Lisnabin, Killucan, Co Westmeath 

Lisnabin, Killucan, 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. 187. “(Purdon/IFR) A C18 house castellated ca 1840 for Edward Purdon with battlements and slender polygonal turrets at the corners and on either side of the entrance door. Circular stair hall.” 

https://www.buildingsofireland.ie/buildings-search/building/15402014/lisnabin-castle-lisnabin-co-westmeath

Lisnabin Castle, LISNABIN, County Westmeath

Detached three-bay two-storey (with dormer storey) castellated country house, built c.1824, having corner turrets on octagonal plan to corners and (slightly taller) turrets on octagonal plan to each side of central bay to entrance façade (northeast). Three-storey battlemented tower (on square-plan) rising from the centre of the house. Curved section of battlemented curtain wall runs away to the northwest side terminated by castellated gateway with pointed segmental-headed arch having cast-iron double gates, which is flanked by two-storey octagonal turrets. Gateway gives access to stable block and coach house (15402032) behind castle (southwest). Hipped natural slate roof with dormer range (added c.1912) hidden behind battlemented parapet. Constructed of rubble limestone with extensive ashlar limestone trim, including projecting string courses, chamfered plinth course and dressings to openings. Turrets constructed of ashlar limestone with incised cross motifs. Doorcase set in section of dressed limestone. Square-headed window openings with hoodmouldings over, chamfered cut stone sills and twelve-over-twelve pane timber sliding sash windows with decorative timber tracery to heads. Pointed-arched window openings with hoodmouldingsover to central two octagonal towers. Central square-headed doorcase in chamfered surround with timber double doors with Gothic decoration. Doorcase flanked by sidelights. Set back from road in extensive mature grounds with stable block/ coach yard southwest (15402032), range of outbuildings arranged around a central courtyard to the south (not accessed) and a gate (15402015) and gate lodge to the northeast (15402033). Located to the northwest of Killucan in mature parkland. 

Appraisal 

A fine and distinguished early nineteenth-century castellated country house, which retains its early form, character and its important early fabric. Lisnabin has a distinctive picturesque appearance that has an instant visual appeal. It has the appearance of a typical late-Georgian symmetrical house with an applied layer of Gothic detailing to the exterior and is not really a Gothic castle on the sprawling irregular scale of Knockdrin Castle (15401322) or Tullynally Castle (15400321), for example. Lisnabin Castle was reputedly built for Edward Purdon in 1824 after the previous house burnt down in 1819. Some sources suggest that this house is the castellation of a late eighteenth-century structure, which was not an uncommon practice during the early nineteenth-century (for example Killua Castle, Clonmellon 15306023). It is not impossible that the shell of the burnt out house was used in the construction of the present edifice, which could explain its unusually symmetrical form for a Georgian Gothic castle. This is difficult to confirm as the interior layout/plan is similar to many early nineteenth-century country houses in Ireland and the castle was described as ‘a handsome castellated mansion recently erected’, by Lewis in his ‘Topographical Dictionary of Ireland’, published in 1837. The Purdon Family had a number of other country seats in Westmeath during the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, including nearby Huntingdon House (15402011), Joristown House, Raharney (demolished) and Curristown House, Killucan (demolished). Lisnabin was the site of a ‘castle’ recorded in the Down Survey (1654-6). It is possible that some of the fabric was incorporated into the present structure. Lisnabin Castle remains an important element of the architectural heritage of Westmeath and forms the centerpiece of an attractive collection of demesne related structures with the associated outbuildings to the south and southwest (15402032) and the gate (15402015) and gate lodge (15402033) to the northeast.  

https://www.buildingsofireland.ie/buildings-search/building/15402015/lisnabin-castle-lisnabin-co-westmeath

Main entrance gates serving Lisnabin Castle (15402014), built or re-erected c.1860, comprising four crenellated ashlar limestone gate piers (on square-plan), having associated cast-iron gates and railings with decorative cast-iron supports. Carved coat of arms of the Purdon Family to the front face (northeast) of each of the gate piers. Rubble limestone (curved) screen walls run away to northwest and southeast forming (gravel) forecourt to exterior of gates. Located to the northeast of Lisnabin Castle (15402014) with attendant gate lodge to south (15402033). Estate wall runs away to the north. 

Appraisal 

An elegant set of entrance gates, which make a suitably fine first impression on entry to the Lisnabin Castle Demesne (15402014). The construction in tooled ashlar limestone and the very fine cast-iron gates and railings exhibit high quality craftsmanship of artistic merit. The carved stone coat of arms of the Purdon Family, the original owners of Lisnabin Castle, adds an extra dimension of historical merit to this gateway. The associated estate walls complete this fine composition, which forms an appealing self-contained pair with the attendant gate lodge to the southwest (15402033). These gates were erected or re-erected in the mid nineteenth-century (Ordnance Survey Map 1837) and may have been moved from a previousmain entrance to the northwest of the present gate.

https://www.buildingsofireland.ie/buildings-search/building/15402032/lisnabin-castle-lisnabin-co-westmeath

Stable block and coach yard to the rear (southwest) of Lisnabin Castle (15402014), built c.1824, comprising central advanced two-bay two-storey section with three-storey tower (on square-plan) with battlemented parapet over with Irish Crenellations, flanked to the northwest and southeast by lower two-bay two-storey sections with central segmental-headed carriage arches. Pitched natural slate roofs to lower two-storey sections with battlemented parapet over two-storey central section. Constructed of rubble limestone with ashlar limestone trim and dressings. Square-headed window openings with timber casement windows and cut-stone sills. Cast-iron security bars to ground floor openings. Square-headed doorcases with battened timber half doors. Stable block and coach yard is accessed through a pointed segmental-headed carriage arch, flanked by octagonal turrets, having cast-iron double gates to the northwest side of the castle. Crenellated curtain wall screens complex from view on approach to Lisnabin Castle from the northeast. Extensive complex of rubble stone single and two-storey outbuildings (hipped natural slate roofs) to the south, arranged around a central cobbled courtyard (not accessed). A number of single-storey detached rubble limestone structures with square-headed openings lies to the south of this southern courtyard. 

Appraisal 

A suitably fine early-to-mid nineteenth-century stable block and complex of outbuildings associated with Lisnabin Castle (15402014). It is built in a Gothic castellated style, which mirrors the form and architectural style of the main house itself. This complex is built to a very high standard with good quality limestone masonry used throughout and is of architectural merit in its own right. This substantial complex gives an interesting insight into the complex and extensive resources required to maintain a large country estate in the nineteenth century. It is an integral element of the architectural heritage of Westmeath and forms part of an important group of related structures within the Lisnabin House Demesne, along with the main house itself and the main entrance gates (15402015) and gate lodge (15402033) to the northwest. The extensive collection of outbuildings to the south (not accessed), arranged around a central courtyard, and the detached single-storey structures behind this complex (south) complete this important composition. 

Bellmont House, Mullingar, Co Westmeath 

Bellmont House, 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. 292. “(O’Reilly of Baltrasna/LGI1912; Gaisford-St Lawrence/IFR) A two storey house of late C18 appearance; 5 bay front, central Wyatt window over enclosed porch with segmental centre and Doric pilasters. Slightly sprocketed eavedroof on bracket cornice. Seat of the O’Reillys, descended from Capt Adams who married the daughter and heiress of Thomas O’Reilly of Roebuck, co Cavan, and took the name of O’Reilly. Afterwards owned by the Gaisford-St Lawrences of Howth Castle.” 

https://www.buildingsofireland.ie/buildings-search/building/15402505/bellmount-house-bellmount-county-westmeath

Detached five-bay two-storey country house, built c.1820, having enclosed bowed single-storey Doric entrance porch to the centre of the main façade (south), a full-height canted bay projection to the east elevation and a two-storey return to the rear (north). Hipped natural slate roof with rendered chimneystacks, aligned behind roof ridge, having terracotta chimney pots. Cast-iron rainwater goods with lion headed brackets to eaves. Ruled-and-line rendered walls. Square-headed window openings with cut stone sills and six-over-six pane timber sliding sash windows. Wyatt window to the centre of the first floor, above porch, and to the rear return. Square-headed doorcase to centre of porch with glazed timber double doors having margin glazing pattern. Doorcase flanked by sidelights. Large Lantern light over roof to junction of front block and rear return. Wrought-iron railings to east. Stable block to north (15402506). Located in extensive mature grounds to the southwest of Mullingar. 

A fine and well-proportioned country house, of early nineteenth-century appearance, which retains much of its early form and fabric. This house is distinguished by the graceful proportions and the handsome bowed entrance porch, which adds interest to an otherwise plain front façade and helps to elevate the form of this building from a typical gentleman’s residence to a small country mansion. The lantern to the junction of the front section and the rear return is an interesting feature of note. This house was originally built as a dower house to the now demolished Ladestown House to the south. The form of this house is quite similar to Glancarra House, which is located a few miles to the northwest, hinting perhaps that the architect involved here, J. B. Keane, may have been responsible for the designs to this house at Bellmount too. Bellmount House was the Seat of the O’Reilly Family, descended from Capt Adams who married the daughter and heiressof Thomas O’Reilly of Roebuck, Co Cavan. It was later in the ownership of the Gainsford-St Lawrence Family of Howth Castle, Dublin. Bellmount House is an important element of the architectural heritage of Westmeath and forms an interesting group with the stable block and ancillary structures to the north (15402506). 

https://www.irishtimes.com/life-and-style/homes-and-property/the-man-in-mullingar-who-lives-in-the-present-as-if-it-is-the-past-1.2751754

Woodstown, Co Waterford 

Woodstown, Co Waterford 

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. 287. “(Carew, B/PB; Rabbon/IFR; Cholmeley-Harrison/IFR) An elegant recently villa overlooking Waterford Harbour; attributed to George and Richard Pin; built 1823 onto an earlier house by Robert Carew, afterwards 1st Lord Carew, as a present for his wife. Of two storeys and square in plan, with a graceful iron veranda ruinning all around the ground floor; each front being of three bays, with Wyatt windows. Eaved roof. 1st Lady Carew, who lived here during her widowhood, died 1901 at the age of 103, having, as a girl, attended the Duchess of Richmond’s celebrated ball before Waterloo. In 1905, Woodstown was sold to E.A.W. Barron. The Barrons sold it 1944 and in 1945 it was bought by Mr C.D. Cholmsley-Harrison, who let it during the summer to 1967 to  Jacqueline Kennedy, and who sold it 1971, having acquired Emo Court, Co Laois. 

https://www.buildingsofireland.ie/buildings-search/building/22901813/woodstown-house-woodstown-lower-co-waterford

Woodstown House, WOODSTOWN LOWER, County Waterford 

Detached three-bay two-storey house, built 1823, possibly over basement and possibly incorporating fabric of earlier house, c.1725, on site with three-bay two-storey side elevations, and seven-bay two-storey service return wing to north-west on a U-shaped plan (comprising two-bay two-storey return to north-west with three-bay two-storey perpendicular wing to north-east, and two-bay two-storey perpendicular range to south-east) having seven-bay single-storey lean-to corridor bay to along courtyard (south-east) elevations. Renovated, c.1900, with six-bay single-storey lean-to veranda added along front (south-east) and side (south-west) elevations. Renovated, c.2000, with single-bay single-storey advanced glazed porch added to centre ground floor. Hipped slate roof on an E-shaped plan (pitched and hipped slate roofs to service return wing; lean-to to corridor range) with clay ridge tiles, rendered chimney stacks, and cast-iron rainwater goods on overhanging rendered eaves. Swept lean-to corrugated-iron roof to veranda with iron ridge tiles, and cast-iron rainwater goods. Painted rendered walls to main block with profiled plinth, vermiculated rendered quoins to corners, moulded stringcourse to first floor, and dentilatedmoulded cornice to first floor. Painted rendered walls to courtyard (south-east) elevations of service return wing with unpainted fine roughcast walls to remainder. Square-headed window openings to main block (in tripartite arrangement to front (south-east) elevation and to central bay side (south-west) elevation) with rendered sills, profiled rendered surrounds having friezes over, and fluted engaged colonette mullions to tripartite openings. 8/8 and 12/8 timber sash windows with 2/2 and 3/2 sidelights to tripartite openings. Square-headed openings to porch with glazed timber double doors, sidelights, and overlights. Segmental-headed door opening to house with glazed timber double doors, sidelights, and decorative fanlight. Square-headed openings to veranda with decorative open work iron intermediary piers, and decorative open work iron aprons to openings. Square-headed window openings to service return wing (some in bipartite arrangement) with rendered sills. 2/4 and 6/6 timber sash windows with some timber casement windows. Interior with entrance hall having decorative timber surrounds to door openings with timber panelled doors, decorative cornice to plasterwork ceiling, elliptical arch to stair hall on clustered colonettes having decorative archivolt with keystone, and cantilevered timber staircase with panelled underside, wrought iron balustrade, and carved timber handrail. Set back from road in own grounds with tarmacadam forecourt, sections of hoop iron railings to service courtyard on random rubble stone plinth, and landscaped grounds to site. 

