Celbridge Abbey, Celbridge, Co Kildare 

Celbridge Abbey, Celbridge, Co Kildare 

Celbridge Abbey, Celbridge, Co Kildare courtesy National Inventory.

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. 81. “(Marlay/LGI1912; Grattan/ LG1863 and IFR; Langdale, sub Mowbray, Segrave and Stourton, B/PB; Dease, sub Bland/IFR) The house of Esther Vanhomrigh, Swift’s “Vanessa”; a rustic seat by the River Liffey is said to have been favoured by Swift as a place to retire with his love. Dr Richard Marlay, Bishop of Waterford, uncle of the statesman, orator and patriot, Henry Grattan, rebuilt the house in Georgian Gothic towards end of C18; it is of two storeys over basement and has a front of six bays, the two centre bays breaking forward and rising above the parapet on either side to form a central battlemented attic; the parapet on either side being battlemented also, with small pinnacles at the corners. The windows on eitehr side of the centre are pointed, and have the most enchanting Georgian-Gothic astragals, in the form of delicate Gothic tracery. Attractive Georgian –Gothic entrance gates. Occupied ca 1837 by J. Ashworth, owner of the woollen manufactory in Celbridge. Passed to Henry Grattan, MP, son of the great Henry Grattan; then to his daughter, and co-heiress, Henrietta, wife of C.J.Langdale. Afterwards the seat of Viceregal Chamberlain Sir Gerald Dease and of his son.” 

Thomas Marlay Esq., Lord Chief Justice, died 1756, courtesy Fonsie Mealy auction Nov 2016.
Celbridge Abbey, Celbridge, Co Kildare courtesy National Inventory.
Celbridge Abbey, courtesy of National Library of Ireland published between ca. 1865-1914 Lawrence Photographic Collection, French, Robert, 1841-1917 photographer.
Celbridge Abbey, County Kildare, photograph by Robert French, Lawrence Photograph Collection, National Library of Ireland.
Possibly a portrait of Hester Van Homrigh )1690-1723), Jonathan Swift’s “Vanessa,” courtesy of National Gallery of Ireland.

https://www.buildingsofireland.ie/buildings-search/building/11805074/celbridge-abbey-clane-road-celbridge-abbey-celbridge-ed-celbridge-co-kildare

Detached six-bay two-storey over basement Georgian Gothic-style house with dormer attic, c.1775, probably incorporating fabric of earlier house, 1697, with two-bay breakfront to front (south-east) elevation having three-bay single-storey over raised basement flat-roofed projecting porch to ground floor, three-bay two-storey side elevation to south-west and single-bay two-storey return to rear to north-west having single-bay three-storey engaged ‘tower’ to north and two-bay three-storey split-level projecting block to west. Renovated, c.1985. Now in use as monastery. Hipped roofs behind battlemented parapet walls with slate (gabled to dormer attic windows). Clay ridge tiles. Roughcast chimney stacks. Cast-iron rainwater goods. Flat-roofed to porch. Materials not visible behind battlemented parapet wall. Roughcast walls. Unpainted. Profiled section to side elevation to north-east continuing into chimney stack with advanced corner piers and ogee-headed and pointed-arch recessed panels. Two-storey pointed arch recessed panel to tower to north possibly originally window opening. Decorative shields to top floor to tower to north. Cut-stone stringcourses to top floors. Roughcast battlemented parapet walls with finials to corners. Roughcast stepped parapet wall to breakfront. Rendered walls to porch. Painted. Cut-stone string/sill courses. Rendered battlemented parapet wall with cut-stone coping. Pointed-arch window openings to flanking bays of front (south-east) elevation. Stone sills. Early multi-pane timber sash windows. Square-headed window openings to remainder (some in bipartite and tripartite arrangements). Stone sills. Moulded hood mouldings over. Early 1/1 and 2/2 timber sash windows. Pointed-arch door openings. Rendered chamfered reveals. Timber panelled double doors with diagonal tongue-and-groove timber panels. Set in own extensive landscaped grounds with rear (north-west) elevation fronting on to road. 

Appraisal 

Celbridge Abbey is of considerable significance to the architectural heritage of County Kildare. Built on the site of an earlier house dating to the late seventeenth century, and possibly incorporating fabric of that house, the building is of some archaeological importance. The present house is of social, historical and cultural significance for its associations with Richard Marlay, Bishop of Waterford (the original builder and occupier), Henry Grattan MP (a subsequent occupier), and Dean Jonathan Swift and Ester (‘Vanessa’) Van Homrigh. Now in use as a monastery for the Christian Brothers order, the house retains most of its original form and character. The front (south-east) elevation of the house is typical of the Georgian Gothic style, composed of graceful, balanced proportions on a symmetrical plan with Gothic-style motifs. The irregular massing of the remainder of the house, including a tower and a variety of chimney stacks, serves to distinguish and identify the composition in the surrounding landscape. Many early or original features and materials remain in situ, including timber sash fenestration (some multi-pane to the imposing pointed-arch openings to the south-east front), timber fittings to the door openings, and slate roofs. The retention of an early external aspect suggests that the house may retain original features and fittings of significance to the interior. Set in its own extensive landscaped grounds (complemented by a range of ancillary structures; 11805075-?/KD-11-05-75 – 7?), the house is an attractive landmark from the River Liffey to the south, while the rear (north-west) elevation forms an imposing feature on the streetscape of Clane Road. 

