Drumreaske House, Monaghan, County Monaghan
Mark Bence-Jones. A Guide to Irish Country Houses (originally published as Burke’s Guide to Country Houses volume 1 Ireland by Burke’s Peerage Ltd. 1978); Revised edition 1988 Constable and Company Ltd, London.
p. 113. “(Kane/LGI1912) A two storey C19 Tudor-revival house of the “cottage” type, with gables and decorated bargeboards.”
https://archiseek.com/2012/drumreaske-house-co-monaghan
1840s – Drumreaske House, Co. Monaghan

Possibly added to by local architect William Walker in a simple tudor style. For many years after the departure of the Kane family, it was divided into two and rented to tenants.
Detached six-bay two-storey county house, built c.1840, having gabled porch to front and slightly projecting gable-fronted bay to each end of front (south-east) elevation, and gabled projections to rear. Pitched slate roof, with decorative timber bargeboards, valences and finials, and having terracotta ridge tiles. Cast-iron rainwater goods. Red brick and rendered chimneystacks, having diamond-plan multiple flues, and clay chimneypots. Half-dormer windows to front with gables over having decorative timber bargeboards with finials. Harl-rendered walls, with red brick and coursed rubble sandstone visible in areas. Square-headed window openings to front, with chamfered rendered surrounds. Render label-mouldings to first floor to end bays and to ground floor. Canted-bay window to front, having tooled stone risers, sills and chamfered mullions. Box-bay windows to ground floor of end bays to front, with smooth rendered walls, square-headed openings with chamfered surrounds, and render label-mouldings. Canted oriel window to south-west elevation with chamfered render surrounds and sills, with later box-bay window below. Square-headed window openings to rear and north-east elevation, with render sills. Windows boarded-up throughout. Porch to front has rendered walls with chamfered corners, Tudor-arch opening having moulded render surround, double-leaf timber panelled door and boarded-up over-light, with decorative timber bargeboards and finial. Square-headed boarded-up doorway to north-east elevation, having flat concrete canopy supported on cast-iron cylindrical columns. Square-headed door openings to rear, boarded-up, some having timber fittings.
This country house was constructed, with some guidance from William Walker, for Henry Mitchell. It has a well-proportioned front elevation exhibiting a subtle symmetry, enhanced by its gable-fronted end-bays. This is enlivened, and challenged, by the off-centre doorway, which draws the eye. Decorative timber detailing to the roof provides further visual interest, bringing a dramatic aspect to this substantial house. The site retains notable demesne-related features, including the walled garden and some outbuildings to the rear, and although it is now derelict, it remains a significant and imposing feature in the landscape.