Aughentaine Castle, Fivemiletown, County Tyrone, demolished and new house built 1954

Aughentaine Castle, Fivemiletown, County Tyrone, demolished and new house built 1954. 

Aughentaine Castle, Fivemiletown, County Tyrone photo from Aughentaine Castle website.

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. 15. “(Knox-Browne, sub Browne/IFR; Hamilton Stubber/IFR) A large Victorian mansion, built 1860 by T.R. Browne, consisting of symmetrical two storey main block, and a lower two storey wing, with two very tall Italianate campaniles of equal height, one at each end, to give the building that air of near-symmetry so beloved of many Victorian architects. Open porch; two-light and 3-light windows, some rectangular, others round-headed. Prominent roofs. Sold following the death of Mervyn Knox-Browne 1954, to Major J.H. Hamilton Stubber, who demolished it and built a modern Classical house to the design of Hon. Claud Phillimore.” 

https://lordbelmontinnorthernireland.blogspot.com/2013/08/aughentaine-castle.html

THE KNOX-BROWNES OWNED 10,350 ACRES OF LAND IN COUNTY TYRONE
JOHN HAMILTON BROWNE, of Cumber House, near Claudy, County Londonderry, and Aughentaine, County Tyrone, son of THOMAS BROWNE, of County Londonderry, by Elizabeth Hamilton his wife, niece of James Hamilton, Provost of Strabane ca 1720, and grandson of GEORGE BROWNE, also of Derry, by his wife Mary, daughter of Colonel Hogg, married, in 1795, Jane Matilda, daughter of William Lecky, of Castlefin, County Donegal, MP for Londonderry City, 1790-7, by Hannah his wife, daughter of Conolly McCausland, of DRENAGH, and had issue,

Conolly William Lecky, of Cumber House; died unmarried;
THOMAS RICHARDSON, his successor;
GEORGE, of Cumber House;
John Hamilton;
Hannah Sidney; Elizabeth.

Mr Browne died in 1848, and was succeeded by his second, but eldest surviving son,

THOMAS RICHARDSON BROWNE JP DL (1810-82), of Aughentaine, High Sheriff of County Tyrone, 1832, who wedded, in 1839, Sarah, fourth daughter of Hervey Pratt de Montmorency, of CASTLE MORRES, County Kilkenny, and had issue,

JOHN HERVEY, his heir;
Raymond Saville;
Conolly William Lecky Browne-Lecky;
Rose Sarah; Caroline Frances; Matilda Theodosia.

Mr Browne was succeeded by his eldest son,

JOHN HERVEY KNOX-BROWNE JP DL (1841-1927), of Aughentaine Castle, High Sheriff of County Tyrone, 1887, who married, in 1867, Louisa Elizabeth, daughter of Sir Francis Arthur Knox-Gore Bt, of BELLEEK MANOR, County Mayo, by Sarah his wife, daughter of Colonel Charles Nesbitt Knox, of Castle Lacken, County Mayo, and had issue,

Charles Arthur Hervey (1870-1934), died unmarried;
MERVYN WILLIAM CHARLES NESBITT;
Sarah Hannah Madeline; Augusta Caroline; Eileen Hester Louisa.

Colonel Knox-Browne, ADC to His Grace the Duke of Abercorn, Lord Lieutenant of Ireland, Lieutenant-Colonel, 9th Brigade, North Irish Division, Royal Artillery, assumed the additional surname and arms of KNOX in 1874.

He was succeeded by his younger son,

MERVYN WILLIAM CHARLES NESBITT KNOX-BROWNE DL (1880-1954), of Aughentaine Castle, High Sheriff of County Tyrone, 1935, who wedded, in 1911, Mary, daughter of Captain Thomas Barry George, and had issue,

MERVYN HERVEY, his heir;
Louisa May (1912-69).

Mr Knox-Browne was succeeded by his only son,

MERVYN HERVEY KNOX-BROWNE MBE JP DL (1927-2022), who married, in 1956, Catherine, daughter of Hugh Ferguson, and had issue,

MAUREEN; DEIRDRE ROSEMARY.

Family of Hamilton-Stubber

Mervyn Knox-Browne, who moved to Perthshire, sold Aughentaine Castle to Lieutenant-Colonel John Henry Hamilton-Stubber.

It was subsequently demolished in 1955. 

An ancestor of the Hamilton-Stubbers, Hugh Hamilton, settled at Lisbane in County Down during the reign of JAMES I, died in 1665 and was interred at Bangor, County Down. Hugh’s son was called John Hamilton, of Ballymenoch near Holywood. A second son was Alexander Hamilton, of Killyleagh.  

MAJOR ROBERT HAMILTON-STUBBER DSO (1879-1963), of MOYNE HOUSE, married, in 1920, the Lady Mabel Florence Mary Crichton, daughter of John, 4th Earl of Erne, and had issue, an only child,

JOHN HENRY HAMILTON-STUBBER DL (1921-86), Captain, Coldstream Guards, Lieutenant-Colonel, Ulster Defence Regiment, 1972, who wedded, in 1953, Fiona Patricia, daughter of Geoffrey Wyndham Breitmeyer, and had issue,

JAMES ROBERT;
Richard J, Vice Lord-Lieutenant of Co Armagh; m Susanna, dau. of 2nd Viscount Brookeborough;
Charles Geoffrey, born 1960;
David Hugh, born 1962.

The eldest son,

JAMES ROBERT HAMILTON-STUBBER DL (1954-), of Aughentaine, former Lieutenant, Coldstream Guards, married Carola E A Savill, and has issue,

HENRY JAMES HAMILTON-STUBBER, born in 1984.

AUGHENTAINE CASTLE, near Fivemiletown, County Tyrone, was a large Victorian mansion, built in 1860 for Thomas Richardson Browne.

This mansion house was named after the plantation castle mentioned by Mrs Knox-Browne in 1937 for a BBC interview.

It consisted of a two-storey main block and a lower two-storey wing, with two tall Italianate campaniles of equal height, one at each end.

There was an open porch; two-light and three-light windows some round-headed and others rectangular. The roofing was prominent.

The image above is shown by kind permission of McClintock of Seskinore, which contains more pictures of Aughentaine.

The house was demolished ca 1955 by Colonel Hamilton-Stubber, who built a neo-classical house (below) ca 1958 to the design of the Hon Claud Phillimore.

Land was acquired in the 18th century and a demesne was set out but not walled in.

There are many fine mature trees, evidence of the planting that took place for this imposing house.

The landscape designer, Percy Cane, planned an ornamental garden for the house and this is maintained.

Excellent distant views can be seen from the house over Cane’s double terraces and tree-tops on lower ground.

Extensive rhododendron and other shrub planting cascades below the terraces and into the parkland to the south.

Expansion took place post-1958 in the planting beneath mature trees on either side of Ballyness Glen, which runs to the east of the house in an attractive declivity.

There is a lake on high ground to the north of the house, which has an island and is backed by a wood and, further back, extensive forest planting.

It is referred to as a ‘Fish Pond’ in 1858, prior to the erection of the 1860s house.

The 1860s stables are retained and beyond lies the walled garden, which is pre-1858.

It is part-cultivated and the original glasshouses have gone except one, which is in operation.

Several bridges are necessary in the park: one, built in the 1860s, was designed as part of the planned landscape.

Aughentaine estate, near Fivemiletown, is renowned for its garden and forestry.

First published in September, 2010.  Knox-Browne arms courtesy of the NLI.

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

AUGHENTAINE CASTLE, County Tyrone (AP MID ULSTER 10) T/001 
REGISTERED GRADE A 
Mid-Victorian demesne parkland (285 acres/115ha) laid out to accompany house of 1860-63, 
subsequently demolished to make way for present 1958 house by architect Claude Phillimore. 
Located 2.4 miles north-east of Fivemiletown and 4.9 miles (7.9km) west of Clogher, it lies in the 
townland of Ballyness – the real ‘Aughentaine (Aughentain) Castle’ is in fact an early 17th century 
ruin 2.2 miles (3.6km) to the west (Scheduled TYR 058:012). While there is a tale that Hamilton 
Browne (d.1848), of Comber House, Co. Londonderry, acquired the land here around 1800 with 
the intention of creating a house and demesne, the work did not begin until the 1850s when his 
son Thomas Richardson Browne (1810-82) made the park from 1855-60, prior to the building of 
the house. In what was clearly a professionally designed landscape, extensive plantations were 
laid down to best accommodate the land, which slopes down from north to south with the 
Blackwater River flowing through the eastern part from north to south. Planting was focussed on 
the valley sides, with good perimeter shelter planting, especially on the east (Beacon Hil). Some of 
the once important plantations on the north side of the old demesne, notably Pea Hill Wood and 
Sheppard’s Wood, have been now been submerged into an extensive blanket of modern conifer 
forestry plantations. A number of roads were diverted in making the demesne, notably a road 
that ran south-north to the west of the river and the moving southwards of present Aghintain- 
road. It may be noted that the Cottage Wood and the park clumps south of the walled garden 
were all laid out in the 1850s in anticipation of these road changes which took place in the 1860s. 
The walled garden, reached by a steep path, also was built before the house and was present by 
1858; it occupies a large trapezoidal area (1.43 acres/0.58ha) enclosed by high brick walls. It 
formerly was surrounded on all sides by slips (average width 8m/25ft), enclosed by banks and 
hedges, giving the kitchen garden a former area of 2.14 acres (0.86ha); these slips have now 
more-or-less disappeared. Inside the garden the ground slopes gradually to the south and was laid 
out in the standard traditional kitchen garden manner with inside circuit paths and two cross 
paths, dividing the area into quadrants. The long south facing wall was lined for much of its length 
(60m) by a series of co-joined lean-to high glasshouses, traces of which remain. One glasshouse 
survives (50ft/15m) containing datura, grapes, peaches, apricots and camellia. There is a door in 
the north wall and, against the outside of the north wall, a potting shed. There were formerly Irish 
yews in the garden centre, now the area is almost entirely under grass save for a few cultivated 
plots in front of the glasshouses. As we would expect, the walled garden is enclosed by woodland, 
though that on its south has been felled in recent years. With the creation of the parkland came 
carefully laid out new drives and inevitably, bridges; the most noteworthy of these lies south-west 
of the house and carries the rear drive from the Aghintain Road over the River Blackwater (Listed 
HB 13/01/050). Another bridge, also associated with the late 1850s landscaping is located along a 
drive to the north of the house (Listed HB 13/01/051). The original house, built between 1860-63 
on the site of an old farmhouse, was in an Italianate style with an irregular plan and with walls of 
local ashlar. Designed by William Robert Farrell of Dublin and his then partner Isaac Farrell (1798- 
1877), it was a two storey building but distinguished by four-stage square campaniles at each end. 
Having been sold in 1954 on the death of Mervyn Knox-Browne (1880-1954), the house was 
demolished on the grounds that ‘restoration and upkeep would be too costly’ and in its place the 
present house was built in 1958 to designs by the distinguished architect Claude Phillimore, 4th 
Baron Phillimore (1911-1994). This new residence is a relatively long, low, two-storey hipped-roof 
rendered building of asymmetric plan in a Neo-Regency Style, with a lengthy two-storey wing to 
the south with a large L-shaped projection extending northwards, as well as various – largely 
curved – bays. To the north front there is a large pedimented breakfront and extending from the 