Celbridge Abbey, Celbridge, Co Kildare courtesy National Inventory.
Celbridge Abbey, Celbridge, Co Kildare courtesy National Inventory.
Celbridge Abbey, Celbridge, Co Kildare courtesy National Inventory.
Celbridge Abbey, Celbridge, Co Kildare courtesy National Inventory.

https://www.buildingsofireland.ie/buildings-search/building/11805076/celbridge-abbey-clane-road-celbridge-abbey-celbridge-ed-celbridge-co-kildare

Celbridge Abbey, Celbridge, Co Kildare courtesy National Inventory.

Section of rubble stone entrance screen wall, c.1775, with advanced section to centre having pointed-arch integral carriageway, cut-stone stringcourse and battlemented parapet over. Attached single-bay two-storey rubble stone flanking outbuilding, c.1775, to south-west with three-bay side elevation to north-east having battlemented parapet wall forming false fortified tower effect and four-bay single-storey wing to south-east with shallow segmental-headed integral carriageway. Reroofed and renovated, c.1985. Gable-ended roofs (partly behind battlemented parapet wall to north-west). Replacement artificial slate. Clay ridge tiles. Square rooflights, c.1985, to pitch to south-west. Replacement rainwater goods, c.1985. Random rubble stone walls. Random rubble stone battlemented parapet wall with red brick trefoil panels and cut-stone stringcourse. Square-headed window openings. Stone sills. Rubble stone dressings. Replacement timber casement windows, c.1985. Segmental-headed carriageway remodelled, c.1985. Rubble stone voussoirs. Replacement glazed timber fittings, c.1985, incorporating door. Shallow segmental-headed integral carriageway to wing. Rubble stone voussoirs. Pointed-arch blind opening to ground floor to elevation to north-west. Stone sill and surround. Attached single-bay two-storey rubble stone flanking outbuilding, c.1775, to north-east with three-bay side elevation to north-east having segmental-headed integral carriageway, battlemented parapet wall forming false fortified tower effect, screen wall to south-east with shallow segmental-headed door opening and two-bay single-storey wing to south-east. Reroofed and renovated, c.1985, to accommodate commercial use. Gable-ended roofs (partly behind battlemented parapet wall to north-west). Replacement artificial slate. Clay ridge tiles. Replacement rainwater goods, c.1985. Random rubble stone walls. Random rubble stone battlemented parapet wall with red brick trefoil panels and cut-stone stringcourse. Square-headed window openings. Stone sills. Rubble stone dressings. Replacement timber casement windows, c.1985. Segmental-headed carriageway remodelled, c.1985. Rubble stone voussoirs. Replacement glazed timber fittings, c.1985, incorporating door. Pointed-arch blind opening to ground floor to elevation to north-west. Stone sill and surround. Shallow segmental-headed door opening to screen wall. Rubble stone voussoirs. 

Appraisal 

This complex, comprising an entrance screen wall with flanking outbuildings arranged about a courtyard, is an integral component of the Celbridge Abbey estate. Presenting a symmetrical front on to Clane Road to north-west, the building is an attractive and imposing landmark in the locality, the battlemented parapet walls serving to articulate the skyline. The construction in rubble stone attests to the high quality of stone masonry practised in the locality and the fabric also incorporates early red brick. Renovated in the late twentieth century to accommodate a commercial use, the replacement materials have been installed in keeping with the original integrity of the design, while most of the original form remain intact. 

Celbridge Abbey, Celbridge, Co Kildare courtesy National Inventory.
Celbridge Abbey, Celbridge, Co Kildare courtesy National Inventory.

https://archiseek.com/2014/the-abbey-celbridge-co-kildare

1780s – The Abbey, Celbridge, Co. Kildare 

Celbridge Abbey was built by Bartholomew Van Homrigh, Lord Mayor of Dublin, in 1697. It was his daughter, Esther Van Homrigh who has been immortalised as ‘Vanessa’ by Jonathan Swift. Swift came regularly from his deanary to visit her. Chief Justice Marlay bought Celbridge Abbey in 1723. It was his son, Dr. Richard Marlay, the bishop of Waterford, who gave the abbey its present Gothic character towards the end of the 18th century. Also, his grandson, Henry Grattan, famous orator and parliamentarian lived here for a time. The house is of two storeys over basement, the centre bays breaking forward with a central battlemented attic. The windows have attractive Georgian-gothic tracery. 

Boakefield, Ballitore, Co Kildare 

Boakefield, Ballitore, Co Kildare 

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. 45. “A two storey five bay mid-C18 house with a high-pitched roof and a rusticated doorway; the front being prolonged by lower wings which though they appear to be contemporary and balance each other in size, are asymmetrical as regards fenestration. The seat of the Boake family.” 

https://www.buildingsofireland.ie/buildings-search/building/11822052/boakefield-house-mullamast-ballitore-co-kildare

Boakefield, Ballitore, Co Kildare courtesy National Inventory.

