Ballincurra House, Kinsale, County Cork for sale courtesy Johanna Murphy & Sons and Colliers Sept 2023
Ballincurra House, Kinsale, County Cork for sale courtesy Johanna Murphy & Sons and Colliers Sept 2023and March 2024.Ballincurra House, Kinsale, County Cork for sale courtesy Johanna Murphy & Sons and Colliers Sept 2023and March 2024.
not in Bence-Jones
5.5 million, p17 yf76 14 bedrooms, 1 bath, dating to 1770, with cottages.
The Mansion House is a detached Georgian two storey property constructed c.1770 which has been remodelled and refurbished. The 18,000-square-foot home is well-proportioned and is currently laid out as 14 ensuite bedrooms and a multitude of living and entertainment spaces.
Ballincurra House, Kinsale, County Cork for sale courtesy Johanna Murphy & Sons and Colliers Sept 2023and March 2024.Ballincurra House, Kinsale, County Cork for sale courtesy Johanna Murphy & Sons and Colliers Sept 2023and March 2024.
But the layout of the Mansion House is unique in that the Centre and West wings combine for a very manageable family living space and consist of:
THE CENTRE & WEST WINGS
Entrance Hall with Waterford Crystal chandelier and marble flooring
8 Ensuite Bedrooms (2 on the Ground Floor and 6 upstairs) • All bedrooms are individually themed and no two rooms are the same. Three of them could be
combined to provide an expansive Master Suite with ‘his’ and ‘hers’ dressing rooms and bathrooms. • All ensuites feature freestanding Royal Doulton antique baths and handbasins. And the majority have
separate luxury shower units.
Country Style Family Kitchen The country-style kitchen features handcrafted hand-painted pitch pine cabinets, range-style cooker, black granite counter tops and a large dining island. And doors open onto the vegetable plot within the walled garden.
Family Living Room with double sided solid fuel fireplace and Minstrel’s Gallery Family Dining Room with original stone steps Formal Sitting Room with antique fireplace Library with original stone walls that could be used as a cinema room
Massage Room with independent shower and toilet for massages, beauty treatments etc. The building is a combination of stone walls and plaster finish. And the roof is a pitched natural slated roof with some flat felted sections. The majority of the windows were replaced in 2003 and are timber casement or sliding sash, single and double glazed. Heating is by way of antique oil fired cast iron radiators which are divided into 6 zones. In addition there are a number of open fire places and wood burners throughout the House as well.
The floors are all solid wood varnished timber throughout, with some bedrooms being carpeted.
To the front of the Mansion House is the original crocquet lawn, stone flagstone terrace, stone arches and garden beds with numerous shrubbery and trees. The original well for the House is also there with a 16th century well head. The views from the House are unobstructed views of the countryside with no direct neighbours in sight.
Ballincurra House, Kinsale, County Cork for sale courtesy Johanna Murphy & Sons and Colliers Sept 2023and March 2024.Ballincurra House, Kinsale, County Cork for sale courtesy Johanna Murphy & Sons and Colliers Sept 2023and March 2024.Ballincurra House, Kinsale, County Cork for sale courtesy Johanna Murphy & Sons and Colliers Sept 2023and March 2024.Ballincurra House, Kinsale, County Cork for sale courtesy Johanna Murphy & Sons and Colliers Sept 2023and March 2024.Ballincurra House, Kinsale, County Cork for sale courtesy Johanna Murphy & Sons and Colliers Sept 2023and March 2024.Ballincurra House, Kinsale, County Cork for sale courtesy Colliers Sept 2023and March 2024.Ballincurra House, Kinsale, County Cork for sale courtesy Johanna Murphy & Sons and Colliers Sept 2023and March 2024.Ballincurra House, Kinsale, County Cork for sale courtesy Johanna Murphy & Sons and Colliers Sept 2023and March 2024.Ballincurra House, Kinsale, County Cork for sale courtesy Johanna Murphy & Sons and Colliers Sept 2023and March 2024.
The East Wing has the added benefit of becoming a separate ‘Entertainment’ Wing – perfect for extended family use, hosting guests, lavish house parties or corporate retreats. This wing has separate access to the main living quarters and consists of:
The Ballroom (details following) The Garden Room (details following) 6 Additional ensuite guest bedrooms (all upstairs) Guest sitting room (Mezzanine Lounge)
Two Private Bars
• The small and intimate Champagne Bar • The Orient Express Bar with bar seating for 12
people which leads to the grand Ballroom.
Covered Outdoor Area with Italian wood-fired pizza oven, barbecue and sink.
Commercial Chef ’s Kitchen and Stores Laundry/boiler house Staff Office
There is also an old stone shed which is currently used as a cocktail bar but could easily be converted to a wine and cigar room.
The Ballroom
The 12 metre long ‘Ballroom’ is the crowning glory of the property with its original fireplace, French door to the terrace and 14 foot high ceiling. Adjoining both your own bar and the multi-purpose Garden Room, this would make an ideal family or corporate entertainment space.
The Garden Room is a reconstruction of the original greenhouse – with glass skylight, Georgian doors to the front terrace and Georgian windows throughout. It is light and airy.
Ballincurra House, Kinsale, County Cork for sale courtesy Johanna Murphy & Sons and Colliers Sept 2023and March 2024.Ballincurra House, Kinsale, County Cork for sale courtesy Johanna Murphy & Sons and Colliers Sept 2023and March 2024.Ballincurra House, Kinsale, County Cork for sale courtesy Johanna Murphy & Sons and Colliers Sept 2023and March 2024.Ballincurra House, Kinsale, County Cork for sale courtesy Johanna Murphy & Sons and Colliers Sept 2023and March 2024.Ballincurra House, Kinsale, County Cork for sale courtesy Johanna Murphy & Sons and Colliers Sept 2023and March 2024.Ballincurra House, Kinsale, County Cork for sale courtesy Johanna Murphy & Sons and Colliers Sept 2023and March 2024.Ballincurra House, Kinsale, County Cork for sale courtesy Johanna Murphy & Sons and Colliers Sept 2023and March 2024.Ballincurra House, Kinsale, County Cork for sale courtesy Johanna Murphy & Sons and Colliers Sept 2023and March 2024.Ballincurra House, Kinsale, County Cork for sale courtesy Johanna Murphy & Sons and Colliers Sept 2023and March 2024.Ballincurra House, Kinsale, County Cork for sale courtesy Johanna Murphy & Sons and Colliers Sept 2023and March 2024.Ballincurra House, Kinsale, County Cork for sale courtesy Johanna Murphy & Sons and Colliers Sept 2023and March 2024.Ballincurra House, Kinsale, County Cork for sale courtesy Johanna Murphy & Sons and Colliers Sept 2023and March 2024.Ballincurra House, Kinsale, County Cork for sale courtesy Johanna Murphy & Sons and Colliers Sept 2023and March 2024.Ballincurra House, Kinsale, County Cork for sale courtesy Johanna Murphy & Sons and Colliers Sept 2023and March 2024.Ballincurra House, Kinsale, County Cork for sale courtesy Colliers Sept 2023and March 2024.Ballincurra House, Kinsale, County Cork for sale courtesy Johanna Murphy & Sons and Colliers Sept 2023and March 2024.Ballincurra House, Kinsale, County Cork for sale courtesy Colliers Sept 2023and March 2024.Ballincurra House, Kinsale, County Cork for sale courtesy Johanna Murphy & Sons and Colliers Sept 2023and March 2024.Ballincurra House, Kinsale, County Cork for sale courtesy Johanna Murphy & Sons and Colliers Sept 2023and March 2024.Ballincurra House, Kinsale, County Cork for sale courtesy Johanna Murphy & Sons and Colliers Sept 2023and March 2024.Ballincurra House, Kinsale, County Cork for sale courtesy Johanna Murphy & Sons and Colliers Sept 2023and March 2024.Ballincurra House, Kinsale, County Cork for sale courtesy Johanna Murphy & Sons and Colliers Sept 2023and March 2024.Ballincurra House, Kinsale, County Cork for sale courtesy Colliers Sept 2023and March 2024.Ballincurra House, Kinsale, County Cork for sale courtesy Johanna Murphy & Sons and Colliers Sept 2023and March 2024.Ballincurra House, Kinsale, County Cork for sale courtesy Colliers Sept 2023and March 2024.Ballincurra House, Kinsale, County Cork for sale courtesy Johanna Murphy & Sons and Colliers Sept 2023and March 2024.Ballincurra House, Kinsale, County Cork for sale courtesy Johanna Murphy & Sons and Colliers Sept 2023and March 2024.Ballincurra House, Kinsale, County Cork for sale courtesy Johanna Murphy & Sons and Colliers Sept 2023and March 2024.Ballincurra House, Kinsale, County Cork for sale courtesy Johanna Murphy & Sons and Colliers Sept 2023and March 2024.Ballincurra House, Kinsale, County Cork for sale courtesy Colliers Sept 2023and March 2024.Ballincurra House, Kinsale, County Cork for sale courtesy Johanna Murphy & Sons and Colliers Sept 2023and March 2024.Ballincurra House, Kinsale, County Cork for sale courtesy Colliers Sept 2023and March 2024.Ballincurra House, Kinsale, County Cork for sale courtesy Colliers Sept 2023and March 2024.Ballincurra House, Kinsale, County Cork for sale courtesy Johanna Murphy & Sons and Colliers Sept 2023and March 2024.Ballincurra House, Kinsale, County Cork for sale courtesy Johanna Murphy & Sons and Colliers Sept 2023and March 2024.Ballincurra House, Kinsale, County Cork for sale courtesy Johanna Murphy & Sons and Colliers Sept 2023and March 2024.Ballincurra House, Kinsale, County Cork for sale courtesy Johanna Murphy & Sons and Colliers Sept 2023and March 2024.Ballincurra House, Kinsale, County Cork for sale courtesy Colliers Sept 2023and March 2024.Ballincurra House, Kinsale, County Cork for sale courtesy Johanna Murphy & Sons and Colliers Sept 2023and March 2024.Ballincurra House, Kinsale, County Cork for sale courtesy Johanna Murphy & Sons and Colliers Sept 2023and March 2024.Ballincurra House, Kinsale, County Cork for sale courtesy Johanna Murphy & Sons and Colliers Sept 2023and March 2024.Ballincurra House, Kinsale, County Cork for sale courtesy Johanna Murphy & Sons and Colliers Sept 2023and March 2024.Ballincurra House, Kinsale, County Cork for sale courtesy Johanna Murphy & Sons and Colliers Sept 2023and March 2024.Ballincurra House, Kinsale, County Cork for sale courtesy Johanna Murphy & Sons and Colliers Sept 2023and March 2024.Ballincurra House, Kinsale, County Cork for sale courtesy Johanna Murphy & Sons and Colliers Sept 2023and March 2024.Ballincurra House, Kinsale, County Cork for sale courtesy Johanna Murphy & Sons and Colliers Sept 2023and March 2024.Ballincurra House, Kinsale, County Cork for sale courtesy Johanna Murphy & Sons and Colliers Sept 2023and March 2024.Ballincurra House, Kinsale, County Cork for sale courtesy Johanna Murphy & Sons and Colliers Sept 2023and March 2024.Ballincurra House, Kinsale, County Cork for sale courtesy Johanna Murphy & Sons and Colliers Sept 2023and March 2024.Ballincurra House, Kinsale, County Cork for sale courtesy Johanna Murphy & Sons and Colliers Sept 2023and March 2024.Ballincurra House, Kinsale, County Cork for sale courtesy Johanna Murphy & Sons and Colliers Sept 2023and March 2024.Ballincurra House, Kinsale, County Cork for sale courtesy Johanna Murphy & Sons and Colliers Sept 2023and March 2024.Ballincurra House, Kinsale, County Cork for sale courtesy Johanna Murphy & Sons and Colliers Sept 2023and March 2024.Ballincurra House, Kinsale, County Cork for sale courtesy Johanna Murphy & Sons and Colliers Sept 2023and March 2024.Ballincurra House, Kinsale, County Cork for sale courtesy Johanna Murphy & Sons and Colliers Sept 2023and March 2024.Ballincurra House, Kinsale, County Cork for sale courtesy Johanna Murphy & Sons and Colliers Sept 2023and March 2024.Ballincurra House, Kinsale, County Cork for sale courtesy Johanna Murphy & Sons and Colliers Sept 2023and March 2024.Ballincurra House, Kinsale, County Cork for sale courtesy Johanna Murphy & Sons and Colliers Sept 2023and March 2024.Ballincurra House, Kinsale, County Cork for sale courtesy Johanna Murphy & Sons and Colliers Sept 2023and March 2024.Ballincurra House, Kinsale, County Cork for sale courtesy Johanna Murphy & Sons and Colliers Sept 2023and March 2024.Ballincurra House, Kinsale, County Cork for sale courtesy Johanna Murphy & Sons and Colliers Sept 2023and March 2024.Ballincurra House, Kinsale, County Cork for sale courtesy Johanna Murphy & Sons and Colliers Sept 2023and March 2024.Ballincurra House, Kinsale, County Cork for sale courtesy Johanna Murphy & Sons and Colliers Sept 2023and March 2024.Ballincurra House, Kinsale, County Cork for sale courtesy Colliers Sept 2023and March 2024.Ballincurra House, Kinsale, County Cork for sale courtesy Johanna Murphy & Sons and Colliers Sept 2023and March 2024.Ballincurra House, Kinsale, County Cork for sale courtesy Johanna Murphy & Sons and Colliers Sept 2023and March 2024.Ballincurra House, Kinsale, County Cork for sale courtesy Johanna Murphy & Sons and Colliers Sept 2023and March 2024.Ballincurra House, Kinsale, County Cork for sale courtesy Johanna Murphy & Sons and Colliers Sept 2023and March 2024.Ballincurra House, Kinsale, County Cork for sale courtesy Johanna Murphy & Sons and Colliers Sept 2023and March 2024.Ballincurra House, Kinsale, County Cork for sale courtesy Johanna Murphy & Sons and Colliers Sept 2023and March 2024.Ballincurra House, Kinsale, County Cork for sale courtesy Colliers Sept 2023and March 2024.Ballincurra House, Kinsale, County Cork for sale courtesy Johanna Murphy & Sons and Colliers Sept 2023and March 2024.Ballincurra House, Kinsale, County Cork for sale courtesy Colliers Sept 2023and March 2024.Ballincurra House, Kinsale, County Cork for sale courtesy Johanna Murphy & Sons and Colliers Sept 2023and March 2024.Ballincurra House, Kinsale, County Cork for sale courtesy Johanna Murphy & Sons and Colliers Sept 2023and March 2024.Ballincurra House, Kinsale, County Cork for sale courtesy Colliers Sept 2023and March 2024.Ballincurra House, Kinsale, County Cork for sale courtesy Colliers Sept 2023and March 2024.Ballincurra House, Kinsale, County Cork for sale courtesy Colliers Sept 2023and March 2024.Ballincurra House, Kinsale, County Cork for sale courtesy Colliers Sept 2023and March 2024.Ballincurra House, Kinsale, County Cork for sale courtesy Colliers Sept 2023and March 2024.Ballincurra House, Kinsale, County Cork for sale courtesy Johanna Murphy & Sons and Colliers Sept 2023and March 2024.Ballincurra House, Kinsale, County Cork for sale courtesy Johanna Murphy & Sons and Colliers Sept 2023and March 2024.Ballincurra House, Kinsale, County Cork for sale courtesy Johanna Murphy & Sons and Colliers Sept 2023and March 2024.Ballincurra House, Kinsale, County Cork for sale courtesy Johanna Murphy & Sons and Colliers Sept 2023and March 2024.Ballincurra House, Kinsale, County Cork for sale courtesy Johanna Murphy & Sons and Colliers Sept 2023and March 2024.Ballincurra House, Kinsale, County Cork for sale courtesy Johanna Murphy & Sons and Colliers Sept 2023and March 2024.Ballincurra House, Kinsale, County Cork for sale courtesy Johanna Murphy & Sons and Colliers Sept 2023and March 2024.Ballincurra House, Kinsale, County Cork for sale courtesy Johanna Murphy & Sons and Colliers Sept 2023and March 2024.
History:
The Beginning of Ballinacurra
1770 John Swete, the High Sheriff of Cork, inherits £30,000 from his cousin the paymaster for the Duke of Marlborough in England. Swete uses the money to build the Ballinacurra House for his son, John. The home consists of the Mansion House only, and is described as a “small hunting lodge” sited on 300 acres.
1777 Maps of the Roads of Ireland
The Ballinacurra House appears on a map by cartographers George Taylor and Andrew Skinner. Their book Maps of the Roads of Ireland lists the property as belonging to John Swete
1791 The Bleazby Family
Swete sells the estate and its surrounding 300 acres to the Bleazbys–an affluent and popular family from Cork City who were actively involved in the tanner business. The Bleazbys purchase the home for £5,500.
1831 Ballinacurra’s Stately Ballroom
William Bleazby builds the East and West wings of the property. The construction of the wings is commemorated on the property’s bell tower. Ballinacurra’s stately ballroom is also built during this period. Since five of the Bleazby’s seven children were daughters, the family would frequently hold dinner dances in their ballroom in an effort to present their daughters to young Cork bachelors.
