Portland Park, Lorrha, Co Tipperary – ruin

Portland Park, Lorrha, Co Tipperary

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

“Butler-Stoney, sub Stoney/IFR) A two storey late-Georgian house. Front with a one bay projection at either end, joined by a balustraded Ionic colonnade…..burnt ca 1920, now a ruin.

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. 

Lissen Hall, Co Tipperary – ruin

Lissen Hall, Co Tipperary

Lissen Hall, County Tipperary entrance front 1979, photograph: Wiliam Garner, 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.

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. 189. “(Otway-Ruthven/IFR; Carroll/LGI1912) A fine 2 storey mid-C18 house , which Dr Craig considers to have been designed by the same architect or builder as Castle Otway, Co Tipperary. Five bay pedimented breakfront, elegant frontispiece of channelled ashlar, the impost-moulding binding the doorway to the windows on either side. High pitched roof. Now ruined.”

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. 136. A fine two storey mid Georgian pedimented house similar to Castle Otway in the same county. Very fine arched doorcase; built by the Otway family. Now a ruin.

Johnstown (formerly Peterfield), Puckaun, Co Tipperary

Johnstown (formerly Peterfield), Puckaun, Co Tipperary

Johnstown (formerly Peterfield), County Tipperary photograph: Lord Rossmore c. 1969 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.

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. 161. “(Holmes/LGI1912) A three storey late C18 block with a similar elevation to the nearby Prior Park, of five bays… probably designed by William Leeson. Pedimented and fanlighted doorcase with two engaged Tuscan columns. Built by Peter Holmes, MP; in 1837, the residence of P.S. Prendergast. Now a ruin.”

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. 

https://www.buildingsofireland.ie/buildings-search/building/22401404/johnstown-tipperary-north

JOHNSTOWN, Tipperary North 

Ashlar limestone gateway, erected c. 1780, formerly leading to Johnstown House, now demolished. Comprises central vehicular arch flanked by pedestrian entrances, all with pilasters, archivolts with keystones and with paterae to spandrels of central arch. Cast-iron gates and low rubble flanking walls. Detached three-bay single-storey former gate lodge to north, built c. 1780 and now in use as shop. Hipped slate roof with rendered chimneystacks, rendered walls with moulded eaves course, and having rounded corners to east gable with wheelguard. Double one-over-one pane timber casement windows with stone sills and with timber matchboard half-door. 

Appraisal 

This finely-crafted and well-designed gateway and its lodge once served Johnstown House which lay to the north-west and is a reminder of the quality of the now-demolished country house. It forms a group of interesting structures and is a notable feature at the junction of three roads. 

Paddy Rossmore. Photographs. Edited by Robert O’Byrne. The Lilliput Press, Dublin 7, 2019. 

Petersfield, otherwise known as Johnstown Park, was built by a branch of the Holmes family in the late eighteenth century. It is unclear whether these Holmeses were related to others of the same name in County Antrim who were of Irish descent (their surname being an Anglicized version of Mac Thomais). They were certainly settled in this part of the country by the early eighteenth century since in 1728 Peter Holmes of Cullen, Co Offaly, paid £4437 for 540 acres of what would become the Petersfield estate. It was his grandson, another Peter, who served as MP in the Irish parliament for Banagher, Co Offaly, and who built the house and named it after himself. The architect is believed to have been the amateur William Leeson, best-remembered for laying out the town of Westport, Co Mayo, for John Browne, 1st Earl of Altamont. Perhaps related to the family of the same surname who became Earls of Milltown and lived at Russborough, County Wicklow, William Leeson, lived in north County Tipperary and seems to have designed a number of houses in the area including Prior Park and Petersfield. The latter was a tall block of three storeys over raised basement and five bays, the three centre ones being closely bunched together. Only a pedimented doorcase with engaged Tuscan columns broke the otherwise-plain facade. The interior seemingly contained good neo-classical plasterwork but no known photographs of it survive. Peter Holmes and his wife Elizabeth Prittie (a sister of the first Lord Dunally) had no surviving children so the estate passed to a cousin, likewise called Peter Holmes. The family remained in ownership until 1865 when Petersfield and almost one thousand acres were sold to William Headech who seemingly moved to Ireland in the 1840s to act as secretary to the Imperial Slate Quarry at Portroe, County Tipperary. He subsequently bought the business and did so well that he was able to pay more than £13,000 for the former Holmes estate. 

His descendant remained there until the 1930s when the Land Commission divided up the property, and the house was unroofed. When Paddy photographed Petersfield it was still standing, albeit in poor condition, but has since been demolished.” 

Castle Otway, Templederry, Co Tipperary – ruin

Castle Otway, Templederry, Co Tipperary

Castle Otway, County Tipperary view of entrance and garden fronts, 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.

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

p. 74. “(Otway-ruthven; IFR; Verney-Cave, Braye, B/PB) A handsome two storey mid-C18 house with a vast and largely C19 towerhouse at its back. The towerhouse incorporated part of the original Clohonan or Cloghanane Castle,  which was granted to John Otway 1665 and later renamed Castle Otway. The C18 house which Dr Craig considers to have been designed by the same architect or builder as Lissenhall, Co Tipperary, another house of the Otways, had a seven bay front…. Burnt 1922.

Castle Otway, County Tipperary, entrance front 1979, photograph: William Garner, 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.

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. 133. A fine mid Georgian two storey pedimented house. Good Doric pedimented doorcase. A tower house much altered is incorporated in the rere of the house. Built for the Otways. Burnt in 1922. Now a ruin.

https://www.buildingsofireland.ie/buildings-search/building/22402716/castle-otway-cloghonan-tipperary-north

Detached seven-bay two-storey over half-basement country house with three-bay pedimented breakfront, built c. 1750, and having four- and- five-storey medieval towerhouse rebuilt in nineteenth-century with three-storey elevations, with turret, to rear. Now in ruins. Roofless, with rendered brick chimneystacks to house and multiple offset limestone stack to towerhouse. Castellations, machicolations and corbel tables to towerhouse. Roughly-dressed limestone walls, slate hung to rear and south-west gable, with brick eaves course and ashlar quoins and plinth. Square-headed openings with limestone voussoirs and sills. Pointed-arch openings, some blocked, with ashlar limestone voussoirs and keystones and limestone sills to tower. Square-headed opening to entrance with carved limestone engaged Doric columns, entablature and pediment. Remains of limestone steps leading to entrance. Castellated walls with alternating round and rectangular openings having integral carriage-arch and with castellated mock gatehouse to south-west. Multiple-bay single-storey outbuildings to south-east. 

Appraisal 

The form of this impressive country house, despite its ruinous condition, is of apparent architectural design and execution. The house was built for the Otway family, and the medieval towerhouse, rebuilt in the nineteenth century, incorporates part of the original Cloghanane castle granted to John Otway in 1665. The house retains many original and interesting features such as the limestone sills, voussoirs and ashlar quoins. The doorway surround is particularly ornate and is obviously the work of skilled craftsmen. The towerhouse contrasts with the Georgian façade of the main house, thereby providing further interest to the site. The Tipperary Gentry. Volume 1. By William Hayes and Art Kavanagh. Published by Irish Family Names, c/o Eneclann, Unit 1, The Trinity Enterprise Centre, Pearse St, Dublin 2, 11 Emerald Cottages, Grand Canal St, Dublin 4 and Market Square, Bunclody, Co Wexford, Ireland. 2003. 
Otway of Templederry 
p. 169. John Otway, a lieutenant in Cromwell’s army, and formerly of Ingham Hall in Westmoreland, found himself at least in a geographically prominent position around 1655 when he took possession of the old Morris stronghold in Latteragh…By 1654 only the bare walls were left of the main structure, and the only usable part was the barbican or outer tower, which was still intanct. 
Latteragh Castle, in the barony of Upper Ormond, had been the chief seat of the Morrises, descendants of Geoffrey de Marisco, the Norman knight who acquired it around 1200. Sir John Morris, recorded as the proprietor in 1641, had died in 1647 before the Cromwellian confiscations took place. It was his widow, Dame Catherine, who had been dispossessed by the Cromwellian settlement, and who was the recipient of a transplanters’ certificate for land set out to her in Connaught.  
p. 170. John Otway added to his original grant by purchasing debentures for land from Cromwellian soldiers who had got small grants of land in Upper Ormond….But he was among the cromwellian grantees in an unsure position after the restoration of Charles II in 1660. James Butler the Duke of Ormonde, and then Lord Lieutenant, one of the king’s most loyal supporters, was at once put into pssession of his confiscated estate. Not only did the agile duke increase his share of Tipperary land, but ensured that his relatives and allies would also be restored to their lands. Among his distant relatives was Dame Katherine Morris, who was enabled to return and obtain recovery of Lattteragh for her son, another Sir John, who was married to a daughter of Purcell, the baron of Loughmoe. 
John Otway, however, played his cards well. Knowing he had to give up his lands in Latteragh, he had, as early as January 1661, secured a certificate from the Court of Claims for a new grant of lands as yet undisposed of in Templederry parish…In 1684, to make doubly sure of his title, he used the good services of the earl of Mountrath, a former Cromwellian leader who still wielded much influence, to obtain the king’s patent under the Commisson of Grace for his new estate, comprising the old lands of the O’Kennedys of Cloghonan… 
p. 171. John Otway also had the advantage that the Cloghonan Castle, a former O’Kennedy stronghold, was in fairly good shape, having been partly repaired… prior to 1654. He accordingly had a well defended residence at his disposal, which was later to be renamed Castle Otway. ..As early as 1650 John had married Phoebe Loftus, a daughter of Nicholas Loftus of Fethard, County Wexford, who was a son of Sir Dudley Loftus of Rathfarnham Castle. Accordingly he was already linked with the ascendancy, and was soon playing a prominent role among the new elite of Tipperary, by getting elected High Sheriff of the county for 1680. 
John’s eldest son, also named John, died in 1722 without a male heir, and it was Henry, the eldest son of his thrid son, Thomas, who inherited Castle Otway. Thomas had established himself at Lissenhall, near Nenagh… He probably  built a small residence there are first, when around the mid-18C an elegant middle-sized Georgian house was built where some members of the Otways lived for four generations. Through his wife Christian, daughter and co-heir of Richard Lock, Tullagory, MP, and his daughters, Thomas established early marriage and political alliances with other newly emerging ascendancy families in North Tipperary and elsewhere. 
…Henry, who inherited Castle Otway, married Mary, daughter of Phanuel Cooke of Clonamiklon, near Uringlford. His eldest son and successor, Thomas, married Martha Prittie, a sister of Henry Prittie of Kilboy, 1st Lord Dunally. Cooke Otway, Henry’s younger brother, who became a captain of the Life Guards, was called after his mother’s maiden name. He married Elizabeth, daughter of Samuel Waller of Lisbrien. Both Henry and Thomas were educated at Trinity College, and in their time Otway House was built, incorporating the 16th/17th century O’Kennedy tower house, wiht its slit windows and gun loops. It wasa a fine two-storey mid-Georgian house, wiht a Doric pedimented doorcase, and had all the elegance of Lissenhall. Indeed there was such a striking similarity btween the two houses that it is though that the same architect was engaged for both. [Vanishing Houses of Ireland by Knight of Glin, David J. Cuffe, Nicholas K. Robinson]  
p. 173. Cooke Otway, who had succeeded to Castle Otway by the time of the disturbed 1790s, when the hill country around was seethign with rumours of rebellion, showed himself more than competent to seal with any incipient insurgency. 
[p. 174.] In the 1780s the Otways, like other landlords in the region, set up a volunteer corps, with Thomas Otway, nominated a Colonel, in command. … 
Thomas Otway has been portrayed as a “harsh and stern landlord.”…[p. 175] Thomas Otway also seemed to have an intolerance towards the native language. In 1772 Silo Magher was fined for speaking Irish in his presence. 
Thomas Otway recieved recognition as an “improving landlord” from the Dublin Society, which presented him with a silver medal in 1767…He died in 1786, and as he was childless, he was succeeded by his brother Cooke Otway [b. 1733]. 
p. 175. [around 1775] The secret societies, such as the Whiteboys, had grown in strength, and by the mid-1790s were given the umbrella name of the Defenders. The Orange Society had recently emerged as well, with the aim of maintaining the Protestant ascendancy, and was spreading throughout the land. 
Another more significant society to be founded in that decade, the United Irishmen, sought a union of Catholics, Protestants and Dissenters under a truly democratic government of all the people of the country. It was getting strong support from the Presbyterians, or Dissenters, in the North. When the government, nervous of any form of radicalism, especially in the wake of the recent French Revolution, suppresed teh United Irish Society, it went underground to become a secret, revolutionary organisation bent on establishign a republic with military support from France. The movement became meshed with the Defenders in many parts. Military loyalism and revolutionary republicanism were heading towards a confrontation. 
p. 176. Nenagh had become one of the most important United Irish centres in tipperary, its chief secret organiser being Hervey or Harvey Montmorency Morres, of the family which formerly owned Latteragh fortress and lands, who was a close friend of Lord Edward Fitzgerald. Cooke Otway reorganised the Castle Otway volunteers as the Castle Otway Yeomen Cavalry, composed now mainly of his Protestant tenantry. The corp captured a local United Irish organiser named Daniel Darcy, who was transferred to Clonmel gaol to await trial. If convicted of administering the United oath he faced execution. 
…Dublin Castle declared martial law on the whole county in April 1798. ..panic set among many of the gentry in the county who quitted their residences and went into the towns. The High Sheriff then ordered every gentleman, under “such penalties as he should be empowered to inflict and the circumstances of the time justify” to return and remain at his country seat, to help restore law and order. 
Cooke Otway was not the sort of “timid” landlord the High Sheriff railed against. He proved himself a ruthless rebel hunter…[he flogged a man to force a confession. Some then came forward and confessed and gave in their pikes and made oaths of allegiance and were pardoned.][some captured who were determined to have administered teh United oath were transported to Australia]. 
p. 178. Cooke was succeeded by his second surviving son [the first, Loftus William, rose to the rank of Lieutenant General in the British Army and then became Knight Commander of Charles III of Spain], Henry 1768-1815, who married Sarah, daughter of thomas Cave of Stanford Hall, Leicester. She became heir to the family property, and she and Henry resided at Standford Hall and in Grosvenor Square, London. This marked the beginning of the absentee landlord phase of the Templederry Otways. The Otway estate then consisted of 6,667 statute acres. 
p. 179. Henry’s younger brother, Admiral Robert Waller Otway, 1770-1851, became a distinguished naval officer, and on the occasion of the coronation of William IV in 1831 was created a baronet for his services. …The baronetcy descended through this Robert Waller branch of the family, first to his eldest son, George Graham Otway and then to his brother, who lived in Brighton. 
p. 180. To return to Henry, who assumed the additional name of Cave, and lived in Stanford Hall, it was through him that the Castle Otway branch of teh family continued. He was succeeded by his second son, Robert Otway Cave, who became heir to Castle Otway. Robert was a man of much more liberal bent of mind than his grandfather Cooke, or his granduncle Thomas. He embarked on a political career as a young man, serving as MP for Leicester in 1826-30, and supporting Catholic emancipation. 
In 1835 he ran as a liberal candidate in the Tipperary election of 1835. As it happened there was no poll in that election and he was joined as one of the two Tipperary MPs by the well-known Richard Lalor Sheil. Despite his ascendancy background, one of Otway’s policies was opposition to the tithe system, the major and most controversial issue of the time. He was also on the side of O’Connell’s repeal of the Union campaign. He resided when convenient in Lissenhall and held his Tipperary seat until 1844… [he had no children] 
Sophia Otway [his widow], although an absentee landlord, continued to take a keen interest in her Castle Otway estate and its people. She headed the Borrisoleigh Poor Relief Fund with her £30 donation in 1846, and financially helped some families emigrate to America. 
…When Sophia died in 1849, Castle Otway was inherited by Vice Admiral Joselyn Otway, MP, second son of her husband’s brother, Rev Samuel Jocelyn Otway. [p. 181] In 1836, Robert Jocelyn married Anne Digby, daughter of Sir Hugh Crofton, of Mohill House, County Leitrim, and his only offspring, Frances Margaret, married William Clifford Bermingham Ruthven of Queensboro, County Galway. Through that marriage the surname became Otway-Ruthven. The eldest son and heir of William and Frances, Captain Robert Mervyn Bermingham, married Margaret, daughter of Julius Casement, of Cronroe, County Wicklow, in 1900. They had seven chidren, all of whom were given Bermingham as the last of their Christian names aparty from their eldest son, Robert Jocelyn Oliver, born 1901. He was the last Otway owner of Castle Otway. At least as far as the 19th century is concerned, the Otways were looked upon as good landlords. 
Castle Otway was burnt down in the time of the Civil War, 1922. The remnant of the estate was divided following the 1926 Land Act…The other former Otway residence, Lissenhall, is also a sad ruin.” 
 

