Castle Pollard (formerly Kinturk), Co Westmeath  

Castle Pollard (formerly Kinturk), Co Westmeath  

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

p. 74. (Pollard-Urquhart/LGI1958) A three storey five bay Georgian block enlarged and remodelled 1821 for W.D. Pollard by C.R. Cockerell, who added a single storey Greek Ionic portico, two short single-storey wings with blinkd walls and niches on the entrance front, and a wing on the garden front. Eaved roof; balustraded area. Cockerell also formed a new staircase hall, with an elegantly cantilevered brass-railed stair leading up to a spacious bedroom lobby lit by a coloured glass dome. Now an institution.” 

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

Clonard House, Dublin Road, Mullingar, County Westmeath 

https://theirishaesthete.com/2019/12/16/castlepollard/

In Poor Health

by theirishaesthete


Captain Nicholas Pollard was one of the many adventurous Englishmen who came to Ireland in the latter part of the 16th century and was rewarded by the government with a grant of land. Originally from Devon, Pollard arrived here as part of the Earl of Essex’s ill-fated expedition in 1599, but whereas his commander returned home in ignominy, Pollard remained and received land and the castle at Mayne in County Westmeath. His heir, also called Nicholas, settled slightly further to the east where he built a new castle and founded a town, which he duly named Castlepollard. His son Walter carried out further improvements in the area, having received from Charles II a patent for holding fairs and a weekly market in the new town. Walter’s son, another Walter, although he had served in Charles II’s army and was attached to the Stuart cause, nevertheless supported William III and in the aftermath of the Battle of the Boyne became a Member of Parliament, as well as being charged to raise supplies for the crown in Westmeath for a number of years. He died in 1718 and having been predeceased by his only son, the estate passed to his daughter Letitia who in 1696 had married Major Charles Hampson; the latter duly took his wife’s family name, Successive generations of Pollards then followed, none of whom made much of an impression outside the immediate locale, although in the 19th century some of them enjoyed respectable army careers. The family remained in residence until after the death of the last male heir, Francis Edward Romulus Pollard-Urquhart in 1915: two decades later the house and 110 acres were sold to a Roman Catholic religious order, the Sisters of the Sacred Heart.

Kinturk House or Castle Pollard, County Westmeath, photograph by Robert O’Byrne.
Kinturk House or Castle Pollard, County Westmeath, photograph by Robert O’Byrne.
Kinturk House or Castle Pollard, County Westmeath, photograph by Robert O’Byrne.
Kinturk House or Castle Pollard, County Westmeath, photograph by Robert O’Byrne.





Standing on the outskirts of Castlepollard, the Pollards’ former residence is called Kinturk House. The core of the building is believed to date from c.1760 when it would have replaced an older castle either here or on an adjacent site. This work was undertaken because in 1763 the estate’s then-owner William Pollard married Isabella, daughter and heiress of John Morres. However, one must assume her inheritance was not enormous since Kinturk was only room deep. This changed in the 1820s when the house was enlarged and remodeled for its next resident, William Dutton Pollard by architect Charles Robert Cockerell, who had come to Ireland to work on another commission for the Naper family at Loughcrew. Cockerell doubled the depth of Kinturk and gave the garden front of the building a more imposing presence by increasing the number of bays (from five to seven) with a central breakfront. He also added a single-storey Ionic porch to the façade, and single storey extensions at either end. Inside, the most notable feature is the cantilevered Portland stone staircase with brass banisters but at least one of the ground floor reception rooms retains pretty rococo plasterwork from the 1760s.

Kinturk House or Castle Pollard, County Westmeath, photograph by Robert O’Byrne.
Kinturk House or Castle Pollard, County Westmeath, photograph by Robert O’Byrne.
Kinturk House or Castle Pollard, County Westmeath, photograph by Robert O’Byrne.
Kinturk House or Castle Pollard, County Westmeath, photograph by Robert O’Byrne.





