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Shelbourne Hotel


The Shelbourne Hotel is a famous hotel situated in a landmark building on the north side of St Stephen's Green, in Dublin, Ireland. Currently operated by Marriott International, the hotel has 265 rooms in total and reopened in March 2007 after undergoing an eighteen-month refurbishment.

John McCurdy designed the hotel and the studio of M. M. Barbezet of Paris cast the four external statues, two Nubian Princesses and their shackled slave girls.

The Shelbourne Hotel was founded in 1824 by Martin Burke, a native of Tipperary, when he acquired three adjoining townhouses overlooking Dublin's St Stephen's Green - Europe's largest garden square. Burke named his grand new hotel The Shelbourne, after William Petty, 2nd Earl of Shelburne.

In the early 1900s, Alois Hitler, Jr., the elder half-brother of Adolf Hitler, worked in the hotel while in Dublin.

During the 1916 Easter Rising the hotel was occupied by 40 British troops under Captain Andrews. Their objective was to counter the Irish Citizen Army and Volunteer forces commanded by Michael Mallin.

In 1922, the Irish Constitution was drafted in room 112, now known as The Constitution Room.

The hotel has been the subject of two histories, the first by Elizabeth Bowen and the second 'The Shelbourne and Its People' by Michael O'Sullivan (with Bernardine O'Neill) Blackwater Press Dublin 1999.

James Joyce's Ulysses also includes a reference to the hotel (U 15.2994).

Coordinates: 53°20′20″N 6°15′22″W / 53.33893°N 6.256092°W / 53.33893; -6.256092


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