Castle Ffogarty, Thurles, Co Tipperary – ruin

Castle Ffogarty, Thurles, Co Tipperary

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

p. 67. “(Ryan-Lenigan/LGI1912; Ryan/IFR) A rather insubstantial C19 castle; burnt 1922 and now a ruin except for one tower which has been rebuilt. The seat of the Ffogarty family, from whom it passed by inheritance successively to the Lenigan, Ryan-Lenigan and Ryan families.”

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. 133. A large two storey early 19C castle built for the Ffogartys and destroyed by fire in 1922. In ruins.

https://www.buildingsofireland.ie/buildings-search/building/22404015/castle-fogarty-castlefogarty-tipperary-north

Detached castellated house, largely a rebuilding c.1800 of earlier Georgian house, the whole destroyed by fire 1922 and one tower restored. An L-shaped house with courtyard to rear formerd by outbuildings. Front, east entrance block comprises three-storey square-plan projecting end towers, that to south-east having cap house to roof and central three-storey projecting polygonal tower built c.1840, flanking two-bay recessed parts. South block is five-bay three-storey with square-plan tower to west end. Maainly roofless. Rendered walls throughout having buttresses to towers and between bays of south block and crenellations supported on corbels throughout, with string courses to recessed bays and to towers of front block. Square-headed openings throughout except for ground floor of front block which are pointed and have hood mouldings. Croix pommées to towers. Coat of arms with motto in irish to one tower. Dressed limestone entrance gate piers with shell-shaped capstones and recent steel gates and railings with rubble plinths. Dressed limestone entrance gate piers with shell-shaped capstone. Steel gates. 

Appraisal 

Castle Fogarty is a typical Gothic Revival ‘castle’ replete with towers and crenellations. It is clearly the rsult of several periods of construction and a remodelling of an earlier house. It is a well-built structure with good detailing as seen in the string courses, buttresses and imitation loops. It presents a gaunt ruin in the landscape today. 

Rathrobin, Tullamore, Co Offaly – a ruin

Rathrobin, Tullamore, Co Offaly – a ruin

Rathrobin, County Offaly, photograph courtesy of National Inventory.

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

p. 240. “(Biddulph/IFR) A house originally built 1694 by Nicholas Biddulph, near an old castle. Rebuilt C19 in irregular Tudor-Revival style; numerous gables, with ball finials; dormers, gabled single-storey porch; mullioned windows. Burnt ca 1920, now a ruin.

Rathrobin, County Offaly, photograph courtesy of National Inventory.
Rathrobin, County Offaly, photograph courtesy of National Inventory.

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. 121. 19C Tudor Revival house designed by Sir Thomas Drew for the Biddulph family. Burnt c. 1920. Now a ruin.

https://www.buildingsofireland.ie/buildings-search/building/14924005/rathrobin-house-rathrobin-county-offaly

Detached multiple-bay three-storey Tudor Revival country house, built c.1890, with advanced end bay and gabled bays to front. Single-storey return and two-storey canted bay to rear. Burnt c.1920 and now in a ruinous condition. Set within its own grounds. Roof gone. Ashlar and rendered chimneystacks with finials and limestone coping to pediments. Ruled-and-lined render to walls with plinth. Plaque to front elevation with label moulding. Window opening with tooled limestone surrounds and sills and some with limestone mullions and transoms. Pedimented ashlar porch with Tudor arched opening with chamfered limestone surround and label moulding. Random coursed limestone outbuildings to north-west set around yard. Random coursed boundary wall to rear with segmental-arched gateway. 

Rathrobin House was designed by Sir Thomas Drew for the Biddulph family, to replace a house built in 1694. It iis constructed of massed concrete, making it a particularly interesting structure of technical and architectural merit. Now an ivy-covered ruin following its destruction during the 1920s. It retains some of its Tudor Revival features, however, such as the multiple gables, dormers and stone window fixtures, which attest to its one time greatness. Its destruction was recounted by Arthur Magan in ‘The Magans of Ummera’, as this was his mother’s home. Despite its humble present state, Rathrobin House makes a valuable contribution to the architectural heritage of County Offaly. 

In Blake, Tarquin. Abandoned Mansions of Ireland II: More Portraits of Forgotten Stately Homes. Collins Press, Cork, 2012. 

Mount Plunkett, Co Roscommon

Mount Plunkett, Co Roscommon

Mount Plunkett, County Roscommon entrance front c. 1920 photograph: William English, 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.

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. 216. “A house of unusual design built 1806 by George Plunkett….Passed to the Grehan family ca 1850 and in 1876, to Robert Adamson. Laster the residence of C.E.A. Cameron, Assistant Inspector General of the RIC.  Dismantled 1946, now a ruin.”

In Blake, Tarquin. Abandoned Mansions of Ireland II: More Portraits of Forgotten Stately Homes. Collins Press, Cork, 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. 

Trimleston Castle (Tremblestown, Trimlestown), Kildalkey, Co Meath – ruin

Trimleston Castle (Tremblestown, Trimlestown), Kildalkey, Co Meath

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

as in Lord Belmont…”…Here lived 12th Lord Trimlestown, a celebrated figure in mid-C18 Ireland; he kept a large eagle chained up by the front door and he had a magnificent coach which had been presented to him by Mashal Saxe; for, as a Catholic, he had spent much of his life abroad, where he had acquired skill in medicine, so that he would treat the poor of the neighbourhood gratuitously; he also treated a fashionable lady for the vapours by getting four assistants to threaten her with rods in a darkened room. In time, the castle had a fine formal garden… Early in C19, the castle was adorned with what a contemporary described as “ornamental towers, an embattled parapet and other marks of the style which prevailed in the latter part of the sixteenth century.” soon afterwards, however, it was abandoned by the family, and fell into ruin.

Record of Protected Structures:

Tremblestown Castle, townland: Tremblestown, town: Trim

Medieval towerhouse with18thC house added, and 19thC

crennelations – barnwell mausoleum, a plain single cell with

some simple slabs to the north in a field.

In Blake, Tarquin. Abandoned Mansions of Ireland II: More Portraits of Forgotten Stately Homes. Collins Press, Cork, 2012.

The Landed Gentry and Aristocracy: County Meath. Volume 1. Art Kavanagh, 2005.

Barnewall of Trimlestown, p. 19.

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. 115. “An 18C house incorporating a tower house. The building was further altered in the early 19C. Now a ruin.”

https://lordbelmontinnorthernireland.blogspot.com/2015/12/1st-baron-trimlestown.html

THE BARONS TRIMLESTOWN OWNED 3,025 ACRES OF LAND IN COUNTY MEATH

This family, whose surname was anciently written De Barneval and Barnewall, deduces its lineage from remote antiquity, and claims, among its earliest progenitors, personages of the most eminent renown. It is the parent stock whence the noble houses of BARNEWALL and TRIMLESTOWN branched.

The name of its patriarch is to be found, with the other companions in arms of WILLIAM THE CONQUEROR, in the roll of Battle Abbey. In Ireland, the Barnewalls came under the denomination of “Strongbowians“, having established themselves there in 1172, under the banner of Richard de Clare, 2nd Earl of Pembroke, commonly called Strongbow.

SIR MICHAEL DE BERNEVAL, Knight, the first settler, joined the English expedition, with three armed ships, and effected a descent upon Berehaven, County Cork, previous to the landing of his chief, the Earl of Pembroke, in the province of Leinster.

Sir Michael is mentioned in the records at the Tower of London as one of the leading captains in the enterprise; and in the reigns of HENRY II and RICHARD I, he was lord, by tenure, of Berehaven and Bantry.

From this gallant and successful soldier we pass to

SIR ULPHRAM DE BERNEVAL, Knight, the tenth in descent, first possessor of Crickstown Castle and estate, and the founder of what was termed the “Crickstown Branch” of the family.

The great-grandson of this Sir Ulphram,

NICHOLAS DE BERNEVALL (fourth of the same Christian name), married a daughter of the Lord Furnivall, and left three sons,

Christopher (Sir), father of 1st Baron Trimlestown;
John, ancestor of the Barons Kingsland;
Barnaby (Sir), an eminent lawyer.

The eldest son,

SIR CHRISTOPHER BARNEWALL (c1400-46), as the name began to be spelt, succeeded to the patrimonial estate of Crickstown; and was, in 1445 and 1446, Vice-Treasurer of Ireland and Lord Chief Justice of Ireland.

