Capard, Rosenalis, Co Laois

Capard, County Laois, courtesy Savills.

Capard, Rosenalis, Co Laois

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. 56. [Pigott] A 2 storey early C19 house with a 5 bay front; the centre bay pedimented and projecting boldly, with a window in a rectangular recess above a Doric portico. The Pigott family tree is painted on a wall in one of the rooms. Straight canal in garden.” 

Capard, County Laois, courtesy Savills.
Capard, County Laois, courtesy Savills.
Capard, County Laois, courtesy Savills.
Capard, County Laois, courtesy Savills.

https://fivestar.ie/luxury-property-sales/capard-house/

13 beds10 baths1540 m2

13 bedrooms, €4,750,000 

Capard House: Laois 

Capard, County Laois, courtesy courtesy myhome.ie 2020

Savills 2024:

Capard House is a Greek Revival, late 18 Century country mansion of immense charm and character set amidst about 40.40 hectares/100 acres of land.

Capard House was built in 1790 and was the third house to be built on the same site. A Protected Structure, it is a most impressive two storey non basement Greek Revival period house with an adjoining substantial wing (formally built for staff), which is totally self-contained and can also be used as additional accommodation to the Main House.

Capard, County Laois, courtesy Savills.

The Capard House was home to the Piggott family. The family owned vast tracks of lands in both Co. Laois (The Queens County) and Co. Limerick. The Treaty of Limerick (1691) which brought an end to the Williamite wars against James II is reputed to have been signed at Capard. General Ginkel is said to have quartered his soldiers at Rosenallis Village and he himself stayed in Capard House as a guest of Robert Piggott. A copy of the Treaty was kept in Capard House up to the 1960`s when it was handed over to the National Museum.

The family prospered at Capard, one family member, Thomas Piggott was a major- general in the army and a member of parliament, his son George Piggott was granted the Piggott Baronetcy, a title in the Baronetage of the United Kingdom.

Over the past 20 years, the vendors have painstakingly and meticulously restored the house and wing, whilst maintaining the integrity of the original period features. All wiring and plumbing has been replaced and many improvements made. Their attention to detail throughout is evident.

Their efforts went far beyond the residence and wing as the entire estate has been restored to its former glory with the terraced lawns and formal gardens broken into segments, the walled gardens, the long pond and lake, the folly and stables all combining to offer the new owner of Capard House, all the benefits of their labours.

The main house is laid out with bright and generous proportioned rooms with ornate ceiling decoration and large open fireplaces. It is a perfect house for entertaining on a grand scale with all the main reception rooms leading off the main hall.

Capard, County Laois, courtesy myhome.ie 2020
Capard, County Laois, courtesy myhome.ie 2020
Capard, County Laois, courtesy myhome.ie 2020
Capard, County Laois, courtesy myhome.ie 2020
Capard, County Laois, courtesy myhome.ie 2020
Capard, County Laois, courtesy myhome.ie 2020
Capard, County Laois, courtesy Savills.

Upstairs are the very generous bedroom suites, all with fine views either overlooking the gardens or with a panoramic vista over the surrounding countryside below.

Capard, County Laois, courtesy myhome.ie 2020
Capard, County Laois, courtesy myhome.ie 2020
Capard, County Laois, courtesy myhome.ie 2020
Capard, County Laois, courtesy myhome.ie 2020.
Capard, County Laois, courtesy Savills.

There is a terrific atmosphere of calmness at Capard which comes from the natural surrounds of the gardens and grounds with the stream flowing incessantly bringing nourishment to all the living plants, trees and flowers on the property.

Capard is situated at the foothills of the Slieve Bloom Hills well known for its many and varied wildlife. Part of the estate has a special designation (SPA) Special Protected Area which is an area where rare and protected species can live in safety and their breeds can evolve. The surrounding habitat is very suitable for many leisurely purposes.

The gardens at Capard have been largely created under the guidance of Arthur Shackleton over the past 20 years and are now maturing into one of the finer gardens in the country. Nestled on the edge of the Slieve Bloom Mountains with stunning views across the landscape and with acid soil and soft climate, it is the perfect place to create a garden.

Formal terraces round the house covered with scented roses lead out into a Camellia Walk, Scented Walk, mixed grass border and a field of beautiful Rhododendrons planted to celebrate the Millennium.

Capard, County Laois, courtesy Savills.
Capard, County Laois, courtesy Savills.
Capard, County Laois, courtesy Savills.
Capard, County Laois, courtesy Savills.
Capard, County Laois, courtesy Savills.

A lake and canal sit happily in the landscape below the house. Set in the midst of this is a restored Walled Garden filled with shrub borders, a Hornbeam archway, new and old rose borders and an orchard.

Capard, County Laois, courtesy Savills.
Capard, County Laois, courtesy Savills.
Capard, County Laois, courtesy Savills.
Capard, County Laois, courtesy Savills.
Capard, County Laois, courtesy Savills.
Capard, County Laois, courtesy Savills.

Natural streams run down through the garden and as if this were not enough, the woods in May are carpeted with a sea of wild bluebells. All in all a remarkable and inspiring garden experience where the vendor’s passion for the garden has been extraordinary and responsible for creating this magical experience.

Capard, County Laois, courtesy Savills.
Capard, County Laois, courtesy Savills.
Capard, County Laois, courtesy Savills.
Capard, County Laois, courtesy Savills.

Local Sporting Golf at Birr and The Heritage in Portarlington. Racing at the Curragh, Tipperary, Limerick and Kilbeggan. Several good hunting packs including Laois Hunt and the Ormond Hunt. Many excellent driven and rough shooting opportunities in the vicinity. (There are Shooting rights over approximately 100 acres adjoining the property). Main House Ground floor A Portico entrance leads into the Entrance Hall which features gilted decorative cornice and centre rose, black and white marble tiled floor with double doors lead to the Main Hall. The hall also has marble black and white tiled floor and gilted decorative cornice centre rose. The Drawing room has a timber floor, white carved mantelpiece with Georgian grate, highly decorated gilted painted cornice and centre rose, 2 large windows affording wonderful panoramic views. The Dining Room boasts white marble Adam style mantelpiece and Georgian grate, highly decorated gilted painted cornice and centre Rose and timber floor. The Staircase Hall features the magnificent cantilevered staircase lit by a central cupola and black and white marble tiled floor. Off this hall is found the Cloakroom with WC and small storeroom and sandstone flagged floor. The Library with marble mantelpiece and brass surrounds, gilted cornice decoration and the Small Dining Room with black marble mantelpiece and decorative gilted cornice. The Back hall also has a black and white marble tiled floor and leads to the wine cellar, the serving dining room, the kitchen, breakfast room, utility, pantry, and office and study. The back staircase leads from the back hall to the first floor. The study has a wooden fireplace and leads into the office which also has a wooden fireplace. The Pantry has a sandstone flagged floor, fireplace, fitted cupboards and shelving. The Serving Dining room features an impressive marble Adam style mantelpiece and basket grate, cornice and centre rose decoration in gold and white, sandstone floor. The large old world Kitchen has a sandstone floor, fully fitted with large timber cupboards and drawers with large polished granite worktops and meat hooks on ceiling, a 4 oven oil fired Aga cooker, 5 ring Neff gas hob and electric cooker, double stainless steel sink unit, drawers and built in dresser. Off the kitchen is found the breakfast room with sandstone floor, open fire, fitted cupboards, and polished granite worktops. The Utility has fitted cupboards sink unit, plumbed for washing machine and dryer, cloak cupboards and boot storage and door to outside. First floor At first floor level there are 8 spacious bedrooms, 7 of which have their own ensuite bathroom. Guest Bedroom 1 has a timber floor, grey marble mantelpiece and basket grate and the large ensuite has a timber floor, WC, WHB, bath with shower attachment and tiled shower, grey marble mantelpiece and basket grate. Guest Bedroom 2 has a timber floor, white Connemara marble mantelpiece and Georgian grate. The Master Bedroom Suite has a timber floor, panoramic views over 5 counties, mottled white marble mantelpiece open grate and the ensuite has twin WHB Multi jet shower, roll top bath, WC, mottled white marble mantelpiece open grate, large fitted wardrobe Guest Bedroom 4 has a timber floor, mottled mantelpiece open fire and the ensuite has a bath with shower attachment, bidet, WC and WHB. Off the landing is a Guest with WC, WHB and the back staircase, and a laundry room. Guest bedroom 5 has a timber floor and Black fireplace and the ensuite has a timber floor, bath, separate shower, heated towel rail, WC, WHB, open fireplace. Guest bedroom 6 and ensuite with tiled floor, WC, WHB, heated towel rail, shower. Guest bedroom 7 and ensuite with tiled floor, shower, WHB, WC, heated towel rail. Guest bedroom 8 with fireplace and ensuite with tiled floor, WC, WHB, large bath, shower, heated towel rail. THE WING Ground floor Entrance Hall with tiled floor, leading to the front of the wing and rear. Ground floor front Kitchen fully fitted with fridge freezer, electric 4 plate hob, Neff Electric Cooker, polished granite work top with sink and drawer + extractor fan, sandstone floor. Double doors lead to the Dining Room with oak and Greek mahogany inlay floor, black marble mantelpiece + Georgian granite, cornice and centre rose. Double doors lead to the Drawing Room with oak and Greek mahogany inlay floor and Dublin white marble mantelpiece with painted decoration and open grate cornice and centre rose and a door to front garden. Another set of double doors lead to the hall with sandstone flagged floor open fireplace and staircases, door to rear. Double Doors into the Study with black marble fireplace and an ensuite bathroom with tiled floor, WC, Jacuzzi bath, shower and heated towel rail. Ground floor rear Second staircase hall with open fireplace, tiled floor and corridor and double doors into the Catering Kitchen which has tiled floor, 2 Neff electric double ovens, 5 plate Neff Gas Hob, fridge freezer, fully fitted Cupboards with polished granite worktops and sink unit. The Hot Tub Room has a fitted hot tub/ Jacuzzi and is fully tiled with 2 showers + heated towel rail. The Guest Changing have tiled floor, 2 WC, 2 WHB. The Party / Banqueting Room features an oak and Greek Mahogany inlay floor, partly sprung for dancing, door to Courtyard. First floor Front Upstairs has laminated rosewood floors with underfloor heating Bed 1 with ensuite shower room with tiled floor and walls, shower WHB + WC. Large games room which interconnects the front and rear of the wing. Guest WC with marble floor WHB + WC. Bed 2 with and ensuite shower room with marble tiled floor, part tiled wall, built in shower, WHB, WC and heated towel rail. Bed 3 with ensuite bathroom, shower, WC, WHB marble tiled floor and part tiled walls and walk in wardrobes. First floor rear wing Living room with carved painted wooden mantel piece and concealed door to internal hallway. Also with Study off the living room. The halls gives access to the large Bathroom tiled floor and part tiled walls, 2 x WHB, WC, oval Bath and multi jet shower. It also gives access to Bedroom 4 off of which are two further concealed doors leading to a Study / office with fitted bookshelves in the corridor and the other leading to the Dressing room which is fully fitted. Bedroom 5 is wired and plumbed for a kitchen. The farm buildings Upper Courtyard A series of stone lofted sheds and general storage facilities Farm yard Long concrete yard with stone building including 2 garages Large open span, stone built barn with concrete floor and good roof. Various stone outbuildings/ stores and old cottage all re-roofed. The lands The grass land provides good grazing mainly for sheep and cattle and the woodland provides great shelter and amenity. Parts of the land are included in an SPA, (Special Protected Area) which means that it provides a very special habitat for many species of wild life as well as being a safe haven for many species of birds’, especially rare ones. Title Freehold Fixtures and Fittings Garden statuary, light fittings, furniture and other removable fittings are expressly excluded.

Accommodation 

Features 

  • Greek Revival, late 18th Century mansion
  • Sitting on 40.4 Hectares/ 100 acres
  • 13 bedrooms
  • 6 reception rooms
  • Beautifully renovated and restored

https://www.buildingsofireland.ie/buildings-search/building/12800705/capard-house-capard-demesne-capard-co-laois

Detached seven-bay two-storey Neo-Classical Georgian house, built c.1815, with pedimented central breakfront and flanking end bays. Double-pitched and hipped slate roofs hidden behind parapets, with rolled lead ridge tiles, ashlar chimneystacks with yellow clay pots and glazed lantern to rear on a cylindrical plan. Sandstone ashlar walls with projecting plinth, bands, cornice and blocking course. Pediment to entrance bay with eagle over. Nap rendered to rear elevation with ruled and lined detail, painted. Square-headed window openings with sandstone sills forming sill course, sandstone architraves and six-over-six timber sash windows. Blind openings to end bays with pediments over. Prostyle tetrastyle Greek Doric portico to breakfront with lugged architrave to door opening and timber panelled double door with sidelights. Interior retains original joinery; Entrance Hall with decorative plasterwork; Dining Room with decorative plasterwork. House is set back from road in own grounds; designed landscaped grounds to site; tarmacadam drive and forecourt to approach; concrete steps to entrance. Gateway to site comprising rendered piers with cast-iron gates. 

https://www.buildingsofireland.ie/buildings-search/building/12800706/capard-house-capard-demesne-capard-co-laois

Capard, County Laois, courtesy National Inventory.

Detached nine-bay two-storey former stable complex, built c.1820, on a quadrangular plan with three-bay pedimented central breakfront. Renovated, c.1990, to accommodate part residential use. Double-pitched and hipped slate roof with rolled lead ridge tiles, nap rendered chimneystacks and cast-iron rainwater goods. Nap rendered walls with ruled and lined detail and sandstone plinth and cornice. Square-headed window openings with sandstone sills with three-over-six and six-over-six timber sash windows. Two round-headed window openings flank round-headed door opening to central breakfront with glazed timber panelled door with fanlight. Interior not inspected. Set back from road in own grounds; landscaped grounds to site; cobbled courtyard to site. 

https://www.buildingsofireland.ie/buildings-search/building/12800707/capard-house-capard-demesne-capard-co-laois

Capard, County Laois, courtesy National Inventory.

Detached seven-bay single- and two-storey coach house, built c.1760, comprising six-bay single-storey range with single-bay two-storey pedimented end bay having bellcote. Pyramidal slate roof with sandstone bellcote. Roof to stable wing originally double-pitched. Roughcast rendered walls with rubble stone to side elevations, painted. Stone sillcourse to upper floor, painted. Oculi and round-headed window openings to upper floor, Diocletian window opening to pediment with multi-pane timber fixed-pane windows. Elliptical-headed carriageway with timber panelled double doors. Interior not inspected. Road fronted; tarmacadam courtyard to right; pair of limestone ashlar piers to right with wrought iron gates and railings. 

https://www.buildingsofireland.ie/buildings-search/building/12800708/capard-house-capard-demesne-capard-co-laois

Capard, County Laois, courtesy National Inventory.

Detached two-storey farm outbuilding, built c.1830, about a courtyard with round-headed carriageway to entrance. Double-pitched and hipped slate roof with nap rendered chimneystack and cast-iron rainwater goods. Mono-pitched to flanking bays. Lime-rendered walls over rubble sandstone, painted. Square-headed window openings with sandstone sills and six-over-six timber sash windows. Elliptical-headed carriageway; no fitting. Cobbled floors to interior and timber stalls. Outbuilding is set back from road in own grounds at right angles to road; cobbled courtyard to site; roughcast boundary wall to front with rendered piers having wrought iron double gates; tarmacadam turn-around to front. Detached single-storey rubble stone outbuildings to site. 

https://www.buildingsofireland.ie/buildings-search/building/12800709/capard-house-capard-demesne-capard-co-laois

Orthogonal pool, c.1830, with rounded ends. Freestanding timber-clad temple, c.1980, to site. Located in landscaped gardens. 

Capard, County Laois, courtesy National Inventory.

‘The house is one of the most extensive in the kingdom, the front exceeding upwards of two hundred feet and one of the most beautiful, being built of the quarries on this estate, and mostly hewn, which gives the whole a magnificent appearance’. So wrote William Wilson in 1803 of the recently built Capard, County Laois. This neo-classical house, situated on high ground with panoramic views across the surrounding countryside, has enjoyed mixed fortunes over the past two centuries with its future uncertain on more than one occasion. However since 2015 its current owners have undertaken a meticulous restoration of both building and demesne so that it is now without doubt one of Ireland’s finest country houses. This week saw the publication of a book chronicling Capard’s history, written by Ciarán Reilly and placing the estate within the context of time and place, allowing readers better to understand the evolution of the midlands region. As handsome as the place itself, Capard: An Irish Country House and Estate is a welcome addition to the field of Irish country house studies 

https://laoishouses.wordpress.com

Ballyshanduffe House (also known as The Derries), Portarlington, Co Laois 

Ballyshanduffe House (also known as The Derries), Portarlington, Co Laois 

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. 28. “[Alloway/LG1879] A C19 castellated house originally built 1810 by W.J. Alloway on the site of an old house of the O’Dempseys; remodelled and partly rebuilt ca. mid C19 by R.M. Alloway, two principal fronts, one of them low and nearly 200 feet in length, with battlements and pointed doors and windows; the other front higher and with a square tower. Old arch opposite hall door, surviving from the O’Dempsey house.” 

Nothing on google. 

https://landedfamilies.blogspot.com/search/label/Leix

Alloway of The Derries 

The Alloway family were Quaker merchants in the Devon/ Somerset border area in the late 17th century. William Alloway of Bridgwater (and formerly of Minehead), probably the brother of the first Benjamin Alloway noticed below, is recorded as the leading general merchant in the town, with an international trade and ships plying regularly to Dublin and France. Benjamin Alloway (1670-?1745) seems to have settled in Dublin in about 1700, perhaps as agent for William. The family remained in Dublin over several generations, and maintained the Quaker faith for many years as is indicated by some of their marriages: for example, the first wife of Benjamin Alloway (1728-72) was a grand-daughter of the leading Quaker apologist, Robert Barclay of Urie.  It was William Johnson Alloway (c.1771-1829), who perhaps inherited significant wealth from his father-in-law, Robert Johnson, a justice of the common pleas in Ireland, who translated the family into the county gentry by buying a small estate of around 618 acres at Ballyshaneduff (Co. Leix) and building a new house there in about 1810.  His son had to partially reconstructed the house after a devastating fire in 1849, and it remained in the family until the early death of Robert Marmaduke Alloway in 1880. With his death, his young children became orphans, and were taken into the care of their mother’s father, Theophilus Lucas-Clements, who acted as their guardian and trustee. He put the Ballyshaneduff estate (by then known as The Derries) up for auction in 1884. The two young sons who would have stood to inherit the estate emigrated to Canada when they reached their late teens, becoming part of the vast Irish diaspora who sought a new life in the colonies. They perhaps chose Canada because their great-uncle Arthur William Alloway (b. 1804) had previously gone there in 1855 and their cousin, William Forbes Alloway (1852-1930) was becoming established and wealthy as a banker and public benefactor in Winnipeg, Manitoba.  

The Derries, alias Ballyshaneduff (Co. Leix) 

A 19th-century castellated house, built in 1810 by W.J. Alloway on the site of an old house of the O’Dempseys, and remodelled and partially rebuilt by his son after a devastating fire in January 1849.  The resulting building had two main fronts: a long, low east front (nearly 200 feet in length) with pointed doors and windows and a castellated parapet, presumably largely of c.1810, and a higher western front with a square tower.  In the 1850s, a small ivy-covered fragment of the old house of the O’Dempseys stood opposite the hall door, and near it Robert Morellet Alloway built a replica of an Irish round tower.  Like the house, this has gone, and the well-wooded landscaped demesne of some 618 acres is now given over to commercial forestry; few traces remain of the estate. No illustration of the house is known to survive. 
 
Descent: Sir Terence O’Dempsey (d. 1638), 1st Viscount Clanmalier; to son, Lewis O’Dempsey (d. 1683), 2nd Viscount Clanmalier; seized by Parliament 1641 and granted after Restoration to Sir Henry Bennet (1618-85), 1st Earl of Arlington… forfeited 1690 and granted to Henry Massue du Ruvigny (1648-1720), 1st Earl of Galway… sold to Hollow Swordblade Co. of London, which divided it into smaller properties, one of which was sold to William Johnson Alloway (d. 1829); to son, Robert Morellet Alloway (1810-77); to son, Robert Marmaduke Alloway (1840-80); after whose death it was sold in 1884. 
 

