Paradise Hill, Co Clare – ‘lost’ 

Paradise Hill, Co Clare – ‘lost’ 

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. 230. (Henn/IFR) a two-storey slightly Gothic Georgian house, with two curved bows and a Gothicized Venetian window in the Batty Langley manner as its doorway. 
 
High-pitched roofs and pointed dormer gables were added in the Victorian era; and iron balconies. Paradise Hill was burnt in 1970.” http://lordbelmontinnorthernireland.blogspot.com/2016/03/paradise-hill.html

THE HENNS WERE MAJOR LANDOWNERS IN COUNTY CLARE, WITH 7,664 ACRES 

 
The family of HENN, one of English origin, was settled in County Clare for upwards of two centuries. 
 
RICHARD HENN obtained a grant of “Paradise Hill”, and various estates in that county, 1685, from the Earl of Thomond. 
 
WILLIAM HENN (c1720-96), second son of Thomas Henn (younger brother and devisee of Richard Henn, the grantee of Paradise Hill), was called to the Irish Bar and appointed a Judge of the King’s Bench, 1768. 
 
He married Miss Elizabeth Parry, and had (with three daughters) an only son, 
 
WILLIAM HENN, Master of the Irish Court of Chancery, 1793, who wedded, in 1782, Susanna, sister of Sir Jonathan Lovett Bt, of Liscombe Park, Buckinghamshire, and had issue, 
 

WILLIAM, of whom presently
Jonathan, QC; 
Richard, Commander RN; 
Eleanor; Susanna; Eliza; Jane; Frances. 

The eldest son, 
 
WILLIAM HENN (c1782-1857), who, like his father, became a Master in Chancery in Ireland, 1822, espoused, in 1809, Mary Rice, eldest daughter of George Fosbery, of Clorane, County Limerick, by Christiana his wife, daughter of Thomas Rice, of Mount Trenchard, in the same county, and had issue, 
 

William, died unmarried
THOMAS RICE, of whom hereafter
Jonathan Lovett, died unmarried
George; 
Richard; 
Christiana; Susanna; Mary; Ellen; Jane. 

The second son, 
 
THOMAS RICE HENN KC JP DL (1814-1901), of Paradise Hill, County Clare, Barrister, County Court Judge, Chairman of Quarter Sessions for County Carlow, 1859, and for County Galway, 1868, Recorder of Galway, 1878, married, in 1845, Jane Isabella, second daughter of the Rt Hon Francis Blackburne, LORD CHANCELLOR OF IRELAND, and had issue, 
 

William, Lieutenant RN; dsp
FRANCIS BLACKBURNE, of whom we treat
Thomas Rice; 
Edward Lovett; 
Richard Arthur Milton, of Castle Troy House
Henry (Rt Rev), Bishop of Burnley; 
Adela Jane; Mary Rice. 

The second son, 
 
FRANCIS BLACKBURNE HENN JP (1848-1915), of Paradise Hill, Barrister, wedded, in 1880, Helen Letitia Elizabeth, daughter of Francis Gore, of Woodlands, County Clare, and had issue, 
 

WILLIAM FRANCIS; 
Thomas Rice, b 1901; 
Muriel Helen Isabella Rice; Lilian Adela Gore; Maud Susan Beatrice. 

The eldest son, 
 
WILLIAM FRANCIS HENN CBE MVO (1892-1964), of Paradise Hill, wedded, in 1915, Geraldine Frances Jane, daughter of Thomas George Stacpoole-Mahon, and had issue, 
 

WILLIAM BRYAN, AFC, b 1917; 
Francis Robert, CBE, b 1920; 
Margaret Geraldine, b 1922. 

PARADISE HILL, Ennis, County Clare, was a two-storey Georgian house, with two curved bows and a Gothicized Venetian window as its doorway. 
 
High-pitched roofs and pointed dormer gables were added in the Victorian era; and iron balconies. 
 

 
Paradise Hill was burnt in 1970. 
 
Francis Robert Henn, CBE, has compiled The Henn Family of Paradise, including early lineage and reminiscences. 
 
First published in March, 2016. 

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.

Two storey, bow fronted, gable-ended house, much altered in the late 19C when the bows were given circular high-pitched conical roofs. Former seat of the Henn family. Destroyed by fire 1970.”

