Dublin's Molly Malone may be wheeling her wheelbarrow from Grafton Street on an unlikely world tour shortly.
According to Wordirish.com plans are afoot to temporarily remove her and some of Dublin's most famous monuments during construction of the new Luas tramcar line.
The John Murray Show on RTE has reported this morning that Molly Mallone could travel as far afield as Melbourne, Australia, for a few weeks.
The story first broke in The Sunday Times last week.
The monuments under consideration include Molly Malone, the Lady Grattan fountain, the statue of Thomas Moore on College Green, Jim Larkin, Father Matthew, and several other landmark monuments that line the route from Saint Stephen’s Green to Broadstone.
The work on the tram lines is still waiting on the go ahead from the Irish government, but is unlikely to begin until May 2013. Meanwhile the monuments that line the route could be locked away for up to two years.
'They’ll be carefully stored by specialist heritage contractors,' a spokesman for the Railway Procurement Agency told the press.
The planned Luas tram line will link up two existing lines between Saint Stephen’s Green and Connolly Station.
What do you think about Molly being moved?
5 Comments
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Switch to the desktop site to post a comment.WoundedKnee | Jul 25, 2012, 03:20 PM EDT
missecho--Molly's clothes are sexist? And inappropriate? Inappropriate to what? Are you some kind of nut? By the way, Molly was sculpted by a woman.
padraiginrua | Jul 25, 2012, 02:38 PM EDT
Stupid to spend that kind of money
missecho | Jul 25, 2012, 02:35 PM EDT
Hopefully Molly will pick up some new clothes on her travels. Her attire is revoltingly sexist and inappropriate.
Springfield9 | Jul 25, 2012, 01:46 PM EDT
I think Molly and her cart would be happier in Boston. Australia (bless them all) has the taint of being transported.
WoundedKnee | Jul 25, 2012, 09:59 AM EDT
I have always thought it ironic that the Molly Malone, a rather unpretentious little statue, has become Dublin's favourite and iconic monument, while the Spike, on which vast sums were wasted, has never gained a place in anyone's affection. The Spike represents just about everything wrong in the Ireland of the past few years. I'd love to see it knocked down.