Detached five-bay two-storey Classical-style house, c.1770, possibly over basement retaining early fenestration with square-headed door opening to centre ground floor, five-bay two-storey lower lateral wing to north-east and three-bay double-height lower lateral wing to south-west. Refenestrated, c.1990, to wing to north-east. Hipped roof to central block with slate. Hipped gabled roof to lateral wing to north-east with slate. Gable-ended roof to lateral wing to south-west with slate. Clay ridge tiles. Rendered chimney stacks. Cast-iron rainwater goods on rendered eaves course. Rendered walls. Painted. Square-headed window openings. Stone sills. Early 1/1 timber sash windows to central bock. Early 2/2/2 timber sash windows to lateral wing to south-west. Replacement uPVC casement and fixed-pane windows to lateral wing to north-east. Square-headed door opening to central block. Cut-stone Gibbsian surround with double keystone. Timber panelled door. Square-headed door opening to lateral wing to north-east. Cut-stone block-and-start doorcase with keystone. Replacement glazed timber door, c.1990. Set back from road in own grounds. Gravel forecourt to front. Attached two-bay double-height lower outbuilding, c.1775, to south-west retaining early aspect. Gable-ended roof with slate. Clay ridge tiles. Cast-iron rainwater goods. Roughcast walls. Unpainted. Openings not visible (no openings to front (south-east) elevation). 

Appraisal 

Boakefield (House) is a fine, Classically-balanced substantial Georgian country house of the mid to late eighteenth century that has been well-maintained to present an early aspect. The scale and fine detailing of the house suggest that it was originally built by a patron of high status in the locality, and it is therefore of social and historic interest, representing the formal architecture employed by the middle class at the time – the house is one of the largest private residences in the immediate vicinity of Ballitore. Composed of graceful proportions, the central block of the house is a prominent feature in the landscape, soaring above the surrounding landscape, and is complemented by the lateral wings. The house retains many important early or original features and materials, including timber sash fenestration (with an unusual triple sash arrangement to the lateral wing to south-west) and cut-stone doorcases – the re-instatement of traditional-style timber fenestration to the wing to north-east would benefit the entire composition. Without extraneous ornamentation, the only concession to decoration are the fine cut-stone doorcases to ground floor, the opening to the central block retaining early fittings. The retention of an early external aspect suggests that the house may retain early or original features and fittings of note to the interior. The house is an important component of the architectural heritage of Ballitore and has been well-maintained for the benefit of future generations. 

Leixlip House, Leixlip, Co Kildare

Leixlip House, Leixlip, Co Kildare

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. 183. “(Nesbitt, sub Beaumont-Nesbitt/LGI1958; West sub Colthurst/PB; Carvill, sub Eustace-Duckett/IFR) A three storey five bay mid-C18 house, with a two storey bow-fronted wing. The home of Gen. Brady, whose daughter married J.D.Nesbitt 1800. In the present century, the home of A.W. West, and more rectly, of Mr and Mrs Michael Carroll.” 

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.

p. 85. A very attractive early to mid 18C house. Good interior. A bow fronted wing was added in the early 19C. Recently destroyed by fire. Now a ruin.

https://www.buildingsofireland.ie/buildings-search/building/11804074/leixlip-house-hotel-captains-hill-newtown-leixlip-ed-leixlip-co-kildare

Leixlip House (Hotel), Captain’s Hill, NEWTOWN (LEIXLIP ED), Leixlip, County Kildare 

Detached five-bay three-storey over basement house, built 1772, possibly retaining some early fenestration with two-bay three-storey shallow return to rear to north-west. Extended, c.1875, comprising four-bay three-storey recessed wing to right (east) with single-bay three-storey red brick bowed projecting to centre. Renovated, c.1990. Now in use as hotel. Hipped roof with slate. Clay ridge tiles. Rendered chimney stacks. Cast-iron rainwater goods on eaves course. Flat-roofed to wing behind parapet walls. Materials not visible. Coursed squared rubble limestone walls. Coursed squared rubble limestone walls to wing with red brick to bowed projecting bay. Irregular coursed rubble stone to rear elevations to north. Shallow segmental-headed window openings to ground floor. Square-headed window openings to remainder (including wing) with some round-headed window openings to rear to north. Stone sills. Red brick dressings to some openings. Cut-stone voussoirs. 6/6 and 6/3 timber sash windows (possibly original). Some replacement uPVC casement windows, c.1990. Square-headed door opening approached by flight of four cut-stone steps. Cut-stone surround with moulded cornice and lintel over having double keystone. Timber panelled door. Fixed-pane sidelights. Set back from road in own grounds. Tarmacadam forecourt/carpark to front. Section of iron railings to basement. Gateway, c.1775, to south comprising pair of cut-stone piers with moulded capping having ball finials. Renovated, c.1990, and relocated to current position with replacement iron gates. 