The Alloway family of The Derries 

Alloway, Benjamin (b. 1670) of Dublin. Son of William and Susannah Alloway of Minehead, born 23 June 1670. He settled in Dublin about 1700.  He is probably the person of this name who married, 12 September 1698 at Luxborough or Luccombe (Somerset), Hannah, daughter of Peter Godwin, and had issue including: 
(1) William Alloway (fl. early 18th cent.) (q.v.). 
He may be the person of this name who was buried at Minehead in 1745. 
 
Alloway, William (fl. early 18th cent.) of Dublin.  Son of Benjamin Alloway (b. 1670) and his wife Hannah, daughter of Peter Godwin, born about 1700.  He married, about 1725, Grace, daughter of Archibald Montgomerie of Ayrshire and had issue: 
(1) Benjamin Alloway (1728-72) (q.v.); 
(2) Hannah Alloway (d. 1796), m. Jonas Duckett (1720-97) of Duckett’s Grove and had issue five sons and three daughters; died 29 February 1796. 
His date of death is unknown. 
 
Alloway, Benjamin (1728-72) of Dublin.  Son of William Alloway (fl. early 18th cent.) of Dublin, and his wife Grace, daughter of Archibald Montgomerie of Ayrshire, born 1728. He married 1st, 28 or 29 June 1753, Lydia, daughter of John Barclay (1687-1751) and granddaughter of Robert Barclay of Urie (Aberdeens), and 2nd, 27 December 1769, Anne, daughter of William Johnson of Dublin, and had issue: 
(1.1) David Alloway; probably died young; 
(1.2) John Barclay Alloway (1754/5-1830) of Mount Pleasant (Dublin); married, August 1787, Catherine Evans (1758-1830) but died without issue, 6 December 1830; 
(1.3) Robert Alloway (b. c.1756); probably died young; 
(1.4) William Alloway (b. 1757); 
(1.5) Mary Alloway (b. 1759); married, 1776, Joseph Sparrow; 
(1.6) Benjamin Alloway (b. 1761); 
(2.1) William Johnson Alloway (c.1771-1829) (q.v.
He died 29 April 1772. His widow married 2nd, 1781, George Holmes and had issue a further son (Maj. George Holmes, killed at the Battle of Waterloo in 1815). 
 
Alloway, William Johnson (c.1771-1829) of Ballyshaneduff.  Only son of Benjamin Alloway (1728-72) and his second wife, Anne, daughter of William Johnson of Dublin, born 1770×1772. He married, 15 May 1802, Margaret (d. 1834), eldest daughter of Robert Johnson, a judge of common pleas for Ireland, and had issue: 
(1) Robert Morellet Alloway (c.1803-77) (q.v.); 
(2) Arthur William Alloway (b. 1804), baptised 3 October 1804; vetinary surgeon in 4th Regiment; emigrated to Canada, 1855; married, 26 April 1832, his cousin Mary Christina Johnson and had issue (including William Forbes Alloway (1852-1930) the Canadian banker and philanthropist); 
(3) Margaret Anne Alloway (1809-35), born 22 April 1809; died unmarried, 16 April 1835; 
(4) George Holmes Alloway (c.1815-80); married, 8 December 1847, Florence Gertrude, daughter of Henry McClintock of Dundalk (Louth); died in London, 1880; 
(5) Anne Alloway (fl. 1835); probably died unmarried; 
(6) Maria Alloway (d. 1845); married, 19 May 1844, William Conway Morgan (b. 1814), barrister-at-law  (who married 2nd, 1854, Catherine Elizabeth Kane and had issue two daughters) and had issue one son; died about 17 May 1845; 
(7) John Parker Alloway (fl. 1835). 
He purchased the Ballyshaneduff estate and built a new house there c.1810. 
He died 2 October 1829. His widow died 18 April 1834. 
 
Alloway, Robert Morellet (c.1803-77) of Ballyshaneduff. Eldest son of William Johnson Alloway (d. 1829) and his wife Margaret, daughter of Robert Johnson, born about 1803. Educated at Trinity College, Dublin (admitted 1820; MA) and Grays Inn (admitted 1826). JP for Co. Leix. Author (as Robert Montgomerie) of The Rose of Rostrevor, 1855; patented improvements in the treatment of peat for use as fuel, 1865. He married, 19 June 1832, Marian (d. 1881), only daughter of William Lewis of Harlech (Dublin) and had issue: 
(1) Grace Montgomerie Alloway (1838-67), born 19 June 1838; married, 28 November 1865, John Saunders of Burnham (Somerset) and had issue a son; died 8 January 1867; 
(2) Robert Marmaduke Alloway (1840-80) (q.v.). 
He inherited Ballyshaneduff from his father in 1829, and partially rebuilt the house after a devastating fire in 1849.  Some of the estate land was sold in 1863, and he lived latterly at Wells in Somerset. 
He died at Wells (Somerset), 8 July 1877; his will was proved 10 August 1877 (estate £450). His widow died at Exmouth, 2 November 1881; her will was proved 13 December 1881 (estate in England £418). 
 
Alloway, Robert Marmaduke (1840-80) of Ballyshaneduff.  Only son of Robert Morellet Alloway (1810-77) and his wife Marian, daughter of William Lewis of Harlech (Dublin), born 9 June 1840. Served as a Lieutenant in Dublin City Artillery (resigned 1873). He married 1st, 19 August 1869 at St Peter, Dublin, Isabella Margaret (d. 1876), daughter of Theophilus Lucas-Clements esq. of Rathkenny (Cavan) and Dublin, and 2nd, 24 July 1878 at Weston-super-Mare (Somerset), Laura Georgina (c.1856-1951), daughter of Rev. Joseph Philip Knight, and had issue: 
(1.1) Edward Lewis Upton Alloway (1872-1903), born 16 March 1872; emigrated to Canada, 1889 and became a rancher at Little Red River, Alberta; died 28 December 1903; will proved 7 May 1906 (estate in England £477); 
(1.2) Robert Henry Arthur Alloway (1873-1956), born 18 March 1873; emigrated to Canada; died in Vancouver, British Columbia, 21 December 1956; 
(1.3) Olivia Beatrice Alloway (1875-1938), born 13 January 1875; married, 1909, Charles Vernon Olive, bank clerk, and had issue; died 16 January 1938; will proved 25 August 1938 (estate £1,007); 
(1.4) Isabella Maria Alloway (b. 1876), born 12 April 1876; unmarried in 1911. 
He inherited Ballyshaneduff alias The Derries from his father in 1877. It was sold with 364 acres in 1884 by his children’s trustee. 
He died at Aldeburgh (Suffolk), 7 December 1880; his will was proved 15 June 1901 (estate £1,077). His first wife died 24 April 1876; administration of her goods was granted 24 April 1901 (estate £816). His widow married 2nd, 16 April 1889, Otto Ernesta Haenni, of Godalming, schoolmaster, and died 23 March 1951; her will was proved 11 June 1951 (estate £5,678). 
 

Sources 

 
Burke’s Landed Gentry, 1850, vol. 2, supplement, p.4; 1871, vol. 1, p. 15; M. Bence-Jones, Country Houses of Ireland, 1988, p.28; Dublin Evening Mail, 15 January 1849. 
 

Location of archives 

 
No significant archive is known to survive. 

Moydrum Castle, Co Westmeath – ruin

Moydrum Castle, Co Westmeath

Moydrum Castle, County Westmeath entrance front c. 1860, Vanishing Country Houses of Ireland by The Knight of Glin, David J. Griffin and Nicholas K. Robinson, published by The Irish Architectural Archive and The Irish Georgian Society, 1988.

Mark Bence-Jones. A Guide to Irish Country Houses (originally published as Burke’s Guide to Country Houses volume 1 Ireland by Burke’s Peerage Ltd. 1978); Revised edition 1988 Constable and Company Ltd, London. 

p. 219. “(Handcock, Castlemaine/B/PB) An early C19 castle by Richard Morrison, built 1812 for 1stLord Castlemaine; incorporating an earlier house described at the time as “nothing more than an ordinary farmhouse, contracted in its dimensions, mean in its external form, and inconvenient in its interior arrangements” in contrast to “most finished and complete residence” which it became. As completed the castle had battlemented and machicolated entrance tower with two slender polygonal turrets and a perpendicular window above the front door; at one side was a single bay with another polygonal turret, at the other a lower and longer battlemented range. Burnt 1921.

Moydrum Castle, County Westmeath, photograph by Robert French, (between ca. 1865-1914), Lawrence Photograph Collection, National Library of Ireland.

Listed in Vanishing Country Houses of Ireland by The Knight of Glin, David J. Griffin and Nicholas K. Robinson, published by The Irish Architectural Archive and The Irish Georgian Society, 1988. 

p. 144. …the interiors were a mixture of Gothic and classical as at Thomastown, County Tipperary and Borris County Carlow. …Now a ruin.

Moydrum Castle, County Westmeath, photograph by Robert French, (between ca. 1865-1914), Lawrence Photograph Collection, National Library of Ireland.

http://lordbelmontinnorthernireland.blogspot.com/2016/06/moydrum-castle.html

THE VISCOUNTS CASTLEMAINE WERE MAJOR LANDOWNERS IN COUNTY WESTMEATH, WITH 11,444 ACRES
WILLIAM HANDCOCK (c1631-1707), of Twyford, County Westmeath, descended from a family of considerable antiquity in Lancashire, MP for that county in the first parliament after the restoration of CHARLES II, was nominated one of the Council of Connaught, and obtained a patent, 1680, to erect his estates into a manor, under the designation of the Manor of Twyford, with ample privileges.

Mr Handcock married, in 1652, Abigail, sister of Sir Thomas Stanley, by whom he had, with other issue,

THOMAS, his heir;
William (Sir), Recorder of Dublin;
Stephen (Very Rev), Dean of Clonmacnoise;
Matthew (Ven), Archdeacon of Kilmore;
Stanley, drowned;
Hannah; Sarah; Elizabeth.

The eldest son,

THOMAS HANDCOCK (1654-1726), of Twyford, MP for Lanesborough, 1692-5, espoused, in 1677, Dorothy Green, and had issue,

WILLIAM, his heir;
Eliah;
Thomas;
Samuel;
Sarah; Abigail; Mary; Dorothy.

Mr Handcock was succeeded by his eldest son,

WILLIAM HANDCOCK (1676-1723), MP for Athlone, 1703-14, County Westmeath, 1721-23, who wedded Sarah, daughter of Richard Warburton, and had issue,

WILLIAM, his heir;
George;
Thomas;
RICHARD, of whom hereafter;
Robert;
John Gustavus;
Abigail; Susan; Dorothy; Susanna.

Mr Handcock was succeeded by his eldest son,

WILLIAM HANDCOCK (1704-41), MP for Fore, 1727-41, who espoused Elizabeth, second daughter of the Rt Rev Sir Thomas Vesey Bt, Lord Bishop of Ossory, though the marriage was without issue, and he was succeeded by his brother, 

THE VERY REV RICHARD HANDCOCK (c1716-91), of Twyford, Dean of Achonry, who married Sarah, only daughter and heiress of Richard Toler, of Ballintore, County Kildare, and had issue,

WILLIAM, his heir;
Richard;
Sarah; Susanna; Dorothy; Mary; Elizabeth; Anne.

The Dean was succeeded by his eldest son,

THE RT HON WILLIAM HANDCOCK MP (1761-1839), MP for Athlone, 1783-1800, who was elevated to the peerage, in 1812, in the dignity of Baron Castlemaine.

His lordship was advanced to a viscountcy, in 1822, as VISCOUNT CASTLEMAINE.

On his lordship’s death the viscountcy expired, though the barony passed to his brother.

The heir apparent is the present holder’s only son, the Hon Ronan Michael Handcock. 

The 5th Baron was the last Lord-Lieutenant of County Westmeath, from 1899 until 1922.

Roland Thomas John [Handcock], 8th and present Lord Castlemaine, MBE, lives at Salisbury, Wiltshire.

The heir is the present holder’s son, the Hon Ronan Michael Handcock (b 1989).

MOYDRUM CASTLE, near Athlone, County Westmeath, was a seven-bay, two-storey over basement castellated country house, rebuilt ca 1812 (incorporating the fabric of an earlier house built c1750), having an advanced three-storey breakfront/gate tower (offset) to the west side of centre.

There were turrets on an octagonal plan to the corners of an advanced tower and to the west end of the front façade (north); a turret on square plan to the east end.

The house is now out of use, derelict and partially collapsed to the west side.

There were rough-cast, cement-rendered walls, now failing and exposing limestone rubble construction below, with cut stone plinth to base.

Clasping buttresses between bays to the east side of tower; extensive decoration to walls with incised cross loop motifs, cut stone quatrefoils and cut stone hood mouldings over window openings.

The walls are now largely overgrown with ivy.

Square-headed openings to main body of structure, originally having cut stone surrounds and cut-stone tracery.

Tudor Gothic-arched doorcase to front face of tower, inset within a Tudor-Gothic arched recess and originally with cut stone surrounds (now gone).

Pointed-arched window over doorcase to first storey, originally with Geometric tracery.

Set back from road in extensive mature grounds with remains of a walled garden and ancillary structures to the rear.

These remain impressive and picturesque ruins of a large-scale, Gothic-Revival, castellated country house.

The scale and the attention to detail are still apparent, despite its ruinous condition; and fragments of the early cut stone detailing are still evident to a number of openings from behind the extensive ivy growth.

This important Gothic-Revival essay was built to designs by Sir Richard Morrison (1767-1849), who was commissioned by William Handcock to rebuild an existing house befitting of his new status as Lord Castlemaine, ca 1812.

The house was burnt by the IRA in 1921 and has remained a ruin ever since.

Moydrum Castle, given its status as the seat of HM Lord-Lieutenant of County Westmeath and a member of the House of Lords, was chosen as a suitably symbolic target for Irish republican reprisals: On the night of July 3rd, 1921, an assembly of IRA members marched on the castle.

The 5th Baron was out of Ireland at the time, but Lady Castlemaine and their daughter, together with several servants, were in residence and were woken from their sleep by knocking at the door.

They were given time to gather together a few valuable belongings before the building was set alight. The blaze completely destroyed the castle.

Following the establishment of the Irish Free State, much of the land belonging to Lord Castlemaine was acquired by the Irish Land Commission.

The Castlemaines were never to return to Moydrum.

These impressive and romantic ruins have been much photographed since and a picture of the remains featured on the cover of the U2 album ‘The Unforgettable Fire‘.

These ruins have now become almost a place of pilgrimage for U2 fans and the interior walls are now covered with graffiti relating to the band, giving this site a new cultural significance.

Former residence ~ Rathmore House, Fiddown, County Kilkenny.

Castlemaine arms courtesy of European Heraldry.  First published in May, 2012.

https://archiseek.com/2013/moydrum-castle-co-westmeath

1814 – Moydrum Castle, Co. Westmeath 

Architect: Richard Morrison 

Described in 1837 by Lewis, “About a mile and a half from Athlone on the Leinster side of the Shannon is Moydrum Castle the handsome residence of Viscount Castlemaine a solid castellated mansion with square turrets at each angle beautifully situated on the edge of a small lake and surrounded by an extensive and richly wooded demesne.” In July of 1921 the British Army, searching for arms, burnt down 3 neighboring farms, the local Republican army retaliated by burning down Moydrum. 

https://theirishaesthete.com/2018/08/15/moydrum-1/

An Unforgettable Fire

by theirishaesthete


The ruins of Moydrum Castle, County Westmeath. The former seat of the Handcock family, an earlier house here was described in Neale’s Views of Seats (1823) as being ‘nothing more than an ordinary farmhouse, contracted in its dimensions, mean in its external form and inconvenient in its interior arrangements.’ By that date work was already underway to transform and enlarge the building into a neo-Jacobean castle designed by Richard Morrison suitable as a residence for William Handcock, raised to the peerage first as Baron and then Viscount Castlemaine. The completed work was described by Samuel Lewis in 1837 as ‘a solid castellated mansion with square turrets at each angle beautifully situated on the edge of a small lake and surrounded by an extensive and richly wooded demesne.’ This is what remains of the east-facing façade, the entrance resembling an immense gate-tower. Moydrum was burnt by members of the IRA in July 1921 and has remained derelict ever since: in 1984 a photograph of Moydrum by Anton Corbijn was used on the cover of U2’s album The Unforgettable Fire showing members of the band standing in front of the ruins.

http://greatirishhouses.blogspot.com/2013/08/moydrum-castle-athlone-co-westmeath.html 

http://davidhicksbook.blogspot.com/search?updated-max=2014-04-21T13:13:00-07:00&max-results=7&start=45&by-date=false 

SATURDAY, 29 JUNE 2013 

Moydrum Castle 

Co. West Meath 

The Unforgettable Fire  

A picture containing grass, photo, building, sign

Description automatically generated 
The 1984, U2 album cover of the “Unforgettable Fire” which featured the iconic image of the castle. Accreditation-  Copyright Universal Island Records Limited  Moydrum Castle stands near the small village of Ballylin outside Athlone in County Westmeath. This dramatic ruin has become a site of pilgrimage for fans of the band U2, since this building was featured on their ‘Unforgettable Fire’ album cover in 1984. The title of this album aptly describes how this now ivy covered hulk met its end in a conflagration of epic proportions in 1921. Today a lot of Moydrum Castle’s architectural detail is obscured by ivy which is also threatening the structural integrity of this building.   Modern houses have grown up around the demesne and a public road passes very close to what remains of the castle. The walled gardens and other outbuildings to the rear of the main structure are being reused and adapted to suit alternative modern uses. The derelict remains of Moydrum Castle are a sad reminder of the passive nature that is adopted in regard to the preservation of historical and culturally significant buildings such as this. The area immediately around the castle is out of bounds to the general public and over zealous U2 fans. Their scrawled tributes on the gate entering the castle’s curtilage are a sad reminder of what an untapped resource this building is for the local community. 

The story of this building begins with William Handcock who was an M.P. for Athlone, who was created Baron Castlemaine in 1812 for his support for the Act of Union. In that same year in recognition of his new position in society he employed the leading architect, Richard Morrison, to design a castle in the Gothic Revival style. The building was essentially a two-storey, over basement castellated country house which was completed in 1814. It incorporated an earlier house that existed on the site from 1750 which had been described as an ordinary farmhouse with inconvenient interior arrangements. The completed castle had a battlemented entrance tower with two slender polygonal turrets on either side of the large entrance door. The entrance front was asymmetrical with a polygonal tower at one end and a square tower at the opposite corner. The windows of the front elevation had Gothic tracery while those on the side of the castle that over looked the garden had regular square headed sash windows. Over the front door there was balcony which could be accessed by a French door in an elaborate church-like window.  While the exterior of the castle was Gothic in style, the interior was classical and was described as being similar to Borris House in County Carlow. There were a substantial quantity of farm buildings and gardens to the rear of the castle which were necessary to service a building of this size. The castle had an extensive complex of twenty seven outbuildings and many local people from the surrounding townlands were employed in various parts of the estate. Morrison was also engaged to design a hunting lodge on Hare Island which was a retreat for Baron Castlemaine and allowed him the opportunity to engage in fishing, shooting and boating on Lough Ree. A set of imposing gates and an adjoining lodge provided access to the demesne and the road that winds through the estate is still used today. After travelling through the entrance gates, the road divided in two, one road led to the front of the house while the other diverged and led to the servant’s entrance at the rear. Those lucky enough to be guests of the Castlemaine’s travelled through the landscaped parkland and over a little bridge that spanned a lake to the right of the castles entrance front. 

