Puneet Varma (Editor)

Robert Burns Memorial (Montreal)

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Location
  
Dorchester Square

Opening date
  
October 18, 1930

Opened
  
18 October 1930

Designer
  
George Anderson Lawson

Dedicated to
  
Robert Burns

Material
  
bronze, pink granite

Height
  
4.95 m

Province
  
Québec

Subject
  
Robert Burns

Robert Burns Memorial (Montreal) httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

Similar
  
The Hermitage - Friars Car, Bachelors' Club - Tarbolton, Ellisland Farm, Boer War Memorial, Burns Monument - Kilmarnock

The Robert Burns Memorial is a monument of sculptor George Anderson Lawson located at Dorchester Square in Downtown Montreal.

OverviewEdit

The memorial to the Scottish poet Robert Burns, a tribute to Montréal's Scottish industrialists and financiers, represents the socially conscious and refined romantic ideal of the community during the High Victorian Era. The memorial by George Anderson Lawson stands at the western entrance of Square Dorchester. Burns looks out towards the infinite expanse of Western Canada, opened up by the rail and finance managed by the elites of the community.

The statue was a reproduction of the one which stands in Ayr, near Burns’ birthplace, considered to be one of the finest depictions of Scotland's national poet.

The memorial was unveiled in the city’s downtown Dominion Square on October 18, 1930, a cold and rainy day. The speeches made that day emphasised that its erection was not only in honour of Burns's genius, but also to commemorate the impact of Scots on Montreal’s development.

On July 8, 2009, the official first shovelful of dirt was lifted in the $23-million project to restore Dorchester Square and Place du Canada at 10 a.m. near the Boer War Memorial monument.

The original memorial by George Anderson Lawson was inaugurated in Ayr, in 1892. Replicas of Lawson's memorial were also erected in Melbourne on 23 January 1904, Detroit on 23 July 1921, Vancouver on 25 August 1928, and Winnipeg in 1936.

References

Robert Burns Memorial (Montreal) Wikipedia