New Hall (formerly Killone), Ennis, Co Clare 

New Hall (formerly Killone), Ennis, Co Clare 

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. 224. “(MacDonnell/LGI1912; Armstrong-MacDonnell, sub Armstrong/IFR) A two storey house of pink brick built onto the end of an earlier house ca 1764 by Charles MacDonnell, MP; probably the the design of Francis Bindon. Front with two bays on either side of a central three sided bow surmounted by a balustrade and urns; curved end bows. High-pitched roof on eaved cornice. Pedimented doorcase in central bow; windows with keystones, those in the upper storey being of the original rather small proportions; those below having been enlarged at a later date. The octagonal hall, which has a Doric cornice and frieze with grinning masks, bucrania and crests in the metopes, contains the most remarkable feature of the interior: a cupboard in the form of an impressive and elegant Baroque organ case. There is fine plasterwork in the drawing room. New Hall was sold early in the present century to the Joyce family.” 

Moyriesk, Quinn, Co Clare – ‘lost’ 

Moyriesk, Quinn, Co Clare – ‘lost’ 

Moyriesk, County Clare, entrance front, 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.

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. 220. “(Foster-Vesey-Fitzgerald/IFR) A mid-C18 house…Might have been designed by Francis Bindon. Bought by Rt Hon James Fitzgerald, MP, Prime Serjeant of Ireland and distinguished orator, towards the end of C18; sold by Foster-Vesey-Fitzgerald family 1932…..now 2/3 demolished” 

John MacNamara, of Moyreisk from the MacNamara Family of Moyreisk and Ballyline, County Clare, courtesy Fonsie Mealy auction 2016.
Francis son of John MacNamara of Moyriesk from the MacNamara Family of Moyriesk and Ballyline, County Clare, courtesy Fonsie Mealy auction 2016.
Margaret daughter of John MacNamara of of Moyreisk from the MacNamara Family of Moyreisk and Ballyline, County Clare, courtesy Fonsie Mealy auction 2016.

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. 41. “A seven bay early to mid 18C house of two storeys with a three bay pedimented breakfront, and doorcase with lugged architrave. The main block was linked to single storey pavilions by quadrant walls with rusticated arched gateways. Home of the Rt. Hon James Fitzgerald MP at the end of the 18C. The house was much altered in the late 19C. Only a portion of the main block survives.

Moy House (also known as Carrowgar House), Lahinch, Co Clare

Moy House (also known as Carrowgar House), Lahinch, Co Clare

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. 301. “(Fitzgerald, Bt, of Newmarket-on-Fergus/PB1908; Studdert/IFR) A single-storey late-Georgian house consisting of five bay centre with projecting wings, built by Sir Augustine Fitzgerald. An Italianate pyramidal roofed tower added to the centre of the front, serving as a porch. The house was bought C19 by George Studdert, whose daughters sold it 1932. Subsequently owned by the Daly family.” 

Lismehane (formerly Maryfort), O’Callaghan’s Mills, Co Clare 

Lismehane (formerly Maryfort), O’Callaghan’s Mills, Co Clare 

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. “(Westropp/IFR; O’Callaghan-Westropp, sub O’Callaghan/IFR) An early C18 gable-ended house of three storeys over high basement; traditionally built by John Westropp…Demolished by Mr. C.J.O’Callaghan-Westropp in 1967” 

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.

A large 18C house built for John Westropp. Refaced and altered c. 1880, these alterations included the addition of a single storey portico and pediments to the ground floor windows. Demolished 1967.

Lemanagh or Leamaneagh Castle, Co Clare 

Lemanagh or Leamaneagh Castle, Co Clare 

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

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. 183. “(Inchiquin, B/PB) A tower of ca. 1480 to which a four storey high-gabled house with rows of mullioned and transomed windows was added 1643 by Conor O’Brien and his wife, the formidable Maire Ruadh, who, after her husband had been killed in a skirmish with Ludlow’s men in 1651, saved her son’s lands by offering to marry a Cromwellian officer of Ludlow’s choosing. Her offer was taken up and she duly married an English cornet of horse; according to tradition, he died through receiving a savage kick from her. Her son, Sir Donagh O’Brien, 1st Baronet, abandoned Lemanaeagh in favour of Dromoland towards the end of C17. Lemaneagh is now a ruin. The gateway of the bawn is now at Dromoland; a stone fireplace from one of the rooms is in the Old Ground Hotel, Ennis. 