The first Baron Castlemaine met an untimely end in 1839 when he fell out of his first floor bedroom window of the castle during a storm. As he had no children, the title and estate passed to his brother Richard. The second Baron Castlemaine did not enjoy the fruits of his new title for long, as one year later in 1840 he died in Dublin. He was then succeeded by his son, also named Richard, who was now styled the third Baron Castlemaine. Further problems were experienced by the family in 1840 when Moydrum Castle caught fire. An unattended candle in Lady Castlemaine’s bedroom caused the blaze after it fell into a turf bucket. This was one of three fires that were to occur during the lifetime of the castle which seemed destined to burn down. In order to reduce the pain and suffering of the tenants on the estate during the famine in the 1840s, a number of building projects were undertaken as a form of famine relief.  These projects included the construction of a private family church, new entrance gates, farm buildings and an eight foot wall that enclosed the demesne. In 1859, the third Baron Castlemaine received six proposals from the architect William George Murray for a Tudor Gothic entrance gate and lodge but these were never executed. In 1869 the third Baron Castlemaine died and his son became the fourth Baron Castlemaine. Both of theseBarons did not treat their tenants well and were considered tyrants and a lot of public resentment existed locally against them. Possibly to appease local sentiment, the fourth Baron instigated a number of works centred on Moydrum church. A plaque on the gable of this building records that the entrance porch was erected by the fourth Baron in 1876. From 1886 onwards the fourth Baron began to sell off the lands of the estate under the Land Purchase Acts. In just over twenty years, the Handcocks had reduced their land holding from 12,041 acres to just 550 acres.  

Both the fourth Baron Castlemaine and his wife died in 1892 and the Moydrum estate passed to their son Albert Edward Handcock now the fifth Baron Castlemaine. As Albert had received a substantial inheritance from his father together with Moydrum, he led a life of leisure as a country gentleman. He married Annie Evelyn Barrington from Kent in 1895 and after their marriage they returned to set up home in Moydrum. Two years later they were blessed with their one and only child, a daughter who they named Evelyn Constance. In the 1901 census the castle is described as having thirty-four rooms and nineteen windows across its entrance front. In residence at this time are the 38 year old, Baron Castlemaine, his wife aged 27, his daughter aged 3 and their ten servants. By 1911 the Castlemaine’s are still living in Moydrum and their retinue of servants now includes a German butler. 

 Lord and Lady Castlemaine were very active in social circles and were often mentioned attending numerous balls and events. Many of these events included mixing in royal circles which would explain the visit of the Duke of Connaught to Moydrum in August 1905. His Royal Highness arrived in Athlone on the 7.15 train from Dublin and was met at the station by Lord Castlemaine. The entourage then proceeded to Moydrum Castle in a procession of motor cars. After a brief sojourn they drove all round Lough Ree showing Queen Victoria’s son the local sights. In the evening the Duke of Connaught returned to Moydrum Castle where he dined with Lord and Lady Castlemaine. He eventually left by motor car for Shannonbridge to witness the successful crossing of the river by the advanced party of the Red Army. In April 1909, Lord and Lady Castlemaine who had been spending the winter at Marlay Grange in Dublin returned to Westmeath. An enthusiastic welcome was given to the Castlemaine’s arrival at their family’s ancestral seat after a protracted absence. His lordship, accompanied by Lady Castlemaine and their daughter, the Hon. Evelyn Handcock arrived from Dublin by the afternoon train and drove immediately to their home. As they reached the Moydrum gates, lusty cheers were raised by their tenants while a local band played stirring music and bonfires were lit. It appeared that the animosity of earlier years had dissipated and that the Castlemaine’s were now much loved by their tenants. 
 

A ruinous fire eventually sealed the fate of Moydrum but the castle had avoided disaster by the same incident previously in 1840 & 1912. An account of the 1912 fire was featured in the national press which explained that paintings and antiques to the value of £1,000 were destroyed in the blaze that nearly claimed the life of Lady Castlemaine. Lord and Lady Castlemaine were in residence in the castle, when a fire began to fill the interior with smoke which awoke the household. Lady Castlemaine and the servants made their escape from the burning building by placing wet towels over their heads. The fire was quickly brought under control by the servants who saved the entire building from being gutted. The Castlemaine’s leased a house in Foxrock in Dublin while repairs and renovations were being carried out the castle in the aftermath of the blaze. Another strange incident to take place in Moydrum that was also featured in the national press highlighted the hatred that was beginning to boil over against the local landlord. On November 15, 1913 at 7.30pm a gun was discharged through the window of the drawing room of the castle. The window shattered and shot grains were found embedded in furniture at the far end of the room which smashed some of the china on the sideboard. Lady Castlemaine was in the castle at the time and both she and the servants were shocked by the incident. For the next number of yearsthe Castlemaine’s appeared to spend the winter months in Foxrock in Dublin and the remainder of the year was divided between Moydrum, London and Europe. By 1919, a worrying trend was developing in Ireland; the grand homes of the local gentry were being burnt down in order that the lands of the estate would be broken up. The Castlemaine’s were not initially concerned but as more and more houses were burnt; they thought it prudent to return to Westmeath. The fifth Baron was under the mistaken belief, that if he and his family were in residence it would ward off any attackers looking to take advantage of an empty house. In March 1921, Lord and Lady Castlemaine left Cannes in France where they had spent the winter. Lord Castlemaine returned firstly to Moydrum Castle and was joined shortly after by his wife who had spent some time in London.  Around this time, the house burnings in Ireland had become more sporadic and it was thought that the threat to Moydrum had lessened considerable. Now that Lord Castlemaine suspected that Moydrum was no longer a target for attackers he left for London and Scotland in mid June 1921. A further indication that he was not concerned with any threat to Moydrum was illustrated by the fact that he left his wife and daughter behind, convinced of their safety. However Lord Castlemaine’s home had become a target, as he was seen as a member of the British establishment, he was a member of the House of Lords, British officers had often stayed in Moydrum Castle and Lord Castlemaine had previously dismissed men from his employment that would not join the British army.

On July 3, 1921, armed men gathered in the castle grounds at 3.30 am on the Sunday morning and surrounded the building. Present in the castle was Lady Castlemaine, her daughter and eight servants. After a loud knocking at the door, her ladyship looked out her bedroom window where she seen about sixty men outside with revolvers. As their knocks went unanswered, they smashed through the ground floor windows and made their way up the stairs. Before they reached her bed chamber they encountered a frightened Lady Castlemaine on the landing. She was given five minutes to leave the castle as the intruders intended to burn it to the ground.  They said that they were burning her home as a reprisal for the recent burnings at Coosan and Mount Temple by the Black and Tans. They had procuredparaffin from the Castlemaine’s chauffeur and proceeded to move through the building, moving furniture in to piles in the center of the rooms and dousing it with the paraffin. Every method was used to accelerate the forthcoming flames, all the windows were opened and holes were punched in the ceiling and roof to create a draught. As the raiders were doing their destructive work, Lady Castlemaine and the servants set about removing personal belongings and the family silver, trying to save what they could. The servants were rounded up by the raiders and two armchairs were placed on the lawn in front of the castle for Lady Castlemaine and her daughter to view the destruction of their home. In anticipation of the fire, the leader of the raiders addressed Lady Castlemaine as to why her home was being burnt. Once the fire had taken hold and the castle could not be saved, the raiders dispersed. By the time authorities arrived, the castle was a blaze and nothing remained but the walls by the following morning. The damage was estimated at £120,000 and the majority of paintings, antiques, silver and jewelry had been lost. Lord Castlemaine quickly returned from London to view the blackened ruins of his castle. Upon his return he organized a cleanup operation, while he pondered what to do with the ruins of the castle and the remaining lands of the estate. One week later, he sent Lady Castlemaine and their daughter to London to recover from their terrible ordeal. In the month after the fire, a story appeared in The Irish Times that inferred that some of the servants had used the fire to steal items from the castle. Michael Grady and Patrick Delany pleaded guilty to a charge of having stolen an eclectic number of items from Moydrum on the night of the fire. These items included a fur coat, two dress shirts, a smoking jacket, a suit case, a bicycle and other articles that were the property of Lord Castlemaine. Grady was a Butler and Delany was a footman and both had worked in the castle. When the fire broke out, Delany reported the matter to the military and both he and Grady saved a considerable amount of valuable property and gave assistance to fight the fire. After the military had left, the men took away some of the aforementioned articles. After the fire they were unemployed and traveled to Dublin in search of work. While in the city they were badly in need of money, pawned the coat and this is how they came to be arrested. Grady was sentenced to six months imprisonment with hard labour and Delany who was under 21 years of age received four months imprisonment with hard labour.  

In October 1921, £101,359 was awarded by Judge Fleming in Athlone to Lord Castlemaine for the destruction of his castle, furniture and personal belongings. In March 1922, a dispersal sale of the Moydrum farmyard equipment was advertised and in 1924, the remaining land of the estate was sold to the Land Commission. After the fire, Baron Castlemaine and his wife went to live at Langham House in Surrey, paying only occasional visits to Athlone where Lord Castlemaine’s brother still acted as his agent. On his death in the 1930s, the title and estates passed to his brother Robert Handcock. The castle languished in obscurity for decades until it played host to U2 in 1984.  A number of photographs that were taken at the time and the iconic image of the front of the castle appeared on the album sleeve of the ‘Unforgettable Fire’. Over the years, many fans from all over the world have scoured the Westmeath county side to find this enigmatic building that now sits silent and bears little testament to the tumultuous events that occurred here. 

Dunboden Park, Mullingar, Co Westmeath

Dunboden Park, Mullingar, Co Westmeath

Mark Bence-Jones. A Guide to Irish Country Houses (originally published as Burke’s Guide to Country Houses volume 1 Ireland by Burke’s Peerage Ltd. 1978); Revised edition 1988 Constable and Company Ltd, London.

p. 113. “(Cooper.IFR) A house of early to mid C19 appearance, of two storeys over a basement and square in plan; with five bay front and side elevations. Porch with engaged columns; entablature over windows.”

Listed in Vanishing Country Houses of Ireland by The Knight of Glin, David J. Griffin and Nicholas K. Robinson, published by The Irish Architectural Archive and The Irish Georgian Society, 1988. 

p. 141. Large two storey late Georgian house with single storey Doric portico. Now a ruin. Stables converted to a house.

https://www.buildingsofireland.ie/buildings-search/building/15403303/dunboden-park-kilbride-county-westmeath

Detached five-bay two-storey over basement country house, built c.1815 and remodelled c.1860, having a two-storey service wing attached to the east side. Now in ruins and overgrown. Roof now gone, originally shallow hipped, with a central pair of chimneystacks and a moulded cut stone cornice to the eaves. Moulded cut stone plinth over basement. Constructed of coursed rubble stone with roughcast rendered finish over. Square-headed window openings with cut stone sills and dressed stone surrounds. A number of window openings retain cut stone scrolled brackets supporting entablatures over. Main entrance to the centre of the north elevation, originally having a porch with engaged columns. Set back from road in extensive mature grounds with a complex of outbuildings/stable block (15403306) to the northeast, main entrance gates to the west (15403305), The Cooper Mausoleum (15403304) to the south and sections estate wall (15402625) running around former demesne boundary. Located to the south of Mullingar and to the northwest of Rochfortbridge. 

A once grand and refined early nineteenth-century neoclassical country house, which now survives as a picturesque ruin in the rural landscape. It was reputedly remodelled by Sandham Symes (1807-98), c.1860. This house was well-built and proportioned and retains a number of fine cut stone details that hint at its former splendour. This house was built by the Cooper Family (of Markee Castle, Co. Sligo) and may have replaced (or be the extensive remodelling) of an earlier house on or near this site. It was in the ownership of an R. W. Cooper in 1837 and of a Colonel Joshua Henry Cooper c.1870, who owned 1,785 acres in the area at this time. It forms the centerpiece of an interesting and extensive collection of related structures along with the extensive stable block to the northeast (15403306), the curious Cooper Mausoleum (15403304) to the south, the main gates (15403305) to the west and the boundary wall (15402625) surrounding this extensive demesne. This house is now halfway to becoming an archaeological site but is an important architectural and historical document, adding interest to its pleasant rural location. 

Thomastown Castle, Golden, Co Tipperary – ruin

Thomastown Castle, Golden, Co Tipperary

Thomastown Castle, County Tipperary, entrance front 1917, photograph: Miss Moira Lysaght, Vanishing Country Houses of Ireland by The Knight of Glin, David J. Griffin and Nicholas K. Robinson, published by The Irish Architectural Archive and The Irish Georgian Society, 1988.
Thomastown, County Tipperary, entrance front c. 1969, photograph: Christopher Tynne, Vanishing Country Houses of Ireland by The Knight of Glin, David J. Griffin and Nicholas K. Robinson, published by The Irish Architectural Archive and The Irish Georgian Society, 1988.

Mark Bence-Jones. A Guide to Irish Country Houses (originally published as Burke’s Guide to Country Houses volume 1 Ireland by Burke’s Peerage Ltd. 1978); Revised edition 1988 Constable and Company Ltd, London.

p. 272. “(Mathew/IFR; Daly/IFR) Originally a long two storey house of pink brick built from 1670 onwards by George Mathew, half-brother of the great Great Duke of Ormonde; with a centre one room deep consisting of a great chamber or gallery above a rusticated arcade, and projecting wings; a massive oak staircase led up from the arcade to the first floor. It was probably by the same builders who worked for the Duchess of Ormonde at Dunmore House, near Kilkenny; while Dr Loeber suggests that the arcade may have been a design by Sir William Robinson. The Mathews grew richer through heiress marriages, and the grandson of the builder of the house, another George, who inherited 1711, carried out various additions and improvements…This George Mathew was known as “Grand George” and renowned for his hospitality; people could come uninvited to Thomastown and use it as though it were an inn; many legends have grown up about him, though he has become somewhat confused, in local legend, with “Big George,” Earl of Kingston (see Mitchellstown Castle).  In 1812, Francis Mathew, 2nd Earl of Llandaff, called in Richard Morrison to enlarge the house and transform it into a castle. Morrison’s transformation was literally skin-deep; he refaced the house in cement, which was originally painted the rather surprising shade of pale blue’ a mask of Gothic openings was applied to the front of C17 arcade which was glazecd and turned into a “Gothic Hall” with a Gothic chimneypiece of plaster and other Gothic plasterwork. Slender turrets, square and polygonal, were added to the entrance and garden fronts, which remained symmetrical; the two on either side of the entrance have pinnacles like rockets or darts growing out of them; from a distance they look like rabbit ears. Thr office wing to the right of the entrance front was enlarged into a vast Gothic kitchen court and stables; a detached entrance tower was also built. The great upstairs room became a Gothic library; the drawing room remained Classical and was adorned with scagliola columns. Fr Theobald Mathew, the “Apostle of Temperance,” grew up here, his father having been a cousin of 1st Earl of Landaff who more or less adopted him and made him his agent. Lady Elizabeth Mathew, sister of 2nd Earl, left Thomastown to her cousin on her mother’s side, the Visomte de Rohan Chabot, son of the Comte de Jarnac. It eventually passed to the Daly family, but from ca 1872 onwards it was allowed to fall into disrepair; it is now one of the most spectacular ruined Gothic castles in Ireland, much of it submerged beneath the ivy which grows here with an unbelievable luxuriance. In 1938 the ruin was bought by Archbishop David Mathew, the historian, in order to keep it in the family and to save it from destruction.”

Listed in Vanishing Country Houses of Ireland by The Knight of Glin, David J. Griffin and Nicholas K. Robinson, published by The Irish Architectural Archive and The Irish Georgian Society, 1988. 

p. 136. A large Tudor Revival house designed by Richard Morrison in 1812 for Thomas Mathew 2nd Earl of Llandaff incorporating a late 17C house which may have been designed by Sir William Robinson. Very fine interiors some of which were classical. Now a ruin.

https://www.buildingsofireland.ie/buildings-search/building/22206025/thomastown-castle-thomastown-demesne-tipperary-south

Detached multiple-bay two-storey country house, incorporating seventeenth-century house, enlarged 1812, now in ruins. Comprising central block with office wing to west having square and polygonal towers to front elevation and incorporating an earlier seventeenth-century house. Courtyard with outbuildings to north. Crenellations with machicolations to roofline. Lined-and-ruled render over brick walls with rendered string course to office wing. Ashlar limestone masonry plinths to towers. Projecting entrance bay, in ruins. Square-headed window openings with carved limestone label mouldings having ornate label stops to front. Pointed arch window openings to office wing. Two-storey gate lodge to east having crenellations with machicolations. Rendered brick walls with blank cross-loops to first floor and buttresses to ground floor. Square-headed opening with render hood moulding over pointed arch entrance. Three-stage polygonal tower to east elevation with crenellations and arrow slit windows with hood-mouldings. Coursed rubble limestone walled gardens to north. 

Appraisal 

This former country house was built by the Matthew family, the earliest house on this site, built by George Matthew dating to c. 1670. The house in its present form was enlarged in the Gothic style by Francis Matthew, II Earl of Llandaff in 1812. Richard Morrison designed the house incorporating a veneer of Gothic openings including the ornate polygonal and square towers to front elevation. The office wing to the right was also enlarged in the Gothic style. From 1870 the house fell into disrepair to become the impressive and spectacular ruin it is today. Much of the original seventeenth-century house survives in the interior of the building. The arched gate lodge to the east mirrors the architecture of the main house and retains many fine details such as the cross loops and hood mouldings. The walled gardens provide an example of the many demesne related activities thereby contributing context to the site. 

https://archiseek.com/2012/1812-thomastown-castle-co-tipperary

1812 – Thomastown Castle, Co. Tipperary 

Architect: Richard Morrison 

Built in 1812 for the 2nd Earl of Landaff, the large Tudor Revival castle incorporated a previous 17th century house, thought to have been designed by Sir William Robinson. Now a ruin, the castle was the victim of the decline of the family’s fortunes and was largely closed up in the early part of the 20th century. Now a spectacular ruin. 

 
http://landedestates.nuigalway.ie/LandedEstates/jsp/property-list.jsp?letter=T 

The original building was a two storey house of pink brick built in the 1670s by George Mathew with early 18th additions. Wilson decribed it in 1786 as “an ancient but handsome edifice”. In the second decade of the 19th century it was enlarged and transformed into a Gothic castle, designed by Richard Morrison for the 2nd Earl of Llandaff. Viscount Chabot is recorded as the occupier in the mid 19th century. He held the property in fee and the buildings were valued at £100. Bence Jones writes that it later was in the possession of the Daly family but from the mid 1870s it began to decay. William Daly was the occupier in 1906 when the buildings were valued at £61. 

https://lordbelmontinnorthernireland.blogspot.com/2018/09/1st-earl-landaff.html

The family of MATHEW originated from Wales, where at Radyr, Glamorganshire, they long resided; and possessed the town of Llandaff in that county. 
 
SIR DAVID MATHEW (1400-84), Knight, was Standard-Bearer of EDWARD IV, whose monument is still to be seen in Llandaff Cathedral, Glamorganshire. 
 
EDWARD MATHEW, of Radyr, was possessed, in 1600, of the town of Llandaff, and other estates, which his ancestors enjoyed for time immemorial. 
 
At his decease he left an only son, 
 
GEORGE MATHEW, the first of the family in Ireland, who became seated at Thurles, County Tipperary, and married Elizabeth, daughter of Sir John Poyntz MP, of Iron Acton, Gloucestershire, and widow of Thomas Butler, Viscount Thurles (who died before his father Walter, 11th Earl of Ormond). 
 
Mr Mathew died in 1636, leaving two sons and a daughter, and was succeeded by the elder son, 
 
THEOBOLD MATHEW, of Thurles, who married Margaret, eldest daughter of Sir Valentine Browne Bt, and was succeeded by his elder son, 
 
GEORGE MATHEW, of Thurles, who wedded Eleanor, second daughter of Edmond, 3rd/13th Baron Dunboyne, and was succeeded by his son, 
 
GEORGE MATHEW, who erected a splendid mansion upon his estate at Thurles, containing forty bedrooms, and ample corresponding accommodation for as many guests. 

This gentleman distinguished himself by hospitality upon an unprecedented and almost boundless scale.  

He fitted up his sumptuous residence as a guest house of the first magnitude, and his guests were informed upon their arrival, that as such they were to regard it, and to consider themselves, in every sense of the word, quite at home.  

They might either live in their own suite of rooms, or at the table d’hôte, as they pleased.  