Appraisal 

An elegantly-composed Regency-style substantial house, built by Robert Shapland Carew (later 1st Lord Carew) (d. 1829) to designs attributable to George Richard Pain (1793 – 1838). Very well maintained, the house presents an early aspect with important salient features and materials intact, both to the exterior and to the interior. Features, such as the tripartite openings and the fine rendered detailing throughout, augment the architectural quality of the composition, while the exterior is enhanced by the addition of an attractive iron veranda of artistic design merit. Carved timber joinery and decorative plasterwork to the interior attest to high quality craftsmanship. Set in mature landscaped grounds, the house forms a landmark site in the locality, andrepresents an important element of the architectural heritage of the county.  

https://www.buildingsofireland.ie/buildings-search/building/22901818/woodstown-house-woodstown-lower-co-waterford

Detached three-bay single-storey gate lodge with half-dormer attic, c.1875, retaining original aspect with single-bay single-storey side elevations having single-bay single-storey canted bay window to north-east. Pitched slate roof (gabled to half-dormer attic windows) with clay ridge tiles, rendered chimney stacks, and cast-iron rainwater goods on overhanging timber eaves. Painted roughcast walls (ivy-clad). Square-headed window openings with stone sills, and timber casement windows (having diamond-leaded panels to canted bay window). Square-headed door opening with glazed timber panelled door. Set back from line of road in grounds shared with Woodstown House having hedge boundary to perimeter of site. 

Appraisal 

A well-composed picturesque gate lodge forming an integral component of the Woodstown House estate, which has been well maintained to present an original aspect, and which contributes to the visual appeal of the locality. 

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

In 1848 Woodstown House was held in fee by Lord Carew when it was valued at £76. Lewis refers to it in 1837 as the seat of Lord Carew. Slater refers to it as the residence of Lady Jane Carew in 1894. In 1774, Smith stated that Woodstown was “the house and improvements of Mrs. Matthew”. The ITA survey of 1945 stated that it was then owned by the Hearne family but unoccupied and was “suitably situated for a hotel”. It was subsequently let to visitors who included, in 1967, Mrs. Jacqueline Kennedy (widow of John F. Kennedy) and her children. In 2011 it was offered for sale.   

http://www.michaelhdaniels.com/Properties-For-Sale/6 

Woodstown House, Woodstown, County Waterford  

A fine Regency country house dated 1823 designed by the Paine brothers on the Waterford Estuary  

Floor Area (sq. m): 600 Land Area (ha): 12 

  • Beds: 6 

    

Baths: 5

https://landedfamilies.blogspot.com/search/label/Ireland?updated-max=2020-05-01T17:43:00%2B01:00&max-results=20&start=2&by-date=false

Woodstown, Co. Waterford 

An elegant Regency villa overlooking Waterford Harbour, attributed to George Richard Pain (1793-1828) of Cork, who had been a pupil of John Nash and came to Ireland with his brother James. It was built in 1823 onto an earlier small house (which survives at the rear) for Robert Shapland Carew (1787-1856), later 1st Baron Carew, as a present for his wife.  

It is of two storeys and square in plan, with a graceful iron veranda running all round the ground floor. Each front has three bays, with six tripartite windows on the main south-east facing garden front and two in the centre of each of the side elevations. The shallow-pitched roof is supported on broad eaves. Inside, the house has delicate plasterwork in the main reception rooms. After the 1st Lord Carew’s death in 1856, Woodstown remained the home of his widow, Jane (1798-1901), who not only became a centenarian but had the rare distinction of living in three different centuries. It was sold to Edward A.W. Barron (1876-1939) after her death at the age of 102 in 1901, and he engaged Ashlin & Coleman (formerly Ashlin & Pugin) to make alterations and additions to the house. This firm, which was known almost exclusively for its Gothic work, was an unexpected choice to alter a delicate Regency house, but the link was probably that they had worked on Ferrybank Catholic Church for Sir Henry P-T. Barron a few years earlier. They proposed a Classical re-rendering of the façade of Woodstown, and the addition of a gallery, a library with neo-Celtic decoration and a new top-lit billiard room under a dome. Fortunately, nothing came of these proposals, and the house survived intact. It was bought in 1945 by Mr. C.D. Cholmeley-Harrison, a stockbroker who later carried out the notable restoration of Emo Court (Co. Leix). He let it for the summer of 1967 to Jacqueline Kennedy, the widow of President J.F. Kennedy, who must count as the house’s most famous resident, even though she was only here for six weeks. The house has been discreetly modernised in recent years and the drawing room is no longer the rather relentless blue shown above. 
 
Descent: Robert Shapland Carew (1787-1856), 1st Baron Carew; to widow, Jane, Lady Carew (1798-1901); to grandson, Robert Shapland George Julian Carew (1860-1923), 3rd Baron Carew, who sold to Edward Alphonse Winston Barron (d. 1939); sold 1944; sold 1945 to Cholmeley Dering Cholmeley-Harrison (1908-2008), who sold 1971… 

https://iarc.ie/blog/page/2/

Woodstown House is an elegant Regency villa overlooking Waterford harbour. It was built, or rather an earlier house was substantially altered, in 1823 by Robert Chapland Carew, later first Baron Carew, as a present for his wife, Jane Catherine Cliffe. The architect was George Richard Pain. A year before their wedding, Jane had attended ‘the most famous ball in history’ held by the Duchess of Richmond in Brussels on 15 June 1815, the night before the Battle of Waterloo. It is said that Jane danced with the Duke of Wellington. Born in 1798, she died in 1901 aged 103. 

Winston Barron. He asked the architectural firm of Ashlin and Coleman to make proposals for alterations and additions to the house, a somewhat unusual choice as the practice was almost exclusively known for its Gothic ecclesiastical works. George Coppinger Ashlin was a son in law of Augustus Welby Northmore Pugin, the Gothic revivalist par excellence, and formed a partnership with Pugin’s son, Edward, in 1861. Pugin and Ashlin eventually became Ashlin and Coleman in 1903. The choice of architects might however be explained by the fact there was a Barron family connection to the firm. Sir Henry Page Turner Barron, Edward’s first cousin, had employed Pugin and Ashlin to work on Ferrybank Catholic Church, in Co. Waterford. 

Ashlin and Coleman proposed a Classical re-rendering of the façade of Woodstown, and the additions of a gallery, a library with neo-Celtic decorations and a new billiard room. Top lit, with deep upholstered settees and a convenient lavatory, this would have been a distinctly masculine space ideally suited to the military man and bachelor which Edward Barron was. 

As it happens, none of Ashlin and Coleman’s proposals for Woodstown were executed. In 1945 the house was purchased by Major Dering Cholmeley-Harrison who later owned Emo Court, Co Laois. In 1967 he let Woodstown House to Jacqueline Kennedy, widow of the assassinated US president.  During her stay she described it as ‘typically Irish — 39 bedrooms and one bathroom’. 

Anne Henderson, 
IAA 

Whitechurch House, Cappagh, Co Waterford 

Whitechurch House, Cappagh, Co Waterford 

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. 284. “(Allen/LGI1958) A two storey early C19 house built round a courtyard. Five bay front, central Wyatt window above single-storey Ionic portico with paired columns; fanlighted doorway. Eaved roof. Staircase with wrought-iron balustrade rising round main hall. In 1837, the residence of R. Power; in 1914, of Richard William Forsayeth. Until his recent death, the home of the late Mr William Allen, the well-known authority on Georgia and the middle-East, whose celebrated library was here.” 

http://www.whitechurchhouse.com/

https://www.buildingsofireland.ie/buildings-search/building/22903020/whitechurch-house-bridgequarter-d-wt-by-co-waterford

Detached five-bay two-storey over basement house, c.1820, on a quadrangular plan about a courtyard retaining most original fenestration with single-storey prostyle tetrastyle Ionic portico to centre, two-bay two-storey side elevations, pair of five-bay two-storey returns to north-east and to south-east having elliptical-headed carriageways, and five-bay two-storey range to east (completing courtyard) originally with series of three elliptical-headed carriageways to ground floor accommodating outbuilding range. Renovated, c.1995, with some openings remodelled to accommodate multiple residential use. Hipped slate roofs on a quadrangular plan with clay ridge tiles, limestone ashlar chimney stacks having stringcourses and coping, and cast-iron rainwater goods on overhanging eaves having iron brackets. Flat roof to portico not visible behind blocking course. Painted rendered walls. Square-headed window openings (in tripartite arrangement to centre first floor) with cut-limestone sills. 8/8 and 12/8 timber sash windows (some possibly replacement, c.1995) with 2/2 sidelights to tripartite opening. Elliptical-headed door opening in tripartite arrangement under prostyle tetrastyle Ionic portico (having cut-stone columns supporting frieze, dentilatedmoulded cornice, and blocking course over) with moulded rendered panelled pilaster surround incorporating engaged colonette mullions, timber panelled door, decorative sidelights, and decorative fanlight having archivolt with keystone. Square-headed door openings to returns with cut-limestone steps, replacement glazed timber panelled doors, c.1995, sidelights, and overlights. Elliptical-headed carriageways to returns with squared stone block-and-start surrounds, voussoirs, and timber boarded double doors incorporating pedestrian doors. Series of three elliptical-headed carriageways to range to east remodelled, c.1995, with squared stone voussoirs, timber panelled doors with sidelights, fixed-pane timber windows having casement sections, and spoked fanlights over. Interior with timber panelled shutters to window openings. Set back from road in own grounds with forecourt, landscaped grounds to site, and gravel courtyard to quadrangle. 

Appraisal 

A very well-appointed, substantial house incorporating domestic and ancillary ranges in an integrated design centred about a shared courtyard. Austerely detailed, the house is centred on a fine Classical portico, the carved detailing of which is indicative of high quality stone masonry. The house presents an early aspect, with important salient features and materials intact, and has been successfully converted to multiple residential use without adversely affecting the historical character of the site. The house is of additional significance in the locality on account of its historical associations with the Power, Forsayeth, and Allen families. 

Carrick Barron, or Carrickbarrahane, Stradbally, Co. Waterford  

Carrick Barron, or Carrickbarrahane, Stradbally, Co. Waterford  

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. 57. “[Barron; Osborne] A 2 storey 5 bay C18 house with a 1 bay pedimented breakfront having a round-headed window above a fanlighted doorway. A seat of the Barron family; subsequently belonged to the Osbornes of Newtown Anner, Co Tipperary and known for a time as “Lady Osborne’s Summer House.””

https://www.buildingsofireland.ie/buildings-search/building/22902407/carrickbarrahane-house-carrickbarrahane-co-waterford

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Detached five-bay two-storey house, c.1820, retaining some early fenestration with single-bay two-storey gabled breakfront, single-bay two-storey canted projecting bay to side (south) elevation, and four-bay two-storey lower return to west. Renovated and mostly refenestrated, 1998. Hipped gabled slate roof to main block (gabled to breakfront; pitched to return) with clay and rolled lead ridge tiles, rendered chimney stacks, and replacement uPVC rainwater goods, 1998, on replacement cement rendered eaves, 1998. Unpainted replacement cement rendered walls, 1998, with rendered quoins to corners, rendered band to eaves to canted projecting bay, and unpainted lime rendered walls to return over random rubble stone construction. Square-headed window openings (round-headed window opening to first floor breakfront and to return) with cut-stone sills. Replacement uPVC casement windows, 1998, to main block with 3/6 and 6/6 timber sash windows to remainder. Round-headed door opening with replacement glazed uPVC panelled door, 1998, having sidelights, and spoked fanlight. Interior with timber panelled shutters to window openings. Set back from road in own grounds with landscaped grounds to site.

Appraisal

A well-appointed, substantial house distinguished by stylistic features including a canted projecting bay, which enhance the architectural value of the composition. Although extensive renovation works in the late twentieth century have led to the loss of much of the original fabric, and to the erosion of some of the early character as a result, some important salient features and materials survive intact, both to the exterior and to the interior, which enhance the historic quality of the site.