Register of Parks, Gardens and Demesnes of Special Historic Interest (NI) – November 2020 
ground level of this is a Tuscan colonnade. A short distance to the west of the house is the stable 
yard which contains an L-shaped two-storey hipped-roof block which would appear to have been 
built to serve the 1860s mansion, but which seems to have been converted to living 
accommodation in recent years. The north of the house is flanked by a large rectangular 
forecourt, beyond which lies a large lawn looking onto a large lake on higher ground with a tiny 
island (2 acres/0.83ha), which was part of the 1850s landscape design (labelled ‘fish pond’ on the 
1858 map), but was enlarged in the late 19h century, and given a boat house at the north end; in 
recent decades gunnera has been planted north of the lake. The area is enclosed with handsome, 
mature, deciduous trees. West of the house and stable block Major Hamilton Stubber planted an 
arboretum. This is in grass on sloping ground and a summer house built there East of the house is 
Ballyness Glen and south of the house are new ornamental gardens for the new house were 
designed by the English landscape designer Percy Stephen Cane (1881-1976). He created a level 
flagged area and two parallel terraces running from west to east south of the house. The flags 
were derived from Albert Square, Belfast. In the 1990s there were beds in the flagged area with 
herbaceous material, but formerly roses. A set of central steps leads down through them and the 
ground slopes down below the terraces. Rhododendron and other shrubs cascade below the 
terraces and into the parkland to the south. The crane sculptures on the terrace are a symbol of 
longevity. There are shrubs between the terraces and mature trees to west and east with yew 
trees in the front and taller trees behind. Excellent distant views can be seen from the house over 
Cane’s double terraces and tree tops on lower ground. Private. 

Debsborough, Nenagh, Co Tipperary 

Debsborough, Nenagh, Co Tipperary 

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. 100. “Bayly/IFR) Original house demolished during war of 1939-45. New house built in its place 1955, in the manner of a two storey three bay Georgian house, with a slightly lower two storey one bay wings set slightly back; but with modern windows.” 

Not in National Inventory 

Old Castle House, Dungar, Roscrea, Co Tipperary

Old Castle House, Dungar, Roscrea, Co Tipperary for sale courtesy Sherry Fitzgerald Fogarty

E53 WT22 

Old Castle House, Dungar, Roscrea, Co Tipperary for sale courtesy Sherry Fitzgerald Fogarty.

Sold.  Price advertised €395,000 5 beds3 baths416 m2

Old Castle, Dungar is a home for the discerning buyer. A beautiful cut stone, double bay fronted house built in the 1920’s. The property is beautifully positioned to the edge of the town, is very private and surrounded by approx. 4.96 acres of walled gardens, woodland, castle grounds, farm yard and a paddock. In need now of some restoration and upgrading the house has many possibilities with its large number of rooms and great outside spaces. Accommodation extends to approx. 416 sq. mts (4,477 sq. ft.). There are six reception rooms and six bedrooms, and a kitchen with varied pantries and stores. It’s beautiful rooms have pitch pine floor boards, original panelled doors, moulded architraving, high ceilings, a wide gracious teak staircase, Art Deco fireplaces and a sunny southerly aspect. The property is situated within the grounds of a well preserved 16th Century Tower House, once home to Rory O’Carroll. Upon ascending the internal stone stairs the views from the top are breath taking. There are extensive outbuildings which are suitable for conversion to residential or commercial use. (Subject to required permissions) There is also stabling and ample grounds to support equestrian uses. The gardens include a disused all weather tennis court, an orchard, a stone patio, together with mature lawns, trees and shrubbery. One can also make out the outline and level of the former croquet lawn. With some investment Old Castle has immense potential and can be easily reinstated as a home of immense importance and appeal. 

Old Castle House, Dungar, Roscrea, Co Tipperary for sale courtesy Sherry Fitzgerald Fogarty.

More recent advertisement by Sherry Fitz Fogarty:

Old Castle, Dungar is a home for the discerning buyer. A beautiful cut stone, double fronted house with two bay windows built in the 1920’s. The property is beautifully positioned to the edge of the town, is very private and surrounded by approx. 4.96 acres of walled gardens (natural sandstone), woodland, castle grounds, farm yard and a paddock.Almost fully restored now by the current owners this is such a special property. Most rooms have been restored with new wiring, flooring, panelling, tiling etc, and some rooms are ready for you to put your touch to them. Accommodation extends to approx. 416 sq. mts (4,477 sq. ft.). There are six reception rooms and five bedrooms, three bathrooms and a kitchen with boot room & pantry. The house has many original features such as panelled doors, moulded architraving, high ceilings, a wide gracious teak staircase, Art Deco fireplaces and a sunny southerly aspect to the front. Recent renovations include an all new central heating system installed with zoned areas, and all new radiators throughout, & new hot water cistern. The layout has been reconfigured to create a big “heart of the home kitchen” and a generous boot room and walk in pantry. Complete re-wire throughout the house including internet fibre cable (FTTP) via underground cable laid from the road. High internet speeds available. CAT 6 cables and sockets in 2 of the rooms and further CAT 6 cabling to the Annex and to 2 WiFi repeaters (downstairs hallway and kitchen) to allow for professional working from home with a fast, stable internet connection.Electric trunking laid from the house to top and bottom gates on the driveway to facilitate electric gates and intercoms. The property is situated within the grounds of a well preserved 16th Century Tower House, once home to Rory O’Carroll. Upon ascending the internal stone stairs the views from the top are breath taking.There are extensive outbuildings which are suitable for conversion to residential or commercial use. (Subject to required permissions) There is also stabling and ample grounds to support smaller scale equestrian uses.The stunning gardens include a disused all weather tennis court, an orchard, a stone patio, together with mature lawns, trees and shrubbery. One can also make out the outline and level of the former croquet lawn.Accommodation 
Entrance Porch – 1.5m x 2.42m Original quarry tiled floor.

Entrance Hall – 9m x 2.4m Beautiful timber floor and gracious wide staircase to first floor. Wall panelling painted a lovely country green. Sitting Room – 4.57m x 4.86m Bay window. Wood burning stove installed and chimney lined. Dining Room – 5.57m x 4.86m Bay window. Wood burning stove installed and chimney lined. Home office – 3.32m x 4.88m CAT 6 cabling connected. Open fireplace. Walls panelled. Kitchen – 7.09m x 7.55m Stunning limestone floor. Bespoke kitchen units with Island unit, Belfast sink, and Rangemaster cooker with extractor, plumbed for dish washer. Chimney lined and ideally suited to an Aga/Stanley cooker. Boot Room – 2.27m x 6m Oil burners located here. Great space for outdoor clothing and sports gear. Pantry – 2.04m x 3.41m Original pantry cabinets still in place. SSSU. Games Room – 4.88m x 4m The combination of the following rooms being the lobby, games room, old library and WC, with their own separate entrance from the garden could combine to be a separate living unit ideal for relatios, operating a home business, or an au pair. WC – 2m x 0.98m Library – 6.67m x 5.49m Open fireplace with chimney lined and ready for stove installation. Lobby – 3.331m x 4m Glazed porch with access to the patio and library. FIRST FLOOR – Landing – 4.85m x 6.81m Beautiful arched window overlooking walled in garden. Bedroom 1 – 4.57m x 6.27m Super size room with wall to wall built in wardrobes. Walk in Wardrobe – 3m x 1.13m Bedroom 2 – 4.57m x 5.05m Located on the east elevation of the house. Lovey bright morning room. Dual aspect of garden. Bedroom 3 – 3.43m x 4.88m Over looking patio and western side of house. Bedroom 4 – 3.49m x 4.86m Located on the east elevation of the house. Bathroom – 3.38m x 3m Newly installed encloed electric shower unit. WHB. Lovely guest bathroom. Bedroom 5 – 4.71m x 3.93m Located to the back right side Family Bathroom – 2.1m x 4.05m Freestanding cast iron rolltop bath with telephone shower head, vanity unit with marble top and 40cm white ceramic bowl. WC, WHB, heated towel rail & electric shower unit. Separate WC – 2.1m x 0.9m Hotpress – 2.1m x 1.07m Store – 1.08m x 3.5m

