Richhill Castle, Co Armagh

Richhill Castle, Co Armagh 

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

p. 241. Rich Hill, County Armagh: “(Richardson/IFR) An important C17 house, built between 1664-1690 by Major Edward Richardson, MP. Two storey with gabled attic in high-pitched roof. “U” plan, entrance front with projecting wings to form a shallow three sided court. Five bay centre range, and one on the inner face of each wing. Tall brick chimneystacks with arched recessed panels. C18 doorway with Doric columns, entablatures and pediment. Magnificent wrought-iron gates, made 1745, perhaps by the Thornberry brothers, of Armagh, now at Hillsborough Castle, Co Down, where they were taken 1936.” 

http://lordbelmontinnorthernireland.blogspot.com/2015/01/richhill-castle.html

THE RICHARDSONS WERE MAJOR LANDOWNERS IN COUNTY ARMAGH, WITH 6,878 ACRES  

The family of RICHARDSON is descended from 

WILLIAM RICHARDSON, stated by William Roberts, Ulster King of Arms, in a confirmation of arms dated 1647, to be descended from the ancient family of RICHARDSON of Pershore, Worcestershire. 

His second son, 
 
MAJOR EDWARD RICHARDSON, of Legacorry, alias Richhill, County Armagh, MP for Armagh County, 1661, High Sheriff of County Armagh, 1665, wedded Anne, only child and heir of Francis Sacheverell, of Legacorry, and Dorothy his wife (daughter and co-heir of Sir John Blennerhassett, Knight, Chief Baron of the Irish Exchequer). 
 
Mr Francis Sacheverell was son of Francis Sacheverell, of Rearsby, Leicestershire, who had a grant of Legacorry during the reign of JAMES I. 
 
By Anne his wife Major Richardson (who died in 1690) had issue, 

William, of Legacorry (1656-1727), dsp
JOHN, of whom presently

The younger son, 
 
JOHN RICHARDSON (1663-c1744), of Legacorry, alias Rich Hill, an army officer, espoused, in 1707-8, Anne, daughter of William Beckett, Prime Sergeant-at-Law, and had issue, 

WILLIAM, his heir
HENRY, of whom hereafter
Hester, m Rev J Lowry, of Pomeroy; 
Mary, m Archibald, 1st Baron Gosford. 

Mr Richardson was succeeded by his eldest son, 
 
﷟HYPERLINK “https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/William_Richardson_(1749%E2%80%931822)”WILLIAM RICHARDSON (1749-1822), of Rich Hill, High Sheriff of County Armagh, 1777, MP for County Armagh, 1807-20, who married firstly, in 1775, Dorothea, daughter of Henry Monroe, of Roes Hall, Tullylish, by whom he had no issue. 
 
He wedded secondly, Louisa Magennis, of Waringstown, and had issue, three daughters, 

Elizabeth, died unmarried 1859; 
Isabella, died unmarried 1860; 
LOUISA. 

The youngest daughter, 
 
LOUISA RICHARDSON (-1881), of Richhill, who espoused, in 1832, Edward Bacon, eldest son of Sir Edmund Bacon, 10th Baronet, though the marriage was without issue. 
 
Mr John Richardson’s second son, 

HENRY RICHARDSON, of Rossfad, Lieutenant-Colonel, 29th Regiment (entered the army as a cornet in the 8th Horse, Ligonier’s, 1743), wedded firstly, Catherine, eldest daughter of Samuel Perry, of County Tyrone, which lady died dsp 1765. 

He married secondly, in 1766, Jane, daughter and co-heir of Guy Carleton, of Rossfad, County Fermanagh. 
 
Colonel Richardson died about 1794, having had issue, a son, 
 
JOHN RICHARDSON (1768-1841), of Rossfad, Major, Tyrone Militia, who wedded, in 1807, Angel, daughter of Mervyn ArchdallMP, of Castle Archdale, by whom he had an only son,  
 
HENRY MERVYN RICHARDSON DL (1808-82), of Rossfad, County Fermanagh, who espoused, in 1834, Mary Jane, widow of John Johnston, of Crocknacrieve, County Fermanagh, second daughter of Dr Charles Ovenden, of Enniskillen, and Mayfield, Sussex, and had issue, 

JOHN MERVYN ARCHDALL CARLETON, his heir
Charles William Henry (1840-88); 
Jane Angel; Angel Catherine Charlotte; Emilie Margaret; Henrietta M Mervyn. 

Mr Richardson succeeded on the death of his cousin Louisa, Mrs Bacon, in 1881, to two-thirds of the Richhill estate. 

He was succeeded by his eldest son, 

JOHN MERVYN ARCHDALL CARLETON RICHARDSON JP DL (1836-1912), of Rossfad, County Fermanagh, Colonel, 3rd Battalion, Royal Inniskilling Fusiliers, High Sheriff of County Tyrone, 1885, County Fermanagh, 1888, who married, in 1880, Mildred Harriet, third daughter of Gartside Tipping, of Rossferry, County Fermanagh, and Bolton-le-Moors, Lancashire, and had issue, 

HENRY SACHEVERELL CARLETON; 
Guy Carleton, b 1885; 
Jane Mary; Mildred Cicely Carleton. 

The eldest son, 
 
LIEUTENANT-COLONEL HENRY SACHEVERELL CARTLETON RICHARDSON DL(1883-1958), of Rossfad. 
 

 
THE CASTLE, Richhill, County Armagh, was built between 1664-90 by Major Edward Richardson MP. 

It comprises two storeys, with a gabled attic in a high-pitched roof. 

The house is U-shaped, the entrance front having projecting wings which form a three-sided court. 

The centre range has five bays, with one bay at the end of each wing. 

There are pedimented Dutch-style gables at the ends of the wings. 

Chimney-stacks are lofty and prominent. 

The doorway boasts Doric columns, pediment and entablature.  

 
The Castle stands on the site of an earlier dwelling erected by Francis Sacheverall, a planter from Rossbye, Leicestershire, in 1611. 

In 1610, Sacheverall had received two portions of land, 1,000 acres each, called Mullalelish and Legacorry, and decided to live on the latter. He declared himself to be worth £300 a year and brought over three masons, a carpenter, a smithy, nine labourers, two women, four horses and a cart. Before his death in 1649, Sacheverall had sold the Mullalelish portion to Sir William Alexander, a Scottish speculator who was later honoured with the earldom of Stirling. 

 
Francis Sacheverall’s son and heir, also called Francis, and his wife, Dorothy, had an only daughter, Anne, who married Major Edward Richardson in 1654. 

Through this marriage, Legacorry became the property of the Richardson family and the present castle was built. 

Louisa Richardson married Edward Bacon, High Sheriff of Armagh and, as she had no family, the estate passed to the Rossfad branch of the Richardsons after her death in 1881. 

In the early part of this century the castle was the residence of Major Robert Gordon Berry. 

There are some stories surrounding him involving secret passages, skeletons and a grave in the castle grounds. 

After the establishment of the Government of Northern Ireland in 1920, the castle became the property of the NI Education Authority. 

 
During the 1930s it was occupied by Sam Hewitt, whose main claim to fame was the invention of an egg-washing machine. 

***** 

 
 
The elaborate gates of Richhill Castle were constructed by the Thornberry Brothers of Armagh in 1745.  

They were 18-20 feet high and topped with the Richardson coat-of-arms. 

In 1936, the gates were removed during the night to Hillsborough Castle, then the residence of the Governor of Northern Ireland, which was being renovated after a fire in 1934. 

In spite of a storm of protest from local councillors and villagers, the gates were never returned. 

The Richardson family crest adorns the top of the gates. 

Villagers are seeking the return of the gates to the Castle. 

According to villagers, the gates were taken from Richhill in the late 1930s as part of the 2nd World War effort, when gates and railings all over the UK were seized by the Government to melt down and turn into guns and tanks to fight the Nazis. 

But the former Richhill Castle gates, considered too ornate to waste on Hitler, were stashed away during the hostilities. They turned up in Hillsborough to adorn the castle at the top of the town’s main street. 
 