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

James R. Smyth was leasimg this property from the trustees of Mrs. Osborne in 1851 when it was valued at £23. The National Inventory of Architectural Heritage suggests it was built c.1820. It is still extant. 

Barron of County Waterford, baronets

As with so many Irish gentry families, the loss of early records means that the earlier generations of this family as recorded below are very uncertain, and dependent as much on family traditions reported to the editors of Burke’s Landed Gentry as upon any original records. I have, however, done my best to corroborate or correct the statements made by Burke in such sources as are available, and particularly from local newspapers, which for this part of Ireland become a rich source only in the 1820s.

The essential facts of the family background seem to be fairly clear, however. Their forebears were a cadet branch of the great Fitzgerald family and were based at Burnchurch (Co. Kilkenny). Already in the 16th century they were using the alternative name of Barron or Baron. They remained Roman Catholics and were Royalists in the Civil War, as a result of which they were deprived of their estate at Burnchurch under Cromwell. Capt. James Fitzgerald alias Barron, who was heir to his uncle, Richard Fitzgerald alias Barron of Burnchurch, went to France and served under the Prince de Condé, Louis II of Bourbon, in his military campaigns in the 1660s. Some years after the restoration of the monarchy in Britain and Ireland, Capt. Barron returned to his native country and sought to recover the Burnchurch estate, but his claim, like those of many other Irish Catholic families, was never adjudicated on. He subsequently settled in County Waterford, where over several generations the family acquired – through marriage and purchase – a number of small estates, eventually achieving a position as one of leading gentry families in the county by sheer force of numbers. Not only did they have at any one time a large number of properties, they acquired and sold them frequently, and also passed them between different branches of the family by bequest and rental, so that tracing the descent of individual places is far from straightforward. Only those properties which clearly had country house status are noticed below.

Capt. James Barron had three sons, of whom the second, Pierse Barron (fl. 1725) was chiefly responsible for the liberal scattering of the family name around County Waterford, since he had five sons, three of whom also had large families. His eldest son, James Barron (b. 1715) of Carrickbarrahane, had five sons and two daughters. Two of the sons, Eustace and William, emigrated to Cadiz (Spain) and their descendants moved on to Mexico, where in the early 19th century they founded the great merchant and banking house of Barron, Forbes & Co. and subsequently acquired mining and political interests. It is said that in the mid 19th century, over 90% of the external trade of Mexico was in their hands. The wealth and status of the Spanish and Mexican branches of the family attracted several of their Irish relations in later centuries to settle, either temporarily or permanently, in those countries, and this is reflected in the genealogy below.

The third son of Pierse Barron (fl. 1725) was John Barron (1718-1800), who inherited the Ballydurn and Ballyneal estates between Kilmacthomas and Carrick-on-Suir from his father. He had six sons and three daughters, the eldest of whom was Pierse Barron (1752-1811) of Ballyneal, who had five sons and five daughters, born late in his life. Pierse seems to have increased the wealth of the family significantly, probably through trading with England, but when he died only his eldest son, Pierse Barron, was of age. In 1817, tragedy struck when this Pierse, with four of his sisters, were drowned by the sinking of the packet boat ‘William & Mary’ in the Bristol Channel. As a result, their brother, Henry Winston Barron (1795-1872) became the head of this branch of the family. Like his younger brother, William Winston (later William Newell) Barron (1805-91), and several of their cousins, Henry was a political animal, and actively involved in campaigning for Catholic emancipation and, later, for weakening the ties between Ireland and Britain. He served as the MP for Waterford City at Westminster between 1832 and 1870, but his long political career was far from smooth and he lost as many elections as he won due to some bitter political rivalries, which at least once spilled over into a duel. As his rivals were quick to point out, he was at least averagely venal, and there seems little doubt that several of his relatives benefited in their careers from the helping hand which those who owed him favours were able to provide. At the end of his first term in Parliament he was rewarded with a baronetcy. His marriage in 1822 brought him an interest in the estates in England of the Page-Turner family, which greatly increased his wealth, and he bought Belmont Park near Waterford – the grandest of the family seats – and also built Glenanna, a little cottage near the sea at Ardmore.

In due course, the baronetcy and the estates passed to his son, Sir Henry Page-Turner Barron (1824-1900), 2nd bt., who was a very different man from his father. He entered the diplomatic service straight from school and spent fifty years ‘lying abroad for the good of his country’ at postings in Italy, Belgium, Portugal, Turkey and Germany. He was unmarried and had no issue, so the baronetcy died with him, but he left a vast fortune of over £300,000, which is comparable to the great industrial magnates of the time. He made a significant number of charitable bequests, left an important collection of pictures to the National Gallery of Ireland, and divided his landed property between his nephew, Cecil Charles Polhill-Turner (later Polhill), who received his English lands, and his first cousin once removed, Edward Alphonse Winston Barron (1876-1939), who received the Irish estates (some 4,680 acres in County Waterford). The Irish property no longer included Belmont Park, which the 1st baronet had sold to his second cousin, Pierse Marcus Barron (1806-79) in the 1860s, and although it did include Glenanna, this was a small house not really suitable as a permanent residence. This lack of a principal residence had not mattered in the 2nd baronet’s day as he lived abroad, but in 1903, his heir, Edward A.W. Barron bought the Woodstown estate overlooking Waterford Harbour. He subsequently divided his time between Woodstown and a town house in London. During his ownership, the estate was greatly reduced by sales (chiefly to farming tenants), and after Edward died, his executors sold Woodstown in 1944. Edward was apparently the last of the family to live as a landed gentleman in County Waterford.

Carrickbarrahane (aka Carrick Barron), Stradbally, Co. Waterford

The house was a seat of the Barron family but was rebuilt, perhaps after 1832, as a two-storey, five bay house with a one bay pedimented breakfront having a round-headed window above the fanlighted doorway for the Osbornes of Newtown Anner (Co. Tipperary) and was known for a time as ‘Lady Osborne’s Summer House’. The house still exists but seems now to be a farmhouse.

Descent: James Barron (b. 1715); to son, Pierse Barron (b. 1740); to daughter, Mary Anne, wife of John Barron (1754-97); to son, Pierse George Barron (1792-1864), who leased it to his uncle, William Barron (c.1761-1832) and later sold it to the Osborne family of Newtown Anner, who rebuilt it.

Barron family of Carrickbarrahane and Georgestown House

Fitzgerald (alias Barron), Captain James (fl. 1690). Son of Edward Fitzgerald and nephew of Richard Fitzgerald of Burnchurch (Co. Kilkenny), who was deprived of his estates by Oliver Cromwell and transplanted to Connaught. A Roman Catholic in religion, he went abroad and served in France under the Prince de Condé, returning to Ireland after the Restoration of King Charles II with Col. Dempsey and others. He petitioned the king for the return of his barony and lands of Burnchurch, but his claim was rejected by default, since it was never formally determined. He then settled in Co. Waterford, where he married Slany Ny Brien, daughter and heiress of Donald More O’Brien of Cummeragh and Abbeyside Castle (Co. Waterford), and had issue including:
(1) William Barron, of Ballykirogue; married a daughter of Darby Kennedy of Ballykerogue alias Castletown, and had issue;
(2) Pierse Barron (b. c.1690; fl. 1726) (q.v.);
(3) Stephen Barron, of Carrigennahala; married a daughter of Hearn of Brennan, and had issue three daughters.
He lived at Fahagh, Stradbally (Co. Waterford).
His date of death is unknown. His wife’s date of death is unknown.

Barron, Pierse (b. c.1690; fl. 1726). Second son of Capt. James Fitzgerald (alias Barron) and his wife Slany Ny Brien, daughter and heiress of Donald More O’Brien of Cummeragh and Abbeyside Castle (Co. Waterford), born about 1690. He married, c.1710*, Mary, daughter of Thomas FitzGerald of Kilconavey, and had issue:
(1) James Barron (b. 1715) (q.v.);
(2) William Barron (1717-1800?), born 1717; settled at Durrow (Co. Leix); married Mary Anne, daughter of Morgan Kennedy of Garranamoyden and Ballynamullin, and had issue five sons and two daughters; will proved 1 May 1800;
(3) John Barron (1718-1800) (q.v.);
(4) Edward Barron; died unmarried and without issue;
(5) Pierse Barron (1726-1809) of Fahagh, born 1726; married Anne, daughter of Luke Power of Waterford, but had no issue; died 1809; will proved 28 April 1812;
(6) Monica Barron; died unmarried.
He lived at Garrahillersh (Co. Waterford).
His date of death is unknown. His wife’s date of death is unknown.
*Some sources give a date for this marriage of 12 May 1697, but this seems improbable as all the children were born so much later.

Barron, James (b. 1715). Eldest son of Pierse Barron (b. c.1690; fl. 1726) and his wife Mary, daughter of Thomas FitzGerald of Kilconavey, born 1715. He married, 1738, Margaret Catherine, daughter and heiress of John Power of Georgestown (Co. Waterford), and had issue:
(1) Pierse Barron (b. 1740) (q.v.);
(2) Eustace Barron (1742-97), born 1742; emigrated to Spain, where he married, 1784, Catalina Manuela Cantillon (c.1762-1823) of Cadiz, and had issue six sons and two daughters (from whom descent the Barron family of Mexico, bankers, merchants and proprietors of extensive mines); died 1797;
(3) William Barron (1745-1814) (q.v.);
(4) John Barron (1750-1800) (q.v.);
(5) Allen Barron; died unmarried;
(6) Catherine Barron; married A. Barker of Co. Wexford;
(7) Ellen Barron; married [forename unknown] Horseman of Co.. Cork.
He lived at Carrickbarrahane and inherited Georgestown House in right of his wife.
His date of death is unknown. His wife’s date of death is unknown.

Barron, Pierse (b. 1740). Eldest son of James Barron (b. 1715) and his wife Margaret Catherine, daughter and heiress of John Power of Georgestown (Co. Waterford), born 1740. He married, 1768, Johanna, daughter of Thomas Connery, and had issue:
(1) Mary Anne Barron; married, 1789, her cousin, John Barron (1754-97) of Ballyneale, second son of John Barron of Ballydurne, and had issue one son; her date of death is unknown;
(2) Margaret Barron; married James Quan of Waterford (bankrupt, 1824), but died without issue.
He inherited Carrickbarrahane from his father.
His date of death is unknown. His wife’s date of death is unknown.

Barron, William (1745-1814). Third son of James Barron (b. 1715) and his wife Margaret Catherine, daughter and heiress of John Power of Georgestown (Co. Waterford), born 1745. He married, 1794, Margarita Power  of Davidstown Castle (Kildare), and had issue:
(1) Margaret (alias Margarita) Barron (b. c.1795), born about 1795; married 1st, 7 November 1814 at St James, Westminster (Middx), Henry Charles Hervey Aston (1792-1821) of Aston Hall (Ches.) and had issue one son and one daughter; married 2nd, Le Chevalier de Poggenpohl, secretary to the Prince Lieven, Russian ambassador in London and later Russian Chargé d’Affaires in Spain; married 3rd, Lt-Gen. Le Chevalier de Montenegro, chamberlain to HRH Infante Don Francisco de Paulo of Spain; she probably died in Spain but her date of death is unknown;
(2) Catalina Barron (1804-23), born 7 February 1804; died unmarried, 23 June 1823;
(3) Pierce Marcus Barron (1806-79) (q.v.);
(4) William Eustace Barron (1808-25), born 16 May 1808; died unmarried at Malaga (Spain), 7 November 1825.
He lived latterly at Cadiz (Spain).
He died at Cadiz, 1814. His widow married 2nd, Col. Le Chevalier Fitzgerald, of the Spanish Service; her date of death is unknown.

