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. 88. “(Nugent, Westmeath, E/PB; Greville, B/PB)A square symmetrical two storey C19 castle of cut limestone, with four tall corner towers. Large two storey hall with gallery and massive arcading. The seat of the Nugents, Earls of Westmeath, whose original castle here was burnt as Cromwell’s army approached. On the death of the 8th Earl and 1st and last Marquess of Westmeath 1871, Clonyn passed to his only surviving child, Rosa, wife of 1st Lord Greville. A late C17 house, reconstituted in C18 Gothic style, also still remains not far away in the park.”
Possibly George Frederick Nugent, Lord Delvin, later 7th Earl of Westmeath, by François-Xavier Vispré https://www.christies.com.cn/lot/attributed-to-francois-xavier-vispre-french-c1730-1794-5341641/?intObjectID=5341641&lid=1Mary Ann Cavendish Bradshaw also known as the Countess of Westmeath. Portrait painted by Sir Thomas Lawrence in 1806. She was born Marianne Jeffreys, and married George Frederick Nugent, the 7th Earl of Westmeath and she became the Countess of Westmeath. In 1796 in a sensational court case she divorced Nugent and soon after married Augustus Cavendish Bradshaw.
Casey, Christine and Alistair Rowan. The Buildings of Ireland: North Leinster. Penguin Books, London, 1993.
Clonyn Castle was built in 1876 by the Nugent family – one of the oldest Norman families in Ireland. Sir Gilbert de Nugent, originally from the Nogent-le-Rotrou area in France, came to Ireland with his brother-in-law Hugh de Lacy in 1171. He was granted the title Baron of Delvin within the Lordship of Meath. Gilbert soon built a large Norman castle whose ruins can be found on the main street in Delvin village. The family remained in the area and later in 1639 Richard Nugent decided to ‘upgrade’ and built a new castle on the hill over looking the village at this location. This again was replaced by the present Clonyn Castle which was built in 1876 and is regarded as one of the last great Victorian Baronial houses to be built in Ireland. It was built to designs of the architect John McCurdy (1823-85), who was also responsible for the Shelbourne Hotel in Dublin and Royal Marine Hotel in Dun Laoghaire. It remained a Nugent residence until 1922, when Patrick Nugent sold it and moved to Scotland. It was soon afterwards home to a community of Australian nuns and in the post-World War II period served briefly as a home for Jewish children, most of them orphans of the Holocaust. Manchester businessman and philanthropist Yankel Levy was persuaded to buy the castle and associated land for £30,000 and some 100 children aged between 5 and 17 were temporarily housed here which consequently bankrupted him. It is currently a golf course and is privately owned by a Mrs Dillon.
Delvin Castle is located right in the middle of Delvin village in County Westmeath. This was once a sturdy Norman castle with a square block in the middle and 4 corner cylindrical towers. It was built in 1310 by a member of the Nugent family, decendants of Gilbert de Lacy and brother in law of Hugh de Lacy, Lord of Meath. The DeNugent family who had originally been from Nogent in France supported William the Conqueror in 1066 when he invaded England and were seen thereafter as ‘loyal King’s men’. Their later generations were granted titles and land in this area and were encouraged to build fortifications and expand their foothold in the new Irish colony. On the southern end of the town are remains of an earlier Norman motte built in 1181 by Hugh de Lacy which again was built on top of an Irish fortress. This location was always strategic and it controlled the ancient trading routes between the east and west of Ireland. Delvin Castle is now a national monument and under the care of the OPW. It was originally a square building with four round corner towers and a gabled roof. Only the western half remains.
Christopher Nugent (1642-1680) Lord Delvin portrait (c1660-5) by Gaspar Smitz at National Gallery of Ireland. Dublin, Ireland. Smitz was a Dutch artist who is said to have come to England shortly after the Restoration and who became a member of the Guild of St. Luke in Dublin. This Guild was also known as the Guild of Dublin Cutlers, Painter-Steyners and Stationers, and was founded in 1670.He was 8th Baron Delvin.Catherine Nugent (d.1756) by James Latham c. 1725 courtesy of National Gallery of Ireland NGI.4156. She was the daughter of Thomas Nugent 4th Earl of Westmeath, and she married Andrew Nugent (1685-1735).
Delvin Castle is said to have been built about 1180 by Hugh de Lacy for his brother-in-law, Gilbert de Nugent. However the building was probably notbegun until the 13th century.
THE EARLS OF WESTMEATH WERE MAJOR LANDOWNERS IN COUNTY WESTMEATH, WITH 9,783 ACRES
The noble family of NUGENT was settled in Ireland since the subjugation of that country by HENRY II.
Its founder,
SIR GILBERT DE NUGENT, one of the knights who accompanied Hugh de Lacy in the expedition to Ireland, having married Rosa, the sister of the said Hugh, obtained thereby the barony of Delvin; but, his sons predeceasing him, he was succeeded at his decease by his brother,
RICHARD NUGENT, whose only daughter and heiress carried the barony of Delvin into the family of Johns, or Jones, into which she married, and it so remained until brought back by the intermarriage of
SIR WILLIAM FITZRICHARD NUGENT, 1ST BARON DELVIN, of Balrath (descended from Christopher Nugent, third brother of Sir Gilbert), with Catherine, daughter and heiress of John FitzJones, Baron Delvin.
Sir William was elected Sheriff of Meath, 1401, in which office he was confirmed by the King for one year, and again in 1402.
He was succeeded at his decease, ca 1414, by his eldest son,
RICHARD, 2nd Baron; who, in consequence of his services and expenses in the King’s wars, to the impoverishment of his fortune, had an order, dated at Trim, 1428, to receive twenty marks out of the exchequer.
He wedded Catherine, daughter of Thomas Drake, sister and heiress of Nicholas Drake, of Drakerath, County Meath.
His lordship died in 1475, and was succeeded by his eldest son,
CHRISTOPHER, 3rd Baron, who died ca 1483, and was succeeded by his son and heir,
RICHARD, 4th Baron, who had summonses to Parliament in 1486, 1490, and 1493, and was constituted by the Lords Justices and Council, in 1496, commander and leader-in-chief of all the forces destined for the defence of counties Dublin, Meath, Kildare, and Louth.
His lordship was subsequently summoned to parliament in 1498, but failing to appear, he was fined forty shillings for non-attendance.
In 1504, Lord Delvin accompanied the Earl of Kildare to the famous battle of Knockdoe, in Connaught, and was the first to throw a spear into the ranks of the Irish, by which he chanced to kill one of the Burkes.
In 1527, he was nominated Lord Deputy of Ireland, and conducted the public affairs with integrity and honour, until treacherously taken prisoner by O’Connor Faly.
That native chieftain having made inroads upon the confines of the Pale, in 1528, Lord Delvin ordered the detention of a yearly rent due to him out of certain carucates of lands in County Meath; which procedure led to a conference at Rathyn Castle, belonging to Sir William Darcy, when by stratagem the Lord Deputy was seized and detained prisoner, many of his attendants being slain, wounded, and taken.
Walter Wellesley, of Dangan Castle, and Sir Walter Delahyde, of Moyclare, were subsequently deputed to expostulate with O’Connor Faly, and to procure his lordship’s liberation, but ineffectually, when another Lord Deputy was appointed to administer the government, and Lord Delvin remained in confinement until O’Connor’s pension was restored.
His lordship wedded Elizabeth, daughter of Lord Howth, and had two sons,
CHRISTOPHER; THOMAS, of Carlanstown, ancestor of the EARLS NUGENT.
His lordship died in 1538, and was succeeded by his son,
RICHARD, 5th Baron (1523-59), father of
CHRISTOPHER, 6th Baron (1544-1602), was sent prisoner to London, 1580, and committed to the Tower, on suspicion of holding correspondence with the rebels of Leinster; but his innocence being soon afterwards fully established, he returned to Ireland, and was present in Sir John Perrot’s parliament, in 1585.
In 1588, he obtained a grant of Fore Abbey, County Westmeath; and being, in 1593, appointed by commission leader of the forces raised in County Westmeath at the general hosting on the Hill of Tara, he brought, with the Nugents, his kinsmen, twenty horsemen there; and so acceptable were his services to ELIZABETH I that, by privy seal, 1597, Her Majesty ordered him a grant in fee farm of so many manors and forfeited lands in counties Cavan and Longford at his election as should amount to the crown rent of £100 per annum.
But this grant not having been executed during his life, on account of the troubles in Ireland, JAMES I, in 1603, ordered £60 in lands, per annum, to be granted to his widow and son.
His lordship espoused Mary, daughter of Gerald, 11th Earl of Kildare, and was succeeded by his eldest son,
RICHARD, 7th Baron (1583-1642), who was arrested in 1607, and committed by the Lord Deputy of Ireland, Sir Arthur Chichester, to Dublin Castle, upon a charge of high treason, being concerned in a conspiracy with the Earls of Tyrone and Tyrconnell, and others, to surprise Dublin Castle, cut off the Lord Deputy and Council, dissolve the state, and set up a government of their own.
His lordship effected, however, his escape, by the assistance of his servant, and was subsequently proclaimed a traitor.
Surrendering in the following year, he obtained a pardon under the Great Seal (1608), and so entirely re-established himself in a few years in royal favour; that he was created, in 1621, EARL OF WESTMEATH.
He wedded Jenet, daughter of Christopher, 9th Baron Killeen; and dying in 1642, was succeeded by his grandson,
RICHARD, 2nd Earl (1621-84), only son of Christopher, Lord Delvin, who pre-deceased his father, by Anne, eldest daughter of Randal, 1st Earl of Antrim.
His lordship espoused Mary, daughter of Sir Thomas Nugent Bt, of Moyrath, and had, with junior issue,
CHRISTOPHER, father of RICHARD, 3rd Earl; Thomas, 1st Baron Nugent of Riverston; Anne; Mary.
His lordship was succeeded by his grandson,
RICHARD, 3rd Earl, who, adopting a religious life, became a friar of the Order of Capuchins; and dying in 1714, at Wassey, in a convent of his order, the honours devolved upon his brother,
THOMAS, 4th Earl (1669-1752); who had a colonel’s command in the army of JAMES II, and was outlawed in consequence in 1691; but being one of the hostages exchanged for the observance of the articles of Limerick, the outlawry was reversed, and he was restored to his estates and honours.
His lordship wedded Margaret, only daughter of John, 1st Baron Bellew of Duleek, by whom he had issue,
Christopher, Lord Delvin, dsp; John, dsp; Katherine; Mary.
His lordship died at the advanced age of 96, and was succeeded by his brother,
JOHN, 5th Earl (1671-1754), a major-general in the army, who married Marguerite Jeanne, daughter of Count Charles Molza, of Modena, Italy, and had issue,
THOMAS, his successor; James; John; Richard; Edward; Marie Charlotte; Francois Christine.
His lordship was succeeded by his eldest son,
THOMAS, 6th Earl (1714-92), who conformed to the established church, and wedded firstly, in 1742, Mary, only daughter and heiress of Walter Durand Stapleton, by whom he had an only son, Richard, Lord Delvin, who fell in a duel in 1761.
He espoused secondly, in 1756, Catherine, daughter and co-heiress of Henry White, of Pichfordstown, County Kildare, and had further issue,
Thomas, Lord Delvin, died young; GEORGE FREDERICK, his successor; Henry; Catharine.
His lordship, a founder Knight of the Order of St Patrick, 1783, was succeeded by his eldest surviving son,
GEORGE FREDERICK, 7th Earl (1760-1814), who wedded firstly, in 1784, Maryanne, eldest daughter of Major James St John Jeffries, of Blarney Castle, County Cork, and niece of John, 1st Earl of Clare, LORD HIGH CHANCELLOR OF IRELAND, and had issue, and had issue,
GEORGE THOMAS JOHN, his successor.
His lordship espoused secondly, in 1797, the Lady Elizabeth Emily Moore, daughter of Charles, 1st Marquess of Drogheda, and had further issue,
Robert Seymour; Thomas Hugh; Elizabeth Emily; Catherine Anne; Mary Frances.
His lordship was succeeded by his eldest son,
GEORGE THOMAS JOHN, 8th Earl (1785-1871), who wedded, in 1812, the Lady Emily Anne Bennet Elizabeth Cecil, second daughter of James, 1st Marquess of Salisbury, and had issue,
William Henry Wellington Brydges (1818-19); Rosa Emily Mary Anne.
His lordship, Lord-Lieutenant of County Westmeath, Colonel of the Westmeath Militia, was advanced to the dignity of a marquessate, in 1822, as MARQUESS OF WESTMEATH.
He died without surviving male issue, when the marquessate expired.
The heir apparent is the present holder’s son, Sean Charles Weston Nugent, styled Lord Delvin
CLONYN CASTLE, also known as Delvin Castle, is situated in Delvin, County Westmeath.
The first castle (now in ruins) is believed to have been built in 1181 by Hugh de Lacy the Norman, Lord of Meath for his brother-in-law, Sir Gilbert de Nugent.
Sir Gilbert, originally from the Nogent-le-Rotrou area in France, came to Ireland with Hugh de Lacy in 1171 and settled on some land in Delvin and was granted the title Baron of Delvin.
The ruins of Nugent Castle, burnt when Cromwell’s army approached, remain near the centre of the city.
Clonyn Castle is a square, symmetrical, two-storey, 19th century castle of cut limestone.
It has four tall, round corner towers.
The interior has a large two-storey hall with gallery and enormous arcading.
In 1639 Richard Nugent, 1st Earl of Westmeath, build another more recent castle, situated on the dominating ground, and now overlooking Delvin urbanised area today, may be referred to as either Delvin or Clonyn Castle.
Following the death of the 8th Earl and 1st and last Marquess of Westmeath in 1871, Clonyn passed to his only surviving child Lady Rosa, wife of the 1st Lord Greville.
After the 2nd World War, the castle served briefly as a home for 97 Jewish children, most of them orphans of the Holocaust.
A public golf course lies behind the more recent castle, 500 yards from Delvin centre.
Corballymore (formerly Summerville), Dunmore East, 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. 92. “(Fortescue, E/PB; Gallwey/IFR) A Victorian Baronial house overlooking the Back Strand of Tramore BAy, built by Hon Dudley Fortescue. Of dark random ashlar with bands of lighter-coloured stone; gables, dormer-gables, high-pitched and half-conical roofs. Bought early in the present century by Mr and Mrs H.J. Gallwey; restored after fire 1935. Now an hotel.”
Corbally More (House) (Summerville House), SUMMERVILLE, County Waterford
Detached eleven-bay two-storey Scottish Baronial-style house with dormer attic, built 1878, on a complex plan comprising five-bay single-storey main block with half-dormer attic having single-bay single-storey flat-roofed projecting porch to ground floor, single-bay two-storey bowed projecting bay to right (north-east), single-bay single-storey gabled end bay to left (south-west) having single-bay single-storey shallow box bay window to ground floor, three-bay single-storey recessed wing with half-dormer attic to right (north-east) having single-bay single-storey gabled advanced end bay to right (north-east), two-bay two-storey recessed service block with dormer attic to right (north-east), and single-bay two-storey recessed end bay to right (north-east). Burnt, 1935. Extensively reconstructed, post-1935. Pitched roofs (half-conical to bowed projecting bay; gabled to end bays; hipped to half-dormer attic windows; gabled to dormer attic windows to service block) with replacement slate, post-1935, red clay ridge tiles, rubble sandstone chimney stacks having cut-stone dressings, cut-stone coping to gables, and cast-iron rainwater goods on moulded cut-stone eaves (sproketed eaves to bowed projecting bay). Flat roof to porch not visible behind parapet. Broken coursed squared red sandstone walls with cut-stone dressings including courses to main block, coping to parapet to porch, and detailing to gables. Painted rendered walls to end bay to right (north-east). Square-headed window openings (in tripartite arrangement to shallow box bay window and to end bay to recessed wing) with cut-stone flush sills, lintels having chamfered reveals, and squared red sandstone voussoirs forming pointed segmental relieving arches. Replacement 1/1 timber sash windows, post-1935, to main block with replacement timber casement windows, post-1935, to recessed wing and to service block (having overlights to tripartite openings). Square-headed window opening to first floor bowed projecting bay with cut-stone sills, mullions, and lintel, and fixed-pane timber windows having stained glass panels, dated 1878. Square-headed window openings to end bay to right (north-east) with stone sills, and 6/6 timber sash windows. Square-headed door opening with cut-stone block-and-start surround having moulded reveals, timber panelled door, and overlight. Interior with timber panelled shutters to window openings. Set back from road in own grounds with forecourt, and landscape grounds to site.
Appraisal
A very fine, substantial house in a Scottish Baronial style, built for Dudley Fortescue (n. d.) to designs prepared by James Ottway (fl. 1877) and Robert Watt (fl. 1877). Distinctive features, including a bowed projecting bay having a spire-like roof, a variety of arrangements to the window openings, and the many gables, all serve to enhance the architectural value of the composition, while the construction in red sandstone with cut-stone dressings produces an attractive textured and polychromatic visual effect. Destroyed by fire, the house was comprehensively restored, and retains most of the fabric dating to that period of reconstruction. Stained glass panels introduce a feature of artistic interest to the composition. Positioned overlooking Back Strand and Tramore Bay, the house forms a picturesque feature in the landscape, and is of additional importance in the locality for its historic associations with the Fortescue and Gallwey families.
Summerville Estate, at Corballymore, Dunmore East, which includes a former stately home, held a guide price of €1.2m.
It was purchased as one lot for an undisclosed sum by “a local family”, according to the selling agents, John Rohan Shelley Fitzgerald.