Appraisal 

Leixlip House (Hotel) is a fine and imposing late eighteenth-century house that has been well-maintained to present an early aspect. The house is of considerable social and historical significance, representing the dwellings of the prosperous class in Leixlip in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries. Originally composed on an almost symmetrical plan of graceful Classical proportions centred about a fine cut-stone doorcase, the house was extended in the late nineteenth century to include a recessed wing having a bowed bay feature typical of the period of construction. The construction of both portions of the house in coursed squared limestone walls with cut-stone dressings is a fine example of the high quality of stone masonry traditionally practised in the locality – this is particularly evident in the doorcase, which has retained a crisp intricacy. The house appears to retain many important early or original features and materials, including multi-pane timber sash fenestration and a slate roof having cast-iron rainwater goods – some of the windows to the rear (north) elevation have been replaced with inappropriate uPVC models and this ought to be discouraged in future renovation works. The retention of an early external aspect suggests that the house may retain early or original features and materials to the interior. The original context of the house is now lost, the grounds having been partitioned for the purpose of residential developments and the gateway has been relocated to a new entrance in to the grounds. Originally composed of stone work of similar quality to the house, the repointing undertaken in the relocation of the piers has resulted in badly formed joints, and this ought to be addressed in future works to the site. 

https://www.irishtimes.com/business/commercial-property/1m-for-boutique-hotel-in-co-kildare-1.2107203

€1m for boutique hotel in Co Kildare  

Georgian manor house was converted into 19-bedroom Leixlip House Hotel in 1996  

Wed, Feb 18, 2015, 01:16 

Jack Fagan 

Hotel and bar operator the Towey Group is to sell the prestigious Leixlip House Hotel in Leixlip, Co Kildare. 

John Ryan, of CBRE, is quoting €1 million for the 19-bedroom boutique hotel, which has captured a good share of the wedding market in the area.  

The Georgian manor house dates back to 1774 and was cleverly converted into hotel use in 1996 without losing any of its elegance and style. Good use has been made of the available space to accommodate a restaurant and a function room .  

The 19 bedrooms include five superior rooms and 10 standard rooms in the main house and four more in the coach house. All rooms come with TV, direct-dial telephone and tea and coffee facilities.  

The ground floor includes a reception area, a lounge bar and the award-winning Bradaun Restaurant, which can seat 50 diners. The function room, with its own private entrance and bar, can accommodate up to 140 diners. There is a lapsed planning permission to convert the basement area from use as storage to a new bar and lounge.  

John Ryan says the sale offers “an excellent opportunity to acquire a beautifully appointed and unique boutique hotel that oozes charm and character”. It also has the advantage of an established level of turnover, much of it coming from wedding receptions. 

Tyrone House, Galway – ‘lost’ 

Tyrone House, Galway – ‘lost’ 

Tyrone House, County Galway, photograph courtesy Daniel Finnerty instagram @greatirishhouses ‘.
Tyrone House, County Galway, entrance front c. 1870. 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.

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. 279. “(St. George, sub French/IFR) A large square cut-stone house by an inlet of Galway Bay; built 1779 for Christopher St. George, reputedly to the design of John Roberts, of Waterford….After enjoying his magnificent house for about 20 years, Christopher St. George handed it over to his son and retired to Kilcolgan Castle nearby, where he lived with a “chere amie,” turning Catholic to please her. In 1808, the great house was described as standing start on its eminence, without a tree, bush or offices in sight; later, woods grew up around it. Christopher St. George’s son and grandson were both very fashionable; but by the end of C19, life at Tyrone was not quite what it had been; the grandson’s widow and other members of the family inhabited various corners of the house, the cooking was done over an open fire in a room on the top floor, and the drawing room and dining room were most of the time kept locked. However, the family had not come down in the world nearly as much as Violet Martin imagined it had when she visited Tyrone 1912, which gave her the inspiration for The Big House of Inver, written after her death by Edith Somerville. When she saw it, the house stood empty, having been abandoned by the family 1905, though the continued to own it. From then until 1920, when it was burnt, it was a favourite haunt of trippers from the neighbouring towns, who were allowed to dance in the dining room. It is now a gaunt and rather sinister ruin which can be seen for miles around, the woods having all gone. Facing the house is a medieval church and the crumbling St George family mausoleum, which inspired a well-known poem by Sir John Betjeman: 

“There is pinnacle protection, 

One extinguished family waits, 

A Church of Ireland resurrection 

By the broken, rusty gates.” 

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.

p. 78. “…Similar in many details to Moore Hall, County Mayo. Very fine plasterwork in main rooms. … Ruin is now in the care of the Irish Georgian Society.”

Tyrone House, County Galway photograph by Colin Colleran, from his Lost Buildings of Ireland facebook page.
Tyrone House, County Galway photograph by Colin Colleran, from his Lost Buildings of Ireland facebook page.
Tyrone House, County Galway photograph by Colin Colleran, from his Lost Buildings of Ireland facebook page.
Tyrone House, County Galway photograph by Colin Colleran, from his Lost Buildings of Ireland facebook page.
Tyrone House, County Galway photograph by Colin Colleran, from his Lost Buildings of Ireland facebook page.
Tyrone House, County Galway photograph by Colin Colleran, from his Lost Buildings of Ireland facebook page.
Tyrone House, County Galway, photograph courtesy Daniel Finnerty instagram @greatirishhouses ‘.
Tyrone House, County Galway, photograph courtesy Daniel Finnerty instagram @greatirishhouses ‘.
Tyrone House, County Galway, photograph courtesy Daniel Finnerty instagram @greatirishhouses ‘.

http://lordbelmontinnorthernireland.blogspot.com/2020/08/tyrone-house.html

Marble Hill House, Balynakill, Co Galway – ruin

Marble Hill House, Balynakill, Co Galway – ‘lost’

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. 201. “(Burke, Bt/PB) A house built ca 1775 by John Burke, and enlarged post 1813 by Sir John Burke, 2nd Bt. Of three storeys over a high basement; entrance front with one bay on either side of a three-sided bow; doorcase with rusticated pilasters. Side elevation of two bays and a further two bays projecting forwards. Now a ruin.” 