Clamours for the gates’ return built up a head of steam during 2009, but the death ofGordon Lyttle, the incumbent of Richhill Castle, held things back: 
 
Dr Alan Turtle, chairman of the Richhill Improvements Association: 

“But now that the seemingly impossible has happened with the political agreement. It would seem appropriate to give us back our gates. 
 
We are in the process of spending £747,000 donated by the Heritage Lottery Fund on a major scheme in Richhill, and the least the government can do is give us back the gates that were taken, supposedly temporarily, but seem to have a permanent home at Hillsborough. 
 
It’s our long-term ambition to buy the castle and turn it into a hotel and conference centre, so we’ll be stepping up the gates campaign.” 

Ca 1681-82, permission was granted for Major Edward Richardson to hold a Saturday market and three fairs per annum

 
The fairs were held on Shrove Tuesday, St Swithin’s Day and St Francis’s Day. New orchards were being planted at this time and houses were springing up along the road sides. 

A market-house was built in the Square by William Richardson in 1753, which became a very important centre of the brown linen trade where, in 1804, sales averaged at least £500 per week, despite rival markets in both Armagh and Portadown. 

 
The construction of a new road from Armagh to Belfast, which by-passed Richhill, triggered the decline of the weekly market and the three fairs; thus the market-house was converted into the present parish church in 1837. 

It is notable that, in a census in 1814, Richhill had 161 dwellings, six more than Portadown. 

Occupations included hand-loom weaving, straw plate-making, shuttle-making, wood-turning and spade-making. 

By 1835, the three Misses Richardson, who now owned the estate – and were described as excellent landlords – had built many new country schools on the estate, Mulladry and Derryhale being two examples. 

First published in August, 2010. 

The Pavilion, County Armagh – demolished 

The Pavilion, County Armagh – demolished 

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. 231. “(Armaghdale, B/PB1924) A single-storey house with unusually wide Georgian-glazed windows, a remarkable potico of four Gothic columns supporting a Classical entablature… A Regency iron veranda at one side of the portico; a wood and glass conservatory …The seat of John Londsale, 1st (and last) Lord Armaghdale, a prominent Unionist politician.” 

http://lordbelmontinnorthernireland.blogspot.com/2013/08/the-lonsdale-baronetcy.html 

JAMES LONSDALE JP DL (1826-1913), of The Pavilion, Armagh City, son of Thomas Lonsdale, of Loughgall, County Armagh, married firstly, in 1846,  Jane, daughter of William Brownlee, and had issue, 
 

JOHN BROWNLEE, his heir
Thomas; 
Mary; Jane. 

He wedded secondly, in 1856, Harriet, daughter of John Rolston, without issue. 
 

James Lonsdale was a substantial tenant farmer at Loughgall. In the 1860s, however, he realised that rather than just produce and sell his own butter, it would be much shrewder to buy other farmers’ butter for the English market. 
 
He established butter depots in Armagh and many other parts of Ireland. Ca 1880, he moved the centre of his operations to Manchester and began to import food produce from the Empire. His two sons, John and Thomas, joined him in this enterprise which became very successful financially. 

Mr Lonsdale, High Sheriff of County Armagh, 1891, was succeeded by his elder son, 
 
JOHN BROWNLEE LONSDALE JP DL(1849-1924), of The Pavilion, High Sheriff of County Armagh, 1895, MP for Mid-Armagh, 1899-1918, Lord-Lieutenant of County Armagh, 1920-24, who married, in 1887, Florence, daughter of William Rumney. 
 

A person in a suit sitting in a chair

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Photo Credit: Northern Ireland Assembly 

 
Mr Lonsdale was created a baronet in 1911, designated of Prince’s Gardens in the Royal Borough of Kensington and of The Pavilion in the City and County of Armagh. 
 
Sir John was elevated to the peerage in 1918, in the dignity of BARON ARMAGHDALE, of Armagh, County Armagh. 
 

 
THE PAVILION, Armagh City, was a single-storey Regency villa of ca 1805, with very wide Georgian-glazed windows and a splendid portico of four Gothic columns supporting a Classical entablature. 
 
It was built for Captain William Whitelaw Algeo JP, who lived there until his decease in 1845.  
 

The doorway was surmounted by a segmental, pointed fanlight; with a Regency veranda on one side of the portico. 
 

The conservatory was of wood and glass construction, with Georgian astragals obscuring the range behind it. 
 
The Pavilion was demolished ca 1960 to make way for a school.  
 

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Memorial at Armagh Cathedral 

Lord Armaghdale married Florence Rumney, of Stubbins House, Lancashire, though the marriage was without issue. 
 
The Armaghdales lived latterly at The Dunes, Sandwich Bay, Kent, and had a London residence at Prince’s Gardens. 
 
A keen golfer, Lord Armaghdale presented the Lonsdale Cup to the County Armagh Golf Club. 
 
Lord Armaghdale died in 1924 and, without an heir, the barony and baronetcy expired. 
 
Lady Armaghdale died at 13 Prince’s Gardens, London, in 1937.  
 
First published in July, 2010. 

Mount Caulfeild, Bessbrook, County Armagh

Mount Caulfeild, Bessbrook, County Armagh 

Mount Caulfield, County Armagh, photograph by Robert French, (between ca. 1865-1914), Lawrence Photograph Collection, National Library of Ireland.

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

p. 212. “A house of two storeys with a dormered attic, a gabled projection at one end of its front and a curvilinear gable at the other; probably a C19 rebuilding of a C18 house. Seven bay front, plus the gabled projection; window surrounds with blocking. Charming wooden porch, in the Chinese taste. In 1814, the residence of William Duff.” 

Loughgall Manor, County Armagh 

Loughgall Manor, County Armagh 

Loughgall Manor, Co Armagh, photograph by Robert French, (between ca. 1865-1914), Lawrence Photograph Collection, National Library of Ireland.

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

p. 193.  “(Cope/LGI1912) A two storey, mildly Tudor-Revival house of ca 1840, with many gables, some of them with bargeboards. Windows with simple wooden mullions; hood-mouldings over ground floor windows of main block. Lower service wing at one side, also many gables, with pointed windows in upper storeys.” 

Loughgall Manor, Co Armagh, photograph by Robert French, (between ca. 1865-1914), Lawrence Photograph Collection, National Library of Ireland.
Loughgall Manor, Co Armagh, photograph by Robert French, (between ca. 1865-1914), Lawrence Photograph Collection, National Library of Ireland.

http://lordbelmontinnorthernireland.blogspot.com/2015/03/loughgall-manor.html

THE COPES WERE MAJOR LANDOWNERS IN COUNTY ARMAGH, WITH 9,367 ACRES 

 
ANTHONY COPE, of Portadown, County Armagh, younger brother of Walter Cope, of Drumilly, and grandson of Sir Anthony Cope, 1st Baronet, of Hanwell, wedded Jane, daughter of the Rt Rev Thomas Moigne, Lord Bishop of Kilmore and Ardagh, by whom he had an only son, 
 
THE VERY REV ANTHONY COPE (1639-1705), Dean of Elphin, who wedded his second cousin, Elizabeth, daughter and eventual heiress of Henry Cope, of Loughgall, and granddaughter of Anthony Cope, of Armagh, who was second son of Sir Anthony Cope, 1st Baronet, of Bramshill. 
 
The Dean left, with other issue, a son and heir, 
 
ROBERT COPE (1679-1753), of Loughgall, MP for Armagh County, 1713-14 and 1727-53, who espoused firstly, in 1701, Letitia, daughter of Arthur Brownlow, of Lurgan, who dsp; and secondly, in 1707, Elizabeth, daughter of Sir William Fownes Bt, of Woodstock, by whom he had, with other issue, 

Anthony (Very Rev), Dean of Armagh; 

ARTHUR, of whom hereafter

Mr Cope’s younger son, 
 
ARTHUR COPE, of Loughgall, wedded, in 1761, Ellen Osborne, and had issue, 

ROBERT CAMDEN, his heir; 

Kendrick, lieutenant-colonel, died unmarried 1827; 

Emma; Elizabeth; 

Mary, m Col R Doolan, and had 2 sons: RWC Doolan (cope); KH Doolan. 