There was a coffee-room, tavern, billiards-room, etc, and Mr Mathew himself appeared only as one of the guests. 

This highly accomplished and celebrated person had the degree of LL.D conferred upon him, 1677, by his half-brother James, 1st Duke of Ormond, Chancellor of the University of Oxford. 
 
Mr Mathew wedded firstly, Catherine, third daughter of Sir John Shelley, 3rd Baronet, by Mary, eldest daughter and co-heiress of Sir John Gage Bt, of Firle, East Sussex, and had issue, an only child, 

GEORGE, his heir

He espoused secondly, in 1716, Ann, widow of James, 3rd Earl of Tyrone, by whom he no issue, and at his decease, the estates devolved upon his brother-in-law, 
 
GEORGE MATHEW, married his cousin, Mary Anne Mathew, and had issue, 

George (1733-8); 
Elizabeth. 

On the failure of male issue in this branch, the estates devolved to 
 
GEORGE MATHEW, of Thomastown, who wedded firstly, Margaret, fourth daughter of Thomas Butler (grandson of the Lord Richard Butler, younger son of James, 1st Duke of Ormond, by the Lady Margaret Burke, eldest daughter of William, 7th Earl of Clanricarde, and widow of Bryan Magennis, Viscount Iveagh, and had issue, a daughter. 
 
Mr Mathew espoused secondly, Isabella, fourth daughter of William Brownlow, of Lurgan, County Armagh (by the Lady Elizabeth Hamilton, eldest daughter of James, 6th Earl of Abercorn), and had issue, a son, who died in infancy, when the estate devolved upon a junior branch of the family, 
 
THOMAS MATHEW, of Thurles, and subsequently of Thomastown, who married, in 1736, Miss Mary Mathews, of Dublin, and had issue, 

FRANCIS, his heir; 
Catherine Ann Maria. 

The only son and heir, 
 
FRANCIS MATHEW (1738-1806), wedded firstly, in 1764, Ellis, second daughter of James Smyth (son of the Rt Rev Edward Smyth, Lord Bishop of Down and Connor), and had issue, 

FRANCIS JAMES, his heir
Montague James, Lieutenant-General in the Army; 
George Toby Skeffington; 
Elizabeth. 

He espoused secondly, in 1784, the Lady Catherine Skeffington; and thirdly, in 1799, ______ Coghlan, second daughter of Jeremiah Coghlan. 
 
Mr Mathew, MP for Tipperary, 1768-83, High Sheriff of County Tipperary, 1769, was elevated to the peerage, in 1783, as Baron Landaff, of Thomastown, County Tipperary; and was advanced to a viscountcy, in 1793, as Viscount Landaff, of Thomastown, County Tipperary. 
 
His lordship was further advanced to the dignity of an earldom, in 1797, as EARL LANDAFF. 
 
He was succeeded by his eldest son, 
 
FRANCIS JAMES, 2nd Earl (1768-1833), MP for County Tipperary, 1801-6, Knight of St Patrick, 1831, who married, in 1797, Gertrude Cecilia, daughter of John La Touche, of Harristown, County Kildare, though the marriage was without issue. 
 
His lordship died of syncope in Dublin, on 12 March 1833, aged 65, when the titles expired. 
 
Dying intestate, his estates went to his sister, the Lady Elizabeth Mathew, who died in 1842, leaving the estates to a cousin, the Vicomte de Chabot, the son of her mother’s sister, Elizabeth Smyth. 

THOMASTOWN CASTLE, Golden, County Tipperary, was built by George Matthew and dated from ca 1670. 

It comprised a long, two-storey house of pink brick. 

The house in its present form was enlarged in the Gothic style by Francis, 2nd Earl Landaff, in 1812. 

(Sir) Richard Morrison designed the house incorporating a veneer of Gothic openings, including the ornate polygonal and square towers to the front elevation. 

The office wing to the right was also enlarged in the Gothic style. 

From ca 1872 the great mansion fell into disrepair to become the impressive and spectacular ruin it is today. 

Father Theobald Mathew, the famous temperance reformer whose father was a cousin of the 1st Earl, grew up at the Castle. 

The 2nd Earl’s sister, Lady Elizabeth Mathew, bequeathed Thomastown to her maternal cousin, the Vicomte de Rohan-Chabot, son of the Comte de Jarnac. 

The estate later passed to the Daly family. 

The ruinous building was purchased in 1938 by the Rt Rev David Mathew, the historian, who wished it to be kept in the family and saved from destruction. 

This expectation proved to have been in vain. 

The arched gate lodge to the east reflects the architecture of the main house and retains many fine details, such as the cross loops and hood mouldings. 

The walled gardens provide an example of the many demesne-related activities thereby contributing context to the site. 

The Tipperary Gentry. Volume 1. By William Hayes and Art Kavanagh. Published by Irish Family Names, c/o Eneclann, Unit 1, The Trinity Enterprise Centre, Pearse St, Dublin 2, 11 Emerald Cottages, Grand Canal St, Dublin 4 and Market Square, Bunclody, Co Wexford, Ireland. 2003. 

Matthew of Thomastown, Annfield and Thurles 

p. 135. Viscount Thurles was Thomas Butler the eldest son of Walter the 11th Earl of Ormonde. Thomas’s wife was Elizabeth the daughter of Sir John Poynz of Acton, Gloucester, and she was a Catholic. Thomas died tragically in a drowing accident when he was travelling to Ireland from England in 1619. His widow, Elizabeth, had three sons and four daughters. Elizabeth’s eldest son became the 12th Earl of 1st Duke of Ormonde. She did not remain a widow for long. She married George Mathew of Llandaff, Glamorgan, in 1620. [This enterprising lady managed to save Thurles during the Cromwellian wards by telling Cromwell taht she had refused to allow a Royalist company under Colonel Brian O’Neill to occupy the town and sought Cromwell’s help. This action saved the town of Thurles from being despoiled and saved the Mathew family from being dispossessed.] 

George and his widow, Elizabeth, had two sons, Theobald, who founded the Thurles adn Annfield dynasties of Mathew, and George Reihill, later of Thomastown, who managed the estates of the Ormondes in Tipperary [The Peerage has him as the son of Theobald]. In the process George succeeded in acquiring substantial properties himself. The fact that George Reihill married Eleanor Butler, the [p. 136] daughter of Lord Dunboyne and widow of Lord Cahir (another Butler) helped considerably. George raised her young son the 4th Lord Cahir and when he was of age married him off to his niece, Elizabeth. George Reihill was the ancestor of the Thomastown Mathews. [George surrendered Cahir Castle to Cromwell in 1649. Apparently he was warned by his mother, Elizabeth, to follow that course of action as she had done in Thurles]. [ note: the Mathew family of Llandaff adopted “Mathews” with an ‘s’ in the mid 17th century] 

When the Duke and Duchess of Ormonde were away in England or in Dublin the maintenance of Kilkenny Castle was the provenance of Captain George Reihill Mathew, their relation. The Duchess bombarded him with orders, “my Lord and I doe so much apprehend the danger to the roof of the old hall of the castle of Kilkenny and he desires it may be secured, repaired and mended with as much speed as may be.”  “I desire you will furnish the castle of Kilkenny to be in readiness to receive me, my son and his family in the middle of next month.”  

p. 137. When the Lady Cahir died George married another widow, who brought with her a dowry of £10,000. She was the widow of the last Earl of Tyrone [ on my family tree I have her as Anne Rickard (1665-1729) but she is married to his son, George Mathew *. She was married to James de la Poer, 3rd Earl of Tyrone (1666-1704), and they had a child, Catherine de la Poer, Baroness de la Poer (1701-1769)]. 

She had no children [Anne Rickard, according to this book] and when George died in 1689 she became somewhat isolated in Thomastown. [Thomastown was built around 1670 by George Reihill. Prior to that he had lived in Cahir Castle]. She fled to London in 1690 whre she petitioned the government for help, stating that she, a Protestant, had been driven out of Ireladn by her in-laws who were Catholic. [see Marnane, Land and Violence in West Tipperary]. 

George Reihill was succeeded by his second son, Theobald, who was also twice married. [the eldest son, George, was educated in England and died on the way home from England in 1666]. He died in 1711. Theobald’s son, George, known as “Grand” George, inherited the estate of Thomastown. In his will, Thomas left several bequests including monies to be put in trust and managed for his three daughters until they got married or reached the age of 21. [The ladies in question were Elizabeth, who married Christopher O’Brien of County Clare, Frances, who married John Butler of Co Tipperary, and Elinor who married Kean O’Hara of County Sligo]. He expected a return of 8% on his money. He left money to the youngest son, Bartholomew, and to his “dear cousin” Major George Mathew of Thurles… 

The problem of succession in the Catholic Mathew families contrasts with the almost smooth successions achieved by the families of the Butlers of Cahir and the Ryans of Inch. 

p. 138. The Thurles Mathews were fortunate that there were three single male heirs following the death of Theobald Mathew in 1699. This meant that no stratagem had to be used to avoid carving up the estate. However, a failsafe plan was put in place in the event that the male heirs were not forthcoming. In 1713 a settlement was put in place, which ensured that in default of male heirs the estate would go to the Annfield and Thomastown branches successively. Similar plans must have been put in place in the other Mathew properties because in 1738 the Thurles and Thomastown estates were joined because of the failure of direct heirs in Thomastown. It should be noted that “Grand” George Mathew who died in 1738 had converted in the early years of the 18th century. This inheritance did put a strain on the Thurles owner, George Mathew, who felt it incumbent to change his religion in 1740. 

p. 138. Theobald of Thurles (who died in 1699) did in fact have several sons and daughters himself. He was married three times. By his first wife, Margaret the daughter of Sir valentine Browne he had three sons, George, known as Major George who inherited in 1699, Edmund who died young and James who married Elizabeth Bourke, daughter of the 3rd Baron Brittas. [he is acknowledged to be the father of James Mathew of Thomastown and later of Rathclogheen, who was adopted by his cousin and guardian the 1st Earl of Llandaff. James of Rathclogheen is the ancestor of the modern day Mathews] James had no family. He also had two daughters – Elizabeth who married the 4th Lord Cahir, and Anne who married Viscount Galmoy [ 3rd] 

By his second marriage to the heiress, Anne Salle of Killough Castle, County tipperary, he had one son….[see tree] 

The Annfield branch of the family found life a little more complicated in that Theobald of Annfield, who inherited in 1714 had two brothers. However there is no record on any legal pressure being applied to compel the family to comply with the penal laws of inheritance. 

p. 139. When Theobald died in 1745 the estate went to his son Thomas Mathew. [Thomas had three sons and two daughters, one of whom, Mary, married John Ryan of Inch. The sons were Theobald, who inherited in 1714, Edmund who died in 1772 and James of Borris who married the heiress Anne Morres. They had one daughter who married her cousin Charles Mathew.]  

Again there does not seem to have been any pressure put on Thomas to divide the estate. Howver, in 1755 just prior to Parliament considering framing anti-Catholic laws Thomas decided to convert. The fact that his relation, George Mathew of Thurles, who had inherited Thomastown, was now elderly and had no male heir may have been a contributory factor also. George died in 1760 and Thomas Mathew of Annfield now became the sole owner of all the Mathew properties. 

p. 141. Thomastown had been repaired and reconstruction began in 1711. [ W. Nolan in Tipperary History and Society] It was reported that “Grand” George Mathew and his family lived ‘frugally’ on the continent for seven years on £600 a year in order to devote his £8,000 rental to the laying out of his 1500 acre demesne and the fitting out of the house with forty bedrooms. [T. Power in Land, Politics and Society in 18th Century Tipperary]… 

“Grand” George of Thomastown turned Protestant in the early decades of the 18th century and was elected an MP for County Tipperary. George sat as a Tory and a supporter of the 2nd Duke of Ormonde. He was also elected MP for the period 1727-1736. He died two years later. This was the same George Mathew who was visited by Dean Swift in 1719. In 1704 he was one of nine Catholics in the country who were given licenses to carry arms. However this situation changed after 1715 when the government ordered the seizure  of Catholics horses and arms. At some stage in th following years George adn his son were apprehended and searched for arms. 

The other two branches of the family remained Catholic. When Lady Thurles died she left her second son Theobald the town and manor of Thurles and an estate of four thousand acres. He was married three times and his second wife was Anne Sall, an heiress. Theobald gave her esate to his second son Thomas and so began the Annfield family. The changes in land ownership, which was effected by the necessity of the Ormonde Duke to reduce his overwhelming debts, benefited many landowners in Tipperary, including the Mathew famiy. They used the opportunity to consolidate and expand their holdings. [other families to benefit were Sadleir, Coote, Langley, Baker, Cleere, Dawson, Dancer and Harrison – T. Power in Land, Politics and Society in 18th C Tipperary

p. 142. The Mathew family owned Thurles town and because of their patronage the Catholic Butler bishop was allowed to live there. [Whelan in Tipperary society and history]. In addition the Mathew family of Annfield built Inch and Thurles chapels. A plaque on the wall of the chapel, which was built in 1730 in Thurles, stated that it was built by “Big” George Mathew. He was the George Mathew of thurles who married his stepsister Martha Eaton. He was also the son of the Major mentioned above.  

The Thomastown dynasty came to an abrupt end with the death of “Grand” George and his grandson who both died in 1738. “Grand” George’s son, Theobald, had died two years earlier in 1736. He was married to a cousin from Thurles, Mary Ann Mathew. Her brother, George of Thurles  inherited Thomastown at this time. As George of Thurles had no sons the Thomastown and Thurles estates passed into the ownershop of Thomas of Annfield in 1760. The will, transferring the ownership, was contested unsuccessfully by Margaret the daughter of George of Thurles. 

Thomas had converted to the Church of Ireland in 1755 and he was returned an MP for Tipperary in 1761. In the turbulent political climate of the times, his election was seen as a triumph for the pro Catholic interest in the county. Thomas was perceived as being of dubious conformity himself. He conformed again in 1762. He was elected MP again [p. 143] in 1768 but by a very small margin of 25 votes. On petition the result was overturned. Unlike the Pritties who were very widely connected with teh Protestant landowning classes, Thomas Mathew had to rely on his own voters and whatver support he could must from among the more liberal gentry. 

…Thomas Mathew’s son Francis was perceived as being a closet Catholic. However, he was fortunate in that he had John Scott (later Lord Clonmell) as his brother-in-law. Scott became solicitor-general and was very influential in government circles. Through his influence, Francis, formerly an opposition MP, became a government supporter and this led to his elevation to the peerage as Lord Llandaff in 1784. Though he had, to some extent, changed his allegiance, he still championed the Catholic cause right up to the end of the century and beyond. 

The Act of 1778, which gave an enormous measure of relief to the Catholics, was widely welcomed by the Catholics in Tipperary. The men most associated with the carriage of the Act were Francis Mathew of Thomastown, Lord Clonmel (John Scott, brother in law of Francis, Sir William Osborne and John Hely-Hutchinson. [This close association between Lord Clonell and Francis Mathew wasn’t always harmonious. According to Barrington, in his Reminiscences, Lord Clonmell fought duels with Lord Llandaff, Lord Tryawley and others.] p. 144. The main features of the Act were (1) the removal of the requirement that Catholic property had to be divided among the surviving sons (2) leases could now be given for more than 31 yers (3) the removal of the decree that a son who converted would get immediate possession making his parent a tenant for life only. The Act would only apply to people who took the Oath of Allegiance. … 

That is not to say that Francis favoured any change in the status quo with regard to property rights. During the heyday of Whiteboyism he stood four square with the landlords. After the murder of Ambrose Power, a landlord, in 1775, over sixty of the leading figures in Tipperary including Francis Mathew nd Thomas Maude, pledged their lives and fortunes to suppress Whiteboyism. 

With the re-emergence of considerable agrarian unrest, the American war of Independence and threatened French invasions, Volunteer Corps were founded all over Ireland. ..Each corps ws comprised of about forty rank and file members drawn from the head tenantry or from friends or associates of the Colonel. Francis Mathew had three corps, one in each of his main holdings at thomastown, Annfield and Thurles. 

…p. 145. Francis was made Baron Llandaff of Thomastown in 1783 and he was later made Earl of Llandaff in 1797. The Earl lived the life of a Lord and entertained and was entertained royally. .. 

In 1812 Francis the 2nd Earl employed the architect Richard Morrison to “throw a Gothic cloak over the earlier house” (at Thomastown)… 

Fortuitous marriages brought additional wealth to the Mathew family starting with George the first Mathew to arrive in Tipperary, who married the widow of Viscount Thurles. His soon George Reihill married the widow of Lord Cahir who was also the daughter of Lord Dunboyne. “Grand” George Mathew, a grandson of George Reihill, married as his second wife Lady Ann Hume who brought him an estate worth £10,000 in the 1680s. He converted the title to his own use and that of his heirs and used the money to make further land purchases. Francis Mathew the 1st Earl received £10,000 with Ellis Smyth of Wicklow when they married in 1764. 

…Francis was in serious debt when he inherited in 1777 due largely to marriage payments and unpaid debts from previous generations. Trustees were appointed by Parliament to unravel his affairs and lands had to be disposed of.  

When he died in 1806 the estate was still very much in debt for a variety of reaons one of which was his sponsoring a bill to bring a water supply to Thomastown Castle. 

p. 147. Francis teh 2nd Earl died in 1833. He had been predeceased by his brother Montague in 1819. His second brother George was insane and had died in 1832, so teh estates passed to Elizabeth his sister. She too died unmarried in 1841. 

While the main branch of the family disappeared the Mathew name was kept aloive…For example, Francis Mathew of Rockview House who was mentioned in the will of Elizabeth was married twice and had four sons and two daughters. .. 

https://theirishaesthete.com/2021/08/30/thomastown/

Recalling a Lavish Host

by theirishaesthete

Thomastown Castle, County Tipperary, photograph by Robert O’Byrne.


Many people in Ireland will be familiar with the name of Theobald Mathew, a 19th century Roman Catholic priest who became known as the Apostle of Temperance. A member of the Capuchin order, in 1838 Fr Mathew, witnessing the problems arising from excessive consumption of alcohol, founded the Total Abstinence Society in Cork city, where he was then living. Within nine months some 150,000 persons had enrolled in this organisation and at its height during the late 1840s it is estimated that half the population of Ireland were members. What may be less well known is that Theobald Mathew was related to a wealthy, and Protestand, landed family and grew up at Thomastown Castle, County Tipperary where his father acted as agent to a cousin, the first Earl of Landaff. Now a striking ruin, Thomastown was for several centuries the seat of the Mathew family. Of Welsh origin (hence the choice of name for their title), they were connected through marriage to the Butlers, and thus acquired land in this part of the country. As was so often the case, a series of judicious marital alliances made them exceedingly rich, allowing the construction of a large residence in the late 17th/early 18th centuries. In Town and Country in Ireland under the Georges (1940) Constantia Maxwell provides an excellent account of life there in the years after the house had been built by Thomas Mathew. The building was ‘surrounded by gardens adorned with terraces, statuary, and fish ponds, and by a park of some two thousand acres stocked with deer. Mr Mathew, besides being very rich, was held to be one of the finest gentlemen of the age, and, having travelled much on the Continent and lived in London and Dublin, had a large circle of friends. Nothing gave him so much pleasure as to invite these to Thomastown, where he had no less than forty guest-rooms, besides handsome accommodation for servants. The guests in his house were invited to order anything they might wish for, as at an inn; they might seat themselves at the dining-room table without paying irksome respect to rank, or, if they preferred it, dine with chosen companions in their own rooms. A large room was fitted up as a city coffee-house with newspapers and chessboards, where servants had been ordered to bring refreshments at any time of the day. For those who liked sport fishing tackle was provided, as well as guns and ammunition, while hounds and hunters were available in the stables. But, although everything at Thomastown was on such a lavish scale, there was no disorder or waste, for Mr Mathew rose early every morning to look over the accounts, and his servants were well paid, and forbidden to take tips.’ A description of life at Thomastown was provided by Thomas Sheridan in his biography of Jonathan Swift described how the later was so delighted with Thomas Mathew’s hospitality that instead of staying for a fortnight, as originally intended, he remained there for four months. 

