General Post Office Dublin

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The General Post Office O’Connell Street, Dublin

T

he General Post Office on Dublin’s O’Connell Street has arguably come to symbolise the 1916 Rising more than any other building. The building was selected as the headquarters of the Rising primarily because it was the communications heart of the country, a position it held from 1818 when it first opened its doors to the public. Despite the damage to the building in Easter Week, 1916, the GPO survives as one of the oldest operating postal headquarters in the world. The GPO was designed by the Armagh-born architect Francis Johnston (1760-1829). Johnston was regarded as an innovator, equally adept in the neo-Classical and neo-Gothic styles of architecture. He was subsequently appointed as Architect to the Board of Works in 1805, an appointment that afforded him the opportunity to work on important civic buildings. His design for the GPO was intended as a noble centrepiece bringing elegance and grandeur to a fashionable boulevard.

Figure (right): A drawing signed (1814) by Francis Johnston (1760-1829) titled ‘Plan for the General Post Office, Dublin. The Ground Floor’ shows the original U-shaped plan centring on a Common Hall entered via the portico. To the left, or south, are the offices of the Penny Post including a room for Letter Carriers and for the Sorting Office. A square Hall gives access on the left to a Waiting Room outside the office of the Secretary and on the right to the staircase accessing the Boardroom on the first floor. To the right, or north, of the Common Hall are the octagonal Inland Sorting Office and a half-octagonal office set aside for Letter Carriers: both offices access a corner room labelled as Alphabet. The courtyard, entered by gateways in Henry Street and Prince's Street, is enclosed on the west side by a row of

Above: An engraving by Benjamin Winkles from a drawing by George Petrie RHA (1790-1866) published in Dublin Delineated in Twenty-Six Views of the Principal Public Buildings (1831).

service buildings with offices and a Mail Coach Guard House centring on a square room labelled as Fire Engine. Courtesy of the Irish Architectural Archive Johnston’s original design comprised a U-shaped building wrapping around a coach yard accessible via carriageways opening off Henry Street to the north and Prince's Street to the south. The front elevation stands three storeys tall and was constructed of granite quarried from Golden Hill, Co. Wicklow. The centrepiece comprised a

projecting Portland stone portico of six stop-fluted Ionic columns supporting an anthemion-detailed frieze and pediment (fig. 3). Above the Royal Coat of Arms in the tympanum stood the symbolic figures of Mercury and Fidelity flanking Hibernia. The foundation stone of the neoClassical building was laid by Lord Charles Whitworth (1752-1825), Lord Lieutenant of Ireland, on the 12th August, 1814. Work on the GPO progressed steadily for almost three

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General Post Office Dublin by Office of Public Works - Issuu