The agents say the holding had been offered alternatively as six lots, with the Scottish-Colonial style Summerville House, its two-storey gate lodge and out-buildings, with 23 acres, reserved at €175,000. The sale attracted “very strong and varied interest, locally, nationally and internationally”.
Ten minutes from Waterford Airport, the site constitutes a vacant possession of tillage, woodland, and a private beach.
The boarded-up house requires major renovation but the buyer intends restoring it as a family home.
The estate was once the seat of the English Catholic Wyse family, whose Waterford connections date to Norman times and whose lands were seized under Cromwell but returned under the Restoration.
Sir Thomas Wyse, keenly pro-union with Britain but a strong advocate of Catholic Emancipation, engineered the defeat of Lord Beresford in the 1826 election, which inspired Daniel O’Connell to contest the 1828 Clare by-election.
Thomas was himself elected to Westminster where he served between 1835 and 1847. He married Napoleon Bonaparte’s niece, Letitia, in 1821, but the marriage fragmented under Letitia’s infidelity. They had two sons, while Letitia subsequently had three more children. She died in Italy in 1871.
Sir Thomas had engaged Charles Barry and Augustus Welby Pugin — who co-designed London’s Houses of Parliament — to construct Summerville House on the site of the original but demolished Manor of St John’s.
On losing his seat in parliament, he left to serve as ambassador to Greece, where he died in 1862.
In later times the house served as a hotel, but plans to develop it as a major leisure and holiday facility never took off.
The mansion, located at Corballymore close to both Waterford city and Tramore, was designed by Charles Barry, the architect who rebuilt the House of Commons in the 19th century. In need of complete restoration, it stands on the Summerville Estate which was the seat of the Wyse family for centuries
A substantial farm in Co Waterford and former home of one of the most historic and interesting families in the country is on the market by private treaty.
The 163ac holding is centred around a neglected manor house originally built to a design by Charles Barry, the architect responsible for the 19th century restoration of the British Houses of Parliament.
Summerville Estate at Corballymore between Dunmore East and Tramore sits on 163ac of coastal land and can be bought by private treaty in its entirety or in lots. The entire comes with a guide price of €1.25m while the house on 23ac has a guide price of €175,000.
Corballymore is situated 5km from Waterford Airport, 7km from Dunmore East 7km and 11km from Tramore with Waterford City just 14km away.
The property was the seat of the Wyse family, a dynasty associated with Waterford since Norman times.
The family has an amazing history and as one of the last remaining “Old English Catholic” families its fortunes very much mirrored the twists and turns of Irish history down the centuries.
The Wyse lands were confiscated under Cromwell, returned under the Restoration; the family suffered under the Penal Laws and one of the most illustrious family members, Thomas Wyse, became active in support of Catholic emancipation.
He engineered the defeat of the local grandee, Lord Beresford in the 1826 election campaign, a win that encouraged Daniel O’Connell to seek the Clare seat in the by-election of 1828.
After emancipation, Thomas himself was elected to represent Waterford City in Westminster from 1835 to 1847. He refused to support the movement to repeal the Act of Union, remaining a loyal supporter of the connection with Britain.
He was more successful in politics than in marriage. On the face of it, he married well when Laetitia Bonaparte, the niece of the great Napoleon became his wife in 1821. However, it was a marriage that went aground in 1828 on the rocky shores of infidelity as Laetitia was a true Bonaparte when it came to matters of the flesh.
In later life, Thomas left politics for the world of diplomacy serving as British Ambassador to Greece.
The estate fell into decline and was being sold under the Encumbered Estates Act in the 1860s when the estranged and disinherited son of Thomas and Laetitia, Napoleon Alfred Wyse, (known as Nappo) bought the property and came to live there.
He undertook a lavish restoration of Corballymore but eventually sold up and returned to Paris.
His brother William Charles, not wanting to let the estate to go out of the family, bought it but he was the wrong man for the political times that were in it.
An avowed unionist he swam against the tide of rising nationalism, falling foul of the Catholic Church and the Land League.
‘Nappo’
The unfortunate man followed in his brother Nappo’s footsteps and departed for France and died in Cannes.
The house ‘St John’s Manor’ at Corballymore is currently boarded up and in bad shape. It was built c1870 in a Scottish-Baronial style and comes with a two-storey gate lodge and courtyard, also in poor condition.
Situated in a beautiful setting with mature woodland trees it has direct access to the beach and is surrounded by good arable land. Roseanne De Vere Hunt of selling agents Sherry FitzGerald Country Homes, which is handling the property along with local agents Sherry FitzGerald Rohan, said the place “is oozing with potential and would again make an excellent residential estate.”
However, the house and its surrounding buildings will take considerable investment.
The coastal land extending to 163ac is nearly all in tillage and is in good heart having been well looked over the years. All leases on the land expire in August so any new buyer or buyers will have vacant possession.
The ground is in one block and is available in a series of natural lots that have excellent access and road frontage with some having extensive sea frontage.
The lots include four individual parcels of land varying in size from c33ac to c62ac with the house and out houses available separately and an 8ac parcel with putative site potential is also available separately.
The house, gate lodge and outbuildings on 23ac is guided at €175,000, an amazing price until one looks at the restoration job.
The 8ac parcel is guided at €75,000 or €9,000/ac, the 62ac is guided at €450,000 or €7,250/ac, a 38ac piece is guided at €295,000 or €7,700/ac while a 33ac piece is guided at €275,000 or €8,300/ac. The entire is guided at €1.25m.
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. 44. “(Montgomery/IFR) There was originally no house at Blessingbourne, an estate which came to the Montgomerys through marriage early in C18; the family seat being Derrygonnelly Castle in County Fermanagh, which was burnt later in C18 and not rebuilt. the family lived for some years at Castle Hume, which they rented; then, at the beginning of C19, a romantic thatched cottage was built by the side of the lough at Blessingbourne by Hugh Montgomery (known as Colonel Eclipse) as a bachelor retreat for himself after he had been crossed in love. His bachelorhood ended in 1821, when he married a Spanish girl; but during the next 50 years the family lived mainly abroad, so that his cottage was all they needed for their occasional visits to County Tyrone. The present Victorian Elizabethan house was built by his grandson, Hugh de Fellenberg Montgomery, between 1870 and 1874, to the design of F. Pepys Cockerell. Pepys Cockerell, son of the better-known C.R. Cockerell, as an artist as much as an architect; his patron and his patron’s wife were also people of tate; so that Blessingbourne is an unusually attractive and successful example of it style and period. The grey stone elevations are not overloaded with ornament; such as there is had restraint: caps on the chimneys, small finials on the gables, curved and scrolled pediments over some of the mullioned windows. The interior of the house is comfortable, with great character. The hall has a staircase incorporated in a screen of tapering wooden piers. Through glazed arches one looks across an inner hall to the lough and mountains. The principal rooms have chimneypieces of carved sone in a Tudor design, flanked by niches for logs: some of them being decorated with William de Morgan tiles. The dining room still keeps its original William Morris wallpaper of blue and green grapes and foliage; while there is another original Morris paper in the library. The late owner, Capt P. S. Montgomery, former President of th Northern Ireland Arts Council, stylishly redecorated much of the interior, which houses his collection of modern Irish art. Blessingbourne has passed to his nephew, Captain R.H.Lowry.”
Hugh Montgomery (1779-1838) of Blessingbourne, County Tyrone, by Martin Archer Shee, courtesy of Eton College.
THE MONTGOMERYS OWNED 7,996 ACRES OF LAND IN COUNTIES FERMANAGH AND TYRONE
HUGH MONTGOMERY was settled at Derrybrusk, County Fermanagh, by his kinsman, the Rt Rev Dr George Montgomery, Lord Bishop of Clogher, about 1618, and was father of
THE REV NICHOLAS MONTGOMERY (c1615-c1705), of Derrybrusk, Laureate of Glasgow University, 1634, Lieutenant in Sir James Montgomery’s Regiment, and afterwards Rector of Carrickmacross, County Monaghan.
He left issue, with two younger sons (Robert, of Derrybrusk, Captain in the army, and Andrew, who succeeded his father as Rector of Carrickmacross), and a daughter, Catherine, who married Captain Alexander Acheson, an elder son,
HUGH MONTGOMERY JP (1651-1723), of Derrygonnelly, Captain of Horse under WILLIAM III, who married Katherine, daughter and heir of Richard Dunbar, of Derrygonnelly (by his wife, Anna Catherina, daughter of Lars Grubbe Stjernfelt, a cousin of King Gustavus Adolphus, of Sweden, and widow of Ludovic Hamilton, Baron of Dalserf, in Sweden), and great-granddaughter of Sir John Dunbar, Knight, of the same place, and had issue,
NICHOLAS; HUGH, of whom we treat; Richard, of Monea, Co Fermanagh; Sarah; Anne; Jane; Margaret; Sidney.
Mr Montgomery’s eldest son,
COLONEL NICHOLAS MONTGOMERY (1690-1763), of Derrygonnelly, married firstly, Angel, daughter and heir of William Archdall, of Castle Archdale, County Fermanagh, and assumed the surname of ARCHDALL.
By his first wife he had issue, an only son, Mervyn, MP, of Castle Archdale.
Colonel Montgomery wedded secondly, Sarah, daughter of ______ Spurling, of London, and had further issue,
HUGH MONTGOMERY, of Derrygonnelly, wedded Elizabeth, daughter of the Ven William Armar, Archdeacon of Connor (by Martha his wife, daughter of Captain William Leslie, of Prospect), and sister of Colonel Margetson Armar (1700-73), of Castle Coole, County Fermanagh, and was father of Hugh Montgomery, of Castle Hume.
Mr Montgomery died before 1760, leaving a son,
HUGH MONTGOMERY (1739-97), of Castle Hume, who espoused, in 1778, Mary, daughter of Sir Archibald Acheson (afterwards 1st Viscount Gosford), and had issue,
HUGH, his heir; Archibald Armar; Mary Millicent.
Mr Montgomery was succeeded by his eldest son,
HUGH MONTGOMERY (1779-1838), of Blessingbourne, Captain, 18th Dragoons, Lieutenant-Colonel, Fermanagh Militia, who married, in 1821, Maria Dolores Plink, of Malaga, Spain, and had an only son,
HUGH RALPH SEVERIN MONTGOMERY (1821-44), of Blessingbourne, who wedded, in 1843, Maria, daughter of Philipp Emanuel von Fellenberg, of Hofwyl, Switzerland, sometime Landmann of the Republic of Bern, and had issue, a son and heir,
THE RT HON HUGH DE FELLENBERG MONTGOMERY JP DL(1844-1924), of Blessingbourne, High Sheriff of County Fermanagh, 1871, Tyrone, 1888, Captain, Fermanagh Militia, who espoused, in 1870, Mary Sophia Juliana, youngest daughter of the Hon and Rev John Charles Maude, Rector of Enniskillen, and had issue,
MAJOR-GENERAL HUGH MAUDE DE FELLENBERG MONTGOMERY CB CMG (1870-1954), of Blessingbourne, who married, in 1894, Mary, second daughter of Edmund Langton, and Mrs Massingberd, of Gunby, Lincolnshire, and had issue,
Hugh Edmund Langton (1895-1971); PETER STEPHEN, of whom hereafter; Mary Langton; Elizabeth; Anne.
The younger son,
PETER STEPHEN MONTGOMERY JP DL (1909-88), of Blessingbourne, Vice Lord-Lieutenant of County Tyrone, died unmarried.
BLESSINGBOURNE HOUSE, near Fivemiletown, County Tyrone, is an Elizabethan-Revival style manor housebuilt between 1870-74.
It comprises two storeys and an attic storey.
The windows are multi-gabled and mullioned, with carved, round chimney stacks.
Located just north of Fivemiletown in County Tyrone, much of the estate was in the neighbouring county of Fermanagh.
Blessingbourne passed to the Montgomery family through marriage to the Armor family early in the 18th century.
This is a Regency period demesne, created for a modest dwelling of 1810, referred to as, ‘a romantic thatched cottage’ built as a bachelor pad for Hugh Montgomery.
When the family left County Fermanagh their former seat was Derrygonnelly Castle, which was burnt in the late 18thcentury.
Hugh Montgomery, known as ‘Colonel Eclipse’, married in 1821 and travelled abroad, needing the cottage only for very occasional visits.
The present house is considerably more substantial.
It is a large restrained Elizabethan style manor-house designed by F Pepys Cockerell and built between 1870-74 for Hugh de Fellenberg Montgomery, grandson of Hugh.
Its grey stone elevations overlook a natural lough, Lough Faddaand is surrounded by a present-day garden around former sunken lawns, Fastigate yews and a gravel terrace, vestiges of the garden made for the present house.
A planted area and lawns on the south east side, which leads to the lough, is now a grazing field.
Views were opened up in the 1960s.
There is also a late 19th century rhododendron walk.
There are fine mature woodland and parkland trees.
A walk through the woods goes round the lake; a lake walk, via a rockery.
There is public access in the woods and the Ulster Wildlife Trust undertakes some management here.
This wood dates from the time of the present house.
The boat house and summer house have gone.
The part-walled garden is partly cultivated and dates from the time of the first dwelling.
The Gardener’s House was replaced by a bungalow in the 1970s.
There is a delightful little Tudor-style gate lodge, built ca 1845 by Hugh Ralph Severin Montgomery after he succeeded to the property in 1838.
Major-General Hugh Montgomery’s brother was Field-Marshal Sir Archibald Montgomery-Massingberd.
Peter Montgomery, former president of the Arts Council of Northern Ireland, stylishly redecorated much of the interior at Blessingbourne.
In December, 2007, the Daily Telegraph published an obituary of Hugh (Montgomery) Massingberd:
“. . . He was born Hugh John Montgomery at Cookham Dean, in Berkshire, on December 30, 1946. His father was in the Colonial Service and later worked for the BBC; his mother was a “Leftward-leaning schoolmistress”.
His remoter background, however, was distinctly grand, even if it promised a great deal more than it delivered.The Montgomerys, seated at Blessingbourne in Co Tyrone, were a Protestant Ascendancy family, albeit exceptionally conscious of the need to right the wrongs suffered by Roman Catholics.
In his youth Hugh stayed at the Montgomerys’ pseudo-Elizabethan (actually 1870) pile in the full expectation that one day it would be his. There was a strong military tradition in the family. Hugh’s paternal grandfather was Major-General Hugh Montgomery, while his great-uncle, the major-general’s younger brother, ended his career as Field Marshal Sir Archibald Montgomery-Massingberd, Chief of the Imperial General Staff from 1933 to 1936
. . As a teenager, Hugh seemed to add substance to his dreams when he went to stay with his Uncle Peter at Blessingbourne. Peter Montgomery was something of a figure in Ulster, to such a degree that his homosexuality, at that date unknown to Hugh, did not prevent him from becoming Vice-Lord Lieutenant of Tyrone
… It was, therefore, a shattering blow to be told in his mid-teens that a cousin who intended to be a farmer would inherit Blessingbourne. This youth, it was judged, would be better qualified than Hugh to return the estate to order after years of benign neglect under Peter Montgomery”.
The estate was eventually inherited by Captain Robert Lowry, a great-great grandson of Colonel Hugh Montgomery.
I recall Captain Lowry voluntarily “skippering” the Duke of Westminster’s motor yacht, Trasna, on loan to the National Trust ca 1988 at Crom estate:
The Grosvenors, Dukes of Westminster, had a beautiful, classic, wooden motor yacht which they used to keep at Ely Lodge. It was called Trasna; it was the finest vessel I’d ever seen on Lough Erne. It was about fifty feet in length and held sixteen persons in comfort. Trasnasported a magnificent kind of figurehead on her bow: a golden sheaf, or bundle, of wheat (or corn). The vessel was acquired by the National Trust for a short period before acquisition by the Duke of Abercorn for Belle Isle.
Colleen and Nicholas Lowry today operate self-catering apartments on the estate.