1957 John Danford
Over 150 years later, the Bleazbys sell Ballinacurra to John Danford. A brilliant artist and explorer, Danford studied at the Royal Academy of Art. He was later recruited as a U.K. ambassador to Nigeria by the British Council, which often required him to spend extended periods abroad in Trinidad, Manchester, and Sierra Leone. During his time at Ballinacurra, Danford created five themed rooms–African, Elizabethan, Georgian, Japanese, and Victorian–to showcase the many items he had collected during his international travels.
1970 Upon Danford’s death, the estate passes to the Ardfoyle Sisters of Cork, who had cared for John in Africa when he had fallen ill. The nuns lived in the centre of the main house and used the rest of the home as a summer retreat.
1972 The Ardfoyle Nuns sell the 9-acre walled garden to a local farmer. They use the money from the sale for restoration of their convent in Cork City.
1981 The Ballinacurra House Maggie Glicksten, a South African woman who was married to an Irishman. Maggie and her husband live in the home for eight years with their children.
1989 The property was then sold to Michael and Pauline Forsythe. The couple was Irish, but lived as expatriates in various countries. While in Hong Kong, the Forsythes bought Ballinacurra with the intention to retire there. They lived in the house during the summers, while renting it out to various groups during the other parts of the year.
2000 Ballinacurra’s current owners, Des and Lisa McGahan, buy the property. They begin an extensive renovation of both the house and grounds. In 2003 The McGahans buy back the 9-acre walled garden that the Ardfoyle Nuns sold in 1972. The property is restored to its original borders.
The Grounds
The entire grounds were neglected and in dire need of love and attention. This has taken the full 20 years to achieve with its ornamental lawns, pond, streams, pagodas, jetty, horse-riding arena and more. And the access to the ancient forest of Kippagh Wood was completed in 2020 to provide a walking and jogging path to the far end of the property on the Bandon River.
AND
For sale courtesy Colliers
€2,800,000
27 Bed10 Bath12442 m²
The Property A delightful small water fronted estate which is registered with Failte Ireland since 2003 as a 4 star self-catering property. The estate comprises a truly magnificent Georgian manor house, three other houses and approx. 23 acres only 4km from the historic town of Kinsale, now recognized as Ireland’s gourmet capital and only 30 minutes from Cork city and airport. Ballinacurra House which dates from the 1770’s has been totally restored and extended and has been run as an exclusive holiday rental with 14 ensuite bedrooms and additional accommodation available through the converted coach house, stone cottage and newly built stone lodge. The property extends to approx. 9.3 ha (23 acres) and enjoys considerable frontage to the Ballinacurra and White Castle creeks which flow to the Bandon River, and which are lined by the estates private woodland which is interspersed with woodland walks.
History John Swete, the High Sherriff of Cork built Ballinacurra in the early 1770’s and in 1791 sold the estate to the Bleazby’s a prominent family from Cork city. In 1831 William Bleazby enlarged the original house with the addition of the matching east and west wings, one of which includes the stately ballroom. Over 150 years later the Bleazby’s sold Ballinacurra to John Danford, a recognised artist and inveterate explorer and traveller. Upon John’s death in 1970 the estate passed to an order of nuns who had cared for him in Africa when he was ill. The property went through two further ownerships before being bought in 2000 by the current owners who spent the next three years restoring, extending, and improving the property including the grounds to what it is today. The house is approached through electric gates via winding avenue which sweeps through the lawns to the gravelled entrance front courtyard with central oval lawn and flanked by the east and west wings. There two service access avenues, one to the right of the main entrance with separate gate and the second to the west of the walled garden.
Accommodation Main House The centre portion of the property is the Georgian House of approx. 1156 sq.m (12,442 sq.ft) which has been extended, and remodelled. The west wing has been converted to a bedroom accommodation with two spa rooms on the ground floor. The East wing has also been converted to entertainment and bedroom accommodation. The grand ballroom with extended dining area, bar and services on the ground floor, bedrooms on the first floor. On entering the reception hall, the original reception rooms are to the left and right and access to the large family kitchen. On the first floor are two spacious en suite bedrooms. In the west wing you have the library, massage room/study and six en suite themed bedrooms. The east wing to the right is currently laid out for commercial use as a wedding venue and might require reconfiguration if the house was to be returned to a family home. The accommodation in the east wing includes the bar and ballroom which opens to the 120 sq.m conservatory on the ground floor. These reception rooms are connected to the commercial catering kitchen and general stores and offices. On the first floor is situated a music themed resident’s lounge and six en suite bedrooms. The conservatory opens on one side to a covered outdoor area with barbecue and toilets and to the other side a spacious sun terrace. The Stone Lodge A detached 1.5 storey house built in 2008 and is located at the western corner of the overall site, keeping it very private from the rest of the estate. The property benefits from a private garden and separate driveway and takes full advantage of its south facing elevation. The property is a timber framed construction with a natural stone / timber clad external finish. Accommodation downstairs includes double height living room with stone surround fireplace, open plan kitchen / dining area, laundry room, office and 3 bedrooms (2 ensuite) with separate WC. The upstairs includes a grand master suite with ensuite and separate dressing room and a further 2 bedrooms sharing a bathroom. The Stone Cottage A two storey stone fronted house was extensively restored and extended in 2004 and has an open plan living/dining/kitchen, utility room, separate wc and four en suite bedrooms. The Stone Cottage is accessed either from the main house or via a separate avenue from the main entrance. The Coach House A two-storey brick fronted Carriage house was converted in 2005 and which has a galley kitchen, three ensuite bedrooms and a living/dining room which can double as a bedroom as it has an ensuite. Additional Buildings Between the Main House and the Coach House stands a single-story building previously used as a cookery school. Adjoining the sand arena is a range of stables with tack room and fodder storage. The Grounds The grounds are a feature of Ballinacurra. To the front lawns slope gently towards the water frontage and jetty. The walkway passing under a canopy of vegetation and by ornamental ponds supplied by the small river and pumped system of irrigation on to White Castle Creek and then onto the extensive woodland walks with views over the Bandon River Estuary. To the rear and side of the house are lawns, paddocks, stables and a walled garden. A reputed famine wall forms the boundary to the county road. Location Nearby Kinsale, situated at the southern start of Irelands famous Wild Atlantic Way, recognised not just as a noted international sailing centre but as one of Irelands most sought after residential locations. Cork City, Irelands second city is a thirty-minute drive with Cork International Airport even closer. For the golfer, as well as local clubs “The Old Head Kinsale” is of international acclaim. Kinsale is the premier location to commence exploring the magnificent coastline of West Cork and Kerry, whether by boat, cycling, car or walking. Features · Spacious restored Georgian manor house, c. 1,709 sq.m · Newly built stone lodge, c. 261 sq.m · Restored stone cottage, c. 166 sq.m · Restored coach house, c. 107 sq.m · 23 acres of private gardens, woodlands and paddocks · River frontage with jetty and remains of boathouse · Enormous scope to expand Services · Mains electricity both single and three phase. · Mains water with private well available · Oil fired central heating with zoned areas. · Waste water bio cycle treatment unit · All buildings with commercial grade fire alarm BER: Main Building D2 BER: Coach House G BER: Stone Cottage G BER: Stone Lodge C1
Ardbraccan House, Ardbraccan, Navan, County Meath, C15W8C0 for sale March 2025 courtesy Sherry FitzgeraldArdbraccan House, Ardbraccan, Navan, County Meath, C15W8C0 for sale March 2025 courtesy Sherry Fitzgerald
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. 7. “The Palace of the (C of I) Bishops of Meath, on the site of the old castle where the Bishops lived from C14. Bishop Evans left money for the building of a new house here early in C18; his successor, Bishop Henry Downes, came here with Dean Swift to lay out the ground; but it was not until the time of the next Bishop again, Arthur Price, that the house was begun ca 1734, to the design of Richard Castle. When the two 2 storey 5 bay wings of what was to be a Palladian mansion had been completed, Price was elevated to the Archdiocese of Cashel. For the next 30 years, the subsequent Bishops did nothing about building the central block, but lived in one of the wings, using the other for guests. It was not until early 1770s that Bishop Henry Maxwell, a younger son of 1st Lord Farnham, decided to complete the house; he is said to have boasted that he would build a palace so grand that no scholar or tutor would dare to live in it. He obtained designs from Thomas Cooley and also from one of his own clergy, Rv. Daniel Beaufort, Rector of Navan, who was a talented amateur architect. Both of them were, to a certain extent, under the influence of James Wyatt, who produced a sketch of the garden front. The centre block, which was eventually begun 1776 and took several years to build, is a simple and dignified grey stone house of 2 storeys and 7 bays, with an Ionic doorcase; it harmonises well with Castle’s wings, to which it is joined by curved sweeps with niches. The garden front, also of 7 bays, has a 3 bay central breakfront in which the ground floor windows are set in a blind arcade. The restrained neo-Classical interior plasterwork is said to have been designed by Wyatt, though Beaufort was asked by Bishop Maxwell to design a ceiling for the entrance vestibule 1780. This is a narrow room with a barrel-vaulted ceiling of shallow hexagonal coffering; a door under a large and elegant internal fanlight at its inner end opens into the main hall or saloon in the middle of the garden front, which has a cornice of mutules and elliptical panels above the doors. The principal and secondary stairs lie on either side of this saloon, which also communicates with the drawing room and dining room in the entrance front, on either side of the vestibule. Despite Bishop Maxwell’s hope that the grandeurs of Ardbraccan would discourage scholars and tutors from aspiring to the diocese, his successor was Thomas O’Beirne who had started life as a humble schoolmaster; but who none the less carried out improvements to the outbuildings, advised by Beaufort. The more aristocratic Bishop Nathaniel Alexander carried out grander improvements to the outbuildings in 1820s and 30s. The handsome farm and stable yards are joined by a tunnel under the garden terrace.”
George Montgomery, Bishop of Meath (c. 1566-1621), courtesy of Fonsie Mealy auction 2021.Ardbraccan House, Ardbraccan, Navan, County Meath, C15W8C0 for sale March 2025 courtesy Sherry FitzgeraldArdbraccan House, Ardbraccan, Navan, County Meath, C15W8C0 for sale March 2025 courtesy Sherry Fitzgerald
Ardbraccan House, Ardbraccan, Navan, County Meath, C15W8C0 for sale March 2025 courtesy Sherry Fitzgerald
€10,150,000
11 Bed
7 Bath
2150 m² for sale March 2025 courtesy Sherry Fitzgerald.
Ardbraccan House, Ardbraccan, Navan, County Meath, C15W8C0 for sale March 2025 courtesy Sherry Fitzgerald
Once home to the Lord Bishop of Meath, and with a history going back one thousand years, Ardbraccan House owes its design to one of the most significant architects working in Georgian Ireland. Thanks to award winning restoration works, this Palladian Mansion is presented in ideal condition, while the approx. 101ha (250 acres) of lands include pleasure grounds, gardens, pastures and farmlands and so comprise one of the county’s finest country estates.
Right Reverend Henry Maxwell (d. 1798) Bishop of Meath Irish school courtesy of National Trust Castle WardArdbraccan House, Ardbraccan, Navan, County Meath, C15W8C0 for sale March 2025 courtesy Sherry Fitzgerald
Mansion House, approximately 2,150 sq. m. (23,142 sq. ft.) 4-bedroom guest wing, 2 bedroom staff apartment, 4 guest lodges SPECIAL FEATURES • Approx. 101 Hectares (250 Acres) Country Estate with lands laid out in grazing paddocks and woodlands in the Boyne Valley • Walled garden, specimen trees, pleasure grounds, formal gardens and secluded walking trails • Historic 18th Century Georgian Mansion designed in the Palladian style by a team of architects including Richard Castle, architect of Leinster House • Beautiful and elegant original features throughout, with ideally proportioned reception and entertainment rooms • Full stables, stud farm and horse sport facilities Additional farmyards and coach houses and outbuildings • Excellent lands, ideally maintained and suitable for grazing, sporting pursuits or tillage • Eleven bedrooms in the central main house, four-bedroom guest wing, and two-bedroom staff apartment • Historic church and four additional lodges on site, including two apartments • Located just 5km from Navan • Approx 56km from Dublin International Airport • Approx 12km from Ballyboy Private Airfield • Excellent road network throughout the lands, including tunnels linking farmyards • Lands very well laid out with excellent secure fencing • Heritage award winning restoration of the Main Residence
Ardbraccan House, Ardbraccan, Navan, County Meath, C15W8C0 for sale March 2025 courtesy Sherry Fitzgerald
ARDBRACCAN HOUSE Ardbraccan House joins Castletown and Carton as one of Ireland’s most significant Palladian mansions, taking its design from the hey days of classical Georgian Architecture. Contributed to by many of Europe’s most significant architects and designers, craftspeople and creators, it has been refurbished to award-winning standards. The principal mansion sits at the heart of lands that have been equally well designed, tended and restored over the centuries. A significant two storey over basement centrepiece is flanked by curved linking enfilades leading to a pair of symmetrical guest wings, one of which also houses a set of palatial stables. Reached via a sweeping set of stone steps, Ardbraccan preserves the symmetry so loved by the Georgians by means of a rare and beautiful barrel-vaulted hall, leading through to the wider Great Hall beyond. This feature allows the principal Dining and Drawing rooms three windows apiece, with lavish views across the estate parklands. Both of these gracious rooms have particularly fine neo-Classical plasterwork. The Great Hall has a William Chambers chimney piece, elegant plasterwork and French windows to the garden terrace. It leads to the Library and Study. Adjacent to this, the main Stair Hall has plasterwork to designs by James Wyatt, who also worked on Slane Castle.
Ardbraccan House, Ardbraccan, Navan, County Meath, C15W8C0 for sale March 2025 courtesy Sherry FitzgeraldArdbraccan House, Ardbraccan, Navan, County Meath, C15W8C0 for sale March 2025 courtesy Sherry FitzgeraldArdbraccan House, Ardbraccan, Navan, County Meath, C15W8C0 for sale March 2025 courtesy Sherry FitzgeraldArdbraccan House, Ardbraccan, Navan, County Meath, C15W8C0 for sale March 2025 courtesy Sherry FitzgeraldArdbraccan House, Ardbraccan, Navan, County Meath, C15W8C0 for sale March 2025 courtesy Sherry FitzgeraldArdbraccan House, Ardbraccan, Navan, County Meath, C15W8C0 for sale March 2025 courtesy Sherry FitzgeraldArdbraccan House, Ardbraccan, Navan, County Meath, C15W8C0 for sale March 2025 courtesy Sherry FitzgeraldArdbraccan House, Ardbraccan, Navan, County Meath, C15W8C0 for sale March 2025 courtesy Sherry FitzgeraldArdbraccan House, Ardbraccan, Navan, County Meath, C15W8C0 for sale March 2025 courtesy Sherry Fitzgerald
Also at this level are a servery / kitchen, a pair of cloakrooms and a second staircase. At garden level there is a larger kitchen / breakfast room, gym, laundry room, playroom, pantry, stores, brickfloored beer cellar and wine cellar. The vaulted, country-style garden level kitchen is a particularly beautiful room. Light-filled it has an Aga, granite worktops, wooden-topped island unit, York flagstone floor, and solid timber cabinetry.
Ardbraccan House, Ardbraccan, Navan, County Meath, C15W8C0 for sale March 2025 courtesy Sherry FitzgeraldArdbraccan House, Ardbraccan, Navan, County Meath, C15W8C0 for sale March 2025 courtesy Sherry FitzgeraldArdbraccan House, Ardbraccan, Navan, County Meath, C15W8C0 for sale March 2025 courtesy Sherry FitzgeraldArdbraccan House, Ardbraccan, Navan, County Meath, C15W8C0 for sale March 2025 courtesy Sherry FitzgeraldArdbraccan House, Ardbraccan, Navan, County Meath, C15W8C0 for sale March 2025 courtesy Sherry FitzgeraldArdbraccan House, Ardbraccan, Navan, County Meath, C15W8C0 for sale March 2025 courtesy Sherry FitzgeraldArdbraccan House, Ardbraccan, Navan, County Meath, C15W8C0 for sale March 2025 courtesy Sherry FitzgeraldArdbraccan House, Ardbraccan, Navan, County Meath, C15W8C0 for sale March 2025 courtesy Sherry Fitzgerald
Upstairs are four generous bedroom suites, and two further bedrooms, and on the second floor, you will find a further five bedroom suites. All are beautifully proportioned with views across the gardens and parklands. A kitchenette on the top floor is a wise convenience for both nightcaps and morning coffees.