The elder son, 
 
ROBERT CAMDEN COPE (c1771-1818), of Loughgall, MP for County Armagh, 1801-2, Lieutenant-Colonel, Armagh Militia, married Mary, daughter of Samuel Elliott, Governor of Antigua, and had an only son, 
 
ARTHUR COPE (1814-44), of Loughgall; who dsp, and bequeathed his estates to his cousin, 
 
ROBERT WRIGHT COPE DOOLAN JP DL (1810-58), of Loughgall Manor, who assumed the surname and additional arms of COPE in 1844. 
 
He espoused, in 1848, Cecilia Philippa, daughter of Captain Shawe Taylor, of County Galway, and had issue, 

FRANCIS ROBERT, DL (1853-) his heir; 
Albinia Elizabeth; Emma Sophia; Helen Gertrude. 

*****  

 
In 1610, the Plantation of Ulster came into effect under the auspices of JAMES I. 

The manors of Loughgall and Carrowbrack in County Armagh were granted to Lord Saye and Sele. 
 
In 1611 he sold these lands to Sir Anthony Cope Bt, of which 3,000 acres were represented by the manor of Loughgall. 
 
The manor of Loughgall was divided between two branches of the Cope family, being known as The Manor House and Drummilly. 

THE MANOR, LOUGHGALL, County Armagh, is a two-storey, mildly Tudor-Revival house of ca 1840 with numerous gables, some of which have barge-boards. 

 
The windows have simple wooden mullions; and there are also hood-mouldings over ground-floor windows of the main block. 
 
A lower service wing is at one side, gabled, with pointed windows in the upper storey. 

 
The gabled entrance porch, in Gothic-Revival style, looks like a work of the 1850-70s and may be a later addition. 
 
While the tree-lined avenue leading from the main street of the village was indicated on a map of 1834, the gateway and lodges, and the main house were not; nor was the house referred to by Lewis in 1837. 
 
The main gates were manufactured in 1842, according to their inscription, which accords with that of the manor-house, although there is no architectural similarity between the gateway and lodges and the main house. 

 
The Yew Walk, to the north of the Manor House, also seemsto be indicated on a map of 1835. 
 
One branch of the family subsequently lived in Drumilly House, situated to the east of the lough, which was demolished in 1965, while the other lived in the Manor House. 
 
The manor-house was purchased from Field-Marshal Sir Gerald Templer, a relation of the original owners, by the Ministry of Agriculture in 1947. 
 
The Ministry began general farming operations in 1949, and in 1951 established a horticultural centre on the estate. 
 
In 1952, the Northern Ireland Plant Breeding Station, which had been founded by the Northern Ireland Government in 1922, was transferred to Loughgall. 
 
In 1987, the Horticultural Centre and Plant Breeding Station were amalgamated to form the Northern Ireland Horticultural and Plant Breeding Station; and in 1995 the station became part of the NI Department of Agriculture’sApplied Plant Science Division.  

***** 

 
THE VILLAGE of Loughgall developed slowly under the benign guidance of the Cope family, assuming a distinctly English appearance. 
 
During the 18th and early part of the 19th century, a number of houses were built in the elegant Georgian style of architecture. 

The two Cope families, of Loughgall Manor and Drumillyrespectively, did not take a very active part in politics; however, as residential landlords, they pursued a policy of agricultural development on their own estates and greatly encouraged the improvement and fertility of their tenants’ farms. 

Apple-growing over the past two centuries has become a major factor in the economic development of County Armagh, with  Loughgall at the heart of this important industry. 
 
To this day there is no public house in Loughgall. 
 
The Copes, at some stage in the past, actively discouraged the sale and consumption of alcohol by buying several public houses in the village and closing them down. 
 
In their place they established a coffee-house and reading-room. 
 
The Cope Baronets are now extinct in the male line. 
 
The last generation of both the Loughgall Manor and Drumilly families had daughters only. 
 
Of the Manor House family, a Miss Cope married a clergyman, the Rev Canon Sowter; while Ralph Cope, of Drumilly, had two daughters, one of whom, Diana, married Robin Cowdy of the local  Greenhall linen bleaching family at Summer Island. 
 
Both the Manor House and Drumilly estates were purchased by the Northern Ireland Ministry of Agriculture and now play a prominent part in testing and development in the horticultural field. 
 
Both estates remain intact and have not been developed for housing or industry; they form part of Loughgall Country Park
 
With considerable areas of mature woodland interspersed with orchards and cultivated fields, this area must surely be one of the most pleasant stretches of countryside in County Armagh. 
 
First published in August, 2010. 

https://theirishaesthete.com/2022/01/10/loughgall/

Loughgall, County Armagh is an exceptionally handsome and well-preserved village, laid out in the 18th century by the Cope family, who were resident landlords. It comprises one long street lined on either side with residences other than at one point where an extraordinary set of gates and gate houses announce entry to the Cope estate. The family had come to this part of the country in 1611, after land here was either granted by the crown or purchased by Sir Anthony Cope of Oxfordshire. He passed the property onto one of his younger sons, also called Anthony but the latter then sold part of the estate called Drumilly to a brother, Richard Cope, so that there were two branches of the same family living adjacent to each other. Drumilly was an exceptionally long house, its facade running to 228 feet, and comprised a central, two storey-over-basement block linked to similarly scaled pavilions by lower, six-bay wings; when Maria Edgeworth visited in 1844, she thought it ‘one of the most beautiful places I think I ever saw.’ Not long afterwards, a vast conservatory with curved front was added to the entrance. In the middle of the last century, the house and land came into the ownership of the Ministry of Agriculture and Drumilly was used as a grain store, with the result that it fell into disrepair. A contents auction was held in 1960 and six years later, the building was demolished; the Belfast MP Roy Bradford described this as ‘a Philistine Act of the most heinous irresponsibility embarking on a reckless course of artistic nihilism.’ Today nothing remains of the place, meaning only Loughgall survives to represent the former presence of the Copes in the area.  …

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

LOUGHGALL MANOR HOUSE, County Armagh (AP ARMAGH, BANBRIDGE & CRAIGAVON 03) 
A/025 
REGISTERED GRADE A 
The present Tudor-Revival county house (Listed HB 15/2/16) was built in 1874 on high ground 
above Lough Gall (35acres/14ha), its associated demesne (registered area 264acres/107ha) is 
essentially 18th-century in layout with 17th-century origins. The park lies on the east side of the 
village of the same name, 6.35 miles (10.2km) west of Portadown and is approached down an 
impressive lime avenue that leads up hill to the house, where there has been a house since 
around 1610 when Sir Anthony Cope (1548-1614) of Oxfordshire acquired through purchase these 
lands and built for his sons, Arthur and Walter, a ‘bawn of stone and lyme, a hundred and eighty 
foot square, and fourteen feet high, with four flankers and in three of them…very good 
lodgings…three storeys high…’. At some point before the 1650s the demesne had been split 
between Arthur and Walter Cope family, with Drumilly house (now lost) being established as 
Water’s branch of the family on the west side of the lake. The Loughgall Manor house, probably 
destroyed in the 1641 Rebellion, was evidently enlarged and re-built on several occasions, but 
unfortunately there is very poor documentation for the Copes in the 17th and 18th centuries. In 
the late 17th century the property belonged to the Rev. Anthony Cope (1639-1705), but as the 
Dean of Elphin he was most likely not resident very much; his eldest son Robert Cope (1679-1753) 
was a resident; furthermore, his mother was an heiress and he himself married well twice in the 
first decade of the century. Consequently, we can be reasonably certain that the formal 
landscape around the house was created by him in the first two decades of the 18th-century. This 
included the lime avenue, which extends with north-west south-east axis from the village to the 