BLESSINGBOURNE (ANNAGH), County Tyrone (AP MID ULSTER 10) T/007 REGISTERED GRADE A Regency park in the Picturesque-tradition (219 acres/88.8ha) created around 1800-3 for a gentlemen’s seat in the thatched cottage orné style, later built around 1810, on the north-east side of Fivemiletown and 5.85 miles (9.4km) south-west of Clogher. Also known as ‘Annagh Demesne’, the Regency cottage was subsequently replaced in 1874 on a de novo location by the present large Elizabethian-style mansion (Listed HB 13/01/003A). The original house, referred to as, ‘a romantic thatched cottage’ was in a central location in the park looking south over a natural lake, Lough Fadda (18.8 acres/7.6ha). Both it and the park created as an occasional residence for Col. Hugh Montgomery (1779-1838), known as ‘Colonel Eclipse’ – a widely travelled man, who lived a carefree bachelor until 1821. He inherited the property from his father in 1797, Hugh Montgomery (1739-97) of Castle Hume, whose uncle, Col. Margetson Armar (d.1773), had purchased the Fivemiletown estate in 1731. Col. Armar left the property to his nephew, who went on to develop Fivemiletown itself, but never actually lived there. The cottage, of 1810, described
Register of Parks, Gardens and Demesnes of Special Historic Interest (NI) – November 2020 in the 1830s OS Memoirs as ‘a very neat building built in the cottage style’, had an L-plan, with the main house being 1½-storey rectangular three-bay building with bowed ends, steep thatched roof, large reception rooms with large windows that extended close to the ground. A projecting bay with three windows served as the entrance in the centre and the attic floor was lit, not by dormers but by windows in the bowed gable ends. As was often typical of Regency gentleman’s ‘cottages’ (for example at Castlewellan), there rere service wing was a full two storey range; this was linked to the slated stables and offices to the rere, part of which survives within the present stable yard (Listed HB 13/01/003B). The present large rectilinear partly walled garden (1.76 acres/0.71ha), which lies around 120m north-east of the cottage, appears to have been built at the same time as the cottage. The ground slopes steeply up to the north-west and it is walled on the north. It is sheltered and gets the sun all day. Maps do not show any buildings associated with the garden until the 1870s when lean-to glasshouses are built onto the south-west facing wall with ranges of potting sheds to the rere. The head gardener’s house was close to these glasshouses, replaced in 1970s by a modern bungalow. During World War 2 the walled garden was intensively farmed; prior to this it had a notable extensive flower garden with bedding at the south-west on either side of the path and rose pergolas apart from a large fruit and vegetable garden. The gardens are mentioned in Robinson’s Garden Annual & Almanac of 1908, p 236. Today the garden is largely under grass; one glasshouses survives with the bases of other visible, while in this immediate area are beds with some flowers and fruit. The garden is still approached from the house by a rhododendron walk. A feature of the Regency park was a belt of trees screening and protecting the southern flank of the garden; this important belt survives, though broken in more recent years by a poorly sited tennis court. This screen still extends down to the lake, where it formerly met with the eastern demesne perimeter screen, now submerged into forestry plantations. The most substantial woodlands in the original park,. which largely survives, was border the west and north-west side of the lake and extending as perimeter planting alongside the Aghingow-road northwards. This enclosed the ‘lawn’ between the cottage and the lake, planted, as was the Regency fashion, with isolated parkland trees. The planting of the park, which was begun in 1800-02 some time before the cottage, from the outset extended beyond the Aghinglow-road to the Murley-road; it was almost certainly the intention at the time to close the Aghinglow-road, but this never happened. After Col. Hugh Montgomery’s death in 1838, the property passed to his son Hugh Ralph Severin Montgomery (1821-44), following whose untimely demise it was left to his infant son Hugh De Fellenberg Montgomery (1844-1924). In his short tenure Hugh Ralph Severin, did have time to built a pretty Tudor style gate lodge (Listed HB 13/01/006) at the main entrance along Aghinglow-road (recently renovated). He came of age in 1865 and married in 1870 (Mary S.J. Maude) and that same year commissioned his friend the architect Frederick Pepys Cockerell (1833-78) to design a new much grander seat on a height to the south of the original dwelling. The style chosen, described at the time as ‘Elizabethian’, is a two and a half-storey mansion with an irregular plan with a roughly rectangular main block and a relatively large single-storey section to the north-east. AS finished in 1874, it has squared stone walls, ashlar dressings, various gabled bays, parapets, finely-cut finials and an array of large mullioned and transomed windows. The de-facto front faces north-west with a memorable doorway whose concave pediment has an armorial fist with dagger as a finial and ‘spandrel’ panels with hounds in relief. A wide gravel terrace, edged by urns flanks the house and at south- west end ther is a large flat terrace, probably designed as a croquet-lawn, but later adapted as a tennis-court. From the south-east facade and leading downhill from the terrace towards Lough Fadda is a straight, formal path, also contemporary with the house. On either side there were once lawns with shrubs in groups. About 1964 evergreens and rhododendrons were removed to allow a clear view. There are also fine chestnut and lime trees in the area south-west of the house. South of the house, on the south shore of Lough Fadda there was a rockery with 2 small ponds, ornamental footbridges and a summer house; one of the bridges has been replaced by planks. The rockery’s large rocks remain and there is a path through them. At the gate lodge,
Register of Parks, Gardens and Demesnes of Special Historic Interest (NI) – November 2020 which has its own garden with clipped hedges and topiary, including a topiary chair, an attractive, partly-clipped, mature weeping beech tree with a seat underneath it and, near the ‘Cottage,’ a weeping ash. At the east of Lough Fadda, where there is now woodland, may have been the position of the wild garden or wilderness, which had become overgrown before World War 2. There are also some fine, older, mature trees here. Hugh De Fellenberg Montgomery, who became a prominent Unionist and sat as a senator in the Stormont Parliament from 1922, died in 1924. He was succeeded by his eldest son, Major-General Hugh Maude De Fellenberg Montgomery (1870-1954). During the WW2 the demesne was occupied by the American Army’s 8th Field Artillery Regiment – commemorated today by a recent oak sapling. In 1954 the property passed to the younger son, Peter Stephen Montgomery (1909-1988) and then to a cousin Capt. Robert Lowry, with whose descendants it remains. The property now serves as a venue for weddings, with the former outbuildings converted to self-catering accommodation and business use, as well as a small carriage and costume museum. There is also a mountain bike trail within the grounds. Two enclosures, probably raths, on the site SMR: TYR 64:27 and 28. Privately owned.
Slevoir, County Tipperary, photograph courtesy of the house’s airbnb entry.
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. 261. “(Hickie/IFR) A large Victorian-Italianate mansion on the shores of Lough Derg, built ca 1870 by Lt-Col J.F. Hickie. Two storey; irregular front. Entrance door at the front of an unusually tall four storey campanile tower. Balustraded roof parapet; tripartite and Venetian windows, windows with entablatures or pediments over them. Sold ca 1950; now a convent. A very attractive modern house in the Classical style, rather like a pavilion, has been built elsewhere in the demesne by Brid and Mrs W.S.F. Hickie.”
Slevoir, County Tipperary, photograh courtesy of Mark Bence-Jones.Slevoir, County Tipperary, photograph courtesy of the house’s airbnb entry.Slevoir, County Tipperary, photograph courtesy of the house’s airbnb entry.
Slevoir House, ALLENGORT, Terryglass, Tipperary North
Slevoir, County Tipperary, photograh courtesy of National Inventory.
Detached five-bay two-storey house, c.1870, in an Italianate style, having projecting four-stage towered entrance bay, lower slightly-recessed four-bay wing to south end of front and a bowed bay and advanced bay to garden façade of main block. Pitched slate roofs to house and felted roof with cornice and brackets to tower and to rendered chimneys. Balustrade to main roof with low parapet to wing. Ruled-and-lined render to all facades with stucco quoins to main house. Tower of ashlar granite, channelled to lower stages and with paired pilasters to upper. Square-headed window openings with stone sills, moulded surrounds and entablature and some tripartite with brackets to sills. Round-arch and squared-headed windows to tower, with imposts to ground floor, pediments to second and paired with keystones to third. Depressed-arch Palladian window in front elevation with panelled pilasters. Keystone, entablature, scrolls and brackets to sills. Round-arch door opening with keystone, spoked fanlight and flanked by red marble columns and panels. All windows and doors are replacement uPVC. Stable yard to south built around courtyard having hipped slate roofs. Rubble limestone walls and snecked squared limestone entrance gateway in east of complex having cut-stone voussoirs to carriage arch. Cut-stone surrounds to window openings facing onto yard.
Appraisal
This imposing house was built for Lt. Col. J.F. Hickey by John McCurdy on the shores of Lough Derg and its distinctive tower is visible from across the lake. Its style is idiosyncratic, but clearly Italianate. The ashlar granite tower has skilled stonework and details and the render detailing of the rest of the building is pleasant. The external character of the house has been altered by the replacement of windows and doors, but otherwise the exterior is relatively intact. The grounds and stable yard are well maintained.
Slevoir, County Tipperary, photograh courtesy of National Inventory.Slevoir, County Tipperary, photograph courtesy of the house’s airbnb entry.Slevoir, County Tipperary, photograph courtesy of the house’s airbnb entry.Slevoir, County Tipperary, photograph courtesy of the house’s airbnb entry.Slevoir, County Tipperary, photograph courtesy of the house’s airbnb entry.Slevoir, County Tipperary, photograph courtesy of the house’s airbnb entry.Slevoir, County Tipperary, photograph courtesy of the house’s airbnb entry.Slevoir, County Tipperary, photograph courtesy of the house’s airbnb entry.Slevoir, County Tipperary, photograph courtesy of the house’s airbnb entry.Slevoir, County Tipperary, photograph courtesy of the house’s airbnb entry.
Lewis records R. Monsell as resident at Slevoir in 1837. The Reverend Francis Synge was the occupier at the time of Griffith’s Valuation, holding the property from the representatives of Mr Steele. The buildings were valued at £34. The National Inventory of Architectural Heritage states that the present house was built in the Italianate style in the 1870s for Lieutenant Colonel J.F. Hickey by John McCurdy. In the early 1940s General Carlos J. Hickie was the owner and the house contained very beautiful furnishings and valuable family pictures according to the Irish Tourist Association surveyor. This house sold for over £3 million in 2000 and was offered for sale again in 2011.
A record price for a property in Tipperary was achieved on Tuesday when Slevoir House, Terryglass, was sold for just over £3 million at…
A record price for a property in Tipperary was achieved on Tuesday when Slevoir House, Terryglass, was sold for just over £3 million at auction.
The original house at Slevoir was built at the close of the eighteenth century by the Maunsell family. It later passed to a Rev Francis Synge, who put the property for sale in 1871. It was then purchased by Lt. Col James F. Hickie and his Spanish born wife Lucilia.
They completely rebuilt the house, giving it the distinctive tower, and the refurbishment was completed in 1875. Slevoir was the residence of the Hickie family to 1965, when it was sold to the Salesian sisters. They were at Slevoir until 1983, when it passed into private ownership. It was sold again in 1987.
Considered one of Ireland’s outstanding Victorian country houses, in mint condition, it has a splendid lakeside setting on about 100 acres on the shores of Lough Derg. There are eleven bedrooms with bathroom or shower en-suite, five reception, kitchen with 4 oven Aga, oil fired central heating.
Outside there is a manager’s bungalow, well manicured lawns, hard tennis court, impressive stable yard with stone faced buildings, walled garden, parkland and woodland and extensive frontage to the lake.
Bidding opened on Tuesday at £1 million, and it went on the market at £2 million. There were 41 bids before it was knocked down at £3,110,000, according to Charles Smyth of Gunnes Country Department, who were joint agents with The Property Shop.
It was sold to Tralee Auctioneer Edward Barrett, in trust. The new owner is understood to be an American industrialist.
Duneske House, County Tipperary, photograph courtesy of National Inventory.
Mark Bence-Jones. A Guide to Irish Country Houses (originally published as Burke’s Guide to Country Houses volume 1 Ireland by Burke’s Peerage Ltd. 1978); Revised edition 1988 Constable and Company Ltd, London.
p. 115. “(Smith/IFR) A three storey asymmetrical Victorian house with a high roof and some gables; built ca 1870 for R.W. Smith to the design of Sir Thomas Drew. Plate glass windows, bows in various places. Porch with sinuous, rather art-nouveau style decoration in stucco. An impressive straight flight of stairs between walls leads up to 1st floor, where the principal reception rooms are situated; there are two drawing rooms with friezes of simple Victorian plasterwork; one of them has a characterstically late-Victorian alcove in a projecting bow, set at an odd angle.”
Duneske House, County Tipperary, photograph courtesy of National Inventory.
Detached T-plan country house, dated 1873, having four-bay two- and three-storey over half-basement elevations to east and west long sides, three-bay two-storey over half-basement south elevation, cross bar of T, with central triangular bay. Two-storey over half basement octagonal projection to south-west corner and gable-fronted three-storey entrance bay to west elevation with projecting gable-fronted porch. Esplanade over extended basement to south elevation, having balustraded parapet and decorative cast-iron double-leaf gate at top of access steps, latter having rendered parapet walls and piers. Artificial slate roofs, hipped to octagonal projection and pitched elsewhere, with red brick chimneystacks, cast-iron rainwater goods, overhanging eaves with carved timber brackets and with timber trusses to gables having carved timber finials. Painted smooth rendered walls with moulded render continuous string course at impost level of top floor. Brick bands to north gable and to north end of east elevation. Square-headed window openings, shouldered to most windows of upper floors and having render label mouldings to top floor windows. Camber-headed window to top floor of entrance bay. Timber sliding sash windows with limestone sills, one-over-one pane to middle floor and two-over-two pane horizontal pane windows to top floor throughout and to middle floor of front elevation. Entrance porch has decorative timber truss with ornate piercing and supported on carved timber brackets. Square-headed timber casement windows to side walls of porch. Square-headed entrance door to front with double-leaf timber door having decorative wrought-iron detailing to glazed upper panels and decoratively carved lower panels. Door set into segmental-headed moulded render doorcase with render label moulding, having ornate stucco work above door incorporating the initials ‘R.C.S’ and with date 1873 to spandrels. South elevation has square-headed double-leaf glazed timber panelled door with overlight, and round-headed glazed timber panelled door with petal fanlight. Internal timber shuttering to windows. Gate lodges to north-west and south-west, former with limestone gateway.
Appraisal
Designed by Sir Thomas Drew, architectural design and detailing are apparent in this house. The varying elevations with different levels give the house a distinctive appearance. The building exhibits a range of unusual and decorative features, most notably the angular bow to the south elevation. The elaborate entrance with the decoratively-treated door, forms a striking feature, and the stucco over the door bear the initials of the owner and the construction date. The render details to the upper windows and the decorative timber trusses highlight the artistic nature of the design. The associated gate lodges further contribute to the setting of the house.
Duneske House, County Tipperary, photograph courtesy of National Inventory.Duneske House, County Tipperary, photograph courtesy of National Inventory.Duneske House, County Tipperary, photograph courtesy of National Inventory.
Classiebawn Castle, County Sligo, photograph courtesy of Tourism Ireland.
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. 84. “(Palmerston, V/DEP; Ashley, sub Shaftesbury, E/PB; Mountbatten, of Burma, E/PB) A Victorian-Baronial castle spectacularly situated on a bare headland jutting out into the Atlantic; built, towards the end of his life, by the statesman, Lord Palmerston; who is said to have sat on the grass and watched the new castle go up on a visit to his County Sligo estate. Designed by Rawson Carroll; of yellowish brown sandstone, consisting of a plain, gabled range and a central tower and conical roofed turret. Carved coat of arms on entrance front. The principal rooms are raised on a very high basement. Bequeathed by Palmerston to his wife’s grandson, Rt Hon Evelyn Ashley, MP, grandfather of the late Countess Mountbatten of Burma. The Irish seat of the late Earl Mountbatten of Burma.”
Built at the end of his life for Henry John Temple (1784-1865) 3rd Viscount Palmerston.
Henry John Temple (1784-1865) 3rd Viscount Palmerstown by Francis Cruikshank, courtesy of National Portrait Gallery London.
Classiebawn Castle, MULLAGHMORE [CAR. BY.], County Sligo
Detached multi-bay single- two- and three-storey with raised basement and attics stone mansion, built 1874. East main entrance wing with central five-stage tower with bartizan to south-east corner, three-storey over basement block to south with pitched roof set behind parapet and gabled entrance breakfront, two-storey with dormered attic pitched roof block to north. L-plan three-bay by two two-storey over raised basement gabled and parapeted south wing with single-storey over basement canted bay to west gable end. Two two-storey over basement gabled blocks to west stepping down to single storey service wing and enclosed yard to north-west. Pitched and hipped slate roofs, crested clay ridges, stepped ashlar stone corbelled chimneystacks, ashlar stone verge and parapet copings, cast-iron rainwater goods. Squared-and-snecked rubble stone walling, dressed ashlar quoins, ashlar strings, ashlar basement plinth course, ashlar corbelling to bartizan, machicolated ashlar corbelling to tower parapet. Square-headed window openings, splayed ashlar reveals and lintels, flush sills, painted one-over-one timber sash windows, two-over-two to basement. Pointed-arch window openings to east front at first and second floor of south block (continuous hood moulding to second floor gallery arcade) over entrance breakfront and to stairwell (with ashlar transoms) to north block, painted timber plain-glazed fixed lights. Square-headed door opening, profiled corbels to lintel, carved cartouche in spandrel of depressed arch over, moulded ashlar surround to arch, hood moulding over with carved label stops, flanking stone colonettes with carved capitals on square dados, varnished hardwood diagonally-sheeted double doors, three-sided stone approach steps. Sea edge location on elevated site, extensive grounds, approached by long avenue from gatelodge to east.
Appraisal
In a spectacular and isolated position by the sea, Classiebawn Castle dominates the skyline for miles around. It was designed by the architect Rawson Carroll (architect of Sligo Courthouse) for Lord Palmerston in a dramatic Scottish Baronial style that is entirely appropriate for the location. Exceptional workmanship is evident throughout the building which is superbly preserved in every respect.
Classiebawn, County Sligo, photograph courtesy of National Inventory.
Classibawn was commissioned by 3rd Viscount Palmerstown and completed by his stepson William Cowper-Temple in 1874. It afterwards passed to the Ashley family and is still in the possession of their descendants. In 1906 it was valued at £69.
Designed in the Baronial style by J. Rawson Carroll, a Dublin-based, but Scottish, architect, and is constructed of local stone with Mountcharles stone dressings brought by sea from County Donegal. It comprises a gabled range with a central tower topped by a conical roofed turret, and was intended as a marine residence for Rt. Hon. W.F. Cowper-Temple, MP (stepson of Lord Palmerston). Cost: £2,850.
The castle has always been used as a holiday home. The various owners used it for summer holidays and, up to 1916, it served as a shooting lodge in winter. The Castle has probably never been occupied all year-round.
Remained in the family for many years but in 1916 the house was cleared and remained empty until 1950. During the civil war, Classiebawn was occupied by the Irish Free State Army who protected it from damage. In 1939, it was inherited by Edwina, Lady Mountbatten who, with her husband Admiral of the Fleet The 1st Earl Mountbatten of Burma, made a number of improvements, installing electricity and a mains water supply. Mountbatten’s biographer, Philip Ziegler describing the building “as charmless as its situation is magnificent”. After his wife’s death in 1960, Lord Mountbatten spent his summers there until his death when his boat was blown up off the coast of Mullaghmore by the IRA in August 1979. Sold after his death.