Lemaneagh Castle, County Clare, photograph courtesy of Mark Bence-Jones, A Guide to Irish Country Houses.
Donough O’Brien, of Leameneagh and Dromoland, younger son of Murrough O’Brien last King of Thomond, died 1582, painted 1577 on panel, courtesy History of the O’Briens from Brian Boroimhe, AD. 1000 to AD. 1945, by Donough O’Brien, page 200.
Máire Rua O’Brien née McMahon (1615/1616 – 1686) daughter of Turlough Roe McMahon Baronet, wearing Felemish bobbin lace with O’Brien coat of arms. She married first Colonel Neylan, then in 1639, Colonel Conor O’Brien of Lemeneagh, ancestor of Barons Inchiquin, but he was slain in battle in 1651. The Markree Castle information board says she married Edward Cooper then, but Irish Portraits 1660-1860 by Anne Crookshank and the Knight of Glin, published by the Paul Mellon Foundation for British Art 1969, say she then married, to keep the family property, Captain John Cooper of Ireton’s army, whom she is said to have murdered! It’s a rare example of a portrait almost certainly painted in Ireland in the first half of the seventeenth century – see Irish Portraits 1660-1860 by Anne Crookshank and the Knight of Glin, published by the Paul Mellon Foundation for British Art 1969.
Slaney O’Brien, wife of Conor O’Brien (d. 1603/4) of Leamaneh, Daughter of Turlough O’Brien of the Dough and Ennistymon courtesy Max Gheeraerts, Historical memoir of the O’Briens, The Origin and History of the O’Brien Clan by John O’Donoghue, Publ.1860, Martin Breen 2002.
Donough O’Brien of Lemeneagh (1595-1637). Scan from Historical Memoir of the O’Briens, The Origin and History of the O’Brien Clan John O’Donoghue published by Martin Breen (Collection of Lord Inchiquin).
Donough O’Brien (1642-1717), 1st Baronet by Mary Beale, 1690. He lived in Dromoland Castle.
Lucia Hamilton, 1674, daughter of George Hamilton. Wife of Donough O’Brien, 1st Baronet, married in 1674. She died two years later, not long after the birth of his son and heir, Lucius.

MacDonnell, Randal. The Lost Houses of Ireland. A chronicle of great houses and the families who lived in them. Weidenfeld and Nicolson. London, 2002 

p. 219. Leamaneh Castle in Co Clare is a four storey building with many mullioned windows. It is basically a seventeenth century house built on to a 15th century tower. The house was probably built in 1639 when Conor O’Brien married ‘Red’ Mary, the daughter of Sir Toirdhealbhach Ruadh MacMathghamhna (MacMahon), Lord of Clonderalaw. Conor was her second husband and was killed by Cromwellians at a fight in the pass of Inchicronan, in 1651. The story goes that his widow, a woman of strong character, refused to allow his body to be brought home to Leamaneh, saying ‘We need no dead men here.’ She decided that the best way to secure her son’s inheritance would be to marry one of the enemy officers. Consequently, she took herself off to Limerick the next day and promptly married Cornet John Cooper. As she was no beauty (her portrait still survives to prove the point), it must have been the prospect of the inheritance that tempted the Cornet. In any case, it did him no good for, when he made a disparaging comments about her late husband, she allegedly killed him by throwing him out of a window in the castle. Nonetheless, she must have been married to him for at least seven years, because their son Henry was born eight years later. The poet and author Robert Graves descended from the child of this unlikely union. One possible side-effect of his mother’s marriage to the Cornet was that her son by Col O’Brien as brought up as a Protestant.” 

https://theirishaesthete.com/2024/11/29/dromoland-gate/

A Gateway to the Past

by theirishaesthete



Following Monday’s text about souvenirs of Dromoland Castle’s earlier history, it is worth looking at another feature on the estate. A previous residence of the O’Brien family, Leamaneh Castle, County Clare has featured here before (see The Legacy of Máire Rúa « The Irish Aesthete). That building was constructed around 1480 by Turlogh O’Brien, King of Thomond, and is said to derive its name from the Irish ‘Leim an eich’ (The horse’s Leap). In 1543, Turlogh’s son, Murrough O’Brien, surrendered the castle and pledged loyalty to the English crown; subsequently, he was created first Earl of Thomond and Baron Inchiquin. In 1648, his descendant Conor O’Brien extended the tower with the addition of a four-storey manor house following his marriage to Máire ní Mahon who on account of her flaming red hair, was commonly known as Máire Rúa (Red Mary).  The couple’s son, Sir Donough O’Brien later abandoned Leamaneh, moving to Dromoland. In 1902, Lucius William O’Brien, 15th Baron Inchiquin, organised for the castle’s 17th century stone gatehouse to be removed and re-erected at the entrance of Dromoland’s walled gardens, where it can still be seen. 