house site, 1295ft (395m). At right angles to this was a an another avenue of yew trees, 
extending 855ft (260m) north-east south-west to the old Portadown-road and possibly aligned on 
the side of the house (this is not clear). The yew avenue ceased to be an approach in the early 
19th century, but still exists as a walk and comprises three ranks of trees each side. It is now 
known as ”Dean Swift’s Walk’, this being reflection on the fact that the famous dean stayed with 
Robert Cope, initially for a brief in 1717 and then for a month in 1722. At the time Robert was an 
anti-Whig, having served as MP in the reign of Anne but put under arrest by Parliament in 1715 
after her death, where Swift visited him. It was said that Cope at Loughgall ‘entertained that 
covetous lampooning dean much better than he deserved’. The house he would have stayed in 
seems from the Rocque’s County Armagh map of 1760 to have been an L-shaped block standing 
about 65-70ft (20m) further downslope closer to the junction between the two avenues. 
Rocque’s map also shows that the main line avenue (not clearly shown) was extended on the 
same axis to the south-east of the house for around 500m. Such a layout was entirely typical of 
the period; the surrounding demesne would have been geometrically divided up with tree-lined 
boundaries and around the house would have been a network of enclosures, walled or hedged, 
containing gardens and yards. Following Robert Cope’s death in 1753, the property was inherited 
by his son Arthur (d.1795) who was responsible for transforming Loughgall into a landscape park; 
the date is unknown but probably dates to the late 1760s or 1770s. It involved planting narrow 
shelter belts along the outside of the park to the Lissheffield-road and to the demesne wall west of a small stream from the lake that then separated Drumilly which belonged to the other branch 
of the Copes. Six small irregular woodland blocks were planted in the west sector of the park and 
a circuit drive; isolated trees were probably added later in the century. As an attraction on the 
drive a stone hermitage (Listed HB 15/22/027) was constructed on the west side of one of the 
woodland clumps close to the Drumilly boundary (but it was never part of Drumilly); it comprises 
a rubble structure built in characteristic rustic or grotesque manner into the side of a mound with 
a narrow arch entrance leading into a short passage (width 2ft 7in/79cm) that led in a roughly 
circular chamber (10ft/3m diameter) with a little window on one side; (frames were still in situ in 
the 1980s), a small fireplace facing the passage, which looks like a later insertion, and a domed 
brick roof with hexagonal opening and earth covering the dome; the structure a typical of the 
1760s and 1770s era and a rare survival in Ulster. Another feature from this phase of the park is 
the ice house (Listed HB 15/02/016C) which stood concealed in the park under a mound on the 
edge of another woodland block north-west of the house; it has a brick and rubble vaulted oblong 
chamber with short vaulted brick-lined passage with eastern facing rubble stone segmental arched opening. The location of the original kitchen garden for the Loughgall Manor in the later- 
18th century is not yet established; it may be added that the park in the adjoining demesne of 
Drumilly, port of which is now part of Loughgall Manor, was laid out in much the same time, 
possibly with same landscape designer. He carefully planted the edge of the lake so that tree 
screens allowed views across the water from Drumilly House and its approach drives towards the …

Kilmore House, Richhill, County Armagh 

Kilmore House, Richhill, County Armagh 

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 

p. 174. “(Johnston/IFR) A three storey Georgian block, given two curvilinear Jacobean-style gables and mullioned oriels in C19, between which three bays of the original elevation remain as they always were, complete with the astragals in the sash windows; the adjoining elevation also remained Georgian. The interior was also remodelled, presumably at the same time; the hall has a screen of tapering wooden piers, incorporating the stairs, which have a handrail of carved wood panelling. The dining room has a Victorian Gothic chimneypiece of marble. Seat of the Johnstons, of whom Francis Johnston, the architect, was a younger son.” 

Dartan Hall, Co Armagh 

Dartan Hall, Co Armagh 

http://lordbelmontinnorthernireland.blogspot.com/2018/02/cross-of-dartan.html

THE CROSSES OWNED 1,090 ACRES OF LAND IN COUNTY ARMAGH 

This Lancashire family settled in Ulster at the time of the Plantation, 1611, in the parish of Tynan, County Armagh. 
 
From a tombstone in Tynan churchyard it appears that JAMES CROSS was buried there in 16_8 (the third figure is indecipherable and the church books for a lengthened period are not forthcoming). 
 
Two of his sons, JOHN and WILLIAM, were amongst the defenders of Londonderry, who signed the address to WILLIAM & MARY on the relief of that city in 1689, when they returned to County Armagh, where the descendants of John fixed their abode. 
 
William Cross died unmarried. 
 
JOHN CROSS died in 1742, having had issue by his wife, Jane, five sons and three daughters. 
 
The eldest son, 
 
RICHARD CROSS, of Dartan, succeeded his father, and died in 1776, having had issue by his wife, Margaret, two sons and four daughters. 
 
The second son and successor, 
 
WILLIAM CROSS, of Dartan, married, in 1743, Mrs Mary Stratford, of Dartan (née Irwin), and had issue, 
 

Richard, dsp
William Irwin (1785-1809); 
JOHN, of whom presently
MAXWELL, succeeded his brother
Mary. 

William Cross, Deputy Governor of County Armagh, 1793, died in 1812, and was succeeded by his third son, 
 
JOHN CROSS (1787-1850), of Dartan, an army officer who saw much service in the 52nd (Oxfordshire) Light Infantry during the Peninsular War. 
 
He accompanied the expedition to Sweden in 1807, and proceeded thence to Portugal, 1808. 
 
He took part in the battle of Corunna, the actions preceding it, and all the subsequent campaigns wit the 52nd regiment; Battle of Waterloo, and occupation of Paris; thrice wounded; received the War Medal with ten clasps, also the Waterloo Medal; subsequently commanded the 68th Light Infantry, from which regiment he retired in 1843. 
 
Colonel Cross, Lieutenant-Governor commanding the forces in Jamaica, was a Member of the Royal Hanoverian Guelphic Order. 
 
He died in 1850, and was succeeded by his brother, 
 
MAXWELL CROSS JP DL (1790-1863), of Dartan, High Sheriff of County Armagh, 1847, who wedded Sarah, daughter of William Hardy JP, and was succeeded by his only son, 
 
WILLIAM CROSS JP DL (1815-82), of Dartan, High Sheriff of County Armagh, 1860, Captain and Adjutant, 68th Light Infantry, Colonel-Commandant, Armagh Light Infantry Militia, who espoused, in 1844, Frances Jane, only daughter of Major-General Pennell Cole, Royal Engineers, and had issue, 
 

Maxwell (1845-69); 
WILLIAM PENNELL, his heir
SARAH JANE BEAUCHAMP, succeeded her brother

The second son, 
 
WILLIAM PENNELL CROSS JP LL.B (1849-1906), of Dartan, married, in 1883, Beatrice Lucinda, daughter of the Rev Dominick Augustus Browne, and dsp 1906, when he was succeeded by his only sister, 
 
MRS SARAH JANE BEAUCHAMP COOKE-CROSS (-1911), who wedded, in 1887, ARTHUR CHARLES INNES, of Dromantine, who assumed  the additional surname and arms of CROSS, and had issue, 
 

ARTHUR CHARLES WOLSELEY, of Dromantine (1888-1940); 
Sydney Maxwell (1894-1914); 
Marian Dorothea (d 1965). 

MRS INNES-CROSS married secondly, in 1907, HERBERT MARTIN COOKE(eldest son the Mason Cooke, of Ely), who assumed, in 1908, the additional name and arms of CROSS. 
 

 
 
DARTAN HALL, near Killylea, County Armagh, is situated 6 miles east of the city of Armagh. 

The present house was built between 1850-60 by the Cross family. 

The house comprises two storeys over a basement. 

It remained inhabited by the Cross family until 1906, when it was leased to a son of the Very Rev Robert Shaw-Hamilton, Dean of Armagh. 

The property subsequently passed to the Knox family, when it lay vacant for many years. 

John Erskine acquired the property in 1987, since when it has been extensively restored. 