THE VISCOUNTS PALMERSTON WERE MAJOR LANDOWNERS IN COUNTY SLIGO, WITH 12,436 ACRES
The TEMPLES, from whom this family paternally, and the ducal house of Buckingham and Chandos maternally, descend, are said to have been of Saxon origin, and to have sprung immediately from the son and heir of Ælfgar, Earl of Mercia, EDWYN, who was deprived of the earldom by WILLIAM THE CONQUEROR, and killed in defending himself against the Normans in 1071.
This Edywn left a son,
EDWYN, styled Earl of Leicester and Coventry, who is said to have assumed the surname of TEMPLE from the manor of Temple, in the hundred of Sparkenhoe, Wellsborough,
“Which manor was given by the ancient Earls of Leicester to the Knights Templar, who usually give the name of TEMPLE to their lands, and they granted it to one whose family was called Temple, of great account and livelihood in those parts.”
Be this, however, as it may,
HENRY DE TEMPLE was Lord of Temple and Little Shepey in the reign of the CONQUEROR, and from him descended
THOMAS TEMPLE, of Whitney, Oxfordshire, whose great-grandson,
PETER TEMPLE, received a grant of the manor of Butlers Marston, in Warwickshire, and purchased, in 1560, the right which Laurence Denet had therein.
This Peter being likewise lord of the manor of Stowe, Buckinghamshire, his descendants fixed their residence there.
He married Millicent, daughter of William Jekyl, of Newington, Middlesex, and had two sons,
John, the elder, ancestor maternally, of the noble house of BUCKINGHAM and CHANDOS; and
ANTHONY TEMPLE, who was father of SIR WILLIAM TEMPLE (1555-1627), a learned and eminent person in the reign of ELIZABETH I, secretary to Sir Philip Sydney, and after his decease, to the unfortunate Earl of Essex; upon whose tragic end Sir William removed into Ireland, and was appointed provost of Trinity College, Dublin, which university he represented in parliament in 1613.
He received the honour of Knighthood, in 1622, from the Lord Deputy of Ireland, Sir Oliver St John, and was appointed one of the Masters in Chancery.
Sir William espoused Martha, daughter of Robert Harrison, of Derbyshire, by whom he had two sons, and was succeeded in 1627 by the elder,
THE RT HON SIR JOHN TEMPLE (1600-77), Knight, was constituted Master of the Rolls in Ireland, and sworn of the Privy Council there.
He filled, for a series of years, high and confidential places in the government of Ireland; and was appointed, in 1648, Joint Commissioner of the Great Seal with Sir William Parsons.
Sir John joined, however, the standard of CROMWELL, but was nevertheless retained as Master of the Rolls after the Restoration, when he was constituted Vice-Treasurer of Ireland.
He wedded Mary, daughter of Dr John Hammond, of Chertsey, in Surrey, and had two surviving sons, viz.
WILLIAM; JOHN.
Sir John’s younger son, SIR JOHN TEMPLE (1632-1705), Knight, Solicitor-General, Attorney-General, and Speaker of the House of Commons in Ireland, married Jane, daughter of Sir Abraham Yarner, Knight, of Dublin, and had issue, among others,
HENRY, his successor; John.
Sir John was succeeded by his eldest son,
HENRY TEMPLE (c1673-1757), who was elevated to the peerage, in 1722, in the dignities of Baron Temple and VISCOUNT PALMERSTON, of Palmerston, County Dublin.
His lordship wedded firstly, in 1703, Anne, daughter of Abraham Houblon, and had issue,
HENRY, father of HENRY; d 1740; Richard, d 1749.
He espoused secondly, in 1738, Isabella, daughter of Sir Francis Gerard Bt, and widow of Sir John Fryer Bt, but had no other issue.
His lordship was succeeded by his grandson,
HENRY, 2nd Viscount (1739-1802), who married, in 1767, Frances, only daughter of Sir Francis Poole Bt, of Poole Hall, Cheshire, but by her had no issue.
His lordship wedded secondly, in 1783, Mary, daughter of Benjamin Mee, and had issue,
HENRY JOHN, his successor; William; Frances; Elizabeth.
He was succeeded by his elder son,
HENRY JOHN, 3rd Viscount (1784-1865), KG GCB PC, twice PRIME MINISTER, who espoused, in 1839, Emily Mary, daughter of Peniston, 1st Viscount Melbourne, though the marriage was without issue.
The title expired following the decease of the 3rd Viscount.
CLASSIEBAWN CASTLE, near Mullaghmore, County Sligo, is a Victorian-Baronial mansion, splendidly located in a commanding position on a bare headland overlooking the Atlantic Ocean.
It was built in the early 1860s, near the end of his life, by the statesman, Lord Palmerston.
The Castle was designed by Rawson Carroll.
It is of a yellow-brown sandstone, comprising a plain, gabled range and a central tower with a conical roofed turret.
The entrance front boasts a carved coat-of-arms; principal rooms are raised on a considerably high basement.
The Classiebawn estate belonged to the Temple family from the 17th century, but they seem not to have had a main residence here until the mid 19th century, when Henry John Temple (1784-1865), 3rd Viscount Palmerston, who was Prime Minister, 1855-65, decided to build a holiday home on the windswept western Irish coast north of Sligo. His architect was James Rawson Carroll (1830-1911) of Dublin, who had trained under George Fowler Jones of York. The first site chosen was on Dernish Island, a little to the south-west, but experiment showed that it would be impossible to construct a causeway linking the island to the mainland, and this site was abandoned for the present location on the clifftops close to Mullaghmore.
The house was built of Donegal sandstone in a monumental Victorian Baronial style that opposes the Atlantic gales with an appropriate solidity. The house is composed of a gabled main range with a central tower and conical-roofed turret. The entrance front is decorated with carved coats of arms. Inside, the principal rooms are raised on a very high basement.
The house was unfinished when Lord Palmerston died, and his step-son and heir, William Cowper-Temple completed the house. At the beginning of the 20th century, the Ashley family came here annually for the month of August, but in 1916, at the height of the Irish uprising, the house was cleared of its contents and the family stopped coming. However, it was neither unroofed by its owners nor burned by the Nationalists, perhaps because Wilfrid Ashley, then the owner, was popular and regarded as a fair-minded landlord. It remained unoccupied and decaying until the Second World War, when Lord Mountbatten visited the estate and was enchanted. ‘You never told me how stupendously magnificent the surrounding scenery was’, he wrote to his wife in 1941; ‘No place has thrilled me more…’. Renovations began after the war, with electric light installed in 1947 and a programme of repairs and redecoration lasting until 1950, after which the family resumed their habit of spending August here. From 1976 the castle was leased to Hugh Tunney, with the proviso that Lord Mountbatten could return each year for August. However that regularity of habit was ultimately fatal, for the IRA chose his annual holiday as an opportunity to murder to him and other members of his party by blowing up his yacht in 1979.
Descent: built for Henry John Temple (1784-1865), 3rd Viscount Palmerston; to step-son, William Cowper-Temple (1811-88), 1st Baron Mount Temple; to nephew, Hon. Evelyn Melbourne Ashley (1836-1907); to son, Wilfrid William Ashley (1867-1939), 1st Baron Mount Temple of Lee; to daughter, Edwina (1901-60), wife of Lord Louis Mountbatten (1900-79), 1st Earl Mountbatten of Burma; leased 1976 to Hugh T. Tunney (1928-2011), who bought the freehold in 1991.
Lairakeen House, Banagher, Co Galway for sale July 2025, previously in 2022.
Lairakeen House, County Galway, for sale March 2022, photographs courtesy estate agent.
R42DN24
€3,850,000
5 Bed218530 m²
Exceptional residential and amenity estate with a magnificent 19th Century manor home and frontage onto the River Shannon incorporating two islands Lairakeen House is a privately positioned residential estate set along the banks of the River Shannon, extending to about 54 acres. At its heart stands an elegant five-bay period residence, dating back to circa 1870, which has been meticulously restored in recent years. As part of the renovation, a new roof was installed, along with updated electrical systems (including a three-story walk-in elevator), modernized plumbing, and a comprehensive security system, seamlessly blending the home’s timeless character with contemporary reliability and comfort. The house offers beautifully proportioned, well-balanced accommodation that harmoniously combines period features with contemporary living standards. Included within the main residence is a double studio, currently fitted as a full sound recording studio and office, which could easily be converted into a cinema room. A collection of traditional stone outbuildings complements the property, including excellent equestrian facilities. The mature landscaped grounds surrounding the house are thoughtfully planted and impeccably maintained, offering both privacy and a picturesque rural setting. Among the notable features are several Champion Irish Oak trees, which add significant character and heritage to the estate. The estate includes about 46 acres of quality grassland, divided into well-sized paddocks enclosed by a combination of stud railing, mature hedging, and secure wire fencing, ideally suited for equestrian or agricultural use. The estate infrastructure has been maintained to a high standard, and the property has been expertly managed under the direction of the current owners. Lairakeen House offers a rare opportunity to acquire a distinguished period home in a peaceful and scenic riverside location, with extensive accommodation and a range of high-quality amenities.
Lairakeen House, County Galway, for sale March 2022, photographs courtesy estate agent.Lairakeen House, Banagher, Co Galway for sale July 2025, photograph courtesy Savills estate agent.Lairakeen House, Banagher, Co Galway for sale July 2025, photograph courtesy Savills estate agent.Lairakeen House, Banagher, Co Galway for sale July 2025, photograph courtesy Savills estate agent.Lairakeen House, Banagher, Co Galway for sale July 2025, photograph courtesy Savills estate agent.Lairakeen House, Banagher, Co Galway for sale July 2025, photograph courtesy Savills estate agent.Lairakeen House, County Galway, for sale March 2022, photographs courtesy estate agent.Lairakeen House, County Galway, for sale March 2022, photographs courtesy estate agent.Lairakeen House, County Galway, for sale March 2022, photographs courtesy estate agent.Lairakeen House, Banagher, Co Galway for sale July 2025, photograph courtesy Savills estate agent.Lairakeen House, County Galway, for sale March 2022, photographs courtesy estate agent.Lairakeen House, Banagher, Co Galway for sale July 2025, photograph courtesy Savills estate agent.Lairakeen House, Co Galway for sale March 2022, photographs courtesy estate agent.Lairakeen House, County Galway, for sale March 2022, photographs courtesy estate agent.Lairakeen House, County Galway, for sale March 2022, photographs courtesy estate agent.Lairakeen House, County Galway, for sale March 2022, photographs courtesy estate agent.Lairakeen House, County Galway, for sale March 2022, photographs courtesy estate agent.Lairakeen House, Banagher, Co Galway for sale July 2025, photograph courtesy Savills estate agent.Lairakeen House, Banagher, Co Galway for sale July 2025, photograph courtesy Savills estate agent.Lairakeen House, Banagher, Co Galway for sale July 2025, photograph courtesy Savills estate agent.Lairakeen House, Banagher, Co Galway for sale July 2025, photograph courtesy Savills estate agent.Lairakeen House, County Galway, for sale March 2022, photographs courtesy estate agent.Lairakeen House, County Galway, for sale March 2022, photographs courtesy estate agent.Lairakeen House, County Galway, for sale March 2022, photographs courtesy estate agent.Lairakeen House, County Galway, for sale March 2022, photographs courtesy estate agent.Lairakeen House, Banagher, Co Galway for sale July 2025, photograph courtesy Savills estate agent.Lairakeen House, Banagher, Co Galway for sale July 2025, photograph courtesy Savills estate agent.Lairakeen House, County Galway, for sale March 2022, photographs courtesy estate agent.Lairakeen House, Banagher, Co Galway for sale July 2025, photograph courtesy Savills estate agent.Lairakeen House, County Galway, for sale March 2022, photographs courtesy estate agent.Lairakeen House, Banagher, Co Galway for sale July 2025, photograph courtesy Savills estate agent.Lairakeen House, County Galway, for sale March 2022, photographs courtesy estate agent.Lairakeen House, Banagher, Co Galway for sale July 2025, photograph courtesy Savills estate agent.Lairakeen House, County Galway, for sale March 2022, photographs courtesy estate agent.Lairakeen House, County Galway, for sale March 2022, photographs courtesy estate agent.Lairakeen House, Banagher, Co Galway for sale July 2025, photograph courtesy Savills estate agent.Lairakeen House, County Galway, for sale March 2022, photographs courtesy estate agent.Lairakeen House, County Galway, for sale March 2022, photographs courtesy estate agent.Lairakeen House, Banagher, Co Galway for sale July 2025, photograph courtesy Savills estate agent.Lairakeen House, County Galway, for sale March 2022, photographs courtesy estate agent.Lairakeen House, County Galway, for sale March 2022, photographs courtesy estate agent.Lairakeen House, County Galway, for sale March 2022, photographs courtesy estate agent.Lairakeen House, County Galway, for sale March 2022, photographs courtesy estate agent.Lairakeen House, Banagher, Co Galway for sale July 2025, photograph courtesy Savills estate agent.Lairakeen House, County Galway, for sale March 2022, photographs courtesy estate agent.Lairakeen House, County Galway, for sale March 2022, photographs courtesy estate agent.Lairakeen House, County Galway, for sale March 2022, photographs courtesy estate agent.Lairakeen House, County Galway, for sale March 2022, photographs courtesy estate agent.Lairakeen House, County Galway, for sale March 2022, photographs courtesy estate agent.Lairakeen House, County Galway, for sale March 2022, photographs courtesy estate agent.Lairakeen House, County Galway, for sale March 2022, photographs courtesy estate agent.Lairakeen House, Banagher, Co Galway for sale July 2025, photograph courtesy Savills estate agent.Lairakeen House, Banagher, Co Galway for sale July 2025, photograph courtesy Savills estate agent.Lairakeen House, County Galway, for sale March 2022, photographs courtesy estate agent.Lairakeen House, County Galway, for sale March 2022, photographs courtesy estate agent.Lairakeen House, Banagher, Co Galway for sale July 2025, photograph courtesy Savills estate agent.Lairakeen House, Banagher, Co Galway for sale July 2025, photograph courtesy Savills estate agent.Lairakeen House, Banagher, Co Galway for sale July 2025, photograph courtesy Savills estate agent.Lairakeen House, Banagher, Co Galway for sale July 2025, photograph courtesy Savills estate agent.Lairakeen House, County Galway, for sale March 2022, photographs courtesy estate agent.Lairakeen House, County Galway, for sale March 2022, photographs courtesy estate agent.Lairakeen House, Banagher, Co Galway for sale July 2025, photograph courtesy Savills estate agent.Lairakeen House, Banagher, Co Galway for sale July 2025, photograph courtesy Savills estate agent.Lairakeen House, Banagher, Co Galway for sale July 2025, photograph courtesy Savills estate agent.Lairakeen House, Banagher, Co Galway for sale July 2025, photograph courtesy Savills estate agent.Lairakeen House, Banagher, Co Galway for sale July 2025, photograph courtesy Savills estate agent.Lairakeen House, Banagher, Co Galway for sale July 2025, photograph courtesy Savills estate agent.
Detached three-storey house, built c.1870, comprising five-bay central block with entrance breakfront to middle bay accessed by flight of steps to entrance at first floor level, flanked by projecting canted bays presenting three bays to front elevation. South end destroyed by fire and rebuilt c.2002. Five-bay rear elevation with full-height canted stairs projection to middle bay, two bays to north elevation, and three bays to south elevation, further window to south side of canted bay projection. Hipped slate roofs with cement rendered chimneystacks, and hipped slate roofs to canted bays. Rendered walls, with limestone sill course to first floor. Square-headed window openings with limestone sills, render surrounds to lower floors, and having two-over-two pane timber sliding sash windows with ogee horns, tripartite to top floor of entrance bay. One round-headed window to upper level of rear canted bay and to north side elevation. Rebuilt section has concrete sills. Front entrance comprising slightly pointed elliptical-arch or Tudor-arch door opening with chamfered cut limestone surround, timber panelled door, spoked timber fanlight, sidelights with timber panelled stall risers, and flight of limestone steps having low stone parapets with limestone copings and wrought-iron railings terminated by rendered square-plan piers with caps. Square-headed doorways to ground floor of north and rear elevations. Outbuildings ranged around courtyard to north, having pitched slate roofs, rubble limestone walls, square-headed window and door openings, and elliptical-arched carriage entrances, all with brick surrounds and replacement timber or uPVC fittings. Recent greenhouse. Shuttered concrete boat house with pitched corrugated-iron roof to north bank of River Shannon. Road entrance has rusticated limestone piers, recent gate, and rubble quadrant walls.
Appraisal
The broad front elevation, with its canted bays to either end, echoed by a third to the rear, makes this a particularly distinctive country house. Its scale is almost institution-like with a sense of formality and grandeur. The first floor entrance is unusual, and is emphasised by the fine limestone arched doorway and an impressive flight of steps. The horizontal and ground-hugging appearance of the house is counterpointed by the vertical emphasis of the windows and the terminating blocks. The house is part of a group of estate buildings including the outbuildings and coach house immediately to the north, and the boathouse on the banks of the Shannon.