Barron, Pierce Marcus (1806-79). Elder son of William Barron (1745-1814) and his wife Margarita Archibald Power, born 3 July 1806. JP (from 1833) and DL for Co. Waterford; High Sheriff of Co. Waterford, 1868. He was appointed an Assistant Poor Law Commissioner for Ireland, 1847. He married, 9 October 1824, Catherine (k/a Kate) Lucinda (b. c.1805-70) (whose sister married Manuel de Godoy, 2nd Prince di Bassano, a Spanish-Italian aristocrat), daughter of Laurence Crowe of St. Stephen’s Green, Dublin, and had issue:
(1) Pierce Eustace Laurence Aloysius Barron (1826-96) (q.v.);
(2) Joseph Manuel Barron (1827-92), born 31 May 1827; employed at The Admiralty; married, 11 April 1849, Elizabeth Mary Seymour, second daughter of Thomas Soulsby of Newcastle-upon-Tyne, and had issue six sons and one daughter; died 18 May 1892;
(3) William Arthur Archbold Barron (c.1831-66), born about 1831; emigrated to Mexico, probably to work in the family business there; died at Jelisco, near Tepic (Mexico), 6 October 1866;
(4) A daughter (b. & d. 1833), born 30 July 1833 but died in infancy, 20 November 1833;
(5) twin, A child (b. & d. 1834), born 27 June 1834 but died the same day;
(6) twin, A child (b. & d. 1834), born 27 June 1834 but died the same day;
(7) Catherine (k/a Kate) Lucinda Mary Anne Barron (1835-1912), born 11 August 1835; she married, 1857 at Boulogne-Sur-Mer, the  Viscount de Cosepigny, but the marriage was annulled by French Law in 1858, although it apparently remained valid in England; she lived later with her youngest brother; died 24 January 1911; will proved 2 March 1911 (estate £6,303) and 5 December 1916;
(8) Margeurita Louisa Barron (1838-1912), born 1838; a nun of the Carmelite monastery of the Incarnation, Hampton (Co, Dublin) as Sr. Mary Francis Xavier of the Infant Jesus; died 1912;
(9) Arthur Hervey Aston Barron (c.1840-82), born about 1840; married, 17 August 1876, Maria, eldest daughter and co-heiress of Michael Donovan of Dublin; died at Westport (Co. Mayo), 23 April 1882 and was buried at Aughavale Cemetery, Waterford;
(10) Maria Matilda Barron (c.1840-1910), born about 1840; married, 1867, John O’Keefe MP (1827-77) of Dungurvan (Co. Waterford) but had no issue; lived subsequently with her youngest brother; said to have died in 1910;
(11) Emma Eliza Mary Clare Barron (c.1842-90), born about 1842; married, 28 November 1871 at Belmont Park, Vincent Scully (1846-1927) of Mantlehill House (Co. Tipperary), son of Vincent Scully QC MP, and had issue three sons and three daughters; died 7 April 1890;
(12) John Marcus Fitzgerald Barron (1844-80), of Georgestown, born 18 May 1844; JP for Co. Waterford; married 1st, 30 April 1868 at Tramore (Co. Waterford), Mary Madeline (d. 1872), youngest daughter of William Henry Barron of Lacken (Co. Waterford) and had issue one son; married 2nd, 28 September 1875 at St Michael, Kingstown (Co. Dublin), Margaret Kate (d. 1932), daughter of Nicholas King MD of Dublin and of Ards (Co. Kerry), and had issue one daughter (who died young in 1885); died at Turret House, Tramore (Co. Waterford), 19 July 1880; will proved 14 August 1880 (effects under £100); his widow lived latterly in London and died 10 May 1932;
(13) Rev. Eustace John Fitzgerald Barron (c.1847-1916), born about 1847; educated at Middle Temple (admitted 1869; called 1871); barrister-at-law; but was ordained in the Roman Catholic church and was subsequently priest of St Peter, Gloucester (Glos), 1878-94, canon of Clifton Cathedral, 1894-1916 and priest of Weston-super-Mare (Som.), 1898-1916; he died 3 November 1916; administration of goods granted 26 June 1916 (estate £942).
He lived at Glenview by 1833 (an early 19th century house which he probably built and may have sold c.1850) and later at Killowen (Co. Waterford) and Belmont Park, which he purchased from Sir Henry Winston Barron, 1st bt. He had a town house at 102 St Stephen’s Green, Dublin.
He died at Belmont Park, 2 August 1879; his will was proved 7 January 1880 (effects under £3,000). His wife died 12 January 1870 and was buried in the family vault in Ferrybank Catholic Church.

Barron, Pierce Eustace Laurence Aloysius (1826-96). Eldest son of Pierce Marcus Barron (1806-79) and his wife Catherine Lucinda, daughter of Laurence Crowe of St. Stephen’s Green, Dublin, born 22 February 1826. Educated at Downside, London University (matriculated 1845), Lincoln’s Inn (admitted 1848) and King’s Inns, Dublin (called 1851). Barrister-at-law. An officer in the Waterford Light Infantry (Lt., 1855). He married, 1864 in Mexico, Ellen Clerke Cecilia (1833-1914), second daughter and co-heiress of Capt. Edward Abney (1788-1839) of Measham Hall (Derbys), and had issue:
(1) Cecilia de Meysam Constance Josephine Barron (1865-1946), born in Mexico, 1865; married, 4 March 1897, Francois Celestin Fidele Fourmaintraux (d. 1941), son of Francois Fourmaintraux and had issue four sons and three daughters; died 30 April 1946;
(2) Percy Alphonse Abney Joseph Frederick Barron (1867-1942), of Manoir de Menneville, Echingen (France), born 18 July 1867; educated in France; married, 2 June 1903, Marie Adele Ernestine Francoise (d. 1957), daughter of Paul Gaultier de Bruillac de Lespinay of St. Malo (France), and had issue two sons and three daughters; died 30 August 1942;
(3) Ernest Edward de Wivelslie Joseph Barron (1871-1941), of Manoir de Menneville, Echingen (France), born 12 November 1871; educated in France; married, 7 January 1905, Evelyn Maud Innes Thompson (d. 1962) of London, and had issue six sons and six daughters; died 25 March 1941.
He inherited Belmont Park from his father in 1879, but sold it to the Brothers of Charity in 1883.
He died 23 May 1896; administration of goods granted 14 October 1913 (estate 2,528). His widow died in France, 21 April 1914.

Barron, John (1750-1800). 
Fourth son of Pierse Barron (b. c.1690; fl. 1726) and his wife Mary, daughter of Thomas FitzGerald of Kilconavey, born 1750. In 1775, he was a tanner in Waterford. He married Mary, daughter of Michael Maddock of Waterford, tanner, and had issue:
(1) James Barron (c.1771-1857) (q.v.);
(2) Eustace Barron; married ?Anne (d. 1839), sister of Joseph Power of Dangan (Co. Kilkenny?) and Seafield (Co. Waterford) but died without issue;
(3) John Barron of Annestown;
(4) Pierse Eustace Barron (d. 1826) of Hermitage; died unmarried at Dungarvan, after a few days illness with a sudden fever, 11 May 1826;
(5) William Barron, of Lacken (Co. Waterford); married [forename unknown] Cooper of Ballynure Castle and had issue two sons and two daughters;
(6) Edward Barron, of Georgestown; married [forename unknown] Alley, and had issue four sons and three daughters;
(7) Catherine Barron; married Lt-Gen. Halliday;
(8) Mary Anne Barron; married Patrick Sheehan MD (d. c.1852) of Waterford, physician.
He inherited Georgestown from his father.
He died in 1800. His wife’s date of death is unknown.

Barron, James (c.1771-1857). 
Only son of John Barron (1750-1800) of Georgestown House and his wife Mary, daughter of Michael Maddock of Waterford, tanner. JP for Co. Waterford. He married, c.1810, Mary (b. c.1790), daughter of William Grant of Montalto, Woodstown (Co. Waterford), and had issue:
(1) John Barron; died unmarried in the lifetime of his father;
(2) Pierse Eustace Barron; died unmarried in the lifetime of his father;
(3) Catherine Barron (c.1815-70); inherited Georgestown from her father; married James Sherlock Harper (d. 1868) of Waterford, wine merchant; died in Waterford, 20 November, and was buried at Kill RC church, 27 November 1870.
He inherited Georgestown from his father. At his death it passed to his daughter and her husband, and after their deaths to his first cousin once removed, John Marcus Barron (1844-80).
He died aged 86 on 11 June 1857. His wife’s date of death is unknown.

Ballynaparka, Cappoquin, Co Waterford

Ballynaparka, Cappoquin, Co Waterford

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. 26. “(Davis-Goff, Bt/PB; Villiers-Stuart/IFR) A two storey double bow-fronted early C19 house with an eaved roof. The home of the parents of Muriel Bowen, the writer and journalist; afterwards the home of Ernest Davis-Goff, 3rd and present Bt; now of Mr and Mrs James Villiers-Stuart, who formerly lived at Dromana, nearby.”

https://www.buildingsofireland.ie/buildings-search/building/22902924/ballynaparka-house-ballynaparka-d-wn-by-kilmolash-par-co-waterford

Ballynaparka, County Waterford, photograph courtesy of National Inventory.

Detached five-bay two-storey over basement house, c.1820, retaining most original fenestration with single-bay single-storey flat-roofed projecting porch to centre ground floor, two-bay two-storey shallow bowed flanking end bays, three-bay two-storey side elevations, and three-bay three-storey rear (east) elevation. Part refenestrated, c.1995. Shallow hipped slate roofs on a quadrangular plan (half-conical to shallow bowed bays) with clay ridge tiles, rendered chimney stacks, and cast-iron rainwater goods on overhanging rendered eaves. Flat roof to porch not visible behind parapet. Unpainted (ivy-clad) rendered, ruled and lined walls (painted to side (north) and to rear (east) elevations) with rendered band to eaves, and rendered piers to porch supporting moulded stringcourse/cornice having blocking course to parapet. Square-headed window openings (in tripartite arrangement to centre first floor; some in bipartite arrangement to basement) with cut-stone sills. 6/6 and 9/6 timber sash windows with 2/2 sidelights to tripartite opening, 4/4 timber sash windows to bipartite openings, one 16/12 timber sash window to rear (east) elevation, and some replacement replica windows, c.1995, throughout. Elliptical-headed window opening to porch in tripartite arrangement with cut-stone sill, fixed-pane timber window having bas-relief mullions, and spoked fanlight. Round-headed door opening to porch with rendered surround having archivolt, timber panelled door, and fanlight. Elliptical-headed door opening to house with timber doorcase, timber panelled double doors, sidelights having margins, and spoked fanlight. Interior with timber panelled shutters to window openings. Set back from road in own grounds with gravel forecourt, and landscaped grounds to site including shallow terrace to south-west with flight of six cut-stone steps having cut-stone parapets. (ii) Attached three-bay single-storey over raised basement range, c.1920, to north-east flanking service courtyard with square-headed carriageway to basement level. Roof not visible behind parapet (probably flat) with cast-iron rainwater goods on slightly overhanging rendered eaves. Unpainted roughcast walls with battlemented parapet. Square-headed window openings with concrete sills, and timber casement windows. Square-headed door opening approached by flight of steps with timber panelled door. Square-headed carriageway to basement level with timber panelled door. (iii) Detached single-bay two-storey outbuilding, c.1920, to south-east flanking service courtyard. Roof not visible behind parapet (probably flat). Unpainted roughcast walls with rendered battlement parapet on rendered stringcourse. Shallow segmental-headed window opening to ground floor with concrete sill, and square-headed window opening to first floor with no sill. Fixed-pane iron windows. Square-headed door opening with timber door. (iv) Gateway, c.1820, to east (accessing service courtyard) comprising elliptical-headed opening with unpainted rendered flanking piers supporting parapet with rendered stringcourse, blocking course, timber boarded double doors, and sections of unpainted roughcast recessed flanking walls having rendered coping. (v) Gateway, c.1820, to north comprising pair of inscribed unpainted rendered piers having chamfered corners, moulded rendered capping, cast-iron double gates, sections of unpainted rendered panelled flanking walls on L-shaped plans leading to inscribed unpainted rendered outer piers, and unpainted rendered panelled flanking walls extending into unpainted fine roughcast curved walls having unpainted rendered piers, and unpainted fine roughcast boundary wall to perimeter of site over random rubble stone construction.

Appraisal

An elegantly-composed substantial house incorporating a variety of features characteristic of the Regency period, including shallow bowed bays, and overhanging eaves, which enhance the architectural value of the site. Very well maintained, the house retains most of its original form and early fabric, both to the exterior and to the interior. A range of attendant outbuildings forming a service complex augment the group value of the site, while a gateway of undulating profile makes a strong visual statement in the landscape. The house is of additional importance in the locality for its historic associations with the Bowen, Davis-Goff, and Villiers-Stuart families.

Ballyin, Lismore, Co Waterford 

Ballyin, Lismore, Co Waterford 

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.

