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Victorian Charm in Galway, Ireland - Great Southern Hotel
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Victorian Charm in Galway, Ireland - The Great Southern Hotel Kriss Hammond, Editor, Jetsetters
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Mass tourism began in the Victorian age (the Industrial Age) when Thomas Cook
packaged rail tickets along with guest house stays fpr Londoners who traveled to
breath the clean air in the Scottish Highlands. There were few luxurious hotels
or resorts at the end of the rail lines or scenic stopovers. Thomas Cook, still
in operation today, and a leading travel supplier, made a fortune. It was the
era of adventure and discovery, and the railroad companies took notice of Cook’s
success by building huge limestone and granite monumental hotels along their
rail routes.
One such hotel was the regal Railway Hotel built in Galway,
Ireland, opening its doors in 1852. Queen Victoria of England had been in power
for about 15 years and travel was in full swing. Ireland at the time was part of
the British Empire and the hotel, today called the Great Southern Hotel, still
stands, beckoning adventurers through its revolving doorway.
The hotel
was completed at a cost of £30,000 for the Midland and Great Western Railway
Company. The architect, John Skipton Mulvany, also designed the Galway railway
station. Just over the entrance on the façade of the hotel is Mulvany’s favorite
motif, the wreaths. The hotel is built of limestone ashlar, just like many of
the ancient Celtic castles in the region, and there is a cornice over the
heavily rusticated ground floor. The ground floor also has recessed architrave
windows and a heavy string-course, making the morning breakfast light natural in
the Oyster Room Restaurant. Prepare to be spoiled on a grand scale, enjoy the
good things in life in the Oyster Room Restaurant, and sample the delights of
afternoon tea to the sound of the resident pianist.
The original facade was
topped by a shelf-like Doric cornice. Among the surviving internal features in
the present majestic hotel is a beautiful marble fireplace incorporating a pair
of bronze discs, emblazoned with the Midland and Great Western Railway coat of
arms, and it is dated to 1845, about the same time Thomas Cook began his tours
in England.
While waiting for my new found Irish friends, the fireplace
was the most popular spot on cool autumn evenings, and with the Oyster Room
Restaurant and Bar not far off, it often means sitting warmly with a stiff drink
in hand to ember the interior regions as well.
It must have been a
magnificent era for those that traveled to Galway a hundred and fifty years ago.
The Galway Subscription Ball was held in 1855 by Lady Clanmorris and Lady
Redington, a notable early historical event when the Galway Militia paraded in
Eyre Square, a square block of city park green, but not so green when I visited.
It was all torn up for a complete renovation, but due for quick completion.
President John F. Kennedy,of Irish descent, spoke in the Square in 1963, and the
park within the Square is now called Kennedy Park. I stopped to talk to
archaeologists who were digging in an ancient Irish housing unit, complete with
bars, on the top end of the park. The most evident relics they found were
whiskey bottles and beer casks.
The local Galway residents got a real
shocker one day in July 1857, when Prince Louis Napoleon of France sailed up
Galway Bay on his steam yacht La Reine Hortense, and had lunch at the hotel. The
bureaucrats in Dublin and England were fearful of yet more French Imperial
expansionism, but I think Louie was here just for the superb lunch and high tea
that are still served!
At the end of World War I, in 1918, the hotel was
requisitioned by the British Army and then later handed over to the Irish
National Army after the signing of the Anglo-Irish Treaty in 1922, the year of
Ireland ’s independence. But during the Irish Civil War of the same year, the
Renmore Military Barracks was taken over by the Republican forces and set
ablaze, along with the Officers Mess and accommodations blocks. So they occupied
the hotel, but later the Republicans retreated and the hotel fell into the hands
of the Free State troops. Sandbags were erected on the front entrance and troops
guarded the hotel until calm prevailed.
The Victorian age ended with the
death of Queen Victoria in 1903 (still the longest reining British Queen at 66
years), the hotel was still vibrant as ever, now ushering in the new era of air
travel. In 1919, Galway got its first glimpse of this new mode of transport when
the first non-stop trans-Atlantic flight landed at Derrygimla Bog near Clifden.