LAIRAKEEN HOUSE, BANAGHER, COUNTY GALWAY, IRELAND An exquisite late 19th-century country home, privately positioned within glorious parkland, on the banks of the River Shannon, and nearby to Banagher town. Lairakeen House is a superb country home presented in excellent condition and comprising some 8,913 square feet or 828 square metres of accommodation and positioned within some 53 acres or 21.4 hectares. The main house is augmented by a Guest Cottage and a Studio Apartment to present some 12,019 square feet or 1,165 square metres of accommodation in total. Beautifully positioned within well-timbered parkland, against a backdrop of the River Shannon, the setting is picturesque and private. The small town of Banagher is just 2.5 miles or 4 kilometres away. Dublin International and Shannon International airports are each, respectively, within about a 1 hour 40 minute and 1 hour 30 minute driving time. Galway airport is about a 50 minute drive. The grounds are impressive, and quite a feature of the property, with an abundance of ancient indigenous Irish Elm, Beech and Sycamore trees interspersed throughout the parkland meadows, through which a series of clipped pathways meander, to take in a river bank walk and connect to a small island and the formal gardens, positioned to the rear of the house and including an Edwardian vine house resplendent with home-grown figs, apricots and peaches. Lairakeen House was completed circa 1870 as the centrepiece of a large landed estate. All the principal rooms benefit from elevated views over the mature grounds and to the River Shannon itself. Re-building and restoration works were painstakingly carried out in 2002 to sympathetically reinstate the house to restore the composition of the circa 1870 mansion, and to imbue period character and charm, a fire having destroyed a large portion of the house in 1931. The reinstated drawing room and library feature 16th-century mahogany and ebony panelling, while a chimneypiece dating from 1425 depicts the Palestine wars. Owing to the extensive re-building and renovation works the house is now presented in excellent condition and benefits from the installation of current high specification wiring, plumbing and heating systems providing an efficiency of running costs and comfort not often associated with such fine country houses. Usefully a lift or elevator has been installed to augment the delightful oak staircase and giving easy access to all floors. The works included the restoration of the stone courtyard and outbuildings adjacent to the house, which include useful garaging, a studio apartment and a guest cottage. Overall, the effect is extremely aesthetically pleasing and complimentary of the picturesque setting. Lairakeen is now a wonderful well-equipped home with a delightful combination of period character and charm and a specification and layout suited to 21st-century living. Occupied as a private home by the current owner, the previous owner was Roger Whittaker, the singer-songwriter known for his eclectic mix of folk music and popular songs incorporating his baritone singing voice, guitar skills and trademark whistling ability. His best known songs include ‘Wind Beneath My Wings’, ‘Durham Town (The Leavin’)’ and ‘New World in the Morning’. The estate includes a stretch of river frontage extending to some 400 yards. The River Shannon is the longest river in Ireland and Britain and is a bustling colourful navigation. A harbour and marina in Banagher provides good boat access to the river, while the boathouse at Lairakeen provides access for small boats and could be upgraded. The grassy meadows along the river bank provide habitat for a large number of waders, swans, wildfowl and other bird life. Riverside mammals include otters, mink and fox. Pike are plentiful in the River Shannon. EIRCODE [Property Specific Code] R42 DN24 GPS LOCATION 53.1976239 (latitude), -8.0406798 (longitude).
Baltrasna House, County Louth, courtesy National Inventory.
Detached five-bay two-storey over basement house, built c. 1870. Hipped slate roofs with eaves brackets and red brick chimneystacks. Rendered walls with limestone quoins and string course between floors. Segmental-headed openings with timber sliding sash windows and limestone sills. Projecting porch to entrance. Farmyard complex to west, comprising four ranges of single-storey buildings set around central courtyard. Pitched slate roofs. Rubble stone walls with red brick and limestone dressings to openings. Timber fittings to some openings. Pair of cast-iron gates flanked by cast-iron piers and pedestrian gates to entrance, set in rendered walls.
Appraisal
A fine Italianate house, representative of architectural fashions in the latter part of the nineteenth century. Retaining much of its original fabric, such as timber sliding sash windows, slate roof and fine entrance porch. The outbuildings and entrance gates add context to the site.
Baltrasna House, Ardee, Co. Louth for sale June 2025 courtesy Lisney Sotheby’s International Realty
€1,800,000
A92 A0P1 6 beds6 baths743 m2
Baltrasna House, Ardee, Co. Louth for sale June 2025, photograph courtesy Lisney Sotheby’s International Realty.
Baltrasna House is an exceptional late Georgian/early Victorian country residence, nestled within approximately 6.6 acres (2.67 hectares) of landscaped lawns, mature woodlands, and historic walled gardens on the outskirts of the thriving town of Ardee, Co. Louth. Built circa 1840, this distinguished home has been meticulously maintained and thoughtfully restored in recent years, seamlessly blending period grandeur with contemporary comfort.
Baltrasna House, Ardee, Co. Louth for sale June 2025, photograph courtesy Lisney Sotheby’s International Realty.
Spanning approximately 8,000 square feet across three elegantly appointed levels, Baltrasna House has long been a distinguished setting for gracious living and refined entertaining. At its heart lies a magnificent ballroom a testament to its storied past which famously hosted a grand assembly of the local gentry in 1875 and continues to evoke the splendour of a bygone era. The exterior exudes classical symmetry, with graceful bay windows and a stately pillared portico approached by sweeping granite steps, all combining to create an immediate and commanding sense of grandeur.
Baltrasna House, Ardee, Co. Louth for sale June 2025, photograph courtesy Lisney Sotheby’s International Realty.Baltrasna House, Ardee, Co. Louth for sale June 2025, photograph courtesy Lisney Sotheby’s International Realty.Baltrasna House, Ardee, Co. Louth for sale June 2025, photograph courtesy Lisney Sotheby’s International Realty.Baltrasna House, Ardee, Co. Louth for sale June 2025, photograph courtesy Lisney Sotheby’s International Realty.Baltrasna House, Ardee, Co. Louth for sale June 2025, photograph courtesy Lisney Sotheby’s International Realty.Baltrasna House, Ardee, Co. Louth for sale June 2025, photograph courtesy Lisney Sotheby’s International Realty.Baltrasna House, Ardee, Co. Louth for sale June 2025, photograph courtesy Lisney Sotheby’s International Realty.Baltrasna House, Ardee, Co. Louth for sale June 2025, photograph courtesy Lisney Sotheby’s International Realty.Baltrasna House, Ardee, Co. Louth for sale June 2025, photograph courtesy Lisney Sotheby’s International Realty.Baltrasna House, Ardee, Co. Louth for sale June 2025, photograph courtesy Lisney Sotheby’s International Realty.
The entrance hall makes a striking first impression both stately and inviting with a grand sweeping staircase ascending beneath a glazed cupola that bathes the space in natural light.
Baltrasna House, Ardee, Co. Louth for sale June 2025, photograph courtesy Lisney Sotheby’s International Realty.Baltrasna House, Ardee, Co. Louth for sale June 2025, photograph courtesy Lisney Sotheby’s International Realty.Baltrasna House, Ardee, Co. Louth for sale June 2025, photograph courtesy Lisney Sotheby’s International Realty.
The principal reception rooms are a showcase of period refinement, featuring soaring ceilings adorned with intricate plaster cornices, centre roses, ornate marble fireplaces, and glittering crystal chandeliers. The drawing room, originally designed as a ballroom, is bathed in light from three expansive windows and distinguished by its twin marble mantelpieces. Both the formal dining room and the sitting room mirror this elegance, making the home exceptionally well-suited for entertaining on a grand scale.
Baltrasna House, Ardee, Co. Louth for sale June 2025, photograph courtesy Lisney Sotheby’s International Realty.Baltrasna House, Ardee, Co. Louth for sale June 2025, photograph courtesy Lisney Sotheby’s International Realty.Baltrasna House, Ardee, Co. Louth for sale June 2025, photograph courtesy Lisney Sotheby’s International Realty.Baltrasna House, Ardee, Co. Louth for sale June 2025, photograph courtesy Lisney Sotheby’s International Realty.Baltrasna House, Ardee, Co. Louth for sale June 2025, photograph courtesy Lisney Sotheby’s International Realty.Baltrasna House, Ardee, Co. Louth for sale June 2025, photograph courtesy Lisney Sotheby’s International Realty.Baltrasna House, Ardee, Co. Louth for sale June 2025, photograph courtesy Lisney Sotheby’s International Realty.Baltrasna House, Ardee, Co. Louth for sale June 2025, photograph courtesy Lisney Sotheby’s International Realty.
At the heart of the home, the main kitchen marries heritage with modern craftsmanship, bespoke cabinetry and fine detailing rest atop original timber floorboards, creating a space that is as authentic as it is timeless. The floor is completed by a guest bathroom, with direct access to the extensive gardens and pool area.
Baltrasna House, Ardee, Co. Louth for sale June 2025, photograph courtesy Lisney Sotheby’s International Realty.Baltrasna House, Ardee, Co. Louth for sale June 2025, photograph courtesy Lisney Sotheby’s International Realty.Baltrasna House, Ardee, Co. Louth for sale June 2025, photograph courtesy Lisney Sotheby’s International Realty.
The first floor is home to five beautifully proportioned bedrooms, each with its own unique character and serene views over the manicured gardens. Original marble fireplaces grace several rooms, while deep-set sash windows and ornate cornicing elevate the sense of Georgian grandeur. The four bathrooms on this level are thoughtfully designed to reflect the home’s heritage, featuring roll-top baths, timber panelling, antique fittings, and authentic Victorian sanitary ware. A generous central landing, illuminated by a glazed atrium above, creates a graceful flow between the rooms, suffused with natural light and elegance. A home office with a feature window overlooking the pool & orchard is secreted on the landing of the main staircase.
Baltrasna House, Ardee, Co. Louth for sale June 2025, photograph courtesy Lisney Sotheby’s International Realty.Baltrasna House, Ardee, Co. Louth for sale June 2025, photograph courtesy Lisney Sotheby’s International Realty.Baltrasna House, Ardee, Co. Louth for sale June 2025, photograph courtesy Lisney Sotheby’s International Realty.Baltrasna House, Ardee, Co. Louth for sale June 2025, photograph courtesy Lisney Sotheby’s International Realty.Baltrasna House, Ardee, Co. Louth for sale June 2025, photograph courtesy Lisney Sotheby’s International Realty.Baltrasna House, Ardee, Co. Louth for sale June 2025, photograph courtesy Lisney Sotheby’s International Realty.Baltrasna House, Ardee, Co. Louth for sale June 2025, photograph courtesy Lisney Sotheby’s International Realty.Baltrasna House, Ardee, Co. Louth for sale June 2025, photograph courtesy Lisney Sotheby’s International Realty.Baltrasna House, Ardee, Co. Louth for sale June 2025, photograph courtesy Lisney Sotheby’s International Realty.Baltrasna House, Ardee, Co. Louth for sale June 2025, photograph courtesy Lisney Sotheby’s International Realty.Baltrasna House, Ardee, Co. Louth for sale June 2025, photograph courtesy Lisney Sotheby’s International Realty.Baltrasna House, Ardee, Co. Louth for sale June 2025, photograph courtesy Lisney Sotheby’s International Realty.Baltrasna House, Ardee, Co. Louth for sale June 2025, photograph courtesy Lisney Sotheby’s International Realty.Baltrasna House, Ardee, Co. Louth for sale June 2025, photograph courtesy Lisney Sotheby’s International Realty.Baltrasna House, Ardee, Co. Louth for sale June 2025, photograph courtesy Lisney Sotheby’s International Realty.Baltrasna House, Ardee, Co. Louth for sale June 2025, photograph courtesy Lisney Sotheby’s International Realty.Baltrasna House, Ardee, Co. Louth for sale June 2025, photograph courtesy Lisney Sotheby’s International Realty.Baltrasna House, Ardee, Co. Louth for sale June 2025, photograph courtesy Lisney Sotheby’s International Realty.Baltrasna House, Ardee, Co. Louth for sale June 2025, photograph courtesy Lisney Sotheby’s International Realty.Baltrasna House, Ardee, Co. Louth for sale June 2025, photograph courtesy Lisney Sotheby’s International Realty.
The basement offers a relaxed yet equally captivating living space. The country-style second kitchen is rich in rustic charm, featuring a classic Stanley oil-fired cooker, ceramic Belfast sink, handcrafted timber cabinetry, and characterful tiled walls. This level also includes the 6th bedroom (ensuite) a spacious utility room, boot room, , wine cellar, playroom and a dedicated bar & games room – an ideal setting for informal entertaining, reached by a second staircase also servicing the upper floors.
Baltrasna House, Ardee, Co. Louth for sale June 2025, photograph courtesy Lisney Sotheby’s International Realty.Baltrasna House, Ardee, Co. Louth for sale June 2025, photograph courtesy Lisney Sotheby’s International Realty.Baltrasna House, Ardee, Co. Louth for sale June 2025, photograph courtesy Lisney Sotheby’s International Realty.Baltrasna House, Ardee, Co. Louth for sale June 2025, photograph courtesy Lisney Sotheby’s International Realty.Baltrasna House, Ardee, Co. Louth for sale June 2025, photograph courtesy Lisney Sotheby’s International Realty.Baltrasna House, Ardee, Co. Louth for sale June 2025, photograph courtesy Lisney Sotheby’s International Realty.Baltrasna House, Ardee, Co. Louth for sale June 2025, photograph courtesy Lisney Sotheby’s International Realty.Baltrasna House, Ardee, Co. Louth for sale June 2025, photograph courtesy Lisney Sotheby’s International Realty.Baltrasna House, Ardee, Co. Louth for sale June 2025, photograph courtesy Lisney Sotheby’s International Realty.
The grounds of Baltrasna are equally impressive. Approached via a picture perfect tree-lined avenue, the property opens into a generous gravel forecourt. The meticulously maintained gardens include expansive lawns, mature rhododendrons, flowering shrubs, and rare tree specimens. A traditional walled garden houses a working orchard, greenhouse, and vegetable beds. The pool and BBQ area is a true outdoor sanctuary thoughtfully designed and seamlessly extending from the main residence. This beautifully arranged space is ideal for hosting large gatherings, offering both luxury and comfort in an inviting alfresco setting. Baltrasna House represents a rare and distinguished offering on the Irish property market, a quintessential Georgian residence of remarkable architectural pedigree. Recently restored and impeccably maintained, the home seamlessly combines timeless grandeur with modern comfort. Whether envisioned as a refined family residence, a tranquil country retreat, or an elegant venue for entertaining on a grand scale, this exceptional property offers a rare fusion of elegance, heritage, and seclusion all set amidst breathtaking natural surroundings.
Baltrasna House, Ardee, Co. Louth for sale June 2025, photograph courtesy Lisney Sotheby’s International Realty.Baltrasna House, Ardee, Co. Louth for sale June 2025, photograph courtesy Lisney Sotheby’s International Realty.Baltrasna House, Ardee, Co. Louth for sale June 2025, photograph courtesy Lisney Sotheby’s International Realty.Baltrasna House, Ardee, Co. Louth for sale June 2025, photograph courtesy Lisney Sotheby’s International Realty.Baltrasna House, Ardee, Co. Louth for sale June 2025, photograph courtesy Lisney Sotheby’s International Realty.Baltrasna House, Ardee, Co. Louth for sale June 2025, photograph courtesy Lisney Sotheby’s International Realty.Baltrasna House, Ardee, Co. Louth for sale June 2025, photograph courtesy Lisney Sotheby’s International Realty.Baltrasna House, Ardee, Co. Louth for sale June 2025, photograph courtesy Lisney Sotheby’s International Realty.Baltrasna House, Ardee, Co. Louth for sale June 2025, photograph courtesy Lisney Sotheby’s International Realty.Baltrasna House, Ardee, Co. Louth for sale June 2025, photograph courtesy Lisney Sotheby’s International Realty.Baltrasna House, Ardee, Co. Louth for sale June 2025, photograph courtesy Lisney Sotheby’s International Realty.
Cangort Park, County Offaly courtesy Sherry Fitzgerald Country Homes, Farms and Estates.
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. 55. [Atkinson] The seat of the Atkinson family 1600-1957. Original castle beseiged and destroyed by Cromwellian forces and the family fled. They returned at the Restoration and built a house on the right of the castle, which was subsequently altered from time to time; 2 very small rooms from the castle surviving at the back of the present house. The front of the house was rebuilt in early Victorian Tudor-Gothic, being finished 1850; with steep pointed gables and plain mullioned windows.“
Cangort House, Cangort demesne, County Offaly, Courtesy of National Inventory.
Detached Jacobean style country house, built c.1870, incorporating earlier house visible from the rear and built on the site of Cangort Castle, destroyed in the seventeenth century. Three-bay two-storey principal elevation with projecting gabled bay and gabled entrance porch. South-facing side elevation has gabled end bays. Pitched slate roofs with tall rendered chimneystacks with moulded brick cornices. Punched ashlar limestone south-facing elevation and to projecting gables to front and rear elevations with heraldic plaques, corbelled eaves course and surmounted by finials. Ruled-and-lined render to remaining elevations. Square-headed window openings to front and south-facing side elevations with box-bay windows with transom and mullion windows to ground floor and square-headed mullion windows to first floor. Round-headed window openings to rear elevation with timber sash windows. Square-headed window openings elsewhere with timber sash windows and limestone sills. Tudor arched door opening to gabled entrance porch with limestone hoodmoulding and timber and glazed door. Ranges of single- and two-storey outbuildings in yard to north of house. Walled garden to north-west of house with random coursed walls. Ruined three-bay single-storey structure to rear of walled garden with pointed-arched door opening. Site accessed through decorative cast-iron gates and railings to road.