He married Matilda, daughter of Sir _____ Drake, of Drakerath, and had two sons, of whom the younger,

SIR ROBERT BARNEWALL, Knight, was elevated to the peerage by EDWARD IV, in 1461, in the dignity of BARON TRIMLESTOWN, of Trimlestown, County Meath.

The next patent of creation that occurs” said the historian, William Lynch, in his work on Feudal Dignities, “is one of considerable importance, as being the first grant (in Ireland) of any description of peerage conveying, by express words, the dignity of a baron of parliament.”

The patent was dated in the second year of EDWARD IV’s reign, and thereby the King ordained and constituted Sir Robert Barnewall, Knight, for his good services to His Majesty’s father when in Ireland, as essendum unum baronum parliamenti nostri infra terram nostram prædictam, to hold to him and the heirs male of his body lawfully begotten, and to be called by the name of Domini et Baronis de Trymleteston, etc;

And also that the said Sir Robert should be one of his, the King’s, Council within the said land during his life, with the fee of £10 yearly, payable out of the fee-farm of Salmon Leap and Chapelizod etc.

His lordship wedded firstly, Elizabeth Broune, by whom he acquired a considerable estate, and had two sons,

CHRISTOPHER (Sir), his heir;
Thomas.

He espoused secondly, Anne, daughter of Sir Thomas Plunkett, but had no other issue.

His lordship was succeeded at his decease in 1470 by his elder son,

CHRISTOPHER, 2nd Baron; who obtained a pardon for his participation in the treason of Lambert Simnel.

His lordship married Elizabeth, daughter of Sir Thomas Plunkett, of Rathmore, and had issue,

JOHN, his heir;
Robert;
Ismay;
a daughter;
Alison.

His lordship died ca 1513, and was succeeded by his eldest son,

JOHN, 3rd Baron (1470-1538), an eminent judge and politician, who wedded no less than four times, and was succeeded at his decease by the only son of his first wife, Janet, daughter of John Bellew, of Bellewstown,

PATRICK, 4th Baron, who espoused Catherine, daughter of Richard Taylor, of Swords, County Dublin, and widow of Richard Delahyde, Recorder of Drogheda.

His lordship died in 1562, and was succeeded by his eldest son,

ROBERT, 5th Baron, who married Anne, only daughter of Alderman Richard Fyan, Mayor of Dublin; but dying issueless, in 1573, the barony devolved upon his brother,

PETER, 6th Baron. This nobleman dying in 1598, was succeeded by his only son, by Catherine, daughter of the Hon Sir Christopher Nugent, and granddaughter of Richard, 11th Baron Delvin,

ROBERT, 7th Baron (c1574-1639), who wedded Genet, daughter of Thomas Talbot, of Dardistown, County Meath, by whom he had issue,

Christopher, father of MATTHIAS, 8th Baron;
John;
Patrick;
Richard;
Matthew;
Mary; Catherine; Ismay.

His lordship had a memorable dispute with the Lord Dunsany regarding precedency, which was decided in favour of Lord Trimlestown by the Privy Council in 1634.

He was succeeded by his grandson,

MATTHIAS, 8th Baron (1614-67), eldest son of the Hon Christopher Barnewall, by Elizabeth, daughter of Sir Edward FitzGerald, Knight.

This nobleman serving against the usurper CROMWELL was excepted from pardon for life, and had his estates sequestered; but surviving the season of rebellion and rapacity, he regained a considerable portion of his lands.

His lordship espoused, in 1641, Jane, daughter of Nicholas, 1st Viscount Netterville, and was succeeded by his only surviving son,

ROBERT, 9th Baron, who married Margaret, daughter of Sir John Dungan Bt, and niece of William, Earl of Limerick, by whom he had two sons and five daughters,

MATTHIAS, 10th Baron;
JOHN, 11th Baron;
Jane; Bridget; Dymna; Catharine; Mary.

His lordship sat in JAMES II’s parliament in 1689, and dying in June that year, was succeeded by his eldest son,

MATTHIAS, 10th Baron, who had a commission in the 1st Troop of King James’s guards under the Duke of Berwick, and fell in action against the Germans in 1692, when the barony devolved upon his brother,

JOHN, 11th Baron (1672-1746). The 10th Baron having been attainted by WILLIAM III, that monarch granted the family estates to Henry Sydney, 1st Earl of Romney; but those estates were subsequently recovered at law, and were enjoyed by the house of Trimlestown.

His lordship wedded Mary, only daughter of Sir John Barnewall, Knight, second son of Sir Patrick Barnewall Bt, of Crickstown, by whom he six sons and four daughters,

ROBERT, his heir;
John;
Richard;
Thomas;
James;
Anthony;
Thomasine; Margaret; Bridget; Catharine.

His lordship was succeeded by his eldest son,

ROBERT, 12th Baron (c1704-79); who lived for many years in France, and pursued the study of medicine with great success.

After his return to Ireland he resided at Trimlestown, and gratuitously and freely communicated his advice to all who applied for it.

His lordship was succeeded at his decease by his eldest surviving son,

THOMAS, 13th Baron, a Knight of Malta, who conformed to the established church, and had a confirmation of the dignity (which, although adopted, was unacknowledged from the time of CROMWELL), in 1795.

His lordship dying unmarried, the title reverted to his cousin,

NICHOLAS, 14th Baron (1726-1813), who espoused firstly, in 1768, Martha Henrietta, only daughter of Monsieur Joseph D’Aquin, president of the parliament of Toulouse, by whom he had issue,

JOHN THOMAS, his heir;
Rosalia.

He married secondly, in 1797, Alicia, second daughter of Major-General Charles Eustace.

His lordship was succeeded by his son,

JOHN THOMAS, 15th Baron (1773-1839), who wedded, in 1794, Maria Theresa, daughter of Richard Kirwan, of Gregg, County Galway, and had issue,

THOMAS;
Martha Henrietta.

His lordship was succeeded by his son,

THOMAS, 16th Baron (1796-1879), who espoused, in 1836, Margaret Randalina, eldest daughter of Philip Roche, of Donore, County Kildare, and had issue,

THOMAS, died in infancy;
Anna Maria Louisa.

His lordship died without surviving male issue, when the barony became dormant.

In 1891, however, the peerage was was claimed by

CHRISTOPHER PATRICK MARY, de jure 17th Baron (1846-91), a descendant of the Hon Patrick Barnewall, second son of the 7th Baron.

The 17th Baron died before he had fully established his claim; but in 1893, his younger brother,

CHARLES ALOYSIUS, 18th Baron (1861-1937), was confirmed in the title by the Committee for Privileges of the House of Lords.

His lordship married, in 1889, Margaret Theresa, daughter of Richard John Stephens, of Brisbane, Australia, and had issue,

Reginald Nicholas Francis (1897-1918), killed in action;
CHARLES ALOYSIUS, of whom presently;
Ivy Esmay; Marcella Hilda Charlotte; Letitia Anne Margaret; Geraldine Christia Marjory.

He wedded secondly, in 1907, Mabel Florence, daughter of William Robert Shuff, of Torquay, Devon; and thirdly, in 1930, Josephine Francesca, fourth but second surviving daughter of the Rt Hon Sir Christopher John Nixon Bt, of Roebuck Grove, Milltown, County Dublin.


His lordship was succeeded by his second son,

CHARLES ALOYSIUS, 19th Baron (1899-1990), who espoused, in 1926, Muriel, only child of Edward Oskar Schneider, of Mansfield Lodge, Manchester, and had issue,

ANTHONY EDWARD, 20th Baron;
RAYMOND CHARLES, 21st Baron;
Diane.

He married secondly, in 1952, Freda Kathleen, daughter of Alfred Allen Atkins, of Ross-on-Wye, Herefordshire.

His lordship was succeeded by his eldest son,

ANTHONY EDWARD, 20th Baron (1928-97), who wedded firstly, in 1963, Lorna Margaret Marion, daughter of Charles Douglas Ramsay; and secondly, in 1977, Mary Wonderly, eldest daughter of Judge Thomas Francis McAllister, of Grand Rapids, Michigan, USA.

His lordship died without issue, when the honours devolved upon his brother,

RAYMOND CHARLES, 21st Baron, born in 1930, of Chiddingfold, Surrey.

There is no obvious heir presumptive to the Barony of Trimlestown.

An heir presumptive may be found amongst the descendants, if any, of Thomas Barnewall, of Bloomsbury, London, a cousin of the 17th and 18th Barons Trimlestown.

TURVEY HOUSE, Donabate, County Dublin, was a late 17th century mansion comprising two storeys below a gabled attic storey.

The upper storey has three distinctive lunette windows added between 1725-50.

The house has nine bays and lofty, narrow windows grouped in threes.

This was once the seat of the extinct Viscounts Barnewall (of Kingsland); though subsequently it passed to a kinsman, the 13th Baron Trimlestown.

TRIMLESTOWN CASTLE, Kildalkey, County Meath, is a medieval tower-house with an 18th century house attached.

In the 19th century, the castle was adorned with ornamental towers, an embattled parapet, and other marks of the style which prevailed in the latter part of the 16th century.

Shortly afterwards, however, the family abandoned the castle and it became ruinous.

First published in December, 2015.  Trimlestown arms courtesy of European Heraldry.

https://meathhistoryhub.ie/houses-r-z/

The ruins of Trimblestown Castle stand to the west of Trim on the banks of the Trimblestown River. The Castle was erected by the Barnwall’s, Barons Trimleston. The place is also known by variations of the name: Tremblestown also Tremleston, Trimlestown and Trimleston. 

Hugh de Lacy may have erected a motte at Trimblestown and there is a large mound to one side of the castle but this has also been identified as a tumulus from earlier times. A village may have grown up around the castle, an extensive field system exists surrounding the castle. 

In 1461 Robert Barnewall was created Baron Trimleston by Edward IV. The family were very active in affairs of state and also in defending the Pale against attack from the Irish. The second Baron, Christopher, was implicated in the Lambert Simnel affair but received a pardon in 1488. His son, John, the third Baron, served as Lord Chancellor of Ireland from 1534 until his death in 1538. In 1597 Hugh O’Neill defeated the government forces, led by Barnewall, Lord Trimleston,  at the battle of Tyrrell’s pass in Westmeath. Barnewall’s son was taken prisoner. 

Mathias, Lord Trimleston, was one of the Old English lords of the Pale who met on the Hill of Tara in 1642 and was then outlawed by the English authorities. Mathias was sentenced to be transplanted to Connacht by Cromwell in October 1653 but managed to delay it until 1655 and was granted 1462 acres belonging to the Frenchs of Monivea, Co. Galway. The Barnewalls share the same family motto with the French family: Malo mori quam foederi, I would rather die than be dishonoured. In 1647 General Jones took the castle for the English forces. Trimleston regained Trimblestown and lands in Meath and Dublin after the Restoration and also managed to hold onto lands in Connacht. Matthias died at Monivea in 1667 and was buried in Kilconnel Abbey. 

Matthias, the next baron, supported James II and his estate and title were forfeited. The next barons took the title but were not recognised as they were Roman Catholics. 

Robert Barnewall, the 12th Baron was educated in France and was noted for his medicinal skills which he used to treat local residents. 

There is a Barnwall County in South Carolina. This may be named after a member of the Trimblestown Barnewalls. Colonel John Barnwall acquired the nickname ‘Tuscarora Jack’  following a successful expedition against the Tuscarora Indians to North Carolina in 1711-1712. Barnwell County was called Winton County until 1785 when it was re-named in honour of John Barnwell, a Revolutionary War hero. Robert W. Barnwall, a descendant, was to the forefront of the foundation of the Confederate states of America. 

The lands amounting to 681 acres were in the possession of the Hon. Anna Barnewall in 1925 when it was taken over by the Land Commission. As the only daughter of the 16th Baron she married Robert Elliot of Scotland. Her burial site is in the Scottish highlands and there a stained glass window in the church commemorates her: “A kinder hearted and most utterly unselfish woman never lived.” 

The 20th Baron Trimleston died at the age of 69 in 1997 and his successor is his brother, Raymond Barnewell, a dairy farmer who lives in England, but he has no children to succeed to the title. 