Kilkishen House, Sixmilebridge, Co Clare 

Kilkishen House, Sixmilebridge, Co Clare 

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. 168. “(Studdert/IFR) A C18 house of two storeys over a basement, 7 bay front, doorcase with engaged Doric columns and a fanlight extending over door and sidelights; parapeted roof. Good interiors, including an oval drawing room with neo-Classical plasterwork.” 

Kiltanon House, Tulla, County Clare – ‘lost’ 

Kiltanon House, Tulla, County Clare – ‘lost’ 

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. 176. “(Molony/IFR) A Georgian house of three storeys, the top storey being treated as an attic above a bold cornice. Odd fenestration; C19 addition on ground floor to enlarge the principal rooms; two storey wing set back. Burnt 1922. 

http://lordbelmontinnorthernireland.blogspot.com/2014/09/kiltanon-house.html

THE MOLONYS WERE MAJOR LANDOWNERS IN COUNTY CLARE, WITH 10,095 ACRES

The Milesian family of MOLONY is one of great antiquity in the sister island. The Molonys were formerly princes of Clare, where they possessed a large tract of country called the O’Molony’s Lands, as may be seen from some of the old maps of that county.

In Catholic times, three members of the family attained the mitre, as appears from the following epitaph on the tomb of John O’Molony, Bishop of Limerick in 1687, who after the siege of that city, followed JAMES II to Paris, where he assisted in the foundation of a College for the education of Irish priests, in the chapel belonging to which he was buried in 1702.

The Bishop’s nephew,

JAMES MOLONY, of Kiltanon, the first of the family who laid aside the prefix “O,” served first in JAMES II’s army, but subsequently sided with WILLIAM III.

He married twice, by his first wife, Jane, daughter of Colonel Richard Ringrose, whom he wedded about 1690, he had a son, JAMES, his heir; and by the second, he left two sons and a daughter, 

Richard;

Stephen;

Catherine.

James Malony died in 1738, and was succeeded by his eldest son,

JAMES MOLONY, of Kiltanon, second son of JAMES MOLONY, of Kiltanon and Ballynahinch, by his second wife, Mary, daughter of James Lambert, married, ca 1715, Elizabeth, widow of Major Morgan Ryan, and second daughter and co-heir of Thomas Croasdaile, of Clostoken, County Galway, by Mercy his wife, daughter of Colonel Richard Ringrose, of Moynoe House, County Clare, and had issue,

JAMES, his heir;
Croasdaile;
Lambert;
Jane.

Mr Molony was succeeded by his eldest son,

JAMES MOLONY (1717-), of Kiltanon, who married, in 1751, Mary, daughter of Stewart Weldon, of Raheenderry, Queen’s County, and had issue,

JAMES, his heir;
Arthur;
Walter Weldon;
Lambert;
Weldon John (Rev);
Charles;
Edmund;
Elizabeth.

Mr Molony was succeeded by his eldest son,

JAMES MOLONY (1742-1823), of Kiltanon, High Sheriff of County Clare, 1802, who married, in 1780, Selina, daughter of the Rev John Mills, of Barford, Warwickshire, and had issue,

JAMES, his heir;
Charles Arthur, b 1790;
Edmund, b 1794;
Selina; Mary; Harriet; Anne; Lucy.

Mr Molony was succeeded by his eldest son,


JAMES MOLONY JP DL (1785-1874), of Kiltanon, High Sheriff of County Clare, 1828, who wedded firstly, in 1820, Harriet, daughter of William Harding, of Baraset, Warwickshire, and had issue,

James, 1822-34;

WILLIAM MILLS, his heir;

Harriet, died in infancy.

He espoused secondly, in 1828, Lucy, second daughter of Sir Trevor Wheler Bt, of Leamington Hastings, Warwickshire, and had further issue,

Francis Wheler (Rev);
Edmund Weldon;
Trevor Charles;
Frederick Beresford;
Charles Mills, CB;
Marcus;
Mary; Lucy Anne; Harriet Selina.