Thomastown Castle, County Tipperary, photograph by Robert O’Byrne.
Thomastown Castle, County Tipperary, photograph by Robert O’Byrne.
Thomastown Castle, County Tipperary, photograph by Robert O’Byrne.
Thomastown Castle, County Tipperary, photograph by Robert O’Byrne.





As mentioned, the house at Thomastown was once surrounded by splendid gardens. Writing in 1778, Thomas Campbell noted that not only was the setting perfect, with the Galtee Mountains ‘set at such a due distance that they are the finest termination for a prospect a painter could desire’ but ‘behind the house is a square parterre, with flowers, with terraces thickly studded with busts and statues; before it, a long and blind avenue, planted with treble rows of well-grown trees, extends its awkward length. In the centre of this, and on the acclivity of the hill, are little fish ponds, pond above pond. The whole park is thrown into squares and parallelograms, with numerous avenues fenced and planted.’ By the time Campbell visited, this style of garden had fallen out of fashion, so he tut-tutted that ‘if a hillock dared to interpose its little head, it was cut off as an excrescence, or at least cut through; that the roads might be everywhere as level as they are straight. Thus was this delightful spot treated by some Procrustes of the last age.’ A few years later, Joseph Cooper Walker was just as critical of Thomastown’s gardens. ‘They lie principally on the gentle declivity of an hill,’ he explained, ‘resting on terraces, and filled with “statues thick as trees”. A long fish pond, sleeping under “a green mantle” between two rectilineous banks, appears in the midst. And in one corner stands a verdant theatre (once the scene of several dramatic exhibitions) displaying all the absurdity of the architecture of gardening. Thus did our ancestors, governed by the false taste which they imbibed from the English, disfigure, with unsuitable ornaments, the simple garb of nature.’  Not much later, perhaps when the second Earl of Landaff, who inherited title and estate on his father’s death in 1806, transformed the house, these by-now old-fashioned gardens were largely swept away in favour of open parkland. 

Thomastown Castle, County Tipperary, photograph by Robert O’Byrne.
Thomastown Castle, County Tipperary, photograph by Robert O’Byrne.

Thomastown, as previously mentioned, was originally a late 17th/early 18th century house of two storeys, the centre just one room deep with projecting wings forming a short entrance courtyard. However, it appears that the generous Thomas Mathew enlarged the house by filling in the space between the wings to create a dining room, some 50 feet long and 20 feet deep, no doubt to feed all the guests he entertained. Several generations later, the second Earl of Landaff decided to alter the building’s appearance by giving it a Gothick makeover. In 1812 the architect Richard Morrison was commissioned to come up with a design for the place. The original entrance arcade was now glazed to create a Great Hall, while the first-floor gallery became a gothic-style library. However, the drawing room retained its classical decoration, with screens of scagliola columns at either end, a typical Morrison flourish which can still be seen in the library at Ballyfin, County Laois. Meanwhile, the exterior was ornamented with a crenellated parapet and a series of octagonal turrets topped with dart-like finials. As Mark Bence-Jones noted, from a distance these look like rabbits’ ears. A kitchen and service wing at right-angles to the house was also thoroughly dressed in Tudor-Gothic decoration, although a stone tower at the corner of the range is in Norman style. The entire building was covered in stucco, which was then rather oddly painted pale blue. An engraving of the completed work made by John PrestonNeale in 1819 although this included an unexecuted family wing and a more simple service range than that actually constructed. The second earl had no children and following his death, Thomastown passed to a sister Lady Elizabeth Mathew who in turn left the estate to a cousin of her mother, the Vicomte de Chabot. Before the end of the 19th century, it had come into the possession of the Dalys of Dunsandle, County Galway but seemingly by then the house was already falling into ruin. And so it has remained, with much of the central block, where those hospitable dinners were once given, long since collapsed. Today the only diners seen here are cattle.

Thomastown Castle, County Tipperary, photograph by Robert O’Byrne.

https://theirishaesthete.com/2021/09/01/thomastown-2/

Copycats

by theirishaesthete

Thomastown Castle gate tower, County Tipperary, photograph by Robert O’Byrne.
Thomastown Castle gate tower, County Tipperary, photograph by Robert O’Byrne.



After Monday’s post explaining the history of Thomastown Castle, County Tipperary, these pictures might be of interest since they show the gate tower that formerly gave access to the main house. It dates from around 1812 and was likewise designed by Richard Morrison: note the Mathew family coat of arms prominently displayed over the gateway. Aside from this detail, the building is almost identical to a similar gate tower at the entrance to the demesne of Borris House, County Carlow. This was also designed by Morrison and at the same date: one wonders if the estates’ respective owners ever noticed or remarked on the duplication?

Thomastown Castle gate tower, County Tipperary, photograph by Robert O’Byrne.
Thomastown Castle gate tower, County Tipperary, photograph by Robert O’Byrne.

http://www.patrickcomerford.com/search/label/castles?updated-max=2019-10-29T19:30:00Z&max-results=20&start=8&by-date=false

In recent days, I have been writing about tangled family trees and difficult marriages that led to questions about the inheritance of titles and estates in the Townshend familyand the Leeson family
 
In the Townshend family, scandals and a bigamous marriage threatened the succession to both the title of Marquess Townshend and the ownership of Tamworth Castle. In the Leeson family, a tangled family tree led to the loss of Russborough House in Co Wicklow and the disappearance of the title of Earl of Milltown. 
 
Similar stories are told about the Mathew family of Thomastown, Co Tipperary, and the claims to the title of Earl Landaff. 
 
The Mathew family claimed descent from a branch of the Matthew family of Radyr in Glamorgan, in south Wales. There are three 15th and 16th century Mathew family effigies In Llandaff Cathedral. 

George Mathew sold his estate at Radyr in the mid-17th and moved to Co Tipperary. He became the owner of Thomastown Castle, near Thurles, when he married Elizabeth Poyntz (1587-1673), Lady Thurles, widow of Thomas Butler, Viscount Thurles. 
 
It was a marriage that brought George Mathew into a powerful and influential family circle, and he was the stepfather of James Butler (1610-1688), 1st Duke of Ormond. 
 
George Mathew died in 1638, but the Mathew family maintained close connections with the Ormond Butlers in the generations that followed. In 1666, George Mathew was granted a large estate in Co Tipperary, including part of Thomastown. The original Thomastown Castle was a two-storey house of pink brick built in the 1670s by George Mathew with early 18th additions. 
 
Thomastown Castle was the birthplace and early home of Father Mathew, the ‘Apostle of Temperance,’ and his father was a cousin of Thomas Mathew and worked for him as his agent. 
 
Thomas Mathew of Annefield succeeded to the Mathew estates of Thomastown and Thurles in 1760. Wilson described Thomastown Castle in 1786 as ‘an ancient but handsome edifice.’ Thomas was succeeded by his son Francis Mathew in 1777 who was given the title of Earl Landaff in 1797. 
 
Francis Mathew (1738-1806), 1st Earl Landaff, had been MP for Tipperary in the Irish House of Commons in 1768-1783, and was High Sheriff of Tipperary. He was made a member of the Irish House of Lords in 1783 with the title of Baron Landaff, of Thomastown, in Co Tipperary. In 1793, he received the higher title of Viscount Landaff, and in 1797 he was made Earl Landaff. 
 
The Earls Landaff used the invented courtesy title Viscount Mathew for the heir apparent. Despite their territorial designations, the misspelling of Llandaff as Landaff, and the fact that the titles were in the Irish Peerage, the titles all referred to the place in Glamorgan now spelt Llandaff. After the Act of Union, Lord Landaff was elected as one of the 28 Irish peers to the British House of Lords. 
 
This Lord Landaff was married three times. On 6 September 1764, he married Elisha Smyth (1743-1781) in Bellinter, Co Meath. She was a sister of Sir Skeffington Smyth of Tinney Park, Co Wicklow. They had four children, three sons and two daughters: Francis James Mathew, later 2nd Earl of Landaff; General Montague Mathew (1773-1819); the Hon George Toby Skeffington Mathew (died 1832); and Lady Elizabeth Mathew (died 1842). 
 
In 1784, he married his second wife, Lady Catherine Skeffington (1752-1796), a daughter of Clotworthy Skeffington, 1st Earl of Massereene. They had no children, and in 1799 he married his third wife, a woman named Coghlan from Ardo, Co Waterford. 
 
When he died in 1806, he was succeeded in his titles by his eldest son from his first marriage, Francis James Mathew (1768-1833), 2nd Earl Landaff, who had been known by the courtesy title of Viscount Mathew. He was MP for Tipperary in the Irish House of Commons (1790-1792), Callan (1796) and again for Tipperary (1796-1801). As Earl Landaff, he also took his father’s place as an Irish representative peer in the House of Lords. 
 
He opposed the Act of Union, supported Catholic Emancipation, and was seen as ‘a personal enemy of George IV’ when he gave evidence in favour of Queen Charlotte regarding her conduct at the Court of Naples during her famous trial. 
 
Thomastown Castle was enlarged in the early 19th century, and transformed into a Gothic castle, designed by Richard Morrison for Francis James Mathew, the 2nd Earl Landaff. 
 
Lord Landaff married Gertrude Cecilia La Touche, a daughter of John La Touche, of Harristown, Co Kildare. They had no children, and he died in Dublin on 12 March 1833, aged 65. 

Lord Landaff’s next brother, Lieut-Gen Montague James Mathew (1773-1819), had died 14 years earlier, on 19 March 1819, and so the family titles became extinct. General Mathew was MP for for Ballynakill in the Irish Parliament until 1800, and MP for Co Tipperary in Westminster in 1806-1819. He was a Whig and a supporter of Catholic Emancipation. 
 
Their youngest brother, the Hon George Toby Skeffington Mathew, also died in 1832. So, when the second earl died, the family titles became extinct, and the estates passed to his sister, Lady Elizabeth Mathew. The Ordnance Survey Name Books record Lady Elizabeth Mathew owned townlands in the parish of Kilfeacle, barony of Clanwilliam, in 1840. 
 
When she died in 1842, she left the family estates and fortune to a cousin, the Vicomte de Chabot, the son of her mother’s sister Elizabeth Smyth. Viscount Chabot was living at Thomastown Castle in the mid-19th century. Later it was owned by the Daly family, but from the mid-1870s it began to decay from the mid-1870s. William Daly was living there in 1906. 
 
As Thomastown Castle crumbled and decayed, a number of pretenders came forward, claiming they were the rightful holders of the title Earl Landaff and heirs to the castle. The most outrageous of these pretenders was Arnold Harris Mathew (1852-1919), self-styled de jure 4th Earl Landaff, also self-styled Count Povoleri di Vicenza. 
 
Mathew was also the founder and first bishop of the self-styled Old Roman Catholic Western Orthodox Church in Great Britain, an Old Catholic Church. His episcopal consecration was declared null and void by the Union of Utrecht’s International Old Catholic Bishops’ Conference. In addition, he was excommunicated by Pope Pius X for illicitly consecrating two priests as bishops which led a London jury to find that ‘the words were true in substance and in fact’ that he was a ‘pseudo-bishop.’ 
 
He claimed his father, Major Arnold Henry Ochterlony Mathew, who died in 1894, was the third Earl Landaff, and the son of Major Arnold Nesbit Mathew, of the Indian Army. According to these claims, this Major Arnold Mathew was, in turn, the eldest son of the 1st Earl Landaff, born in Paris five months after his parents married. 
 
This claim was later shown to be based on invented and fictitious information. Arnold Nesbit Mathew originally used the name Matthews, as did his son. He was, in fact, the son of William Richard Matthews and his wife Anne, of Down Ampney in Gloucestershire. Incidentally, Down Ampney was also the home village of the composer Ralph Vaughan Williams (1872-1958(, who composed the tune ‘Down Ampney’ for the hymn ‘Come down, O love divine’ 
 
Arnold Harris Mathew put forward his claim to the Garter Principal King of Arms for the title of 4th Earl Landaff of Thomastown, Co Tipperary, in 1890, and placed his creative pedigree on the official record at the College of Arms. 
 
John H Matthews, Cardiff archivist, said in 1898 that the number of claimants to the dormant or extinct earldom was ‘legion.’ In his opinion, Arnold Henry Mathew’s pedigree was ‘too extra-ordinary to commend itself to an impartial mind.’ 
 
Nevertheless, Arnold Henry Mathew presented his petition to the House of Lords in 1899, claiming a right to vote with the Irish peers for representative peers in the House of Lords. In his petition, he did not repeat other exuberant claims, including one that his grandmother was Eliza Francesca Povoleri, was an Italian countess and the daughter of a Papal marchese. 
 
His petition was read and referred to the Lord Chancellor, Lord Halsbury, who reported in 1902 that Mathew’s claim ‘is of such a nature that it ought to be referred to the Committee for Privileges; read, and ordered to lie on the Table.’ 
 
Mark Bence Jones in a feature in Country Life says Archbishop Mathew also bought the ruins of Thomastown Castle and 20 acres surrounding it to save it from destruction. 
 
Mathew’s aristocratic pretensions, like his life as a ‘wandering bishop,’ were fantasies that continue to resurface in the claims of fantasists and pretenders in many walks of life. 
 
When he died on 19 December 1919, the claims to the Mathew title did not come to an end. 
 
As recently as 1987, a mural memorial was erected in Llandaff Cathedral, claiming it was: ‘In memory of Thomas James Mathew son and heir of Francis James Mathew second Earl of Landaff born in London 1798 died in Cape Town 1862.’ The memorial includes a full display of the coat of arms of the Mathew family of Co Tipperary as Earls Landaff, and the misspelling of Llandaff as Landaff. 
 

Templemore Abbey, Co Tipperary

Templemore Abbey, Co Tipperary

Templemore Abbey, County Tipperary entrance and garden fronts c. 1880, photograph: collection Sir John Carden, Vanishing Country Houses of Ireland by The Knight of Glin, David J. Griffin and Nicholas K. Robinson, published by The Irish Architectural Archive and The Irish Georgian Society, 1988.

Mark Bence-Jones. A Guide to Irish Country Houses (originally published as Burke’s Guide to Country Houses volume 1 Ireland by Burke’s Peerage Ltd. 1978); Revised edition 1988 Constable and Company Ltd, London.

p. 271. “(Carden, Bt, of Templemore/PB) Templemore Castle, the original seat of the Carden family, was detroyed by fire towards mid-C18; after which a handsome nine bay house was built elsewhere on the demesne. This house was demolished early C19 and a new house built on a more elevated site in demesne adjoining the original park to the west; it was originally known as Templemore Priory, but afterwards called Templemore Abbey. In 1819, this house was no more than a single-stoey Gothic cottage with a very tall round tower and a crocketed square tower but it was subsequently greatly enlarged by William Vitruvius Morrison, in the Tudor-Gothic style….it was burnt 1922.”

Templemore Abbey, County Tipperary, dining room c. 1880 photograph: collection Sir John Carden, Vanishing Country Houses of Ireland by The Knight of Glin, David J. Griffin and Nicholas K. Robinson, published by The Irish Architectural Archive and The Irish Georgian Society, 1988.
John Craven Carden, 1st Baronet by Robert Hunter courtesy of Adam’s auction 13 Oct 2015. This portrait of John Craven Carden is in the uniform of the Templemore Light Dragoons, a volunteer regiment raised in response to the withdrawal of regular troops required for the American War but which rapidly acquired political leverage. Carden had inherited large estates in Tipperary acquired in the Cromwellian settlement of the 17th Century. Although without parliamentry influence, Carden represented landed interests which the Castle administration were keen to control. Bribes were measured and Carden was made a baronet in 1787. He proved to be a sound man in the 1798 rebellion and by fortifying the Market House in Templemore denied the town to the rebels. He also leased the land for a barracks (now the Garda Training College) and donated the site of the Catholic Church in 1810.

Listed in Vanishing Country Houses of Ireland by The Knight of Glin, David J. Griffin and Nicholas K. Robinson, published by The Irish Architectural Archive and The Irish Georgian Society, 1988. 

1819 – Templemore Abbey, Co. Tipperary 

Architect: William Vitruvius Morrison 

Constructed on the site of an earlier house, Templemore Abbey was a vast neo-Gothic mansion designed by one of the masters of the genre in Ireland, William Vitruvius Morrison. The building contains elements of much of Morrison’s best work in the style, Elizabethan gables, battlements and turrets. 

Sadly the building was torched during the War of Independence after it had been used by British forces as a base for B Company of the Auxiliaries. After they left the building in May 1921, it was destroyed in an arson attack.  

https://lordbelmontinnorthernireland.blogspot.com/2018/08/templemore-abbey.html

THE CARDEN BARONETS OWNED 6,680 ACRES OF LAND IN COUNTY TIPPERARY 

This family, which is of antiquity, removed from Lincolnshire into Ireland about the middle of the 17th century. 
 
The name is local, being derived from the township of Cawarden, or Carden, which lies about eleven miles south-south-east from Chester, which manor was the original inheritance of the family; but the elder branch terminating in co-heiresses, the manor of Over-Carden was carried by marriage into the family of Felton, about the end of the 16th century. 
 
A branch of the family had been settled in Kent, where it appears that it had been for several generations possessed of the manor of Hodford; but that estate was alienated during the reign of ELIZABETH I, by John Carden, to the family of Cobbe, when there is reason to believe that the Cardens of Kent removed into Lincolnshire, and that from them diverged the Irish branch, springing from 
 
JOHN CARDEN (c1623-1728), who settled at Templemore, County Tipperary, about 1650, and married Priscilla, daughter of John Kent, of County Kilkenny, by whom he had issue, 
 

Jonathan, ancestor of CARDEN OF BARNANE; 
JOHN, of whom we treat
William; 
Margery; Anne; Abigail; Margaret; two other daughters. 

Mr Carden died at the extraordinary age of 105. His second son, 
 
JOHN CARDEN, of Templemore, wedded, in 1717, Rebecca, daughter of Humphrey Minchin, of Ballynakill, and had issue, 
 

JOHN, his heir
Minchin; 
Paul. 

The eldest son, 
 
JOHN CARDEN (1720-74), of Templemore, espoused, in 1747, Elizabeth, daughter and heir of the Rev Robert Craven, and had (with other issue), 
 

JOHN CRAVEN, his heir
Christiana. 

The eldest son, 
 
JOHN CRAVEN CARDEN (c1758-1820), of Templemore, married firstly, in 1776, Mary, daughter of Arthur, 1st Viscount Harberton, and had issue, 
 

John (1777-1811); 
ARTHUR, his heir
another son. 

He wedded secondly, in 1781, Sarah, daughter of John Moore, and had issue, 
 

Annesley; 
Gertrude; 
another daughter. 

Mr Carden espoused thirdly, in 1788, Mary Frances, daughter of Henry Westenra, and sister of Warner William, 2nd Baron Rossmore, and had further issue, 
 

HENRY ROBERT, 2nd Baronet
Harriet Amelia; Frances. 

He married fourthly, Anne, widow of the Viscount Monck. 
 
Mr Carden was created a baronet in 1787, denominated of Templemore, County Tipperary. 
 
He raised and commanded the 30th Regiment of Light Dragoons, which, with many other regiments, was reduced at the peace of Amiens. 
 
Sir John was succeeded by his eldest son, 
 
SIR ARTHUR CARDEN, 2nd Baronet (1778-1822), High Sheriff of County Tipperary, 1820, who wedded Mary, daughter of Thomas Kemmis, of Shaen, Queen’s County; but dying without issue, the title devolved upon his half-brother, 
 
SIR HENRY ROBERT CARDEN (1789-1847), of Templemore, High Sheriff of County Tipperary, 1824, who espoused, in 1818, Louisa, daughter of Frederick Thompson, of Dublin, and had issue, 
 

JOHN CRAVEN, his successor
Frederick; 
Henry Daniel; 
Arthur (Rev); 
Elizabeth Caroline; Sarah Sophia; Frances Mary. 

Sir Henry was succeeded by his eldest son, 
 
SIR JOHN CRAVEN CARDEN, 4th Baronet (1819-79), DL, High Sheriff of County Tipperary, 1849, who married firstly, in 1844, Caroline Elizabeth Mary, daughter of Sir William Mordaunt Sturt Milner Bt, and had issue, 
 

Beatrice Georgina; three other daughters. 