Trimblestown Castle was a three-storey tower-house erected in the fifteenth century possibly by the first Baron Trimleston. There is a loft above the ground floor with a barrel vault above that. High up on the tower wall is a plaque commemorating the marriage of the sixth baron to Katherine Nugent, daughter of Lord Delvin. In the mid-18th century the 12th Lord Trimleston attached a new three-storey house at the north of the tower-house. This has a fine bow projection in the east wall. Early in the 19th century the house was decorated with crenellations and ornamental turrets in the style of the late 16th century. In the early 1800s the castle was abandoned by the family. The castle was in ruins by the 1840s and the demesne was being farmed by a Mr. Allen. The noted horse trainer, Frank Barbour, erected stables and a house at Trimblestown about 1915. 

To the north of the castle is an old graveyard in which is located a small stone-built chapel containing the 1680 tomb of Margaret, wife of the ninth Baron Trimleston. This chapel was recently restored by a local committee. 

This poetic gravestone is from Trimblestown. 

Beneath this stone Silvester lies, 

Whose ashes mingles with the Blighs, 

He passed through life unstained with pride, 

We wept and lamented when he did 

His sons whose youth he ne’er neglected 

In gratitude his stone erected. 

The Landed Gentry and Aristocracy: County Meath. Volume 1. Art Kavanagh, 2005. 

Barnewall of Trimlestown, p. 19. 

https://theirishaesthete.com/2018/12/10/trimlestown/

Fallen Out of Use

by theirishaesthete

Trimlestown Castle, County Meath, photograph by Robert O’Byrne.


Baron Trimlestown is one of the oldest titles in Ireland, created in 1461 for Sir Robert Barnewall. The family were of Norman origin, their name originally de Berneval (from the small seaside town of Berneval-le-Grand, where Oscar Wilde stayed following his release from Reading Gaol in June 1897). Having first moved to England, following the Battle of Hastings in 1066, they followed Richard de Clare to Ireland, the first to do so, Sir Michael de Berneval, landing in Cork in 1172. Rising to power in the Pale, they were responsible for building Drimnagh Castle, now in a suburb of Dublin, and then gradually acquired substantial land holdings in County Meath. Here in Trimblestown, a few miles west of the town of Trim, they erected a mighty castle, probably in the 15th century and perhaps around the time that the title of baron was granted to Sir Robert Barnewall.

Trimlestown Castle, County Meath, photograph by Robert O’Byrne.
Trimlestown Castle, County Meath, photograph by Robert O’Byrne.
Trimlestown Castle, County Meath, photograph by Robert O’Byrne.
Trimlestown Castle, County Meath, photograph by Robert O’Byrne.
Trimlestown Castle, County Meath, photograph by Robert O’Byrne.






The core of Trimblestown Castle is late mediaeval, rising three storeys and with a massive square tower in the south-west corner. The main block is some 114 feet long and 40 feet wide, internally dominated by a two-storey vaulted great hall that faces towards the river Trimlestown: the exterior of this side is marked by massive corner buttresses. On the south-east side of the tower there is (or perhaps was) a shield bearing the arms of the Barnewall and Nugent families – the two had intermarried – but whether it remains in place is impossible to tell due to vegetation covering much of the walls. Considerable alterations to the building were undertaken in the 18th and 19th centuries, when a large addition was made on the northern section of the site. It is likely that at this time towers similar to those on the river front were demolished and a modern house built, the most notable feature of this being a large bow-front with views to the east. Similarities with the work undertaken during the same period at Louth Castle (see Saintly Connections, August 28th 2017) have led to suggestions that Richard Johnston might have been the architect responsible in both instances. This may have happened around 1797 when the 14th Lord Trimlestown, then aged 70, married a woman less than a third of his age: the suggestion is that she got a new house in return for an old husband. Soon afterwards, her husband also inherited Turvey, County Dublin from a distant cousin and in due course the family moved there, leaving Trimblestown Castle to slip into decay.

Trimlestown Castle, County Meath, photograph by Robert O’Byrne.
Trimlestown Castle, County Meath, photograph by Robert O’Byrne.
Trimlestown Castle, County Meath, photograph by Robert O’Byrne.
Trimlestown Castle, County Meath, photograph by Robert O’Byrne.
Trimlestown Castle, County Meath, photograph by Robert O’Byrne.






For much of the 18th century, although the Barnewalls held onto the greater part of their lands, they were unable to use the title Baron Trimlestown. Their problems had begun in the 1640s when Matthias, eighth Lord Trimlestown, had supported the royalist cause, deprived of his estates by Cromwell and banished to County Galway. Following the restoration of the monarchy in 1660, he regained the greater part of his original property, but remained true to the Roman Catholic faith, as did his son Robert who sat in James II’s parliament in 1689. The next couple of heirs, because of their support for the Jacobite cause and their loyalty to Catholicism, were not allowed to use the old title. They lived in France and it was only in 1746 that Robert Barnewall (who claimed the title of twelfth Lord Trimlestown) returned to Ireland and took up residence in the old castle. It is likely to have been during his lifetime (he died in 1779) that the building was first modernised. As an ardent supporter of the Catholic cause, it must have been a blow to him when his heir Thomas conformed to the Established Church (thereby reversing the government attainder and allowing him to be acknowledged after his father’s death as the 13th Lord Trimlestown). Thereafter one generation succeeded another, although more than once the title had to go to a cousin as there was no direct heir. However while there is still a Lord Trimlestown – the 21st – he has no known heirs. It seems likely that after more than 550 years one of Ireland’s oldest peerages will go the same way as the castle from which its name was derived, and fall out of use.

Trimlestown Castle, County Meath, photograph by Robert O’Byrne.

https://landedfamilies.blogspot.com/search/label/Ireland?updated-max=2020-04-02T14:59:00%2B01:00&max-results=20&start=5&by-date=false

Barnewall of Trimlestown Castle and Turvey House, Barons Trimlestown and Viscounts Barnewall of Kingsland 

he Barnewall family has its roots deep in the soup of myth and legend that is the genealogy of medieval Britain and Ireland. It is said that ‘Le Sieur de Barneville’ hailed from Brittany and was one of the companions of William the Conqueror when he invaded England in 1066, but neither this name nor its many variants (de Barneville; de Barneval, Barnewill, Barnwell etc) seem to occur in Domesday Book. A century later, some members of the family were granted lands in Ireland and settled there, only to be slain by the native Irish. The sole survivor was Hugh (or Ulphran) de Barneville, who was away studying law in England. He is said to have made a fresh start with a grant of lands from King John at Drymnagh and Tyrenure in the Vale of Dublin which his descendants retained until the early 17th century. By the 14th century, they also owned Crickstown in Co. Meath, and Sir Christopher de Barneval (fl. 1386), with whom the genealogy below begins, was seated there. Many of the early generations of the family were both knights involved in military service and lawyers, and from the time the earliest records begin in the 15th century they were receiving their legal training at the inns of court in London. This metropolitan experience and the sophistication it bred meant that they were in demand as administrators and judges back in Ireland. Sir Christopher Barnewall (d. 1446), who was probably trained in London, was appointed a Serjeant-at-Law in Ireland in 1408, King’s Serjeant in 1420, and went on to be Chief Justice of Kings Bench from 1435 and Lord Treasurer of Ireland from 1437. He had two recorded sons, the elder of whom, Sir Nicholas Barnewall (d. c.1465), was Chief Justice of King’s Bench, 1457-63 and inherited Crickstown, and the younger of whom, Sir Robert Barnewall (d. c.1471), pursued a military career in the service of the Duke of York and was raised to the peerage as Baron Trimleston (later usually spelled Trimlestown) in 1461. Sir Nicholas’ descendants continued to hold Crickstown into the 17th century, and a cadet branch of the family became Viscounts Barnewall of Kingsland in 1646. 
 
For the moment, however, I want to stay with Sir Robert Barnewall (d. c.1471), 1st Baron Trimlestown, and his descendants. Sir Robert himself married  the heiress of the Le Brun family, who brought him a significant property in Co. Meath, including Trimlestown itself, where he seems to have erected the castle of which parts stand today, albeit in a ruinous condition. His property descended to his eldest son, Sir Christopher Barnewall (d. by 1513), 2nd Baron Trimlestown, who was involved in the Yorkist conspiracy to pass off Lambert Simnel as one of the murdered Princes in the Tower. He can only have been peripherally involved, however, for he was pardoned for his part in the affair and went on to see important military service under King Henry VII’s Lord Deputy in Ireland, the Earl of Kildare. His two sons, John Barnewall (1470-1538), 3rd Baron Trimlestown, and Robert Barnewall (d. by 1547), were both trained as lawyers in London, but it was the elder brother, John, who had the most distinguished career, ending up as Lord High Treasurer and finally as Lord Chancellor of Ireland, roles in which his duties seem to have been as much military as judicial. 
 
The 3rd Baron’s eldest son, Patrick Barnewell (d. c.1462), 4th Baron Trimlestown, sat in the Parliament of 1541 which acknowledged Henry VIII as King of Ireland and at the beginning of Elizabeth’s reign was ‘a ready and willing nobleman in the Queen’s service’. The divisive question of the age was, of course, the breakaway of the English Crown from the Roman Catholic Church, and the attendant dissolution of the monasteries. In England, these measures commanded majority though not universal support, but in Ireland the picture was very different. We do not really know what the personal views of the 4th and 5th Barons were on religion: they probably espoused the government’s position in public and kept to the traditional ways in private. That was at first a tenable position, but Sir Peter Barnewall (c.1540-98), 6th Baron Trimlestown, found it much more difficult to sustain and by the time of the Spanish Armada in 1588 he was recognised as a Catholic and suspected of communication with the enemy. His son, Robert Barnewall (c.1574-1639), 7th Baron Trimlestown, was loyal to the Crown, but could not refrain from protesting about the increasingly severe restrictions on Catholics, and by 1615 he was regarded as ‘a busy and violent recusant’. His grandson, Mathias Barnewall (c.1614-67), 8th Baron Trimlestown, was one of the leaders of the 1641 Catholic uprising, and was outlawed and deprived of his estates in 1642, and in 1653 exiled to County Galway. Although he recovered part of his property at the Restoration (and his son recovered more in 1667), it was all lost again by the 10th Baron, who was Colonel of a Jacobite regiment after the Battle of the Boyne. For being in arms against William III he was attainted in April 1691 and forfeited his peerage and estates. After the Treaty of Limerick, he followed James II into exile in France, where he joined the Irish Brigade and was killed at the Battle of Roumont in September 1692. His son, John Barnewall (1672-1746), was just too young to have been involved in any fighting, and although there can be little doubt that he was enthusiastic about the Jacobite cause, he managed to recover his father’s estates by July 1695. His attempts to reverse the attainder and recover the peerage were unsuccessful, however, and indeed it was asserted that the outlawry of the 8th Baron in 1642, which had never been reversed, had also had the effect of suspending the peerage. Despite the outlawry and the attainder, however, the title continued to be widely used by and about John and his successors in the 18th century in all but the most official documents. 
 
Although the de jure 11th Baron recovered possession of his estates, there seems little doubt that he divided his time between Ireland and France, and his sons made their careers on the continent. His eldest son and heir, Robert Barnewall (c.1704-79), de jure 12th Baron Trimlestown, studied medicine and botany in France and returned to Ireland on his father’s death with a considerable reputation as a physician: skills which he made available to his Irish neighbours, whether gentle or poor. In later life he became an active advocate for the civil rights of his fellow-Catholics, and in the 1770s he was responsible for drafting a form of oath of allegiance which was acceptable to both the Government and to Irish Catholics. This opened up careers in the army to the Catholic population, and laid the foundation for further measures for Catholic relief which took place after his death. It must therefore have been something of an embarrassment to one so prominent in the Catholic cause that his two sons chose to conform to the Protestant religion. Robert was succeeded by the youngest son of his first marriage, Thomas Barnewall (c.1739-96), who lived in France until the French Revolution took place. In 1790 he left his French property in the hands of an attorney (from whom it was seized by the French state in 1793) and returned to Ireland. It was now more than a century since the attainder on the title of Baron Trimlestown, and with the incumbent a Protestant, the Government seems to have made no difficulty about reversing the attainder on the title, which was done in 1795, after which he was summoned to the Irish House of Lords as 13th Baron Trimlestown. He died the following year, and the revived title passed to his nephew, Nicholas Barnewall (1726-1813), 14th Baron Trimlestown. He had been brought up near Toulouse in France, where he was a leading Freemason, and acquired through his marriage the Chateau Lamirolles, where he lived until the French Revolution. His wife having died in 1782, he then moved to England, where he seems to have lived in Bath until he inherited the Irish estates and peerage from his uncle. In 1797 he married for a second time, taking as his wife a young Irishwoman a third of his age, and this would seem to have been the occasion for a major building campaign at Trimlestown Castle to turn it into a modern house. In 1800, however, Nicholas inherited the extensive estates of his distant kinsman, the 5th Viscount Barnewall of Kingsland, which included Turvey House, and soon afterwards Trimlestown seems to have been abandoned, perhaps with his alterations incomplete. 
 