Features 

  • New central heating system installed with two Grant oil fired boiler for heating and hot water with 2 zones downstairs and third zone upstairs with separate wall controller units
  • New radiators in all rooms & new hot water cistern.
  • Layout reconfigured to create a big “heart of the home kitchen” and a generous boot room with separate laundry room.
  • Complete re-wire throughout the house to current electrical standard
  • Internet fibre cable to the house (FTTP) via underground cable laid from the road. High speeds available.
  • CAT 6 cables and sockets in 2 of the rooms and further CAT 6 cabling to the Annex and to 2 WiFi repeaters (downstairs hallway and kitchen) to allow for professional working from home with a fast, stable internet connection.
  • Electric trunking laid from the house to top and bottom gates on the driveway to facilitate electric gates and intercoms.
  • Local granite flagstone floor in the kitchen.
  • Country kitchen with two handmade solid pine units, dove-tailed drawers, Belfast sink and lovely bridge tap. Handmade kitchen island with storage underneath and solid pine top. Further low-level kitchen units with laminate worktop. 90cm electric Leisure Range cooker, 5 zone ceramic hob, 2 ovens and separate grill. 60cm Dishwasher
  • 14mm thick Engineered Wooden floors in one reception room and downstairs hallway, 12mm thick laminate floor in further 2 reception rooms, all with Trojan Traffic Excel Underlay, providing sound proofing, an extra layer of insulation and a built-in moisture membrane
  • New tartan carpet fitted on staircase and landing.
  • Three of the open fireplaces have been closed with Arada Aarrow multi-fuel stoves, 8.8kW Energy rating. These chimneys have been fully lined. The three stoves have hearths, cast iron insets and wooden surrounds, all have been professionally installed.
  • All 13 chimney pots have been fitted with new cowls.
  • Roof repairs have been carried out on the main house.
  • New roofs installed over the double garage, wood store and dog kennel.
  • Sky satellite dish for TV installed, cabling to the living room
  • Complete re-fit of main bathroom and toilet upstairs as well as toilet downstairs, including new suites and plumbing.
  • Natural stone wall enclosed gardens (approx. 5 acres)
  • Site contains beautiful mature trees & has small stream on perimeter. Accessed through upper & lower cut stone entrances.
  • Disused Gate House / Farm Building
  • Disused Tennis Court & Croquet Lawn
  • Orchard with old apple, pear, red plum, and fig trees.
  • 3 car garage recently re roofed.
  • Castle Yard Complex Including:
  • 16th Century O’Carroll Tower House (Rory O’Carroll in 1640)
  • Coach Houses
  • Livestock Sheds / Stables (Ideal For Conversion To Large Workshop)
  • Large stone wall enclosed & cobbled courtyard
  • Stable Yard complex Including:
  • Old farm House
  • 6 Stables (Ideal for conversion into 2 houses)
  • 2 enclosed, 1 open shed. Possible conversion potential.
  • Slated hay barn & a machinery shed
  • Wall enclosed paddock (c 0.4 acres)
Old Castle House, Dungar, Roscrea, Co Tipperary for sale courtesy Sherry Fitzgerald Fogarty.
Old Castle House, Dungar, Roscrea, Co Tipperary for sale courtesy Sherry Fitzgerald Fogarty.
Earlier photo, Old Castle House, Dungar, Roscrea, Co Tipperary for sale courtesy Sherry Fitzgerald Fogarty.
Earlier photo, Old Castle House, Dungar, Roscrea, Co Tipperary for sale courtesy Sherry Fitzgerald Fogarty.
Old Castle House, Dungar, Roscrea, Co Tipperary for sale courtesy Sherry Fitzgerald Fogarty.
Old Castle House, Dungar, Roscrea, Co Tipperary for sale courtesy Sherry Fitzgerald Fogarty.
Old Castle House, Dungar, Roscrea, Co Tipperary for sale courtesy Sherry Fitzgerald Fogarty.
Old Castle House, Dungar, Roscrea, Co Tipperary for sale courtesy Sherry Fitzgerald Fogarty.
Old Castle House, Dungar, Roscrea, Co Tipperary for sale courtesy Sherry Fitzgerald Fogarty.
Earlier photo, Old Castle House, Dungar, Roscrea, Co Tipperary for sale courtesy Sherry Fitzgerald Fogarty.
Old Castle House, Dungar, Roscrea, Co Tipperary for sale courtesy Sherry Fitzgerald Fogarty.
Earlier photo, Old Castle House, Dungar, Roscrea, Co Tipperary for sale courtesy Sherry Fitzgerald Fogarty.
Old Castle House, Dungar, Roscrea, Co Tipperary for sale courtesy Sherry Fitzgerald Fogarty.
Old Castle House, Dungar, Roscrea, Co Tipperary for sale courtesy Sherry Fitzgerald Fogarty.
Old Castle House, Dungar, Roscrea, Co Tipperary for sale courtesy Sherry Fitzgerald Fogarty.
Earlier photo, Old Castle House, Dungar, Roscrea, Co Tipperary for sale courtesy Sherry Fitzgerald Fogarty.
Old Castle House, Dungar, Roscrea, Co Tipperary for sale courtesy Sherry Fitzgerald Fogarty.
Earlier photo, Old Castle House, Dungar, Roscrea, Co Tipperary for sale courtesy Sherry Fitzgerald Fogarty.
Old Castle House, Dungar, Roscrea, Co Tipperary for sale courtesy Sherry Fitzgerald Fogarty.
Old Castle House, Dungar, Roscrea, Co Tipperary for sale courtesy Sherry Fitzgerald Fogarty.
Old Castle House, Dungar, Roscrea, Co Tipperary for sale courtesy Sherry Fitzgerald Fogarty.
Old Castle House, Dungar, Roscrea, Co Tipperary for sale courtesy Sherry Fitzgerald Fogarty.
Earlier photo, Old Castle House, Dungar, Roscrea, Co Tipperary for sale courtesy Sherry Fitzgerald Fogarty.
Old Castle House, Dungar, Roscrea, Co Tipperary for sale courtesy Sherry Fitzgerald Fogarty.
Old Castle House, Dungar, Roscrea, Co Tipperary for sale courtesy Sherry Fitzgerald Fogarty.
Old Castle House, Dungar, Roscrea, Co Tipperary for sale courtesy Sherry Fitzgerald Fogarty.
Old Castle House, Dungar, Roscrea, Co Tipperary for sale courtesy Sherry Fitzgerald Fogarty.
Earlier photo, Old Castle House, Dungar, Roscrea, Co Tipperary for sale courtesy Sherry Fitzgerald Fogarty.
Earlier photo, Old Castle House, Dungar, Roscrea, Co Tipperary for sale courtesy Sherry Fitzgerald Fogarty.
Old Castle House, Dungar, Roscrea, Co Tipperary for sale courtesy Sherry Fitzgerald Fogarty.
Old Castle House, Dungar, Roscrea, Co Tipperary for sale courtesy Sherry Fitzgerald Fogarty.
Earlier photo, Old Castle House, Dungar, Roscrea, Co Tipperary for sale courtesy Sherry Fitzgerald Fogarty.
Old Castle House, Dungar, Roscrea, Co Tipperary for sale courtesy Sherry Fitzgerald Fogarty.
Old Castle House, Dungar, Roscrea, Co Tipperary for sale courtesy Sherry Fitzgerald Fogarty.
Old Castle House, Dungar, Roscrea, Co Tipperary for sale courtesy Sherry Fitzgerald Fogarty.
Old Castle House, Dungar, Roscrea, Co Tipperary for sale courtesy Sherry Fitzgerald Fogarty.
Earlier photo, Old Castle House, Dungar, Roscrea, Co Tipperary for sale courtesy Sherry Fitzgerald Fogarty.
Old Castle House, Dungar, Roscrea, Co Tipperary for sale courtesy Sherry Fitzgerald Fogarty.
Old Castle House, Dungar, Roscrea, Co Tipperary for sale courtesy Sherry Fitzgerald Fogarty.
Earlier photo, Old Castle House, Dungar, Roscrea, Co Tipperary for sale courtesy Sherry Fitzgerald Fogarty.
Old Castle House, Dungar, Roscrea, Co Tipperary for sale courtesy Sherry Fitzgerald Fogarty.
Old Castle House, Dungar, Roscrea, Co Tipperary for sale courtesy Sherry Fitzgerald Fogarty.
Earlier photo, Old Castle House, Dungar, Roscrea, Co Tipperary for sale courtesy Sherry Fitzgerald Fogarty.
Old Castle House, Dungar, Roscrea, Co Tipperary for sale courtesy Sherry Fitzgerald Fogarty.
Old Castle House, Dungar, Roscrea, Co Tipperary for sale courtesy Sherry Fitzgerald Fogarty.
Old Castle House, Dungar, Roscrea, Co Tipperary for sale courtesy Sherry Fitzgerald Fogarty.
Earlier photo, Old Castle House, Dungar, Roscrea, Co Tipperary for sale courtesy Sherry Fitzgerald Fogarty.
Newer photos, Old Castle House, Dungar, Roscrea, Co Tipperary for sale courtesy Sherry Fitzgerald Fogarty.
Old Castle House, Dungar, Roscrea, Co Tipperary for sale courtesy Sherry Fitzgerald Fogarty.
Earlier photo, Old Castle House, Dungar, Roscrea, Co Tipperary for sale courtesy Sherry Fitzgerald Fogarty.
Earlier photo, Old Castle House, Dungar, Roscrea, Co Tipperary for sale courtesy Sherry Fitzgerald Fogarty.
Old Castle House, Dungar, Roscrea, Co Tipperary for sale courtesy Sherry Fitzgerald Fogarty.
Old Castle House, newer photos, Dungar, Roscrea, Co Tipperary for sale courtesy Sherry Fitzgerald Fogarty.
Old Castle House, Dungar, Roscrea, Co Tipperary for sale courtesy Sherry Fitzgerald Fogarty.
Old Castle House, Dungar, Roscrea, Co Tipperary for sale courtesy Sherry Fitzgerald Fogarty.
Old Castle House, Dungar, Roscrea, Co Tipperary for sale courtesy Sherry Fitzgerald Fogarty.
Earlier photo, Old Castle House, Dungar, Roscrea, Co Tipperary for sale courtesy Sherry Fitzgerald Fogarty.
Old Castle House, Dungar, Roscrea, Co Tipperary for sale courtesy Sherry Fitzgerald Fogarty.