Appraisal
Cangort Castle, once residence of the Atkinson family, was destroyed by Cromwellian forces in the seventeenth century. The present appearance of the house dates to a nineteenth-century remodeling of an earlier eighteenth-century house, an elevation of which survives to the rear of the present structure and retains distinctly eighteenth-century round-headed windows. The Jacobean style is expressed in the tall narrow gabled elevations with finals and elaborately carved kneelers and the large limestone transom and mullion windows. There are three heraldic plaques on the house, one to the projecting gable to the front of the house and two on the south-facing elevation. The ornate plaques are skillfully executed and add artistic interest to the site. A small single-storey structure to the rear of the walled garden survives as a ruin. Its pointed-arched door opening suggests an ecclesiastical function, perhaps a small chapel. The main house together with the outbuildings, elegant entrance gate and long avenue, walled garden and former gate lodges form an interesting group of related structures.
Cangort House, Cangort demesne, County Offaly, Courtesy of National Inventory.Cangort House, Cangort demesne, County Offaly, Courtesy of National Inventory.Cangort House, Cangort demesne, County Offaly, Courtesy of National Inventory.Cangort House, Cangort demesne, County Offaly, Courtesy of National Inventory.Cangort House, Cangort demesne, County Offaly, Courtesy of National Inventory.Cangort House, Cangort demesne, County Offaly, Courtesy of National Inventory.Cangort House, Cangort demesne, County Offaly, Courtesy of National Inventory.
Cangort House, Cangort demesne, County Offaly, Courtesy of National Inventory.
Detached three-bay single-storey former gate lodge to Cangort House, built c.1870, with modern extension to rear. Located in a wooded area in the former demesne. Pitched slate roof with rendered chimneystack and decorative bargeboards. Rendered walls with limestone corbelled eaves course. Pointed-arched window openings with decorative tooled limestone surrounds comprising limestone transom, sill and hoodmoulding with fanlight and timber casement window. Square-headed door opening with timber panelled and glazed door.
Appraisal
Though no longer in use as a gate lodge, its form, scale and decorative treatment make its original function immediately recognisable. The pointed-arched window opening with particularly fine tooled limestone surrounds and hoodmoulding contribute to the significance of the structure. This gate lodge together with the Cangort House and ancillary structures form an interesting group of related demesne structures.
Cangort House, Cangort demesne, County Offaly, Courtesy of National Inventory.Cangort Park, County Offaly courtesy Sherry Fitzgerald Country Homes, Farms and Estates.Cangort Park, County Offaly courtesy Sherry Fitzgerald Country Homes, Farms and Estates.Cangort Park, County Offaly courtesy Sherry Fitzgerald Country Homes, Farms and Estates.Cangort Park, County Offaly courtesy Sherry Fitzgerald Country Homes, Farms and Estates.Cangort Park, County Offaly courtesy Sherry Fitzgerald Country Homes, Farms and Estates.Cangort Park, County Offaly courtesy Sherry Fitzgerald Country Homes, Farms and Estates.Cangort Park, County Offaly courtesy Sherry Fitzgerald Country Homes, Farms and Estates.Cangort Park, County Offaly courtesy Sherry Fitzgerald Country Homes, Farms and Estates.Cangort Park, County Offaly courtesy Sherry Fitzgerald Country Homes, Farms and Estates.Cangort Park, County Offaly courtesy Sherry Fitzgerald Country Homes, Farms and Estates.Cangort Park, County Offaly courtesy Sherry Fitzgerald Country Homes, Farms and Estates.Cangort Park, County Offaly courtesy Sherry Fitzgerald Country Homes, Farms and Estates.Cangort Park, County Offaly courtesy Sherry Fitzgerald Country Homes, Farms and Estates.Cangort Park, County Offaly courtesy Sherry Fitzgerald Country Homes, Farms and Estates.Cangort Park, County Offaly courtesy Sherry Fitzgerald Country Homes, Farms and Estates.Cangort Park, County Offaly courtesy Sherry Fitzgerald Country Homes, Farms and Estates.Cangort Park, County Offaly courtesy Sherry Fitzgerald Country Homes, Farms and Estates.Cangort Park, County Offaly courtesy Sherry Fitzgerald Country Homes, Farms and Estates.Cangort Park, County Offaly courtesy Sherry Fitzgerald Country Homes, Farms and Estates.Cangort Park, County Offaly courtesy Sherry Fitzgerald Country Homes, Farms and Estates.Cangort Park, County Offaly courtesy Sherry Fitzgerald Country Homes, Farms and Estates.Cangort Park, County Offaly courtesy Sherry Fitzgerald Country Homes, Farms and Estates.Cangort Park, County Offaly courtesy Sherry Fitzgerald Country Homes, Farms and Estates.Cangort Park, County Offaly courtesy Sherry Fitzgerald Country Homes, Farms and Estates.Cangort Park, County Offaly courtesy Sherry Fitzgerald Country Homes, Farms and Estates.Cangort Park, County Offaly courtesy Sherry Fitzgerald Country Homes, Farms and Estates.Cangort Park, County Offaly courtesy Sherry Fitzgerald Country Homes, Farms and Estates.Cangort Park, County Offaly courtesy Sherry Fitzgerald Country Homes, Farms and Estates.Cangort Park, County Offaly courtesy Sherry Fitzgerald Country Homes, Farms and Estates.
Cangort, originally Camgart, i.e., the marshy field, has been the seat of the Atkinsons since the time of James I. Cangort Castle, was destroyed by Cromwellian forces in the seventeenth century. The present appearance of the house dates to a nineteenth-century remodeling of an earlier eighteenth-century house, an elevation of which survives to the rear of the present structure and retains distinctly eighteenth-century round-headed windows. Cangort House was the seat of the Atkinson family from 1600 to 1957. Is an important building with a sightly ungainly exterior almost identical to Bellair. Internally it is very finely planned and has a well finished interior. The farm buildings include a range of stables and a huge barn.
Anthony Atkinson, of Cangort, married, 1709, Mary, daughter of Admiral John Guy, who is said to have been instrumental in breaking the boom at the siege of Derry; he was M.P. for St. Johnstown, 1711-13, and for Belfast, 1713-14, and died in 1743, leaving numerous issue. His eldest son having died in his lifetime, he was succeeded by Guy, the second, but he , being a beneficed clergyman in the North of Ireland,Cangort was long occupied by Charles, a younger son, who acted as agent for his brother. This Charles was ancestor of the branch now settled at Ashley Park, Co. Tipperary, while the present owner of Cangort if descended from the Rev. Guy. One of their sisters married Francis Sanderson, ancestor of the late Colonel Edward James Sanderson, of Castle Saunderson, M.P. Source: F.R. Montgomery Hitchcock The Midland Septs and the Pale (1908)
Lewis 1837 records “Cangort, the residence of G. Atkinson, Esq., a handsome mansion erected on the site of the ancient castle;”
Atkinson, Guy Newcomen, of Cangort, eldest son of Guy, of Cangort, (born 1800, died 1859), by Anne Margaret, daughter of William Trench, Cangort Park, born 1847; married 1877, Frances E., daughter of The Hon. Lawrence Harman King-Harman, Rockingham, Roscommon. Has with other children, Guy Montague, born 1882. Was educated at the Royal Military College. Is J.P, for County and Lieut.-Colonel Shropshire Regt.
Lt.-Col. Guy Newcomen Atkinson lived in Cangort. Lt.-Col. Guy Newcomen Atkinson married Frances Elizabeth King-Harman, daughter of Hon. Laurence Harman King-Harman and Mary Cecilia Johnstone, on 19 July 1877. He died on 10 February 1890.
The Grant first appear in Shinrone records in 1797. Three brothers aged about 25/35 – Stephen, John and William – arrived at that date, settled in the parish and raised families. As the Shinrone records run from 1741 we can be sure that there were no Grants in the parish any earlier.
Both my great-grandfather (Thomas) and by grandfather (Charles) said that the family came from Waterford and Cork to near Cashel. Mrs Whitford of Stream Cottage, Aghancon said her great-grandfather William Grant had said that they came from near Goolds Cross, Co Tipp (i.e. Moyaliff). Ireland was very violent at this time, and it is likely that the Grants moved to Shinrone as it was then a Protestant area. Family lore has it that they had their cattle maimed and that made them move. Interestingly the family remaining in Moyaliff turned Catholic around 1810, perhaps their way of reducing the problems of life, perhaps because of a lack of Protestant marriage parners. The continuing links with Moyaliff can be seen with Mary Grant’s marriage in 1812 to a man from Glenkeen.
Shinrone was referred to as a hot bed of Orangeism during the demonstrations for and against Catholic emancipation in 1828. A large gathering of Green Boys tried to march on Shinrone which was defended by the army. They were only talked out of it at the last minute, bloodshed was averted.
By 1831 only 5% of the total population of Co Tipperary was Protestant. But Borrisokane and Cloughjordan parishes had the largest concentration of Protestants ( over 20% in each parish were Protestant)
The church records are good, and we can see where they lived and what children were born. The family were very prolific with ten to twelve children being the norm. They then stayed in the immediate area until the famine forced them to move in the 1840’s
Stephen was the first to arrive in 1797, followed by John in 1801 and William in 1812. I suspect that none of them produced their complete families in Shinrone, but the records for Moyaliff do not exist, so we do not know what happened there.
There is a John Grant on the Poor List of Shinrone Parish in 1811 and 1812, when he is getting relief from the parish.
The Tithe Commission Book 1824 gives 3 Grants in the area
John of Towra 8 acres from Chas Atkinson
John of Gurtgreen 5 acres from Lord Ross
Thomas Grant of Modreeny 4 acres from Lord Dunally
SOLD 24 Jul 2018
€461,538
Cangort Park, County Offaly courtesy Sherry Fitzgerald Country Homes, Farms and Estates.Cangort Park, County Offaly courtesy Sherry Fitzgerald Country Homes, Farms and Estates.Cangort Park, County Offaly courtesy Sherry Fitzgerald Country Homes, Farms and Estates.Cangort Park, County Offaly courtesy Sherry Fitzgerald Country Homes, Farms and Estates.
Anthony Atkinson (d. 1626) was a junior officer in the army who received a grant of lands in Co. Offaly and built a fortified residence known as Cangort Castle. During the Civil War the castle was garrisoned for the king but captured by Cromwellian troops and slighted. Anthony Atkinson (1630-63) recovered the estate at the Restoration and a new house was built adjoining the castle ruins. Information about the family is very sketchy before the time of a third Anthony Atkinson (c.1680-1743), who trained as a barrister and was an MP in the Irish parliament between 1711 and 1714. He married Mary Guy, the daughter of Admiral John Guy, whose chief claim to fame was breaking the boom across the River Foyle to relieve the Siege of Derry. Anthony Atkinson’s eldest son having predeceased him, the estate passed on his death to his second son, the Rev. Guy Atkinson (c.1712-1804), who was vicar of Trim (Meath) and later rector of Aghoghill (Antrim). He seems to have lived chiefly in or close to the parishes which he served, and it may be that his eldest son by his first marriage Anthony Atkinson (1748-90) managed the estates until his death. The eldest son of Guy’s second marriage, Jackson Wray Atkinson (1766-1846), certainly did so later, and was High Sheriff of Offaly in 1803.
After many years living on his estates and serving as commander of the county militia, Jackson seems to have moved to France in old age, where in 1841 he took a French woman as his second wife. His son and heir, Guy Atkinson (1800-59) was also on the continent at this time, as his first two children were born in Rome and Geneva, but he had taken over the management of the Cangort estate by 1846, when he was High Sheriff and succeeded his father. He died fairly young, and his heir, Guy Newcomen Atkinson (1847-90) did not come of age until 1868. It was probably soon afterwards that he remodelled Cangort House, perhaps assisted by the accumulating revenues during his minority, which coincided with a brief period of agricultural prosperity in Ireland. At his death in 1890, G.N. Atkinson left an heir who was only eight years old. Perhaps because he was a career soldier and a bachelor, Guy Montague Atkinson (1882-1956) decided to sell the Cangort estate to his uncle, William Henry Atkinson (1848-1930). He left Cangort to his eldest surviving son, Guy Hamilton Atkinson (1881-1932), but Guy died shortly afterwards and it passed to his only son, Anthony Guy Atkinson (1909-85), who had just embarked on a career in the Royal Artillery. In 1957 Major Atkinson sold Cangort House while retaining the majority of the estate. In 1970 he inherited the Loughton House estate at Moneygall (Offaly) from his Trench relatives, but he made this over to his son, Guy Nevill Atkinson (b. 1950). He sold Loughton House in 2001.
Charles Atkinson (c.1720-79), one of the younger sons of Anthony Atkinson (c.1680-1743), seems to have farmed part of the Cangort estate. His eldest son, Anthony Atkinson (1752-1815), moved south and leased South Park, Ballingarry (Tipperary) from the Trench family. His younger son, George Guy Atkinson (1799-1872), bought Ashley Park at Nenagh (Tipperary) in 1824 and probably built the present house soon afterwards. In 1872 it descended to his youngest son, James Netterville Atkinson (1843-93), who in the 1870s owned 2,000 acres in Tipperary and nearly 1,000 acres in Galway. He extended the house in 1883, but died without any sons, so that the house passed to his eldest daughter, Alice Marjorie Atkinson (1882-1919). In 1903 she came of age and married Thomas Bateson Biggs (1878-1945), who took the name Biggs-Atkinson, but they had no children. After she died, Biggs-Atkinson married again, and he left the estate to his second wife, who lived there until 1963. Since they had had no children either, Mrs Biggs-Atkinson left the estate to a niece in South Africa, Zelie Biggs, who rarely visited. The house was not surprisingly in poor condition by the time she sold it in 1983 to Sean Mounsey, who restored it and converted it into an hotel.
Cangort House, Shinrone, Offaly
Cangort Castle, the original residence of the Atkinson family, was destroyed by Cromwellian forces in the 17th century after being garrisoned for the king. The family returned at the Restoration and built a house to the right of the castle, which was later altered several times. One Georgian elevation survives at the rear, with round-headed windows, and is said to conceal two very small rooms which were once part of the castle.
The present house is the result of a Victorian neo-Jacobean remodelling of the 18th century house. Work is said to have been completed in 1850 but it seems more likely that the stone east and south fronts with their tall gabled elevations and large mullioned and transomed windows were built for Guy Newcomen Atkinson after he came of age in 1868. The east (entrance) front is of three bays and two storeys, with a projecting gabled bay on the left and a gabled porch jammed up against it. The south front, also of three bays, has gables at each end and another doorway, this time with perfectly plain flat door surround, in the middle. There are, on the house, three well-carved heraldic plaques, one on the gable of the entrance front and two on the south front. The other elevations are of ruled-and-lined render. The main house is approached through an elegant entrance gate with lodges, and down a long avenue. Nearby there is a walled garden and at the rear of this is a small ruined single-storey structure with an arched doorway, which may have been a chapel. In the 1870s, the estate amounted to 2,787 acres.
Descent: Anthony Atkinson (d. 1626); to son, William Atkinson (b. 1613); to son, Anthony Atkinson (1630-63); to son, William Atkinson (c.1665-84); to son, Anthony Atkinson (c.1680-1743); to son, Rev. Guy Atkinson (c.1712-1804); to son, Lt-Col. Jackson Wray Atkinson (1766-1846); to son, Guy Atkinson (1800-59); to son, Guy Newcomen Atkinson (1847-90); to son, Guy Montague Atkinson (1882-1956), who sold 1907 to his uncle, William Henry Atkinson (1848-1930); to son, Guy Hamilton Atkinson (1881-1932); to son, Anthony Guy Atkinson (b. 1909), who sold Cangort in 1957.
Atkinson family of Cangort
Atkinson, Anthony (d. 1626). Parentage unknown. A Lieutenant in the Army. He married Mary, daughter of Thomas Bathe and had issue: (1) William Atkinson (b. 1613) (q.v.); (2) John Atkinson; (3) George Atkinson; (4) Thomas Atkinson; (5) Mary Atkinson; (6) Frances Atkinson; (7) Elizabeth Atkinson (fl. 1650); (8) Jane Atkinson; (9) Margaret Atkinson; (10) Anne Atkinson. He settled on lands (the island of Kiltober or Kiltobrett (Offaly)) granted by Queen Elizabeth by patent, and built Cangort Castle. He died 9 October 1626.
Atkinson, William (b. 1613). Eldest son of Anthony Atkinson (d. 1626) and his wife Mary, daughter of Thomas Bathe, born 1613. During the Civil War Cangort Castle was garrisoned for the King and taken and slighted by Parliamentary forces, and he was forced to flee. He married, Anne, daughter of Bartholomew Peisley of Punchestown (Kildare), and had issue: (1) Anthony Atkinson (1630-63); (2) A daughter; married Thomas Newcomen. He inherited the Cangort estate from his father, and acquired an interest in Kilbalymalin (Tipperary) through his marriage. His widow was confirmed in his lands in 1649. He died before 1649. His widow survived him but her date of death is unknown.
Atkinson, Anthony (1630-63). Only son of William Atkinson (b. 1613) and his wife Anne, daughter of Bartholomew Peisley of Punchestown (Kildare), born 1630, He married, before 1655, Anne (1632-1709), younger daughter of Sir Robert Newcomen, 4th bt. and had issue: (1) William Atkinson (c.1655-84) (q.v.); (2) Capt. Newcomen Atkinson (d. c.1691); married [forename unknown] L’Estrange and had issue one son (from whom descended the Atkinsons of Newry and Mill Vale); will proved, 1691; (3) Charles Atkinson (d. 1686); died unmarried, 1686; (4) Frances Atkinson (d. 1738); married Thomas L’Estrange (1656-1741), son of Henry L’Estrange of Moystown (Offaly) and had issue four sons and two daughters; died 1738. He inherited Cangort from his father and recovered the property at the Restoration. He died in January 1663. His widow married 2nd, 1664, William Tynte (d. 1669) of Cahirmoney (Cork), third son of Sir Robert Tynte of Ballycrenane (Cork), and 3rd, William Digby of Newtown (Offaly); she died in 1709.