He wedded secondly, in 1852, Julia Isabella, daughter of Admiral Charles Gepp Robinson, and had further issue, 
 

JOHN CRAVEN, his successor
Henry Charles; 
Frederick Richard; 
Coldstream James; 
Derrick Alfred, ancestor of the 8th Baronet
Julia Ellen Beatrice; Norah Irene; Eileen Olive. 

Sir John was succeeded by his eldest son, 
 
SIR JOHN CRAVEN CARDEN, 5th Baronet (1854-1931), JP DL, High Sheriff of County Tipperary, 1882, who espoused, in 1891, Sybil Martha, daughter of General Valentine Baker, and had issue, 
 

JOHN VALENTINE, his successor; 
Audrey. 

Sir John, the last of the family to live at Templemore Abbey, was succeeded by his son and heir, 
 
SIR JOHN VALENTINE CARDEN, 6th Baronet (1892-1935), MBE, Captain, Royal Army Service Corps, who married firstly, in 1915, Vera Madeleine, daughter of William Henry Hervet-d’Egville; and secondly, in 1925, Dorothy Mary, daughter of Charles Luckraft McKinnon, by whom he had issue, an only child, 
 
SIR JOHN CRAVEN CARDEN, 7th Baronet (1926-2008), of Jersey, Channel Islands, who wedded, in 1947, Isabel Georgette, daughter de Hart, and had issue, an only child, ISABEL MARY. 
 
Sir John died without male issue, when the title passed to his distant cousin, 
 
SIR JOHN CRAVEN CARDEN, 8th and present Baronet. 
 

Sir John Craven Carden, 5th Baronet (1854–1931) 
Sir John Valentine Carden, 6th Baronet (1892–1935) 
Sir John Craven Carden, 7th Baronet (1926–2008) 
Sir John Craven Carden, 8th Baronet (born 1953). 

TEMPLEMORE ABBEY, County Tipperary, replaced an earlier castle which was destroyed by a fire in the mid-18th century. 
 
In its place another house was erected, though it, too, was demolished in the early 1800s and a new residence was constructed on an elevated location some distance from the original building. 
 
It was called Templemore Priory, though its name was changed subsequently to Templemore Abbey. 

This residence was relatively modest, similar to a single-storey Gothic cottage; it was, however, considerably increased in size, ca 1865, by the architect William Vitruvius Morrison in the Tudor-Gothic style. 
 
This was said to have cost £36,000 (£4.3 million in today’s money). 
 
The completed mansion afforded a two-storey entrance front, with finials, oriels, gables, and a castellated parapet. 
 
There was also a long, irregular side elevation. 
 
The Abbey was burnt to the ground in 1922 by the IRA. 

http://greatirishhouses.blogspot.com/2013/03/templemore-abbey-co-tipperary.html 

Shanbally Castle, Clogheen, County Tipperary

Shanbally Castle, Clogheen, County Tipperary

Shanbally Castle, County Tipperary, garden front during demolition c. 1957. Vanishing Country Houses of Ireland by The Knight of Glin, David J. Griffin and Nicholas K. Robinson, published by The Irish Architectural Archive and The Irish Georgian Society, 1988.

Mark Bence-Jones. A Guide to Irish Country Houses (originally published as Burke’s Guide to Country Houses volume 1 Ireland by Burke’s Peerage Ltd. 1978); Revised edition 1988 Constable and Company Ltd, London.

p. 257. “[O’Callaghan, Lismore, V/PB1898; Butler, sub Ormonde, M/PB; Pole-Carew, sub Pole, Bt/pb] The largest of John Nash’s Irish castles, built ca 1812 for Cornelius O’Callaghan, 1stViscount Lismore. Long and irregular, of smooth silver-grey ashlar; with round and octagon towers, battlements and machicolations. ..2nd and last Viscount Lismore left Shanbally to his cousins, Lady Beatrice Pole-Carew and Lady Constance Butler, daughters of 3rd Marquess of Ormonde; it was sold by Major Patrick Pole-Carew 1954. After a valiant but unsuccessful attempt by Hon Edward Sackville-West (5th Lord Sackville), the author and music critic, to rescue it, the house was demolished 1957 and its ruin dynamited.”

Cornelius O’Callaghan (d. 1797) 1st Baron Lismore by Hugh Douglas Hamilton courtesy Christies British Watercolours.
Shanbally Castle, County Tipperary, photograph by Robert French, (between ca. 1865-1914), Lawrence Photograph Collection, National Library of Ireland.
Shanbally Castle, County Tipperary, photograph by Robert French, (between ca. 1865-1914), Lawrence Photograph Collection, National Library of Ireland.
Shanbally Castle, County Tipperary, photograph by Robert French, (between ca. 1865-1914), Lawrence Photograph Collection, National Library of Ireland.
Shanbally Castle, County Tipperary, photograph by Robert French, (between ca. 1865-1914), Lawrence Photograph Collection, National Library of Ireland.

Listed in Vanishing Country Houses of Ireland by The Knight of Glin, David J. Griffin and Nicholas K. Robinson, published by The Irish Architectural Archive and The Irish Georgian Society, 1988. 

p. 136. “John Nash’s most important and largest Irish castle. Built c. 1806 for Cornelius O’Callaghan 1st Viscount Lismore. The very fine interior included a vaulted entrance hall lit by a series of glass skylights, a splendid oak imperial main staircase and an oval drawing-room.

The castle in good repair was sold in 1954 and despite protests in the press was demolished in 1957. Its destruction was one of Ireland’s great architectural losses this century.”

entry in MacDonnell, Randal. The Lost Houses of Ireland. A chronicle of great houses and the families who lived in them. Weidenfeld and Nicolson. London, 2002

p. 191 “The largest of John Nash’s four Irish castles, Shanbally was in excellent condition when the protectors of Ireland’s heritage in the Irish civil service decided to allow its demolition. Roofed and in good repair at the time it was pulled down, Shanbally’s destruction was one of the most pointless acts of official vandalism in the history of the Irish state.”

p. 192. Nash’s other castles in Ireland were Ravensworth, Caerbays and Aqualate. Shanbally also had the distinction that it was built, not for the descendent o some Cromwellian carpetbagger, but for the scion of an old Irish famiy, Cornelius O’Callaghan.

[pages ripped out]

The Tipperary Gentry. Volume 1. By William Hayes and Art Kavanagh. Published by Irish Family Names, c/o Eneclann, Unit 1, The Trinity Enterprise Centre, Pearse St, Dublin 2, 11 Emerald Cottages, Grand Canal St, Dublin 4 and Market Square, Bunclody, Co Wexford, Ireland. 2003.

O’Callaghan of Shanbally.

p. 163. Cornelius O’Callaghan [1693-1741] was a small county Cork landowner and successful Dublin lawyer. He was Sir Redmond Everard’s solicitor and facilitated him in getting mortgages. Like Redmond he was a convert. In 1713 he and Redmond represented Fethard in Parliament. It is probably that O’Callaghan’s political advancement was paid for by a reduction in Everard’s debts. In 1721 Everard sold his property in Iffa and Offa and centred on Clogheen to O’Callaghan for £11,500. The O’Callaghan family built upon this base and extended their holdings during the next 150 years so that by the mid-19C they were the county’s largest landholders. In 1883 the Lismore estates totalled a staggering 42,000 acres. In Tipperary they owned almost 35,000 acres, while they owned 6000 acres in Cork and over 1000 acres in Limerick. The rent roll was valued at over £16,000 per annum.

…Lord Lismore in his will of 1787 stipulated that his younger son lay out £9,999 in the purchase of lands, and in 1803 his heir bought an estate in Co Laois for £43,620.

p. 164. …the O’Callaghans were noted for their sympathetic approach to the Catholic Relief movement.

The O’Callaghans spent considerable sums over the decades of the 18C improving their estates, building Clogheen village (where Protestant artisans and craftsmen were brought in), drainage schemes, and large scale remodelling of the landscape. These works were facilitated by the appointment of agents. …

p. 160. [Cornelius O’Callaghan 1st Viscount Lismore divorced his wife, Eleanor Butler.] It would seem from the evidence that the marriage ran into trouble shortly after the fourth child was born when Lady Lismore began the habit of chastising her husband, both verbally and physically. According to her brother, the Duke of Ormond, she was a lady who frequently lost her temper. George O’Callaghan gave evidence that he had seen her strike her husband on more than one occasion. In addition she frequently taunted him by stating that Shanbally might be fit for the wife of Lord Lismore but was not fit for Eleanor the sister of the Duke of Ormonde.

p. 161. One of the most startling facts to emerge was that, at the time of the separation, Lord Lismore was in extreme financial difficulty. Although he owned over 40,000 acres of land and despite having received almost £40,000 as a dowry with Eleanor he was reduced to dire straits in the period from 1816-1825. His brother stated that he had only one servant in Shanbally and owned only one carriage and no carriage horse. He also said that in 1817 Lord Lismore was so financially embarressed that he could not travel over to London to see his wife….

The couple was separated in 1819 and Lady Lismore, on the advice of her doctors, decided to travel to a southern country where the climate might be good for her asthma….while in Italy the second time she took a lover, Richard Bingham…[p. 162] It was on the grounds of this adultery that Lord Lismore sought the divorce…. The children were reared by their father.

The seat of the O’Callaghans was at Shanbally Castle, near Clogheen village, where they built a mansion around 1735. There was over 1200 acres of land in the demesne. After the peerage was obtained in 1785 their house was renewed as a castle in 1812. [the castle was unfortunately demolished in 1957]. The new neo-classical house was designed by John Nash….

p. 166. 1st Baron Lismore of Shanbally died in 1797 at a relatively young age. His widow moved to Tunbridge Wells where she remained for the rest of her life until her death in 1827. They had at least two sons, Cornelius and robert William

[the son Cornelius] took his seat in the House of Lords nd voted against the Act of Union in 1800.

[Robert William had an active military career]

In 1806 Cornelius was created Viscount Lismore of Shanbally and in 1838 he was created Baron Lismore of Shanbally Castle. This was one of the Coronation Peerages of Queen Victoria…. Baron Lismore was Lord Lieutenant for Tipperary from 1851 until his death.

p. 167. During the Famine the Lismores worked extremely hard to alleviate the sufferings of the poor. Lord Lismore reduced their rents and provided a soup kitchen at hte gates of his castle. He was describedd as one of Ireland’s benevolent landlords and the town of Clogheen grew and prospered after the Famine.

[His son George outlived both his sons]

http://lordbelmontinnorthernireland.blogspot.com/2013/10/shanbally-castle.html

THE VISCOUNTS LISMORE WERE THE LARGEST LANDOWNERS IN COUNTY TIPPERARY, WITH 34,945 ACRES

This was one of the very few native families which had been dignified by the Peerage of Ireland. The O’Callaghans were formerly princes of the province of Munster, and were seated at Dromaneen Castle. Their Chief, CORNELIUS O’CALLAGHAN, enjoyed very extensive territorial possessions in 1594, according to an inquisition taken by Sir Thomas Norris, Vice-President of Munster, in that year.
From this Cornelius descended 

CORNELIUS O’CALLAGHAN (c1681-c1742), a very eminent lawyer, MP for Fethard, 1713-14, who married Maria, daughter of Robert Jolly, and had three sons, the youngest of whom,

THOMAS O’CALLAGHAN, wedded, in 1740, Sarah, daughter of John Davis, and had, with a daughter (married to Robert Longfield, of Castle Martyr), an only son,

CORNELIUS O’CALLAGHAN (1741-97), MP for Fethard, 1768-85, who was elevated to the peerage, in 1785, in the dignity of Baron Lismore, of Shanbally, County Tipperary.

His lordship married, in 1774, Frances, second daughter of Mr Speaker Ponsonby, of the Irish House of Commons, and niece, paternally, of William, Earl of Bessborough, and niece, maternally, of William, 3rd Duke of Devonshire, and had issue,

CORNELIUS, his heir;
Robert William (Sir), GCB, lieutenant-general;
George;
Louisa; Elizabeth; Mary.

He was succeeded by his eldest son,

CORNELIUS, 2nd Baron (1775-1857), who was created, in 1806, VISCOUNT LISMORE, of Shanbally, County Tipperary.

He married, in 1808, the Lady Eleanor Butler, youngest daughter of John, 17th Earl of Ormonde, and sister of the Marquess of Ormonde, by which lady he had issue,

Cornelius;
William Frederick;
George Ponsonby;
Anne Maria Louisa.

His lordship, Privy Counsellor, 1835, Lord-Lieutenant of County Tipperary, 1851-57, was succeeded by his second son,

GEORGE PONSONBY, 2nd Viscount (1815-98), an officer in the 17th Lancers, High Sheriff of County Tipperary, 1853, Lord-Lieutenant of County Tipperary, 1857-85, who wedded, in 1839, Mary, daughter of George Norbury, and had issue,

George Cornelius Gerald (1846-85);
William Frederick Ormonde (1852-77).

His lordship’s sons both predeceased him, when the titles became extinct.

SHANBALLY CASTLE, near Clogheen, County Tipperary, was built about 1812 for Cornelius O’Callaghan, 1st Viscount Lismore.

It was said to have been the largest of John Nash’s Irish castles.
Shanbally was long and irregular, of a silver-grey ashlar.

This great mansion was 281 feet above sea-level, and about 80 feet above the level of the adjacent brook.

Shanbally Castle had numerous machicolations, towers and battlements.

The entrance front was pointed-arched, with a vaulted porte-cochere under a porch-tower.

The garden front had a round tower at one end and an octagonal tower at the other, with a central feature boasting two square turrets.

There was a stylish Gothic veranda.

Shanbally demesne is beautifully situated on low ground, in the centre of the valley, between the Galtee mountains on the north and the Knockmealdown mountains on the south.

It commands the most magnificent views of the slopes, escarpments, summits, and groupings of both of these alpine ranges.


Shanbally Castle was situated in a picturesque landscape, bounded to the north and south by two mountain ranges, the Galtees and the Knockmealdowns.

It is said that Shanbally bore a remarkable resemblance to Nash and Repton’s joint venture, Luscombe Castle in Devon, though Shanbally was considerably larger.

The 2nd and last Viscount left Shanbally to his cousins, the Lady Beatrice Pole-Carew and the Lady Constance Butler, daughters of the 3rd Marquess of Ormonde.

Shanbally was sold in 1954 by Major Patrick Pole-Carew. 

Following attempts by the Hon Edward Sackville-West (5th Lord Sackville) to rescue the Castle, it was demolished in 1957 and its ruin was blown up.

The following is a composition by Bill Power of the Mitchelstown Heritage Society:

Few acts of official vandalism rival the decision by the Irish Government in 1957 to proceed with plans to demolish Shanbally Castle.

Built for Cornelius O’Callaghan, 1st Viscount Lismore, ca 1810, the mansion was the largest house built in Ireland by the famous English architect, John Nash. 


When the Irish Land Commission purchased the Shanbally estate in 1954, one of the immediate questions which it addressed was what should become of the castle.

For a brief period it seemed that a purchaser could be found in the form of the London theatre critic Edward Sackville-West, 5th Lord Sackville, who had a tremendous love of the Clogheen area, which he had known since childhood.

He agreed to buy the castle, together with 163 acres, but pulled out of the transaction when the Irish 
Land Commission refused to stop cutting trees in the land he intended to buy. 

Consequently, by 1957, the fate of the mansion was sealed.

The Irish Land Commissioners, with Irish Government approval, decided to proceed with plans to demolish the castle on the grounds that they had no use for it and that it was in poor condition.

They ignored suggestions that a religious community might be found for the building, and also 
rejected its suitability as a forestry school.

In that year, Professor Denis Gwynn, wrote an article in the Cork Examiner in which he exhorted the authorities to reverse their decision:

“Shanbally Castle has been well known for years as one of the most graceful and original examples in Ireland of late Georgian architecture,” he said. “Its formal gardens, which have run wild, could easily be brought back to order.”

The Professor pointed out that Shanbally Castle was designed by one of the most famous of all modern architects, who also planned all the well known terraces that surround Regent’s Park in London, and so many other celebrated buildings in England, `What conceivable justification can there be for incurring the great expense of demolishing this unique Irish mansion,’ he asked.

“All around the house, with its long avenues, the land has been admirably laid out and planted with fine trees in groups to enhance the views and to produce valuable timber,’ he continued. `More recently there has been wholesale clearance of the timber. Last summer I saw cutting in progress at many places, and big gaps had been made in the boundary walls to assist removal of the felled trees.

Describing the order to demolish the castle as an `act of vandalism,’ Professor Gwynn called for an inquiry into the circumstances of the decision. There is no sense whatever in squandering public money on the destruction of a beautiful house which is well known to students of Nash’s domestic architecture,’ he added.

But Professor Gwynn’s article was already too late: Despite some local opposition and widespread critical comment, the roof was removed and some of its impressive cut stones were being removed by hand and broken into smaller pieces for use in road building.

The house, with its twenty stately bedrooms, extensive drawing rooms, dining room, library, marble fireplaces and mahogany staircase was rapidly reduced to a state of ruin. 

In 1960, The Nationalist newspaper reported the final end of a building which was once the pride of the neighbourhood: “A big bang yesterday ended Shanbally Castle, where large quantities of gelignite and cortex shattered the building”, it said. 

In the weeks prior to the explosion, demolition workers bored 1,400 holes, 18 inches above ground, into the cut stone of the castle.

Each hole was then filled with explosives which were detonated on the 21st March, 1960.

Almost all of this material was used for road building. 

The protests against the demolition of Shanbally Castle came from some local sources, An Taisce and a few academics such as Professor Gwynn.

Politically, the  Fianna Fail Government had no love for houses of the ascendancy.

However, remarkably, it was from within the ranks of Fianna Fail that the only political voices were raised against the demolition plans, albeit privately.

One was Senator Sean Moylan, the Irish Minister for Agriculture until his death in 1957, and the other was his close friend and TD from Mitchelstown, John W Moher.

They were over-ruled by the Cabinet and failed to get wider political support, even from opposition deputies.

When the explosion finally came, the Irish Government saw fit to issue a terse public statement in response to protests favouring the retention of Shanbally Castle for the nation.
“Apart from periods of military occupation the castle remained wholly unoccupied for 40 years,” said the statement.

First published in October, 2011.

https://archiseek.com/2012/1806-shanbally-castle-clogheen-co-tipperary

1806 – Shanbally Castle, Clogheen, Co. Tipperary 

Architect: John Nash 

Shanbally Castle was built for Cornelius O’Callaghan, the first Viscount Lismore and was the largest house built in Ireland by the noted English architect John Nash. Acquired by the Irish Land Commission in 1954. On 21 March 1960 the castle, after much controversy, was demolished.  

It was widely felt that the castle was in habitable condition, having been sold to the government in good repair. The house had ranges of Gothic windows and was flanked by towers at either end. The interiors were reportedly well-detailed with ornate plasterwork. 

For a time it seemed that a purchaser could be found in the form of the London theatre critic Edward Charles Sackville-West, 5th Baron Sackville. He agreed to buy the castle, together with 163 acres, but pulled out of the transaction when the Irish Land Commission refused to stop cutting trees in the land he intended to buy. A statement from the Irish Government released after the demolition of the Castle said in response to protests favouring the retention of ShanballyCastle for the nation: “Apart from periods of military occupation the castle remained wholly unoccupied for 40 years”. 

Courtown, Kilcock, County Kildare

Courtown, Kilcock, County Kildare

Mark Bence-Jones. A Guide to Irish Country Houses (originally published as Burke’s Guide to Country Houses volume 1 Ireland by Burke’s Peerage Ltd. 1978); Revised edition 1988 Constable and Company Ltd, London. 

p. 93. “(Aylmer/IFR; Drummond, sub Perth, E/PB; O’Brien, Bt/PB) A plain two storey house of ca 1815, built by John Aylmer to replace the earlier house here, which was burned and looted 1798 during the ownership of his father, Michael Aylmer, who had been unable to rebuilt it, not having received sufficient compensation from the state. Five bay front, with strip pilasters. Much enlarged ca 1900 by J.A. Aylmer, who added a wing at right angles to the original block to form a new entrance front, with a three sided bow and an open porch, at one side of a pedimented projection; containing, among other rooms, a hall with a massive oak staircase. Beech avenue, half a mile long. Sold 1947 by J.W. Aylmer to George Drummond; recently the home of Mr and Mrs John O’Brien.” 