Old ad: Accessed Through Upper & Lower Cut Stone Entrances Disused Gate House / Farm Building Wall Enclosed Gardens (c 5 acres) Site Contains Mature Trees & Has Small Stream On Perimeter Disused Tennis Court & Croquet Lawn Orchard Kennels 3 Car Garage Castle Yard Complex Including: 16th Century O’Carroll Tower House (Rory O’Carroll in 1640) Coach Houses Livestock Sheds / Stables (Ideal For Conversion To Large Workshop) Large, Wall Enclosed & Cobbled Courtyard Stable Yard Complex Including: Farm House 6 Stables (Ideal For Conversion Into 2 Houses) 2 Enclosed, 1 Open Shed (Ideal For Conversion Into 2 Houses) Slated Hey Shed Machinery Shed Wall Enclosed Paddock (c 0.4 acres) 

Earlier photo, Old Castle House, Dungar, Roscrea, Co Tipperary for sale courtesy Sherry Fitzgerald Fogarty.
Earlier photo, Old Castle House, Dungar, Roscrea, Co Tipperary for sale courtesy Sherry Fitzgerald Fogarty.
Earlier photo, Old Castle House, Dungar, Roscrea, Co Tipperary for sale courtesy Sherry Fitzgerald Fogarty.
Earlier photo, Old Castle House, Dungar, Roscrea, Co Tipperary for sale courtesy Sherry Fitzgerald Fogarty.
Old Castle House, Dungar, Roscrea, Co Tipperary for sale courtesy Sherry Fitzgerald Fogarty.
Earlier photo, Old Castle House, Dungar, Roscrea, Co Tipperary for sale courtesy Sherry Fitzgerald Fogarty.
Earlier photo, Old Castle House, Dungar, Roscrea, Co Tipperary for sale courtesy Sherry Fitzgerald Fogarty.
Earlier photo, Old Castle House, Dungar, Roscrea, Co Tipperary for sale courtesy Sherry Fitzgerald Fogarty.
Earlier photo, Old Castle House, Dungar, Roscrea, Co Tipperary for sale courtesy Sherry Fitzgerald Fogarty.
Earlier photo, Old Castle House, Dungar, Roscrea, Co Tipperary for sale courtesy Sherry Fitzgerald Fogarty.
Earlier photo, Old Castle House, Dungar, Roscrea, Co Tipperary for sale courtesy Sherry Fitzgerald Fogarty.
Earlier photo, Old Castle House, Dungar, Roscrea, Co Tipperary for sale courtesy Sherry Fitzgerald Fogarty.
Old Castle House, Dungar, Roscrea, Co Tipperary for sale courtesy Sherry Fitzgerald Fogarty.
Earlier photo, Old Castle House, Dungar, Roscrea, Co Tipperary for sale courtesy Sherry Fitzgerald Fogarty.
Old Castle House, Dungar, Roscrea, Co Tipperary for sale courtesy Sherry Fitzgerald Fogarty.
Old Castle House, Dungar, Roscrea, Co Tipperary for sale courtesy Sherry Fitzgerald Fogarty.
Old Castle House, Dungar, Roscrea, Co Tipperary for sale courtesy Sherry Fitzgerald Fogarty.
Earlier photo, Old Castle House, Dungar, Roscrea, Co Tipperary for sale courtesy Sherry Fitzgerald Fogarty.
Earlier photo, Old Castle House, Dungar, Roscrea, Co Tipperary for sale courtesy Sherry Fitzgerald Fogarty.
Old Castle House, Dungar, Roscrea, Co Tipperary for sale courtesy Sherry Fitzgerald Fogarty.
Earlier photo, Old Castle House, Dungar, Roscrea, Co Tipperary for sale courtesy Sherry Fitzgerald Fogarty.

Ardmulchan, Beauparc, Co. Meath

Ardmulchan, Beauparc, Co. Meath 

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. 10. [Taaffe; Galvin, sub. Law] “Originally a house of the Taaffe family; bought 1904 by Mrs. F.G. Fletcher (later Mrs R.W. McGrath), who replaced it by an Edwardian mansion to the design of Sidney, Mitchell & Wilson, of Edinburgh; mostly in the plan, gabled and mullioned Tudor manor house style, but with a large Baronial tower, and an English Renaissance doorway: an elaborate confection of coupled Doric columns, a Doric frieze, scroll pediments and heraldic beasts. In recent years, it was the home of Mr & Mrs Riddell-Martin; it in now the home of Mr and Mrs Sean Galvin.” 

Not in National Inventory 

Casey, Christine and Alistair Rowan. The Buildings of Ireland: North Leinster. Penguin Books, London, 1993.  

p. 122 

Record of Protected Structures: 

Ardmulchan House, townland: Ardmulchan. 

Tudor/Scotch baronial style, dated 1904, of red brick with 

Dumfries sandstone window dressings and elaborate 

renaissance doorcase. Contemporary stables and farmyard. 

http://www.navanhistory.ie/index.php?page=church-ruins 

Ardmulkin Demesne – Ordnance Survey Fieldname Book 1836  

The demesne is situated in the north west part of the townland of Ardmulchan.  It is the seat of R. Taafe Esquire.  There is a good dwelling house with office houses and a garden.  The River Boyne and the Drogheda Canal bounds it to the northwest.  It is bounded on the southeast by the road from Navan to Drogheda. 

(Photos: © Navan & District Historical Society) 

(above) Ardmulchan House viewed from across the river at Dunmoe Castle. 

* 

Ardmulchan Castle is a Scottish Baronial cum Elizabethan hunting lodge dating to 1904. The house was built for a Scottish landowner, Fitzroy C. Fletcher, who died before the house was completed.  Set dramatically high up on the south banks of the river Boyne below Navan the house has been described as a Scotsman’s house in Ireland by Casey and Rowan.  The house was built for entertaining with five guest bedrooms and plenty of space for staff.  It has a very ornate porch, front door and portico.  The house had its own electricity provided by a powerhouse near the river with the front door of the old house was re-used as the door of the powerhouse.  The tower of the house with its battlements stores the water tanks.  The long internal hall is at right angles to the door with the principal rooms overlooking the Boyne.  The hall has high oak panelling.  The rooms have plasterwork ceilings created by G. Rome & Co, a firm which practised in Dublin and Glasgow.  All the rooms have elaborate chimney pieces and a number have angle nooks.  

The Taaffes acquired Ardmulchan in the eighteenth century and erected a plain Georgian style house overlooking the river.  The family burial ground is at Ardmulchan cemetery. Taaffe‟s lock on the Boyne Canal commemorates their financial contribution to the canal company.  

Fitzroy Charles Fletcher of Angus in Scotland married Frances May Grant, from Australia in 1890. Fletcher enjoyed hunting and regularly visited his friend, Robert Gradwell of Dowth Hall, County Meath.  Fletcher rented Slane Castle from the Conynghams for a number of hunting seasons, hunting in Ireland from November to March Fletcher decided to purchase a permanent residence in Ireland.  With the assistance of Gradwell he found and purchased Ardmulchan House in 1900. The existing Georgian style house was not suitable for Fletcher’s requirements and he decided to demolish the house and replace it with a hunting lodge.  

The architect Fletcher selected was a Scotsman Sidney Mitchell of Edinburgh.  Materials and workmen were despatched from Scotland.  Lord Aberdeen, the Viceroy, appealed to Fletcher to use Irish craftsmen and materials but to no avail.  Apart from some welding on some dog grates the rest of the works was all provided by Scottish workers.  The sandstone for the windows was carved from a quarry on Fletcher’s Scottish estate and transported by ship to Drogheda and then by barges along the canal to Ardmulchan.  All the materials with the exception of the bricks were also Scottish.  Casey and Rowan wrote that Fletcher can hardly have been popular in Meath for importing such a quantity of tradesmen.  Fletcher’s poor health forced him to delegate much of the work and decisions to the manager of his Scottish estates, James Stirling.  

Construction made good progress but Fletcher died in August 1902. His will provided for £7,000 for the completion of Ardmulchan.  His wife Mary Frances was given a life rent of all her husband’s estates.  Thomas Fletcher inherited Ardmulchan on the death of his mother.  A noted horse breeder and huntsman, Thomas was director of Proudstown Park racecourse, Navan, from its inception in 1921.  During the 1930s the house was rented to Sir Alexander Maguire of Maguire and Patterson matches. In 1939 his horse “Workman” won the Grand National, an event celebrated in Navan with an address by the Urban District Council to Sir Alexander.  After the Second World War Thomas Fletcher moved across the Boyne to Dunmoe cottage and he died in 1950.  

The Fletcher family remained in ownership of Ardmulchan until 1956 when the house and estate were sold to Anthony Riddell Martin and his family.  When his young daughter died in she was interred in Ardmulchan cemetery and Riddell Martin had the intervening woods cleared so that the grave and cemetery could be viewed from the house.  During the late 1960’s the castle was owned by a German called Von Trapp and the estate was managed by an Englishman Hogarth. In 1973 it was purchased by Sean Galvin as a family home and is still in use as a family home today.  Kathleen G. Mac Leman recorded much detail of Ardmulchan in her book; Fitzroy C. Fletcher of Letham Grange and Ardmulchan. A few years ago the Meath Archaeological and Historical Society was graciously allowed to visit the house courtesy of its owners.  