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.

http://lordbelmontinnorthernireland.blogspot.com/2014/09/marble-hill-house.html

Castle Ffrench, Ahascragh, Co Galway 

Castle Ffrench, Ahascragh, Co Galway 

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. 67. “(Ffrench, B/PB) An elegant ashlar-faced house of three storeys over a basement, built in 1779 for Sir Charles ffrench, Mayor of Galway; replacing a late C17 house on a different site which itself replaced a castle built by the ffrench family soon after they bought the estate in late C16. 
 
Five-bay entrance front with three-bay breakfront, the outer bays being very wide. Fanlighted and pilastered doorcase; solid roof parapet with urns. Three bay side, with a four-bay rear elevation with twin round-headed windows in the centre, lighting the main and secondary staircases. Interior plasterwork of a style characteristic to County Galway, with delicate naturalistic foliage and flower swags. Foliage and trophies on ceiling of hall; Irish harps and other emblems in drawing room frieze; flowers, foliage and birds in sideboard alcove of dining room. Doors and shutters of handsome joinery, with ocagonal and lozenge-shaped panels. Slightly curving staircase behind hall with balustrade of plain slender wooden uprights. Early in C19, 2nd Lord  ffrench lost a considerable amount of money as a result of the negligence of the manager of the family bank; and the family fortune suffered a further blow with the Famine, when the 3rd Baron refused to collect any rents from his tenants; so that in 1848 Castle ffrench had to be sold. 
 
It was, however, re-purchased by the parents of the 6th Baron [as Lord Belmont writes, or as Bence-Jones writes, 7th Lord French] in 1919.” 

http://lordbelmontinnorthernireland.blogspot.com/2019/10/castle-ffrench.html

Ballyglunin Park, Monivea, Co. Galway  

Ballyglunin Park, Monivea, Co. Galway  

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. 22. “(Blake,/IFR) A C18 house of two storeys and three bays, with large mid and late C19 additions at the back of it and to one side. The C18 house has a one bay pedimented breakfront, with a Diocletian window above a Venetian doorway, boht having blocked surrounds. The doorway has been made into a window, the entrance now being at what was originallly the side of the house; in a gable-end of the C19 addition; where there is a very elaborate Victorian stone porch with balustrading and bits of entablature. At the back of C19 range is a squat round tower with a conical roof. Oval room, formerly hall, in centre of C18 front; wiht cornice of mutules, rococo plasterork including eagle over doors adn C19 stencilled decoration on flat of ceiling. Drawing room adjoining with frieze of plasterwork, shouldered doorcases and good chimneypiece of white marble and Siena, with large reclining putti. Victorian staircase. Outbuildings close to house with square pyramidal-roofed tower. Sold ca 1964 by Mr Acheson Blake; now a conference centre of Opus Dei.” 

https://ballygluninpark.ie

Ballyglunin Park, as seen today, dates back to the 1640s when Martin Blake, high sheriff of Galway, was granted the lands by Charles II. The Blakes were by all accounts important figures in Galway society with a large estate of 10,500 acres that in 1833 was valued in The Great Landowners of Great Britain and Ireland at almost £40,000, equivalent to nearly £10,000,000 today. This must have been a golden age for the family’s fortunes, and it was the period during which parts of the property were upgraded to a style befitting the long-serving MP for Galway, Martin Joseph Blake. 

Ballyglunin Park House is a combination of Georgian and Victorian architecture with features dating back to medieval times. Recent extensive renovations, historical research, and local oral history indicate that a medieval castle, or tower house, was located on or near the site of the current house. The most noticeable evidence of this former castle is evident on the initial approach to the house in the unique stone facade of the entry and the large stone tower overlooking the River and walled garden. The facade of the Entry Hall features many components of medieval Irish Castle architecture, which are believed to have been salvaged from an earlier medieval structure. The large stone tower, built during the Victorian era, also features salvaged components of an earlier structure visible in the carved stone window casings. It is believed this structure is a Victorian nod to the medieval Irish Castle that was once located on the property. The oldest feature of the estate, a carved stone crest located in the walled garden, has been dated to the 14th century. 

Because the Blake’s were landed Gentry, agriculture was the main priority in their economic interest. The wide spacious farmyard which is located near the rear of the residence was once facilitated with loose bakes and stalls which were lofted, for sheltering horses. There were two garages, a workshop, machinery, sheds, cow houses, saw bench plus a 500 gallon petrol tank with a pump. This farmyard was always busy with the constant murmur of cows, horses, engines, and workers. Today some of the original farmyard has been converted into dorms, the original stonework of the building has been maintained while the arched doorways are still visible. An outstanding feature of the Blake farmyard still present today is the square pyramidal-roofed tower formerly used as a storage area for grain. 

