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. 96. “(Ponsonby, sub Bessborough.E/PB) A house built 1669 by a branch of the Ponsonbys descended from Henry Ponsonby, younger brother of Sir John Ponsonby from whom the Earls of Bessborough and other Irish Ponsonbys descend. Of two storeys; entrance front consisting of five bays recessed between projecting wings with one bay forward-facing ends. Steep pediment-gable with lunette window over three centre bas; rusticated window surrounds. In 1705 Rose Ponsonby, the heiress of Crotto, married John Carrique; their descendents bore the additional surname of Ponsonby. Some alterations were carried out ca 1819 by a member of the Carrique Ponsonby family to the design of Sir Richard Morrison, who gave the wings “Elizabethan” gables with coats of arms and tall chimneys; he also added a curvilinear-gabled porch. In other respects, the exterior of the house kept its original character. The estate was sold by the Carrique Ponsonbys 1842. A few years later, the new owner leased the house to Lt Col H.H. Kitchener, whose son, the future Field Marshall Earl Kitchener of Khartoum, spent his boyhood here. Now demolished.”
Listed in Vanishing Country Houses of Ireland by The Knight of Glin, David J. Griffin and Nicholas K. Robinson, published by The Irish Architectural Archive and The Irish Georgian Society, 1988.
Crotto House, County Kerry, courtesy Archiseek.Crotto House, County Kerry, courtesy Archiseek.
Original house of 1669, owned by the Ponsonby family. Additions of 1819 in a Jacobean style to the existing house by Sir Richard Morrison, who added gables and the curvilinear porch. The childhood hode of Lord Kitchener, whose father leased the house from 1850-63. Described as derelict by 1925, the ruins remained until the late 1960s. Now demolished, little remains bar a portion of a wing and the farm buildings.
Crotto gate lodge, County Kerry, courtesy National Inventory.
Detached two-bay single-storey gate lodge with dormer attic, built c. 1850, originally with lancet arch openings to north gable end. Openings later remodelled. Now in use as private house. Pitched slate roof with added cement gable parapets. Random rubble stone walls with fragments of render. Pointed arch blocked openings in north gable and one in south gable. Red brick surrounded to first floor window. Later openings formed in west wall. Remains of rubble stone-built walls, built c. 1850, to south-west possibly originally part of walled garden. Crotto House demolished in latter part of twentieth century.
Bence-Jones, Mark. 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. 282. “(Waring LGI1958) One of the earliest surviving unfortified Irish houses, built 1667 by William Waring, who also built the nearby church; the architect of both the house and the church is said to have been James Robb, chief mason of the King’s Works in Ireland. Originally, the house appears to have been of two storeys and an attic, with pedimented curvilinear gables along the front such as still exist at the sides; but the front was fairly soon afterwards raised so that it became three full storeys, probably at the same time as two storey one by overlapping wings were added; giving the house a facade of late C17 early C18 appearance, with six bays in the centre block and a pedimented doorcase flanked by two narrow windows. The two centre bays are framed with rusticated quoins, similar to those at the sides fo the centre block and on the wings. The front is prolonged by two short C18 curved sweeps, ending in piers with finials. Tall C19 Tudor Revival chimneys. Surprisingly, for so large a house, the walls are of rammed earth. Since the death of Mrs D.G. Waring 1968, the house has stood empty; its future is uncertain.”
Bence-Jones, Mark. 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. 82. “(Boyle, Cork and Orrery, E/PB) A fine house built 1661 to his own design by the 1st Earl of Orrery, who at the same time developed the nearby town which is named Charleville after Charles II. The house stood on one side of a fortified enclosure, it had extensive gardens and a park. It was burnt 1690 during the Williamite war by the troops of Berwick and not rebuilt.”
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. 241. Rich Hill, County Armagh: “(Richardson/IFR) An important C17 house, built between 1664-1690 by Major Edward Richardson, MP. Two storey with gabled attic in high-pitched roof. “U” plan, entrance front with projecting wings to form a shallow three sided court. Five bay centre range, and one on the inner face of each wing. Tall brick chimneystacks with arched recessed panels. C18 doorway with Doric columns, entablatures and pediment. Magnificent wrought-iron gates, made 1745, perhaps by the Thornberry brothers, of Armagh, now at Hillsborough Castle, Co Down, where they were taken 1936.”