Dartan has recently been sold

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

DARTON, County Armagh (AP ARMAGH, BANBRIDGE and CRAIGAVON 03) A/061 
REGISTERED GRADE B 
South-west of Killylea and bordering Fellows Hall, this is an 1850s house on an earlier demesne 
parkland (120 acres/48ha), with terracing. Demesne has 17th century origins, the earlier house 
being a low thatched gentleman’s residence, replaced in 1856 by square cubic block in a sober 
Italianate style by architect John Boyd for Maxwell Cross. It faces due north, and on the east and 
south side a raised terrace was created, originally for parterres. This house was gutted by fire in 
1924, by which time it was the home of the Shaw-Hamilton family; restored by the present owner 
in 1987. The yard on the west, partly incorporated earlier yard buildings; it has been extended 
south in recent years. The walled garden (1.25 acres/0.5ha), 170 feet (50m) north of the house 
belongs to the early 19th century; it is presently under grass with a number of isolated trees 
planted therein. The small woodland south-west of the house is of late 18th or early 19th century 
date. There are fine parkland trees flanking the main approach to the house from the north; these 
are a mixture of early and mid-19th century plantings. The fine perimeter planting on the west 
and north side of the park is mid-19th century in date and is a good surviving example of parkland 
planting from this era. The gate lodge at the head of the north entrance drive, which replaced a 
pre-1835 lodge, has a date stone of 1870 and has recently been restored as a residence; it has an 
L-plan and is built of rock-faced Armagh limestone masonry with semi-circular-arched windows 
and a centrally positioned chimneystack. Possible Tree-ring, Arm: 11:018. Private 

Crowhill, Annaghmore, County Armagh 

Crowhill, Annaghmore, County Armagh 

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. 96. “(Atkinson/LGI1958) A two storey late Georgian house; five bay front with one bay pedimented breakfront. Lunette attic window in tympanum of pediment; doorway with very wide elliptical fanlight extending over the door and sidelights; the voussoirs of the fanlight arch being very prominent. Some late-Georgian plasterwork in interior. The estate originally belonged to the Hopes and passed to the Atkinsons through marriage of Sarah Hope to Joseph Atkinson 1791. Sold 1951/2 to Northern Ireland Ministry of Agriculture.” 

Church Hill (or Churchill) House, County Armagh – gone 

Church Hill (or Churchill) House, County Armagh – gone

http://lordbelmontinnorthernireland.blogspot.com/2015/02/the-verner-baronetcy.html 

THE VERNER BARONETS WERE MAJOR LANDOWNERS IN COUNTY ARMAGH, WITH 5,436 ACRES 

 
This family was of long standing in County Armagh and had been, for a long time, settled at Church Hill. 
 
HENRY VERNER, of Gullivenagh, County Antrim, married Isabella _________, and had issue, 

HENRY; 

Benjamin; 

David; 

James; 

Mary; Sarah. 

He died ca 1683, and was succeeded by his eldest son, 
 
HENRY VERNER, who married Anne Kerr, and had issue, 

James; 
DAVID; 
Thomas; 
Mary; Anne. 

The eldest surviving son, 
 
DAVID VERNER (1718-54), wedded Anna Crossle, of Anahoe, and had issue, 

JAMES, his heir
Thomas, an Army officer, killed at the battle of Bunker’s Hill; 
Elizabeth; Sarah; Margaret; Jane. 

The elder son,  

 
JAMES VERNER (1746-1822), MP for Dungannon, 1794-1800, High Sheriff for counties Armagh, Meath, Monaghan, Dublin and Tyrone, married Jane, daughter of  the Rev Henry Clarke, of Summer Island, County Armagh, and had issue, 

Thomas (1774-1853); 
James; 
David (1780-1826); 
John (1780-1814), twin with David; 
WILLIAM, his heir
Elizabeth. 

Mr Verner was succeeded by his youngest son, 
 
SIR WILLIAM VERNER KCH JP DL (1782-1871), of Church Hill, County Armagh, Lieutenant-Colonel, 7th Hussars, MP for County Armagh, 1832-68, High Sheriff of County Monaghan, 1820, Armagh, 1822, Tyrone, 1823, who wedded, in 1819, Harriet, only daughter of Colonel the Hon Edward Wingfield, of Corke Abbey, Bray, County Wicklow, son of Richard, 3rd Viscount Powerscourt, and had issue, 

WILLIAM, his heir; 
Edward Wingfield, 4th Baronet; 
Emilia; Frances Elizabeth; Frederica; 
Harriet Jane Isabella Cecilia; Henrietta Constantia Frances. 

He was created a baronet in 1846, designated of Verner’s Bridge, County Armagh. 

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Lieutenant-Colonel Sir William Verner, 1st Baronet, KCH, by Martin Cregan 

 
Sir William was succeeded by his elder son, 
 
SIR WILLIAM VERNER, 2nd Baronet (1822-73), of Corke Abbey, MP for County Armagh, 1868-73, High Sheriff of County Armagh, 1848, who espoused, in 1850, Mary, daughter of Lieutenant-General the Hon Sir Hercules Robert Pakenham, and had issue, 

WILLIAM EDWARD HERCULES, his successor
Alice Emily; Edith. 

Sir William was succeeded by his only son, 
 
SIR WILLIAM EDWARD HERCULES VERNER, 3rd Baronet (1856-86), of Corke Abbey, who married, in 1877, Annie, daughter of John Wilson, of Melbourne, Australia, though died without issue, when the title reverted to his cousin, 
 
SIR EDWARD WINGFIELD VERNER, 4th Baronet (1830-99), JP, of Corke Abbey (second son of the 1st Baronet), High Sheriff of County Dublin, 1866, MP for Lisburn, 1863-73, County Armagh, 1883-90, who wedded, in 1864, Selina Florence, daughter of Thomas Vesey Nugent, and had issue, 

EDWARD WINGFIELD, his successor
Hubert Henry Wingfield; 
Florence Winifred Wingfield; Sybil; Isabel Dorothy Wingfield. 

Sir Edward was succeeded by his eldest son, 
 
SIR EDWARD WINGFIELD VERNER, 5th Baronet (1865-1936), Captain, the Norfolk Regiment, who wedded, in 1901, Agnes Dorothy, daughter of Henry Laming, and had issue, 

EDWARD DERRICK WINGFIELD, his successor
John Wingfield (1910-43), killed in action
Ruth Wingfield; Betty Dorothea Wingfield; Monica Wingfield. 

Sir Edward was succeeded by his elder son, 
 
SIR EDWARDDERRICKWINGFIELD VERNER, 6th Baronet (1907-75), of Corke Abbey, Lieutenant, the Rifle Brigade, who wedded, in 1948, Angèle, daughter of Louis Becco, though died without issue. 
 
The baronetcy expired on the 6th Baronet’s decease in 1975. 

 
CHURCH HILL (or Churchill House), near Moy, County Armagh, was a three-storey mansion over a basement, built about 1830. 
 
The masonic hall in Markethill is said to include the portico of the old mansion-house. 
 
The former estate is now Peatlands Park.  

 
***** 

 
The 1st Baronet was at Eaton Square for his birthday, and died there in 1871, aged 88.  
 
His body was brought by ship and train to Armagh, and he was buried at Loughgall.  
 
The cortège left Armagh at 11.00am with over 140 carriages of various sorts following the hearse. The pallbearers were:- 

Lord Lurgan, Sir Capel Molyneux Bt., J Y Burges DL., Col. Pakenham, Maxwell Close DL., Lt-Col Cross JP., Parker Synott JP., Sir James Stronge Bt. MP., Sir John Stewart Bt., the Hon Col. Knox MP., A H Pakenham JP., John Irwin JP., Joseph Atkinson DL., Col. Simpson JP., and Major Burleigh Stuart.  

 
The number of people following was estimated at 10,000. 
 
Sir William Verner, 2nd Baronet, lived with his family at Churchill and London from the early 1860s, the 1st Baronet and his wife having removed to Corke Abbey at this time. 
 
The 3rd Baronet, also William, was born in 1856, so he must have known his aunts, his uncle Edward Wingfield, and his illustrious grandfather, the first Sir William. 
 
William and his mother were to reside at Eaton Square and for a reasonable time each year at Churchill. 
 
He was to inherit all the estates on becoming 21, or marrying before that.  
 
Sir William and his wife Annie had no children. 
 
They divided the time between Eaton Square and Churchill, and entertained on a lavish scale. 
 
In 1880, the 3rd Baronet made his will, leaving the estates and Eaton Square to his wife, and then to “the boy who with my consent has assumed the name of Verner and is living under my charge”
 
Sir William Edward Hercules Verner died of cirrhosis of the liver in 1886, at London, and was buried at Loughgall, in the same tomb as his father. 
 