According to a letter written in January of 1847, from Ballinasloe Nurseries, the cost of planting a large number of trees in Ballyglunin Park was five pounds and ten shillings. The trees mentioned include: Larch, Hazel, Oak, Beech, Ash, Elm, Sycamore, Poplars, Alders, Hornbeam. Over 170 years later some of these trees are still thriving and can be observed along the front road leading into the Estate. 

In 1970 the land was divided into smaller plots by the Land Commission. Many small farmers within the surrounding area were given acreage for farming and cattle rearing. Today Ballyglunin Park consists of 32 acres of pasture, gardens, and forest.  

Ballydonelan Castle, Loughrea, Co Galway – ‘lost’ 

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. 30. “(Donelan/LGI1912; Mahon/LGI1912 and sub Mahon, Bt/PB) A long low and narrow 2 storey C17 house with an old castle at one end of it, the seat of the Donelans…subsequently became the seat of a branch of the Mahon family. One wing was burnt sometime ante 1913. The house is now in ruins.” 

Ballydonelan Castle entrance front, County Galway, collection: Bertie Donohoe, 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.

Not in national inventory 

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.

Deerfield, United States Ambassador’s Residence, Phoenix Park, Dublin

United States Ambassador’s Residence, Phoenix Park, Dublin

Deerfield, Chief Secretary’s Lodge, County Dublin, photograph by Robert French, (between ca. 1865-1914), Lawrence Photograph Collection, National Library of Ireland.

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. 280. “(De Blaquiere, B/PB1917) A house originally built 1776 by Sir John Blaquiere, MP (afterwards raised to 1st Lord de Blaquiere), Secretary to the Lord Lieutenant and one of the leading figures in the political life  of Ireland during later C18; in a demesne carved out of Phoenix Park which he obtained on the strength of being the Park’s bailiff. In 1782, he was asked to surrender the house and grounds in return for some compensation, and the house became the official residence of the Chief Secretary, the principal executive of the government of Ireland under British rule. The house was enlarged and altered at various times, but has a predominantly late-Georgian character; of two storeys, with a bowed projection at either end of its principal front. Along this front is a fine enfilade of reception rooms. A large glass conservatory was added at one end 1852 by Lord Naas (afterwards 6th Earl of Mayo and Viceroy of India), while he was Chief Secretary. Later in the century, probably 1865 during the Chief Secretaryship of Chichester Fortescue (afterwards Lord Carlingford), the two bowed projections were joined by a single-storey corridor, into which were thrown the centre rooms, making them much deeper; the main wall of the house being carried by Ionic columns. The house became afterwards the United States Legation 1927, afterwards the Embassy.” 

Deerfield, Chief Secretary’s Lodge, County Dublin, photograph by Robert French, (between ca. 1865-1914), Lawrence Photograph Collection, National Library of Ireland.
Deerfield, County Dublin, February 2026.
Deerfield, County Dublin, February 2026.
Deerfield, County Dublin, February 2026.

https://curiousireland.ie/us-ambassadors-residence/

The US Ambassador’s Residence (Deerfield) is located in Phoenix Park in Dublin City. It was built in 1776 for Sir John Blaquiere, the Chief Secretary for Ireland which was a akin to being the Prime Minister. From then on this was the residence of 69 Chief Secretaries between 1776 up until 1922 when Ireland gained its independence. After 1922 the USA was quick to recognize and establish diplomatic relations with the new Irish Free State and was offered this building as a residence for it’s Ambassador. It was appropriately coincidental that this building was built in 1776, the same year that The United States declared its own Independence. This amazing property has many rooms including a ballroom and a library. The grounds include 62 acres of lawn, orchards and gardens, 3 cottages and a gate lodge. In the 1970s the building was given the name Deerfield by the wife of the then United States ambassador on account of the number of deer who roam in the open parkland around the mansion. It has been periodically suggested that the building should become the residence of the Taoiseach. Presidents John F. Kennedy, Richard Nixon and Bill Clinton all stayed here during their Irish visits. 

Lucan House, Lucan, Co Dublin 

Lucan House, Lucan, Co Dublin 

Lucan House, photograph courtesy of South Dublin City Council. Primrose Hill is part of its original demesne.