Ballyin Garden House, Co Waterford, photograph courtesy of Sherry Fitzgerald on 23 April 2021

p. 23. “(Anson, sub Lichfield, E/PB) A miller’s house to which the prosperous flour-miller P. Foley added a new front in early C19, of three bays with a one bay breakfront and pedimented gable. Round-headed windows. Bought in 1930s by Hon Claud Anson.”

https://www.buildingsofireland.ie/buildings-search/building/22902119/ballyin-house-ballyin-lower-co-waterford

Ballyin, County Waterford, photograph courtesy of National Inventory.

Detached three-bay two-storey mill owner’s house, c.1825, retaining some original fenestration with single-bay two-storey gabled breakfront, single-bay two-storey side elevations, single-bay two-storey lean-to lower return to north continuing into four-bay two-storey lower service wing to north. Renovated, c.2000, with façade enrichments added to front (south) elevation. Now in private residential use. Pitched slate roof (gabled to breakfront; lean-to to return; pitched to service wing) with rolled lead ridge tiles, grouped (four) rendered diagonal chimney stacks, and replacement uPVC rainwater goods, c.2000, on overhanging rendered eaves having paired consoles to front (south) elevation, and retaining original cast-iron downpipes. Unpainted replacement cement rendered walls, c.2000, to main block with rendered quoins to corners, stringcourse to first floor, and band to eaves to breakfront. Painted lime rendered walls to service wing. Square-headed window openings to main block (round-headed to ground floor end bays and to first floor breakfront) with cut-stone sills (forming balconettes to first floor front (south) elevation on consoles), and moulded rendered surrounds having entablature over to ground floor breakfront, and archivolt to first floor. 3/6 and 6/6 timber sash windows with glazed timber French doors to ground floor breakfront approached by four cut-stone steps. Square-headed door opening to return with glazed timber panelled door. Square-headed window openings to service wing with cut-stone sills. 3/3 and 6/6 timber sash windows with some timber casement windows, and some openings having wrought iron bars. Set back from road in own grounds with landscaped grounds to site. (ii) Detached four-bay single-storey rubble stone mono-pitched outbuilding, c.1825, to north-west with single-bay single-storey recessed end bay to right (north). Mono-pitched slate roof with clay ridge tiles, and cast-iron rainwater goods. Random rubble stone walls with lime mortar. Square-headed window openings with no sills and timber boarded fittings. Square-headed door openings with tongue-and-groove timber panelled doors. (iii) Detached six-bay two-storey rubble stone outbuilding, c.1825, to north. Now in ruins. Pitched roof now gone with no rainwater goods on squared rubble stone eaves. Random rubble stone walls with lime mortar. Square-headed slit-style window openings with no sill, and no fittings. Camber-headed door openings with squared rubble stone voussoirs, and fittings now gone. (iv) Single-arch rubble stone footbridge over mill race, c.1825, to south. Irregular coursed squared rubble stone walls with cut-stone coping to parapet. Single elliptical arch with cut-stone voussoirs. Sited spanning mill race with grass banks to mill race. (v) Gateway, c.1825, to south comprising pair of cut-sandstone piers with cut-stone capping, hoop iron double gates, and sections of random rubble stone flanking walls to perimeter of site having squared rubble stone coping.

Appraisal

A well-composed middle-size house that is of initial significance for its associations with the adjacent Ballyin (Flour) Mill (22902118/WD-21-18). Well maintained, the house retains its original form and much of its original character, while important salient features and materials survive intact. A number of attendant structures to the grounds enhance the group quality of the site, including a range of outbuildings in varying states of repair, a discreet footbridge, and a gateway of simple design merit.

Ballyin, County Waterford, photograph courtesy of National Inventory.

Ballyin, County Waterford, photograph courtesy of National Inventory.

Ballyin, County Waterford, photograph courtesy of National Inventory.

Ballyin, County Waterford, photograph courtesy of National Inventory.

https://www.myhome.ie/residential/brochure/ballyin-garden-house-lismore-co-waterford-p51-k343/4496563

Ballyin Garden House, Co Waterford, photograph courtesy of Sherry Fitzgerald on 23 April 2021

23.4.21

ONE OF THE HISTORIC HOUSES OF THE BLACKWATER VALLEY, BALLYIN GARDENS INCLUDES TWO GUEST COTTAGES IN AN UTTERLY IDYLLIC SETTING ON C.2.78HA(C.6.87ACRES). SPECIAL FEATURES – Period main house plus two additional guest houses – Just under seven acres of historic mature gardens laid out by the Dukes of Devonshire – c.400m of private salmon and trout fishing on the River Blackwater – Orchards, lawns, woodlands and sweeping gardens providing privacy and tranquillity – A short walk to the heritage town of Lismore – Tax incentives for garden upkeep, subject to conditions

Ballyin Garden House, Co Waterford, photograph courtesy of Sherry Fitzgerald on 23 April 2021
Ballyin Garden House, Co Waterford, photograph courtesy of Sherry Fitzgerald on 23 April 2021

DESCRIPTION Described as a sight which no visitor should ever miss, Ballyin Gardens were laid out in the 1700s. Those centuries of foresight, love and care have created an extraordinary swathe of lush beauty in one of the most picturesque parts of the South East of Ireland. On the banks of the River Blackwater, renowned all over the world for its rich fishing, Ballyin Gardens has its own private beat, making it a fantasy come to life for aficionados. Meanwhile, the spectacular gardens will endlessly reward horticulturalists, or those with a love of nature in all its seasonal beauty. From spring’s carpet of thousands of daffodils, to the huge camellias and rhododendrons in full bloom, to the flowering of the rose gardens and numerous hydrangeas, this is an extraordinary and uniquely special spot. The Georgian era property was once the Deanery for St Carthage’s Cathedral, and the grounds were maintained by the Lismore Estate, Irish Seat of the Dukes of Devonshire. The main house was once a vast mansion, but in 1726 fire demolished the majority of it, leaving only one wing, now the main house. The guest lodge and coach house were built in the early 19th century. Now you have a much more manageable, and utterly charming three bedroomed property, with two additional guest houses, giving ample scope for family living, rental income, or other ventures. The gardens were formerly on the Waterford Garden Trail, which takes in sister properties including Mount Congreve, Salterbridge House, Cappoquin House, Tourin and Lismore Castle. Some of these neighbouring houses also host recitals during the Blackwater Valley Opera Festival, and dinners at the West Waterford Festival of Food, meaning that you have immediate access to an exceptional, welcoming and varied cultural life. Opening the gardens on public days qualifies for tax incentives for their upkeep.

Ballyin Garden House, Co Waterford, photograph courtesy of Sherry Fitzgerald on 23 April 2021
Ballyin Garden House, Co Waterford, photograph courtesy of Sherry Fitzgerald on 23 April 2021
Ballyin Garden House, Co Waterford, photograph courtesy of Sherry Fitzgerald on 23 April 2021
Ballyin Garden House, Co Waterford, photograph courtesy of Sherry Fitzgerald on 23 April 2021
Ballyin Garden House, Co Waterford, photograph courtesy of Sherry Fitzgerald on 23 April 2021
Ballyin Garden House, Co Waterford, photograph courtesy of Sherry Fitzgerald on 23 April 2021
Ballyin Garden House, Co Waterford, photograph courtesy of Sherry Fitzgerald on 23 April 2021
Ballyin Garden House, Co Waterford, photograph courtesy of Sherry Fitzgerald on 23 April 2021
Ballyin Garden House, Co Waterford, photograph courtesy of Sherry Fitzgerald on 23 April 2021

BALLYIN GARDEN HOUSE The house and guest cottages at Ballyin Gardens are all delightful spaces. The main house features a generous reception hall, triple aspect drawing room with open fire and marble surround, and French windows to the gardens. To the left of the hall, a large dining room leads in turn to the kitchen with a utility room / pantry off. The kitchen gives on to a pretty sunroom. This opens to a sheltered patio. Upstairs, the three bedrooms are all doubles. The very beautiful dual aspect master is en-suite, with a 15ft high ceiling decorated with historic cornicing, and has deeply inset windows with wonderful garden and river views. The other two bedrooms share a family bathroom and there is also a study at this level. Overall, the house is a charming, easy living space with an atmosphere of history and many original features intact. Here, you benefit from all the amenities of a Great House, in terms of gardens, outbuildings and grounds, but with a more manageable footprint.

Ballyin Garden House, Co Waterford, photograph courtesy of Sherry Fitzgerald on 23 April 2021
Ballyin Garden House, Co Waterford, photograph courtesy of Sherry Fitzgerald on 23 April 2021
Ballyin Garden House, Co Waterford, photograph courtesy of Sherry Fitzgerald on 23 April 2021
Ballyin Garden House, Co Waterford, photograph courtesy of Sherry Fitzgerald on 23 April 2021
Ballyin Garden House, Co Waterford, photograph courtesy of Sherry Fitzgerald on 23 April 2021
Ballyin Garden House, Co Waterford, photograph courtesy of Sherry Fitzgerald on 23 April 2021
Ballyin Garden House, Co Waterford, photograph courtesy of Sherry Fitzgerald on 23 April 2021
Ballyin Garden House, Co Waterford, photograph courtesy of Sherry Fitzgerald on 23 April 2021
Ballyin Garden House, Co Waterford, photograph courtesy of Sherry Fitzgerald on 23 April 2021
Ballyin Garden House, Co Waterford, photograph courtesy of Sherry Fitzgerald on 23 April 2021
Ballyin Garden House, Co Waterford, photograph courtesy of Sherry Fitzgerald on 23 April 2021

GARDENS AND GROUNDS Ballyin Gardens are both famous and spectacular. The earliest parts go back to the 1500s, and fragments of history are to be found everywhere, from an old archway dating from a much earlier life as a monastery, to garden sculptures, to beautiful walled gardens, and tree-lined walks. It takes lifetimes to create a garden such as this. The planting, inspired by the husbandry of the Dukes of Devonshire, who took care of the grounds from the 1800s, was created with an eye to the pleasure of future generations. Today you benefit from beautifully mature rhododendrons, hydrangeas, azaleas, camellias, specimen trees including the largest Monterey Cypress in the county, and more. Visitors to the gardens over the years have included such luminaries as Sir Arthur Conan Doyle, King Edward VII and Queen Alexandra. The land is lush and fertile, with fruit trees, soft fruit cages, and vegetable gardens, as well as a rose garden, smooth lawns, aromatic borders and hidden paths and meandering walkways. Of particular note to sports fishermen and enthusiasts is the approximately 400m of private fishing, on one of Ireland’s most prolific salmon rivers, that comes with the house. Add the huge potential afforded by the additional guest cottages and coach house, ripe for conversion and you have an obvious income stream, or you may wish to keep this perfect place entirely to yourself as the ultimate Irish seat, and retreat. LOCATION On the banks of the famed River Blackwater, Ballyin Gardens occupies a key position as one of the historic houses of the Blackwater Valley, part of a cultural network that includes the Blackwater Valley Opera Festival. The heritage town of Lismore is within walking distance, and the Lismore golf club is next door. Lismore itself has a lovely community feel, with good schools, a tennis club, and a farmer’s market at the Castle gates. The Summerhouse Café and Foley’s bar and restaurant are favourite local spots. A riverbank walk brings you to the beautiful and historic St Carthage’s Cathedral and on to Lismore Castle, the Irish seat of the Dukes of Devonshire. The gardens here are open during the summer, as is the contemporary art gallery. Hill walkers will enjoy the Knockmealdown Mountains, while the Blackwater is known around the world for fishing. The coastal town of Dungarvan is a short drive away. Home to a burgeoning foodie scene, there’s a popularFood Festival every spring, and the town is home to Paul Flynn’s famous Tannery Restaurant and Townhouse. Waterford City and Cork International Airport are both less than an hour away, making this an ideal place to live in a beautiful landscape, yet within easy reach of national and international connections. – 1 km / 15 minutes walk to Lismore – 25 km / 22 minutes drive to Dungarvan – 60 km / 50 minutes drive to Cork – 68 km / 50 minutes drive to Cork Airport – 68 km / 1 hour drive to Waterford – 93 km / 1 hr 40 minutes drive to Limerick – 215 km / 2 hr 40 minutes drive to Dublin – 226 km / 2.5 hour drive to Dublin Airport All distances and times are approximate. SERVICES – LPG Central Heating – Mains Water and Electricity – Private Drainage

Ballyin Garden House, Co Waterford, photograph courtesy of Sherry Fitzgerald on 23 April 2021
Ballyin Garden House, Co Waterford, photograph courtesy of Sherry Fitzgerald on 23 April 2021
Ballyin Garden House, Co Waterford, photograph courtesy of Sherry Fitzgerald on 23 April 2021
Ballyin Garden House, Co Waterford, photograph courtesy of Sherry Fitzgerald on 23 April 2021
Ballyin Garden House, Co Waterford, photograph courtesy of Sherry Fitzgerald on 23 April 2021
Ballyin Garden House, Co Waterford, photograph courtesy of Sherry Fitzgerald on 23 April 2021
Ballyin Garden House, Co Waterford, photograph courtesy of Sherry Fitzgerald on 23 April 2021
Ballyin Garden House, Co Waterford, photograph courtesy of Sherry Fitzgerald on 23 April 2021
Ballyin Garden House, Co Waterford, photograph courtesy of Sherry Fitzgerald on 23 April 2021

The first guest cottage has four bedrooms, over two floors. Two of these are en-suite. There is also a kitchen, dining room and sitting room. The third cottage – a very sweet space, is single storey and has one en-suite bedroom, a kitchen and sitting room. Meanwhile a large two-storey coach house has huge additional potential.

