attended meetings in Mountjoy Square in planning the 1916
Easter Rising, of which he was a leader. Mountjoy Square has had many famous inhabitants throughout its history. The earliest was
Arthur Guinness, who died there in January 1803. Subsequently, his descendant
Desmond Guinness and first wife Mariga, attempted to save and restore the gracious character of the square in 1966–75, buying No. 50 and several demolished lots with members of the Irish Georgian Society. lived at no. 53 Mountjoy Square West in the late 19th century and early 20th century. Yeats, as a friend of O'Leary, is known to have stayed at 53 Mountjoy Square and sent letters from there. When the volunteers met on Easter Monday 1916, the 1st battalion met at Blackhall Street in the liberties with the intention of taking over the
Four Courts. The exception was the twelve men of D company under the command of Captain
Seán Heuston who met at Mountjoy Square with the mission of taking the
Mendicity Institution across the river from the four courts.
Tim Healy resided at 1 Mountjoy Square, having lived previously on the adjacent Great Charles Street in number 50. |left
James Whiteside (1804–1876), writer, orator, politician and barrister lived at no. 2 Mountjoy Square North in the mid-19th century. The eminent family of architects which included
Jacob Owen and
James Higgins Owen lived at no. 2 Mountjoy Square West (now no. 54) from the 1830s to the 1860s.
Joseph Napier, an Irish Conservative party MP and member of the
Privy Council of Ireland lived at No. 17 Mountjoy Square South (now no. 52).
Richard Dowse (1824–1890) lived at no. 38 Mountjoy Square. Born in Dungannon, during his career he was MP for
Londonderry (1868–1872), Attorney General, Solicitor General and a
Baron of the Court of the Exchequer.
Sir Robert Anderson (1841–1918) was born at Number 1 Mountjoy Square West (now 53). An infamous brothel, known as The Kasbah Health Studio, frequented by numerous senior Irish businessmen, politicians and churchmen was located in the basement of number 60 Mountjoy Square West This room is thought to have been based on O'Casey's former tenement home. Although the original house was demolished in the 1960s, it was later replaced by a building with a Georgian façade that now stands on the site. O'Casey subsequently lived in another Georgian house very close to Mountjoy Square at 422 North Circular Road; in that house which still stands today, is where he wrote the trilogy, before later moving to London during the nineteen twenties. , sculpted by Thomas Farrell who lived on Mountjoy Square, and erected in nearby
O'Connell Street in 1879. The stuccatore
Michael Stapleton, who built three houses there, was resident in the square from 1793 to 1795. Stapleton subsequently moved into a house at 1 Mountjoy Place, just off the south east corner of the square. Charles Thorp, another stuccadore also developed three houses on the east side, numbers 19 to 21, and is recorded as residing in number 19 in the 1835 Almanac Registry Directory. Sculptor Thomas Farrell (1827–1900) lived in number 30, which is sited along the east side of the square. Two of Farrell's sculptures can be seen on the central median of nearby
O'Connell Street at the junction with
Abbey Street, with a statue on either side of the
Luas tracks. Padraig O'Faolain, an Irish painter, lived next to the Kasbah on Mountjoy Square West in the 1980s. Much of
John Carney's 2007 feature film
Once which won the
Academy Award that year for
best original song was filmed in an apartment on Mountjoy Square East, where the female lead character, played by
Marketa Irglova, lives with her family. Several scenes from ''Georgie's Story'', the third episode of Mark O'Halloran's award-winning television mini-series
Prosperity, screened on
RTÉ in 2007, were filmed in and around Mountjoy Square park. The rock/pop band
U2 used to rehearse in a squat on Mountjoy Square in the late 1970s and were photographed by Patrick Brocklebank, published in "The Dublin Music Scene and U2, 1978–81". ==Education==