Ardbraccan House, Ardbraccan, Navan, County Meath, C15W8C0 for sale March 2025 courtesy Sherry FitzgeraldArdbraccan House, Ardbraccan, Navan, County Meath, C15W8C0 for sale March 2025 courtesy Sherry FitzgeraldArdbraccan House, Ardbraccan, Navan, County Meath, C15W8C0 for sale March 2025 courtesy Sherry FitzgeraldArdbraccan House, Ardbraccan, Navan, County Meath, C15W8C0 for sale March 2025 courtesy Sherry FitzgeraldArdbraccan House, Ardbraccan, Navan, County Meath, C15W8C0 for sale March 2025 courtesy Sherry FitzgeraldArdbraccan House, Ardbraccan, Navan, County Meath, C15W8C0 for sale March 2025 courtesy Sherry FitzgeraldArdbraccan House, Ardbraccan, Navan, County Meath, C15W8C0 for sale March 2025 courtesy Sherry FitzgeraldArdbraccan House, Ardbraccan, Navan, County Meath, C15W8C0 for sale March 2025 courtesy Sherry FitzgeraldArdbraccan House, Ardbraccan, Navan, County Meath, C15W8C0 for sale March 2025 courtesy Sherry FitzgeraldArdbraccan House, Ardbraccan, Navan, County Meath, C15W8C0 for sale March 2025 courtesy Sherry Fitzgerald
The two adjoining wings have been beautifully refurbished. To the left is a semi-separate wing with a kitchen, breakfast area, dining area, staff room and laundry room, with one bedroom at ground level, and three generous bedrooms above.
To the right, the ground floor houses stables, a tack room and boot room, while above is a kitchen, living room, two bedrooms and a loft.
Ardbraccan House, Ardbraccan, Navan, County Meath, C15W8C0 for sale March 2025 courtesy Sherry FitzgeraldArdbraccan House, Ardbraccan, Navan, County Meath, C15W8C0 for sale March 2025 courtesy Sherry FitzgeraldArdbraccan House, Ardbraccan, Navan, County Meath, C15W8C0 for sale March 2025 courtesy Sherry FitzgeraldArdbraccan House, Ardbraccan, Navan, County Meath, C15W8C0 for sale March 2025 courtesy Sherry FitzgeraldArdbraccan House, Ardbraccan, Navan, County Meath, C15W8C0 for sale March 2025 courtesy Sherry FitzgeraldArdbraccan House, Ardbraccan, Navan, County Meath, C15W8C0 for sale March 2025 courtesy Sherry FitzgeraldArdbraccan House, Ardbraccan, Navan, County Meath, C15W8C0 for sale March 2025 courtesy Sherry FitzgeraldArdbraccan House, Ardbraccan, Navan, County Meath, C15W8C0 for sale March 2025 courtesy Sherry FitzgeraldArdbraccan House, Ardbraccan, Navan, County Meath, C15W8C0 for sale March 2025 courtesy Sherry Fitzgerald
Guest and staff accommodation throughout the estate is also provided in four lodges altogether. At the main entrance, the Main Gate Lodge offers a one-bedroom residence, providing an elegant and welcoming setting as you enter the estate.
At the rear entrance, the Kells Gate Lodge features two bedrooms, along with its own private parking area and garden, ensuring privacy. Built in the late 1990s, this lodge was designed in a traditional period style to blend with the aesthetic of the estate. Additionally, at the entrance to St. Ultan’s Church, which has been de-consecrated in recent years, stand two beautifully refurbished cottages: The School House and Sexton’s Cottage. Both of these lodges feature two bedrooms and have been meticulously restored, including the refurbishment of original sash windows, and are finished to an very high standard throughout.
Ardbraccan House, Ardbraccan, Navan, County Meath, C15W8C0 for sale March 2025 courtesy Sherry FitzgeraldArdbraccan House, Ardbraccan, Navan, County Meath, C15W8C0 for sale March 2025 courtesy Sherry FitzgeraldArdbraccan House, Ardbraccan, Navan, County Meath, C15W8C0 for sale March 2025 courtesy Sherry FitzgeraldArdbraccan House, Ardbraccan, Navan, County Meath, C15W8C0 for sale March 2025 courtesy Sherry FitzgeraldArdbraccan House, Ardbraccan, Navan, County Meath, C15W8C0 for sale March 2025 courtesy Sherry FitzgeraldArdbraccan House, Ardbraccan, Navan, County Meath, C15W8C0 for sale March 2025 courtesy Sherry FitzgeraldArdbraccan House, Ardbraccan, Navan, County Meath, C15W8C0 for sale March 2025 courtesy Sherry Fitzgerald
RESTORING ARDBRACCAN, A PROJECT OF PASSION While the house and lands at Ardbraccan feel timeless, history marches on, and estates such as this thrive on the care of each succeeding generation. After lying vacant towards the end of the last century, previous owners lavished their attention on a painstaking restoration project. Working to conservation standards, specialist craftspeople used and revived traditional methods to bring the woodwork, plasterwork, stonework, roofs and windows back to their former glory. Where replacements were necessary, items were sourced and salvaged from sister properties in Ireland and the United Kingdom. Chimney pots were re-cast to match the originals, and the roofs were restored using the original slates, copper and leadwork. Specialist painters, stoneworkers and stuccadores congregated, some to apply and pass on their skills, and others to perfect their craft with the masters. Glass was handblown, and work extended right through to the inlay details in mother of pearl, as well as brass, pewter, marble and papier mache. At the same time, services were brought up to twenty first century standards. The project was renowned in Ireland, and in 2002 Ardbraccan was accoladed with An Taisce’s BestRestoration of a Private Building award. More recently, Ardbraccan’s owners have continued this legacy by restoring one of the wings, upgrading the behind-the-scenes services, sensitively revitalising the interiors, and refurbishing some of the lodges. LANDS AT ARDBRACCAN With approximately 101 Hectares (250 Acres) of excellent land, the immediate gardens at Ardbraccan are thought to have been originally designed by Ninian Nevin, who also designed the Iveagh Gardens in Dublin, and those at the home of the President of Ireland, Áras an Uachtaráin. Notable in the immediate vicinity of the main house are pleasure gardens with paths leading to informal gardens, shrubberies, small conservatories and a brick-lined walled garden. This was restored with the expertise of Daphne Shackleton, whose portfolio also includes gardens at Slane Castle, Virginia Park, the historic gardens at Loughcrew, and restorations at Ballintubbert and Baronscourt. These gardens speak of history and time: one Yew tree on the property is thought to be more than 500 years old. Stands of mature trees shelter the house and provide privacy, while opening up to reveal unspoilt views. The pastures and woodlands are separated by a pair of ha-has, adding to the sense of expansiveness. Beyond these are stud-railed paddocks and pastures. The parklands were extensively drained, fenced and replanted with specimen trees in the early 2000s, and the care has been on-going since then. Extensive yard and farm buildings include Palladian style yards, with stables, coach houses, a restored clock tower, lofted hay stores, a timber-panelled tack room, and horse walker. Two of these yards are linked by an underground tunnel. Further farm buildings are south, beyond a private sunken garden. These include a walled orchard, bell tower, grain lofts and a dovecote. A more-modern farmyard is screened within a former walled garden. There is also an historic church, now deconsecrated, on site. The estate is set within a single block, with the exclusion of a minor public road beyond the immediate core. Offering unparalleled privacy, and huge opportunity, the estate and lands at Ardbraccan give extraordinary scope for country and sporting pursuits, equestrian enterprises and farming. They also comprise an idyllic retreat in The Royal County, in a welcoming community, within easy reach of Ireland’s capital, and Dublin Airport, connecting you to the world, just half an hour away.
Ardbraccan House, Ardbraccan, Navan, County Meath, C15W8C0 for sale March 2025 courtesy Sherry FitzgeraldArdbraccan House, Ardbraccan, Navan, County Meath, C15W8C0 for sale March 2025 courtesy Sherry FitzgeraldArdbraccan House, Ardbraccan, Navan, County Meath, C15W8C0 for sale March 2025 courtesy Sherry FitzgeraldArdbraccan House, Ardbraccan, Navan, County Meath, C15W8C0 for sale March 2025 courtesy Sherry FitzgeraldArdbraccan House, Ardbraccan, Navan, County Meath, C15W8C0 for sale March 2025 courtesy Sherry FitzgeraldArdbraccan House, Ardbraccan, Navan, County Meath, C15W8C0 for sale March 2025 courtesy Sherry FitzgeraldArdbraccan House, Ardbraccan, Navan, County Meath, C15W8C0 for sale March 2025 courtesy Sherry FitzgeraldArdbraccan House, Ardbraccan, Navan, County Meath, C15W8C0 for sale March 2025 courtesy Sherry FitzgeraldArdbraccan House, Ardbraccan, Navan, County Meath, C15W8C0 for sale March 2025 courtesy Sherry FitzgeraldArdbraccan House, Ardbraccan, Navan, County Meath, C15W8C0 for sale March 2025 courtesy Sherry FitzgeraldArdbraccan House, Ardbraccan, Navan, County Meath, C15W8C0 for sale March 2025 courtesy Sherry FitzgeraldArdbraccan House, Ardbraccan, Navan, County Meath, C15W8C0 for sale March 2025 courtesy Sherry FitzgeraldArdbraccan House, Ardbraccan, Navan, County Meath, C15W8C0 for sale March 2025 courtesy Sherry FitzgeraldArdbraccan House, Ardbraccan, Navan, County Meath, C15W8C0 for sale March 2025 courtesy Sherry FitzgeraldArdbraccan House, Ardbraccan, Navan, County Meath, C15W8C0 for sale March 2025 courtesy Sherry FitzgeraldArdbraccan House, Ardbraccan, Navan, County Meath, C15W8C0 for sale March 2025 courtesy Sherry Fitzgerald
Detached double-pile seven-bay two-storey over raised basement central block, built c.1776, flanked by quadrant walls to five-bay two-storey kitchen and stable wings, built c.1735. Former residence of the Bishops of Meath, now in use as a private house. Hipped slate roof to main block with ashlar chimney stacks. Hipped slate roof to flanking blocks with central chimney stacks. Ashlar Ardbraccan limestone walls with string course and a carved limestone cornice. Rear elevation with central three bays advanced with full length square-headed window openings to central block with ashlar limestone reveals, tooled limestone sills and timber sash windows. Laundry house, granary, outbuildings, icehouse and walled gardens to rear.
Appraisal
Ardbraccan House and demesne occupy an historically important site as it has been the seat of the Bishops of Meath since the fourteenth century. It has archaeological sites within the demesne including a holy well and two mounds. Architecturally the house is significant as Richard Castle designed the kitchen and stable blocks while the central block appears to be a culmination of the designs of Thomas Cooley and James Wyatt, together with amateur architect the Rev. Daniel A. Beaufort. The house displays the finest construction materials, such as Ardbraccan limestone and high quality fixtures and fittings. The house is set in mature pasture land with formal gardens and walled gardens.
Ardbraccan, County Meath, courtesy National Inventory.Ardbraccan, County Meath, courtesy National Inventory.Ardbraccan, County Meath, courtesy National Inventory.Ardbraccan, County Meath, courtesy National Inventory.Ardbraccan, County Meath, courtesy National Inventory.Ardbraccan, County Meath, courtesy National Inventory.Ardbraccan, County Meath, courtesy National Inventory.
Casey, Christine and Alistair Rowan. The Buildings of Ireland: North Leinster. Penguin Books, London, 1993.
p. 113. “The house was begun in the 1730s for Bishop Arthur Price, to designs by Richard Castle, who clearly envisaged a typical Palladian house with a large central block joined by curved links to kitchen and stable wings. When Price was raised to the Archbishopric of Cashel, building activity ceased at Ardbraccan; only the wings had been completed, and they served as accommodation for successive, and presumably less worldly, bishops until the 1770s. They survive today as rectangular four-bay, two-storey blocks with hipped roofs and central chimneystacks. The architecture is simple: sash windows, twelve-pane below and six-above, with a continuous string-course between. The S kitchen wing, now remodelled internally, had originally two-storey kitchen with a gallery or walkway to facilitate efficient supervision. The N stable wing, similar to Castle’s work at Strokestown in Co Roscommon, and to other stable blocks by him, is groin-vaulted throughout, the vaults carried on Tuscan columns set on the deep round bases that are characteristic of Castle’s architecture and derive ultimately from the bases of the minor order of Palladio’s basilica at Vincenza.
“The decision to complete the house was made by Henry Maxwell, a younger son of the first Lord Farnham and Bishop of Meath for 32 years from 1766 to 1798. In 1773 he obtained a preliminary design for the central block from James Wyatt. This shows a simple seven-bay, two-storey block above a basement, astylar and studiously understated, with regular sash windows, embellished only by architraves at ground-floor level, an Ionic doorcase and string-courses. The existing house, a reticent seven-bay two-storey building of grey Ardbraccan limestone, although almost certainly not by Wyatt, differs little from his conception, and both Thomas Cooley and the Rev. Daniel A. Beaufort, the amateur architect who provided the later and more detailed designs for the house, were undoubtedly guided by it… [p. 114].Cooley’s plans are restrained and nearer to Wyatt’s than Beaufort’s, which are often fussily grandiose and old-fashioned. Wyatt left no model for the garden front, proposals for this elevation were less inhibited. What was built is a simple seven-bay façade – the three centre bays advanced and expressed as full-length windows on the ground floor, set in round-headed relieving arches, a design close to Cooley’s drawings of 1775, though they lack the rather gauche arches of the design as built.
“In one sense the plan of Ardbraccan follows the traditional double-pile layout: a hall flanked by public rooms, with the principal and service stairs in the middle on each side and three rooms at the rear. What is different is that the usual large square hall is here placed in the centre at the rear, behind a narrow vaulted vestibule, an arrangement which first appears in Cooley’s plans of 1773 and 1774 and permits the rooms on either side to be large rectangular spaces, each with three windows, instead of the more common near square plan.
“The ground plan for the unsigned and unexecuted Adamesque design was the most unusual and up-to-date of all the proposals: a rectangular hall, elliptical stairhall and circular saloon, all on a central axis flanked on each side by dining and drawing rooms, parlour and library.
“Internal features suggest the close involvement of Cooley: the square, ample proportions, the free yet restrained treatment of anthemion and foliate motifs to the joinery and plasterwork, particularly the bay-leaf garlands in the dining room and the simplified – and freely treated – mutule cornice in the stairhall. An elegant finishing touch is the curved inner edge of the mahogany doors throughout the ground floor, all of which operate on a swivel rather than a hinge, a measure of the absolute refinement of late C18 building. Ardbraccan is a sophisticated house, cool and reticent rather than graceful, and more elegant than endearing.”
Ardbraccan, County Meath, “This formal dining room features panels on the wall painted in a delicate acqua tone and a large dining table ” copyright Luke White/The Interior ArchiveLW_268_18
Ardbraccan County Meath copyright Luke White The Interior Archive, dining room LW_268_13
This formal living room is furnished with an Aubusson carpet and a formal arrangement of sofas and armchairs. Ardbraccan House, Copyright Luke White/The Interior Archive Ltd, LW_268_06
The comfortable library is decorated in warm shades of red. Ardbraccan, Copyright Luke White/The Interior Archive Ltd, LW_268_05
The gracious entrance hall features a drum table and walls painted a neo-classical grey, Ardbraccan, Copyright Luke White/The Interior Archive Ltd, LW_268_26
Ardbraccan County Meath, This landing is furnished with a mahogany period sideboard and a pair of matching table lamps and armchairs ,copyright Luke White The Interior ArchiveLW_268_15
The master bedroom is decorated with a formal portrait above the fireplace, Ardbraccan County Meath copyright Luke White The Interior Archive , the master bedroom LW_268_14
Record of Protected Structures:
Detached double-pile seven-bay two-storey over raised
basement central block, built c.1776, flanked by quadrant
walls to five-bay two-storey kitchen and stable wings, built
Ardbraccan House Liscarton. Bishop’s Palace. Historic house which served as the residence of the Church of Ireland Lord Bishop of Meath. residence of a bishop for over one thousand years, first of the Bishop of Ardbraccan and later following the merger of many small dioceses into the Diocese of Meath as the residence of the Bishop of Meath. By the Middle Ages a large Tudor house, containing its own church, known as St. Mary’s, stood on the site. 1734Bishop Arthur Price (1678-1752) decided to replace the decaying mansion with a new Georgian residence. Initially the two wings of the house were built, before the main four-bay two-storey block of the house was completed in the 1770s by Bishop Maxwell. It was partly designed by the acclaimed 18th-century German architect Richard Castle (also known as Richard Cassels) was the architect of many notable Irish buildings including Leinster House in Dublin.Ardbraccan House and demesne occupy an historically important site as it has been the seat of the Bishops of Meath since the fourteenth century. It has archaeological sites within the demesne including a holy well and two mounds. Architecturally the house is significant as Richard Castle designed the kitchen and stable blocks while the central block appears to be a culmination of the designs of Thomas Cooley and James Wyatt, together with amateur architect the Rev. Daniel A. Beaufort. The new bishop’s palace became famous for the quality of its architecture. Funded by government grants and locally paid tithes, the Church of Ireland bishop held court from the mansion, which was the centre of a large agricultural demesne. However the disestablishment of the Church of Ireland in 1871, following the previous scrapping of Roman Catholic-paid tithes, fatally weakened the economic survival of the bishop’s estate, which was left totally reliant on the small local Church of Ireland community, and in 1885 the bishop sold the estate and house, moving to a smaller mansion nearby (which Church of Ireland continued to live until 1958 and which was then sold to a Roman Catholic religious institute, the Holy Ghost Fathers). Ardbraccan House was bought by Hugh Law, the son of the Lord Chancellor of Ireland and remained in the ownership of his descendants until sold by Colonel Owen Foster in 1985 to Tara Mines who used it as a guest residence for visiting businessmen. In the late 1990s the house once again changed hands. The new owners invested large sums to completely restore the mansion. In 2002 the restoration of Ardbraccan House won the An Taisce Best Restoration of a Private Building award. It is now open to the public. In the early 2000s, the County Meath planning authority approved plans to build a major new motorway linking Clonee and Kells through part of the house’s historic demesne. The Irish Georgian Society and environmentalists criticised the proposal. The motorway would also pass through the pristine parkland of a religious seminary called Dalgan Park and close by the historic Hill of Tara, seat of the ancient Árd Rí na hÉireann (High King of Ireland). The motorway is currently (2008) being built.