BER Details

BER: E1 BER No: 110251931 Performance Indicator: 300.54

Negotiator Details

Roseanne De Vere Hunt

Viewing Information

Favour Royal, Aughnacloy, County Tyrone 

Favour Royal, Aughnacloy, County Tyrone 

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. 124. “(Moutray/LGI1912) A somewhat austere Tudor-Gothic house of 1825, said to be by an architect named William Warren; built for John Corry Moutray to replace a house of 1670 destroyed by fire 1823. Two storey with attic of rather low-pitched gables in front; three storey at the back. The front of the house has large rectangular windows with elaborate Gothic tracery and hood mouldings over them. Now owned by the Forestry Commisson.”

see https://lordbelmontinnorthernireland.blogspot.com/2014/05/favour-royal.html

THE MOUTRAYS OWNED 6,545 ACRES OF LAND IN COUNTY TYRONE  

 
ROBERT MOUTRAY, of Roscobie, Fife, 9th Laird of Seafield (descended from Robert Multrare, who had a Royal Charter, 1443, confirming to him the lands of Seafield and Markinch), married Anne, only daughter of Sir James Erskine, of Favour Royal, County Tyrone (to whom that estate was granted by JAMES I), grandson of John Erskine, Earl of Mar, and had a son, 
 
JOHN MOUTRAY, of Aghamoyles, alias Favour Royal, County Tyrone, who wedded his cousin Anne, daughter of the Rev Archibald Erskine (son of Sir James Erskine), through whom the Moutray family acquired Favour Royal, and had a son, 
 
JAMES MOUTRAY (c1661-1719), of Favour Royal, High Sheriff of County Tyrone, 1682, MP for Augher, 1692-1703, who espoused Deborah, daughter of Henry Mervyn MP, of Trillick, son of Sir Audley Mervyn MP, Speaker of the Irish House of Commons, and had issue, 

JAMES, his heir
Anketell; 
Anne, m George Gledstanes, of Daisy Hill; 
Sarah, m Charles Stewart, of Baillieborough. 

Mr Moutray was succeeded by his eldest son, 
 
JAMES MOUTRAY, of Favour Royal, High Sheriff of County Tyrone, 1695, who married, in 1698, Rebecca, eldest daughter of Colonel James Corry, of Castlecoole, County Fermanagh (ancestor of the Earls of Belmore), and was father of 
 
JOHN MOUTRAY, of Favour Royal, High Sheriff of County Tyrone, 1721, who married, in 1720, Elizabeth, daughter of Alexander Montgomery, of Ballyleck, County Monaghan, and had issue, 

JAMES, his heir
ANKETELL, succeeded his brother
Leslie, of Killibrick
John; 
Mary; Rebecca; Catherine; Sarah; Elizabeth. 

The eldest son, 
 
JAMES MOUTRAY (1722-77), of Favour Royal and Killibrick, MP for Augher, 1761-69, High Sheriff of County Tyrone, 1762, married Hester, daughter of Thomas Knox, MP for Dungannon, and sister to Thomas, 1st Viscount Northland, but had no issue. 
 
His younger brother, 
 
THE REV ANKETELL MOUTRAY (1730-1801), of Favour Royal, married, in 1768, Catherine, eldest daughter of Thomas Singleton, of Fort Singleton, County Monaghan, by his first wife, daughter of Oliver Anketell, of Anketell’s Grove. 
 
He died ca 1801, having had one son, JOHN CORRY, and six daughters, all of whom died unmarried, except the third, Isabella, who espoused Whitney Upton Gledstanes, of Fardross. 
 
The only son and heir, 
 
JOHN CORRY MOUTRAY JP DL (1771-1859), of Favour Royal, High Sheriff of County Tyrone, 1794, married, in 1793, Mary Anne Catherine, second daughter of Major Ambrose Upton, of Hermitage, County Dublin, by his wife Margaret, sister and co-heir of Thomas Gledstanes, of Fardross, and had issue, 

ANKETELL, his heir
JOHN JAMES, of Favour Royal
WHITNEY, of Fort Singleton
Thomas (Rev), 1806-43; 
William (Rev), 1811-82; 
Henry, of Killymoon Castle; 
Catherine; Margaret; Sophia; Cecilia; Marion; Mary. 

Mr Moutray was succeeded by his eldest son, 
 
ANKETELL MOUTRAY (1797-1869), of Favour Royal, High Sheriff of County Tyrone, 1855, who dsp and was succeeded by his brother, 
 
THE REV JOHN JAMES MOUTRAY (1802-86), of Favour Royal, Rector of Errigal-Keerogue, who married, in 1836, Maria Dorothea, second daughter of the Rev William Perceval, of Kilmore Hill, County Waterford, and had issue, 

JOHN MAXWELL, his heir
Robert Perceval, Captain RN (1840-96); 
William Henry, b 1842; 
ANKETELL, of Favour Royal
Charles Frederick, b 1846; 
Anna Maria Sophia; Mary Elizabeth; Caroline Helena. 

This clergyman’s eldest son, 
 
THE REV JOHN MAXWELL MOUTRAY, Rector of Ballinasaggart, did not, however, succeed to the family estates, which, under the will of his uncle, Anketell Moutray, of Favour Royal, passed to his younger brother, 
 
ANKETELL MOUTRAY JP DL (1844-1927), of Favour Royal, High Sheriff of County Tyrone, 1877, County Monaghan, 1903, who married, in 1877, Gertrude Madelina, third surviving daughter of Matthew John Anketell, of Anketell Grove, County Monaghan (by his wife Catherine Anne Frances, daughter of D Ker, of Montalto, County Down), and had issue, 

John Corry (1878-79); 
ANKETELL GERALD, JP, of Favour Royal, High Sheriff of Co Tyrone, 1935 (1882-1952?); 
Anne Gwendoline Stella Eliza (1875-1902). 

FAVOUR ROYAL, near Augher, County Tyrone, was built in 1825.  
 
This is quite an austere, Tudor-Gothic mansion consisting of two storeys with an attic of low-pitched gables in front and three storeys at the rear. 

 
The front of the house has big rectangular windows with elaborate Gothic tracery and hood mouldings over them. 
 

***** 

 
JAMES I granted Sir Thomas Ridgeway 740 acres of land in 1613. 
 
Sir James Erskine later purchased the Augher estates from Sir Thomas. 
 
CHARLES II confirmed the Manor of Portclare (under the name of Favor Royal) to the Erskine family in 1665. 
 
Eventually his estate was divided between his two granddaughters: one half became Spur Royal (Augher Castle); and the other, Favor Royal
 
One of Erskine’s granddaughters married John Moutray, and they built the first house, creating the demesne in 1670. 
 
This house continued as the family home until it was destroyed by accidental fire in 1823. 
 
Captain John Corry Moutray, the occupant at the time, commissioned the architect John Hargrave to design the new house, built in 1824-5, with an 1825 date-stone on its left elevation. 
 
The earlier 1670 date-stone, also built into the left elevation, is presumably from the first house that was burnt down. 
 
The fireproof vaulted brick floor construction to upper floor landings and the stone staircases are possibly precautionary, to ensure that the new house was not also destroyed by fire. 
 
The painted transom in the book-room of a cavalry officer with white charger may be a depiction of Captain John Corry Moutray. 
 
Captain Moutray also built the parish church of St Mary’s Portclare in 1830 as a private chapel. 
 
It cost £1,000 and its designer may be John Hargrave who had died in a yachting accident only the previous year. 
 
An 1834 map shows the demesne and most of its features as they are today; however, the drive to the north of the main house, its bridge over the river Blackwater, and the later (1856) elements of the outer farmyard are not shown. 
 
The map shows the north drive and the Blackwater Bridge. 
 
A 1903 map shows a boathouse (now gone) on the north side of the lake. 
 
Favour Royal was occupied in 1858 by Whitney Moutray; in 1870 by the Rev John James Moutray; and during the first half of the 20th century by Major Anketell Gerald Moutray. 
 
The house and its contents were sold in 1976. 
 
In 1979 the occupier was a Mr Craig. 
 
It has been said that the Moutrays were the largest landowners in the valley and held the rental of 36 townlands, with a staff of no fewer than 80 at one time. 
 
Sundials (marked on a 1977 map), one to the front and one to the right of the house, and a large collection of medieval carved stones in the rockery (opposite the front porch) were for sale with the house contents in September, 1976, and were presumably sold and removed at that time. 
 
Following the sale of the contents, the house remained occupied until the early 1990s. 
 
Although not consulted in detail, the Moutray family papers in PRONI are a wide and interesting range of documents from land leases to personal diaries. 

***** 

 
﷟HYPERLINK “http://www.flickr.com/photos/stephen_paskin/sets/72157604205430381/”Stephen Paskin has taken 182 photographs of Favour Royal, including notable pictures of its interior features. 

The demesne dates from the 17th century.  
 
It lies in a valley, with the River Blackwater flowing on the north-eastern side.  

Though no longer a fully functioning demesne, disused stabling and farm buildings remain. 
 
There was a deer park and woodland with, ‘… a few fine old trees’ (Young, 1909).  
 
At the present time there is a small area of lawn at the house and one or two mature notable trees. 
 
The walled garden has a date stone on the entrance gate of 1720. 
 
It is not maintained but was once a fine garden.  
 
Most of the area is heavily planted with forest trees. 
 
The gate lodge of ca 1825, gardener’s cottage and bridges are listed. 
 
There is a man-made ornamental lake with an island. 
 
Planning permission had been obtained to turn Favour Royal into a hotel and golf resort. 
 
Arsonists badly damaged the house in April, 2011. 
 
The estate was for sale in May, 2014.  

*****  

 
SIR THOMAS RIDGEWAY, Earl of Londonderry, was one of hundreds of English and Scottish noblemen who were granted land during the plantation of Ulster. 
 
In Ridgeway’s case, he was treasurer of wars in Ireland. 
 
In 1610, JAMES I granted him 4,300 acres in the Clogher valley area of County Tyrone.  
 
In 1613, he built a castle in Augher and then sold his entire estate to Sir James Erskine in 1622.  
 
In 1630, a defect was discovered in the original grant of lands to Ridgeway and CHARLES I made a re-grant of the lands to Erskine. 
 
This royal favour was acknowledged by naming the estate Favour Royal.  
 
Sir James Erskine’s son, Archibald, was the only member of the family to carry on the family name having two daughters, Mary and Ann, between whom the estate was divided.  
 
Mary married William Richardson and took up living in Augher castle. 
 
Later, as Sir William Richardson, he gained notoriety as the magistrate who kept a supply of Shillelaghs for the settlements of legal disputes.  
 
The other daughter, Ann, married John Moutray and moved into the house at Favour Royal in 1670. 
 

***** 

 
The Moutray family continued to live there until the death of Mrs Anketell Moutray on New Year’s Day, 1975. 
 
The house and what remained of the demesne was sold in 1976. 
 
A major part of the estate was acquired by the Forest service. The total area is ca 1,200 acres. 
 
