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James Joyce Tower and Museum

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Website
  
joycetower.ie

Province
  
Leinster

Opened
  
1804

Phone
  
+353 1 280 9265

James Joyce Tower and Museum

Established
  
16 June 1962 (1962-06-16)

Location
  
Sandycove Point, Sandycove, Dublin, Ireland

Type
  
Martello tower, literary museum

Public transit access
  
Sandycove Road bus stop (Dublin Bus 59, 111) Sandycove and Glasthule railway station

Address
  
Sandycove Point, Glenageary, Sandycove, Co. Dublin, Ireland

Hours
  
Closed now Saturday10AM–4PMSunday10AM–4PMMonday10AM–4PMTuesday10AM–4PMWednesday10AM–4PMThursday10AM–4PMFriday10AM–4PM

Similar
  
James Joyce Centre, National Maritime Museum, Dublin Writers Museum, Forty Foot, People's Park - Dún Laoghaire

Inside the james joyce tower and museum in ireland


The James Joyce Tower and Museum is a Martello tower in Sandycove, Dublin, where James Joyce spent six nights (September 9–14) in 1904. Admission is free.

Contents

History

The tower was leased from the British War Office by Joyce's university friend Oliver St. John Gogarty, with the purpose of "Hellenising" Ireland. Gogarty later attributed Joyce's abrupt departure after only six days to a midnight incident with a loaded revolver.

The opening scenes of Ulysses are set the morning after this incident. Gogarty is immortalised as "Stately, plump Buck Mulligan" (the opening words of the novel).

The tower now contains a museum dedicated to Joyce and displays some of his possessions and other ephemera associated with Ulysses (e.g., an empty pot of "Plumtree's Potted Meat"). The living space is set up to resemble its 1904 appearance (with a ceramic panther to represent one seen in a dream by a resident). It is a place of pilgrimage for Joyce enthusiasts, especially on Bloomsday.

The Tower became a museum opening on 16 June 1962 through the efforts of Dublin artist John Ryan. Ryan also rescued the front door to 7 Eccles Street (now at the James Joyce Centre) from demolition and organised, with Brian O'Nolan, the first Bloomsday Celebration in 1954.

The James Joyce Tower is open 365 days a year, 10am-6pm (10am-4pm in Winter). Admission is free. The museum is run by the Friends of Joyce Tower Society on a voluntary basis.

References

James Joyce Tower and Museum Wikipedia