Not in national inventory 

https://landedfamilies.blogspot.com/search/label/Ireland?updated-max=2017-10-31T17:52:00Z&max-results=20&start=19&by-date=false

Courtown Park, Kilcock, Co. Kildare 

A castle on a green field

Description automatically generated 
Courtown Park: the house in 2015. 

 
The house is approached by a beech avenue, half a mile long. It is now a plain two-storey house of c.1815, built by John Aylmer to replace an earlier house here, which was burned and looted in 1798 during the ownership of his father, Michael Aylmer, who had been unable to rebuild it because he received insufficient compensation from the state. It has a five-bay front with strip pilasters. The house was much enlarged by Richard Francis Caulfield Orpen in 1906 for Major J.A. Aylmer, who added a wing at right-angles to the original block to form a new entrance front, with a three-sided bow and an open porch, at one side of a pedimented projection. The new wing contains, among other rooms, a hall with a massive oak staircase. 
 
Descent: sold c.1792 to Michael Aylmer (1750-1828?); to son, John Aylmer (1783/4-1857); to son, Michael Henry Aylmer (1831-85); to son, Maj. John Algernon Aylmer (1853-1924); to son, Maj. John Wyndham Aylmer (1889-1953), who sold 1947 to George Drummond… occupied in the 1950s by the American film producer, John Huston and his daughter Anjelica;… Mr. & Mrs. John O’Brien (fl. c.1980); sold 1981 to Brendon O’Mahoney; sold 2015 to Luke Comer. 

Aylmer family of Ballycannon, Courtown and Kerdiffstown 

 
Aylmer, John (d. 1632). Youngest son of Thomas Aylmer (c.1541-87) of Lyons and his wife Alison, daughter of Thomas Cusack of Cussingtown, Lord Chancellor of Ireland. He married, 1605, Eleanor Hussey of Moyle Hussey and had issue: 
(1) Matthew Aylmer (b. 1606) (q.v.); 
(2) George Aylmer (c.1608-after 1624); born about 1608; died unmarried after 1624; 
(3) Robert Aylmer (c.1610-after 1624); born about 1610; married Katherine, daughter of Piers Power of Monalargie and had issue one son; died after 1624; 
(4) Bartholomew Aylmer (c.1613-before 1681); born about 1613; died before 1681; 
(5) Richard Aylmer; 
(6) Ellice Aylmer (d. 1684); married Gerald Dillon of Killynin (Westmeath); died 28 September 1684; 
(7) Cicely Aylmer; 
(8) Alison Aylmer. 
He probably inherited Ballycannon, Cloncurry from his father in 1587. 
He died 26 or 27 June 1632. His wife’s date of death is unknown. 
 
Aylmer, Matthew (b. 1606). Eldest son of John Aylmer (d. 1632) of Ballycannon and his wife Eleanor Hussey of Moyle Hussey, born 1606. He participated in the rebellion of 1641. He married, 20 February 1624, Elizabeth, daughter of Nicholas Wogan of Rathcoffey (Kildare) and had issue: 
(1) John Aylmer (1626-1702) (q.v.). 
He inherited Ballycannon from his father in 1632. 
His date of death is unknown. His wife’s date of death is unknown. 
 
Aylmer, John (1626-1702). Only recorded son of Matthew Aylmer (b. 1606) and his wife Elizabeth, daughter of Nicholas Wogan of Rathcoffey (Kildare), born 1626. He was perhaps the first member of this branch of the family to conform to the Protestant religion. He married and had issue: 
(1) Col. John Aylmer (c.1652-1705) (q.v.); 
(2) Richard Aylmer (c.1654-c.1717), born about 1654; married Bridget [surname unknown] and had issue two sons and four daughters; died about 1717; 
(3) Matthew Aylmer (b. c.1656); born about 1656; 
(4) Thomas Aylmer (b. c.1658); born about 1658; 
(5) Alice Aylmer; married, 1707, William Humphreys of Hollywood (Wicklow). 
He inherited Ballycannon from his father. 
He died in 1702. 
 
Aylmer, Col. John (c.1652-1705). Eldest son of John Aylmer (1626-1702) and his wife, born about 1652. An officer in the Army from c.1682 (Capt. by 1687; Col. by 1690). High Sheriff of Co. Kildare, 1680-85; MP for Naas, 1692-93; Sovereign (i.e. Mayor) of Naas, 1694; Deputy Governor of Co. Kildare, 1699. He married, 1678 (settlement 16 November), Mary, daughter of Thomas Breedon of Bear Court (Berks), and had issue: 
(1) John Aylmer (d. 1708) (q.v.); 
(2) Thomas Aylmer (b. c.1682), born about 1682; became a Roman Catholic and was cut out of his father’s will on that account; died in France; 
(3) Charles Aylmer (d. 1754) (q.v.); 
(4) Andrew Aylmer (b. c.1687), born about 1687; died without issue; 
(5) James Aylmer (b. c.1690), born about 1690; died without male issue; 
(6) Matthew Aylmer (b. c.1693), born about 1693; married and had issue; 
(7) Dorothy Aylmer; married [forename unknown] Greville; 
(8) Elizabeth Aylmer; 
(9) Cecily Aylmer; 
(10) Lydia Aylmer; 
(11) Alice Aylmer; 
(12) Anne Aylmer. 
He inherited Ballycannon from his father in 1702. 
He died in 1705, leaving a will dated 22 March 1704/5 which was proved later that year. His widow married 2nd, George Aylmer; her date of death is unknown. 
 
Aylmer, John (d. 1708). Eldest son of Col. John Aylmer (d. 1705) and his wife Mary, daughter of Thomas Breedon of Bear Court (Berks), born about 1680. He married, 1705, Mary, daughter of Thomas Whyte of Pitchfordstown (Kildare) and had issue: 
(1) Martha Aylmer (b. 1706); 
(1) John Aylmer (1707-12), born 1707; inherited the Ballycannon estate from his father in 1708, but died young, 26 July 1712. 
He inherited Ballycannon from his father in about 1705. After his death it passed to his only son and then to his brother Charles Aylmer (d. 1754). 
He died 15 September 1708. His widow married 2nd, Francis Glascock of Dublin; her date of death is unknown. 
 
Aylmer, Charles (c.1685-1754). Third son of Col. John Aylmer (d. after 1705) and his wife Mary, daughter of Thomas Breedon of Bearecourt, born about 1685. High Sheriff of Co. Kildare, 1725. He married [forename unknown], daughter of Col. Gerard Crosbie, and had issue: 
(1) Charles Aylmer (c.1715-c.1772) (q.v.); 
(2) John Aylmer (c.1718-before 1754), born about 1718; predeceased his father; 
(3) Mary Aylmer (fl. 1776); married, 24 December 1759 at St Michael, Dublin, John Bury (d. 1804?) of Dublin, notary public, and of Downings (Kildare), and had issue four sons and three daughters. 
He inherited Ballycannon from his nephew in 1712. 
He died 5/6 May 1754. His wife’s date of death is unknown. 
 
Aylmer, Charles (c.1715-c.1772). Elder son of Charles Aylmer (c.1685-1754) of Ballycannon and his wife, born about 1715. He married, 11 September 1749, Eleanor (d. 1781), daughter of James Tyrrell of Clonard (Kildare), and had issue: 
(1) Michael Aylmer (c.1750-c.1810) (q.v.); 
(2) Charles Aylmer (d. 1776); died unmarried, March 1776; 
(3) Richard Aylmer (b. c.1752); married, September 1772, Eliza, daughter of Admiral Richard Norris, and had issue two sons; 
(4) Bridget Aylmer; married, 9 October 1775, Thomas Cannon of Moyglare (Meath); 
(5) Elizabeth Aylmer; married, about September 1778 at Grangemore, Thomas Coates of Knockin Abbey (Kildare); 
(6) Anne Aylmer. 
He inherited Ballycannon from his father in 1754 and acquired Grangemore (Kildare). 
He died between 1770 and 1772; his will was proved in 1772. His widow died in 1781. 
 
Aylmer, Michael (c.1750-c.1810). Eldest son of Charles Aylmer (c.1715-c.1772) and his wife Eleanor, daughter of James Tyrell of Clonard (Kildare), born about 1750. JP for Kildare from 1776; High Sheriff of Kildare, 1783, 1796 and 1804; Colonel of Kildare militia, 1795-1803; Revenue Collector in Kildare, c.1806-09. He married, 6 May 1777 at St Bride, Dublin, Frances Amelia, only daughter of Richard Hornidge DL of Tulfarris (Wicklow), and had issue: 
(1) Emily Aylmer (c.1779-1811), born about 1779; married, 1799, as his second wife, Whitney Upton Gledstanes (d. 1807) of Fardross, Clogher (Tyrone) and had issue one son and one daughter; 
(2) John Aylmer (1783/4-1857) (q.v.); 
(3) Richard Aylmer (b. 1788), born 1788; educated at Trinity College, Dublin (admitted 1804; BA 1808); died unmarried; 
(4) Eliza Aylmer. 
He inherited Ballycannon from his father c.1772, and acquired Courtown (Kildare) in about 1792, but the house there was looted and burned by the United Irishmen in 1798; after that he lived at The Shrubbery, Kilcock (conveniently close to the town police barracks!). 
He died about 1810. His wife’s date of death is unknown. 
 
Aylmer, John (1783/4-1857). Elder son of Michael Aylmer (c.1750-c.1810) and his wife Frances Amelia, only daughter of Richard Hornidge of Tulfarris (Wicklow), born 1783/4. Educated at Trinity College, Dublin (admitted 1799; BA 1803) and Kings Inn, Dublin (admitted 1807). High Sheriff of Co. Kildare, 1819. He married 1st, March 1813, his cousin Martha (d. before 1828), second daughter of Maj. Richard Hornidge of Tulfarris (Wicklow), and 2nd, 29 December 1828 at Donadea, Margaret Susan (1799-1891), only daughter of Sir Fenton Aylmer, 7th bt., of Donadea Castle, and had issue: 
(1.1) Isabella Aylmer (1814-24), born 1814; died young, 1824; 
(2.1) Jane Grace Aylmer (c.1830-96); died unmarried, 28 March 1896; administration of goods granted 8 June 1896 (estate £5,059); 
(2.2) Michael Henry Aylmer (1831-85) (q.v.); 
(2.3) Frances Aylmer (b. c.1832); died unmarried; 
(2.4) Margaret Aylmer (1834-1905), born 9 March 1834; married, 17 July 1856 at St Mark, Dublin, Charles Michael Wright (later Bury) (1830-1909) of Downings (Kildare) and had issue nine sons and four daughters; died 8 November 1905; 
(2.5) Emily Aylmer (1835-1922), born 8 November 1835; married, 8 November 1859, Thomas Octavius Baldwin Chapman (c.1823-89) and had issue eight sons and five daughters; died 11 May 1922; 
(2.6) Elizabeth Aylmer (c.1837-1900), born about 1837; died unmarried, 8 June 1900; will proved 9 August 1900 (estate in Ireland, £5,730) and sealed in London, 24 August 1900 (estate in England, £3,975); 
(2.7) Cecilia Aylmer (c.1839-1918), born about 1839; died unmarried, 22 September 1918; will proved in Dublin, 2 December 1918, and sealed in London, 18 January 1919 (estate in England, £1,575); 
(2.8) Lucy Harriet Aylmer (c.1842-1922), born about 1842; married, 20 June 1863 at British Chaplaincy in Rome (Italy), Edward Louis Hack (c.1831-89), builder of the first railways in Italy, and had issue one daughter; died 31 January 1922. 
He inherited Courtown Park from his father and built a new house there c.1815. 
He died 5 March 1857 and was buried at Cloncurry (Kildare); his will was proved 28 March 1857. His first wife died before 1828. His widow died aged 92, 26 December 1891; her will was proved in Dublin, 18 March 1892 (estate in Ireland, £14,279) and sealed in London, 11 April 1892 (estate in England £4,584). 
 
Aylmer, Michael Henry (1831-85). Only son of John Aylmer (1783/4-1857) of Courtown Park and his second wife, Margaret Susan (1799-1892), only daughter of Sir Fenton Aylmer, 7th bt., of Donadea Castle, born 30 May 1831. JP for Co. Kildare. A noted horseman and rider to hounds. He married, 5 February 1853 at Naas (Kildare), Charlotte Margaret (d. 1893), daughter and heiress of Hans Hendrick of Kerdiffstown House and Tully (Kildare), and had issue: 
(1) John Algernon Aylmer (1853-1924) (q.v.); 
(2) Florence Mary Aylmer (1854-1907), born about 25 November 1854; married 1st, 21 March 1882 at St Ann, Dublin, Lt-Col. Walter Joseph Borrowes (1834-93), youngest son of Sir Erasmus Dixon Borrowes, 8th bt., and had issue one daughter; married 2nd, 1895, William R.N. Gore; died 3 August 1907; administration of her goods granted 29 October 1907 (estate £632); 
(3) Hans Hendrick Aylmer (later Hendrick-Aylmer) (1856-1917) (q.v.); 
(4) Algernon Ambrose Michael Aylmer (1857-1933) (q.v.). 
He inherited Courtown Park from his father in 1857, and Kerdiffstown in right of his wife. 
He died in Dublin, 4 April 1885; his will was proved 9 April 1885 (effects £1,480). His widow died 4 November 1893; her will was proved in Dublin, 25 January 1894 (effects in Ireland, £5,631) and sealed in London, 7 February 1894 (estate in England, £2,056). 
 
Aylmer, Maj. John Algernon (1853-1924). Eldest son of Michael Aylmer (1831-85) and his wife Charlotte Margaret, daughter and heiress of Hans Hendrick of Kerdiffstown House and Tully (Kildare), born 22 December 1853. Educated at Liverpool Collegiate Institution and Trinity College, Cambridge (matriculated 1872; BA 1876; rowing blue, 1874).  An officer in the 4th Dragoon Guards (Lt., 1875; Capt., 1882; Maj., 1891), who served in Egypt, 1882. JP and DL for Co. Kildare; High Sheriff of Co. Kildare, 1896-97. He married, 12 April 1886 at Clearwell (Glos), Blanche (1855-95), third daughter of John Eveleigh Wyndham of Stock Dennis (Somerset) and widow of Capt. George Montgomery, and had issue: 
(1) Stella Wyndham Aylmer (1887-1973), born Jan-Mar 1887; County Organizer for Women’s Voluntary Service; appointed MBE, 1946; married, 3 March 1909, Lt-Col. John Maurice Colchester-Wemyss OBE JP (1880-1946), younger son of Maynard Willoughby Colchester-Wemyss of Westbury Court (Glos), and had issue one son; died 27 May 1973; 
(2) John Wyndham Aylmer (1889-1953) (q.v.). 
He inherited Courtown Park from his father in 1885. 
He died 24 August 1924; his will was proved in London, 13 March 1925 (estate in England, £12,515) and in Dublin, 1 September 1925 (estate in Ireland, £5,662). His wife died 8 March 1895; administration of her goods was granted 14 June 1895 (effects £1,205). 
 
Aylmer, Maj. John Wyndham (1889-1953). Only son of John Algernon Aylmer (1853-1924) and his wife Blanche, third daughter of John Eveleigh Wyndham of Stock Dennis (Somerset) and widow of Capt. George Montgomery, born 9 March 1889. Educated at Wellington College and Royal Military Academy, Sandhurst. An officer in 4th Dragoon Guards (Lt., 1910; Capt., 1915; Maj., 1923; retired 1924), who served in First World War (mentioned in despatches three times). Master of Kildare Hunt, 1925-26. He married, 8 August 1918 at Holy Trinity, Sloane St., London, Edith Margaret (1892-1964), youngest daughter of Wilfred Hans Loder DL JP of High Beeches, Handcross (Sussex), and had issue: 
(1) Maj. Michael Eustace Wyndham Aylmer (1919-86), born 20 July 1919; educated at Eton and Royal Military Academy, Woolwich; an officer in 16th/5th Lancers (2nd Lt., 1939; Lt., 1941; Capt., 1946; Maj., 1952; retired, 1953) who served in Second World War; member of the London Stock Exchange; died 3 December 1986; will proved 20 May 1987 (estate £230,081); 
(2) Blanche Mary Aylmer (1920-64), born 3 September 1920; served in Women’s Auxiliary Air Force in Second World War; married, 6 May 1944, Christopher Francis Wintour of Sowbury House, Chieveley (Berks), son of Ulick Fitzgerald Wintour of Cap d’Antibes (France), and had issue one son and one daughter; died 16 February 1964; administration of goods granted 12 November 1964 (estate £8,919); 
(3) Col. (John) Anthony Aylmer (b. 1925) of Nunwell House, Brading (IoW), born 7 October 1925; educated at Wellington College; an officer in the Irish Guards (Lt., 1947; Capt., 1952; Maj., 1959; Lt-Col., 1966; Col., 1972; retired 1980), who served in Second World War, Palestine 1948-49 and Aden 1966-67; took part in the Coronation Procession, 1953; Military Assistant to Lord Mountbatten, 1964-65; Deputy Chairman, Exercises Branch of Operations Division, SHAPE (Supreme Headquarters Allied Powers Europe), 1973; President of the Irish Wolfhound Club, 1970-72; purchased Nunwell House from the Oglander family, 1982; DL for Isle of Wight, 1994; married, 16 September 1961, Shaunagh Christine (1934-2010), second daughter of Richard Smythe Guinness of Lodge Park, Straffan (Kildare) and had issue one son and two daughters. 
He inherited Courtown Park from his father in 1924 but sold it in 1947 and lived subsequently at The Park, Charleville (Co. Cork). 
He died in London, 22 March 1953; his will was proved 9 December 1953 (estate in England, £7,320). His widow died 29 October 1964; her will was proved 24 February 1965 (estate £6,409). 
 
Hendrick-Aylmer, Hans Hendrick (1856-1917). Second son of Michael Aylmer (1831-85) and his wife Charlotte Margaret, daughter and heiress of Hans Hendrick of Kerdiffstown House and Tully (Kildare), born 23 May 1856. Educated at Trinity College, Dublin (BA 1877) Kings Inn, Dublin and Middle Temple (admitted, 1878; called to bar, 1880). Barrister-at-law. JP for Co. Kildare; High Sheriff of Co. Kildare, 1894. A keen amateur tennis player, he competed in the Irish national championships in 1880; Treasurer of the Kildare Archaeological Society. He took the additional name and arms of Hendrick by Royal Licence in 1889. He married, 8 May 1886 at Christ Church, Dublin, Florence (c.1861-1940), third daughter of Alexander Edwards of Ballyhire (Wexford), and had issue: 
(1) Charles Percy Hendrick-Aylmer (1887-1906), born Jul-Sep 1887; educated at Wellington College; died unmarried of peritonitis, 1 December 1906; 
(2) Muriel Charlotte Hendrick-Aylmer (1889-1970), born 16 May 1889; married, 5 November 1915, Brig. John Penrose MC (1886-1964) of West Hoe House, Bishops Waltham (Hants), son of Rev. John Penrose of Chippenham (Wilts) and had issue three sons; died 19 November 1970; will proved 30 April 1971 (estate £14,062); 
(3) Violet Lucy Hendrick-Aylmer (1891-1979), born 13 September 1891; married, 31 December 1925, Capt. Philip Sylvester Alexander (1883-1952) of Kilmorna, Lismore (Waterford), only son of Col. the Hon. Walter Philip Alexander, and had issue one son and one daughter; died 19 December 1979; will proved in London, 28 May 1981 (estate in England £4,512); 
(4) Gerald Hans Hendrick-Aylmer (1897-1917), born Jul-Sep 1897; educated at Wellington College and Royal Military Academy, Sandhurst; an officer in Royal Inniskilling Fusiliers (Lt., 1915), who served in First World War and was killed in action, 16 April 1917; he is commemorated on the Arras Memorial, Pas de Calais (France). 
He inherited Kerdiffstown House from his grandfather, Hans Hendrick, in 1889. 
He died 13 November 1917 and was buried at Maudlins Cemetery, Naas (Kildare), where he is commemorated by a monument; his will was proved in Dublin, 14 February 1918. His widow died 8 April 1940 and was also buried at Maudlins Cemetery; her will was proved in London, 7 August 1940 (estate in England, £2,478). 
 