Within a few years of buying Kinturk House, the Sisters of the Sacred Heart embarked on a substantial building programme in the grounds, where they erected, among other structures, a chapel linked to the old residence by a corridor and a free-standing three-storey block intended to serve as a 120-bed Mother and Baby Home. All the new buildings, constructed between 1938-41 was designed in a starkly brutalist style by Dublin architect Thomas Joseph Cullen, who throughout a long career worked extensively for the Catholic church. The cost of this project was some £76,000, much of the money coming from the Hospital Sweepstakes Fund. Called St Peter’s, the home operated for 35 years and like other similar establishments elsewhere in the country – some of them also operated by the same religious order – has in recent years rightly been subjected to public scrutiny, not least because of the horrific conditions in which many young women and their new-born infants were required to live. Following the closure of the home, in 1971 the site was sold to the Midland Health Board, and then, like so many other buildings across the country, became the responsibility of the Health Service Executive (HSE). Kinturk/St Peter’s thereafter provided residential care for the disabled until its closure was announced in 2014, shortly before a highly condemnatory inspection report on the facility was issued by the Health Information and Quality Authority. Today, two detached bungalows provide accommodation for ten residents. The rest of the site sits empty and neglected, the various properties visibly falling into disrepair. The original Kinturk House, of evident architectural merit, is closed up and increasingly dilapidated. This is, unfortunately, yet another instance of a state authority failing to look after the buildings supposed to be in its care and leaving it in poor health. As always, ultimately the citizens of Ireland (who own the place) will be the losers.

https://www.buildingsofireland.ie/buildings-search/building/15302016/kinturk-house-kinturk-demesne-county-westmeath

Attached five-bay three-storey over basement country house, built c.1760. Remodelled and extended in 1821 with the addition of single-storey wings to either end (southwest and northeast) having round-headed niches, a freestanding tetrastyle Ionic porch to the centre of the main façade (northwest) and a large three-storey block to rear (southeast). Later in use as a convent and now in use as a hospital. Shallow hipped natural slate roof with four ashlar chimneystacks, cast-iron rainwater goodsand a moulded ashlar cornice at eaves level. Roughcast rendered walls above ground level, smooth rendered at basement level, separated by projecting cut-stone string course. Square-headed window openings having moulded limestone surrounds, cut stone sills and six-over-six pane timber sliding sash windows. Square-headed doorcase behind porch having moulded cut stone surrounds and original timber panelled door. Flight of cut stone steps flanked to either side by balustraded parapets gives access to doorway over basement. Fine neoclassical interior with elegant plasterwork and joinery. Set in landscaped grounds shared with a number of hospital buildings, c.1935. 

The architectural quality and refinement are apparent in the design, execution and detailing of this fine country house. The impressive form and scale of this imposing house is emphasised by the symmetrical façade, a feature typically found in houses dating from the mid-Georgian Period. The interior is also noteworthy with some elegant rococo plasterwork and a fine staircase in Portland stone with brass balusters. The 1821 remodelling was carried out for William Pollard by the important architect C. R. Cockerell (1788-1867), who also carried out noteworthy work on Loughcrew House (Co. Meath) and the Gilson Endowed School (Oldcastle, Co. Meath) around the same time. The house has very important historical connections with the Pollard Family who were responsible for the development of Castlepollard during the early-seventeenth century and also the remodelling of the village in its present form c.1820. The house remained in Pollard hands until c.1935 when it was purchased by Sisters of Sacred Heart and used as a convent until 1971 when sold to Midland Health Board. This structure represents the focal point of an important and extensive range of demesne-related structures and contributes strongly to the architectural heritage of north Westmeath. 

Crossdrum, Oldcastle, Co Meath 

Crossdrum, Oldcastle, 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. 95. “(Harman/LGI1958) A house attributed by Dr Watkin to C.R. Cockerell, probably built 1825 for J.L. Naper of Loughcrew, to be occupied by a tenant. Two storey, three bays, fanlighted doorway with elegant sideligths. Shallow window surrounds with blocking.”  

“(Rotheram/LGI1958) A late C18 house of two storeys over basement; five bay front with tripartite rounded doorcase; parapeted roof.” 

https://www.buildingsofireland.ie/buildings-search/building/14305026/crossdrum-house-crossdrum-lower-millbrook-co-meath

Crossdrum, County Meath, courtesy National Inventory.

Detached five-bay two-storey over basement house, built c.1800, now derelict. Tuscan porch to Venetian-style doorcase. Moulded architraves and tooled stone sills to window openings. Ashlar limestone walls with string course, dentil eaves course, and quoins. Hipped slate roof with ashlar chimneys. Servants tunnel to basement and cantilevered stone staircase to rear. Scar of demolished return to rear. Cast-iron railings to front.