Atkinson, William (c.1655-84). Eldest son of Anthony Atkinson (1630-63) and his wife Anne, younger daughter of Sir Robert Newcomen, 4th bt, born about 1655. He married Anne, granddaughter of Sir Francis Hamilton of Killeshandra (Cavan), and had issue: (1) Anthony Atkinson (c.1680-1743) (q.v.); (2) William Atkinson. He inherited Cangort from his father. He died in 1684. His widow married 2nd, [forename unknown] Blake and 3rd, Maj. Marcus French of Rahassan; her date of death is unknown.
Atkinson, Anthony (c.1680-1743). Elder son of William Atkinson (c.1655-84) and his wife Anne, born about 1680. Educated at Trinity College, Dublin (admitted 1697), Middle Temple (admitted 1700) and Kings Inn, Dublin (called to bar, 1708). Barrister-at-law. MP in the Irish Parliament for St. Johnstown, 1711-13 and for Belfast, 1713-14. He married, 1709, Mary (d. 1748), daughter of Admiral John Guy of Greenwich (Kent) – who broke the boom across the River Foyle to relieve the siege of Derry in 1690 – and had issue including: (1) William Atkinson (c.1710-38); educated at Middle Temple (admitted 1732) and Kings Inn, Dublin (called to bar, 1737); barrister-at-law; died in the lifetime of his father, 3 July 1738; (2) Rev. Guy Atkinson (c.1712-1804) (q.v.); (3) Anthony Atkinson of Headfield (Offaly); died in the lifetime of his father; (4) Charles Atkinson (c.1720-80) [for whom see below, under Atkinson family of Ashley Park]; (5) Newcomen Atkinson (d. 1759); a Lieutenant in the army; will proved in Ireland, 1759; (6) Anne Atkinson; married Francis Sanderson (d. 1746) of Castle Sanderson, Belturbet (Cavan) and had issue two sons and two daughters; (7) Frances Atkinson (d. 1795); married, 1749 (settlement 30 March), Nathaniel Robbins of Hymenstown (Tipperary) and had issue; died 1795; (8) Harriet Atkinson (fl. 1749); married, 2 September 1749, Robert Sanderson; (9) Jane Atkinson (d. 1763); married Rev. Robert Carew Armstrong (1709-90) of Corolanty (Offaly), son of Thomas Armstrong of Moyaliffe; died 23 January 1763; (10) Catherine Atkinson; married George Fraser of Cuba Court, Banagher (Offaly). He inherited Cangort from his father in 1684. He died in December 1743 and his will was proved the same month. His widow’s will was proved in 1748.
Atkinson, Rev. Guy (c.1712-1804). Second but oldest surviving son of Anthony Atkinson (c.1680-1743) and his wife Mary, daughter of Admiral John Guy of Greenwich (Kent), born about 1712. Educated at Trinity College, Dublin (admitted 1730; BA 1735; MA 1739; DD 1756). Vicar of Newtown Clonbun, 1748-53, Trim and Rathcore (Meath), 1753-67 and Rector of Aghoghill (Antrim), 1767-95. He married 1st, 14 March 1747 at St Peter, Dublin, Jane (d. 1760?), daughter of Charles Maule and niece of Rt. Rev. Henry Maule, bishop of Meath, and 2nd, 19 March 1762 at St Anne, Dublin, Jane (c.1736-98?), daughter of Jackson Wray of Oak Park (Donegal), and had issue: (1.1) Anthony Atkinson (1748-90), born 13 February and baptised at St Peter, Dublin, 15 March 1747/8; died without issue in the lifetime of his father, 1790; (1.2) Hugh Atkinson (d. 1763); died unmarried in India, 1763; (1.3) Guy Atkinson (d. 1766); an officer in the Royal Navy; died unmarried when he was killed by an explosion on board ship; (2.1) Anne Atkinson (b. 1764); died young; (2.2) Lt-Col. Jackson Wray Atkinson (1766-1846) (q.v.); (2.3) Charles Atkinson (b. 1768), baptised at Shinrone, 7 March 1768; died young; (2.4) Rev. Charles Atkinson (c.1769-1851); educated at Lisburn and Trinity College, Dublin (admitted 1788; BA 1792); ordained deacon, 1792; rector of Forkhill (Armagh), 1795-1817 and of Creggan, 1817-51; married 1st, 1793, Thomasine, daughter of Rev. Alexander Clotworthy Downing of Leckpatrick (Derry) and had issue four sons and four daughters; married 2nd, 22 June 1832, Jane Letitia (b. 1803), third daughter of Rev. Arthur Ellis, vicar of Ardee, and had further issue one son and four daughters; died 4 March 1851; (2.5) William Henry Atkinson (b. 1770); died young; (2.6) George Atkinson (b. 1772); died young; (2.7) George Atkinson (later Wray) (1773-1852); assumed the name and arms of Wray, 1809; married, 1797, Leonora (d. 1832), daughter of Jackson Wray of Brentford (Antrim) and had issue three sons; died in Dublin, 6 April 1852; (2.8) Maria Atkinson (d. 1796); married, 1793, George R. Golding; died 1796; (2.9) Jane Atkinson (b. 1780); died young. He inherited the Cangort estate from his father in 1743. He died 24 October 1804, aged about 92; his will was proved in 1804. His first wife may have been the Jane Atkinson whose will was proved in 1760. His second wife died in 1798 (or 30 Dec. 1790).
Atkinson, Lt-Col. Jackson Wray (1766-1846). Eldest son of Rev. Guy Atkinson (c.1712-1804) and his second wife, Jane, daughter of Jackson Wray of Co. Donegal, born at Newry (Down), 1766. Educated at Hertford College, Oxford (matriculated 1792), Middle Temple (admitted 1792) and Kings Inn, Dublin (called to bar, 1795). An officer in the 46th foot (Ensign, 1787) and King’s County (Offaly) militia (Lt-Col.); High Sheriff of Offaly, 1803; JP for Offaly; freemason. He married, 1st, 3 November 1794, Sarah, daughter of Richard Caddell of Downpatrick (Down), and 2nd, 24 November 1841 at British Embassy in Paris (France), Virginie Aspasie Penneguin of Dept. du Nord (France), and had issue: (1.1) Sarah Atkinson (b. c.1795); died unmarried; (1.2) Maria Atkinson (b. c.1797); died unmarried; (1.3) Mabella Jane Atkinson (b. c.1799); probably died young; (1.4) Guy Atkinson (1800-59) (q.v.); (1.5) Caroline Stewart Atkinson (1803-39); married William L’Estrange (1789-1860) of Kilcummin, Banagher (Offaly) and had issue two sons and four daughters; died from injuries received in the ‘Night of the Big Wind’, 22 January 1839; (1.8) Emily Rebecca Atkinson (c.1804-82); died unmarried, 15 December 1882; (1.6) Henry Wray Atkinson (1806-73) of Frankville, Athboy (Meath), born July 1806; married, 9 April 1839, Elizabeth Jane, daughter of Rev. William Brownlow Savage, rector of Shinrone (Offaly) and had issue five sons and five daughters; died 24 January 1873; administration granted to his son, 22 March 1873 (effects under £1,500); (1.7) Charles Atkinson (1808-40); an officer in HEICS 10th Native Cavalry; died from a snake bite, 17 June 1840 at Nusseerabad, Bengal (India); (1.9) Harriet Anne Atkinson (b. c.1809); probably died young; (1.10) Richard Atkinson (1818-71), of Gortmore, Dundrum (Dublin), born 6 October 1818; educated at Kings Inn, Dublin (admitted 1835); married, 14 October 1840 at Caledon (Tyrone), Mary Jane Elizabeth (d. 1886), daughter of Capt. George R. Golding of Lime Park, Caledon, and had issue three sons and six daughters; died 18 July 1871. He inherited the Cangort estate from his father in 1804. He died at Neuilly-sur-Seine (France), 14 August 1846. His first wife’s date of death is unknown. His widow’s date of death is unknown.
Atkinson, Guy (1800-59). Eldest son of Lt-Col. Jackson Wray Atkinson (1766-1846) and his wife Sarah, daughter of Richard Caddell of Downpatrick (Down), born 14 July and baptised at Shinrone, 3 August 1800. Educated at Trinity College, Dublin (admitted 1818; BA 1823). JP for Offaly; High Sheriff of Offaly, 1846; freemason. He married, 24 October 1839 at Shinrone, Anne Margaret (1810-79), second daughter of William Trench of Cangort Park (Offaly) and had issue: (1) Charles Newcomen Atkinson (1840-41), born probably in December 1840 and baptised in Rome, January 1841; died in infancy in Rome, 11 January 1841; (2) Sarah Harriet Atkinson (1842-1935), baptised at British chaplaincy in Geneva (Switzerland), 26 June 1842; married, 11 May 1865 at Shinrone, George Arthur Waller JP (1835-1923) of Prior Park, Borrisokane (Tipperary) and Luska, Nenagh (Tipperary) and had issue ten sons and one daughter; died 11 January 1935 aged 92; (3) Emily Atkinson (1843-1928), baptised at Shinrone, 31 December 1843; married, 4 October 1865 at Shinrone, George Adolphus Western (1838-1929) of Beckenham (Kent), solicitor, second son of Edward Western of London, and had issue three sons and seven daughters; died 21 March 1928; (4) Caroline Sophia Atkinson (1845-1943), born 3 June 1845; married, 14 December 1869 at St Bartholomew, Dublin, Lt-Col. James Halifax Western CMG (1842-1917) of Halifax Lodge, Hurstpierpoint (Sussex) and had issue; died 8 January 1943, aged 97, and was buried at Hurstpierpoint; will proved 21 April 1943 (estate £13,661). (5) Lt-Col. Guy Newcomen Atkinson (1847-90) (q.v.); (6) William Henry Atkinson (1848-1930) (q.v.); (7) Maj. Richard Frederick Atkinson (1849-86), born 11 December 1849 and baptised at Shinrone, 6 January 1850; educated at the Royal Military Academy; an officer in the 67th Regiment (Ensign, 1869; Lt., 1871; Capt. 1880, Maj., 1886); served in Afghan War, 1878-80 and died unmarried when he was killed in action at Salin Myo (Burma), 31 August 1886; will proved in London, 1 February 1887 (effects £4,867) and resealed in Dublin, 1 March 1887 (effects in Ireland £1,577). He inherited the Cangort estate from his father in 1846. He died at Cangort, 28 November 1859 and his will was proved in Dublin in 1860. His widow died 12 July 1879.
Atkinson, Lt-Col. Guy Newcomen (1847-90). Second, but eldest surviving son, of Guy Atkinson (1800-59) and his wife Anne Margaret, second daughter of William Trench of Cangort Park (Offaly), born 4 January 1847. Educated at Royal Military Academy. An officer of Shropshire Light Infantry (Ensign, 1865; Lt., 1867; Capt., 1875; Major, 1882; Lt-Col., 1886); Adjutant of Shropshire Rifle Brigade, 1882-86. JP for Offaly. He married, 19 July 1877 at Leamington (Warks), Frances Elizabeth (c.1846-1929), elder daughter of Hon. Lawrence Harman King-Harman of Rockingham House (Roscommon) and Newcastle (Longford), and had issue: (1) Guy Edward Atkinson (1878-79), born in India, 9 December 1878 and baptised at Lucknow (India), 2 February 1878; died in infancy, 24 May 1879; (2) Helen Mary Atkinson (1880-1973), born 30 September and baptised at Littlemore (Oxon), 12 December 1880; married, 5 September 1908 at St Ethelburga, Bishopsgate, London, Brig-Gen. Robert William Hare CMG DSO DL (1872-1953), only son of Robert Dillon Hare JP of Ballymore, Queenstown (Cork) and had issue one son and two daughters; died in Norwich Jan-Mar 1973, aged 92; (3) Lt-Col. Guy Montague Atkinson (1882-1956) (q.v.); (4) Maj. Gerald Newcomen Atkinson (1884-1962), born 10 March 1884; educated at Charterhouse and Royal Military College, Sandhurst; an officer in the Somerset Light Infantry (2nd Lt., 1904; Lt., 1908; Capt., 1915; Maj. by 1920) who served in First World War; married, 1 March 1923 in Bombay (India), Grace Phoebe (1890-1986), daughter of Alfred James Davies of Heaton Moor, Stockport (Lancs); lived in North Devon; died 24 July 1962; will proved 4 September 1962 (estate £21,436). He inherited the Cangort estate from his father in 1859 and came of age in 1868. He was probably responsible for a substantial remodelling c.1870. He died at Kilkenny, where he was in command of the garrison, 10 February 1890, and was buried at Shinrone; his will was proved in London, 21 July 1890 (effects £6,613) and sealed in Dublin, 18 November 1890 (effects in Ireland £1,961). His widow died 29 March 1929; administration of her goods was granted to her elder son, 16 December 1929 (estate £7,518).
Atkinson, Lt-Col. Guy Montague (1882-1956). Second, but eldest surviving, son of Lt-Col. Guy Newcomen Atkinson (1847-90) and his wife Frances Elizabeth, elder daughter of Hon. Lawrence Harman King-Harman of Rockingham House (Roscommon) and Newcastle (Longford), born at Shrewsbury (Shropshire), 30 March 1882. Educated at Charterhouse and Royal Military College, Sandhurst. An officer in Kings Royal Rifle Corps, 1902-22 (2nd Lt., 1902; Lt., 1906; Capt., 1914; Major, 1916); he served in South African War and First World War (wounded, 1915; DSO 1916); served as Lt-Col. commanding Wiltshire Home Guard in Second World War. JP for Wiltshire, 1937. He married, 7 January 1920, Hon. Bertha Beatrice (1884-1961), fifth daughter of Lt-Col. George Best, 5th Baron Wynford, but had no issue. He inherited the Cangort estate from his father in 1890 and came of age in 1903. He sold the estate to his uncle, William Henry Atkinson, in 1907. He lived latterly at Penleigh House, Westbury (Wilts). He died 1 May 1956; his will was proved 18 September 1956 (estate £31,012). His widow died 10 June 1961; her will was proved 21 November 1961 (estate £31,225).
Atkinson, William Henry (1848-1930). Third son of Guy Atkinson (1800-59) and his wife Anne Margaret, second daughter of William Trench of Cangort Park (Offaly), born 28 August and baptised at Shinrone, 8 October 1848. He married, 20 November 1877 at St Peter, Dublin, Anna (c.1848-1917), second daughter of Lewis Moore of Cremorgan, Timahoe (Leix) and had issue: (1) Ella Mary Emily Atkinson (1878-1922), born 3 September 1878; died unmarried, 7 April 1922; administration of goods granted to her father (effects in England, £668); (2) Henry Richard Atkinson (1880-1905), born 17 March 1880; died unmarried, 26 December 1905; administration of his goods granted to his father, 21 March 1906 (effects £1,076); (3) Guy Hamilton Atkinson (1881-1932) (q.v.); (4) Geraldine Anna Atkinson (c.1884-1950); married, 18 April 1906, James Wallace (1876-1961), barrister-at-law, of Cangort Park (Offaly) and had issue one daughter; died 5 January 1950; administration of goods granted to her daughter, 2 May 1950 in Dublin and 23 June 1950 in London (effects in Ireland, £599 and in England, £640). He purchased the Cangort House estate from his nephew in 1907. He died 7 May 1930; his will was proved in London, 12 August 1930 (effects in England £3,310). His wife died 17 June 1917; administration of her goods was granted 8 September 1917 (effects £154).
Atkinson, Guy Hamilton (1881-1932). Only surviving son of William Henry Atkinson (1848-1930) and his wife Anna, second daughter of Lewis Moore of Cremorgan, Timahoe (Leix), born 20 April 1881. Educated at Monckton Combe School, Bath (Somerset). He married, 18 February 1909, Sybilla Gertrude (1884-1962), only daughter of Canon Richard Philip Homan of Lockeen Glebe, Birr (Offaly) and had issue: (1) Anthony Guy Atkinson (1909-85) (q.v.); (2) Sylvia Geraldine Atkinson (1919-91), born 29 May 1919; married, 19 March 1947, Col. David Peter Davidson OBE (d. 1986) of West Haddon (Northants), only son of David Peter Davidson of Dundee; died 5 November 1991; administration of her goods with will annexed granted 12 February 1992 (estate under £125,000). He inherited the Cangort House estate from his father in 1930. He died 23 February 1932; his will was proved at Mullingar, 24 October 1932 and in London, 7 May 1932 (estate in Ireland, £8,465 and in England £5,972). His widow died 30 January 1962; her will was proved 7 December 1962 (estate in England, £3,594).