First published in October, 2010. 

www.nihgt.org/resources/pdf/Register_of_Parks_Gardens_Demesnes-NOV20.pdf 

FAVOUR ROYAL, County Tyrone (AP MID ULSTER 10) T/018 
REGISTERED GRADE B 
Demesne with 17th-century origins (235 acres/95ha) with ruins of large mansion of 1824-5 (Listed 
HB 13/03/004) located in a valley with the River Blackwater on the north-side, lying 3,24 miles 
(5.24km) east of Augher and 3 miles (4.9km) west of Aughnacloy, straddling the border with 
Monaghan. No dwelling is recorded here until 1670, but the townland of Aghamoyles (Favour or 
Favor Royal) was part of a 1610 Plantation grant of ‘Portclare and Ballykillgirie’ to Sir Thomas 
Ridgeway, who sold it in 1622 to Sir James Erskine (d.1636). On his death, Erskine’s estate was 
divided between his two granddaughters: the one who married William Richardson got Augher 
(Spur Royal) and the other who married John Mountray received Favour Royal. Shortly before or 
shortly after their marriage in 1670, the Moutrays built a house on the present site whose date- 
stone with its inscription ‘Welcom to come in as welcom to go by 1670’, has been incorporated in 
the walls of the present ruined mansion of 1825. Confusingly, perhaps, the name they adopted for 
the new seat, ‘Favour Royal’, was originally applied to a plantation house and bawn built by 
Ridgeway to the north in the townland of Lismore. We have no descriptions or illustrations of the 
1670 house and none of the yard ranges to the east of the house, now in a poor condition, appear 
to be earlier than the 1820s mansion, so there are few clues on this question. From the 1670s the 
property was to long remain in the same family, passing from one generation to the next, 
beginning with James Moutray I (d.1718-19), who was MP for Augher 1692-1703. He was 
succeeded by his son John II (1701-79); his eldest son, James III Moutray (1722-1777), MP for 
Augher in 1761 and 1768, built a house in the north-western corner of the demesne ‘Killybrick’ or 
‘Fort Pleasant’. Just as we are short of evidence as the former appearance of the house, we know 
very little of the early landscape as there are few obvious residual features of any early formal 
landscape surviving. The earliest demesne feature we can date is the walled garden (Listed HB 
13/03/012), to the east of the house, which had (now removed) a keystone over the garden 
entrance on the west with the date 1720; this entrance had a dressed early Georgian surround. 
The garden is rectangular in plan (2.4 acres/0.96ha) with slip gardens on the west. south and east, 
giving the garden a total acreage of 5.34 acres (2.16 acres). The garden is enclosed by tall walls 
are constructed in roughly squared rubble stone and lined in brick with the segmental-headed 
main access to the north and other entrances to the west, south and east. As with the western 
entrance, the doorway to the eastern wall has also lost its cut stone surround. There are ruinous 
remains of glasshouse to the north-western corner. In the eastern slip, which served as the 
forcing yard, there is the, now abandoned, gardener’s house, a single / one and a half-storey 
(seemingly hearth-lobby) vernacular dwelling with gabled ends and a large gabled porch. The 
outer slips, used for growing surplus garden produce, were enclosed with hedges, now grown into 
trees; those on the west side have been removed recently. The garden must have been built by 
John II Moutray, after he inherited in 1719 and married in 1720 Elizabeth daughter of Alexander 
Montgomery of Ballyleck, County Monaghan. It’s likely the garden was part of a larger geometric 
landscape layout, but nothing seems to have survived of this. One of the apprentice garden boys 
employed in an around 1816 was a local boy called John Hughes, would go on to become the 
Catholic Archbishop of New York in 1842. As James III Moutray died without issue in 1777, the 
property passed to his brother Rev. Anketell I (1730-1801), who appears to have been responsible 
for transforming the demesne into the present landscape park. This involved removing the early 
formal features and agricultural field boundaries and in their place putting down sinuous woods, 
woodland clumps and wide open meadow expanses. In the middle ground west of the house the 
river was dammed to create a lake with island (3.5 acres/1.4ha), now drained, adjacent to which is 
a bridge (Listed HB 13/03/026), carrying the new parkland main drive over a stream flowing from 
the Blackwater River in the north, to the lake; It is a small rubble-built structure with a single 
segmental arch with dressed voussoirs and a parapet with rubble battlements. The landscaping of 
the new parkscape involved laying down a network if sinuous carriage drives, all no doubt 
planned to take advantage of the views. The drives facilitated five entrance into the demesne, 

Register of Parks, Gardens and Demesnes of Special Historic Interest (NI) – November 2020 
two lie on the Favour Royal Road (where the demesne is walled), both originally with gate lodges. 
The main entrance is west of the house near the Favour Royal Bridge over the Blackwater; its 
1820s gate lodge (Listed HB 13/03/005), probably by Hargrave, lies on the opposite side of the 
road; it is a small Tudoresque single-storey (with attic) gable-ended dwelling with squared rubble 
walls and an overhanging roof with bracketed eaves. There is a gate screen on the opposite side 
of the road with quadrant walls; from here the carriage drive runs southwards to the lake, over 
the bridge and onto the house. Much of the woodland planting was to the south and south-west 
of the house along a tributary of the Blackwater that now forms the county and international 
Border. A striking feature of the western area of the parkland landscape was a church added in 
1834 (Listed HB 13/03/001). Known as St. Mary’s Church, it is the (C of I) parish church of St. 
Mary’s Portclare and is a small single-storey cruciform structure with two-stage square tower with 
slender pinnacles, and an overall with Scottish feel. It has its own entrance from the Favour Royal 
Road and its gateway (Listed HB13/03/011) has a pair of square cut-stone piers with outsized ball 
finials and a later wrought-iron carriage gate. Another feature of the park was added earlier, 
perhaps around 1810; this is the Garden Cottage (Listed HB 13/03/008) south-east of the house 
on gently sloping ground in partly wooded surroundings. Now sadly abandoned and in disrepair, it 
is a small picturesque dwelling in the cottage orné tradition – a popular feature of Regency era 
parklands in Ireland. It has a central one and a half-storey section flanked by single-storey wings 
of differing sizes, all with gabled ends, overhanging roofs, later slated but probably originally 
thatched. The walls are rendered with brick chimneystacks and a circular two-stage tower to the 
centre of the rere, formerly graced with a conical roof, possibly also originally thatched. The 
building incorporated a canted bay covered by the roof, which oversails to the this side and is 
supported on two battered stone columns. The entrance was on the south and the cottage was 
placed on the south edge of what appears to have been an ornamental grove of shrubs traversed 
by paths. The builder of the cottage was no doubt the Rev. Anketell’s only son and heir, John 
Corry Moutray (1771-1859), who also built the present house in 1824-25 after the old mansion 
was destroyed in an accidental fire in 1823. Seriously damaged by a fire in 2011 and now 
abandoned, the later house was commissioned in 1824 from the Dublin-based architect John 
Hargrave, and completed in 1825 with freestone quarried nearby (original plans of the house 
survive). It is a square two-and-a-half to three-storey roughly square triple-pile main block, north 
facing, in an austere Tudor Gothic style that extended to its interior. Extending eastwards from 
the south-east corner is long and much lower two-storey L-shaped service wing and a much 
smaller single-storey projection to the north-east. The large label-moulded windows display 
Perpendicular Gothic tracery, its entrance elevation is three bay with a central castellated porte- 
cochère; the garden front is five bays, where the drawing room has a central single-storey 
crenellated canted bay window. The house has a long attached stable range with yard to the east, 
also built at the same time as the house and subsequently unaltered, though both now lie 
abandoned and on the Heritage at Risk Register. Further east is the weigh house and pigsty (HB 
13/03/025) and beyond that lies the farm yard (HB 13/03/027) – a relatively large, irregular- 
shaped yard with the south-west side skewed formed of ranges of rubble buildings of various 
dates incorporating various elliptical and segmental-headed carriage arches and doorways, all 
now abandoned, roofless and partly overgrown. Following John Corry’s death in 1859, the 
demesne passed to his son, Anketell II (1797-1869), after whose death Favour Royal was inherited 
by his brother, Rev. John James Moutray (1802-86), who left it to his fourth son, Anketell III (1844- 
1927), who had the misfortune of being attacked and kidnapped at Favour Royal during the 
troubles of 1922. His son, Anketell Gerald Moutray (b.1882) died in 19[?], but his widow 
continued to reside in the house until her death at the beginning of 1975. To that date the house, 
outbuildings, walled garden and park all survived remarkably intact. The park was noted for its 
deciduous woodland and parkland trees; Robert Young in 1909 mentioned the presence then of 
‘fine old trees still standing of two hundred years’ growth’. South of the house still stands a large 
ash tree and near it an unusual variegated ash. In 1976 the house and grounds were sold, with 

Register of Parks, Gardens and Demesnes of Special Historic Interest (NI) – November 2020 
the Department of Agriculture (Forestry Service) acquiring most of the land, and Mr. Herbert Craig 
acquiring the house and a smaller area of ground. The house was put up for sale again in 1994, 
but has remained vacant and was damaged in a malicious fire in April 2011. Much of the demesne 
was heavily planted by DAERA (Forest Service) with forest trees. SMR: TYR 59:63 rath and 64, an 
enclosure. 
 

Crevenagh House, Omagh, County Tyrone 

Crevenagh House, Omagh, County Tyrone 

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. 95. “(Auchlinleck, sub Darling/IFR) A two storey house built ca 1820 by D. E. Auchinleck, great-uncle of Field Marshal Sir Claude Auchinleck. Three bay entrance front with Wyatt windows in both storeys and projecting porch. Three bay side with central Wyatt windows in both storeys. A slightly lower two storey range was subsequently added by D.E. Auchinleck’s son, Major Thomas Auchinleck, behind the original block and parallel with it; its end, which has a single-storey bow, forming a continuation of the side elevation, to which it is joined by a short single-storey link. The principal rooms in the main block have good plasterwork ceilings, and the hall has a mosaic floor depicting the Seven Ages of Man. There are doors made of mahogany from the family plantations in Demerara.”

see https://lordbelmontinnorthernireland.blogspot.com/2014/07/crevenagh-house.html

THE AUCHINLECKS OWNED 2,616 ACRES OF LAND IN COUNTY TYRONE 

 
 
IN MEMORY OF FIELD-MARSHAL SIR CLAUDE JOHN EYRE AUCHINLECK GCB GCIE CSI DSO OBE 

THE REV JAMES AUCHINLECK (1646-c1685), Rector of Cleenish, County Fermanagh, married Margaret Keith, and had issue (with others who died young), 

JAMES, of whom presently; 
William; 
Alexander; 
Katherine; Margaret; Jean. 

The Rev James Auchinleck was succeeded by his son, 

JAMES AUCHINLECK (1675-1746), of Thomastown, County Fermanagh, who wedded, ca 1698, Elizabeth, daughter of Colonel James Corry MP, of Castle Coole, and had, with other issue (who died young), 

JAMES, his heir
Alexander; 
Rebecca; Margaret; Mary; Sarah; Elizabeth. 

The elder son, 

JAMES AUCHINLECK (1704-52), of Thomastown, married, in 1734, Susanna, daughter of John Corry, of Lisanock, and had issue, 

Leslie; 
Armar; 
James; 
John; 
William; 
George; 
Corry; 
ALEXANDER, of whom presently
Anketell (Rev); 
Elizabeth; Sarah. 

Mr Auchinleck’s eighth son, 

THE REV ALEXANDER AUCHINLECK (1749-1833), of Castle Lodge, and Mullans, Fintona, County Tyrone, Rector of Rossory, wedded, in 1784, Jane, daughter of James Corry Eccles, of Shannock, County Fermanagh, and had issue, 

James Eccles (Rev); 
William; 
John (Rev), grandfather of FIELD-MARSHAL SIR CLAUDE AUCHINLECK; 
DANIEL ECCLES, of whom presently
Anna. 

The youngest son, 

 
DANIEL ECCLES AUCHINLECK (1797-1849), of Crevenagh, espoused, in 1833, Elizabeth Dorothea, daughter of the Rev Thomas Lindsay Stack JP, Rector of Badony, and had issue, 

THOMAS his heir
William Lowry, Brigadier-General; 
Daniel; 
Margaret; Anna. 

The eldest son, 

THOMAS AUCHINLECK JP DL (1837-93), of Crevenagh, and Shannock Green, County Fermanagh, Major, Royal Tyrone Fusiliers, High Sheriff of County Tyrone, 1872, married, in 1868, Jane, daughter of George Henry Loxdale, of Grassendale, Liverpool, and had issue, 

DANIEL GEORGE HAROLD, his heir; 
Bessie Sarah; Norah Lilian Loxdale. 

Major Auchinleck was succeeded by his son, 

DANIEL GEORGE HAROLD AUCHINLECK (1877-1914), of Crevenagh, Captain, Royal Inniskilling Fusiliers, who wedded, in 1902, Charlotte Madeleine, only daughter of Robert Scott, of Dungannon, County Tyrone, and had issue, an only son, ROBERT PATRICK AUCHINLECK, who died in infancy, 1906. 

