Lion Statues - Albert Memorial Clock - Belfast
Posted by: Groundspeak Premium Member SMacB
N 54° 36.049 W 005° 55.465
30U E 311104 N 6054302
The base of the tower features flying buttresses with heraldic lions.
Waymark Code: WMV2NV
Location: Ulster, Ireland
Date Posted: 02/13/2017
Published By:Groundspeak Charter Member BruceS
Views: 7

The base of the tower features flying buttresses with 4 heraldic lions, one in each corner.

"In 1865 a competition for the design of a memorial to Queen Victoria's late Prince Consort, Prince Albert, was won by W. J. Barre, who had earlier designed Belfast's Ulster Hall. Initially Barre was not awarded his prize and the contract was secretly given to Lanyon, Lynn, and Lanyon, who had come second. Following public outcry the contract was eventually awarded to Barre. The construction cost of £2,500 (2011: £196,000) was raised by public subscription.

The sandstone memorial was constructed between 1865 and 1869 by Fitzpatrick Brothers builders and stands 113 feet tall in a mix of French and Italian Gothic styles. The base of the tower features flying buttresses with heraldic lions. A statue of the Prince in the robes of a Knight of the Garter stands on the western side of the tower and was sculpted by SF Lynn. A two tonne bell is housed in the tower and the clock was made by Francis Moore of High Street, Belfast.

As a result of being built on wooden piles on marshy, reclaimed land around the River Farset, the top of the tower leans four feet off the perpendicular. Due to this movement, some ornamental work on the belfry was removed in 1924 along with a stone canopy over the statue of the Prince.

Being situated close to the docks, the tower was once infamous for being frequented by prostitutes plying their trade with visiting sailors. However, in recent years regeneration has turned the surrounding Queen's Square and Custom's House Square into attractive, modern public spaces with trees, fountains and sculptures.

In 1947, the film Odd Man Out was filmed partly in Belfast, with the Albert Clock as a central location, although neither the town nor the clock is explicitly identified.

This clock appears in Danger Man S3E4 You are not in any Trouble, Are you? in minute 26, filmed in 1965.

The clock was damaged in a Provisional Irish Republican Army bomb explosion outside nearby River House in High Street on 6 January 1992.

Restoration -

To halt the worsening lean and repair damage caused by the elements and heavy passing traffic, a multi-million pound restoration project was completed in 2002. During the project the wooden foundations were strengthened, the majority of the decaying carvings were replaced and the entire tower was cleaned."

SOURCE - (visit link)
Physical Address:
Albert Memorial Clock
Queens Square
Belfast, Ireland
BT1 3FF


Web Site: [Web Link]

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