47 Years After It Was Bombed, Ireland's Tallest Tower Reopens To Public
Measuring 55 metres in height, the round-shaped tower built with stones is the tallest of its kind in Ireland, which provides a 360 degree view of Dublin and its neighbouring counties of Wicklow and Meath with four windows at the top of the tower, making it once one of the greatest attractions for tourists in the country.
However, in 1971, a huge bomb containing 10 pounds of gelignite hit the base of the tower, causing structural damage and destroying the interior staircase. Though some group claimed responsibility for the bomb attack, it has never been officially confirmed who really conducted the attack.
In 2016, Glasnevin Trust, the largest funeral services provider in Ireland, started work to restore the destroyed staircase that leads to the top of the tower.
Located in north Dublin, the tower was built in 1855 in the memory of Daniel O’Connell, one of the greatest political figures in the first half of the 19th century in Ireland. O’Connell was known for his fight for equal political and civil rights of Catholics in the country.
Friday's official reopening was attended by the Irish Minister for Finance Paschal Donohoe and Northern Ireland MP Sir Jeffrey Donaldson from the Democratic Unionist Party (DUP), among others.
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