The combination of the estates of the two most prominent branches of the Barnewall family made the 14th Baron quite rich, and he did his best to ensure that the estates and the title would remain together by entering into a new settlement in 1812 which entailed the property on his own male heirs, but with remainder to his cousin Richard Barnewall (c.1744-1826) and his heirs, who would inherit the title if his own heirs died out first. This was the basis on which the estates followed the title on the death of the 16th Baron in 1879. At the same time as drawing up the settlement, he made a new will, which made such generous provision for his widow that his son, a child of his first marriage, John Thomas Barnewall (1773-1839), 15th Baron Trimlestown – who was exactly the same age as his stepmother – went to law in an attempt to get the will set aside on grounds of undue influence. The feud expanded into a separate dispute about the payment of her jointure. Although he ultimately lost both cases, he strung matters out so that judgement was not given until 1833 and the dowager Lady Trimlestown is said to have received no benefit until 1847, by which time she had been widowed for a second time. The 15th Baron was probably responsible for remodelling Turvey House at some point after 1813, but he also seems to have had houses in London (a town house on the Grosvenor estate), Paris and Naples (Palazzo Calabritti), with a mistress in each place. They were the principal recipients of his personal wealth, for he had fallen out with his only son and daughter-in-law, who received only the entailed property. This may explain why the very comfortable finances of the 14th and 15th Barons did not continue. Thomas Barnewall (1796-1879), 16th Baron Trimlestown, leased out Turvey House and gave up the lease on his father’s London house (which the Marquess of Westminster demolished in order to build the colonnaded forecourt of Grosvenor House). He took instead a smaller house on the Grosvenor estate in Park Lane, which he remodelled in 1853. Since the 16th Baron had no surviving sons, on his death in 1879 the entailed family estates passed to a distant kinsman, Christopher Patrick Mary Barnewall (1846-91), who was the great-great-great-great-great-great grandson of the 7th Baron, who had died in 1639. With such a very distant connection, it was obviously difficult to conclusively prove his right to the peerage, and a claim was not submitted to the Committee of Privileges of the House of Lords until 1891. A decision had still not been made when Christopher died in 1893, but his brother Charles Aloysius Barnewall (1861-1937) was soon afterwards confirmed as 18th Baron Trimlestown (Christopher being counted as the 17th Baron). Once again, no personal wealth accompanied the title and entailed estates, and since the new Lord Trimlestown’s family had been gentlemen farmers in County Meath for many generations, he was very much the archetypal improverished Irish peer. He sold Turvey House, which had been tenanted for many years, in about 1902. In 1907 he inherited, perhaps unexpectedly, Bloomsbury House in County Meath, but after living there briefly in the years around the First World War, that too was sold in 1920. As an aside, it may be noted that in 1930, the young John Betjeman became rather obsessed by the combination of ancient lineage and complete obscurity which was represented most notably by Lord Trimlestown, and sought him out at Bloomsbury, only to find that he had sold the place a decade before. 
 
Despite the sales, Lord Trimlestown still owned more than 6,000 acres at his death in 1937. His heir was his son, Charles Aloysius Barnewall (1899-1990), 19th Baron Trimlestown, who farmed in Devon, and it is not clear when any remaining Irish property was sold. The 19th Baron left two sons, who succeeded in turn to the title. The present peer, Raymond Charles Barnewall (b. 1930), 21st Baron Trimlestown, also farmed in Devon until his retirement and now lives in Surrey. He is unmarried and there is no known heir to the peerage, which will become dormant on his death. It seems entirely possible that there is a legitimate heir amongst the many descendants who must exist of the earlier barons, but the chances of any of them being able to prove that they have the senior claim seem much more remote. 
 
To return to the early period of the Barnewall family, the second son of Sir Christopher Barnewall (fl. 1386) was John Barnewall (fl. 1426) of Frankestown (Co. Meath). His son, Sir Richard Barnewall settled at Fieldston in the parish of Clonmethan (Co. Dublin), which was inherited in due course by his grandson, Sir Patrick Barnewall (d. 1552). Sir Patrick, like his contemporaries in the Trimlestown branch of the family, was trained as a lawyer in London, at Grays Inn, and became a serjeant-at-law in Ireland, King’s Serjeant and Solicitor General, 1534-50, and finally Master of the Rolls in Ireland, 1550-52. He was responsible for securing the establishment of an inn of court in Dublin (King’s Inns) in 1538, and was also an MP in the Irish parliament. Although he initially opposed the dissolution of the monasteries, he was granted the sites and lands of Gracedieu Priory in Co. Dublin and Knocktopher Abbey in Co. Kilkenny, as well as leases of some of the lands of St Patrick’s Cathedral, Dublin in the parishes of Swords and Clonmethan where his other lands lay. This generous greasing of the wheels of the Reformation overcame his scruples and laid the foundations of his descendants’ prosperity. His son and heir, Sir Christopher Barnewall (1522-75), was, however, a man of stronger principles, and although not so quixotic as to disclaim his inheritance of monastic lands, he emerged as a steadfast opponent of the Protestant administration, who was willing to shelter the priest and future martyr, Edmund Campion, for a few days in 1569. In 1556 he was granted the Turvey estate at Donabate, on which he built Turvey House, reputedly using stone from Gracedieu Priory. Turvey House became the principal seat of his descendants for several hundred years. His eldest surviving son and heir, Sir Patrick Barnewall (c.1558-1622) was also a committed Catholic and an even more outspoken critic of the Government’s religious policy – as a result of which he spent short periods in prison or under house arrest on several occasions – but he balanced this with a personal loyalty to successive monarchs and marriage ties with the Protestant hierarchy that offered him some protection.  
 
Sir Patrick was succeeded at Turvey House by his son, Sir Nicholas Barnewall (1592-1663), who at the outbreak of the Rebellion of 1641 had a commission to raise such troops as he could muster for the defence of County Dublin. This must have severely tested his loyalties, since many of his friends and relatives joined the rebels (his kinsman Lord Trimlestown and his son-in-law, Lord Gormanston were among the leaders), and perhaps to avoid testing his loyalty too far he was allowed to travel to London, and later to settle in Wales, where his mother’s family had lands. Despite his disagreements with the Government, he remained strongly Royalist, and in 1642, when the Civil War broke out in England, his son Patrick became a commander in the Royalist army.  In 1644 he returned to Ireland, where he continued to keep out of politics as much as possible, and in 1646 he was rewarded for his masterly inactivity by being raised to the peerage as Viscount Barnewall of Kingsland (which was often, though incorrectly, abbreviated to Viscount Kingsland). Although in the 1650s he was charged with complicity in a plot against the Lord Protector, briefly imprisoned, and his estates in the Pale sequestered, he recovered Turvey House in 1658 and the rest at the Restoration. 
 
When the 1st Viscount died in 1663 he was succeeded by his eldest surviving son, Henry Barnewall (c.1627-88), 2nd Viscount Barnewall of Kingsland, who seems to have been less politically engaged than his father. However his son, Nicholas Barnewall (1668-1725), the 3rd Viscount, was inevitably caught up in the events of 1688-91. As a strong Royalist and a Catholic, it is hardly surprising that he took his seat in James II’s Parliament of 1689, or that he was later an officer in the Jacobite army. He was outlawed for his offences, but under the terms of the Treaty of Limerick in 1691 the outlawry was reversed and he was allowed to return to his estates. He may have spent some time in France at the exiled Court of James II, but the evidence for this is sparse. All that is known for certain is that his wife spent sometime at St. Germain with her mother, then Duchess of Tyrconnel, and that his elder son, Henry Benedict Barnewall (1709-74) had the Cardinal Duke of York as a godfather, which may imply that the baptism took place in France. Henry Benedict, who succeeded as 4th Viscount while still a minor in 1725, became a leading Irish freemason. He was married, but had no issue, so at his death in 1774 his title and property descended to his nephew, George Barnewall (1758-1800), 5th Viscount. He had been brought up in London as a Protestant, and he was therefore eligible to take up his seat in the Irish House of Lords, which he did in 1787. However, at some point in the 1790s, when several of his kinsmen were scrambling to get out of France, he moved there for reasons which are now obscure. One version of events says that he was confined in a lunatic asylum there, but his will, written shortly before his death, was proved without demur, so this is unlikely. 
 
What happened to the peerage after 1800 is the stuff of romantic legend. The 5th Viscount having no sons or other obvious heirs, the viscountcy became dormant on his death. A young and uncouth Dublin waiter called Matthew Barnewall (d. 1834) believed himself to be descended from the Hon. Francis Barnewall (c.1629-97), a younger son of the 1st Viscount, and in the 1790s, hearing a false report that the 5th Viscount had died in France, he ‘mustered a strong force of the employees of the taverns and the market… and with that formidable army, proceeded forthwith to Turvey… of which he took instant possession. There he cut down timber, lighted bonfires, and for some short time indulged in the exercise of rude hospitality to the companions who had escorted him’, before Lord Trimlestown, who was acting either as guardian or attorney of the 5th Viscount, applied to the court of Chancery and secured his ejection and committal to Newgate Prison on charges of contempt. There he came to the attention of a solicitor called Hitchcock, who became convinced that he boy might really be heir to the peerage, and set about proving it at his own expense, which he was eventually able to do to the satisfaction of the Committee of Privileges of the House of Lords, and the dormancy was ended in Matthew’s favour in 1814. The estates had, however, been bequeathed by the 5th Viscount to Lord Trimlestown, so the peerage was rather an empty honour, although a state pension of £500 a year was granted to the 6th Viscount for life. The 6th Viscount was thrice married, but had no surviving sons, so on his death in 1834 the peerage again became dormant. It was quickly claimed by one Capt Thomas Barnewall, whose petition to the House of Lords was never adjudicated on, but modern scholarship suggests that it was ill-founded, in that his claim that his great-grandfather. Col James Barnewall, was the sixth son of the 1st Viscount Barnewall was incorrect; he was in fact the second husband of the 1st Viscount’s daughter, Mabel, Countess of Fingall. So in 1834 the title became extinct. There continued, however, to be a Lady Kingsland as late as 1890, for the 6th Viscount’s widow survived him for many years. Having been left very little by her husband, she was defrauded of the little she did have by her own brother, and subsequently lived a life of absolute penury in a single room in a tumble-down lodging house in Lambeth, where she and her daughter subsisted on what they earned sewing shirts as piecework, and occasional parish relief. She came to public attention in 1878, when belatedly she made an application to the Universal Benefit Society for financial assistance, and with this help, she was able to live out her last years in slightly more genteel poverty. 
 
The last branch of the family to be explored is that settled at Bloomsbury (Co. Meath). Joseph Barnewall (1781-1852), who rented Bloomsbury from 1829 and bought the freehold in 1835, was the youngest son of Richard Barnewall (c.1744-1826), on whom the 14th Baron Trimlestown had settled his estates in default of his own heirs. Since there is no evidence that he pursued a career he presumably inherited a sufficient sum from his father or through his marriage to make the purchase. Bloomsbury was not a large house at the time, but his elder son, Richard Barnewall (1821-66) doubled its size in 1858. He had no children, so on his early death it passed to his brother, Thomas Barnewall (1825-98), who died unmarried and left it to his sister, Katherine Barnewall (c.1824-1907). Having no close relatives, she chose to leave the property to her distant kinsman, the 18th Baron Trimlestown, who as we have seen was impoverished and obliged to sell off parts of the estate. He occupied Bloomsbury for a time but sold it in about 1920. 
 
The major branch of the family which I have not considered in this post was the senior line, who were established at Crickston (Co. Meath) in the 15th-17th centuries. I have traced their descent below only in so far as is necessary to show the relationship between Barons Trimlestown and the Viscounts Barnewall of Kingsland, who were a cadet branch of the Crickston family. In the 1620s, the latter acquired a baronetcy, and they may have built a new fortified house at Crickston, although if so it was destroyed a few years later during the Civil War. Although their baronetcy is still in existence, the current baronet lives in Australia, and the descent of the honour was early separated from significant landed possessions in Ireland.  I cannot see that any of the holders of the title have possessed a country house that would qualify them for detailed study here, but if anyone knows differently I should be very pleased to hear from them. 
 