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. 195. “(Sarsfield, Lucan, E/DEP; Colthurst-Vesey/LGI1912; Colthurst, Bt/PB; O’Conor Don/IFR; Teeling (formerly Burke), LGI1958) A Palladian villa built 1770s by Agmondisham Vesey, MP, replacing an earlier house which itself replaced the old castle which had belonged to Patrick Sarsfield, Earl of Lucan, hero of the Seige of Limerick. The estate came to Agmondisham Vesey’s father through his first marriage to the Sarsfield heiress; but instead of leaving it to his daughter by her, who was the ancestress of the Binghams, Earls of Lucan, he left it to Agmondisham, who was his son by his second marriage. Agmondisham Vesey acted as his own architect, while consulting with Sir William Chambers, and also James Wyatt and Michael Stapleton, with regard to the interior. Of two storeys over basement, seven bay entrance front with a central feature of a pediment raised on a three bay attic, and carried on four engaged Ionic columns, the gound floor beneath them being treated as a basement, and rusticated. The central feature of Charleville, Co Wicklow, is similar. Five bay side elevation; garden front with central curved bow containing oval room; the plan resembling that of Mount Kennedy, Co Wicklow. The house is entirely free-standing, the officed being detached and connected to it by an underground passage. The interior has very fine neo-classical decoration on the walls and ceilings, some if not all of it by Stapleton. The hall has a screen of columns marbled to resemble yellow Siena. The Wedgwood Room, the ceiling of which curves downwards at the corners giving the effect of a shallow dome, has roundels painted by Peter de Gree. The small but attractive demesne by the River Liffey contains a Coade stone urn on a pedestal designed by James Wyatt and erected as a monument to the great Sarsfield, and a Gothic hermitage. Inherited from the Colthurst-Vesey family by Capt Richard Colthurst (afterwards 8th Bt), who sold it 1932 to H.E. Charles O’Conor, President of Irish Association of the Order of Malta. Re-sold post WW(II by Charles O’Conor’s son in law, William Teeling, MP, to the Italian gov’t, for use as their embassy.”

https://www.buildingsofireland.ie/buildings-search/building/11201148/lucan-house-lucan-house-demesne-lucan-south-dublin-county 

Detached seven-bay two-storey over basement Palladian country house, c.1775, with three-bay pedimented breakfront and three-bay rere bow, each having attic storey. Five bays to south side. Roughcast rendered walls with granite platband, string courses, sill course and quoins. Ashlar granite walls to breakfront, with rusticated ground floor and four half-engaged giant Ionic columns above. Small pane sash windows with stone sills throughout. Timber panelled door with elaborate fanlight. Hipped slate roof behind parapet with stone cornice and rendered chimney stacks. Retains many fine interior features, including late eighteenth-century plasterwork. Single-storey service building to north, with roughcast rendered walls, round-headed windows, segmental-headed archwayand single-pitched roof. Set within mature demesne parkland with various outbuildings (separately recorded). 

An impressive, imposing and substantially intact country house and demesne, with a richly decorated interior. Partly designed by William Chambers, with interior plasterwork by Michael Stapleton, Historically and socially important as the principal land holding in Lucan village with which the demesne is intimately associated. 

https://www.buildingsofireland.ie/buildings-search/building/11201137/lucan-house-demesne-lucan-south-dublin-county

Detached multiple-bay single-storey with attic former stable building, c.1790, now in use as house and storage building, and partly unoccupied. Built on a C-shaped half-octagonal plan. Roughcast rendered walls to convex side. Rendered, ruled and lined walls to concave side, with five three-bay sections alternately having superimposed arcade or ashlar pedimented breakfront. Pedimented breakfront to single-bay end bays. Granite platband at arch springing level. Timber sash windows with stone sills. uPVC casement windows to southern domestic section. Timber tongue and groove doors with overlights. Hipped slate roof with red brick dentil eaves course. Single-storey red brick lean-to shed to north. 

A particularly handsome and well-executed stable building, retaining many original features. Set just inside one of the main demesne gates, it presents a most striking façade on entry. Also a dominant presence on the Leixlip Road and in the vista west from Lucan village. An integral element of this intact demesne. 

https://archiseek.com/2013/1766-lucan-house-lucan-co-dublin

1772 – Lucan House, Lucan, Co. Dublin 

Architect: William Chambers, Michael Stapleton 

Lucan House, often described as a pure Palladian villa, was constructed by Agmondisham Vesey, who cleared the previous residence and began construction in 1772. Vesey, although not an architect, designed the house in conjunction with William Chambers, with Michael Stapleton responsible for the plasterwork.  

However this image by John James Barralet, and in the Paul Mellon Collection at the Yale Center for British Art is inscribed: “Lucan House, Co Dublin, built 1776 by the Rt. Hon. Agmondisham Vesey from his own designs with the help of the Dublin builder Michael Stapleton”. 

The estate passed through the Sarsfield, Vesey and Colthurst families through marriage – the descent of the house was through the female line, as no member of the family produced a male heir. 

In 1925, the entire contents of the house were sold at auction. In 1954, it was purchased by the Italian Government for use as the residence of the Italian Ambassador to Ireland. At the time, they purchased the house, it was an empty shell. 

https://theirishaesthete.com/2024/05/27/lucan-house/

Addio del Passato 

Last Monday, the Presidents of Ireland and Italy jointly inaugurated a new public park in Lucan, County Dublin, the space henceforth to be known as Parco Italia. The reason for this somewhat unusual name? Since 1942 Lucan House, which stands at the centre of the 30-acre park, has been the official residence of successive Italian ambassadors to this country. The building here has, like so often, a long and complex history but in its present form was commissioned in the early 1770s by the estate’s then-owner Agmondisham Vesey who, although he consulted several eminent architects, played an active role in the eventual design. Vesey’s house replaced an earlier one, probably dating back to the Middle Ages but much altered over the centuries. A painting by Thomas Roberts produced shortly before its demolition shows what appears to be a late-mediaeval tower house with a fortified manor house with castellated roofline to one side. Vesey’s wife Elizabeth, a noted bluestocking (and close friend of Elizabeth Montague) lamented the destruction of the older building, ‘with its niches and thousand other Gothic beauties,’ but her husband was determined to start afresh. To do this, he not only had to overcome his spouse’s opposition but also the original house’s associations with noted Irish patriot Patrick Sarsfield, first Earl of Lucan. His forebear, Sir William Sarsfield, had acquired the Lucan estate in 1566 and although temporarily dispossessed during the Confederate Wars, several generations of the family lived there until the marriage in 1696 of heiress Catherine Sarsfield (a niece of Patrick Sarsfield) to Agmondisham Vesey, father of the man responsible for building Lucan House.  