THE RICHARDSONS WERE MAJOR LANDOWNERS IN COUNTY ARMAGH, WITH 6,878 ACRES
The family of RICHARDSON is descended from
WILLIAM RICHARDSON, stated by William Roberts, Ulster King of Arms, in a confirmation of arms dated 1647, to be descended from the ancient family of RICHARDSON of Pershore, Worcestershire.
His second son,
MAJOR EDWARD RICHARDSON, of Legacorry, alias Richhill, County Armagh, MP for Armagh County, 1661, High Sheriff of County Armagh, 1665, wedded Anne, only child and heir of Francis Sacheverell, of Legacorry, and Dorothy his wife (daughter and co-heir of Sir John Blennerhassett, Knight, Chief Baron of the Irish Exchequer).
Mr Francis Sacheverell was son of Francis Sacheverell, of Rearsby, Leicestershire, who had a grant of Legacorry during the reign of JAMES I.
By Anne his wife Major Richardson (who died in 1690) had issue,
William, of Legacorry (1656-1727), dsp; JOHN, of whom presently.
The younger son,
JOHN RICHARDSON (1663-c1744), of Legacorry, alias Rich Hill, an army officer, espoused, in 1707-8, Anne, daughter of William Beckett, Prime Sergeant-at-Law, and had issue,
WILLIAM, his heir; HENRY, of whom hereafter; Hester, m Rev J Lowry, of Pomeroy; Mary, m Archibald, 1st Baron Gosford.
He wedded secondly, Louisa Magennis, of Waringstown, and had issue, three daughters,
Elizabeth, died unmarried 1859; Isabella, died unmarried 1860; LOUISA.
The youngest daughter,
LOUISA RICHARDSON (-1881), of Richhill, who espoused, in 1832, Edward Bacon, eldest son of Sir Edmund Bacon, 10th Baronet, though the marriage was without issue.
Mr John Richardson’s second son,
HENRY RICHARDSON, of Rossfad, Lieutenant-Colonel, 29th Regiment (entered the army as a cornet in the 8th Horse, Ligonier’s, 1743), wedded firstly, Catherine, eldest daughter of Samuel Perry, of County Tyrone, which lady died dsp 1765.
He married secondly, in 1766, Jane, daughter and co-heir of Guy Carleton, of Rossfad, County Fermanagh.
Colonel Richardson died about 1794, having had issue, a son,
JOHN RICHARDSON (1768-1841), of Rossfad, Major, Tyrone Militia, who wedded, in 1807, Angel, daughter of Mervyn ArchdallMP, of Castle Archdale, by whom he had an only son,
HENRY MERVYN RICHARDSON DL (1808-82), of Rossfad, County Fermanagh, who espoused, in 1834, Mary Jane, widow of John Johnston, of Crocknacrieve, County Fermanagh, second daughter of Dr Charles Ovenden, of Enniskillen, and Mayfield, Sussex, and had issue,
JOHN MERVYN ARCHDALL CARLETON, his heir; Charles William Henry (1840-88); Jane Angel; Angel Catherine Charlotte; Emilie Margaret; Henrietta M Mervyn.
Mr Richardson succeeded on the death of his cousin Louisa, Mrs Bacon, in 1881, to two-thirds of the Richhill estate.
He was succeeded by his eldest son,
JOHN MERVYN ARCHDALL CARLETON RICHARDSON JP DL (1836-1912), of Rossfad, County Fermanagh, Colonel, 3rd Battalion, Royal Inniskilling Fusiliers, High Sheriff of County Tyrone, 1885, County Fermanagh, 1888, who married, in 1880, Mildred Harriet, third daughter of Gartside Tipping, of Rossferry, County Fermanagh, and Bolton-le-Moors, Lancashire, and had issue,
HENRY SACHEVERELL CARLETON; Guy Carleton, b 1885; Jane Mary; Mildred Cicely Carleton.
The eldest son,
LIEUTENANT-COLONEL HENRY SACHEVERELL CARTLETON RICHARDSON DL(1883-1958), of Rossfad.