Trimlestown Castle, Co Meath (aka Trimblestown Castle) 

 
The massive and imposing ruins of the late medieval castle built by the Barnewalls in the 15th century stand on the east bank of the Trimlestown River, some three miles west of Trim. The walls still rise for a full three storeys, with a big south-west corner tower and battlemented wall-heads that give it a romantic silhouette. The castle forms a block 114 feet long and 40 feet wide at the southern end, where the tower stands, but narrows to a fraction of that at the north end. Ivy now covers a shield on the tower said to have borne the arms of the Barnewall and Nugent families, which may suggest that the tower was an addition of the time of the 6th Lord Trimlestown (d. 1598), who married Katherine Nugent. Internally the building is dominated by a two-storey vaulted great hall of 52 ft by 17 ft, that faces towards the river and is marked by massive tapering buttresses, though this is now partially filled with the rubble of collapsed walls. The floors above the vault seem to have had timber floors, and little is therefore left of them. The corner tower is also barrel-vaulted at first-floor level. 

The medieval and 16th century castle was evidently damaged in the Civil War, and although the family recovered possession of it fairly quickly, little was done by way of improvements until the 18th century. In 1686, the 9th Baron told his son that he had made ‘considerable improvements’, but this seems to have meant that he had put the castle into repair, for he went on that there was now ‘only a good house wanting’, and suggesting that ‘some little building or improvements’ could be made ‘without incommoding yourself or the fortune I leave you’. But whatever the 10th Baron’s intentions in this matter, they were frustrated by his attainder in 1691 and death the following year. It seems probable that improvements had been made by 1753, when Richard Pococke visited. He described the great avenue leading to the house and church from the Trim road, and says the house is ‘built [on]to an ancient Castle, that was mostly destroyed in Olivers time’, before waxing lyrical about the botanical curiosities which Robert Barnewall (the 12th Baron Trimlestown) had imported. 

A vintage photo of a castle

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Trimlestown Castle: an early 19th century engraving showing the east front as altered c.1800. It had probably already been abandoned by this date. 

Further changes were made to the northern end of the site in about 1790-1800, either by the 13th Baron, who returned to England in 1790 and died in 1796, or after the second marriage in 1797 of his nephew, the 14th Baron. It appears that until then another square tower stood at the north-east corner, creating a Z-plan layout like that of some 16th century Scottish castles. This north-east tower was demolished in about 1800 to allow the creation of a new east front, the main feature of which is a three-storey bow, with three windows on each floor and miniature battlements at the top. Similarities with work undertaken at Louth Castle around the same time have led to the suggestion that Richard Johnston might have been the architect responsible in both instances, but there is no documentary evidence for this. In 1800, Lord Trimlestown inherited Turvey House in Co. Dublin, and in due course the family moved there, leaving Trimlestown Castle to slip into decay.  

It was evidently still habitable in about 1840, when it was fully roofed and there were a kitchen garden and orchards around the house, but in 1849 Sir William Wilde called it ‘forsaken and neglected, a perfect ruin’. Shortly afterwards, a Dublin merchant called Fagan (perhaps the same man as rented Turvey House) rented the place and attempted to arrest the decay by putting on a new roof, enabling his successor – a farming tenant – to occupy the building. The new roof can only have been partial, however, for by the 1860s the northern end was roofless and all trace of polite grounds had disappeared. By 1915, the demesne was part of a successful stud, owned by Frank Barbour, who built a new house and stables nearby. 
 
Descent: Christopher Browne/Le Brun; to daughter Elizabeth, wife of Sir Robert Barnewall (d. c.1471), 1st Baron Trimlestown; to son, Christopher Barnewall (d. by 1513), 2nd Baron Trimlestown; to son, Sir John Barnewall (d. 1538), 3rd Baron Trimlestown; to son, Patrick Barnewall (d. c.1562), 4th Baron Trimlestown; to son, Sir Robert Barnewall (d. 1573), 5th Baron Trimlestown; to brother, Sir Peter Barnewall (d. 1598), 6th Baron Trimlestown; to son, Robert Barnewall (d. 1639), 7th Baron Trimlestown; to grandson, Matthias Barnewall (c.1614-67), 8th Baron Trimlestown; to son, Robert Barnewall (c.1640-87), 9th Baron Trimlestown; to son, Matthias Barnewall (c.1670-92), 10th Baron Trimlestown, who was attainted; seized by Crown and granted to Henry Sydney (1641-1704), 1st Earl of Romney, but returned in 1695 to John Barnewall (1672-1746), de jure 11th Baron Trimlestown; to son, Robert Barnewall (c.1705-79), de jure 12th Baron Trimlestown; to son, Thomas Barnewall (c.1739-96), 13th Baron Trimlestown; to cousin, Nicholas Barnewall (1726-1813), 14th Baron Trimlestown; to son, John Thomas Barnewall (1773-1839), 15th Baron Trimlestown; to son, Thomas Barnewall (1796-1879), 16th Baron Trimlestown; to kinsman, Christopher Patrick Mary Barnewall (1846-91), 17th Baron Trimlestown; to brother, Charles Aloysius Barnewall (1861-1937), 18th Baron Trimlestown, who sold it before 1915 to Frank Barbour. 

Barnewall family of Trimlestown, Barons Trimlestown 

 
Barnewall, Sir Christopher (d. 1446), kt. Son of Sir Christopher de Barneval (fl. 1386) [for whom see below, under Barnewall of Turvey House, Viscounts Barnewall of Kingsland] and his wife Eleanor, daughter of Sir Nicholas Rochford of Rathcoffie (Co. Kildare) and Kilbride (Co. Meath). Serjeant-at-law in Ireland, 1408 and King’s Serjeant, 1420-34; a justice of Kings Bench, 1434-46 (Chief Justice, 1435-37, 1437-46). Deputy Lord Treasurer of Ireland, 1430-35 and Lord Treasurer, 1437-46. He married Matilda Drake, daughter and heiress of the last feudal lord of Drakestown and Drakerath, and had issue: 
(1) Sir Nicholas Barnewall (d. c.1465); Treasurer of the Liberty of Trim, 1436-43; Chief Justice of Kings Bench, 1457-63; knighted 1460; married Ismay (who m2, Sir Robert Bold and died about 1478), daughter and heiress of Sir Robert Serjeant of Castleknock (Co. Dublin) and had issue three sons [from whom descended the Barnewalls of Crickstown and of Dunbrow]; living in 1465 but probably died soon afterwards; 
(2) Sir Robert Barnewall (d. c.1471), kt. and 1st Baron Trimlestown (q.v.). 
He inherited Crickstown Castle (Co. Meath) from his father. 
He died about the beginning of October 1446. His wife’s date of death is unknown. 

Barnewall, Sir Robert (d. c.1471), kt., 1st Baron Trimlestown. Younger son of Sir Christopher Barnewall (d. 1446) of Crickstown and his wife Matilda Drake. He was knighted in about 1449 while on campaign with the Duke of York, and was made an Irish Privy Councillor for life and raised to the peerage as Baron Trimlestown, 4 March 1461. It is the earliest Irish peerage to have been created by patent (earlier peerages had been created only by writ of summons). He married* Anne alias Elizabeth, daughter and heiress of Christopher Browne (or Le Brun) of Roebuck (Co. Dublin) and had issue including: 
(1) Christopher Barnewall (d. by 1513), 2nd Baron Trimlestown (q.v.); 
(2) Hon. Thomas Barnewall, of Irishtown; married Elizabeth Cardiff and had issue one daughter (who married Sir Bartholomew Dill of Riverston). 
Through his marriage he inherited a half-share in the lordship of Athboy (Co. Meath), including the manor of Trimlestown, where he settled. 
He died about 1471/2. His wife’s date of death is unknown.  
* Lodge’s Peerage of Ireland says he married 2nd, Anne, daughter of Sir Thomas Plunkett, but this seems unlikely as she would have been his great-great-niece.

 
Barnewall, Sir Christopher (d. by 1513), 2nd Baron Trimlestown. Son of Sir Robert Barnewall (d. c.1471), 1st Baron Trimlestown, and his first wife, Anne or Elizabeth, daughter and heiress of Christopher Browne of Roebuck (Co. Dublin). He was studying law in London in 1460 and succeeded his father as 2nd Baron, c.1471. He may have been knighted before that, but no record of his knighthood has been found. He was lucky to be one of the eight Irish peers pardoned for his involvement in the Yorkist conspiracy of 1488, in which Lambert Simnel impersonated one of the Princes in the Tower, and was obliged to take the oath of allegiance before the King’s envoy in July 1488. He sat in the Irish Parliament in 1491 and 1493 and fought under the Lord Deputy, the Earl of Kildare, at the Battle of Knockdoe in 1504. He married Elizabeth, daughter of Sir Thomas Plunkett of Rathmore, and had issue including: 
(1) John Barnewall (1470-1538), 3rd Baron Trimlestown (q.v.); 
(2) Hon. Robert Barnewall (d. by 1547); educated at Grays Inn (admitted before 1520); lessee of the Kings Inn, Dublin, 1541; ancestor of the Barnewalls of Roestown (Co. Meath), which estate he acquired through his first marriage to Johanna Rowe, by whom he had three sons and two daughters; he married 2nd, Elizabeth (who m2, James Bathe), daughter of John Talbot of Dardiston, and had further issue four sons and six daughters; died before 1547; 
(3) Hon. Ismay Barnewall; married William Bathe of Rathseigh; 
(4) A daughter; married John Netterville of Dowth, a justice of the King’s Bench; 
(5) Hon. Alison Barnewall; married Sir Roger Barnewall (b. c.1472), kt. [for whom see below, under Barnewall of Turvey House, Viscounts Barnewall of Kingsland] and had issue. 
He inherited Trimlestown from his father in about 1471. 
He died between 1504 and 1513. On a roadside cross about 4 miles south of Drogheda Archbishop Octavian of Armagh promised an indulgence of thirty days to those performing an Our Father and a Hail Mary for the souls of him and his wife. His wife was also dead by June 1513.

…[see website]

A person standing in front of a mirror posing for the camera

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Nicholas Barnewall (1726-1813),  
14th Baron Trimlestown 

Barnewall, Nicholas (1726-1813), 14th Baron Trimlestown. Elder son of Richard Barnewall (fl. 1726-68) and his wife Frances, daughter of Nicholas Barnewall, 3rd Viscount Barnewall of Kingsland, born 29 June 1726. He was a leading figure in freemasonry in Toulouse until he fled to England from the French Revolution in about 1790. He succeeded his cousin as 14th Baron, 24/29 December 1796. In 1799 he was President of the Bath Harmonic Society and presumably then living in that city. He married 1st, 1 November 1768, Maria Henrietta (c.1730-82), only daughter of Joseph d’Auguin, President of the Parliament of Toulouse (France), and 2nd, 8 August 1797, Alicia (1773-1860), second daughter of Lt-Gen. Charles Eustace of Robertstown (Co. Kildare), and had issue: 
(1.1) Richard Barnewall (b. 1770), born August 1770; died in infancy; 
(1.2) Hon. Rosalie Barnewall (c.1771-1864), born about 1771; married, 3 December 1795, Peter, Count D’Alton (d. 1851) of Grenanstown (Co. Tipperary), and had issue two sons and one daughter; died in Florence (Italy), 2 February 1864; 
(1.3) John Thomas Barnewall (1773-1839), 15th Baron Trimlestown (q.v.). 
After his marriage, he lived at the Chateau Lamirolles, Verdun-sur-Garonne until the French Revolution, when he fled to England, and he subsequently divided his time between England and Ireland. He inherited Turvey House and the Barnewall estates at Roebuck (Co. Dublin) and in Galway and Offaly on the death of the 5th Viscount Barnewall of Kingsland in 1800, and entailed these estates on his male heirs in 1812. He fitted up one room in Roebuck Castle as a theatre before 1795, but sold the castle soon after 1800. In London he had a town house in Portland Place by 1810. 
He died 17 April 1813. His will, which made extensive provision for his widow, was proved in Dublin in 1813 but contested by his son, and although a compromise was agreed in 1833 she did not actually receive anything until 1847! His first wife died in May 1782. His widow married 2nd, 24 July 1814 at Donabate (Co. Dublin), Lt-Gen. Sir Evan Lloyd (1768-1846) of Ferney Hall (Shrops.) and had issue one son and two daughters; she died at Stanton Lacy House (Shrops.), 25 November 1860. 
 
