is on buses etc., It being the Norman name for their Bailey they built in the late 12th C.

    • @Jen-lg4hp
      @Jen-lg4hp 2 года назад +1

      Agree! O'Connell Street today is like a slum in Islamabad or Mogadishu. I genuinely feel like crying every time I go to the city now and avoid it when I can- Dublin is not Irish anymore!

  • @andyarmstrong1493
    @andyarmstrong1493 2 года назад +2

    He only had one job!

  • @olieahern1318
    @olieahern1318 2 года назад +3

    3 years to put up and destroyed in seconds

    • @davekeating.
      @davekeating. 2 года назад +4

      Not bad, considering it took the Brits hundreds of years to destroy Ireland

    • @nigelraporam6917
      @nigelraporam6917 2 года назад

      @@davekeating. and we're still here even after all they threw at us

  • @raymondmurphy9593
    @raymondmurphy9593 9 месяцев назад

    A lovely gentleman, and the great Frank Hall. They the bank or who ever were the trustees sould have removed Admiral Nelson and replaced with an Irish patriot Pearce, Collins.... JFK ... I know it doesn't make any difference now it long gone.

  • @deskirby309
    @deskirby309 2 года назад

    It had alot less steps a few month later.

  • @randomaztec2208
    @randomaztec2208 2 года назад +5

    💥💣💥

  • @countycricklewood
    @countycricklewood 2 года назад +1

    Bang! Then It was gone!

  • @Franklincnwosu
    @Franklincnwosu 2 года назад

    Irish should have kept their holiday attraction center monument remove the whom they don't like on it.

  • @hugostiglitz6914
    @hugostiglitz6914 2 года назад +1

    It was visited by Spaniards and other foreigners. He neglected to mention the IRA scouts😂
    Seriously, it's a shame it's gone!

  • @Danny-uc9ic
    @Danny-uc9ic 2 года назад +2

    Happy days it's no more,I bet the westside Brits cried into their Earl grey tea, Brits out.

    • @Jen-lg4hp
      @Jen-lg4hp 2 года назад +1

      Yeah. Brits out, now half of the third world in! You're fighting a war that's 100 years' old, pal, while our country today is being invaded and sold out to the globalists! Brits are in the same boat as us now!

    • @Danny-uc9ic
      @Danny-uc9ic 2 года назад

      @@Jen-lg4hp I agree ,every town throughout the island is getting filled ,why is this happening, Ireland is fucked .out of the E U ,but I don't think that will happen anytime soon.

    • @shane6115
      @shane6115 Год назад +1

      You armchair plastic terrorists make me giggle 😂

    • @noodlyappendage6729
      @noodlyappendage6729 Год назад

      Shut up you communist.

  • @kevphillips02
    @kevphillips02 2 года назад

    I guess the ladies of 71 and 72 might well be dead now.

  • @Dreyno
    @Dreyno 2 года назад

    Job for life…………….

  • @deeppurple883
    @deeppurple883 11 месяцев назад

    Out of a job now that it's gone poor bloke. ✊ ☘️

  • @kittylife5589
    @kittylife5589 2 года назад

    Jesus eamon Magee stunt double

  • @jamesbradshaw3389
    @jamesbradshaw3389 2 года назад +9

    Good riiddens, Ireland did not need that sort of thing. I got those shock of my life a few years ago to hear a relation how said that he supplied some of the explosive used to blow up Nelson and his pillar

    • @SeanKiernan420
      @SeanKiernan420 2 года назад

      *salutes the Bradshaw name*

    • @connoroleary591
      @connoroleary591 2 года назад +2

      @@SeanKiernan420 never was a shortage of Irish men to salute a British name.

    • @SeanKiernan420
      @SeanKiernan420 2 года назад +2

      @@connoroleary591 cheeky

    • @jamesbradshaw3389
      @jamesbradshaw3389 2 года назад

      @@connoroleary591 Not fully true, only if people are in the British arm forces, The Irish are the ones who do not bow to the queen and she was telling me last year that she was fine what that

    • @freebornjohn2687
      @freebornjohn2687 2 года назад +2

      It wasn't necessary to destroy the pillar - they should have put someone or something else up there once they decided they didn't want Nelson. It was also a commemoration of the Irish who fought in those battles, cut the stone, built it and paid for it.

  • @aidgan789
    @aidgan789 2 года назад +1

    We would off been French

  • @coleraineful
    @coleraineful 2 года назад +1

    Nelsons Pillar didn't exist in 1966. It was blown up in March 1963.

    • @neilthefish
      @neilthefish 2 года назад +4

      You're wrong it was blown up in the year 66. I went up it in 1963 or thereabouts, a fond memory.

  • @MargaretRooney-h7x
    @MargaretRooney-h7x 7 месяцев назад

    Sounds like Eamon MacThomas

  • @Tattedup85
    @Tattedup85 2 года назад

    A bit of a trill lol

  • @myztartupjourney6772
    @myztartupjourney6772 2 года назад

    I bet some fella in the Ra watched this and thought let’s put this chancer out of a job

  • @Paul5520
    @Paul5520 2 года назад +2

    He had to go. No Question. British semantics.

  • @jackyeh8149
    @jackyeh8149 2 года назад

    The understood freezer phytochemically appear because neck firstly spoil out a abounding department. ill-informed, ceaseless experience

  • @lanslater
    @lanslater 2 года назад

    ah nvm sure "old Nelson took a powder - den he blew "