His widow died two years later and was interred in the same tomb. 
 
This was, in effect, the end of the Verners at Churchill; though Harry Felix Verner, presumably a kinsman, was High Sheriff of County Armagh in 1898. 

***** 

 
Churchill House was put up for sale in 1898, but was not sold. 
 
The following year it could have been bought for £12,000, but much of the best timber had been sold. 
 
In 1900, the Irish Peat Development Company bought 548 acres of bog land. The most valuable furniture was sold in 1902. 
 
More and more bog-land was sold to the Irish Peat Development Company. 
 
Churchill, vacant since 1918, was known to have wood-rot in 1926. 
 
The house and remaining lands were sold in 1927, and the house was dismantled by the end of 1928. 
 
Today there is no sign of the Churchill estate, but a few things can still be seen: Verner’s Inn, at Vernersbridge, has been restored. 
 
A row of Irish yew trees remain, which were near the house. 
 
At Maghery, the railings and gates at the old chapel were once at the Southern entrance to Churchill.  
 
The entrance to the Masonic Hall at Markethill is adorned by the former portico of the main entrance. 
 
The Loughgall graves in the old churchyard are of interest: 
 
The vault where the 2nd Baronet and the 3rd Baronet and his wife were interred could be entered until 1962, when, as it was no longer weatherproof it was sealed up. 
 
A full length portrait of Sir William Verner, 1st Baronet, in the uniform of a Colonel of the 7th Hussars, is in the Armagh museum.  
 
The marble mantelpiece from Churchill’s entrance hall is said to be in Derryadd Orange Hall.  

“There was a huge grave stone in the family cemetery that covered the remains of Sir William’s beloved charger which he brought home after Waterloo – she was known locally as The Waterloo Mare. 

Would-be thieves tried to remove the stone in – I’m guessing – 1982, but I discovered their handiwork and the stone is now mounted in a wall in the local Orange Hall. 

The cottage, Yew Cottage (named, not after the avenue of yews on the estate, but after a 2,000 year-old yew in the cottage’s garden), is still, I believe, the longest thatched cottage in Ireland. 

My parents lived in the only other surviving house on the Verner estate and coincidently, my father was also Deputy Lieutenant of Tyrone – and also High Sheriff of Tyrone”. 

London residence ~ 86 Eaton Square. 

I acknowledge the article by John Kerr – Churchill, Home of the Verners – and Craigavon Historical Society as a source of information. 
 
First Published in July, 2011. 

Castle Dillon, Armagh, County Armagh 

Castle Dillon, Armagh, County Armagh 

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

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

p. 66. “(Molyneux, of Castle Dillon/ PB1940) A large and austere mansion of 1845 by William Murray; built for Sir George Molyneux, 6th Bt, to replace a rather low and plain mid-C18 winged house, which had itself replaced the second of two earlier houses again. Two storey nine bay centre block with single-storey three bay wings; the entrance front, and the garden front facing the lake, being similar and without any ornament at all, except for a simple pillared porch on the entrance front. A straightforward and conservative plan; a large hall with a screen of columns dividing it from a wide central corridor running the full length of the house, and having a curved stair at one end; a saloon flaked by dining room and drawing room in the garden front. A library and morning room on either side of the hall; additional living-rooms in one wing, offices in the other, which in fact consist of two shallow ranges with a yard between them. Fine pedimented C18 stables by Thomas Cooley. Fine entrance gates of 1760, described as “the most costly park gates perhaps at that time in the three kingdoms,” erected by Sir Capel Molyneux, 3rd Bt, MP, who also built an obelisk near the park to commemorate the winning of independence by the Irish Parliament 1782. Castle Dillon was sold ca 1926. It is now a hospital.” 

http://lordbelmontinnorthernireland.blogspot.com/2017/06/castle-dillon.html

HE MOLYNEUX BARONETS OWNED 6,009 ACRES OF LAND IN COUNTY ARMAGH 

This is a junior branch of the family of MOLYNEUX, Earls of Sefton, springing immediately, it is supposed, from Sir Thomas Molyneux, second son of Sir William Molyneux, of Sefton, a celebrated warrior under the Black Prince; who added to his arms, in a distinction, the fleur-de-lis in the dexter chief still borne by the family. 

Sir Thomas commanded the forces of Robert de Vere, Duke of Ireland, but was defeated and slain by the combined and insurgent lords at Radcot Bridge, near Faringdon, formerly in Berkshire, in 1388. 

The genealogy, however, and the records of this branch of the Molyneux family, which resided at Calais, France, being destroyed during the sacking of that town by the Duke of Guise in 1588, a chasm, of necessity, occurs in the pedigree. 

SIR THOMAS MOLYNEUX(1531-97), who was born at Calais, falling into the hands of the enemy on the capture of that place, above alluded to, was ransomed for 500 crowns. 

He came to England in 1568, and was sent to Ireland in 1576 by ELIZABETH I, as Chancellor of the Exchequer, when he obtained, with extensive grants of land from Her Majesty, a lease for twenty-one years of the exports and imports of the city of Dublin (wines excepted) for the annual rent of £183. 

This gentleman married Catherine, daughter of Ludowick Stabeort, Governor of Bruges, and and issue, 

Samuel, MP for Mallow; died unmarried
DANIEL, successor to his brother
Katherine, m Sir R Newcomen Bt and had 21 children; 
Margaret. 

Sir Thomas was succeeded by his eldest surviving son, 

DANIEL MOLYNEUX (1568-1632), of Newlands, County Dublin, MP for Strabane, 1613-15, who was appointed, in 1586, Ulster king-of-arms, and his celebrated collection of Irish family history, now amongst the manuscripts of Trinity College Dublin, prove him to have been an accurate and very learned antiquary. 

He wedded Jane, daughter of Sir William Ussher, Clerk of the Privy Council, and had five sons and three daughters. 

Mr Molyneux was succeeded by his third, but eldest surviving son, 

 
SAMUEL MOLYNEUX (1616-93), of Castle Dillon, County Armagh, Chief Engineer of Ireland, who espoused Anne, daughter and heir of William Dowdall, of Mounttown, County Meath. 

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Castle Dillon, County Armagh 

 
My Molyneux was succeeded by his eldest son, 
 
WILLIAM MOLYNEUX (1656-98), MP for Trinity College, Dublin, 1692-8, author of the celebrated “Case of Ireland”, who married Lucy, daughter of Sir William Domvile Bt, Attorney-General of Ireland, and was succeeded at his decease by his eldest son, 

 
THE RT HON SAMUEL MOLYNEUX (1689-1728), MP for Trinity College, Dublin, 1727-8, Lord of the Admiralty, Secretary to GEORGE II when Prince of Wales, who wedded, in 1717, the Lady Elizabeth Diana Capel, eldest daughter of Algernon, 2nd Earl of Essex; but dying without issue, the estates reverted to his uncle, 

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Sir Thomas Molyneux © National Museums Northern Ireland 

THOMAS MOLYNEUX  (1661-1733), Lieutenant-General, Physician-General to the Army in Ireland, who was created a baronet in 1730, designated of Castle Dillon, County Armagh. 

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The Molyneux Family (1758), Photo Credit: The Ulster Museum 

 
I have written about the THE MOLYNEUX BARONETS. 

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Castle Dillon (Image: © Sarah Hutchinson Burke – please do not use without permission) 

 
CASTLE DILLON, near the city of Armagh, County Armagh, is a large dignified mansion, built in 1845 for Sir George Molyneux, 6th Baronet. 
 
This mansion replaced an austere mid-18th century winged house. 
 
The designer was William Murray. 
 
It has a two-storey, nine-bay centre block; with single-storey, three-bay wings. 
 
Both the entrance front and the garden front, which faces the lake, are similar and plain, apart from a pillared porch on the entrance front. 

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Castle Dillon (Image: © Sarah Hutchinson Burke – please do not use without permission) 

The interior is no less austere: a large hall with a screen of columns dividing it from a central corridor which ran the whole length of the House, with a curved stair at one end. 