The pilots, Captain John Alcock, DSC, and Lieutenant Arthur Whitten Brown, were
greeted as heroes and driven around town in a Marconi motorcar and then
entertained at the Railway Hotel. Both men stayed at the hotel and the
festivities lasted into the next day. Despite heavy rains thousands of citizens
waited for hours outside the hotel to see the two pilots. More parties ensued
with invited guests at a hotel reception.
The hotel was renamed the Great
Southern Hotel in 1925 with the merger of various railway companies in southern
Ireland, now called the Great Southern Railway Company. Then in 1933, another
famous pilot and his wife arrived after landing a seaplane near Mutton Island.
Charles and Annie Lindbergh visited Galway as part of a Pan Am aerial survey.
During my two day sojourn at the beautiful hotel, I didn’t realize the celebrity
status of the charming edifice. That’s what so great about staying in historical
hotels.
During the Second World War years people didn’t travel as much as
before. Rationing of butter, tea, and sugar was enforced, even at the hotel. But
after the war, in 1946, the pent-up demand for discovery saw the hotel over run
with tourists, and often times people even slept in the lobby. While soaking in
the Canadian hot tub on the fifth and top floor in the hotel’s Square Spa &
Health Club, I had a bird’s eye sunset view of Galway Bay and the dockyards that
still flourish with arrriving and departing passengers at the rail station and
tour buses grinding out of the bus station to take present day adventurers on
their voyage of discovery.
After the railways came under public ownership
in 1945, the hotel was owned by CIE. In 1952 the General Manager, Brian Collins,
began the Galway International Oyster Festival that is still a regional legacy.
Other celebrities that have rested their bones at the hotel include: Queen
Salote of the Tonga Islands; British Paratroopers, Sergeant Chay Blythe and
Captain John Ridgeway, who arrived as the first to row across the Atlantic
Ocean. Presidents that have stayed at the hotel or at least lunched there
include: Sean T. O’Kelly, Eamon de Valera, Erskine Childers, Patrick Hillery,
Cearbhall O’Dalaigh, Mary Robinson, and Charles De Gaulle. Lord Oranmore and
Browne took over the 5th floor for two weeks during the shooting season for many
years, with members of the peerage including Lord Longford and Lord Killanin.
Now that blood sports such as fox hunting are banned in England, more sports
shooters are seen at the hotel.
Actors who have stayed at the hotel
include: Siobhan McKenna, Ray McNally, Rex Harrison, David Hemmings, Bing Crosby
and his wife, Cathy, Michael Mac Liammoir, Hilton Edwards, John Ford, and David
Lean. Lunch visitors have included: Richard Harris, Fred Astair, Jack Nicholson,
Anjelica Huston, John Huston, Paul Newman (who starred in the Mackintosh Man
nearby Burren region), John Wayne, and Maureen O’Hara (both starring in The
Quiet Man). Yes. I was in fine company while dining a la carte in the Oyster
Room Restaurant. O’Flaherty’s Bar in the basement of the hotel is named after
the writer, Liam O’Flaherty, who often stayed at the hotel while pounding out
the screed in the 1940s. So as a Scottish writer myself, I had to toast my Irish
counterpart. Well, maybe more than one toast!
Although the hotel bedrooms
on the lower floors are not overly large, they are appointed with modern
amenities, including modern baths, internet email access, personal fax service,
TVs, and lovely and comfortable beds. Some of these bedrooms are more
traditional. The fifth floor is only elevator accessed with your room key, and
offers the plushest rooms in the house. The hotel underwent a renovation of €8
million in 2003, so you are assured a very high standard. During the renovation,
many of the Victorian features were enhanced and restored.
The hotel is
still in the heart of Galway, with Eyre Park on one side and Galway Bay on the
other. Just a short stroll away is the wonderful streets filled with bargain
shopping that ends at the River Corrib.
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By Kriss Hammond, Editor, Jetsetters Magazine at www.jetsettersmagazine.com
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