As mentioned above, Agmondisham Vesey, displayed a keen interest in architecture despite his involvement in many other activities: a Member of the Irish Parliament, he was also a Privy Councillor and Accountant and Controller General of Ireland. Like his wife Elizabeth he liked to keep abreast of cultural developments: in 1773, during the period that work was underway on the new house, he was elected to the ‘Club’, the informal dining and conversational group established by Samuel Johnson and Joshua Reynolds 10 years earlier. Johnson and James Boswell granted him the notional title of ‘Professor of Architecture,’ and the latter wrote that Vesey had ‘left a good specimen of his knowledge and taste in that art by an elegant house built on a plan of his own at Lucan.’ Boswell exaggerated his friend’s role in the matter because while Vesey undoubtedly had a hand in Lucan House’s appearance, so did a number of architects, not least Sir William Chambers who in 1773 sent him now-lost ‘Designs for a Villa.’ It is thought that the facade of the building was based on this work, not least because in March 1774, Vesey wrote to Chambers, ‘I am much more intent in finishing the South front of your Plan at Lucan this summer.’ The aforementioned facade is of seven bays and two storeys over basement except for the breakfront three centre bays which feature an additional attic storey beneath a pediment (despite Vesey reminding Chambers ‘You have taught us to think pediments but common architecture). This central section is faced in granite ashlar with four half-engaged giant Ionic columns above a rusticated ground floor. Originally at that level the two bays on either side were given rusticated render, as can be seen in an engraving of the house produced by Thomas Milton in 1783, but this was removed at some later date. Lucan House’s design looks to have been the inspiration for Charleville, County Wicklow, designed by Whitmore Davis in 1797, although the facade of that building is entirely faced in ashlar and runs to nine bays. Meanwhile, at Lucan, the house forms a rectangular block, other than a three-bay bow to the rear that, as with the facade, rises three storeys over basement.  

If Sir William Chambers was involved in designing the exterior of Lucan House, James Wyatt, together with his Irish representative Thomas Penrose, can claim much credit for the building’s interiors, with Michael Stapleton responsible for much of the plasterwork found on many of the walls and ceilings in the ground floor, as well as the main staircase and first-floor lobby. Lucan House has some of the finest examples of neo-classical decoration in Ireland, beginning with the entrance hall, to the rear of which a screen of columns and pilasters painted to imitate Siena marble, provide access to the principal reception rooms. That to the immediate left here, now called the Wedgewood Room but originally the breakfast room, is a perfect square, its walls rising to a gently domed ceiling at the centre of which is a medallion depicting a warrior kneeling before Minerva accompanied by her maidens. Around the room, floral drops surround panels containing what appear to be grisaille paintings: in fact, these are in fact prints overpainted at some date when age had caused them to fade. To the rear is the drawing room, although this was intended to be the dining room. Its walls were left undecorated (and today covered in paper) but again the ceiling has been covered in plasterwork centred on another medallion, this one, somewhat unusually, featuring the Christ child and infant John the Baptist together with a lamb. The rear of the house is taken up by what is now the dining room but was originally intended to be the drawing room. The ceiling decoration here is simpler than that in the previous rooms, but the walls are decorated with plaster girandoles, their design found among those created by Michael Stapleton. Oval in shape, the bow in the window is echoed by a similarly curved wall centred on a door leading back into the entrance hall. This arrangement of the two rooms  – hall with screen of columns to the rear and central door opening into an oval room – is found in Castle Coole, County Fermanagh designed in the early 1790s by James Wyatt.  
Agmondisham Vesey died in 1785 and having no children, left the estate to his nephew Colonel George Vesey. The latter’s only child, Elizabeth Vesey, married Sir Nicholas Colthurst and their descendants lived at Lucan House until the property and its contents were sold in September 1925 by Captain Richard Colthurst (later eighth baronet), after which it was occupied by Charles Hugh O’Conor and then his son-in-law William Teeling. In 1942 the building and surrounding gardens were rented by the Italian government and then bought 12 years later, to serve as a residence for its ambassador. It continued to serve the same purpose until this month, at the end of which the present ambassador leaves his position and the property passes into the hands of a new owner, the local authority, South Dublin County Council. What happens to both house and grounds in the future remains to be seen.  

For anyone wondering, the bronze buffaloes seen in the grounds and fibreglass horse in the entrance hall, all by contemporary Italian artist Davide Rivalta and placed in their present positions last year, are due to remain on site.