Atkinson, Maj. Anthony Guy (1909-85). Only son of Guy Hamilton Atkinson (1881-1932) and his wife Sybilla Gertrude, only daughter of Canon Richard Philip Homan of Lockeen Glebe, Birr (Offaly), born 10 December 1909. Educated at St. Columba’s and Royal Military Academy, Woolwich. An officer in the Royal Artillery, 1929-52 (2nd Lt., 1929; Maj.; retired 1952); served in Second World War in Hong Kong and was a prisoner of war, 1941-45. He married, 16 October 1937, Anne Elizabeth (b. c.1915), eldest daughter of Rev. Nevill Lascelles-Ward of Largo, Florida (USA), and had issue: (1) Mary Catherine Charlotte Atkinson (b. 1938), born 11 November 1938; married, 10 April 1964, Maj. Thomas Michael Hawksworth Smyth (1933-2004) of Ballyvona House, Killinick, Rosslare (Wexford), only son of Maj. Thomas Reginald Hawksworth Smyth of Cedar Hill, Roscrea (Tipperary) and had issue one son and three daughters; living in 1976; (2) Antonia Sybilla Atkinson (b. 1948), born 26 July 1948; married, 13 February 1971, Capt. Andrew William Orr MB BS MRCS LRCP (b. 1946), of Royal Army Medical Corps, only son of Lt-Col. Harold Arthur Orr of Poole (Dorset) and had issue one daughter; living in 1976. (3) Guy Nevill Atkinson (b. 1950) (q.v.); He inherited the Cangort House estate from his father in 1932, but sold the house in 1957. He inherited Loughton House, Moneygall (Offaly) from the Trench family in 1970 but made it over to his son. He died 15 March 1985; his will was proved in London, 11 October 1985 (estate in England & Wales, £19,256). His wife was living in 1976.
Atkinson, Guy Nevill (b. 1950). Only son of Maj. Anthony Guy Atkinson (1909-85) and his wife Anne Elizabeth, eldest daughter of Rev. Nevill Lascelles-Ward of Largo, Florida (USA), born 29 November 1950. Educated at St. Columba’s and Royal Military Academy, Sandhurst. An officer in Queen’s Royal Irish Hussars (2nd Lt., 1971). He married, 20 April 1974, Mary Grace, younger daughter of Dr. Norman Cunningham Porter of The Lodge, Naburn (Yorks NR). He was given Loughton House, Moneygall and the Cangort estate by his father in 1970, but sold the former in 2000. He was living in 2016.
Cangort House, On Approx. 9.67 Hec (23.9 Acre), Shinrone, County Offaly
€1,950,000. R42HT92 8 beds2 baths798 m2 for sale 2025 courtesy Sherry Fitzgerald Country Homes, Farms and Estates
Cangort House is a stunning Jacobean-style residence set within 9.67 hectares (23.9 acres) of beautifully landscaped grounds, offering a mix of historical charm and modern comforts. With extensive living spaces, equestrian facilities, and a natural swimming pool, it provides a perfect setting for relaxing country living and recreation. CANGORT HOUSE Set amidst a landscape steeped in history, Cangort House combines the allure of the past with the conveniences of modern living. Though the original castle fell in the 17th century, its surviving rear section was preserved and incorporated into the present structure, which was rebuilt around 1870 in a distinguished Jacobean style. With its steeply pitched roofs and tall chimneys adorned with intricate moulded brick cornices, the house exudes a timeless elegance and enduring charm. The current owners have skilfully preserved the property’s historic character while introducing a bold and vibrant colour palette that adds a modern, distinctive touch throughout the house. Upon entering Cangort House, you are greeted by a long entrance hall featuring a decorative vaulted ceiling and stunning parquet flooring, which extends into many of the rooms throughout the house. To the right is a small lobby area, and as you continue, the first reception room you encounter is the dining room. This elegant space boasts lofty ceilings adorned with intricate cornicing, solid wood flooring, a striking marble fireplace, and large mullioned windows, a hallmark of the Jacobean era. Next door, the library offers a cosy atmosphere with built-in shelving. Sliding double doors lead from this room into the beautifully light-filled drawing room, where the rich navy walls create a warm and inviting ambiance. A wood-burning stove is complemented by a stunning Adams fireplace above, making it the ideal space for entertaining. A panelled hallway leads you to a cosy sitting room that overlooks the outdoor swimming pool. With its lower ceilings and a wood-burning stove, this room exudes warmth and comfort, making it the perfect space for everyday living. Next door, two interlinking studies provide an ideal setting for working from home. An additional hallway leads to another family room, painted in a striking blue shade, offering yet another inviting space for everyday living. Opposite the family room is the kitchen, which has been recently refurbished by the owners who clearly love to cook and entertain. The light-flooded kitchen combines classic country kitchen features, including a striking black and white marble floor, solid wood built-in cabinetry, a sizable island unit with a double Shaws Belfast sink and a generous dining table. Complemented by two cookers, an electric Stanley Rangemaster with 5-burner gas hob, and a cast iron solid fuel Stanley stove and Smeg fridge. A fantastic adjacent pantry area boasts floor-to-ceiling solid oak cabinets and provides ample storage and convenience, including a second fridge. Just off the kitchen, you’ll find a boot room, laundry room, and WC, adding to the home’s practicality. A magnificent dark wooden staircase leads you to the upper floors, where on the returning landing, an open fireplace stands as a striking and unique feature. It creates a stunning focal point, especially when lit on cold winter evenings, adding warmth and charm to the space. The master suite exudes luxury, with lofty ceilings, an open fire, and large windows adorned with shutters that overlook the splendid gardens. It is further enhanced by a dressing room with built-in wardrobes. The main bathroom is a relaxing retreat, featuring panelled walls, solid wood flooring, a generous shower, a vintage freestanding roll top bathtub, and an Edwardian rectangular washstand, creating an elegant space. You will find seven more generously sized double bedrooms on this floor, each offering a unique view of the surrounding grounds. This floor also includes a shower room, study, an additional bathroom and a newly decorated WC. Another bathroom is awaiting refurbishment, offering potential for personalisation. While a second internal staircase provides extra access to the ground floor. GARDENS & GROUNDS Cangort House is set within splendid grounds, extending to approximately 9.67 hectares (23.9 acres). A pair of electric gates welcome you to the property, where a tarmac driveway, bordered by trees and post and rail fencing, stretches ahead, passing by paddocks to the left. As you draw closer to the house, the driveway gently splits, allowing you the choice to drive up to the front entrance or to the courtyard and stables. As you approach the front of the house, a large turning circle greets you, with a mature beech tree standing proudly at its centre while manicured lawns unfold before you. To the side of the house lies a stunning natural swimming pool, surrounded by a lush array of aquatic plants and filled with pure rainwater, free from chemicals or chlorine. This serene, eco-friendly oasis provides the perfect spot to unwind and relax amidst the beauty of the garden. At the rear of the house, an enclosed courtyard is framed by a collection of charming old stone buildings, including 13 stables and a shed for firewood and garden tools. Adjacent to the courtyard lies the historic walled garden, now home to a sand arena for exercising horses. LOCATION Cangort House is perfectly situated just 2.4 km from the village of Shinrone, where you’ll find a range of essential amenities, including a national (primary) school, filling station, convenience shop, pub, farm store, gym, squash courts and both GAA and soccer clubs, ensuring everything you need is close at hand. Additionally, the Slieve Bloom Cricket Club is only 7.6 km away, providing further recreational options for sports enthusiasts. The property is also ideally situated, nearly equidistant from the towns of Roscrea and Birr, offering easy access to both locations.
Cangort Park, County Offaly courtesy Sherry Fitzgerald Country Homes, Farms and Estates.Cangort Park, County Offaly courtesy Sherry Fitzgerald Country Homes, Farms and Estates.Cangort Park, County Offaly courtesy Sherry Fitzgerald Country Homes, Farms and Estates.
When a Dublin couple were gifted two horses by an emigrating aunt, they never imagined it would lead them to swap the coast of Sandymount for the sweeping pastures of Offaly.
But that’s exactly what happened in 2002 when regular weekend visits to check on the horses stabled on family land near Birr sparked something unexpected — a love affair with rural life.
Property Details
Cangort House, Shinrone, Birr, Co Offaly
Price: €1.95m
BER: exempt
Beds: Eight
Agents: Sherry FitzGerald Country Homes 01-2376308 and Sherry FitzGerald Fogarty 0505-21192
Fast forward and they’ve traded a modest 110-square-metre city semi for Cangort House, a spectacular 19th-century Jacobean-style residence of just under 800 square metres sprawled across nearly 24 acres.
With eight bedrooms, 13 stables, a natural swimming pool, and enough fireplaces to keep winter endlessly cosy, the move was nothing short of a leap — or as they put it, “a jump-off-a-jetty” decision.
What started as a trial run in a nearby holiday home owned by the husband’s father turned into a full-blown lifestyle reinvention.
Cangort House, once home to thriller writer Campbell Black (rumoured inspiration for Jilly Cooper’s iconic Rupert Campbell-Black), became their forever home — a haven for horses, friends, and family alike.
“That Sunday night feeling when everyone else is leaving, and we get to stay — that’s never worn off,” they say.
And who could blame them?
The first order of business was upgrading Cangort’s beautiful, period, shuttered sash windows, then repairing, refurbishing and in some cases installing wood-burning stoves throughout the house, which, combined, they admit was a game-changer.
“We then turned our attention to the kitchen, which was a dark, unwelcoming space tacked onto the rear of the house,” they said, transforming the space into a large, bright, traditional space.
The refurbished classic country kitchenThe games room, with sash windows and high ceiling, has a full size pool table The impressive dual-aspect drawing room with marble fireplaceThe impressive dual-aspect drawing room with marble fireplace
Everywhere else, the couple have filled the house with a bold, vibrant gemstone colour palette, the grand proportions and intricate detailing of which historic homes like this were built for.
Entry is via a pair of electric gates opening to a long, tree-lined drive cutting a swathe through the estate’s paddocks. Along the main drive a secondary driveway splinters off to whisk away those with an equestrian purpose to Cangort’s courtyard and stables.
At the front of the house proper is a large turning circle with a majestic beech tree at its centre surrounded by manicured lawns, a gravel drive and parking apron and the modern addition of a basketball court off to the side.
A set of double front doors open to a long entrance hall featuring a decorative vaulted ceiling and stunning parquet floors, which extend into many of the rooms throughout the house.
To the right of the entrance is a small lobby area, and the first reception room, the impressive dual-aspect dining room, is on the left. The inky blue-hued walls contrast with the room’s high ceilings adorned with intricate cornicing, its solid wood floors, striking white marble fireplace, and large Jacobean, mullioned windows.
Next door, the library offers a cosy atmosphere with built-in shelving.
Sliding double doors lead from this room into the beautifully light-filled, dual-aspect drawing room, where the rich navy walls once more create a warm and inviting ambience, warmed further by a wood-burning stove set into an Adams fireplace.
A panelled hallway leads to a cosy sitting room with emerald green walls and which overlooks the outdoor swimming pool and has a wood-burning stove set into a white marble fireplace.
Next door, two interlinking studies provide an ideal setting for working from home.
Another hallway leads to another family room, painted in a striking teal shade with another handsome fireplace and inset wood-burning stove.
Opposite the family room is the refurbished classic country kitchen, laid in classic black and white marble floors, solid timber built-in cabinetry, a sizeable island unit with a double Shaws Belfast sink and a generous dining table.
Complemented by two cookers, an electric Stanley Rangemaster with five-burner gas hob, and a cast iron solid fuel Stanley stove and Smeg fridge.
An adjacent pantry area boasts floor-to-ceiling solid oak cabinets and provides ample storage and convenience, including a second fridge.
Just off the kitchen is a handy boot room, laundry room, and WC, adding to the home’s practicality.
A magnificent dark wooden staircase leads to the upper floors, where on the returning landing, an unexpected open fireplace stands as a striking feature as well as offering additional warmth to the space.
The dual-aspect principal suite, set above the formal dining room below, exudes luxury, with lofty ceilings, an open fire and large, shuttered windows and an adjacent, enviable dressing room with built-in wardrobes.
The main bathroom is a relaxing retreat, featuring panelled walls, solid timber floors, a generous shower, a vintage free-standing roll-top bathtub, and an Edwardian rectangular washstand, creating an elegant space.
There are seven equally generously sized double bedrooms on this floor, each offering a unique view of the surrounding grounds.
This floor also includes a shower room, study, an additional bathroom and a newly decorated WC.
Another bathroom is awaiting refurbishment, while a second internal staircase provides alternative access to the ground floor.
Outside, Cangort House boasts a delightful freshwater swimming pool, which was installed four years ago during Covid-19 and is a 17-step walk from the kitchen and a warming, post-dip cup of coffee.
“You’re not standing on a rock at the Forty Foot struggling to put your smalls on,” said the owner. “You can go from the pool up to a roaring fire in your bedroom to get changed with your morning coffee in tow.
“The pool has transformed Cangort House from an autumn leaves and fireplace, wintry home to a summer home too and when the sun does come out, you do not want to be anywhere else.”
Surrounding the pool is a lush array of aquatic plants, a raised sheltered deck area, lawns, a sunken trampoline, original stone walls and, at the rear of the house, an enclosed courtyard framed by a collection of charming old stone buildings. These include 13 stables and a shed for firewood and garden tools.
“We inherited the yard in working order with stabling and a water supply and we had a pal who rented the yard from us, and he ran a kind of a livery yard from there,” said the owners.
Beside this is a historic walled garden, now home to a sand arena for exercising horses.
Cangort House is just 2.4 km from the village of Shinrone, which is home to a range of essential amenities, including a national (primary) school, filling station, convenience shop, pub, farm store, gym, squash courts and both GAA and soccer clubs. The Slieve Bloom Cricket Club is 7.6 km away.
The property is also nearly equidistant from the towns of Roscrea and Birr, the latter renowned for its preserved Georgian heritage. Birr is home to Birr Theatre and Arts Centre along with Birr Castle Demesne, the ancestral seat of the Parsons family – the Earls of Rosse – for 14 generations, as well as having cafes, pubs, restaurants, shops and two hotels.
Roscrea has a variety of shops, supermarkets, cafes, restaurants and healthcare facilities as well as rugby, tennis and athletics clubs and Cistercian College Roscrea, a boarding and day school for boys.
The Urseline Secondary School, a boarding school for girls, is located about 39km from Cangort House.
Cangort House is a 70-minute drive from Shannon Airport and an hour and 20 minutes to Dublin’s Red Cow Roundabout.
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.
“(Macartney-Filgate, sub Filgate/IFR) A two storey Victorian house with camberheaded windows, a single-storey three sided bow decorated with Romaneque pilasters at either end of its front, and a high roof on a bracket cornice. The seat of the Tunstall-Moores; Lucy, sister and heiress of G.B.Tunstall-Moore, married c.H.R. Macartney-filgate, 1910.”
not in national inventory
record Of Protected Structures:
Stadalt House, townland: Stadalt, town: Stamullen
Now a nursing home Seven-bay, two-storey house built c. 1879, and extended 1889, with camber headed windows, a single storey 3 sided bow decorated with Romanesque pilasters at either end of its front and a high roof on a bracket cornice.
Stadalt is located southwest of Stamullin village. It borders County Dublin. Stedalt is a large two storey Italianate house from the Victorian period. A large lake was created at the front of the house which has now been drained. A large flour mill was located near Stamullin and was fed from the artificial lake. There was also a kiln.
The Plunketts held Stadalt during the medieval period before the property came into the hands of the Darcy family. In 1773 Christopher Darcy of Stadalt died. Stadalt became the property of the Walsh family. Rev. Jeremiah Walsh of Stadalt was a descendant of the Walsh family of Laragh. When he died in 1774 he was succeeded by his eldest son, Andrew.
In 1804 William Walsh of Stadalt married Margaret Upton. Stadalt was the seat of W. Walsh in 1835. Stadalt House was pleasantly situated in a demesne of 230 acres. In 1862 William Walsh was residing at Stadalt. The family allowed all their tenants to bring their blighted potatoes to their farmyard to be turned into flour during the famine. In 1861 John Walsh of Stadalt patented a furze crusher which could be used to make the plant suitable for feeding to animals. The machine was exhibited at the Dublin International Exhibition of 1865. The old house at Stadalt was demolished around 1860 when the new house was erected. In 1863 William Walsh captured a burglar in the drawing room of his home. Brendan Matthews recorded that a member of the Walsh family was run over by the train at Gormanstown in 1881. In 1876 William Walsh held 445 acres in County Meath. Henry Walsh died in 1885.
The property then went through the Tunstall-Moore family and Macartney-Filgate families. By 1876 Robert Tunstall-Moore was living at Stadalt. His wife was Mathilde Sophie Blount of Nantes, France. In 1901 Robert Tunstall-Moore, his wife, Mathilda Sophie, his son, George Blount and daughters, Lucy Mathilda, Edith Mary and Eveline Frances were living at Stadalt.
Henry R. Tunstall-Moore of Stadalt House died in 1911. Aged 42 Henry was the owner of a number of racehorses and was a steward of Bellewstown Races for years. He had a cricket green at Stadalt. A cricket team for Stadalt competed in competition from the 1890s onwards. Mathilde Sophie Tunstall-Moore died in 1925.
Lucy Matilda, sister and heiress of George B. Tunstall-Moore married Clement H.R. Macartney-Filgate in 1910. The Macartney-Filgate family were established in north County Dublin and in County Louth. Clement Macartney-Filgate was a commissioner in Scotland Yard before World War I. He died in 1930. His son, Brian, married in 1937.
In 1933 Stadalt was put up for sale. The house had four reception rooms, a billiard room, gunroom and office, butler’s pantry, kitchen, scullery, twelve family bedrooms and dressing rooms, two bathrooms and W.C.s, two maidservant’s rooms, work room and pantry. Outside there was seven loose boxes, five stalls, mens’ rooms, gardens, two tennis lawns, gate lodge and two cottages. In 1936 Mrs. Macartney-Filgate sold the house and 270 acres which was purchased by the Sisters of the Holy Child of Jesus, their first foundation in Ireland. In 1951 the Sisters of Clare took up residence at Stadalt and founded a home for the children of unmarried mothers. In 1987 the Sisters sold the house and it became a nursing home for the elderly.