SOURCE:  meath-roots.com 

Ardmulchan Castle is a Scottish Baronial cum Elizabethan hunting lodge dating to 1904. The house was built for a Scottish landowner, Fitzroy C. Fletcher, who died before the house was completed. Set dramatically high up on the south banks of the river Boyne below Navan the house has been described as a Scotsman’s house in Ireland by Casey and Rowan. The house was built for entertaining with five guest bedrooms and plenty of space for staff. It has a very ornate porch, front door and portico. The house had its own electricity provided by a powerhouse near the river with the front door of the old house was re-used as the door of the powerhouse. The tower of the house with its battlements stores the water tanks. The long internal hall is at right angles to the door with the principal rooms overlooking the Boyne. The hall has high oak panelling. The rooms have plasterwork ceilings created by G. Rome & Co, a firm which practised in Dublin and Glasgow. All the rooms have elaborate chimney pieces and a number have angle nooks. 

The Taaffes acquired Ardmulchan in the eighteenth century and erected a plain Georgian style house overlooking the river. The family burial ground is at Ardmulchan cemetery. Taaffe’s lock on the Boyne Canal commemorates their financial contribution to the canal company. 

Fitzroy Charles Fletcher of Angus in Scotland married Frances May Grant, from Australia in 1890. Fletcher enjoyed hunting and regularly visited his friend, Robert Gradwell of Dowth Hall, co. Meath. Fletcher rented Slane Castle from the Conynghams for a number of hunting seasons, hunting in Ireland from November to March Fletcher decided to purchase a permanent residence in Ireland. With the assistance of Gradwell he found and purchased Ardmulchan House in 1900. The existing Georgian style house was not suitable for Fletcher’s requirements and he decided to demolish the house and replace it with a hunting lodge. 

The architect Fletcher selected was a Scotsman Sidney Mitchell of Edinburgh. Materials and workmen were despatched from Scotland. Lord Aberdeen, the Viceroy, appealed to Fletcher to use Irish craftsmen and materials but to no avail. Apart from some welding on some dog grates the rest of the works was all provided by Scottish workers. The sandstone for the windows was carved from a quarry on Fletcher’s Scottish estate and transported by ship to Drogheda and then by barges along the canal to Ardmulchan. All the materials with the exception of the bricks were also Scottish. Casey and Rowan wrote that Fletcher can hardly have been popular in Meath for importing such a quantity of tradesmen. 

Fletcher’s poor health forced him to delegate much of the work and decisions to the manager of his Scottish estates, James Stirling. Construction made good progress but Fletcher died in August 1902. His will provided for £7,000 for the completion of Ardmulchan. His wife Mary Frances was given a life rent of all her husband’s estates. 

Thomas Fletcher inherited Ardmulchan on the death of his mother. A noted horse breeder and huntsman, Thomas was director of Proudstown Park racecourse, Navan, from its inception in 1921. During the 1930s the house was rented to Sir Alexander Maguire of Maguire and Patterson matches.  In 1939 his horse “Workman” won the Grand National, an event celebrated in Navan with an Address by the Urban District Council to Sir Alexander. 

After the Second World War Thomas Fletcher moved across the Boyne to Dunmoe cottage and he died in 1950. The Fletcher family remained in ownership of Ardmulchan until 1956 when the house and estate were sold to Anthony Riddell Martin and his family. When his young daughter died in 1952 she was interred in Ardmulchan cemetery and Riddell Martin had the intervening woods cleared so that the grave and cemetery could be viewed from the house. 

During the late 1960s the castle was owned by a German called Von Trapp and the estate was managed by an Englishman Hogarth. In 1973 it was purchased by Sean Galvin as a family home and is still in use as a family home today. 

Kathleen G. Mac Leman recorded much detail of Ardmulchan in her book ‘Fitzroy C. Fletcher of Letham Grange and Ardmulchan.’ A few years ago the Meath Archaeological and Historical Society was graciously allowed to visit the house courtesy of its owners. 

Martinstown House, Kilmallock, Co Limerick 

Martinstown House, Kilmallock, Co Limerick 

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. 203. “(McCalmont/IFR) A modern house in the Classical style, built ca 1972 for Mrs Dermot McCarlmont to the design of Mrs Baker-Baker; executed by Mr Christopher Jacob. Two storey seven bay main block with pedimented doorcase; single-storey wings. Generous roofs, on cornices, bold chimneystacks.” 

and supplement: ” The house was in fact designed by C. Harvey Jacob and Associates incollaboration with Mrs Baker-Baker. 

Not in national inventory 

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

Martinstown was the residence of M. Walsh in 1837. At the time of Griffith’s Valuation this was a house on the Trench/Gascoigne estate valued at £10+ and inhabited by William O’Grady. Bence Jones refers to a modern house built in circa 1972 at Martinstown, Kilmalloc

Spiddle House (or Spiddal),  Spiddal, County Galway

Spiddle House (or Spiddal),  Spiddal, County Galway

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

p. 262. “(Morris, Killanin, B/PB) Originally a small Georgian house, which was replaced by a large house of two and three storeys with irregular elevations built in 1910 by 2nd Lord Killanin, to the design of William A. Scott. Plain rectangular plate-glass windows and features in a Romanesque style; at one end a square tower surmounted by an open belvedere with Romanesque columns and a dome; alongside the tower, a two storey veranda with Romanesque columns and arches. At the other end, a Romanesque loggia joined to the house by a short colonnade surmounted by an iron balcony; sculptures by Michael Shorthall, of Loughrea, above the capitals of the columns. In the centre of the principal front, a single-storey projection with an iron balcony and a Regency-style veranda above it. The house was rebuit 1931 after a fire 1923, the architect of the rebuildings being M. Byrne. The principal front of the house, as rebuilt, is basically similar to what it was previously, and the Romanesque loggia and two storey Romaneque veranda remain as they were; but the tower is no longer surmounted by a belvedere, the single-storey projection in the middle of the front has been removed and the windows now have astragals. Sold ca 1960 by 3rd and present Lord Killanan.” 

see http://lordbelmontinnorthernireland.blogspot.com/2015/07/1st-baron-killanin.html

THE BARONS KILLANIN OWNED 1,274 ACRES OF LAND IN COUNTY GALWAY 

The family of MORRIS is one of the “Tribes of Galway”, an expression first used by Cromwell’s soldiers in 1652. 

So far back as 1486 Richard Morris was Bailiff of Galway under a charter granted in 1485 by RICHARD III to the inhabitants of Galway, empowering them to elect a mayor and two bailiffs. 

From him were lineally descended John Morris, Bailiff of Galway, 1501; William Morris, Mayor of Galway, 1527; Andrew Morris, Mayor of Galway, 1588; George Morris, Bailiff of Galway, 1588; John Morris, of Galway; Andrew Morris, of Galway; and James Morris, of Galway. 

GEORGE MORRIS, of Spiddal, County Galway (son of JAMES MORRIS), served in JAMES II’s army. 

He married, in 1684, Catherine, daughter of John Fitzpatrick, of Loughmore, in the south island of Arran, whose nephew Richard Fitzpatrick represented Galway in the Irish parliament, 1749-61. 

By this marriage the property of Spiddal was acquired. 

His only son, 

ANDREW MORRIS, of Spiddal and Galway, wedded Monica Browne, of the family of Gloves, near Athenry, and had two sons, 

George; 
JAMES, of whom we treat

The second son, 

JAMES MORRIS (1732-1813), of Spiddal and Galway, espoused, in 1762, Deborah, daughter of Nicholas Lynch, of Galway, and had issue, 

Ambrose; 
Michael; 
MARTIN, of whom hereafter; 
Monica; Mary. 

His third son, 

MARTIN MORRIS JP (1784-1862), of Spiddal and Galway, High Sheriff of Galway, 1841, married, in 1822, Julia, daughter of Dr Charles Blake, of Galway, and had two sons and two daughters, 

MICHAEL, of whom presently
George (Sir), KCB DL MP etc; 
Jane Caroline; Lizzie. 

Mr Morris’s elder son, 

THE RT HON SIR MICHAEL MORRIS QC (1826-1901), of Spiddal and Galway, wedded, in 1860, Anna, daughter of Henry George Hughes, Baron of the Court of Exchequer in Ireland. and had issue, 

MARTIN HENRY FITZPATRICK, his heir
George Henry, father of the 3rd Baron
Michael Redmond; 
Charles Ambrose; 
Lily; Rose Julia; Maud Anna; Mary Kathleen; 
Frances Anne; Eileen Elizabeth. 

Sir Michael rose to become one of the most distinguished judges of his time, as LORD CHIEF JUSTICE OF THE KING’S BENCH FOR IRELAND, 1887-89. 

He was created a baronet, in 1885, denomianted of Spiddal, County Galway. 

Following his appointment as a law lord, in 1889, Sir Michael was elevated to the peerage, as BARON KILLANIN, of Galway, County Galway. 

His lordship was succeeded by his eldest son, 

MARTIN HENRY FITZPATRICK, 2nd Baron, PC JP (1867-1927), of Spiddal, High Sheriff of Galway, 1897. 

His lordship was the last Lord-Lieutenant of County Galway, from 1918 until 1922. 

He died unmarried, and was succeeded by his nephew (the son of Lieutenant-Colonel the Hon George Henry Morris, Irish Guards), 

MICHAEL, 3rd Baron (1914-99), MBE TD, of Spiddal, who espoused, in 1945, (Mary) Sheila Cathcart Dunlop MBE, daughter of the Rev Canon Douglas Lyall Cathcart Dunlop, and had issue, 

GEORGE REDMOND FITZPATRICK, his successor
Michael Francis Leo“Mouse”
John Martin; 
Monica Deborah. 

