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Robert Burns to be welcomed back to the Fenway with bagpipers, poets and a cavalcade of notables

Burns statue in 1920

Burns and Luath at their 1920 commemoration (Source).

The Fenway Civic Association is hoping to restore the statute of Scottish poet Robert Burns - and his faithful companion, Luath - to its original perch in the Fens sometime this summer, association Vice President Matthew Brooks says.

"We intend to make the return of the Robert Burns statue an event similar to the original dedication with dignitaries, poetry reading, bagpipers, etc.," Brooks says.

The exact date of his formal return to the Fens depends on how soon the group can raise roughly $25,000 to pay for some immediate preservation work and long-term maintenance of the statue, he says.

Henry Hudson Kitson's statue of Burns had originally been unveiled in the Fens in a ceremony led by then Gov. Calvin Coolidge in 1920. It was unceremoniously moved to Winthrop Square in 1975 as a favor from City Hall to the developer who restored the building at 1 Winthrop Square, but who was unable to convince a Back Bay church to give up its statue of John Winthrop and who didn't want to pay to commission a new statue.

Millennium Partners, which is building a $1.3-billion skyscraper on the site of the former Winthrop Square garage, has agreed to pick up the tab for conservation work - which will include deep cleaning the statue and applying a protective coating to it - and moving the homage to the author of "Auld Lang Syne" back to the Fenway as part of its plans to re-do Winthrop Square.

The money the association is raising will create a maintenance fund to repair any possible vandalism and to reapply the coating if needed for at least the next five years.

Both the Boston Arts Commission and the Boston Landmarks Commission have approved the move.

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Comments

I wonder why this statue isn't wearing a traditional kilt and going commando?

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Seriously? For one thing, Burns was a lowlander, not a highlander. For another, wearing the Tartan was illegal during his lifetime. He was born in 1759, but wearing Tartan was outlawed following the 1745 Jacobite Rebellion. He died 1796 and the ban wasn't lifted until Sir Walter Scott's novels served to spread Scottish Romanticism to the Royal Family and upper classes.

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to put this guy in a kilt...

EDIT: I loved how quickly the nebbish "Well, Actually" jumped out on this post. And I didn't even get to my Groundskeeper Willie reference yet!

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...he isn't going commando?

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tou to motherf*cking ché.

Those pants look awfully tight though...is a he a bagpipe player or a sartorial masochist?

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I come from the 1970s where tight pants on men were the norm. We never gave it a second thought. The pants we wore were far cooler than today's foolish "skinny jeans" which are super tight in the leg and baggy in the butt. In the 70s we didn't fool around. The pants were tight all over. We didn't cop out at the butt. :-)

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Sartorial: "relating to tailoring, clothes, or style of dress."

masochist: ": a person who takes pleasure in pain and suffering"

I said what I said. ¯\_(ツ)_/¯

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...at least the cleaning by the conservator. Their construction (I think it's a big concrete-batching plant) is coating the statue in more and more crap each week. I took this photo a week ago and it's worse today.

Glad that conservation / restoration is coming soon!

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(n/t)

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This statue kind of looks like President Donald Trump,

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As long as the bagpipers stay outside, this is the obvious choice for the afterparty!

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