THE CASTLE, Richhill, County Armagh, was built between 1664-90 by Major Edward Richardson MP.
It comprises two storeys, with a gabled attic in a high-pitched roof.
The house is U-shaped, the entrance front having projecting wings which form a three-sided court.
The centre range has five bays, with one bay at the end of each wing.
There are pedimented Dutch-style gables at the ends of the wings.
Chimney-stacks are lofty and prominent.
The doorway boasts Doric columns, pediment and entablature.
The Castle stands on the site of an earlier dwelling erected by Francis Sacheverall, a planter from Rossbye, Leicestershire, in 1611.
In 1610, Sacheverall had received two portions of land, 1,000 acres each, called Mullalelish and Legacorry, and decided to live on the latter. He declared himself to be worth £300 a year and brought over three masons, a carpenter, a smithy, nine labourers, two women, four horses and a cart. Before his death in 1649, Sacheverall had sold the Mullalelish portion to Sir William Alexander, a Scottish speculator who was later honoured with the earldom of Stirling.
Francis Sacheverall’s son and heir, also called Francis, and his wife, Dorothy, had an only daughter, Anne, who married Major Edward Richardson in 1654.
Through this marriage, Legacorry became the property of the Richardson family and the present castle was built.
Louisa Richardson married Edward Bacon, High Sheriff of Armagh and, as she had no family, the estate passed to the Rossfad branch of the Richardsons after her death in 1881.
In the early part of this century the castle was the residence of Major Robert Gordon Berry.
There are some stories surrounding him involving secret passages, skeletons and a grave in the castle grounds.
After the establishment of the Government of Northern Ireland in 1920, the castle became the property of the NI Education Authority.
During the 1930s it was occupied by Sam Hewitt, whose main claim to fame was the invention of an egg-washing machine.
*****
The elaborate gates of Richhill Castle were constructed by the Thornberry Brothers of Armagh in 1745.
They were 18-20 feet high and topped with the Richardson coat-of-arms.
In 1936, the gates were removed during the night to Hillsborough Castle, then the residence of the Governor of Northern Ireland, which was being renovated after a fire in 1934.
In spite of a storm of protest from local councillors and villagers, the gates were never returned.
The Richardson family crest adorns the top of the gates.
Villagers are seeking the return of the gates to the Castle.
According to villagers, the gates were taken from Richhill in the late 1930s as part of the 2nd World War effort, when gates and railings all over the UK were seized by the Government to melt down and turn into guns and tanks to fight the Nazis.
But the former Richhill Castle gates, considered too ornate to waste on Hitler, were stashed away during the hostilities. They turned up in Hillsborough to adorn the castle at the top of the town’s main street.
Dr Alan Turtle, chairman of the Richhill Improvements Association:
“But now that the seemingly impossible has happened with the political agreement. It would seem appropriate to give us back our gates.
We are in the process of spending £747,000 donated by the Heritage Lottery Fund on a major scheme in Richhill, and the least the government can do is give us back the gates that were taken, supposedly temporarily, but seem to have a permanent home at Hillsborough.
It’s our long-term ambition to buy the castle and turn it into a hotel and conference centre, so we’ll be stepping up the gates campaign.”
Ca 1681-82, permission was granted for Major Edward Richardson to hold a Saturday market and three fairs per annum.
The fairs were held on Shrove Tuesday, St Swithin’s Day and St Francis’s Day. New orchards were being planted at this time and houses were springing up along the road sides.
A market-house was built in the Square by William Richardson in 1753, which became a very important centre of the brown linen trade where, in 1804, sales averaged at least £500 per week, despite rival markets in both Armagh and Portadown.
The construction of a new road from Armagh to Belfast, which by-passed Richhill, triggered the decline of the weekly market and the three fairs; thus the market-house was converted into the present parish church in 1837.
It is notable that, in a census in 1814, Richhill had 161 dwellings, six more than Portadown.
Occupations included hand-loom weaving, straw plate-making, shuttle-making, wood-turning and spade-making.
By 1835, the three Misses Richardson, who now owned the estate – and were described as excellent landlords – had built many new country schools on the estate, Mulladry and Derryhale being two examples.