Ardbraccan was the seat of the diocese of Ardbraccan founded by St. Breaccan and St. Ultan. In the middle ages Ardbraccan became the seat for the Protestant bishops of Meath and a large house was erected with a chapel dedicated to St. Mary. The bishops of Meath were interred in the churchyard at Ardbraccan. The house was replaced by a Georgian building in the eighteenth century. The kitchen and stable wings were completed first in the mid 1730s and then the central block was erected about 1776. The two wings were designed by Richard Castle, the pre-eminent architect working in Ireland at the time while the central block was an amalgam of the designs of Thomas Cooley and James Wyatt, together with amateur Navan architect, the Rev. Daniel A. Beaufort. The house was constructed with limestone from the nearby White Quarry. The house is set in mature pasture land with formal gardens and walled gardens. There is a courtyard of domestic and agricultural buildings to the north of the house. The farm and stables are joined to the house by a tunnel under the garden terrace. A dome-shaped icehouse, dating from about 1800, is located to the south of the outbuilding complex. A gable fronted gate lodge was constructed about 1776 when the main house was completed. Known as Ardbraccan House or Bishop‟s Palace the house was the residence of the bishops of Meath until 1885, after which it became a private residence.
In 1734 Bishop Arthur Price decided to replace the old Tudor house with a new residence and commissioned Richard Castle to prepare plans. Arthur Price had been vicar of Celbridge and resided at Oakley Park. Here his steward at Oakley Park was Richard Guinness, who was acclaimed for his brewing talents. Richard‟s son, Arthur, went on to establish the Guinness Brewery in Dublin in 1759. While the new house was in the process of construction Price was elevated to Archbishop of Cashel and construction came to a halt. The kitchen wing was used as the bishop‟s residence for more than thirty years until Bishop Henry Maxwell decided to complete the building. Bishop Maxwell was a younger son of the 1st Lord Farnham of Cavan. James Wyatt, Thomas Cooley and Rev. Daniel Beaufort of Navan drew up plans and it would appear that while Wyatt‟s plans were used but Beaufort and Cooley also influenced the final house. Beaufort attended the laying of the foundation stone but had to leave early due to a toothache. Beaufort described the house as being “in a style of superior elegance, and yet with such simplicity as does equal honour to his lordship’s taste and liberality.‟ Maxwell is said to have boasted that he would build a palace so grand that no scholar or tutor would dare live in it. Bishop Maxwell also constructed the nearby Ardbracan church about 1777. The Bishops of Meath resided at Ardbraccan during the late eighteenth and first half of the nineteenth centuries. Rev. James Singer became bishop in 1852 but resided mostly in Dublin and the house at Ardbraccan was shut up in the 1860s. In 1876 Rev. William Plunket became bishop of Meath and he resolved to sell Ardbraccan as the costs of upkeep were too large for a now disestablished Church of Ireland.
The bishops moved to a smaller house in the locality, Bishop’s court, now An Tobar. Bishop Plunkett sold the house in 1885 to Hugh Law, son of the Lord Chancellor of Ireland. At the time Fr. Kearney P.P. Bohermeen suggested purchasing the Bishop‟s Palace as a seminary but his bishop did not agree with the suggestion. The house remained in the Law family until it passed by marriage to the Foster family. In 1985 Colonel Owen Foster sold Ardbraccan House to Tara Mines who used it as an occasional guest residence for visiting businessmen. The Fosters moved to the old schoolhouse at the entrance to the churchyard and were noted for their great care of the grounds of the church. In the late 1990s the house was once again sold.
Copied from meath-roots.com”
The Irish Aesthete: Buildings of Ireland, Lost and Found. Robert O’Byrne. The Lilliput Press, Dublin, 2024.
Ardbraccan, County Meath. January 2021
“For many centuries, Ardbraccan was the seat of the Church of Ireland Bishop of Meath. In 1734, following his appointment to the diocese, Arthur Price embarked on building a new residence for which one of his predecessors, John Evans, had left the sum of £1,000. Designs for a Palladian house were provided by Richard Castle and work began on the project but then halted in 1744 when Price was transferred to the archdiocese of Cashel. By this date, the wings of the building had both been completed and one of these, intended to house the kitchen, was converted into a residence for Price’s successors. Only following Henry Maxwell’s appointment as Bishop of Meath in 1766 was it decided to finish work on the site. In the early 1770s new designs were sought from three architects, not least James Wyatt, based in London. Thomas Cooley, then also working for Richard Robinson, Archbishop of Armagh, likewise produced plans, as did local rector and amateur architect, the Rev. Daniel Beaufort. The finished house, in the then-fashionable cool neoclassical style, is an amalgam of all three men’s proposals. The garden front of the main block… is of seven bays with a three-bay central breakfront, the ground floor windows set in a blind arcade. Ardbraccan remained the seat of Maxwell’s ancestors until after the disestablishment of the Church of Ireland in 1869 and has been owned by a number of private individuals since that date.”
Right Reverend Henry Maxwell (d. 1798) Bishop of Meath Irish school courtesy of National Trust Castle Ward.
Palladian is a much-abused term in this country, frequently applied to buildings which visibly have no link with Palladio but which happen to be old. Rather than attempt to re-write an already admirable summary, I here quote from the Encyclopaedia Britannica: ‘Palladianism, style of architecture based on the writings and buildings of the humanist and theorist from Vicenza, Andrea Palladio (1508–80), perhaps the greatest architect of the latter 16th century and certainly the most influential. Palladio felt that architecture should be governed by reason and by the principles of classical antiquity as it was known in surviving buildings and in the writings of the 1st-century-bc architect and theorist Vitruvius. Palladianism bespeaks rationality in its clarity, order, and symmetry, while it also pays homage to antiquity in its use of classical forms and decorative motifs.’ Palladianism as we see it in Ireland emerged in the early 18th century, heavily influenced by English practitioners and theorists such as Colen Campbell whose Vitruvius Britannicus was published in 1715, and his patron Richard Boyle, 3rd Earl of Burlington (and also, let it not be forgotten, 4th Earl of Cork, since he was a large landowner in this country). The first indisputably Irish Palladian house is Castletown, County Kildare on which work began c.1722 with its facade designed by Florentine architect Alessandro Galilei (1691-1737), today best known for his work at the basilica of San Giovanni in Laterano in Rome.
One aspect of Palladianism often overlooked is its functionality: seduced by the beauty of the overall design we are inclined to forget these buildings were intended to serve a practical purpose. In the 16th century many of Palladio’s clients were wealthy Venetians who owned country estates on which they wished to spend the summer months. The estates were working farms, and the houses Palladio created at their centre reflect this reality. Because of his admiration for classical design and the importance of symmetry, rather than permit a variety of stand-alone farm buildings scattered across the site as had customarily been the case, he consolidated them into a single unit. Thus the archetypal Palladian villa is dominated by a central residence with a facade inspired by Roman temples (hence the frequency of pedimented porticos). On either side of this block run a series of lower wings symmetrical in appearance and practical in purpose. Behind their calm and orderly exteriors a quantity of different activities would take place, whether the preparation of meals or the storage of grain, the housing of livestock or the washing of clothes. There would be stables and dovecots, piggeries and chicken coops, all of them part of a single harmonious unit. The concept was both simple and yet sophisticated, rational yet handsome. In the late 19th century the American architect Louis Sullivan proclaimed ‘form ever follows function.’ Palladio’s villas demonstrate the truth of this maxim. As his influence spread beyond Italy, so too did his designs and the practical philosophy that underlay them. This approach found a particularly warm reception in Ireland where from the late 17th century onwards landowners sought to bring order to their estates and to create new residences at their core.
One such estate was Ardbraccan, County Meath. This had been the seat of a bishopric for over a thousand years and in the 16th century a large Tudor house called St Mary’s stood there. However by the early 18th century the old residence had become so dilapidated that a new house was deemed essential. In 1734 then-Bishop of Meath Arthur Price made a start on the project but within a few years he had been transferred to the Archbishopric of Cashel (where incidentally he was responsible for unroofing the old cathedral, seemingly because he found his carriage could not easily be driven to the top of the hill on which it stands). It would be another 30 years before the work initiated by Price was brought to completion, but the two wings of the building he commissioned were completed before his departure. The architect employed for this task was Richard Castle, whose personal history remains somewhat shrouded in mystery. He is believed to have grown up in Dresden, where his father, an English-born Jew named Joseph Riccardo, served as Director of Munitions and Mines to Friedrich Augustus, Elector of Saxony and King of Poland. By 1725 Castle, sometimes called Cassels, had come to England where he is likely to have encountered Lord Burlington and his circle of Palladians. Three years later he moved to Ireland, supposedly at the request of Sir Gustavus Hume, to design Castle Hume, County Fermanagh. Not long after Castle began working as a draughtsman for Sir Edward Lovett Pearce on the plans of the new Parliament House then being built in Dublin. Following Pearce’s death in 1733 Castle took over some of his unfinished commissions and also became the most notable designer of country houses in Ireland. He was, therefore, the obvious choice when Bishop Price sought an architect for the new residence at Ardbraccan.
Understandably visitors to Ardbraccan focus their attention on the main house, finished in the 1770s to the designs of no less than three architects: James Wyatt, Thomas Cooley and the Rev. Daniel Beaufort. As a result, the rest of the structure receives less notice, even though it offers one of the purest examples of Palladianism in Ireland. To north and south of the central block run arcaded quadrants that link to two-storey, five-bay wings, their entrances facing one another across the house’s forecourt. The facade presented to the world is one of order and equilibrium, harmony and proportion. In classic Palladian fashion Castle provided facilities for a wealth of complementary domestic and agricultural activities, all housed in splendidly constructed outbuildings that remain intact. These include stables and carriage houses, kitchens and laundry yard, pump yard and slaughter house, piggeries, granary, dovecotes, cattle sheds and fowl yards, accommodation for the large community of workers who engaged in diverse activities, and rising above them all a clock tower to ensure time was kept on the day’s tasks. One of the pleasures of these buildings is the quality of their finish, a tribute to Irish workmanship at the time. It is worth noting the way different sections interact; the mixture of cut and uncut stone within the stable block to the north, for example, is surprisingly successful. On this side of the house a Gibbsian door permitted the bishop to descend to the yard via a flight of handsome steps, and then climb another short sequence to the mounting block for his horse. Inside the wing itself look at the superlative groin vaulting in the stables, the vaults carried on solid Tuscan column. Elsewhere the interplay of curved wall and staircase is another delight. These were all practical spaces, intended to ensure the estate operated smoothly and would be almost self-sufficient. Nonetheless as much attention was paid to their design and construction as to the episcopal residence. Here are the tenets of Palladianism put into practice and showing their mettle.
Pastoral scene with country house as backdrop: Ardbraccan, County Meath. The central block dates from the 1770s when it was constructed for the then-Bishop of Meath, Henry Maxwell. Visiting the place two centuries ago, the English agronomist and politician John Christian Curwen wrote that Ardbraccan ‘is a modern edifice, erected by the former Bishop on a plan of the late Dr Beaufort; which unites much internal comfort with great external beauty and simple elegance, well designed and appropriated for the residence of so considerable a dignitary of the church. The grounds are laid out with great taste, and the luxuriant growth of the trees and shrubs affords incontestable evidence of the fertility of the soil.’
A moment when the Virginia Creeper perfectly matches the colour of the door: the façade of Ardbraccan, County Meath. Dating from the late 1760s the building has a complex history, since Henry Maxwell, Bishop of Meath commissioned designs from three architects: James Wyatt, Thomas Cooley and Daniel Beaufort, the last of these also being a local Anglican clergyman. In the end the façade reflects elements of all their proposals, although it is closest to that of Wyatt.
A detail of the plaster frieze running around the walls of the staircase hall at Ardbraccan, County Meath. We know that in 1773 James Wyatt produced drawings for the centre block of the house. These were commissioned by Henry Maxwell, Bishop of Meath whose brother Barry Maxwell, Earl of Farnham would likewise employ Wyatt to design a new house for him in County Cavan a few years later. In the event, the architect’s plans for Ardbraccan were modified to incorporate elements from schemes by both Thomas Cooley and Daniel Beaufort, the latter a gifted amateur who was also Rector of nearby Navan. However, the staircase hall’s plasterwork is distinctly Wyatt’esque and so it is surely not too fanciful to imagine that at least this part of his proposal was executed without intervention from other hands.
A businessman from Maryland is the latest American to buy an Irish country estate, in this case Ardbraccan, a Palladian pile partly designed by Richard Castle, the classical-style architect who also created Leinster House
for sale, bought 2013
9 May 2013 by Jack Fagan
A wealthy American businessman has availed of the sharp fall in the price of country estates here to buy one of Ireland’s finest Palladian mansions on the Ardbraccan Estate in Navan, Co Meath.
Charles Noell, who co-founded JMI Equity in Baltimore, Maryland, has paid close to the asking price of €4.9 million for the 18th century mansion and 120 acres of formal gardens, ancient woodlands and parkland about three miles outside Navan.
Noell was underbidder last February for the 420-acre Dowth Hall estate on the river Boyne between Slane and Drogheda which was bought by a local businessman for €5 million.
Noell is the latest American to invest in a large estate in Ireland following the purchase of Humewood Castle in Co Wicklow, and Woodhouse Estate in Co Waterford, in recent months by American businessmen.
Noell is best known as president of the family investment company of John J Moores, founder of BMC Software, who last year attracted international attention when he sold the San Diego Padres baseball team for €800 million.
George Windsor-Clive, an international equestrian property agent, who advised Noell, said his client enjoys an interest in bloodstock and racing, and he expects that he will breed horses at Ardbraccan.
The marketing campaign here was handled by Pat O’Hagan of Savills who said that when the “overseas buyer” indicated his interest in acquiring the Navan estate the deal was wrapped up in record time and the sale closed last Friday.
Ardbraccan was built in the mid-1700s as the palace of the bishops of Meath. It is now a vast home, extending to 2,150 sq m (23,142 sq ft), and includes a stunning range of reception rooms and 15 bedrooms, six of which are suites.
Like many other great mansions, Ardbraccan, partly designed by Richard Castle, conforms to the classical style of a central block joined to subordinate wings by curved linking walls inset with niches.
riginally housing butlers’ and housekeepers’ rooms and kitchens, the south wing now provides well-proportioned guest accommodation including three reception rooms and four bedrooms.
The north wing is mainly used for staff accommodation and a farm office.
The central block, built after the two wings, is a simple and dignified grey stone house of two storeys over basement and seven bays with an Ionic doorcase.
When the last owner, property investor David Maher, acquired Ardbraccan, the property had been unoccupied for almost 20 years and was in need of considerable attention. Over four years the house, yards, gardens and grounds were restored by specialist craftsmen using traditional methods and, where necessary, salvaged materials from Ireland and the UK.
Chimney pots were specially cast to match the originals and roofs recovered with original slates, and worked in copper and lead. Internal fittings were also restored and replaced and parklands were fenced and replanted with specimen trees.
One of the unusual features of the house is a narrow entrance vestibule with a barrel-vaulted ceiling. This allows the principal rooms on either side to be large rectangular spaces, each with three windows looking out on to the spectacular gardens.
rdbraccan differs from most layouts in that it has a large square hall at the rear of the house behind the entrance vestibule. The Great Hall has French doors leading to the rear garden. This also connects directly with the drawingroom and the diningroom. The principal and secondary stairs are on either side of the Great Hall.
Like the rest of the house, the basement has also been tastefully restored and includes a wide range of facilities including a kitchen, wine cellar, pantry, laundry room, playroom and billiard room. And of course a boot room. Where would you be without one?
SEVERAL small bishoprics gradually coalesced into one See, which received the name of Meath, at the end of the 12th century.
In 1568, the bishopric of Clonmacnoise was incorporated with it by act of parliament.
It extends from the sea to the River Shannon, over part of six counties, viz. Meath, Westmeath, King’s County (Offaly), Cavan, Longford, and Kildare.
From east to west it extends 80 miles; and in breadth, about 25 at a medium.
The Lord Bishop of Meath traditionally took precedence next to the four archbishops (Armagh, Dublin, Cashel, Tuam), and has been styled Most Reverend.
The other bishops, excepting only the Lord Bishop of Kildare, took precedence according to the date of their consecration.
Entrance Front
ARDBRACCAN HOUSE, near Navan, County Meath, is a large Palladian mansion house which served from the 1770s until 1885 as the seat of the Lord Bishop of Meath.
By the Middle Ages a large Tudor house, containing its own church, known as St. Mary’s, stood on the site.
Bishop Evans left money for the building of a new residence here early in the 18th century.
