St Stephen's Green’s 27 acres is the most popular park in Dublin city centre. Come for a leisurely stroll in elegant landscaped gardens, stay for the people-watching.
Although surrounded by iconic Georgian architecture, the layout of the park is quintessentially Victorian with tree-lined avenues, a duck pond, ornamental gazebos and a bandstand which is still used in summer. Statues and public artworks are found at every turn; notable ones include representations of James Joyce, Constance Markievicz, Arthur Edward Guinness, Robert Emmet and a memorial to the Great Famine. There is also a playground and a garden designed especially for people with vision impairments to enjoy.
A popular meeting spot for Dubliners, the park is busy throughout the year but on sunny days you may have to squeeze in amongst assorted groups of friends, lovers and individuals splaying themselves across the grass (the flower beds are, of course, strictly off limits).
In 1814 the green became accessible only to wealthy residents of the nearby area who could rent a key. While they carried out many improvements in the park, the move was hugely unpopular with practically everyone else. In 1877, Arthur Edward Guinness (great-grandson to the founder of Guinness) bought the park back and paid for the development which shaped the Victorian layout we see today. In 1880 it was officially returned to the public.
During the Easter Rising 1916, St Stephen’s Green was seized by the Irish Citizen Army. For the week-long conflict with the British Army, both sides agreed to a daily ceasefire so the park keeper could feed the ducks. A report from the time notes they were well fed and “very little perturbed by the bullets flying over their heads”. The choice of the park was a poor strategic one though as the British was able to commandeer the buildings surrounding it and shoot down towards the entrenchments. Bullet holes from the conflict can still be seen today at the Fusiliers’ Arch at the Grafton Street entrance.
Fusiliers’ Arch itself commemorates soldiers of the Royal Dublin Fusiliers who were killed fighting for the British in the Second Boer War and is one of the few monuments from the time of British Rule that has not been demolished.
The Fitzwilliam Hotel
Cliff Townhouse
The Shelbourne