His lordship, a journalist, author, and sport official, was renowned for his presidency of the International Olympic Committee. 

He was appointed MBE (Military Division), 1945. 

The 3rd Baron was succeeded by his eldest son, 

GEORGE REDMOND FITZPATRICK, 4th and present Baron, born in 1947, a film producer, who wedded firstly, in 1972, Pauline, daughter of Geoffrey Horton, and had issue, 

LUKE MICHAEL GEOFFREY, born in 1975; 
Olivia Rose Elizabeth, born in 1974. 

He married secondly, in 2000, Sheila Elizabeth, daughter of Patrick Lynch. 

The present Baron lives in Dublin. 

SPIDDAL HOUSE, Spiddal, County Galway, replaced a considerable smaller Georgian house. 

The present mansion consists of two and three storeys, in different places. 

It was built in 1910 for Martin, 2nd Lord Killanin. 

The windows are rectangular, plain, Romanesque-style. 

One end of the house features a tower (a belvedere prior to the 1923 fire) with Romanesque columns. 

Beside this tower there is a two-storey veranda with further Romanesque columns and arches. 

The opposite end has a loggia, joined to the house by a colonnade with an iron balcony. 

Spiddal House suffered a fire in 1923 and was subsequently rebuilt in 1931. 

The 3rd Baron sold Spittal about 1960. 

Costello Lodge, Costello, Co Galway 

Costello Lodge, Costello, Co Galway 

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

p. 93. “(Ismay/LG1952; Herdman/IFR) A fishing lodge in Connemara, owned earlier this century by J. Bruce Ismay, head of the White Star Line at the time of the sinking of the Titanic and one of the survivors from that ill-fated ship. Burnt 1922 and rebuilt 1925; a two storey house with gables, dormer gables and pantiled roof.” 

Lisheens, Carrickmines, Co Dublin 

Lisheens, Carrickmines, Co Dublin 

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

p. 185. “(Orpen/IFR) An Edwardian Tudor house, built 1901-2 for Charles St George Orpen to the design of his brother, Richard Orpen, who also designed an addition of 1913. Sold 1950 to Mr and Mrs Shannon.” 

Not in national inventory 

https://www.irishtimes.com/life-and-style/homes-and-property/modest-house-glorious-summer-garden-1.1210407

June 14 2007 

Carrickmines: €3.5m:Everything is coming up roses in a secluded house on 1.36 acres of gardens, says Property Editor Orna Mulcahy 

Lisheens, a modest home hidden away on 1.36 acres of superb gardens at Brennanstown Road in Carrickmines, Dublin 18, has been home to the same family for the last 30 years. 

However, the owners are now selling up and preparing to pass on their wonderful garden to buyers who they sincerely hope will maintain it. 

The property will be auctioned on July 5th by Lisney and has an AMV of €3.5 million. 

The four-bedroom house is hidden from view, set well back from the road next to Brennanstown Vale in an area where many of the properties have been snapped up for future development. 

The tree-lined front garden has a winding driveway leading to the low dormer-style house which dates from the 1940s. 

It’s a charming house, not particularly large at 210sq m (2,260sq ft) and with its principal rooms – drawingroom, diningroom, study and main bedroom – in a row overlooking the garden. 

New owners will inevitably refurbish completely and may decide to replace it with a far larger house. Howevever, the relatively modest AMV could attract househunters selling up closer to town in order to enjoy the privacy and peace that you get with a large enveloping garden. 

Old roses and lavender flourish below the terrace that leads out from the drawingroom, while below them is a velvety smooth lawn bounded by shrubs and specimen treees screening a second wide lawn that would convert beautifully to a tennis court. 

Rambling roses cloak old fruit trees while even the compost heap – the size of many a town garden – has sprouted the most enormous densely petalled poppies. It’s a summer garden now at its best. The gardener who has tended it for the last 25 years will need to be negotiated with separately! 

Kilteragh, Foxrock, Co Dublin – burnt 1923 

Kilteragh, Foxrock, Co Dublin – burnt 1923 

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

p. 177. “(Plunkett, sub Dunsany, B/pb 1970) A house built 1905-7 for Sir Horace Plunkett, the great Irish agricultural reformer, to the design of a Swedish architect named Caroe, though rather under the influence of Norman Shaw…Plunkett’s own bedroom was on the roof, and open to the elements – with a mechanical device enabling him to turn his bed towards the sun and against the wind. Burnt 1923.” 

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

p. 60. “A large gabled house built 1905-7 for Sir Horace Plunkett to the design of William D. Caroe. Burnt in 1923. Partly rebuilt.

Featured in Irish Country Houses, Portraits and Painters. David Hicks. The Collins Press, Cork, 2014. 

p. 47. Plunkett, who was born into wealth and privilege, sought to use his position for the betterment of others, especially poor Irish farmers. His contribution to Ireland is often overlooked and forgotten, but his development of the cooperative movement and better practices of production had a profound effect on agriculture in Ireland. Kilteragh, his home, was an imposing example of the Arts and Crafts movement in Ireland, designed at the dawn of a new century. 

The house, which was created to look to the future, became a focal point for those who were at the forefront of anation on the cusp of change. It was unfortunate that it was burnt down by people who were focused on Ireland’s past. Kilteragh was rebuilt and survives today: once surrounded by expansive green fields and gardens, it is now hidden in the forest of suburbia tht has grown up around it in later years. 

Horace Plunkett was born in Oct 1854 at Sherborne in Gloucestershire, England. Sherborne was the mansion belonging to his mother’s family. He was the third son and sixth child of the 16th Baron Dunsany of Dunsany Castle in County Meath, to where the family moved in the 1860s. Plunkett was well connected: his mother was the daughter of the second Baron Sherborne; his cousin was George, Count Plunkett. of Ballymascanlon House in Co Louth. [George Noble Plunkett (1851-1948) great grandfather was George Plunkett (1750–1824), son was Joseph Plunkett of the Easter Rising]. Another cousin, Lord Fingall, had a neighbouring estate to Dunsany and his wife Daisy, Lady Fingall, remained a lifelong friend of Plunkett. [Lord Fingall the 11th Earl of Fingall and Daisy, nee Elizabeth Margaret Mary Burke] The early years of Plunkett’s life were tinged with sadness. His mother died in 1858 when he was only four, his younger brother died when he was ten and his sister when he was 12. They all died from the same disease, tuberculosis, which would haunt Plunkett all his life. He was educated at Eton, followed by Oxford where he read Modern History. After his formal education, he went ranching in Wyoming in 1879 at the age of 25, as he believed the climate there would be better for his health; [p. 48] he suffered from tuberculosis among other ailments. From 1883 he returned on occasion from Wyoming to Ireland in order to help his elderly father manage the family estate and business interests after the death of his older brother, Randall, who also died from TB. One year later he also had to help his recently widowed sister run her estate at Kilcooley in county Tipperary [his sister Mary Sophia Elizabeth, who had married Chambre Brabazon Ponsonby]. After the death of his father in 1889, it was necessary for him to return to Ireland on a full-time basis and take over the management of the Dunsany estates in Ireland and Wales, coalmines in Northumberland and boatbuilding in Hampshire. 

Plunkett’s father had left his a sizeable inheritance but he was not content to live the life of a rich man. [his brother John William became 17th Baron Dunsany and died in 1899]. He began to tackle and reform the vested family holdings. Accounts were scrutinised and reforms were implemented, especially on the Dunsany estate, which paid dividends. In 1889, Plunkett started a cooperative store on the estate. He believed that Irish farmers should not rest their hopes on the abatement of their rents being pursued by the Land League, and that they should study modern farming methods to be responsible for their own prosperity. [p. 49] In 1889 the first creamery cooperative was established in Ireland at Drumcollogher in County Limerick and Plunkett became involved in the establishment of the second creamery at Ballyhahill in 1891. At this time he became a member of the Congested Districts Board and would visit parts of the country on his yacht Granuaile. He saw the terrible conditions in which a large amount of the rural population of Ireland lived and became acutely aware of the importance of the cooperative movement in helping the poor of Ireland. The cooperative creameries allowed milk to be processed, marketed and sold, allowing farmers to get [p. 50] the best price for their produce. In 1892 Plunkett was elected as Unionist MP for Dublin South and two years later, in 1894, founded the Irish Agricultural Organisation Society to manage the 33 dairy cooperative societies, or creameries, which had become established. In 1895, Plunkett suggested that the leading political figures in Ireland should come together to discuss the development of agriculture and other industries in Ireland. This Recess Committee looked at the involvement of the state in agriculture and industry and other countries and produced a report that led to the establishment of a specialised department in Ireland. In 1897 Plunkett became a member of the Irish Privy Council which passed an Act in 1899 establishing the government body that eventually became today’s Department of Agriculture. 

p. 51. As a result of the success of teh cooperative movement, in November 1899 Queen Victorian approved Plunkett’s appointment to the Vice-Presidency of the Department of Agriculture and  Technical Instruction for Ireland. In 1900, as a result of his work, Plunkett was believed to be on too-friendly terms with the Nationalist movement. He was viewed with distrust by his own Unionist party who thought he had leanings towards Home Rule and they decided to field another candidate in the forthcoming election. As a result the vote was divided and Plunkett lost his seat but retained his Vice-Presidency of the Department of Agriculture until 1907. His rehabilitation of the agricultural sector in Ireland was noticed on an international stage and his ideas were adopted by the President of the United States. In Nov 1908 he was invited by President Roosevelt to discuss the advances made as a result of his involvement with the Department of Agriculture in Ireland. In a public letter in 1909, President Roosevelt thanked Plunkett for his contribution to the organisation of agriculture in the US and for helping to formulate policy. Plunkett was eventually forced to give up his post with the Department of Agriculture. On his departure, a number of people wished to honour his work. A group was set up to raise funds and 84 Merrion Square in Dublin was purchased for £3,000. It was presented to Plunkett and the 18th century house became the headquarters of the Irish cooperative movement, and was named Plunkett House. 