Barnewall, John Thomas (1773-1839), 15th Baron Trimlestown. Only surviving son of Nicholas Barnewall (1726-1813), 14th Baron Trimlestown, and his first wife, Maria Henrietta, only daughter of Joseph d’Auguin of Toulouse (France), born in France, 29 January 1773. Member of the Royal Irish Academy. In 1812 The Globe noted that he had ‘distinguished himself by some eloquent and impressive addresses’ at popular assemblies in support of Catholic emancipation. He succeeded his father as 15th Baron, 17 April 1813, but was aggrieved by the terms of his will, which he felt made an unreasonably generous provision for his stepmother. He accordingly tried to have the will overturned on the grounds of her undue influence, and the matter was not finally settled until shortly before his death; he was also at law with his stepmother in a dispute over the arrangements for the payment of her jointure, which was not settled until 1843. He seems also, from the terms of his will, to have fallen out with his son and daughter-in-law, who received no share of his personal effects. He married, 16 January 1793, Maria Theresa (d. 1824), daughter of the Irish scientist and eccentric, Richard Kirwan of Cregg Castle (Co. Galway), and had issue: 
(1) Thomas Barnewall (1796-1879), 16th Baron Trimlestown (q.v.); 
(2) Hon. Martha Henrietta Barnewall (1800-36), baptised at Bath RC Church, 28 July 1800; died unmarried in Bath, 10 April 1836. 
After the death of his wife he apparently solaced himself with mistresses: his ‘dear friend’ Eugenia Ponti who lived with him in Naples (to whom he left 50,000 francs*), ‘Heloisa Goury Widow Parry’ in London, who was one of his principal legatees, and Caroline, Marquise de Bailliet in Paris (to whom he left 40,000 francs*). 
He inherited Turvey House from his father in 1813. He had a house in London, adjoining Grosvenor House, which was purchased after his death by the Marquess of Westminster and demolished to allow the enlargement of Grosvenor House. He seems also to have had a house in Paris, the contents of which were dispersed to friends and relatives by his will, and at the time of his death he was living at the Palazzo Calabritti in Naples. 
He died in Naples (Italy), 7 October 1839; his will was proved 18 February 1840. His wife died 10 September or 12 October 1824. 
* 50,000 fr. was about £2,000 and 40,000 fr. about £1,600 at the then prevailing rate of exchange. 
 
Barnewall, Thomas (1796-1879), 16th Baron Trimlestown. Only son of John Thomas Barnewall (1773-1839), 15th Baron Trimlestown, and his wife Maria Theresa, daughter of Richard Kirwan of Cregg (Co. Galway), born 14 April 1796. High Sheriff of Co. Dublin, 1830. He succeeded his father as 16th Baron, 7 October 1839, and continued his father’s legal dispute with his grandfather’s widow until judgement was finally given against him in 1843. He was a founder member of the Society for Irishmen in London, 1844, and in 1848 was one of the few Catholic gentry to join the nationalist Irish Confederacy. He married, 3 November 1836 at Twickenham (Middx), Margaret Randalina (d. 1872), daughter of Philip Roche, and had issue: 
(1) A son (b. & d. 1837), born 22 August 1837; died in infancy, 27 August 1837; 
(2) Hon. Anna Maria Louisa Barnewall (1839-1914), born 8 May 1839; married, 4 June 1868, Robert Henry Elliot DL (1837-1914) of Clifton Park (Roxburghs.) and Ballybrittas (Co. Offaly), and had issue one son; died at sea on S.S. Arabia, 16 April 1914 and was buried at Linton (Roxburghs.); her will was confirmed 27 January 1915 (estate £1,475). 
He inherited Turvey House from his father in 1839, but leased it out. His gave up the lease on his father’s London town house in exchange for what is now 129 Park Lane, which he remodelled in 1853 to the designs of Thomas Cundy II (for the Grosvenor estate) and George Legg (for Lord Trimlestown). 
He died 4 August 1879 and was buried at Linton; his will was proved 6 September 1879 (effects in England under £80,000; in Ireland, £6,518). His wife died at Ryde (Isle of Wight), 4 September 1872; administration of her goods was granted 17 December 1872 (effects under £9,000). 
 
Barnewall, Hon. Patrick (b. c.1600). Second son of Robert Barnewall (c.1574-1639), 7th Baron Trimlestown, and his wife Genet, daughter of Thomas Talbot of Dardistown (Co. Meath), born in or shortly before 1600. He married 1st, Katherine, daughter of Robert Barnewall of Bremore (Co. Dublin) and 2nd, Katherine, daughter of Mathew King of Co. Kildare, and had issue: 
(1.1) Christopher Barnewall (fl. 1670) (q.v.). 
His date of death is unknown. His first wife’s date of death is unknown. His second wife’s date of death is unknown. 
 
Barnewall, Christopher (fl. 1670). Only recorded son of the Hon. Patrick Barnewall (fl. 1600) and his first wife, Katherine, daughter of Robert Barnewall of Bremore (Co. Dublin). He married 1st, [forename unknown], daughter of Gerald Nangle of Kildalkey (Co. Meath), and 2nd, 1670, Jane, daughter of Edward Tuite of Trimlestown, and had issue including: 
(1.1) Richard Barnewall (d. 1718) (q.v.); 
(1.2) Patrick Barnewall; died without issue; 
(1.3) Garrett Barnewall; 
(1.4) Peter Barnewall. 
He lived at Woodtown (Co. Meath). 
His date of death is unknown. His wife’s date of death is unknown. 
 
Barnewall, Richard (d. 1718). Eldest son of Christopher Barnewall and his wife, [forename unknown], daughter of Gerald Nangle of Kildalkey (Co. Meath). He married 1st, Aminett, sister of James Barnewall of Bremore (Co. Dublin) and widow of James Caddell, and 2nd, 3 March 1712, Bridget (d. 1755), daughter of Henry Piers of Ballydrimney (Co. Meath), and had issue: 
(1.1) Elizabeth Barnewall; married Henry Plunkett; 
(2.1) Christopher Barnewall (b. 1715) (q.v.); 
(2.2) Anne Barnewall (d. 1740); died unmarried. 
He lived at Clonylogan. 
He died in February 1717/8. His first wife died before 1712. His widow married 2nd, 1723, Robert Barnewall (b. 1702) of Moyrath (Co. Meath), son of Bartholomew Barnewall of Ballyhost (Co. Westmeath) and had further issue one son; she died in 1755. 
 
Barnewall, Christopher (b. 1715). Only son of Richard Barnewall (d. 1718) and his second wife, Bridget, daughter of Henry Piers of Ballydrimney (Co. Meath), born 1715. He married Cecilia, daughter of Matthew Dowdall of Clone (Co. Meath) and had issue: 
(1) Richard Barnewall (c.1744-1827) (q.v.); 
(2) Anne Barnewall; married, 13 October 1777, Columbus Drake (1750-1806) of Roristown (Co. Meath), elder son of Patrick Drake of Drakerath (Co. Meath), and had issue two sons and three daughters. 
He lived at Fyanstown. 
His date of death is unknown. His wife’s date of death is unknown. 
 
Barnewall, Richard (c.1744-1826). Only son of Christopher Barnewall (b. 1715) and his wife Cecilia, daughter of Matthew Dowdall of Clone (Co. Meath), born about 1744. In 1812, the 14th Baron settled the Turvey House estate on him and his descendants so that it continued to accompany the Trimlestown peerage. He married, 1764. Katherine (d. 1823?), daughter of George Byrne of Seatown, Dundalk (Co. Louth) and had issue: 
(1) Christopher Barnewall (1765-1849) (q.v.); 
(2) Patrick Barnewall (c.1773-1854); lived at Causestown; married Barbara (d. 1862), daughter of Thomas Everard of Randalstown (Co. Meath) but had no issue; died at Dalkey (Co. Dublin), 4 August 1854; 
(3) Joseph Barnewall (1781-1852) [for whom see below, Barnewall of Bloomsbury]; 
(4) Cecilia Barnewall; married 1st, John Connolly of New Haggard (Co. Meath) and 2nd, Charles Nangle (c.1786-1847) of New Haggard and Kildalkey, son of Walter Nangle, who died bankrupt. 
He lived at Fyanstown. 
He died aged 82 at Greenanstown (Co. Meath) in June 1826. His wife is said to have died in 1823. 
 
Barnewall, Christopher (1765-1849). Eldest son of Richard Barnewall (c.1744-1826) and his wife Katherine, daughter of George Byrne of Seatown, Dundalk (Co. Louth), born 3 September 1765. He married, November 1793, Anne (1772-1819?), daughter of Charles Aylmer of Painstown, and had issue including: 
(1) Esmay Mary Catherine Barnewall (1794-1879), born October 1794; married, 29 September 1836 at Ardbraccan (Co. Meath), Sir Aylmer John Barnewall (1789-1838), 9th bt., of Greenanstown (Co. Meath), and had issue one son; died in London, 5 March 1879, and was buried at Kensal Green Cemetery; 
(2) Charles Barnewall (c.1800-73) (q.v.); 
(3) Cecilia Barnewall (c.1801-82); died unmarried aged 80 in Dublin, 3 January 1882; 
(4) Anne Barnewall (b. c.1803), born about 1803; died unmarried and possibly young; 
(5) Jane Barnewall (c.1804-81); died unmarried, 20 January 1881; 
(6) Richard Barnewall (c.1806-89), born about 1806; died 11 March 1889; 
(7) Mary Barnewall (b. c.1808), born about 1808; died unmarried and possibly young. 
He lived at Meadstown (Co. Meath), where he was a tenant in 1805 but may have purchased the freehold when it was sold in that year. 
He died in Dublin aged 84 on 14 August 1849. His wife is said to have died 14 August 1819. 
 
Barnewall, Charles (c.1800-73). Elder son of Christopher Barnewall (c.1775-1849) and his wife Anne, daughter of Charles Aylmer of Painstown, born about 1800. JP for Co. Meath. In 1836 he was a member of the provisional committee promoting the Dublin & Drogheda Railway. Throughout his life, he was a locally prominent leader of the Catholic causes and campaigns, including those for the repeal of the Union, opposition to tithes and securing the rights of Catholic tenants. He married 1st, Katherine, daughter of John Connolly of New Haggard (Co. Meath) and 2nd, 9 October 1844 at St Michan’s RC Church, Dublin, Letitia (c.1825-86), daughter of Gerald Aylmer of Lyons, and had issue: 
(2.1) Hon. Katherine Barnewall (1845-1928); a nun at Wicklow as Sister Mary Dominic; granted the rank of a baron’s daughter, 2 August 1893; died 15 July 1928; 
(2.2) Christopher Patrick Mary Barnewall (1846-91), de jure 17th Baron Trimlestown (q.v.); 
(2.3) Hon. Anna Maria Barnewall (1848-1930), baptised 8 October 1848 at Templenoe (Co. Kerry); granted the rank of a baron’s daughter, 2 August 1893; died unmarried, 10 November 1930; will proved 13 January 1931 (estate £548); 
(2.4) Hon. Esmay (aka Esmina) Barbara Mary Barnewall (1850-1910), baptised at St Michael’s RC church, Kingstown, Dublin, 30 May 1850; granted the rank of a baron’s daughter, 2 August 1893; married, 21 November 1883 at St Andrew RC Church, Dublin, Nicholas Francis Haly Coppinger (1831-1905) of Monkstown (Co. Dublin) and had issue one son and one daughter; committed suicide, 6 April 1910; administration of goods (with will annexed) granted 27 April 1910 (estate £2,474); 
(2.5) Hon. Mary Jane Barnewall (1851-1919), baptised at St Michael’s RC church, Kingstown, Dublin, 11 September 1851; a sister of Presentation of the Blessed Virgin Mary at Lismore, New South Wales (Australia) as Sister Berchmans; granted the rank of a baron’s daughter, 2 August 1893; died 18 August 1919; 
(2.6) Hon. Helen Cecilia Mary Barnewall (1853-1936), baptised at St Michael’s RC church, Kingstown, Dublin, 22 November 1853; granted the rank of a baron’s daughter, 2 August 1893; died unmarried, 14 October 1936; will proved 19 December 1936 (estate £6,201); 
(2.7) Hon. Letitia Fanny Barnewall (1855-1933), born 12 February and baptised at St Michael’s RC church, Kingstown, Dublin, 18 February 1855; a sister of Presentation of the Blessed Virgin Mary at Lismore, New South Wales as Sister Ignatius; granted the rank of a baron’s daughter, 2 August 1893; died 31 January 1933; 
(2.8) Gerald Aylmer Barnewall (1856-71), born 8 May and baptised at St Michael’s RC church, Kingstown, Dublin, 13 May 1856; died young, 2 July 1871; 
(2.9) Hon. Angelina Barnewall (b. 1857), baptised at St Michael’s RC church, Kingstown, Dublin, 7 October 1857; a Sister of Mercy at Arklow (Co. Wicklow); granted the rank of a baron’s daughter, 2 August 1893; death not traced; 
(2.10) Hon. Cecilia Mary Barnewall (1859-1908), baptised at St Michael’s RC church, Kingstown, Dublin, 6 May 1859; granted the rank of a baron’s daughter, 2 August 1893; married, 5 October 1907, Maj. Henry Chamney CMG, son of Rev. Joseph Chamney DD of Ard Ronan (Co. Louth); died without issue at Rustenberg, Transvaal (South Africa), 11 July 1908; will proved 17 April 1909 (estate £635); 
(2.11) Hon. Marcella Mary Barnewall (1862-1930), born 10 October and baptised at Dalkey (Co. Dublin), 16 October 1862; granted the rank of a baron’s daughter, 2 August 1893; died unmarried, 29 October 1930; will proved 12 December 1930 (estate £1,234); 
(2.12) Charles Aloysius Barnewall (1861-1937), 18th Baron Trimlestown (q.v.); 
(2.13) Hon. Margaret Barnewall (1864-1916), born at Athboy (Co. Meath), 31 January 1864; granted the rank of a baron’s daughter, 2 August 1893; married, 19 January 1899 at St Andrew RC Church, Dublin, Bertrand Thomas Lambert (who m2, 12 June 1923 Julia More-O’Ferrell), son of Ambrose Lambert, but had no issue; died 17 July 1916; will proved 5 September 1916 (estate £287). 
He lived at Meadstown and had a house at 72 Eccles St., Dublin. 
He died in Dublin, 2 May 1873; administration of his goods was granted 9 February 1881 (effects under £200). His widow died 3 March 1886. 
 