Appraisal 

Crossdrum House is an exceptional country residence. The architectural quality of the house is immediately apparent. The limestone ashlar façades with their limestone detailing and dressings are clearly the work of skilled craftsmen. The execution of the doorcase and the internal plasterwork are of artistic interest. Crossdrum House was the home Edward Rotheram, agent to the Naper estate at Loughcrew. Some of the plasterwork has been attributed to George Stapleton, son of Michael Stapleton. 

Crossdrum, County Meath, courtesy National Inventory.
Crossdrum, County Meath, courtesy National Inventory.

Record of Protected Structures 

Cross Drum, townland: Crossdrum Lower; town: Millbrook 

Detached five-bay two-storey over basement house, built c.1800, now derelict. Tuscan porch to Venetian-style doorcase. Crossdrum House was the home Edward Rotheram, agent to the Naper estate at Loughcrew. Incl Outbuildings. 

Crossdrum House is located near Millbrook, Oldcastle. The townland of Crossdrum was in the ownership of the Napers of Loughcrew and they leased the land to the Rotherams and Smith Harman families. Both families were involved in the hunt.  

Crossdrum House has been described as an exceptional country residence while others have described it as a dull and ill proportioned Georgian house. Some of the plasterwork has been attributed to George Stapleton, son of Michael Stapleton. The house had a Tuscan porch with a Venetian-style doorcase. The house became derelict in the late twentieth century. There was a servants’ tunnel to the basement 

The first recorded lease at Crossdrum dates to 1734 from the Napers of Loughcrew. Edward Rotheram born 1789, married Barbara Crofton from Leitrim. He acted as an agent for Lord Shelborne. The Rotherams of Triermore came into possession of Crossdrum. George Rotheram lived  at Crossdrum in 1810. 

In 1835 Crossdrum house, the residence of Edward Rotheram, was described as a neat and commodious house of modern style, having been erected in 1817. There were suitable offices and gardens attached to it. Mr. Rotheram was described as a comfortable farmer, and lived on the land. He employed constantly 40 labourers, cultivating a third of the land and grazing the remainder. 

Edward Rotheram was born in 1810, married in 1835 and was a member of the Royal Dublin Yacht club. In 1883 Edward Rotheram of Crossdrum held 5,308 acres in Meath and 1,290 in Cavan making a total estate of 6,598 acres. Edward Rotheram held the lands on which the cairns on Loughcrew stand. 

Percy French was a regular visitor to Crossdrum while he was inspector of drains in Cavan. He often kept the family up to the small hours with his singing and stories. Mr. Rotheram would say “Do you know Percy the early train leaves Oldcastle at 7.30 in the morning?” This worked sometimes and Percy went to bed but many times it did not. Source John Smith ‘The Oldcastle Centenary Book’ 

In 1911 Edward and Jane Rotheram and their family lived at Crossdrum. In 1906 Edward had served as High Sheriff of Meath.  In January 1914 when Edward, his wife and a visitor were sitting at the fire a shot was fired through the window. 

Soldiers occupied Crossdrum at the request of Mr. Rotheram during the War of Independence. Edward Rotheram died about 1925. The Rotherham family left Ireland in the 1920s. The Cadden family then lived there  until the late 1960s. They built a new house nearby and moved out of the old house.  A modern farmyard was built directly behind the house but the old farm buildings are also still in use. 

Upper Crossdrum House 

Nearby Upper Crossdrum House was the residence of W. Smith Harman in 1837. In 1835 Upper Crossdrum House was described  as a neat three storey house with offices built in 1819. It is attributed to the architect C.R. Cockerell. William Smith Harman married Catherine Battersby of Newcastle in 1836. Their eldest son William succeeded at Crossdrum. William who was born in 1837 married Mary O’Rorke of Loughcrew. In 1911 William Harman and his wife were living at Crossdrum. William died in 1932 at the age of 95. He had been master of the Ballymacads from 1887 to 1900. Their son Charles Cecil Harman served in the South African War and then in World War I and was awarded the DSO in 1916 and a bar 1917. Born in 1877 Charles married Muriel Huth in 1914 and they had two sons, William and Charles, both of whom served in the Second World War. When Charles Cecil died in 1952 his widow remarried two years later to Major Kenneth Thompson of Triermore House.