12/12/2022
A large crowd assembled in the Council Chamber in City Hall on Saturday 3rd December for the official launch of the fundraising campaign to erect statue of Michael Collins in Cork City Centre.
The campaign was formally launched by the Lord Mayor Deirdre Forde who said that a statue of Collins would be a great addition to the City and was long overdue as Collins was a great Corkman who had made an enormous contribution to the struggle for Irish independence.
On 12th September, a motion proposed by Cllr Shane O’Callaghan had been passed by the members of Cork City Council, asking the Council to facilitate the placing of a statue of Collins in Cork City Centre. The proposal was for the Michael Collins 100 Committee to raise the funds, have the statue made and present the piece to Cork City Council for placement at a prominent location in Cork City Centre. The Michael Collins 110 committee propose to create a statue of Collins with a bicycle, based on the iconic photograph of him with a Pierce bicycle in Wexford in 1922.
Fidelma Collins (grand-niece of Michael Collins) described how the name of every person who made a contribution to the statue would go into a time capsule which would be placed into the plinth of the statue when it was being put up. Every person who made a contribution would also receive a special certificate acknowledging their contribution and the amount given. The certificate is modelled on the certificate the Collins gave out for the national loan when he was Minister for Finance in the outlawed Dáil government.
Chairman of the Michael Collins 100 Committee, Tim Crowley said that the idea for a statue of Collins in Cork City Centre had come about as a result of discussions between him, Noel Scannell, Cork businessman Jerry Carey and Cllr Shane O’Callaghan. The idea was for a statue of Collins as the rebel leader in the Rebel City, leading the military resistance to British rule, managing the finances of the outlawed Dáil government and running a war against the British Empire, the most powerful the world had ever known. All of this, whilst riding a bicycle dressed as a businessman. He described how it would also symbolise Collins’ efforts to develop the economy of the newly independent Irish State in 1922.
He described how the statue of Michael Collins in Clonakilty had turned into a major landmark in West Cork and had attracted a large amount of extra tourism to the area. Announcing that the new statue of Michael Collins would be located in Patrick Street, Tim said that he had no doubt that the new statue would serve as a focal point, which would attract lots of extra tourists and shoppers to Cork City Centre.
Tim thanked Chief Executive Ann Doherty and the Council Executive for the positive and proactive role which they had played in the project since September and thanked the members of the Michael Collins 100 Committee for all of their hard work.
The sculptor of the statue, Kevin Holland had the head of the statue (minus the hat) on display in the Council Chamber and there was also an actor with the same make and model of pierce bicycle which Collins had been photographed with in Wexford in 1922.
Tim said that the Committee needed to raise in excess of €100,000 in the next few months and that all contributions, big and small, would be most welcome. Details on how to make a contribution are on the website www.michaelcollinsstatue.com