Mr Molony died at Leamington Hastings, and was succeeded by his eldest surviving son,

WILLIAM MILLS MOLONY JP DL (1825-91), of Kiltanon, Major, 22nd Regiment, High Sheriff of County Clare, 1865, who married, in 1865, Marianne Marsh, elder daughter and co-heir of Robert Fannin, of Leeson Street, Dublin, by his wife Henrietta, daughter of Croasdaile Molony, of Granahan, and had issue,

James Edmund Harding (1873-79);
WILLIAM BERESFORD, his heir;
Henrietta Mary; Iva Kathleen; Selina Charlotte; Maud Alice.

Major Molony was succeeded by his only surviving son,

WILLIAM BERESFORD MOLONY (1875-1960), of Kiltanon, High Sheriff of County Clare, 1908, Colonel, King’s Own Royal Lancaster Regiment, who wedded, in 1905, Lena Maria Annie, only daughter of George Wright, of Heysham Lodge, Lancashire, and of Coverham Abbey, Yorkshire, without issue.

KILTANON HOUSE, near Tulla, County Clare, was an attractive, pale brick three-storey Georgian mansion with stone facing which overlooked rolling parklands of mature trees of both native and imported variety.  

The house was burnt in 1920

Unique family mementos, including a marble table and an inlaid set of playing cards, perished.  

This classic heirloom was said to have been given to Bishop John O’Molony by LOUIS XIV in atonement for having once lost his temper when playing and tearing up his card.

The top floor was an attic storey.

The fenestration was said to be unusual.

A two-storey wing was set back.

The Molonys managed to hold onto Kiltannon House in the 1690s by a fortunate clause in the Treaty of Limerick which exempted serving officers within the city walls.

In 1878, it was estimated that the lands comprising the Kiltannon Estate numbered 10,000 acres with a rateable valuation of £2,500.

It was then owned by Major William Mills Molony.  

His son, Colonel William Molony, was the last of seven generations to own this estate.

Kiltanon was the home of the Molony family for at least two centuries.

The house, built in 1833, had a drive which linked it to the other nearby Molony residences at Bunavory and Cragg.

The house is now ruinous.

In the second half of the 19th century another house, known as the Home Farm House, was built at Kiltanon for Marcus Molony, eighth son of James Molony, and his agent.

This house remains today.

Kiltanon home farm is on the grounds of the Kiltanon Sport Estate and is 1,000 yards south-west of Kiltanon House and estate.

The folklore history of the Kiltanon Estate is that the lands were given to a Cromwellian soldier as payment for his services in the Cromwellian Army.

After arriving in Galway Harbour, he began his journey on foot, and crossing the mountain from Gort, heading south for Tulla with the newly signed property deed on his person, he stopped a member of the Molony clan at Laughan Bridge to ask directions to his estate:

‘Is the lands of Kiltanon as bad as all of the land around here?”the soldier asked. ‘It’s worse’ said Molony, pointing to the snow covered rocks and heather that formed part of the mountain and was many miles from the fertile Kiltanon lands. “Then I have no business being here’ replied the soldier, ‘do you want to buy it from me?’.

Accepting what money Molony had in his pocket as payment, he handed over the deed to Kiltanon Estate and returned to Galway.

Thus, as local folklore has it, the property came into the Maloney family.

A book by Hugh Weir states that the soldier was James Molony, of Ballinahinch and Kiltanon, who served in O’Brien’s regiment of foot in support of JAMES II. 

His property was saved at the Treaty of Limerick by a clause which exempted those from within the city walls.

Kiltanon Home Farm was built for Marcus Molony JP, son of James Molony JP DL, of Kiltanon, who married Christina Emma of neighbouring Tyredah Castle and acted as land agent for the family estate which comprised of 10,095 acres.

Colonel William (Willie) Molony (1875-1960), of Kiltanon, was the last of seven direct descendents to own Kiltanon.

The Home Farm now forms the nucleus of de luxeself-catering accommodation. https://renaissance-resorts.com

Kiltanon Home Farm is on the grounds of the Kiltanon Sport Estate and is 1,000 meters south west of Kiltanon House and Estate which can trace its history back to the seventeenth century when Ireland was first settled under the  ‘Plantation Policy’ of the English Government.