His successor, Bishop Downes, came here with Dean Swift to lay out the new ground; though it was not until 1734 that Bishop Price (1678-1752) decided to replace the decaying mansion with a new Georgian residence.
Initially the two wings of the house were built, before the main four-bay two-storey block of the house was completed in the 1770s by Bishop Maxwell.
It was partly designed by the acclaimed 18th-century German architect Richard Castle (also known as Richard Cassels).
Garden Front
When the two two-storey, five-bay wings had been completed, Bishop Price was translated to the archbishopric of Cashel.
For the following thirty years, succeeding bishops did nothing about building the centre block, but resided in one of the wings, using the other for guests.
It wasn’t till the early 1770s that Bishop Maxwell, a younger son of the 1st Baron Farnham, decided to complete the house.
This prelate boasted that he would erect a palace so grand that no scholar or tutor would dare inhabit it.
The centre block, which was eventually begun in 1776, took a number of years to complete.
It comprises two storeys and seven bays, with an Ionic doorcase.
This block complements the wings with curved sweeps and niches.
The garden front has a three-bay central breakfront.
The interior plasterwork is Neo-Classical in style.
Bishop Alexandercarried out more elaborate renovations to the outbuildings in the 1820s and 1830s.
THE disestablishment of the Church of Ireland in 1871 fatally weakened the economic survival of the bishops’ estate, which was left totally reliant on the small local Church of Ireland community.
In 1885, the Church of Ireland sold the estate and house.
The bishop moved to a smaller mansion nearby (until 1958, when it was sold to a Catholic religious institute, the Holy Ghost Fathers).
Ardbraccan House was bought by Hugh Law, the son of the Lord Chancellor of Ireland and remained in the ownership of his descendants until sold by Colonel Owen Foster in 1985 to Tara Mines who used it as a guest residence for visiting businessmen.
In the late 1990s, Ardbraccan once again changed hands.
The new owners invested large sums to restore the mansion house.
Ardbraccan was the seat of the diocese of Ardbraccan founded by St. Breaccan and St. Ultan. In the middle ages Ardbraccan became the seat for the Protestant bishops of Meath and a large house was erected with a chapel dedicated to St. Mary. The bishops of Meath were interred in the churchyard at Ardbraccan.
The house was replaced by a Georgian building in the eighteenth century. The kitchen and stable wings were completed first in the mid 1730s and then the central block was erected about 1776. The two wings were designed by Richard Castle, the pre-eminent architect working in Ireland at the time while the central block was an amalgam of the designs of Thomas Cooley and James Wyatt, together with amateur Navan architect, the Rev. Daniel A. Beaufort. The house was constructed with limestone from the nearby White Quarry. The house is set in mature pasture land with formal gardens and walled gardens. There is a courtyard of domestic and agricultural buildings to the north of the house. The farm and stables are joined to the house by a tunnel under the garden terrace. A dome-shaped icehouse, dating from about 1800, is located to the south of the outbuilding complex. A gable fronted gate lodge was constructed about 1776 when the main house was completed.
Known as Ardbraccan House or Bishop’s Palace the house was the residence of the bishops of Meath until 1885, after which it became a private residence.
In 1734 Bishop Arthur Price decided to replace the old Tudor house with a new residence and commissioned Richard Castle to prepare plans. Arthur Price had been vicar of Celbridge and resided at Oakley Park. Here his steward at Oakley Park was Richard Guinness, who was acclaimed for his brewing talents. Richard’s son, Arthur, went on to establish the Guinness Brewery in Dublin in 1759. While the new house was in the process of construction Price was elevated to Archbishop of Cashel and construction came to a halt. The kitchen wing was used as the bishop’s residence for more than thirty years until Bishop Henry Maxwell decided to complete the building. Bishop Maxwell was a younger son of the 1st Lord Farnham of Cavan. James Wyatt, Thomas Cooley and Rev. Daniel Beaufort of Navan drew up plans and it would appear that while Wyatt’s plans were used but Beaufort and Cooley also influenced the final house. Beaufort attended the laying of the foundation stone but had to leave early due to a toothache. Beaufort described the house as being ‘in a style of superior elegance, and yet with such simplicity as does equal honour to his lordship’s taste and liberality.’ Maxwell is said to have boasted that he would build a palace so grand that no scholar or tutor would dare live in it. Bishop Maxwell also constructed the nearby Ardbracan church about 1777.
The Bishops of Meath resided at Ardbraccan during the late eighteenth and first half of the nineteenth centuries.
Rev. James Singer became bishop in 1852 but resided mostly in Dublin and the house at Ardbraccan was shut up in the 1860s. In 1876 Rev. William Plunket became bishop of Meath and he resolved to sell Ardbraccan as the costs of upkeep were too large for a now disestablished Church of Ireland. The bishops moved to a smaller house in the locality, Bishop’s court, now An Tobar.
Bishop Plunkett sold the house in 1885 to Hugh Law, son of the Lord Chancellor of Ireland. At the time Fr. Kearney P.P. Bohermeen suggested purchasing the Bishop’s Palace as a seminary but his bishop did not agree with the suggestion.
The house remained in the Law family until it passed by marriage to the Foster family. In 1985 Colonel Owen Foster sold Ardbraccan House to Tara Mines who used it as an occasional guest residence for visiting businessmen. The Fosters moved to the old schoolhouse at the entrance to the churchyard and were noted for their great care of the grounds of the church.
Abbeyleix House, County Laois, photograph courtesy of Colliers.Abbeyleix House, County Laois, photograph courtesy of Colliers.Abbeyleix House, County Laois, photograph courtesy of Colliers.
featured in Great Irish Houses. Forewards by Desmond FitgGerald, Desmond Guinness. IMAGE Publications, 2008.
Designed by James Wyatt for Lord Knapton, later the 1st Viscount de Vesci, building began in 1773. Built between 1773 and 1778, it was a typical plain Georgian box. By the mid-19th century the De Vesci’s had grown wealthier and wanted the house to look somewhat grander.
Many of the adornments – such as architraves and large ballast rails – were added in the 1840s to the design of Thomas Wyatt, a nephew of James Wyatt, added these adornments. The De Vesci family retained the house until 1994 when the present owner Sir David Davies acquired the property and began the latest phase of restoration.
When David Davies acquired the house in 1994, he employed John O’Connell, one of Ireland’s foremost conservation architects, to restore the building.
Sir David was determined to preserve and reuse all the original architectural elements, which included acquiring at auction the 18th century original window sashes. Fortunately, the Penrose Wyatt Collection fo Drawings in the National Library of Ireland had office drawings relating to the gold room/saloon of Abbey Leix so they could be accurately returned to their 18th century states.
One of the main decisions taken by Sir David was to alter a wing built in the mid 19th century to the west of the building. The original idea had been to drive the house more towards the west, with the addition of a new dining room, large library and billiard room beyond. This was never completed. Today it has become a wonderful and sympathetic addition to the main house. “It was a horrible concrete looking thing with three chimneys,” says Sir David. “John O’Connell was asked to make it look sympathetic with the rest of the house. I now call the finished product the John O’Connell wing!”
The nearby courtyard and 19th century dairy have been retained, as has the area where carriages and service stores for the house were kept. What appears to be a single storey structure from the outside has two floors inside. It was dug out so its height would not impact on the lines of the main house. On the opposite side of the main house is an unusually short extension of the basement to the first floor. A mezzanine level allows movement between each floor. The grand forecourt, which has been executed to an Italianate design, provides a tremendous podium for the house to sit upon.
Inside, the entrance hall is very much the heart of the house. The hall floor, unlike many 18th century properties, is not Portland stone but French limestone. The fireplace, which is not original and dated earlier than the house, came from a De Vesci house in London. The screen columns are all original, while the stuccowork is a fine example of neo-Classical design. Great mahogany doors, many with original locks and handles, lead from the hall.
As was often the fashion at the time in the early 20th century, the entrance hall doubled as a sitting room in winter months, and large curtains across the entrance door helped retain the heat. Sir David has returned the hall to what it is likely to have looked like in 1770. There are two great Irish tables – one from 1720 is pine, painted to look like ebony, while the other is a slightly later piece, dating to 1750. A set of four chairs, designed by Wyatt for Dunsandle House in Co Galway, were bought from Russborough. The stone colouring is true to 18th century form. Indeed, the colouring is authentic throughout with the dining room primarily cream and the drawing room a plaster or rose pink colour. The original dining room was a long way from the kitchen ans so now its primary purpose is as a music room and sir David has held a number of concerts in it.
[p. 39] The fireplace here is shown on early drawings for the room and it is fascinating to compare the vision for this great neo-classical room with the reality. The room has, however, been subjected to two great upheavals. The first was a fire in the 1950s but the second – and far more serious – occurred in 1996 during the restoration.
[picture credit: The front of the house shows the refacing, which took place in the 19th century. The façade is rendered and the finish gives the impression of sandstone. ]
[grissailes by de Gree in the music room which was originally designed as a dining room]
“A smouldering fire, confined to this room and the one adjacent, resulted in the doors leading to the second suite of rooms being badly burned. The ceilings in both rooms also had to be taken down, cleaned and restored. As much of the ceiling design is executed in gold, it was resistant to the worse of the fire damage. Cliveden Conservation, a company specialising in restoration and renewal of plasterwork and marble fireplaces, restored the ceilings of the two great rooms after the fire, but also copied and carved the original Wyatt fireplace in the drawing room which was so badly damaged that it had to be replaced. Also reinstated were the French limestone tiles in the front hall.
Primarily the music room was designed to have a typical ‘wedding cake’ interior with a strong emphasis on cream and gold colourings. Sir David has opted for more Adam colours such as pink and green and the result is magnificent. The pelmets were designed by O’Connell and have blended into the overall design seamlessly. Pull-up curtains have been installed as draw curtains would have taken up too much space. The double doors, with brass handles and carvings, were modelled from another Wyatt design. It is thought the mahogany came from Honduras and was already 1,000 years old when it was felled for the house in 1770.
The drawing room is one of the most elegant and best proportioned rooms in the house. Sir David has a young family and so the room is also comfortable. The ceiling features a circular motif design with two large panels either side. The room also suffered extensive damage during the recent fire and required extensive restoration that took more than a year to complete. Many of the panels had to be removed and repaired or replaced.”
[picture caption: the music room showing the neo-classical plaster decoration designed by James Wyatt. According to John O’Connell it is probably the most authentic Wyatt room in Ireland, aside from the great dining room at Curraghmore.]
[the study with the carved festoons in the style of Grinling Gibbons.]
p. 40. “The original house ended where there is now a set of four scagliola columns when in the 1840s the De Vescies decided to create a long gallery through to where the glass conservatory once stood. Sir David decided to partition the gallery, given its proximity to the kitchen, in order to create a dining room with both a formal and informal dining space. The Knight of Glin helped with the furnishings. ‘All the furniture and paintings here have been brought in the last 25 years,” Sir David says. “It was a time when the Knight was persuading people to buy Irish furniture and paintings and bring them back to Ireland. Much of the stuff here was bought in America. It’s important these furnishings in the house don’t come across as a museum piece. This is very much a family home.”
“The great wing built off the house has the largest and longest butler’s pantry in Ireland, which leads to the upstairs kitchen. The floors in this area are of oak found on the estate. Beyond the kitchen is a wonderful family room in what was formerly the billiard room. The entire first floor is made up on family rooms, bedrooms, dressing rooms and en suite bathrooms. All the original bath and tap finishings have been retained, with slate flooring used under the baths to prevent damage. The real richness at work at Abbey Leix is the contrast between the formal and informal, between the everyday and the elaborate. In its simple elegance, it remains as true to the early 18th century original as any house in private ownership today.”
[picture caption: The white chimneypiece in the drawing room is to the design of James Wyatt. The Irish mirror was designed by Francis and John Booker of Essexbridge, Dublin.]
[The present dining room was a large tri-partite library in the mid 19th century.]
[The formal dining table, which had a fine collection of Wyatt dining chairs, can seat up to 24 guests. The painting is of Sir David Davis by Lord Dunsany.]
Abbeyleix House, County Laois, photograph courtesy of Colliers.
featured in Georgian Mansions in Ireland with some account of the evolution af Georgian Architecture and Decoration by Thomas U. Sadleir and Page L. Dickinson. Dublin University Press, 1915.
Abbeyleix House, County Laois, photograph courtesy of Colliers.
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. 1. Abbey Leix, Co Leix: “[Vesey, De Vesci, V/PB] A three storey late C18 block, built from 1773 onwards by Thomas Vesey, 2nd Lord Knapton and afterwards 1st Viscount de Vesci, with some interiors being designed by James Wyatt. Seven bay entrance front, with three bay pedimented breakfront; frontispiece of coupled Doric columns and entablature around entrance door. Five bay garden front with three bay breakfront. In C19 the elevations were made more ornate with a balustraded roof parapet, entablatures over the windows, balconies and other features. A large conservatory was also added at one side of the house, which was blown away by the “great wind” of 1902 and replaced by a wing containing a new dining room. The principal rooms in the main block have ceilings and, in the old dining room, walls decorated with Wyatt plasterwork. The hall has a screen of fluted Ionic columns;
from myhome.ie. The fireplace mantel of siena and white marble in the front hall, with a well-carved centre panel, is from a Dublin mansion [from Georgian Mansions in Ireland, as well as following information about paintings] There’s a portrait of Le Grand Dauphin by Pierre Mignard, and pictures of Michael Boyle, Archbishop of Armagh [ he was an ancestor of the family through the marriage of Sir Thomas Vesey, 1st Baronet, with his granddaughter Mary Muschamp]; of John Vesey, archbishop of Tuam; Sir Thomas Vesey, Bt, 1712, afterwards Bishop of Ossory the first Lord Knapton; Mrs Colclough, wife of Caesar Colclough, of Duffrey Hall, Co Wexford and sister of the first Lord Knapton; Agmondesham Vesey, father of Ann, Lady Bingham, as a child [also an ancestor of the Veseys of Lucan, which estate he acquired by his first marriage with Charlotte, daughter of William Sarsfield, who was the elder brother of the celebrated Patrick Sarsfield, Earl of Lucan, and by whom he had an only daughter, Anne, wife of Sir John Bingham, Baronet, ancestor of the present Earl of Lucan. He left the estate to his oldest son of his second marriage, so subsequent owners are not descended from the Sarsfields]; and of the Elizabeth, wife of the first Lord Knapton. This last painting is by Stephen Slaughter, and dates to 1744.
BJ cont. “the drawing room is hung with a C19 blue wallpaper. The demesne contains some magnificent trees, including oaks which are part of a primeval forest. A formal garden with terraces and ironwork balustrades was laid out by Lady Emma Herbert, who married 3rd Viscount 1839; inspired by the garden of her Russian grandfather, Count Simon Woronzow, at Alupka, near Yalta, in the Crimea. Towards the end of C19, in the time of 4th Viscount, whose wife was Lady Evelyn Charteris, daughter of 10th Earl of Wemyss, Abbey Leix was the Irish outpost of the “Souls.” The garden is now open to the public.”
Abbeyleix House, County Laois, photograph courtesy of Colliers.Abbeyleix House, County Laois, photograph courtesy of Colliers.Abbeyleix House, County Laois, photograph courtesy of Colliers.Abbeyleix House, County Laois, photograph courtesy of Colliers.Abbeyleix House, County Laois, photograph courtesy of Colliers.Abbeyleix House, County Laois, photograph courtesy of Colliers.Abbeyleix House, County Laois, photograph courtesy of Colliers.Abbeyleix House, County Laois, photograph courtesy of Colliers.Abbeyleix House, County Laois, photograph courtesy of Colliers.Abbeyleix House, County Laois, photograph courtesy of Colliers.Abbeyleix House, County Laois, photograph courtesy of Colliers.Abbeyleix House, County Laois, photograph courtesy of Colliers.Abbeyleix House, County Laois, photograph courtesy of Colliers.Abbeyleix House, County Laois, photograph courtesy of Colliers.Abbeyleix House, County Laois, photograph courtesy of Colliers.Abbeyleix House, County Laois, photograph courtesy of Colliers.Abbeyleix House, County Laois, photograph courtesy of Colliers.Abbeyleix House, County Laois, photograph courtesy of Colliers.Abbeyleix House, County Laois, photograph courtesy of Colliers.Abbeyleix House, County Laois, photograph courtesy of Colliers.Abbeyleix House, County Laois, photograph courtesy of Colliers.Abbeyleix House, County Laois, photograph courtesy of Colliers.Abbeyleix House, County Laois, photograph courtesy of Colliers.Abbeyleix House, County Laois, photograph courtesy of Colliers.
Colliers International
Tel: 01 633 3700
PSRA Licence No. 001223
€20,000,000
9 beds, 10 baths, 2500 sq metres,
Eircode: R32 E2W4 A splendid and most distinguished Irish 18th-century mansion positioned within a remarkable and ancient woodland demesne of over 1,000 acres. Abbey Leix is one of the most venerable 18th-century houses in Ireland and, following a spectacular restoration, it is also one of the most congenial. In any list of important Irish country houses Abbey Leix has a prominent place. The late-18th-century mansion, clothed in the Italianate manner in 1859-60, enjoys a remarkable position within a private estate comprising some 1,120 acres and includes some of Ireland’s most notable remaining ancient woodland and extensive frontage to the River Nore. The accommodation is grand and beautifully executed with the mansion comprising some 26,910 square feet or 2,500 square metres.