Plunkett was an enthusiastic motorist and became the first president of the Irish Automobile Club which was formed in 1901. In 1903, at the time of King Edward VII and Queen Alexandra’s visit to Ireland, their motor car broke down in Connemara but it was quickly repaired by Plunkett’s chauffeur, who cared for his De Dion-Bouton. At the end of teh tour the King made Plunkett a Knight Commander of the Royal Victorian Empire for his “unselfish loyalty to the weak and distressed” and from then on he became known as Sir Horace. The success of teh cooperative movement was evident by 1914 as there were over 800 co-ops in the country. 

In 1905, Sir Horace, now in his 50s, commissioned a house to the design of William Douglas Caroe. Sir Horace sought many opinions with regard to various elements of the project. A gentleman from the Botanic Gardens was brought on board to advise solely on the grounds that would surround the house. Sir Horace had many reasons for wanting a home at this time: the ancestral seat of Dunsany Castle had now become the home of his nephew, causing Sir Horace to [p. 53] remark that “I am tired of being homeless at home.” [his nephew was Edward John Morton Drax Plunkett, 18th Baron Dunsany, whose father died in 1899. Edward married in 1904, so this could have been the biggest reason for the move]. After viewing many sites and locations around Dublin he decided on Foxrock, which he declared to be the healthiest part of the city, The idea of building a house in this area had begun in 1903 when Sir Horace rented a house there called The Barn, a small wooden bungalow, for two summers. As he grew to like Foxrock he decided to build a new house which would be the centre of a 90 acre farm. 

As Sir Horace was preoccupied with various projects such as the cooperative movement and the newly founded Department of Agriculture, he delegated the project to [p. 54] a friend, Jim Power to ensure it was kept on track. The custodian of the project was not as focused as Sir Horace and as a result the proposed house grew to nearly twice the size originally planned. Daisy, Horace’s friend and wife of his cousin the Earl of Fingall, noted that Mr Power also took an extravagant approach to every project in which he was involved. She recorded that the mundane drains of her home, Killeen Castle, were fashioned by Mr Power into an elaborate and expensive project. The house, which would became known as Kilteragh, was fan-shaped and designed to take full advantage of the path of the sun. The garden front had large windows and large glazed areas while the north entrance front had small windows and largely blank facades. These northern facades were punctured only by the windows that served the staircase, bathrooms and pantries. Inside the house there was a large drawing room that ran the whole width of the structure. The bow windows in this room were so positioned to take full advantage of the vistas surrounding the house; one focused on the sea and another on the mountains. Window seats were built in, on which guests would recline and spend a summer’s day admiring the views. The room was dominated by a large open fireplace of ornamental brickwork above which hung a simple St Bridget’s cross given to Sir Horace by Shane Leslie. Daisy, Lady Fingall, though the architect’s choice of furniture too severe and convinced Plunkett to purchase more traditional furniture. [p. 55] She and other friends scoured auctions and sales to secure furniture that they thought more beautiful and also a lot cheaper. For the main hall ofthe house, which had very good acoustic with a warm, resonant quality, they purchased a grand piano around which friends would often gather for a sing-song. Daisy did allow Horace to decorate his own study, although she exclaimed that “it was the only ugly room in the house.” In the dining room a guest would enjoy a hearty meal while admiring wonderful frescoes painted by A.E. (George William Russell). 

An outdoor bedroom was constructed at the top of the house on the roof. A bed with a canopy was equipped with a mechanical device that allowed it to be turned to follow the sun. The location was chosen by Sir Horace as he believed it helped relieve his health problems. His bed was covered by a shelter but mostly exposed to the elements and Sir Horace slept up there in winter and summer, leaving his guests to wonder if he might die from exposure. Those hardy enough in the winter months to venture up onto the roof to talk with Sir Horace wore extra layers of clothing. Despite the cold, the view from his outdoor bedroom was impressive, taking in Dublin Bay and the Irish Sea. Sir Horace had his makeshift bedroom placed here in 1911 after spending many weeks in a nursing home. An indication of the isolatino that Kilteragh enjoyed in Foxrock in the early 1900s is evident by the telephone number of the house, which Plunkett’s personalised stationary at the time records as “Foxrock No. 1.” The telephone was not the only modern convenience to be installed in the house: Kilteragh also boasted central heating, its own electricity generator and a mdoern sewerage system. Expansive gardens and a mini-golf course overlooked by a large terrace surrounded the house. In the grounds Sir Horace established a 90 acre model farm in order to develop and understand the agricultural practices that he recommended to others.  

p. 56. Sir Horace welcomed many guests over the years, always greeting them with a smile from the steps at the front of Kilteragh. This tradition of hospitality began in July 1906 when he welcomed guests to stay with him in the unfinished house which was still occupied by over thirty workmen. Each signed the guestbook, which survived the fire of 1923 and now resides in the library of Trinity College Dublin. The completed house was comprised of a drawing room, library, sitting room and dining room on the ground floor wiht all the necessary kitchen and ancilliary facilities for the servants. Guests were accommodated on the upper floors where there were four bathrooms to supply the needs of the household when it expanded, which was at most weekends. The house was constructed from granite rubble with brick reveals and the exterior was pebble-dashed with cut granite quoins on the corners. In 1906 Horace Plunkett recorded in his diary an ambition to use his new residence as a place where he could “bring Irishmen togehter to discuss Irish problems.” Plunkett hoped that Irish people from all backgrounds would gather in the large drawing room of the house to debate the future of the country. As a result, members of the Irish acendancy mixed with Ireland’s future statemen while also enjoying the company of the leading lights of the artistic and literary scene. In the short life of the house (about 16 years), its guests included George Bernard Shaw, John and Hazel Lavery, Michael Collins, Oliver St John Gogarty, W.B. Yeats, Lady Gregory, Violet Martin of Somerville and Ross fame, Sir Roger Casement, H.G. Wells and George Moore. It was around the large fireplace in the drawing room that animated conversations took place, mainly about Ireland and its future. In 1913 Sir George Bernard Shaw was a gust of Sir Horace at Kilteragh while on a visit to Dublin. It was during this visit that he discussed Sir Hugh Lane’s proposal of situating a muncipal art gallery on the Liffey, which prompted Shaw to quip, “Has Hugh Lane ever smelt the Liffey?” 

p. 57. In the 1911 census, Kilteragh is listed as having 14 rooms and 28 windows in the front of the house. Here the 56 year old Horace is livign with his “wife” Ellie Pilkington, two visitors and five servants. The listing of Ellie Pilkington as his wife must have been a practical joke as Sir Horace still lists himself as single and having never married. Emplyed at this time were a butler, cook, two housemaids, kitchen maid, farm steward, ploughman, yard man, chauffeur and head gardener. The butler at Kilteragh, Curtin, ws though to be an excellent example of his profession, although he did have one failing: he always thought it necessary to taste the wine before serving it to Sir Horace’s guests. On one occasion he became so engrossed in the wine tasting that he became drunk and the guests in the drawing room were left wanting. 

By 1915, Sir Horace no longer saw the need to maintain such a large residence, which appeared lavish and unnecessary in the austere times of the First World War. He reduced the number of rooms in daily use, planning to divert the money saved to good causes. However, he shortly came around to the belief that entertaining influential persons in Kilteragh would be far more beneficial to Ireland and soon the whole house was in operation again. In 1916, Horace’s old friends and neighbours from Killeen Castle, the Fingalls, spent Easter at Kilteragh. On the Sunda, they heard the sensational news that Roger Casement had been captured on the Kerry coast trying to land guns from a German submarine. The next day life continued on as normal in Kilteragh adn a party left the house heading for the Leopardstown Races. Sir Horace remained in the house and later rang Dublin Castle only to be informed that civil unrest – the 1916 Rising – had broken out. He drove into the city during the Easter Rising and came under attack from snipers in Merrion Square. The car was fired upon and badly damaged. Tommy Ponsonby, his nephew [who lived at Kilcooley, Co Tipperary], was injured, but only the extremities of Plunkett’s coat were pierced by bullets. 

Sir Horace’s health was always a concern. In 1916 he was seriously ill for seven weeks after being accidentally burnt while undergoing treatment by x-rays; he recuperated in his Foxrock residence. In Feb 1919, while on a trip to America to promote Home Rule in Ireland he fell ill, and in April 1919 The New York Times recorded that Sir Horace had undergone a serious operation and would be confined to bed for a number of weeks. Sir Horace was still involved in publich life and in 1917 he was elected to the Chair of the Irish Convention. In 1919 he founded the Plunkett Foundation in Ireland and the UK to promote and develop agricultural cooperatives and rural community enterprise. 

New Year’s Day 1920 saw the press reporting that Sir Horace had died in Michigan, but this turned out to be a mistake caused by a journalist’s badly written shorthand. His obituary appeared in some newspapers and Sir Horace was less than pleased with what some of his contemporaries had to say about him, especially those who said he had no sense of humour. This premature death notice was an omen that set the tone for the rest of Horace’s life in the 1920s as the political scene in Ireland became more unsettled. In 1921, a trench was dug outside Kilteragh to hamper travel to Dublin; in 1922 the farmyard was raided for tools and an attempt was made to take Sir Horace’s motor car. These attempts on the security of Kilteragh were a foretaste of the disaster that was to befall the house. It was not only Kilteragh that suffered attacks but also the creameries that he had helped establish. Conor Cruise O’Brien said taht Sir Horace Plunkett “lived to see his creameries burnt by the English and his house by the Irish.”  