The folklore history of the Kiltanon Estate is that the lands were given to a Cromwellian soldier as payment for his services in the Cromwellian Army. After arriving in Galway Harbour, he began his journey on foot and crossing the mountain from Gort heading south for Tulla with the newly signed property deed on his person, he stopped a member of the Maloney clan at Laughan Bridge to ask directions to his estate.

‘Is the lands of Kiltanon as bad as all of the land around here? The soldier asked.

‘It’s worse’ said Maloney, pointing to the snow covered rocks and heather that formed part of the mountain and was many miles from the fertile Kiltanon lands.

Then I have no business being here’ replied the soldier, ‘do you want to buy it from me?’

Accepting what money Maloney had in his pocket as payment, he handed over the deed to Kiltanon Estate and returned to Galway. Thus, as local folklore has it, the property came into the Maloney family

‘The Houses of Clare’ book by Hugh W. L. Weir states that it was a James Maloney of Ballinahinch and Kiltannon who served in O’Brien’s regiment of foot in support of King James 11 (1633 – 1701) of England.

His property was saved at the Treaty of Limerick by a clause which exempted those from within the city walls. The Treaty of Limerick ended the Williamite Wars in Ireland between the Jacobites and the supporters of William of Orange. The Treaty really consisted of two treaties which were signed on 3 October 1691. Reputedly they were signed on the Treaty Stone, an irregular block of limestone which once served as a mounting block for horses. This stone is now displayed on a pedestal in Limerick City, because of the Treaty, Limerick is sometimes known as the Treaty City.

These articles dealt with the treatment of the disbanded Jacobite army. Under the treaty, Jacobite soldiers in formed regiments had the option to leave with their arms and flags for France to continue serving under James 11 in the Irish Brigade. Some 14,000 Jacobites chose this option and were marched south to Cork where they embarked on ships for France, many of them accompanied by their wives and children. Individual soldiers wanting to join the French, Spanish or Austrian armies also emigrated in what became known as the Flight of the Wild Geese.

Kiltanon Home Farm was built for Marcus Moloney J.P. son of James Maloney J. P. D. L. of Kiltanon who married Christina Emma of neighboring Tyredah Castle and acted as land agent for the family estate which comprised of 10,095 acres as per the ratable valuation (2,596.00 Pounds) of 1878.

Colonel Willie Moloney (1875 – 1960) of Kiltanon was the last of seven direct decedents to own Kiltanon. In 1922, during the War of Independence, Kiltanon House was burned to the ground and the Moloney family ousted but Kiltanon Home Farm was left un-touched.”

First published in August, 2012.

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.

“Three storey Georgian house with its main cornice at second floor level. Seat of the Molonys for seven generations. Destroyed by fire in 1930s.”

Fortfergus (also known as Mountfergus), Killadysert, Co Clare

Fortfergus (also known as Mountfergus), Killadysert, Co Clare 

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. 126. “(Ross-Lewin/LGI1912; Stacpoole/IFR) A long, irregular house of vaguely Georgian appearance, incorporating, or on the site of, a house built by Captain George Ross 1688. Passed by descent to Ross-Lewins; transferred by W.G. Ross-Lewin to his uncle, John Stacpoole, 1800. Sold under Encumbered Estates Act 1855 to Major William Hawkins Ball. Burnt 1922.

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.

Long two storey Georgian house with Tudor Revival chimneystacks. Seat of John Stacpoole in 1800. Destroyed by fire in 1922.”

Cratloe Woods House, Cratloe, County Clare

Cratloe Woods House, Cratloe, Clare

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. 294. “(Stafford O’Brien/LG1952) A long, low two storey gable ended C17 house one room thick. Its principal elevation, of thirteen bays, with Georgian sash windows and central three sided bow, is now the garden front; a new entrance front, in simple style with timbered porch, having been added to other side ca 1850 to provide a corridor and larger staircase, possibly to the design of James Pain, who gave the garden front bow a Tudor-Revival gable and heightened the chimneystacks, also in Tudor-Revival…. The seat of a branch of the O’Briens, who inherited the estate of Baltherwycke in Northhamptonshire through marriage to an heiress of the Staffords 1699./ Now the house of Robert Stafford O’Brien and his cousins Mr and Mrs Brickenden, who have opened the house to the public and are restoring the Victorian formal gardens overlooking the Shannon estuary, with the help of Mr Jeremy Williams, the architect.”