Abbeyleix House, County Laois, photograph courtesy of Colliers.
The mansion is augmented by 10 lodges and cottages on the estate. Abbey Leix was designed in 1773 by the noted architect James Wyatt. The house is an elegant three-storey Classical mansion of seven bays, the three central bays under a triangular pediment. The arrangement of rooms is elegant and simple, with three major rooms on the park front. There is a deep hall, with a screen of columns separating it from the east-west-running staircase hall and corridor. The music room at the south-eastern corner of the house retains the light, decorative plasterwork for which Wyatt was so admired. Plaster roundels framed by swags of husks were decorated with grisaille by the artist De Gree a few years after completion, probably about 1785. In the middle of the 19th-century the Italianate character was adopted and the great Classical library and a conservatory were added.
Abbeyleix House, County Laois, photograph courtesy of Colliers.Abbeyleix House, County Laois, photograph courtesy of Colliers.Abbeyleix House, County Laois, photograph courtesy of Colliers.
At the same time the front of the house was enclosed within an Entrance Court with terraces added to the rear. A comprehensive and sympathetic restoration was undertaken in 1995. The whole north-west corner of the accommodation was redesigned to provide a new family room (out of rooms subdivided in the 1966), kitchen, and butler’s pantry. A new state dining room was created out of two-thirds of the original library, the remainder now comprising a smaller library. A considerable programme of conservation of the major rooms followed. The works create a 21st-century family home with an appropriate balance between comfort and informality on the one hand and grandeur for entertaining and the display of art on the other. Abbey Leix has one of the most important collections of trees in Ireland. Whereas elsewhere in Ireland the primeval forests of oak, birch, alder and willow have been almost entirely depleted, the woods on Park Hill across the river from the house are among the last surviving remnants of Ireland’s ancient woodland.
Abbey Leix, like so many places in Ireland, owes its origins to religious settlement, and specifically to the French Cistercian monks who came to Ireland in the mid-12th-century. An ancient stone bridge on the estate, known as Monk’s Bridge, marks where they located their abbey. The present demesne evolved out of the monastery’s granges, woods and fields. One tree, the oldest oak in Ireland still survives from this period. The de Vesci family fashioned a landscape as beautiful as the house they built during their ownership between 1675 and 1995. A stud farm is positioned within the original farmstead and includes an attractive range of cut-stone outbuildings.
A beautiful principal yard, complete with a clock tower, was built of local limestone in 1822. The quadrangular yard contains 24 loose boxes. A separate farmyard has a range of farm sheds. The farmland provides good grazing. The limestone soil is highly fertile and ideal for rearing and keeping bloodstock, being well laid out in gently undulating fields and paddocks. The lands are well sheltered by the surrounding woodland. Positioned centrally within the estate the house is quiet and private, the wooded drive being c. 1 mile long. “As few places elsewhere, Abbey Leix gives a sense of the longue durée of Irish history. Having been home to French Monks, O’More Princes, Ormonde Earls, de Vesci Viscounts, and a Welsh Knight, the house, its park and woods form a microcosm of our past.” William Laffan, 2017.
Abbeyleix House, County Laois, photograph courtesy of Colliers.Abbeyleix House, County Laois, photograph courtesy of Colliers.
A seven-bay, three-storey over basement with dormer attic Classical-style country house, begun 1773, with a pedimented breakfront having a cut stone Doric door-case to the ground floor. Originally brick, later rendered by Thomas Henry Wyatt. Five-bay elevation to garden front with breakfront having cut sandstone doorcase and Wyatt style window openings to flanking bays.
“A good landlord, and an improving man, his first care was to remove the old village on the banks of the Nore, and to build a new one, long known as New Abbeyleix, on a better site further from the river.f He also demolished the former family residence, and, in 1773, erected in its place the present mansion, which took several years to complete.”
THE VISCOUNTS DE VESCI WERE MAJOR LANDOWNERS IN THE QUEEN’S COUNTY, WITH 15,069 ACRES
This and the illustrious family of De Burgh, Marquesses and Earls of Clanricarde, derive from a common progenitor; namely,
JOHN, Earl of Comyn and Baron of Tonsburgh, Normandy, son of BALDWIN II of Boulogne, founder of the house of BLOIS, in France.
From the eldest son of this noble John descended the house of Clanricarde; and from the younger,
EUSTACE DE BURGE, Baron of Tonsburgh, that of which we are now to treat.
This Eustace had two sons, Charles and John, both companions in arms of WILLIAM THE CONQUEROR.
The elder son,
CHARLES, built the castle of Knaresborough, in Yorkshire, and was succeeded by his brother,
JOHN FITZ RICHARD, who wedded Margaret, aunt of King STEPHEN, and was succeeded by his eldest son,
EUSTACE FITZ JOHN, feudal lord of Knaresborough, who espoused Beatrix, daughter and sole heir of Ivo de Vesci, by Alda, only daughter and heir of William Tyson, Lord of Alnwick, and was succeeded by his elder son,
WILLIAM, who assumed the name and arms of VESCI, and had a grant from HENRY II of Alnwick Castle.
He was sheriff of Northumberland during the greater part of that reign, and was a principal commander in the battle fought near Alnwick, wherein the Scottish army sustained a signal overthrow.
This William’s elder son,
EUSTACE DE VESCI (1169-1216), one of the twenty-five feudal barons appointed to enforce the observance of MAGNA CARTA, married Margaret, daughter of WILLIAM, King of Scotland.
This nobleman was succeeded by his son,
WILLIAM DE VESCI, who espoused firstly, Isabel, daughter of William Longespée, Earl of Salisbury; and secondly, Agnes, eldest daughter of William Ferrers, Earl of Derby; and in right of the latter had a share of those lands assigned to him in Ireland, belonging to William Marshal, Earl of Pembroke.
He died in 1253, and was succeeded by his eldest son,
JOHN DE VESCI, who was summoned to parliament, 1264, as Baron Vesci.
His lordship dsp 1289, and was succeeded by his brother,
WILLIAM DE VESCI, who was summoned to parliament in 1295, and was one of the competitors for the crown of Scotland during the reign of EDWARD I.
This nobleman was Justice in Eyre for all the royal forests beyond Trent, and one of the Justices-Itinerant touching the pleas of the forest, Governor of Scarborough Castle, and Lord Justice of Ireland, where he was Lord of Kildare.
His lordship died in 1297, leaving an only daughter, Isabel; and the male line of his family was continued by his brother,
THOMAS DE VESCI, who settled in Newlands, Cumberland, where the family continued until his descendant,
WILLIAM VESEY, having the misfortune to kill his antagonist in a duel, fled into Scotland, whence he removed to Ireland, in the reign of ELIZABETH I.
He wedded a daughter of the family of Ker of Cessford, and was succeeded by his only son,
THE VEN THOMAS VESEY, Archdeacon of Armagh, 1655; whose son and heir,
[Georgian Mansions in Ireland with some account of the evolution af Georgian Architecture and Decoration by Thomas U. Sadleir and Page L. Dickinson. Dublin University Press, 1915:
“The Most Rev. John Vesey, Archbishop of Tuam, father of the purchaser (of Abbeyleix), may also be called the founder of this family in Ireland, for from him descended the Veseys of Lucan, Co Dublin; Hollymount, County Mayo; and Derrabard, Co Tyrone; as well as Baron Fitzgerald and Vesey, a title now extinct, and the family of Vesey-Fitzgerald. During the vice-royalty of Tyrconnell he suffered great hardships at the hands of the native Irish, though it was only when their lives were in danger that he and Bishop Tenison, of Killala, consented to quite Connaught. fn. see Dictionary of National Biography. Taking his wife and twelve children, he fled to London, where he lived in straightened circumstances, having no means of subsistence save a lectureship of £40 per annum, which the interest of his friends obtained for him. While in England he was attainted by James II’s Irish Parliament, but after the Revolution he returned to his diocese, and resumed the prominent part which he had been accustomed to take in the affairs of the country, of which he was twice appointed Lord Justice. It was probably as some recompense for his misfortunes that his eldest son, Thomas, when only 25 and during his father’s lifetime, was created a Baronet… He took great pleasure in laying out and planting his seat at Hollymount, Co Mayo, described by John Wesley, when he visited it some forty years afterwards, as “one of the pleasantest places in Ireland.” There he died on 28 March 1716, having been in failing health for two years. ]
This learned prelate, who was thrice one of the Lords Justices of Ireland, left issue,
THOMAS; Agmondisham, ancestor of the Earls of Lucan; John, in holy orders; William; Francis; Mary; Elizabeth; Anne.
His Grace was succeeded by his eldest son,
THOMAS VESEY (c1668-1730), who was created a baronet in 1698, denominated of Abbeyleix, Queen’s County.
Sir Thomas, subsequently taking holy orders, was consecrated Lord Bishop of Killaloe in 1713, and translated to the see of Ossory in the following year.
[Georgian Mansions in Ireland with some account of the evolution af Georgian Architecture and Decoration by Thomas U. Sadleir and Page L. Dickinson. Dublin University Press, 1915:
p. 13. “The above-mentioned Sir Thomas Vesey had a singular career. Born at Cork in 1673 [ie. differs from webpage date], of which city his father was then Dean, he received his education at Eton, and Christ Church College in Oxford…. It is said that he had early intended to take Orders, but it was not until 1699, after he had returned to Ireland, that the young Baronet was ordained a deacon. Preferment in his father’s diocese naturally followed, and in the following year, soon after he was priested, he was presented to a Galway living, and preferred to the Archdeanery of Tuam – an office which he resigned in 1703. During the vice-royalty of the second Duke of Ormond he acted as his chaplain, and on his recommendation was appointed by Queen Anne to the Bishopric of Killaloe, which he held for little more than a year, beign translated in 1714 to the See of Ossory. Notwithstanding that his rapid promotion was due to court influence, his character both as a man and a prelate stood high, and he was greatly respected by his clergy. We have no records of his residence at Abbeyleix, though it is known to have been the birthplace of his only son, born in 1709 [fn. The Compete Baronetage, by G.E. C.], and it seems probable that he constantly lived there. Some difficulty appears to have arisen with regard to his title to the estate, for in 1711 he invoked the aid of Swift to assist him in getting an Act of Parliament to settle the matter. The Bishop died in Dublin on 6 Aug 1730, and was buried in St. Anne’s church.By his wife Mary Muschamp, who survived til 26 Feb 1749, he had one son and two daughters, of whom the younger, Elizabeth, a versatile and accomplished woman, married first William Handcock, of Willbrook [fn. now called Moydrum Castle, and the residence of his representative, Lord Castlemaine], Co Westmeath, and secondly he cousin Agmondesham Vesey, MP, of Lucan, Co Dublin. [fn. Kildare Journal of Archaeolgoy, vol. vii, no. 6, p. 404]. As Mrs Vesey, the friend of Dr. Johnson, she was long prominent in London society for her literary receptions, celebrated in the pages of Horace Walpole and Madame D’Arblay.”]
He wedded Mary, only surviving daughter and heir of Denny Muschamp, of Horsley, Surrey, Muster-Master-General of Ireland, and his wife, Elizabeth, eldest daughter of the Most Rev Michael Boyle, Lord Archbishop of Armagh, by whom he had issue, two daughters, and a son,
SIR JOHN DENNY VESEY, 2nd Baronet, who was elevated to the peerage, in 1750, by the title of Baron Knapton.
[Georgian Mansions in Ireland with some account of the evolution af Georgian Architecture and Decoration by Thomas U. Sadleir and Page L. Dickinson. Dublin University Press, 1915:
p. 13. Sir John Denny Vesey, 2nd Bt, of Abbeyleix, succeeded his father in the title and estates. He had matriculated as a Gentleman Commoner at Christ Church, Oxford, in July 1727, but relinquished his studies on entering the Irish Parliament as M.P. for Newtown Ards before the end of that year. For ths borough he sat for 23 years, and on 10 April 1750, in recognition of his political services, he was raised to the peerage as Baron Knapton, taking his title from a townland on his property adjoining Abbeyleix, which in its turn had been named from Knapton in Yorkshire, a former seat of the family… Lord Knapton, who had been appointed Governor and Custos Rotulorum of the Queen’s County in 1746, during the rebellion in Scotland, died on 25 June 1761, aged 52.]
He espoused, in Elizabeth, daughter of William Brownlow MP, of Lurgan, County Armagh, by the Lady Elizabeth Hamilton, his wife, daughter of the 6th Earl of Abercorn, and had issue,
THOMAS, his successor; Elizabeth; Anne; Jane.
His lordship [who had been appointed Governor and Custos Rotulorum of Queen’s County in 1746, during the rebellion of Scotland]
died in 1761, and was succeeded by his son,
THOMAS, 2nd Baron (1735-1804), [the former’s only surviving son, second Lord Knapton]
who was created, in 1776, VISCOUNT DE VESCI, of Abbey Leix.
[Georgian Mansions in Ireland with some account of the evolution af Georgian Architecture and Decoration by Thomas U. Sadleir and Page L. Dickinson. Dublin University Press, 1915:
“His only surviving son, Thomas, second Lord Knapton, served in Lord Drogheda’s Regiment of Horse, in which he was promoted to the rank of Captain Lieutenant a few months after his father’s death. He was subsequently a Captain in the 123rd Regiment of Foot. {fn. Kelly’s Almanack and Directory for 1795. In 1782 he acted as a General of Volunteers}. After he had retired from the service, on 24 April 1769, he married Selina Elizabeth. He had a town house in Dawon St, Dublin, inherited from his father, but on his marriage moved to a newer and more fashionable residence at 26 Merrion Square. A good landlord, and an improving man, his first care was to remove the old village on the banks of the Nore, and to build a new one, long known as New Abbeyleix, on a better site further from the river. (fn. History of Queens Co p. 154). He also demolished the former family residence, and, in 1773, erected in its place the present mansion, which took several years to complete. During the administration of the Marquess Townsend, Lord Knapton was in opposition, but he accorded his support to the measures of his successor, Earl Harcourt. [fn. The Irish Parliament in 1775, p. 174]. It was not, however, for political reasons, but for having “acted with great spirit and propriety in discountenancing and suppressing the outrageous proceedings of the White Boys” {fn. Harcourt Papers, vol. x p. 198}that he was, on 18 July 1776, advanced to the Viscounty of de Vesci. Besides being an active magistrate, he was a hospitable man, and frequently gathered round him parties of friends. ….Lord de Vesci died at Abbeyleix of a paralytic stroke on 13 Oct 1804. ]
His lordship married, in 1769, Selina Elizabeth, eldest daughter and co-heir of the Rt Hon Sir Arthur Brooke Bt, of Colebrooke, County Fermanagh, by whom he had issue,
JOHN, his successor; Arthur, in holy orders; Charles; Elizabeth; Selina, m Andrew Nugent, of Portaferry.
The 1st Viscount was succeeded by his eldest son,
JOHN, 2nd Viscount (1771-1855), of Abbey Leix, who wedded, in 1800, Frances Letitia, daughter of the Rt Hon William Brownlow, of Lurgan, County Armagh.
[Georgian Mansions in Ireland with some account of the evolution af Georgian Architecture and Decoration by Thomas U. Sadleir and Page L. Dickinson. Dublin University Press, 1915:
p. 16. Of the second Viscount we have the following account, written the year before he died, by an anonymous writer [ he died at Portaferry, Co Down, the residence of his son-in-law, Col Patrick Nugent]]: “,,,An ever resident landlord, he has spent all his life amidst his tenantry; and whereever you turn the fruits of his paternal care are seen.” His elder son, the 3rd Viscount de Vesci, died at 4 Carlton House Terrace, London, on 23 Dec 1875 [he was MP for Queens co, 1835-7, and 1841-52; a representative peer, and an Ecclesiastical Commissioner for Ireland] leaving, with other issue, John Robert William, 4th Viscount, H.M.L. for the Queen’s county, sometimes Lieut-Col of the Coldstream Guards, and of the Honorable Artillery Company of London, who was created Baron de Vesci of Abbeyleix in the peerage of the UK in 1884. On his decease, 6th July 1903, this barony expired, while the Irish honours devolved on his nephew, the 5th and present holder…. note that the 2nd Visciount was MP for the borough of Mayborough, 1796-97, a Representative Peer, and for many years, Lord Lieut. of Queen’s Co.]
The heir apparent is the present holder’s second son, the Hon Oliver Ivo Vesey.
In a Country Life article of 1991, entitled ‘Abbeyleix, County Laois …’, the late John Cornforth provided a short but still serviceable account of Vesey family history, largely based on the Public Record Office of Northern Ireland list of the de Vesci papers as it then stood:
… The Veseys first appeared in Ireland in the second quarter of the 17th century and, like a surprising number of families, rose through service in the Church of Ireland. The first of them, the Venerable Thomas, ended up as Archdeacon of Armagh in 1655 and died in 1662.
