
Only much later, the first Russian memorial was ground in Irkutsk. However, no one dared to touch the Lenin memorial, which had been erected in 1950 at the site of the Lutheran church. Rather, people decided to restore the memorial which had been erected in honor of Tsar Alexander III after the opening of the Trans-Siberian Railway in 1908. Just 3 years after the October Revolution, the bronze statue of the Tsar had been dismounted and presumably melted down. The only remains were 4 prominent bronze reliefs on the base, among them the double eagle with the Tsars ukase (edict) for the construction of the Transsib. Not before 1964, the memorial was "completed" again and a concrete obelisk, which was dedicated to the discoverers and conquerors respectively of Siberia, was put atop the base. With the aid of various sponsors, the old Tsar memorial could finally be re-erected in October 2003, and the obelisk was removed from the cityscape.