In December 1922 the Constitution of the Irish Free State was adopted and Sir Horace was nominated to the Seanad. As a direct result of the nomination, his home in Foxrock now became a target. Towards the end of 1922, Sir Horace left for America on behalf of the Irish Free State. During this visit he intended to procure a collection of books on agriculture published in America. Sir Horace again found Kilteragh was fast becoming too large for his needs and, being a public-spirited individual, considered presenting the hosue to the nation and building a small bungalow in the grounds. On a cold windy night in January 1923, the house was attacked at one o’clock in the morning by a groupof Republicans who forced in the door of the pantry. Gerald Heard, Sir HOrace’s private secretary, and the chauffeur, who were present in the house, had heard loud explosions earlier that night in the distance, which they later found out were the homes of other senators being blown up. Heard had removed the fuses from the main electrical distribution board in Kilteragh to make it difficult for the group that entered teh house to navigate it without any light. The Republicans ordered the occupants out and an explosive mine was placed in the fireplace of the hall. When it detonated, it blew out all the doors and windows, caused  [p. 58] walls and ceilings to collapse and left parts of the house structurally unsound and dangerous. Trying to do what they could to save the house, Sir Horace’s secretary and chauffeur put out a few small fires that had started. The following morning a scene of devastation greeted the workmen who were dispatched to shore up what remained of the house and board up the windows to prevent looting. Pieces of windows, blinds and furniture littered teh drive in front of the house. Unbelievably, a number of people had already gathered and begun removing trees and other shrubs from the gardens as if the explosion had been a starting pistol. Free State troops protected the house until 2am the following morning and, believing that the house was no longer under any threat, they left the grounds. The raiders from the night before were watching the house and returned to complete their task and set the house ablaze. Two members of the Civic Guard who had been on duty at 2:15am reported everything to be correct and they returned to the barracks. By 3am, people living nearby were awakened by the noise of the fire and could see the glow of flames against the night sky. Mr Heard had been sleeping in a room in the house that had been undamaged the night before. He was awakened by stones being thrown at the window and by means of a rope he was rescued. When they went to get a hose that had been used to put out the fire the previous morning, they found it had been slashed with knives. Heard began to rescue what he could from the library which was already on fire. Very little was saved and, as the sparks and ashes from the fire were sent skywards, a library of 1,700 books and an art collection of 200 paintings were incinerated. Some furniture from the west wing of the house was rescued. However, great efforts had to be made to stop the looters from descending a second time. The blaze lit up the night sky and one witness recalled that the corks of the wine bottles in the basement began to pop before the roof collapsed. 

p. 59. The intense heat that the fire generated cracked the walls of the house and by daylight very little remained. 

Sir Horace had thought that this day might come and after the fire his secretary cabled him in America with a very apt and previously agreed code word: “Extinct.” Sir Horace who was in Madison, Wisconsin, remakred that “While the hous eis a very fine one, the occurrence is not so regrettable as it would have beeen the wrecking of some poor man’s one-room dwelling.” He was, however, heartbroken and for years could not visit what remained of his home. On the same night as the destruction of Kilteragh, the houses of a number of Senators and Dail members were also destroyed, together with the homes of judges, the State Solicitor and the manager of Independent Newspapers. Numberous outrages were reported throughout the country. When Kilteragh was burnt down it houses a vast collection of correspondence from leading British and American statesmen. It was estimated that the frescoes and various paintings by “A.E.”, Jack Yeats, Hone and 18th century Irish artists that perished in the fire were worth £10,000 (over £600,000 today). 

In Feb 1923 Sir Horace returned from America on the White Star liner Cedric and arrived in Liverpool. Here it was reported that he said, “I am practically homeless,” and “All that remains is my little office in Dublin. I suppose my crime is that I went to America on behalf of the Free State.” Few of his possessions were saved except a few photographs at Plunkett House. He went on to say, “I had, too, the brightest, healthiest home. All pleasure and, I fear, health is gone.”.. In Oct 1923 Sir Horace resigned from the Seanad. W.B. Yeats, also a senator, recorded that “the establishment of every technical school and agricultural college in this country is the result of his efforts… he organised, I think, 180,000 farmers into his organisation.” 

A claim was lodged for the loss of Kilteragh and its contents amounting to £28,122 for the building and £4,844 for the contents. It was later settled in total for £18.819. The ruins of Kilteragh were sold and Sir Horace abandoned Ireland and moved to England. Two years later in 1925, Kilteragh House was rebuilt. Elements of its original style were incorporated with one major difference: the enormous rambling house was divided into six separate residences and the beautiful formal gardens to the rear of the building became communal to the properties. The house, now known as Kilteragh Pines, is located off Westminster Road in Foxrock and is surrounded by other houses built in later years. 

Sir Horace settled in England in a house similar in character to Kilteragh, which was named Crest House. Furniture and other articles that had been rescued in the fire in Dublin were moved to his new home. …He died in 1932 at his home in Weybridge in Surrey, aged 77… He left a year’s wages for staff and £4000 for Daisy Countess Fingall. 

p. 60. Note that Michael Collins dined at Kilteragh his last night in Dublin, three days before he was shot in Cork. He was brought there by Hazel Lavery, wife of the painter. G.B. Shaw was there that night also. 

Dunboy, Burnaby Road, Greystones, Co. Wicklow, A63N125

Dunboy, Burnaby Road, Greystones, Co. Wicklow, A63N125 for sale January 2025 courtesy Colliers.

€2,300,000

5 Bed

2 Bath

303 m²

Dunboy, Burnaby Road, The Burnaby, Greystones, Co. Wicklow – A63 N125 Approx. 0.22 ha – 0.54 acres A superb Edwardian house in an unrivalled position beside the centre of the thriving coastal town of Greystones. The well laid out and spacious accommodation retains many period features and the positioning of the house in its 0.5 acres site allows plenty of scope for extension if required. Dunboy was built in 1904 for the Sullivan family from Castletownbere and gets its name from a costal castle in the area. We gather a Ms Peggy Sullivan was living in the house in the 1960’s and had a lady for companion and often used to attend the Gaiety theatre conveniently travelling by train to the city centre. Having no family to bequeath the house it was left to a friend she often attended the theatre with. This family then sold to the current vendors in the 1980’s resulting in this only being the second time since construction that the house has come to the market. History Elizabeth Hawkins-Whitshed was born in 1860 and could claim kinship with European aristocracy and royalty with her Irish relations including Charles Stewart Parnell. After the death of her father in 1871 she inherited Killincarrick house and lands amounting to approximately 2,000 acres. Whilst still a teenager, whilst in London she met and married Captain Fred Burnaby. Ever since she inherited the Killincarrick estate there had been discussion on the possibility of developing it for housing and as early as 1889 it was rumoured that the owners had decided that they should open a portion of the Burnaby estate “commanding splendid sea and mountain views for building terraces and villas and that several handsome roadways will immediate commence”. Construction of houses in the Burnaby estate began around 1900 with Dunboy noted has been built in 1904. This is a rare opportunity to acquire a handsome spacious five-bedroom home which has been meticulously maintained by its current owners for the past 40 years. Dunboy is an elegant double fronted period residence extending to approximately 303 sq.m (3,261 sq.ft) (excluding garage). Garage extends to approx. 400 sq.ft (37 sqm) Built c 1904, Dunboy is a most impressive period property and a wonderful example of the architecture of its era. The property enjoys elegantly proportioned reception rooms and retains many distinctive features, including cornices, stain glass windows, and fireplaces with colourful tile insert surround. Set back from Burnaby Road, the front of the property is approached via granite pillars and a gravelled driveway, which leads to a garage. A pedestrian gate and pathway lead to the rear garden and terrace. The property is approached via steps to a veranda which has lovely views looking towards Burnaby Park and the sea beyond Upon entering the property, via a porch and stain glass hall door, you are immediately struck by its elegance and its tranquil ambience and charm. The light filled entrance hall with feature white surround fireplace, exudes character. The sweeping timber staircase leads to the first-floor landing with a large stain glass window which overlooks the large open entrance hallway. To the right is a drawing room with a fireplace, this gracious reception room boasts dual aspect windows with box bay built in seating overlooking the front garden, which enjoys the morning sun. To the left there is a formal dining room with fireplace, box bay window enjoying views of the front garden. There is a pantry off the dining room which leads to the L shaped country style kitchen breakfast room with feature AGA and access to the south facing gardens. A cosy sitting room overlooking the rear garden and guest wc complete the accommodation at ground floor level. The stairs lead to the first floor where there are five well-proportioned bedrooms, the primary bedroom has a good-sized bathroom en-suite. There is a dressing room which is laid out as a study located off the second bedroom. There is also a good size family bathroom and hot-press off the main upstairs landing. The property is perfectly positioned on c 0.54 acre of private landscaped garden. Superbly maintained by its current owner, the garden enjoys a south westerly aspect allowing for all day sunshine and boast an eclectic array of plans, shrubs and Specimen trees. There is a large garage, out buildings, Boiler house and an outside WC. The property benefits from a side access from both sides. The front forecourt provides ample secure parking for up to 4 cars. Dunboy is a truly delightful family home which will appeal to the most discerning of purchaser seeking a family home exuding old charm and ambience in a quiet and peaceful setting on one of Greystones’s most sought-after roads Features Exceptional double fronted Edwardian style residence Wonderful period features throughout including stain glass windows Gracious well-proportioned accommodation extending to 303sqm (3,270sq.ft) (excluding garage). Garage extends to approx. 37 sqm (400 sq.ft) Five well-proportioned bedrooms Four reception rooms Delightful private south-west facing rear garden extending to approx. 0.54 acre Prime residential location on Burnaby Road overlooking Burnaby Park and close to excellent schools and public transport Highly convenient location within minutes to Greystones village, the seafront including DART Oil fired central heating Security alarm Generous off-street parking for several cars BER E1