Both his sons followed him into the Church, the elder one, John, becoming Archbishop of Tuam [in 1679], a Privy Councillor and a Lord Justice of Ireland. Three of the Archbishop’s five sons also entered the church, with Thomas, the eldest, being made a baronet [in 1698] and a bishop [in 1713], in his father’s lifetime. He had the foresight to marry, [in 1699, Mary Muschamp], the granddaughter of an even more distinguished Archbishop, Michael Boyle, who was both Primate [1678-1702] and Lord Chancellor [1665-85]. …
Through this marriage, Sir Thomas Vesey acquired the Abbeyleix estate, which was given to the couple as Mary’s marriage portion, by her father, Denny Muschamp. Muschamp was a tax farmer and land speculator as well as adviser to his father-in-law, Archbishop Boyle, and he became involved in Abbeyleix in 1675 through buying the rest of a 99-year Crown lease from the trustees of the will of Sir Edward Massey, an act that immediately led to litigation with the trustees and the beneficiaries of the will. That, together with other complications, led to a series of claims and counter-claims that caused the case to drag on until 1769. …
In 1995, the 7th and present Lord de Vesci sold Abbey Leix sold most of the demesne (excluding, however, the part which went with Knapton).
The purchasers were Sir David Davies, an Irish-born and based international banker and businessman, and his wife, Linda, whose ‘spectacular restoration’ of the house carried forward the de Vesci tradition of improvement and was the subject of an article by Jeremy Musson entitled ‘Abbeyleix, County Laois …’, published in Country Life on the 24th July, 2003.
Prior to the sale of the house and its residual contents, Lord de Vesci had removed, among many other things, his collection of family portraits and the archive.
However, later in 1995, agreement was reached for the sale of the latter to the National Library of Ireland, where it is now made more easily and widely accessible by the publication of the present catalogue.
Thomas Eustace Vesey, 7th and present Viscount de Vesci (b 1955) is managing director of Horticultural Coir Limited.
ABBEYLEIX HOUSE is a seven-bay, three-storey over basement with dormer attic Classical-style country house, begun 1773, with a pedimented breakfront having a cut stone Doric door-case to the ground floor.
Five-bay elevation to garden front with breakfront having cut sandstone doorcase and Wyatt style window openings to flanking bays.
Two-bay single-storey wing to west, renovated ca 1840, with façade enrichments added.
It was extended to the west, post-1902, comprising a seven-bay single-storey wing with breakfront having three-bay advanced centre bay. Balustraded forecourt of ca 1840, to the north.
Formal gardens, post-1839, to south comprising series of artificial terraces with balustrades, flights of steps and ha-has.
The house is set within a landscaped demesne approached by gravel drive; balustraded formal courtyard to Entrance Front with gravel drive and grass centrepiece; group of formal gardens to Garden Front including series of artificial terraces with balustrades, flights of steps and rubble stone ha-has; pond to sheltered garden to south-west.
From Georgian Mansions in Ireland with some account of the evolution af Georgian Architecture and Decoration by Thomas U. Sadleir and Page L. Dickinson. Dublin University Press, 1915:
P. 10. Abbeyleix house, the residence of the Viscount de Vesci, is a large four-storied rectangular building, situated in a splendid demesne, celebrated for its magnificent oaks, of over 700 acres, not far from the small but picturesque town from whence its name is derived. Externally it presents an uninteresting appearance for although constructed of red brick with a stone front, by plastering the whole it has entirely lost its Georgian character; internally, in spite of modern embellishment, much of the original work is still preserved. The character of the ornament is well shown in the Hall: two fluted columns support an entablature, and the Adam style appears both in the frieze and the fan decoration of the walls. There is a tall handsome mantel of siena and white marble, with well-carved centre panel, which was formerly in a Dublin mansion. Besides the masterly portrait of Le Grand Dauphin, by Pierre Mignard, a recent purchase of the present Viscount, this apartment contains pictures in oils of Michael Boyle, Archbishop of Armagh [an ancestor of the family through the marriage of Sir Thomas Vesey, 1st Bt, with his grand-daughter Mary Muschamp.]; John Vesey, Archbishop of Tuam; Sir Thomas Vesey, Bt, 1712, afterwards Bishop of Ossory; first Lord Knapton, in early manhood; Mrs Colclough, wife of Caesar Colclough of Duffrey Hall, County Wexford, and sister of teh first Lord Knapton; Agmondesham Vesey (father of Ann, Lady Bingham0, as a child; and Elizabeth, wife of teh first Lord Knapton [she was a daughter of William Brownlow of Lurgan, MP for county Armagh], by Stephen Slaughter, dated 1744.
p. 11 “Passing to the left from the Hall we enter a large lofty sitting room, wiht three mahogany doors and carved wood overdoors; the decoration is in plaster panels enriched with Adam ornament. There is a conventional Adam ceiling and frieze, the mantel, doubtless contemporary, being of white marble carved. … At the opposite end of the house lies the grand staircase, in two flights, with light balustrade of iron and oak handrail, the plan being similar to that at Caledon.”
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Georgian Mansions in Ireland with some account of the evolution af Georgian Architecture and Decoration by Thomas U. Sadleir and Page L. Dickinson. Dublin University Press, 1915.:
“The corridor bisecting the house passes through the staircase hall, and has been carried on to afford communication with a modern addition containing a library and breakfast room. In this corridor are a fine portrait of Nicholas de Launay, by Hyacinth Rigaud, and a pleasing picture, which has been engraved in mezzotint, of the Right Honourable William Brownlow, of Lurgan, Co Armagh, half-length seated, by Gilbert Stuart. [fn. He was father of Frances Letitia, Viscountess de Vesci, and ancestor of Lord Lurgan.]
The drawing room and dining room, also on this floor, have a south aspect, and overlook the beautifully laid out pleasure grounds: the former, spacious apartment, though lacking in any Georgian interest, contains several oil-paintings, including Thomas, first Viscount de Vesci, by Gilbert Stuart; Margaret, wife of Sir Arthur Brooke, Bart., of Colebrook, Co Fermanagh. [fn. she was the only daughter of Thomas Fortescue, of Reynoldstown, Co Louth, and sister of the first Lord Clermont]. There is also a case of miniatures, in which are examples of the work of Nathaniel Hone, Adam Buck, Gervaise Spencer, and others.
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Georgian Mansions in Ireland with some account of the evolution af Georgian Architecture and Decoration by Thomas U. Sadleir and Page L. Dickinson. Dublin University Press, 1915:
“In the bedrooms most of the joinery is modern, but the Georgian brass grates, in some cases black-leaded, have been well-preserved.”
p. 11. Nothing now remains of the Abbey founded at Leix, in the territory of the O’Mores, by the Cistercians in 1183, though some of the buildings were not finally demolished till the last quarter of the eighteenth century. This establishment, caleld in some documents “the little Abbey of Lenix,” existed till the dissolution, when the site, which is said to be that of the present mansion, together with some 820 acres in the immediate neighbourhood, passed to the Crown, being granted in 1562 to Thomas, Earl of Ormond, [p. 12] “Black Tom,” for services against the rebels. It does not appear that it was ever a residence of the Butler family, but it remained in their possession till in or about 1698, when it became the property of Thomas Vesey, who had lately marrieed a wealthy heiress in the person of Mary, the only daughter of Denny Muschamp, of Horsley, Surrey, Muster-Master General in Ireland, and who in the same year was created a Baronet of Ireland.
p. 12. The most reverent John Vesey, Archbishop of Tuam, father of the purchaser, may also be called the founder of the family in Ireland, for from him descended the Veseys of Lucan, County Dublin; Hollymount, County Mayo, and Derrabard, County Tyrone; as well as Baron FitzGerald and Vesey, a title now extinct, and the family of Vesey-Fitzgerald. During the vice-royalty of Tyrconnell, he suffered great hardships at the hands of the native Irish, though it was only when their lives were in dangerthat he and Bishop Tenison, of Killala, consented to quit Connaught. Taking his wife and twelve children, he fled to London, where he lived in straitened circumstances, having no means of subsistence save a lectureship of £40 per annum, which the interest of his friends obtained for him. When in England he was attainted by James II’s Irish Parliament, but after the Revolution he returned to his diocese, and resumed the prominent part which he had been accustomed to take in the affairs of the country, of which he was twice appointed Lord Justice. It was probably as some recompense for his misfortunes that his eldest son, Thomas, when only 25, and during his father’s lifetime, was created a Baronet. Swift occasionally mentions the Archbishop, who published several sermons, as well as a “Life of Primate Bramhall” and appears to have been a man of refined tastes. He took great pleasure in laying out and planting his seat at Hollymount, County Mayo, described by John Wesley, when he visited it some forty years afterwards, as “one of the pleasantest places in Ireland.” There he died on 28 March 1716, having been in failing health for two years.
Single-arch rubble stone hump back road bridge over river, built c.1840, with cut granite voussoirs. Random rubble stone walls with cut granite voussoirs. Round-headed openings with cut granite voussoirs and rubble stone lining. Sited spanning river; iron gate to centre of bridge; cut stone retaining walls to river banks to north and to south; tubular steel cow grill to east.
Freestanding six-bay single-storey boathouse, built c.1850, with yellow brick piers and open gable ends. Double-pitched slate roof with scalloped slate and red clay tiles, concrete ridge tiles, decorative cresting, timber eaves and decorative timber bargeboards and open framing to gable ends. Coursed rubble stone to base of walls with yellow brick intermittent piers. Square-headed window openings with concrete chamfered sills, yellow brick dressings to lintels and timber lattice panels. Yellow brick internal walls. Sited to west of river on an elevated site; section of iron railings to open gable end to west; gravel drive to east; grass river banks to north and to south.
Detached seven-bay three-storey over basement with dormer attic Classical-style country house, begun 1773, with pedimented breakfront having cut stone Doric doorcase to ground floor. Five-bay elevation to garden front with breakfront having cut sandstone doorcase and Wyatt style window openings to flanking bays. Two-bay single-storey wing to west, renovated c.1840, with façade enrichments added. Extended to west, post-1902, comprising seven-bay single-storey wing with breakfront having three-bay advanced centre bay. Balustraded forecourt, c.1840, to north. Formal gardens, post-1839, to south comprising series of artificial terraces with balustrades, flights of steps and ha-has. Slate mansard roof hidden behind balustraded parapet with rolled lead ridge tiles, rendered panelled chimneystacks with yellow clay pots and cast-iron rainwater goods. Flat-roofed dormer attic windows, flat-roof to wing not visible behind guilloche parapet, roof to wing not visible behind guilloche parapet. Nap rendered walls with ruled and lined detail, unpainted, with sandstone dressings including quoins, quoins strips, stringcourses and cornice. Nap rendered to wings with ruled and lined detail. Square-headed window openings with stone sills on corbels. Gibbsian surrounds to ground floor windows, shouldered surrounds to first floor windows with balconettes to breakfront windows and architraves to top floor windows with keystones, all with three-over-three and six-over-six timber sash windows. Wyatt-style surrounds to Garden Front. Tripartite door arrangement, cut-limestone Doric frontispiece with entablature with timber panelled double doors and decorative overlight. Gibbsian surround to door opening to Garden Front with timber French door. Round-headed window openings to wing with concrete sills, pillared surrounds, moulded archivolts and timber casement windows with overlights. Timber panelled internal shutters to window openings; entrance hall: stone tiled floor; decorative marble fireplaces; Ionic screen wall; Wyatt-style plasterwork to walls and to ceiling. Abbeyleix House is set within landscaped demesne approached by gravel drive; balustraded formal courtyard to Entrance Front with gravel drive and grass centrepiece; group of formal gardens to Garden Front including series of artificial terraces with balustrades, flights of steps and rubble stone ha-has; pond to sheltered garden to south-west.
Multiple-bay two-storey stable complex, built c.1800, on a quadrangular plan with courtyard. Pair of round-headed integral carriageways with belfry and ogee dome to east and series of elliptical-headed carriageways. Multiple-bay two-storey range, c.1800, to east on a triangular plan with kitchen courtyard connecting to Abbeyleix House. Detached four-bay single-storey rubble stone stable range, c.1800, to west. Double-pitched slate roof on quadrangular and triangular plans with rolled lead ridge tiles, roughcast chimneystacks with red clay pots, timber eaves and cast-iron rainwater goods. Timber belfry to apex with corner pilasters and ogee dome. Double-pitched slate roof to stable range with concrete ridge tiles and timber eaves. Roughcast render over rubble stone walls, unpainted. Random rubble stone to stable range. Square-headed window openings with concrete sills, some rendered surrounds and two-over-two, three-over-three and three-over-six timber sash windows. Series of lunette window openings to first floor with concrete sills and timber fixed-pane windows. Round- and elliptical-headed carriageways (two integral) with rendered surrounds and timber panelled double doors. Square-headed door openings to stable range with timber panelled half-doors. Utilitarian interiors with timber stalls. Set adjacent to west of Abbey Leix House approached by gravel drive; tarmacadam and gravel courtyard to centre of quadrangular range; cobbled courtyard to centre of triangular range.
‘I must return to give you an account of Lady De Vesci’s. I am quite in love with her and with their state of living. It is entirely without form, everybody doing as they please, and always a vast number of people in the house. Lady Knapton, his mother, lives with them, and seems no restraint upon anybody, she is so good-humoured. We were about six or seven ladies and as many gentlemen, divided into different parties about the room, some working, some reading, some playing cards, and the room being large and very full, it had a most comfortable appearance. It opens into the library on one side and the dining-room on the other. As it rained most of the time I was there I did not see much of the grounds, but the park is not laid out, as they have employed all their time and money in making a comfortable house first, which I think the most sensible plan. Lady De Vesci was very loth to let us go so soon, but Mr. Dawson had business at home that prevented our staying longer. However, we go again into their neighbourhood the end of next week, as Sir Robert and Lady Staples have been very pressing with their invitations, and insisted upon our naming the time, which we accordingly did, and Lady De Vesci begs we will come to her again after that, to meet Lord and Lady Tyrone, so you see we have enough to do; besides we have a ball to go to on Wednesday next, which a distant neighbour has invited us to, and when all this is over we meditate a trip to Dublin, to buy some things we have occasion for.’ From Lady Caroline Dawson to Lady Louisa Stuart, September 1778.
The Irish Aesthete: Buildings of Ireland, Lost and Found. Robert O’Byrne. The Lilliput Press, Dublin, 2024.
p. 2. Abbeyleix House, County Laois – June 2016
“Abbey Leix was designed in 1773 by James Wyatt for Thomas Vesey, Lord Knapton (later first Viscount de Vesci). As originally built, the house was an elegant three-storey classical mansion of seven bays, the three central bays under a triangular pediment. In the middle of the nineteenth century the third Viscount de Vesci and his wife Emma, daughter of the 11th Earl of Pembroke, added a great classical library and a conservatory, extending the eighteenth-century library to twice its length. Their architect was T. H. Wyatt (descended from a cousin of James Wyatt).
“These alterations gave the building a more pronounced Italianate character through added features such as stone details, Gibbsian window surrounds, emphatic quoins and balconies. The most notable external work was the addition of a balustrade parapet running around the attic, thereby masking dormer windows on an additional storey to provide staff accommodation. Portland cement render applied to the exterior drew these changes together, giving the impression of a unified composition. At the same time as alterations were being made to the building, Lady de Vesci embarked on redesigning the gardens to the rear. Here, a series of elaborate formal terraces was introduced. It has been proposed that the design of these terraces was inspired by those at Alupka in the Crimea, the palace of Lady de Vesci’s Russian maternal grandfather, Prince Worontsov, although more likely they were the invention of Abbey Leix’s chatelaine. In the mid-1990s the house and estate were sold to Sir David Davies, who embarked on a thorough restoration of both. More recently, Abbey Leix was bought by Irish entrepreneur John Collison.”
Archbishop’s Palace, Armagh, photograph by Eric Jones, Creative Commons Attribution Share-alike license 2.0.
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. 12. “The Palace of the (C. of I.) Archbishops of Armagh and Primates. A plain and dignified late C18 block, nine bays long and four bays deep, originally of two storeys over a high rusticated basement. Built 1770, to the design of Thomas Cooley, by Primate Richard Robinson, who added a third storey 1786, his architect then being Francis Johnston. Later, a large enclosed porch was added, with pairs of Ionic columns set at an angle to the front. Flanking the entrance front of the Palace is the Primate’s Chapel, a detached building in the form of an Ionic temple. The exterior, of 1781, is by Cooley; but the interior was carried out after Cooley’s death in 1784 by Francis Johnston, who succeeded him as architect to Primate Robinson. Johnston’s interior, a modification of Cooley’s design, is one of the most beautiful surviving C18 ecclesiastical interiors in Ireland; with a coffered barrel-vaulted ceiling, a delicate frieze, Corinthian pilasters, a gallery with a curved rear wall, and splendid panelling and pews. The Palace is surrounded by a well-wooded demesne, in which there is an obelisk, also by Johnston. The Church of Ireland is at present building a modern residence for the Primate on Cathedral Hill, so that the future of the Palace is uncertain.”
Archbishop’s Palace Armagh, County Armagh, photograph by Robert French, (between ca. 1865-1914), Lawrence Photograph Collection, National Library of Ireland.