Captain Auchinleck was killed in action during the 1st World War. 

***** 

CREVENAGH was eventually to be inherited by Lieutenant-Colonel Ralph Reginald Auchinleck Darling JP(1897-1958), who fought in the 1st World War; was commissioned in the Royal Inniskilling Fusiliers; fought in the 2nd World War, 1939-43, when he retired due to ill-health. 
 
His eldest son, 

Gerald Ralph Auchinleck Darling RD QC DL (1921-96), was educated at Harrow; was an officer in the Royal Navy Volunteer Reserve; fought in the Second World War; was Fleet Fighter Pilot and Test Pilot Eastern Fleet; Chief Test Pilot, British Pacific Fleet. 

On the death of his father in 1958 he had inherited  CrevenaghHouse, near Omagh, where, from his school days, he had spent many happy holidays with his extended family.  

He was proud of his descent from the Auchinleck family who had always lived there, and resolved to maintain it as a family home despite his ties to life in London (in his London office there was a Donegal landscape and a map showing the wartime achievements of Ulster). 

In 1990 he became a Deputy Lieutenant of County Tyrone and, in 1993, High Sheriff.  

In his obsequies address, the Right Rev Brian Hannon, Bishop of Clogher, paid tribute to Gerald Darling’s contribution to the work of Edenderry parish, where he had served as parish secretary. 

The Bishop related how, before a major court appearance, Darling would ease the tension by thinking of his favourite spots on the river, the snipe bogs and the mountains of Tyrone. 

Strangely, after a lifetime of trout-fishing, he caught his first salmon only in 1995. 
 
One of his family remembers the fishing picnics in childhood - “as, unfortunately, a mizzly day is good for fishing, the picnics were often rather damp affairs”. 

But that was balanced by the warmth of bedtime stories in the family flat in the Middle Temple where it is said the family below, willy-nilly, added to the appreciative audience for Darling’s dramatic readings of Winnie the Pooh.  

He would, friends say, have been equally at home as a farmer, taking great pride in his forestry and Belted Galloway cattle and never more at home than working in ragged jeans with his chainsaw. 

A permanent record of Gerald Darling his distinction as a lawyer will be his contribution to that definitive work, Halsbury’s Laws of England (Admiralty and Ship Collisions), the third edition of 1952.  

In 1992 he was made an Honorary Bencher of the Northern Ireland Bar. 

Born at Erganagh, Co Tyrone, 8th December, 1921; called to the Bar, Middle Temple 1950, Bencher 1972, Treasurer 1991; Barrister, Northern Ireland 1957, Honorary Bencher 1992; RD 1967; QC 1967; member, Panel of Lloyd’s Arbitrators in Salvage Cases 1967-78, Appeal Arbitrator 1978-91; member, Panel of Wreck Commissioners 1967-96; QC, Hong Kong 1968; Judge, Admiralty Court of the Cinque Ports 1979-96; trustee, Royal Naval Museum 1985-90; Lloyd’s Silver Medal 1991; married 1954 Susan Hobbs (one son, one daughter); died Londonderry 13 September 1996. 

CREVENAGH HOUSE, near Omagh, County Tyrone, is a two-storey house built ca 1820 by Daniel Eccles Auchinleck, great-uncle of Field Marshal Sir Claude Auchinleck.  

It has a three-bay entrance front with Wyatt windows in both storeys and a projecting porch. 
 
The side is also of three bays. 

A lower, two-storey range was subsequently added by Auchinleck’s son, Major Thomas Auchinleck, behind the original block and parallel with it. 

The principal rooms in the main block have fine plasterwork ceilings; while the hall floor is of mosaic depicting the Seven Ages of Man. 
 
There are doors made of mahogany from the Auchinleckfamily plantations in Demerara. 
 
The surrounding parkland is of the same age as the house, graced by mature parkland trees and clumps of rhododendron. 
 
Shelter woods of mature trees are maintained to the north, south and west. 

The walled garden is part-cultivated, having three walled sides and one of water. 
 
The farm buildings are listed and there is a gate lodge in good condition. 

First published in November, 2010. 

www.nihgt.org/resources/pdf/Register_of_Parks_Gardens_Demesnes-NOV20.pdf

CREEVENAGH, County Tyrone (AP FERMANAGH AND OMAGH 07) T/015 
REGISTERED GRADE A 
Small early Victorian park (13.2 acres/5.35ha) and house on the south perimeter of Omagh. close 
to east bank of the Drumragh River. The park is unusually intact and an excellent surviving 
example of a modest early Victorian gentleman’s parkland, its remarkable survival probably due 
to its being owned by the same family continuously until 2003. Built on a small hill, Creevenagh 
(Listed HB 11/15/003A) is a substantial two-storey block with hipped roof built around 1840 by 
Daniel Eccles Auchinleck (1797-1849), the agent of Henry Corry, M.P. of Castlecoole. The family 
had plantations in Demerara (now part of Guyana), South America, and some of the doors are of 
mahogany from there. Inherited by his son Thomas Auchinleck (1837-93) who leased the 
property for a while but took up residence c.1865 and later in 1883 added a large extension to 
the house on the north-east. The surrounding parkland was created at the same time as the 
house, c.1840 graced by mature parkland trees, notably some walnuts and yews, and clumps of 
rhododendron. It has mature and maintained shelterbelts around the perimeter on the south, 
west and north, with an area of woodland east of the dwelling house. The main entrance is in the 
north-west near the junction of the two bounding roads where there is a gate lodge. The main 
carriage driveway sweeps south and then curves round to the front of the dwelling house. A 
service entrance runs south from the minor road to the outbuildings which are south east of the 
dwelling house. The stables and offices (Listed HB 11/15/003) south-east of the house are flanked 
on the south side by the walled garden (1.23 acres/0.5ha) in part still cultivated in the 1990s but 
now under grass. The walled garden walls are unusually high and built of stone with a lining of 
brick on the inside; the south side has no wall and bounded by a pond, now silted up. Creevenagh 
passed to Daniel George Harold Auchinleck (1877-1914) in 1893, and remained with his widow, 
Madeline until 1949. It then passed to her sister-in-law, Norah Auchinleck Darling (1872-1951), 
and from her to Lt-Col. Ralph Auchinleck Darling (1997-1958). The last in the line to own the 
house was Gerald Darling (1921-96), whose widow sold the property in 2003. Ruined gate lodge. 
Private 

Ballygawley Park, Ballygawley, County Tyrone – ruin 

Ballygawley Park, Ballygawley, County Tyrone – ruin 

Ballygawley, County Tyrone. Photograph © Jennifer Winder-Baggot, www.irishhistorichouses.com.

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

p. 22. “(Stewart, Bt, of Athenree/PB) An early C19 Classical house of two storeys, with a two storey portico supported by two giant Doric columns and a shallow dome; built between 1825 and 1833 by Sir Hugh Stewart, 2nd Bt, MP, to the design of John Hargrave, of Cork. Now derelict.” 

See https://lordbelmontinnorthernireland.blogspot.com/2013/08/ballygawley-house.html

THE STEWART BARONETS WERE MAJOR LANDOWNERS IN COUNTY TYRONE, WITH 27,905 ACRES 

 
 
ANDREW STEWART (commonly styled Captain Andrew Stewart), who, with Andrew, 1st Baron Castle Stewart, to whom he was related, and his (Andrew’s) brother James, who afterwards fixed his abode at Ballymenagh, County Tyrone, went from Scotland to Ulster about 1627. 

On his marriage (mentioned hereafter), he obtained from Lord Castle Stewart the greater part of the manor of Castle Stewart; but afterwards built, and resided at, another residence, called Gortigal, near Stewartstown, County Tyrone. 

Captain Stewart served with Colonel the Hon Robert Stewart, of Irry, in defence of the forts of Dungannon and Mountjoy; and at the rising of the rebels at Artclea, County Tyrone, for the purpose of destroying the Protestant families of that county, his house was attacked; but with a few Scots followers he defended it for two days, when assistance was sent to him from Mountjoy Fort. 

He married Sarah, eldest daughter of Lord Ochiltree, and sister to Mary, Countess of Suffolk, and had issue, 

Robert; 
HUGH; 
James. 

Captain Stewart, having long been a gentleman of vengeance, for his zeal and loyalty he evinced in the royal cause, was at length put to death by rebels in 1650. 

The second son, 

THE REV DR HUGH STEWART (1711-1800), of Athenree, County Tyrone, Rector of Termon, wedded Sarah, daughter of the Rev Dr Andrew Hamilton (Rector of , by his wife, the only daughter and heir of Sir William Conyngham Bt, and had issue, 

JOHN, his heir
Andrew, East India Company; 
Henry (Rev), Rector of Loughgilly, Co Armagh; 
Ann; Sarah; Amelia. 

Dr Stewart was succeeded by his eldest son, 
 
THE RT HON JOHN STEWART (1757-1825), of Ballygawley, who having attained eminence at the Bar, was appointed attorney-general for Ireland in 1799, and sworn of the privy council of that kingdom.  
 
Mr Stewart, MP for Augher, 1794-7, Bangor, 1797-1800, was created a baronet in 1803, designated of Athenree, County Tyrone. 
 
Sir John espoused Mary, daughter of Mervyn Archdale, ofCastle Archdale, and had issue, 

HUGH, his successor
Mervyn; 
Barbara; Mary; Phœbe Julia. 

He was succeeded by his elder son, 

SIR HUGH STEWART, 2nd Baronet (1792-1854), MP for County Tyrone, 1830-35, who wedded firstly, in 1826, Julia, daughter of Marcus Gage, and had issue, 

JOHN MARCUS, his successor
Julia. 

He wedded secondly, in 1837, Elizabeth, daughter of the Rev Henry Lucas St George, and had issue, 

Hugh; 
Henry Lucas St George; 
Elizabeth; Mary; another daughter. 

Sir Hugh was succeeded by his eldest son, 

 
SIR JOHN MARCUS STEWART, 3rd Baronet (1830-1905), DL, High Sheriff of County Tyrone, 1858, who married, in 1856, Annie Coote, daughter of George Powell Houghton, and had issue, 

Albert Fortescue, d 1925; 
HUGH HOUGHTON, his successor
GEORGE POWELL, successor to his brother
John Marcus; 
Charles Gage; 
Cosmo Gordon; 
Julian Leslie (Rev); 
Annie Coote Houghton; Mary; Madeleine Delamont; two other offspring. 

Sir John was succeeded by his eldest surviving son, 

 
SIR HUGH HOUGHTON STEWART, 4th Baronet (1858-1942), JP DL, Brigadier-General in the army, High Sheriff of County Tyrone, 1903, who married twice, though the marriages were without issue. 

 
Sir Hugh was succeeded by his brother, 

 
SIR GEORGE POWELL STEWART, 5th Baronet (1861-1945), Lieutenant-Colonel, Royal Inniskilling Fusiliers, who wedded, in 1895, Florence Maria Georgina, daughter of Colonel Sir James Godfray, and had issue, 

John Houghton (1895-1915) killed in action
HUGH CHARLIE GODFRAY, his successor
Mary. 

Sir George was succeeded by his surviving son, 

 
SIR HUGH CHARLIE GODFRAY STEWART, 6th Baronet (1897-1994), DL, of Loughmacrory Lodge, High Sheriff of County Tyrone, 1955, who espoused firstly, in 1929, Rosemary Elinor Dorothy, daughter of George Peacocke, and had issue, 

DAVID JOHN CHRISTOPHER, his successor
Elinor Godfray. 

He married secondly, in 1948, Diana Margaret, daughter of James Edmund Hibbert, and had further issue, 

Jane Diana;Hugh Nicholas (Nick). 

Sir Hugh was succeeded by his eldest son, 

 
SIR DAVID JOHN CHRISTOPHER STEWART (1935-), 7th and present Baronet, who lives in Somerset. 
 
Nick Stewart, half-brother of the present baronet, has kindly sent me two old photographs of Ballygawley House taken by his father in the winter of 1914. 

At that time the demesne was known as Greenhill. 

BALLYGAWLEY HOUSE, near Ballygawley, County Tyrone, was set in its own parkland, was a Classical mansion of two storeys, with a two-storey portico supported by two giant Doric columns and a shallow dome. 

It was built for the 2nd Baronet between 1825 and 1833, to the design of John Hargrave. 

Seemingly, the mansion suffered an accidental fire during the 1920s and the Stewart family never returned to it.