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Castle Dillon Image: (© Sarah Hutchinson Burke – please do not use without permission) 

At the garden front, a saloon flanked by the dining-room and drawing-room. 
 
There was a library and a morning-room on either side of the hall. 

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 © Sarah Hutchinson Burke – do not use without permission 

There are splendid 18th century pedimented stables by Thomas Cooley. 

 
The entrance gates, dating from 1760, once described as“the most costly park gates perhaps at that time in the three kingdoms”, were erected by Sir Capel Molyneux, 3rd Baronet. 
 
Sir Capel also erected an obelisk near the Park in order to commemorate the winning of independence by the Irish Parliament in 1782. 
 
The sizeable walled demesne lies in pleasantly undulating countryside, with a lake at its centre. An anonymous guide wrote in 1839 that, 

‘… the demesne is laid out in a style of elegance, rarely imitated in this country, and which would do honour to the best taste. Here every natural advantage of hill, wood and water, appears admirably improved by the correctest aid of art …’ 

It is laid out as a mid-18th century landscape park, though there is little remaining planting, with some woodland at the lake and very few parkland trees. 

The Molyneux baronets, at one stage, owned 6,009 acres in County Armagh, 2,226 in County Kildare, 1,378 in County Limerick, 6,726 in the Queen’s County, and 221 acres in County Dublin. 
 
The site has been forested and intensively farmed in recent years. 
 
The first house was built ca 1611 and, when that was burnt in 1663, another followed. 
 
The stable block of 1782 by Thomas Cooley is derelict. 
 
The walled garden has gone but two gate lodges survive, one possibly by Sir William Chambers and an eye-catching obelisk erected in 1782, still impresses outside the demesne walls. 
 
The baronetcy became extinct when the 10th Baronet, Sir Ernest, died in 1940. 
 
The contents of Castle Dillon House were sold in October, 1923, and the Scottish firm, McAnish & Company, bought the whole estate in 1927 for the timber. 
 
Armagh County Council purchased the house and the remaining 613 acres from McAnish for £9,800 in 1929 – £527,000 in today’s money. 
 
In 1948, the Northern Ireland Hospital Authority managed the mansion house, and it served for various purposes, including a nursing home, since then. 

Photographs are by kind permission of Sarah Hutchinson Blake.  
 
First published in November, 2009. 

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

CASTLE DILLON, County Armagh (AP ARMAGH, BANBRIDGE and CRAIGAVON 03) A/010 
REGISTERED GRADE B 
The sizeable walled demesne (635 acres/257ha) lies in pleasantly undulating countryside, with a 
large natural lake (53 acres/21.4ha) at its centre. An anonymous guide wrote in 1839 that, ‘… the 
demesne is laid out in a style of elegance, rarely imitated in this country, and which would do 
honour to the best taste. Here every natural advantage of hill, wood and water, appears 
admirably improved by the correctest aid of art …’. The origin of the demesne lies in the early 
17th century when in 1618 John Dillon ‘begun to build some three years since’ a house at 
Mullaghbane (Castle Dillon) ‘of brick and lymme and a very fair building’, but no bawn on the 
north-east side of Lough Turcarra. Remodelled, apparently as a ‘long low building’ by the Chief 
Engineer of Ireland, Captain Samuel Molyneux (‘Honest Sam’, died 1692) after he bought the 
property in 1663-64. It was given some form of associated planned landscape in the early 18th 
century by his grandson, Samuel Molyneux M.P. (1688-1728), Lord of Admiralty and noted 
commentator on architecture and gardening. He is known to have added plantations to the 
demesne and built ‘two little turrets or summer houses…advantageously situated for a view of 

Register of Parks, Gardens and Demesnes of Special Historic Interest (NI) – November 2020 
the lough and plantation about it’; some of the network of geometrically laid-out paths are shown 
on 1723 demesne map. However, the Molyneuxs spent most of their time away from their estate 
until 1759 when Castle Dillon was inherited by Sir Capel Molyneux, third baronet (1717-1797), son 
of the well known amateur botanist, St Thomas Molyneux, 1st Baronet (1661-1733). He rebuilt 
the family house in a rustic Palladian style with gabled wings (as depicted in a painting of 1784), 
which was unflatteringly described by the Post Chaise Companion in 1786 as ‘the most agreeable 
[seat] in the Kingdom’ were it not for the house itelf; immediately to its east, the stable block, 
designed by the architect Thomas Cooley before 1782 was architecturally more successful and still 
survives though ruined (HB 15/03/010). Sir Capel’s biggest impact on Castle Dillon however was 
the landscape park, which he started in the 1760s and was considered successful, perhaps 
because the place had ‘every natural advantage of hill, wood and water’. He walled the demesne 
parkland (635 acres/257ha), cleared field boundaries to created large open lawns or meadows, 
each dotted with trees and clumps; he enlarged the large woodland block south-east of the lake 
(originally 110 acres/45ha), and created two small woodland blocks (each c.5acres/2ha) bordering 
the lake to the west of the house. Except for parts of the northern boundary, he surprisingly did 
not put down perimeter planting tree belts; these were not planted until after 1841. As a political 
statement in the Whig tradition, commemorating the patriotic ideas of the era, Sir Capel erected 
two obelisks; of these only one survives, that on Cannon Hill, (now in State Care) built in 1782 
outside the park, 0.7 miles (1.1km) north-east of the house. As part of the network of carriage 
drives in the new park, there were originally four gate lodges and of these the earliest and 
principal was that from the Ballybrannon Road on the north-west side of the demesne. Built 
probably in the 1760s in ‘monumental Palladian style’ this comprises a pair of square ‘box-type’ 
limestone rock-faced rusticated lodges with distinctive harmonising gate piers; traditionally this is 
supposed to have been the work of Sir William Chambers, though this is unlikely, these lodges are 
considered among the earliest examples in Ulster (HB 15/03/001); the ‘Hockley Lodge’ was added 
around 1780 to designs of Cooley (demolished in 1999). The walled garden, which no longer exists 
save for some fragments on the south-east side, occupied a very large trapezoidal area of 6 acres 
(2.4ha) in the north-east corner of the demesne. A stream (which will exists) ran through the 
garden; in later years the area east of this stream was devoted to apple trees. In the 1840s after 
the property had been inherited by Sir George King Aldercron Molyneux, 6th Bt (1813-1848), the 
park was improved with additional perimeter, clump and isolated tree planting, during which time 
(1844-45) the house itself was rebuilt in austere Classical-style (Listed HB 15/03/001) to designs 
of the architect William Murray of Dublin. The house ceased to be occupied in 1897 and having 
laid vacant was sold in 1928, after which it was converted onto a sanatorium and later a nursing 
home, becoming vacant again in the 1990s. The park was subdivided into a number of different 
owners and suffered accordingly. The woodland south-east of the lake has been both reduced in 
area and replaced with commercial forestry; parkland trees and perimeter planting felled, and 
modern houses built in various locations throughout the park. SMR ARM 12:30 enclosure, 12:32 
enclosure or ? tree ring, 12:62 enclosure or ? tree ring, 12:67 enclosure and 12:85 17th century 
bawn and rath. Private. 

Carrickblacker, Portadown, County Armagh – demolished

Carrickblacker, Portadown, County Armagh – demolished 

Carrick Blacker, County Armagh, photograph by Robert French, [between ca. 1865-1914], Lawrence Photograph Collection, National Library of Ireland.

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

p. 58. (Blacker/IFR) A house dated 1692, but much embellished in C19. Three storey, five bay front with curvilinear “Dutch” gable in the centre; balustraded parapet to roof and urns on skyline; balustrade above entrance door. Now demolished.” 

http://lordbelmontinnorthernireland.blogspot.com/2013/05/house-of-blacker.html

THE BLACKERS OWNED 1,466 ACRES OF LAND IN COUNTY ARMAGH 

This family, according to Burke’s, derives its name and descent from BLACAR, king or chief of the Norsemen, or Danes, who settled at Dublin in the beginning of the 10th century. 
 
He was the son of Godfred, and the grandson of Imar. 
 
Succeeding his brother Amlave in 938, he led back the Danes to Dublin, from whence they had been driven. 
 