THE PALACE (ARMAGH), County Armagh (AP ARMAGH, BANBRIDGE and CRAIGAVON 03) – A/029 REGISTERED GRADE A The Archbishop’s Palace walled demesne occupies 348 acres (141ha) on the south perimeter of the City of Armagh, the grounds now belonging to the Armagh City, Banbridge and Craigavon Council who use the palace of 1768-75 and stable yard for office accommodation. The palace and its demesne owe their existence to Archbishop Richard Robinson (1708-1794), who, following his elevation to the Primacy of Armagh in 1765, demanded a residence in Armagh appropriate to his status; his predecessors had resided mainly in the palace in Drogheda, while the see house in English Street, had fallen into disrepair. Accordingly, in 1769 an Act of Parliament was passed for the enclosure of a demesne incorporating the townlands of Parkmore, Drumarg and part of Ballnaone, church property that fittingly included the remains of the Franciscan friary, founded in 1263, whose impressive ruins now lie at the entrance to the demesne (ARM 012:016). The building of the palace in the centre of the demesne on a height overlooking the city had already begun by 1768, if not earlier, for by February 1769 Robinson ‘hath already erected and covered in the shell of a house for himself and his successors’. The building (Listed HB 15/18/016), a chase but dignified classical block of nine bays and four bays deep, was originally of two-stories over a high rusticated basement, but it was subsequently raised in 1825 by Francis Johnson, who also Register of Parks, Gardens and Demesnes of Special Historic Interest (NI) – November 2020 added a porch. The original palace building, completed in 1775 at a cost of £10,322 17s 9d was evidently the work of Dublin architect George Ensor, but the Sardinian architect, Davis Ducart may also have been involved. Lying on slightly higher ground 93 yards (85m) to the west is the cobbled stable yard – a two-storey Palladian quadrangle built at the same time as the palace (Listed HB 15/18/018), probably also by Ensor; it was burnt in 1859 and rebuilt with a few additions by the Belfast architect W.J. Barre. Also in the 1770s an icehouse was built in the woods behind the yard (Listed HB 15/18/015), while between the house and yard a chapel for the Archbishop was erected in 1781 of ashlar limestone in the form of a classical Roman temple to a design by the English architect Thomas Cooley (Listed HB 15/18/017); the Primate’s Chapel was completed by Francis Johnston after Cooley’s death in March 1784 (chapel deconsecrated in 1977). The Clerk of Works for the construction of buildings ‘in and about the demesne’ at this time was Euclid Alfrey and William Johnston (father of Francis); in addition to the house, yards and chapel, their work will have included the 48m high eye-catcher Rokeby Obelisk (Listed HB 15/18/021), erected in 1782-83 on a hill 0.6 miles (0.9km) south-east of the palace; designed by Thomas Cooley from a sketch by John Carr of York, this obelisk was built to commemorate the friendship between Archbishop Robinson, by then raised as the first Baron Rokeby and Hugh Percy, the first Duke of Northumberland (1714-1786), who as Lord Lieutenant of Ireland had appointed him to the Primacy. The Obelisk was originally set on the north side of a small woodland plantation atop the hill in a carefully designed parkscape laid out in the Reptonian Picturesque manner then popular. The landscape designer is not known, but he made skilled use of the undulating landscape by setting the palace in sweeping open meadows (‘lawns’) with isolated trees, clumps, belts and perimeter screens – all of which were judicially laid out so as to enjoy fine views of the city and its cathedral both from the palace and from a network of walks and drives which meandered their way through surrounding meadows and shelter belts. The planting in the park seems to have been nearly all undertaken in the 1770s; a report of 1775 says that young trees to the value of £283 6s 3d had then been planted in the demesne; the species were mostly beech and ask, but also included sycamore, chestnut, lime, ash and elm; remarkably, the woodland and screen boundaries then established remained unaltered into the mid-20th century. When Arthur Young visited in 1776 he admired the ‘large lawn’ around the palace, which ‘spreads on every side over the hills, and skirted by young plantations, in one of which is a terrace, which commands a most beautiful view of cultivated hill and dale.’ Inglis visited the park in 1834 and found it ‘… in excellent order … laid out with much taste’. At a slightly later date, probably in the 1780s, the main Newtownhamilton road was diverted westward to its present course (A29/B31) to expand the parkland; it notable that much of the parkland planting lies east of the old line of this road. Within this area lies the architecturally notable Palace Farm (Listed HB 15/19/013), erected in the 1790s, probably to a design by Francis Johnson, 0.3 miles (0.5km) south-west of the palace. Enclosed by open parkland, with flanking tree screens each side, this yard comprises a large and pleasantly designed quadrangle fronted by twin farmhouses; it was admired by Sir Charles Coole in 1804, who remarked that ‘his grace’s farmyard, implements of husbandry and mode of culture, afford a bright example to the gentry’. Invariably, demesne farm buildings were located conveniently to the walled garden; however, here the walled garden, which was built for kitchen produce (vegetables, flowers, fruit) in the 1770s lay in the north of the demesne where it was characteristically carefully screened with trees from the parkland. It occupied a large rectangular stone walled area (440ft/121m x 440ft/134m) covering 4.25 acres (1.72ha), which was typically divided by paths into four quadrant sections with a circular pond in the centre. The walled slip gardens lay on its north and east sides; one of these areas, the frame yard, is known in 1863 to have included three ‘Green Houses’, two ‘Vine Pits’; a ‘Vinery’; ‘Fruit House’; ‘Mellon Pit’ and ‘Mushroom Pit’ in addition to offices and a ‘cole pit’. One of the other walled slip enclosures was made into a pleasure garden, known as ‘Lady Anne’s Garden’, laid out in box-edged rose beds; it was entered via a fine wrought iron gate, c.1840 and named after a sister (died 1842) of Lord John George de la Poer Beresford, Primate from 1822 to 1862. All these slip gardens were removed in
Register of Parks, Gardens and Demesnes of Special Historic Interest (NI) – November 2020 the 1950s and are now covered by car parks, while the walled garden area itself has been used since the 1970s by Armagh Rugby Club; its enclosing walls were partly cleared at this time although much of the walling to the east and north has survived, along with a section to the south. North of the walled garden lies the old head gardener’s residence/aka Frazer House (Listed HB 15/18/014), a relatively large two-storey gables house built sometime around 1790; currently this is used to house the planning, and births marriages and deaths registry office. Significantly perhaps, the ruins of the adjacent friary were not incorporated into the landscaped parkland in the 1770s, but rather left obscured behind a wall and within an orchard (it may be noted that in 1557 the friary then had its own orchard and garden). Indeed, stones from the friary were robbed to build walls in the demesne in the 1760s and 1770s and not until the early Victorian era that it became a romantic ruin in the park; by 1888 Bassett referred to ‘the picturesque effect of the immediate surroundings’ [of the friary] being ‘heightened by splendid Irish yews and stately forest trees’; some of these yews are still present in this area and there is a wall with a high arch opening onto the friary church at its west end. The present public entrance to the demesne lies a short distance from these ruins; this dates from the building of the ‘Friary Road’ by-pass in the early 1970s, which removed the northern perimeter tree belts of the park and resulted in the demolition of the main 18th century gate lodge and the movement of the Cooley-designed limestone entrance gates piers – effectively cutting the palace demesne off from the city. The damage was made worse by the later building of the large unsightly Armagh City Hotel (2006), which now dominates much of what used to be the north-east part of the parkland. Of the three former gate lodges into the park, only one is now extant, that on south of the demesne from the Newtownhamilton Road (not listed). The enclosing wall of the demesne, which unfortunately has been damaged, removed and lowered in a number of places, was largely built in the 1770s on the north, east and south sides, while the wall flanking the later section on the west was constructed between 1803-05 at a cost of £3,233 10s 8d, by Archbishop William Stuart. Unlike many large contemporary parks, no lake was made in the Primate’s Demesne, but below the palace meanders a stream north to south through the park; in the 19th century some small weirs were built on the stream to enliven its water and so add to its picturesque effect, while it was crossed by a number of small bridges, some relics of which still remain. There is no historic arboretum in the park, but from the mid-19th century a number of exotic trees, including sequoia, were planted around the palace and on its approaches; since the 1960s the council have added to this collection. South-west of the palace a small ornamental garden was made around the mid-19th century, which is overlooked by a fine metal curvilinear lean-to glasshouse of c.1860 with heating pipes (Listed HB 15/18/020); in section it is quadrant shaped with recesses, possibly for pots, along the base of the wall. The building contained vines and shelving for pots and is now used to grow flowers for Armagh City and District Council. The associated garden has stone-edged paths, flowering shrubs, including magnolia, topiary and stone urns. Close by on the south side of the palace is a 20th century garden with stone sundial, clipped box hedges and a ‘Garden of the Senses’ created in the 1990s. The main house remained the archbishop’s palace until 1975 when a see house was built beside the cathedral. The palace and the core of the demesne were conveyed to Armagh City and District Council two years later and since 1981 the palace has been used as their offices with the service drive becoming the main entrance. The palace outbuildings have become a visitors’ centre—‘The Palace Stables’—with an adventure playground made beside the public car park to the west, all concealed in woodland, however the car park for the council office was less well concealed. In 2015 improvements were made to the front sweep of the palace, removing unsightly fencing and confining cars to a relatively discrete car park north-west of the house. Separate from council ownership is a golf course which occupies 126 acres (51ha) of the north-east section of the parkland. This had its origin in 1893-94 when a golf course was established here, but unfortunately in 1975 what had been previously a discretely laid out course was dramatically remodelled and extended to eighteen holes, resulting in the removal of much of the park’s 18th century south-eastern woodland belts but also saw the planting of extensive
Register of Parks, Gardens and Demesnes of Special Historic Interest (NI) – November 2020 fairway screens of fir, which are not only out of character with the original park scheme but block the historic vistas south; however, the golf course remains part of the registered area in the hope that this damage can be reversed at some stage in the future. SMR ARM 12:16 Franciscan Friary ruins, ARM 12:017 St Bridget’s Holy Well. Public access to part of the grounds.
Ballynoe (or Newtown), Tullow, Co Carlow – private?
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. 27. “[Barratt/LGI1969] A small late-Georgian house of two storeys over basement. Thee bay front and sides; glazed and curving porch; eaved roof. Extended by a two bay Victorian addition of two storeys with pediment; further extensions again. In recent years the home of Major and Mrs S.G.R. Elton-Barratt.”
Detached two-storey over basement house, c. 1775, with stone façade having pedimented advanced bays. Extended to right, c. 1825, comprising three-bay range with central breakfront having bay windows to ground floor. Renovated, c. 1980, with bowed granite projecting porch added. Stable complex to site.
Record of Protected Structures:
Ballynoe House, Aghade, Tullow. Townland: Ballynoe or Newtown
A very curious house of different dates, with an asymmetrical façade of different styles. The house is said to date from circa 1775 and to have been a four-bay, two-storey house with a two-bay, deeply advanced breakfront and a basement. The breakfront and one bay survives and added to this a three-bay, two-storey house of circa 1820.The earlier house is built of coursed-rubble stone with brick dressings to the windows, a gable on the advanced bays, which has a strong cornice giving it the look of a pediment. The sash windows have six panes in each sash. The roof is hipped with wide eaves. The later house has painted, rendered walls and a breakfront, a high basement, oriel windows flanking the simple, round-headed doorcase. There is a most unusual semi-circular porch of four free-standing, granite piers – each pier is composed of three, cylindrical shafts. The low-pitched, hipped roof has wide eaves. The later house is probably by Thomas Cobden.
Jimmy O’Toole, The Carlow Gentry: What will the neighbours say! Published by Jimmy O’Toole, Carlow, Ireland, 1993. Printed by Leinster Leader Ltd, Naas, Kildare.
Originally built by the Ricky family, this residence is a fine late Georgian two storey house which according to author Jimmy O’ Toole’ s book ” The Carlow Gentry” originally stood on circa 600 acres and was one of Carlow’ s smaller estates. Reduced this century to approximately 50 acres, Ballynoe has had a number of interesting owners over the years. Renowned architect Sam Stephenson owned the property for a time in the 1970s. The current owners have made Ballynoe House their home for the last fourteen years during which time they bred many fine draught horses from Ballynoe.
Situated in an area of outstanding natural beauty, the area has much to offer those interested in country pursuits. The Slaney Valley and the renowned Altamont gardens are just a five minute drive from the property with the choice of first class championship golf courses including Mount Wolseley Golf & Country Club in nearby Tullow, Killerig Castle Golf & Country Club, Carlow 27 hole championship course, Coolattin Golf Club. It is in the country of the Carlow Hunt, and there is also excellent trout fishing on the River Barrow which flows through Carlow town which also provides facilities for boating and cruising. There are a number of gun clubs in the area and private shoots within easy drive which are always in need of new guns. The scenic Wicklow way walk passes the nearby village of Clonegal and provides beautiful walks through the Slaney Valley and the Wicklow Hills.
This is a fine cut stone granite wall and cast iron gates set off a quiet country road leads onto a gravelled lane surrounded by mature trees. At its end stands Ballynoe House on an elevated site taking advantage of the fine views of the rolling countryside and farmland and the Wicklow and Blackstairs Mountains.
THE STUD FARM:- Circa 49 acres including residence, gardens and pleasure grounds the lands are arable of excellent quality currently in permanent pasture, with water to all paddocks and due to the lay of the lands can provide great shelter for livestock.
The enclosed cut stone stable yard, containing 9 loose boxes, tack and feed rooms, hay and straw barns are all beautifully maintained, and are an attractive addition to the property. A new machinery and feed storage shed was constructed in 1998.
Surrounding the house and gardens are fine ornamental standing trees, an attractive circa 2 acre old stone walled ornamental garden with extensive orchard, herb & vegetable area, heated swimming pool with adjoining changing rooms and sauna housed in a timber framed pavilion.
To the western boundary of the property lies the river Slaney and Ballynoe has the benefit of salmon fishing rights for approximately 2kms on the bank adjoining the property. It is an area of outstanding natural beauty near the popular Aghade Bridge with a picturesque river walk along the bank. The fishing along the bank is excellent with eight weirs, four named pools a long the beat providing varied and productive water at mort levels. A small fisherman’ s lodge along the bank provides welcome refuge from the summer showers
Five years ago, Ballynoe House on 50 acres at Ardattin, Co Carlow, was valued at €3.8 million. Today, the estate is for sale by private treaty from joint agents Sherry FitzGerald and Browne Corrigan, with an asking price of €1.25 million.
At this price, there appears to be value and it’s likely to attract savvy overseas interest.
The property, in lovely Slaney river valley countryside, is a short drive from junction five on the M9 (Dublin to Waterford) motorway – about an hour south of theRed Cow interchange and nine miles from Carlow town.
The owners – Willem and Anneke Savelkouls – fell in love with Ireland during a hunting holiday two decades ago and bought the estate in 1995. They first used it as a holiday home but eventually moved to Ireland to pursue country sports, breed horses and keep sheep.
Now they’re downsizing “with a lot of regrets” and returning to the Netherlands but will “miss the space, the way of life where everything goes so easy” – and even the Irish weather.
Ballynoe House was originally home to a Carlow “gentry” family followed by a succession of British army top brass. For a few years in the 1970s, it was owned and used as a weekend retreat by the late architect Sam Stephenson(best remembered for his controversial Central Bank in Dame Street and Dublin City Council offices at Wood Quay designs).
His primary legacy – one of the most unexpected and jaw-dropping features to be found in any Irish country house – is an outdoor swimming pool and modernist pavilion with sauna and changing rooms plonked into an early 19th-century walled-garden.
It’s as shocking and unexpected as any of his Dublin structures. Why did he bother when the property has access to natural swimming in the Slaney? This carbuncle could be easily removed. If not, the pool and pavilion will need some costly overhaul and maintenance.
The spacious late-Georgian house (with Victorian extensions) has a curved porch entrance leading into 9,149sq ft (850sq m) of bright, well-maintained accommodation arranged as two storeys over basement.
The ground floor has a big welcoming reception hall and two large reception rooms with high ceilings, big windows and great natural light.
There’s also an open-plan living room/kitchen and a very large study which once housed a private school.
Upstairs are seven bedrooms: a master suite, five family bedrooms sharing two further bathrooms, and a separate guest bedroom suite with a shower room.
The garden or basement level, which can be accessed from internal staircases or directly from outside, is pleasantly bright and includes a games room, an extra bedroom, a wine cellar, a drying room, office and a self-contained apartment (living room, bedroom, kitchen and bathroom) for a live-in caretaker or housekeeper.
An attractive, spick-and-span granite courtyard has extensive stabling, tack room, hay loft, woodshed and barn.
The surrounding 50 acres are “richly fertile lands, which include good pasturage and woodland” with some very fine trees and what the agents accurately describe as “a fabulous stretch of the river Slaney” – 1.25 miles (2km) of private riverbank with some noted weirs and pools for private salmon and trout fishing.
Willem Savelkouls, incidentally, hasn’t adopted the Irish angler’s habit of whopping exaggeration and admits, with disarming honesty, to never having landed a salmon – despite frequent efforts – but, has, over the years, “caught lots of trout”.
Perched high above the riverbank is a little fisherman’s chalet with a log fire and picture window overlooking a mesmerising vista.
You could travel the length and breadth of rural France and not find a more idyllically Arcadian spot for a picnic, river bathing, angling or just plain idling. No wonder the Dutch found it “wonderful” and “unbelievable”.