Aylmer, Algernon Ambrose Michael (1857-1933). Youngest son of Michael Aylmer (1831-85) and his wife Charlotte Margaret, daughter and heiress of Hans Hendrick of Kerdiffstown House and Tully (Kildare), born 23 June 1857. Educated at Trinity College, Dublin (BA 1879). An officer in the Dublin City Militia (Lt., 1875; resigned 1878). A keen amateur tennis player, he competed in the Irish national championships in 1880. He married, 10 June 1886, Frances Sophia (c.1861-1937), youngest daughter of Meade Caulfield Dennis of Fort Granite (Wexford) and had issue: 
(1) Col. Richard Michael Aylmer (1887-1975) (q.v.); 
(2) Theodora Margaret Aylmer (1892-1971), born 21 February 1892; married, 15 June 1915, Maj. Roger Ferdinand Mainguy DSO (1882-1959), son of Maj.-Gen. Ferdinand Beckwith Mainguy of Les Roquettes (Guernsey); lived at Morristown, Kill (Co. Kildare); died 2 December 1971; will proved in London, 30 October 1978 (estate in England £16,267). 
He lived at Rathmore (Kildare) until he inherited Kerdiffstown House from his elder brother in 1917. 
He died 6 February 1933; his will was proved in London, 10 May 1933 (estate in England, £9,674); in Dublin, 12 July 1933 (estate in Ireland, £20,911) and in Belfast, 19 July 1933 (estate in Northern Ireland £1,392). His widow died 20 January 1937; her will was proved in England, 25 March 1937 (estate £571). 
 
Aylmer, Col. Richard Michael (1887-1975). Only son of Algernon Ambrose Michael Aylmer (1857-1933) and his wife Frances Sophia, youngest daughter of Meade Caulfield Dennis of Fort Granite (Wexford), born 5 October 1887. Educated at Wellington College and Royal Military Academy, Sandhurst. An officer in Royal Army Service Corps 1908-38 and 1949-45; served in First World War (wounded, mentioned in despatches three times) and Second World War (mentioned in despatches); seconded to Egyptian Army, 1920-23. He married, 26 January 1939, Mona (1909-99), elder daughter of Capt. Conn Alexander of Bognor Regis (Sussex), and had issue: 
(1) Justin Michael Aylmer (b. 1940), born 3 January 1940; educated at Wellington College; employed in Investment Division of Lloyds Bank Ltd from 1974 but later retrained as an actor at the Focus Theatre, Dublin; member of the Council of the Irish Lawn Tennis Assoc., 1973; married, 1981, Bridget Frances Georgina (b. 1954), daughter of Canon George Alfred Salter, and had issue two sons; 
(2) Dennis Fenton Aylmer (b. 1942) of Valley House, Enniskerry (Wicklow), born 21 May 1942; educated at Wellington College; company director; converted to Unitarianism c.1965; trustee of the Unitarian Church of Ireland, 2001-date; married, 1976, Dorothy Margaret (d. 2012), daughter of Thomas Anthony Fleming, and had issue two sons. 
He inherited Kerdiffstown House from his father in 1933 but sold it in 1938. In 1947 he bought Ayesha Castle (Co. Dublin), which was sold by his sons in 1997. 
He died at Ayesha Castle, 26 January 1975, and was buried at Maudlins Cemetery, Naas (Kildare); his will was proved 31 October 1975 (estate in England, £13,452). His widow died aged 90, 22 August 1999, and was also buried at Maudlins Cemetery, where their grave is marked by a monument; her will was proved in London, 20 March 2000. 
 

Sources 

 
Burke’s Irish Family Records, 1976, pp. 42-43; F.J. Aylmer, The Aylmers of Ireland, 1931; M. Bence-Jones, A guide to Irish country houses, 2nd edn., 1990, pp. 93, 164, 196-97; Irish Architectural Archive, The architecture of Richard Morrison and William Vitruvius Morrison, 1989, pp. 120-22. 
 

Location of archives: Hendrick and Aylmer families of Kerdiffstown and Ayesha Castle: family and estate papers, 18th-19th cents. [Private Collection; enquiries to National Library of Ireland] 

Coat of arms Argent, a cross sable between four Cornish choughs proper. 

Kilcoleman Abbey, Milltown, Co Kerry – demolished

Kilcoleman Abbey, Milltown, Co Kerry

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. 165. “Godfrey, Bt/PB) A house built or remodelled in late C18 by Sir William Godfrey, 1st Bt, MP; altered 1830s by Sir John Godfrey, 2nd Bt, to the design of William Vitruvius Morrison, who threw one of his thinner Tudor-Revival cloaks over the house and gave it four slender corner-turrets with cupolas, similar to those at Glenarm Castle, Co Antrim and Borris, Co Carlow. A two storey service wing with curvilinear gables was also added. Inside the house, Morrison formed a two storey galleried hall, opening with arches onto the staircase. The house was lived in by the Godfreys until ca 1960; after which it was abandoned and has now fallen completely into ruin, most of it having been demolished.” 

Listed in Vanishing Country Houses of Ireland by The Knight of Glin, David J. Griffin and Nicholas K. Robinson, published by The Irish Architectural Archive and The Irish Georgian Society, 1988.

p. 82. Kilcoleman Abbey, Milltown (formerly Milltown House) “A plain three storey house built c. 1800, altered in the Tudor Revival style by Richard and William Vitruvius Morrison in 1819 for Sir John Godfrey. Abandoned 1960, some ruins remain.

https://archiseek.com/2011/1818-kilcoleman-abbey-milltown-co-kerry

1818 – Kilcoleman Abbey, Milltown, Co. Kerry 

Architect: William Vitruvius Morrison 

Also known as Milltown House. More or less abandoned from 1800 to 1818, the house was renovated under the second Baronet, Sir John Godfrey, according to ambitious plans drawn up by architect William Vitruvius Morrison. However the general economic decline of the 1820’s and family misfortunes meant that only the stables and service wing, with its flemish gables, were completed as planned. Later, in the early 1840’s, the third Baronet Sir William Duncan Godfrey further modified the main block of the house, adding an attic storey, a turret, and assorted gables, pinnacles and buttresses. The family abandoned the house in 1958 due to severe dry rot and it was demolished in 1977. 

In O’Hea O’Keeffe, Jane. Voices from the Great Houses: Cork and Kerry. Mercier Press, Cork, 2013. 

p. 215. Under the Cromwellian settlement of Ireland, the Godfrey family from Romney in Kent were granted a 7,000 acre estate in mid Kerry, a grant reaffirmed under the Restoration by Letters Patent dated 13 June 1667. The estate had its origins in the Augustinian priory of Killagha, which was suppressed in 15676 and the lands granted to Captain Thomas Spring of Suffolk. It was later forfeited to Major John Godfrey (1616-75) of Ludlow’s Regiment of Horse. 

The Godfrey family initially lived in Tipperary for fifty years following their arrival in Ireland, before moving to Kerry in teh early part of the eighteenth century. Major John Godfrey’s grandson, John Godfrey (1686-1711), then occupied the old Spring demesne of Bushfield as his principal residence. He was succeeded by his son William Godfrey (1707-47). 

On Wm’s death the estate passed to his brother, Captain John Godfrey (1709-82) who married Barbara Hathaway, granddaughter of Thomas, Earl Coningsby. Captain Godfrey worked hard to improve the lot of his tenants and built the village of Milltown to encourage local enterprise. His son William (1738-1817) succeeded him and he built a new house within the demesne in the 1770s. In 1783 he became MP for Tralee and two years later was elevated to the rank of Baronet. Expensive tastes forced Sir William to assign his life interest in the estate to his eldest son John (1763-1841). John made a well-connected marriage to Eleanor Cromie from County Antrim in 1796, but did not come to live at Bushfield until after his father’s death in 1817. 

p. 216. Sir John was sympathetic towards Catholic emancipatino and provided land for the building of a new Catholic chapel. He employed architects Richard and William Vitruvius Morrison to remodel the old house at Bushfield, which was subsequently renamed Kilcoleman Abbey. 

In 1824 Sir John’s son and heir, William Duncan Godfrey (1797-1873) married a Catholic, Mary Teresa Coltsmann, daughter of John Coltsmann of Flesk Castle in Killarney, much to the surprise of the family. Sir William inherited the estate in 1841, and during the Famine it became heavily burdened by debt, but was saved by the marriage of the heir John Fermor Godfrey (1828-1900) to an English heiress, Mary Cordelia Scutt. Sir John had a keen interest in hunting and kept a famous pack of houses the Kilcoleman Hunt, but was forced to disband it in 1881 due to the constant danger of attack by the Land League. By his death in 1900 most of his powers as landlord and magistrate had been removed under the Local Government Act of 1898. 

He was succeeded by his son, Sir William Cecil Godfrey (1857-1926), who married Maud Hamilton, the only child of Frederick Hamilton of Carbery, County Kildare, in 1885. Following teh birth of their daughter Phyllis, Maud died from medical complications. In 1901, Sir William married Mary Leeson-Marshall of nearby Callinafercy House. During Sir William’s time, the Godfrey estate was sold to the tenants under the terms of the Wyndham Act of 1903, all of teh proceeds going towards teh payment of debts. 

Making a decisive political shift, in the 1918 election Sinn Fein, the Irish republican party, gained all four seats in Kerry, and in the spring of 1921 the first attacks on the Big Houses in Kerry by the IRA began. Kilcoleman Abbey escaped unscathed, due in part to Sir William’s local popularity.  On his death in 1926, Kilcolman was inherited by his brother, John Ernest Godfrey (1864-1935), who in 1889 had been appointed an engineer to the Duke of Devonshire’s estate at Lismore Castle in Co Waterford. In 1933 he and his wife Eileen Curry moved back to Kerry. He was succeeded by his son, Sir William Maurice Godfrey, who lived in England. In 1941, unable to support the family seat, Sir William decided to sell Kilcoleman to his cousin Phyllis Godfrey (1890-1959), who was the last member of the family to reside at the old estate. 

p. 218. Mary Constance Godfrey married Dick Edwards, who became agent of Lismore Castle. It is their son, Dermot Edwards, who is interviewed for this chapter of the book. 

p. 219. Phyllis Godfrey, who was born in 1890 to Sir William Cecil and Lady Maud Godfrey, bought Kilcoleman Abbey, but she did not have the financial resources to maintain the building or teh gardens. Life was far from easy. After the sale in 1942, Dermot’s grandmother Eileen, Lady Godfrey, left Kilcoleman, and with her two daughters, Dorothy and Ursula, returned to live at Lismore.  

[It was demolished in the 1970s. It was full of dry rot. Dr John Knightly, a native of Milltown, wrote his PhD thesis: The Godfrey Family and their Estates 1730-1850.] 

p. 224. After Phyllis Godfrey’s death, Kilcoleman was inhierted for a second time by Sir William Godfrey, who at this time was determined to live in Kerry, though not to restore the ruined house. He was approached by Paulie Fenno, an American heiress, who offered to buy and restore the house and run it as a hotel. The project ran into financial difficulties, however, the the remaining lands were sold to the Land Commission to be divided up among local farmers. In the 1970s Kerry County Council bought and demolished the derelict building. An estate of modern houses now stands on teh site. 

http://landedestates.nuigalway.ie/LandedEstates/jsp/property-show.jsp?id=1975 

Kilcoleman Abbey was the residence of Sir William Godfrey at the time of Griffith’s Valuation, when it was valued at £33. Lewis also records it as his residence in 1837. In 1894 Slater referred to it as the seat of Sir John F. Godfrey. In 1906, it was still part of the Godfrey estate and valued at £35 10s.The Irish Tourist Association survey of the early 1940s refers to it as “Godfrey House, a fine type of Elizabethan type mansion”. Bary states that the original house, built by the first Godfrey to settle in the area at the end of the seventeenth century, was called Bushfield but that it burned down in 1774 though Wilson still refers to it by this name in 1786 and provides a detailed description of the surroundings. Knightly indicates that a new house was then built by Sir William Godfrey. This house was remodelled twice in the nineteenth century. Sir William Maurice Godfrey sold Kilcoleman in the 1960s and it was demolished in 1977. 

http://lordbelmontinnorthernireland.blogspot.com/2016/03/kilcolman-abbey.html

THE GODFREY BARONETS OWNED 6,331 ACRES OF LAND IN COUNTY KERRY 

 
MAJOR JOHN GODFREY, of Colonel Edmund Ludlow’sRegiment of Horse (a member of the ancient family of GODFREY, of Romney, Kent), obtained for his services in Ireland during the rebellion of 1641, a grant of 4,980 acres of land in County Kerry, and settled there. 
 
He married Miss Davies, and was succeeded by his only son, 
 
WILLIAM GODFREY, of Bushfield, County Kerry, and Knockgraffon, County Tipperary, who wedded Deborah, only child of Alderman Luke Lowther, of the city of Dublin, and was succeeded at his decease by his eldest son, 
 
JOHN GODFREY, of Bushfield, who espoused Philippa, daughter of Anthony Chearnley, of Burncourt, County Tipperary, and had issue, 
 

William, dsp
JOHN, his successor

Mr Godfrey died in 1712, and was succeeded by his only surviving son, 
 
JOHN GODFREY, of Bushfield, who married Barbara, daughter of the Rev Mr Hathway, and granddaughter (maternally) of the 1st Earl Coningsby, and had issue, 
 

WILLIAM, his successor
Luke (Rev Dr), Rector of Middleton, Co Cork; 
Edward; 
Anthony; 
Letitia; Phillippa. 

Mr Godfrey died in 1782, and was succeeded by his eldest son, 
 
WILLIAM GODFREY (1739-1817), of Bushfield, who was created a baronet in 1785, denominated of Bushfield, County Kerry. 
 
Sir William, MP for Tralee, 1783-90, MP for Belfast, 1792-7, wedded, in 1761, Agnes, only daughter of William Blennerhassett, of Elm Grove, County Kerry, and had surviving issue, 
 

JOHN, his heir
William (Rev), Rector of Kenmare; 
Luke, a major in the army; 
Letitia; Agnes; Phillippa; Arabella; Margaret; Elizabeth. 

Sir William was succeeded by his eldest son, 
 
SIR JOHN GODFREY, 2nd Baronet (1763-1841), who espoused, in 1796, Eleanor, eldest daughter of John Cromie, of Cromore, County Londonderry, and had issue, 
 

WILLIAM DUNCAN, his heir
John (Rev); 
Henry Alexander; 
Robert; 
James George; 
Richard Frankland; 
Anne; Agnes; Eleanor. 

Sir John was succeeded by his eldest son, 
 
﷟HYPERLINK “https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sir_William_Godfrey,_3rd_Baronet”SIR WILLIAM DUNCAN GODFREY, 3rd Baronet (1797-1873), JP DL, who married, in 1824, Mary Teresa, second daughter of John Coltsman, of County Kerry, and had issue, 
 

JOHN FERMOR, his heir
William; 
Henry Arthur; 
Christiana; Eleanor Isabella. 

Sir William was succeeded by his eldest son, 
 
SIR JOHN FERMOR GODFREY, 4th Baronet (1828-1900). 
 

  • Sir John Fermor Godfrey, 4th Baronet (1828–1900); 
  • Sir William Cecil Godfrey, 5th Baronet (1857–1926); 
  • Sir John Ernest Godfrey, 6th Baronet (1864–1935); 
  • Sir William Maurice Godfrey, 7th Baronet (1909–1971). 

The baronetcy expired following the decease of the 7th Baronet, without male issue. 

KILCOLMAN ABBEY, formerly Bushfield, Milltown, County Kerry, was granted in 1641 by CHARLES II to Major John Godfrey “for his services against the rebels“. 
 
Sir William Petty, in his Reflections on Matters and Things in Ireland, called this donation “by no means an equivalent for the Major’s services”. 
 It was built ca 1800 by Sir William Godfrey, 1st Baronet, comprising a fairly plain, Georgian, three-storey block. 
 
The house was altered in 1819 by Sir John, 2nd Baronet to designs of W V Morrison, who gave it a Tudor-Revival makeover, with four slender turrets on each corner, topped by cupolas (not dissimilar to Glenarm Castle and Borris). 
 
A two-storey service wing was added later. 
 
Morrison created a two-storey galleried hall, which opened with arches on to the hall. 
 
The Godfrey family continued to live at Kilcolman until about 1960, when it was abandoned. 
 
It was demolished in 1977. 
 
First published in March, 2016. 

Renville Hall, Oranmore, Co Galway 

Renville Hall, Oranmore, Co Galway 

Mark Bence-Jones. A Guide to Irish Country Houses (originally published as Burke’s Guide to Country Houses volume 1 Ireland by Burke’s Peerage Ltd. 1978); Revised edition 1988 Constable and Company Ltd, London.

p. 241. “(Athy/LGI1912; Hemphill, B/PB)  a two storey late Georgian house built 1812 for P.E.L. Athy…Bought 1944 after the death of Mrs G Crofts, nee Athy, by P.D. Daly, who sold it to the 5th and present Lord Hemphill; he in turn sold it 1961. Burnt 1976.” 

https://landedfamilies.blogspot.com/2016/09/229-athy-alias-lynch-athy-of-renville.html

Athy (alias Lynch-Athy) of Renville  

The Athy family were settled in Galway from at least the 15th century, and were one of the Catholic merchant families collectively known as the ‘tribes of Galway’, who ran the town’s affairs. In 1639 Francis Athy was sheriff of Galway, and he must have been a Protestant, at least on paper, to have been selected for office. During the Irish rebellion in the 1640s, however, Galway’s citizens ejected the Protestant garrison which had been quartered in the town, and it seems probable that Athy’s sympathies remained Catholic. In the late 17th century several members of the family emigrated to Maryland (USA) in search of greater religious toleration. It is not quite clear how Edmund Athy, with whom the genealogy below begins, was related to the earlier Athys of Galway. His father, Andrew Athy, lived at Beleek (Mayo), and had been a soldier in the Catholic army of King James II in 1689-90, but he was almost certainly connected to the earlier Athys of Galway. In the early 18th century Edmund married Margaret Lynch, the daughter and heiress of Philip Lynch of Renville Castle at Oranmore, just outside Galway town. The Renville estate passed into the control of the Athy family, and Edmund and Margaret may have been responsible for alterations and additions to the medieval tower-house after they gained possession. The subsequent routine use by their descendants over many generations, of Lynch as a final forename, particularly for the heirs to the estate, led in the 19th century to the surname of the family being commonly given as Lynch-Athy (with or without a hyphen). 
 
The old Renville Castle remained the seat of Edmond’s son, Philip Lynch Athy (d. 1774) and his grandson, Edmond Lynch Athy (c.1752-1807). In 1807 the estate passed to Philip Edmond Lynch-Athy (c.1778-1840), who built a new three-bay two-storey house on the estate in about 1820. At this time the family seem to have been prominent among the Catholic gentry of the west of Ireland and Philip (d. 1840) joined O’Connell’s Catholic Association in 1829. His eldest son having predeceased him, Renville passed in 1840 to his second son, Randal Edmond Lynch Athy (1814-75), who was educated at Downside and married an English woman, Margaret Buckle. The family had more English connections after this time, but their focus of attention remained firmly in Ireland: Edmond Joseph Philip Lynch-Athy (1859-1935) was Sheriff of Galway in 1904. The family had over several generations married late and produced only small numbers of surviving children. Edmond’s only child was a daughter, Muriel Pauline Annette Lynch-Athy (1883-1943), who married a local farmer, Christopher Crofts (1878-1946) and seems to have lived at Renville. After her death, however, the house would appear to have been abandoned and the estate sold, and the ruins of Renville are today an even more extensively ivy-clad ruin than the medieval castle which it replaced.