In 940, he plundered Clonmacnoise and Kildare, and the next year he slew with his own axe, in a pitched battle on the banks of the River Bann, Muirchertach, King of Ailech, called the Hector or bravest of his time. 

A battle-axe features in the Blacker coat-of-arms and crest. 

The day after, he marched against and sacked the city of Armagh. 
 
It is a singular fact that his descendants have for many generations possessed the site of this victory; the traditions of the country; the remains of an ancient encampment; and the discovery of both Danish and Irish weapons (some of which are in the possession of the Blacker family). 
 
These facts strongly corroborate the testimony of historians, in this particular. 
 
In 943, Blacar was driven from Dublin by a successful attack of the Irish, and he fell in 946 near that city, with 1,600 of his people, vanquished by Congalach, King of Ireland, and was succeeded by his son, SITRIC MacBLACAR. 
 
By some authors he is called Blaccard, and it is worthy of observation, that the name is still frequently pronounced, in some circles, Blackard

*****  

 
THE FIRST of the family who settled in Armagh, 
 
CAPTAIN VALENTINE BLACKER, of Carrick, in the parish of Seagoe, County Armagh, as he is described in old records, was born in 1597. 
 
This soldier, a commandant of Horse and Foot, went from Poppleton, in Yorkshire, to Ulster. 
 
Captain Blacker purchased the manor of Carrowbrack from Anthony Cope, of Loughgall, in 1660. 
 
This manor was subsequently called Carrickblacker. 
 
During Captain Blacker’s lifetime, and principally by his means, the old church of Seagoe, now in ruins, was built. 
 
He married Judith, daughter of Michael Harrison, of Ballydargan, County Down, and had issue, 

Ferdinando “Capitaine-Leifftenante” in Savile’s troop of horse; 
GEORGE, of whom we treat
Violetta; Dora; Maud. 

Captain Blacker died in 1677, and was succeeded by his younger son, 

LIEUTENANT-COLONEL GEORGE BLACKER, of Carrickblacker, a firm adherent of the royal house of STUART, High Sheriff of County Armagh, 1684, who wedded Rose, daughter and heiress of William Latham, of Ballytroan, County Tyrone. 
 
Colonel Blacker was one of the gentlemen obliged by JAMES IIto proceed to Londonderry for the purpose of demanding the surrender of that city; but remaining firm to the cause of WILLIAM III, his name, together with that of his son, William Blacker, appeared in the Act of Attainder of that day. 
 
Mrs Rose Blacker died in 1689. 
 
The precise time of Colonel Blacker’s demise is uncertain, but it must have been shortly after: Both were buried in Seagoe Church. 
 
Colonel Blacker was succeeded by his son, 
 
WILLIAM BLACKER, of Carrick and Ballytroan, who built (as appears from a date cut on a stone in the wall) the manor house of Carrickblacker in 1692. 
 
A staunch supporter of WILLIAM III, he fought at the battle of the Boyne. 
 
This gentleman wedded firstly, in 1666, Elizabeth, daughter of Colonel the Hon Robert Stewart, of Irry, County Tyrone, third son of 1st Baron Castle Stuart, descended from the Dukes of Albany, and by her he had issue, 

STEWART, his heir
Robert, ancestor of BLACKER of Drogheda and Meath

Mr Blacker espoused secondly Hannah Lawrence; and thirdly, Theodosia, daughter of Oliver St John, of Tandragee Castle, County Armagh, and had further issue, 

Samuel, ancestor of BLACKER of Elm Park and Tullahinel

Mr Blacker died in 1732, and was succeeded by his eldest son, 
 
STEWART BLACKER, of Carrickblacker, High Sheriff of County Tyrone, 1706, who married, in 1704, Barbara, daughter of the Rev Henry Young, and niece and heiress of William Latham, of Brookend, County Tyrone, by whom he had issue, 

WILLIAM, his heir
Latham; 
Henry (Rev); 
George, of Hallsmill, Co Down; 
Barbara. 

Mr Blacker died in 1751, aged 80, and was succeeded by his eldest son,  
 
WILLIAM BLACKER (1709-83), of Carrickblacker and Brookend, High Sheriff of County Armagh, 1734, County Tyrone, 1749, who espoused, in 1738, Letitia, daughter of Henry Cary, of Dungiven Castle, MP for County Londonderry, and had issue, 

STEWART, his heir
William; 
Henry; 
George (Rev), Rector of Seagoe; 
Eliza; Barbara; Martha; Alicia; Letitia; Lucinda. 

Mr Blacker died in 1783, and was interred beside his wife in the abbey church of Bath, in which city he had resided the latter years of his life. 
 
He was succeeded by his eldest son, 
 
THE VERY REV STEWART BLACKER (1740-1826), of Carrickblacker, Dean of Leighlin, Archdeacon of Dromore, Rector of Drumcree, Vicar of Seagoe, who married Eliza, daughter of Sir Hugh Hill Bt, MP for Londonderry, and had issue, 

WILLIAM, his heir
George, Captain, East India Company; 
Stewart, Captain RN; 
James Stewart (Rev); 
Letitia; Sophia; Eliza; Louisa; Caroline. 

Dean Blacker was succeeded by his son, 
 
WILLIAM BLACKER JP DL (1777-1855), of Carrickblacker, Lieutenant-Colonel, Armagh Militia, High Sheriff of County Armagh, 1811, who wedded, in 1810, Anne, eldest daughter of Sir Andrew Ferguson Bt, MP for Londonderry. 

LIEUTENANT-COLONEL VALENTINE BLACKER CB (1778-1826), Surveyor-General of India, was a relative. 

A group of people sitting together

Description automatically generated with low confidence 
Colonel and Mrs Blacker and Lady Ferguson 

 
Colonel Blacker was Vice-Treasurer of Ireland, 1810-17. 
 
Dying without an heir, the family estates devolved upon his nephew, 
 
STEWART BLACKER JP DL, of Carrickblacker, Barrister, High Sheriff of County Armagh, 1859, Member, Royal Irish Academy, who died unmarried in 1881, when the Carrickblacker estate devolved upon his sister, 
 
HESTER ANNE,  BARONESS VON STIEGLITZ, for her life, and the representation of the family reverted to his kinsman,  
 
THE REV ROBERT SHAPLAND CAREW BLACKER JP MA (1826-1913), of Woodbrook House, Enniscorthy, County Wexford, and Carrickblacker, County Armagh, son of William Blacker and Elizabeth Anne Carew, who wedded, in 1858, Theodosia Charlotte Sophia, daughter of George Meara, of May Park, County Waterford, by Sarah Catherine his wife, sister of Edward Southwell, 3rd Viscount Bangor, and had issue, 

William Robert George (1860-80); 
EDWARD CAREW, of whom hereafter; 
STEWART WARD WILLIAM, succeeded his brother. 

The eldest surviving son, 

EDWARD CAREW BLACKER JP DL (1863-1932), of Carrickblacker and Woodbrook House, High Sheriff of County Wexford, 1908, died unmarried and was succeeded by his brother, 
 
LIEUTENANT-COLONEL STEWART WARD WILLIAM BLACKER DSO JP DL (1865-1935), of Carrickblacker and Woodbrook House, who married, in 1903, Eva Mary Lucy St John, daughter of Colonel Edward Albert FitzRoy, and had issue, 

WILLIAM DESMOND, his heir
Robert Stewart, Commander RN; 
Terence Fitzroy; 
Betty Mary. 

Colonel Blacker was succeeded by his eldest son, 
 
LIEUTENANT-COLONEL WILLIAM DESMOND BLACKER DSO (1903-44), of Carrickblacker, who was killed in action at Normandy, France. 
 
Colonel Blacker died unmarried

 
CARRICKBLACKER HOUSE, near Portadown, County Armagh, was a house dated 1692, though much embellished during the 19th century. 
 
It had a three-storey, five-bay front, a curvilinear “Dutch” gable in the centre, a ballustraded parapet to the roof, and urns at the sky-line. 
 
There was a balustrade above the entrance door. 
 
The estate was purchased in 1937 by Portadown Golf Club, which demolished Carrickblacker House in 1958 to make way for a new clubhouse. 
 
First published in May, 2013.