Barnewall, Christopher Patrick Mary (1846-91), de jure 17th Baron Trimlestown. Eldest son of Charles Barnewall (d. 1873) of Meadstown and his second wife Letitia, daughter of Gerald Aylmer of Lyons, born 6 October 1846. He succeeded his distant cousin as 17th Baron, 4 August 1879, but did not seek to prove his title to the peerage until 1889 and died before the process was completed. He was unmarried and without issue. 
He inherited Turvey House from the 16th Baron in 1879, but the property was let throughout his tenure. 
He died 10 September 1891; his will was proved 29 October 1891 (estate £2,202). 
 
Barnewall, Charles Aloysius (1861-1937), 18th Baron Trimlestown. Third son of Charles Barnewall (d. 1873) of Meadstown and his second wife Letitia, daughter of Gerald Aylmer of Lyons, born 14 May and baptised at St Michael’s RC church, Kingstown, Dublin, 17 May 1861. As a young man he travelled extensively, but after his brother’s death he returned from Australia to Ireland. His elder brother having died in 1891 without establishing his right to the peerage, he proved his claim in 1893 and succeeded as 18th Baron. DL for Co. Dublin. He was a director of the Old Bushmills Distillery Company (resigned 1898). He married 1st, 26 October 1889, Margaret Theresa (c.1869-1901), daughter of Richard John Stephens of Brisbane, Queensland (Australia), 2nd, 10 December 1907, Mabel Florence (d. 1914), daughter of William Robert Shuff of Torquay (Devon), and 3rd, 12 August 1930 at Christ Church, Eltham (Kent), Josephine Francesca (d. 1945), daughter of Rt. Hon. Sir Christopher John Nixon, 1st bt., Vice-Chancellor of the National University of Ireland, and had issue: 
(1.1) Hon. Ivy Esmay Myee Barnewall (1890-1971), born 14 September 1890; married 1st, 30 April 1917, John Radcliff (d. 1953) of Nigerian civil service, eldest son of George Edward Radcliff JP of Wilmount, Kells (Co. Meath) and had issue one son (killed in action in Second World War); married 2nd, 30 April 1956, John Kidd (d. 1958), son of Thomas Kidd of Linares (Spain); said to have died in 1971, possibly in Cape Town (South Africa); 
(1.2) Hon. Marcella Hilda Charlotte Barnewall (1893-1965), born 29 June 1893; married, 4 July 1917, Maj. Charles Bathurst MC (d. 1942), son of Lancelot Bathurst, but had no issue; died 11 September 1965; 
(1.3) Hon. Letitia Anne Margaret Barnewall (1895-1938), born 23 September 1895; married, 11 June 1919 at Corpus Christi RC church, Maiden Lane, London, Lt-Col. Cuthbert Hanson Townsend (1872-1956) of Ewell (Surrey), son of Vice-Adm. Samuel Philip Townsend, and had issue one son; died 2 May 1938; will proved 12 July 1938 (estate £2,645); 
(1.4) Hon. Reginald Nicholas Francis Mary Barnewall (1897-1918), born 24 September 1897; an officer in the Leinster Regiment (Capt.) in First World War; died unmarried in the lifetime of his father when he died of wounds received in action, 24 March 1918; buried at Bronfay Farm Military Cemetery, Bray-sur-Somme (France); administration of goods granted 19 July 1918 (estate £1,908); 
(1.5) Charles Aloysius Barnewall (1899-1990), 19th Baron Trimestown (q.v.); 
(1.6) Hon. Geraldine Christina Marjory Barnewall (1900-02), born 14 June 1900; died young, 23 June 1902. 
He inherited Turvey House, which was tenanted, from his father in 1891, but sold it in c.1902. In 1907 he inherited Bloomsbury House from his distant cousin, Katherine Barnewall (c.1824-1907), but he sold it in about 1920. He lived at Loughlinstown (Co. Dublin) and in London, and is said to have still owned 6,000 acres in Ireland at the time of his death. 
He died 26 January 1937 and was buried at Mortlake (Surrey), 3 February 1937. His first wife died 9 January 1901. His second wife died 16 March 1914; her will was proved 25 April 1914 (estate £1,234 in England and £1,427 in Ireland). His widow died 15 June 1945; her will was proved 11 January 1946 (estate £9,452). 
 
Barnewall, Charles Aloysius (1899-1990), 19th Baron Trimlestown. Second but eldest surviving son of Charles Aloysius Barnewall (1861-1937), 18th Baron Trimlestown, and his first wife Margaret Theresa, daughter of Richard John Stephens of Brisbane, Queensland (Australia), born 2 June 1899. Educated at Ampleforth. He served as an officer in the Irish Guards (2nd Lt.) in the First World War. He succeeded his father as 19th Baron, 26 January 1937. He married 1st, 16 June 1926, Muriel (1894-1937), only child of Edward Oskar Schneider of Mansfield Lodge, Whalley Range, Manchester, and 2nd, 7 May 1952, Freda Kathleen (1911-87), daughter of Alfred Allan Watkins of Ross-on-Wye (Herefs), and had issue: 
(1.1) Anthony Edward Barnewall (1928-97), 20th Baron Trimlestown, born 2 February 1928; educated at Ampleforth; served in the Irish Guards, 1946-48, and was a naval architect, 1949-53; sales executive with P&O Shipping Company, 1965-74; succeeded his father as 20th Baron, 9 October 1990; lived at Boxford (Suffk) and later at Grand Rapids, Michigan (USA); married 1st, 30 September 1963 (div. 1973), Lorna Margaret Marion (1934-88), daughter of Charles Douglas Ramsey and 2nd, 14 May 1977, Mary Wonderly (1925-2006), elder daughter of Judge Thomas Francis McAllister of Grand Rapids, Michigan and formerly wife of Frederick Reese Brown (1915-2007), but had no issue; died 21 August 1997; 
(1.2) Hon. Diana Barnewall (b. 1929), born 13 October 1929; lived at Farnham (Surrey) and later at Rogate (Sussex); married, 30 October 1954 at the Brompton Oratory, London, Anthony Gerard Astley Birtwhistle (b. 1928), youngest son of James Astley Birtwhistle of Hoghton (Lancs) and Wroxham (Oxon), and had issue four daughters; 
(1.3) Raymond Charles Barnewall (b. 1930), 21st Baron Trimlestown (q.v.), born 29 December 1930; educated at Ampleforth; undertook National Service in Northern Ireland, 1949-51; dairy farmer at Dartington (Devon) until retirement; succeeded his elder brother as 21st Baron, 21 August 1997; is unmarried and without issue and has no heir to the peerage. 
He lived at Epsom (Surrey) and subsequently at Dartington (Devon) and Chiddingfold (Surrey). 
He died 9 October 1990; will proved 14 November 1990 (estate under £115,000). His first wife died 22 June 1937; her will was proved 13 August 1937 (estate £229). His second wife died 5 May 1987; her will was proved 18 September 1987 (estate under £70,000). 

Newgrove, Co Meath – ruin

Newgrove, Co Meath

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

A five bay C18 house with a pediment, containing an oculus, above a Venetian window, above a pedimented and fanlighted tripartite doorway. Buttresses at back. In 1814, the residence of Philip Reilly. Now a ruin.”

Record of Protected Structures:

Newgrove House, townland: Balngon Upper, town: Ballinlough

Stableyards, outbuildings, gates.

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.

http://meathhistoryhub.ie/houses-k-p/

Newgrove House was located in Balnagon Upper townland, Kilskyre, 6 kilometres west of Kells. The original house has long decayed but it was a medium sized house of two storeys over a basement according to Mulligan. He dated the house to probably around 1760. The house was demolished in 1983. Attached to the house was a courtyard of buildings which still stand today. The stables had unusual flooring. The main entrance to the house has been restored recently. The neighbouring estate to the east was Sylvan Park. 

The lands at Newgrove were held by various families. In the late eighteenth  century they were held by the Reilly family.  In 1774 Hugh O’Reilly was the owner. Frances, widow of Hugh O’Reilly of Newgrove, married Rev. William Maziere Brady, a Protestant minister, who was later vicar at Donaghpatrick but who later  converted to Catholicism and lived in Rome. He wrote a number of books. In Rome he became Private Chamberlain to Pius IX and Leo XIII and was created a Papal Knight. 

In 1814 the residence of Philip Reilly. Mary Reilly made a defence of her house against the Defenders in 1794. The Defenders were a tenant based secret socity agitating for better conditions for the tenants. Mary Reilly died in 1816 and the property was inherited by her nephew, Hugh O’Reilly of Rathaldron Castle. In 1835 Newgrove was the residence of Counsellor O’Reilly. It was described as a neat house of two storeys and basement, with a good garden and offices and excellent lawn. Hugh O’Reilly of Newgrove was magistrate in 1834. In 1865 Hugh sold the estate to Standish Grady Rowley of Maperath, Kells.  The property was then inherited by his son, Clotworthy Rowley, who overspent and the property was purchased by his stepmother in 1902. She sold the house and 109 acres of land to Christopher Leavy in 1919. 

Towerhill, Ballyglass, Co Mayo – ruin

Towerhill, Ballyglass, Co Mayo – lost 

Towerhill, County Mayo entrance front c. 1975, photograph William Garner, 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.

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.

“(Blake, Bt. of Menlough/PB) p. 275. “(Blake, Bt. of Menlough/PB) A two storey house of ca 1790. Entrance front of six bays with pedimented breakfront centre and round-headed rusticated doorway. Adamesque interior plasterwork. Sold post WWII to Lt-Col A.J. Blake, now a ruin” 

In Blake, Tarquin. Abandoned Mansions of Ireland. Collins Press, Cork, 2010.

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.

http://davidhicksbook.blogspot.com/search?updated-max=2018-01-10T11:43:00-08:00&max-results=7&start=5&by-date=false 

WEDNESDAY, 13 SEPTEMBER 2017 

Towerhill House 

Carnacon, Co. Mayo 

A castle surrounded by trees

Description automatically generated, Picture 
The Entrance Front of Towerhill as it once was  
and as it is today, the ruin disguised by trees and ivy Picture ( bottom) Copyright ICHC, Picture ( Top) from Walking Holidays Ireland Website 

One country house in Mayo has a direct connection with the famous Green and Red of Mayo, the colours that the GAA county footballers wear when they go to battle in CrokePark. The demesne that surrounds Towerhill House near Carnacon in County Mayo is said to have been the setting for a Gaelic football match organised by the Blake Family, for whom Towerhill was their ancestral home. It was here on the 23rd January 1887 that the local team from nearby Carnacon first wore a green and red jersey which was the origin of the colours that the Mayo team wear today. This event is commentated with a plaque at the gates that once formed the main approach to the house. The Blakes were Catholic landlords who provided employment, built a local school and also are credited with supporting the early incarnation of the Gaelic Athletic Association. Unfortunately Towerhill has not survived but has disappeared from view, surrounded by a forest of trees that obscure its very existence. The two storey over basement classical style house, unique in having a pediment on each of its four facades, is now indistinguishable from the ivy covered hulk we see today. Towerhill was once the home of the prominent Blake family who descended from John Blake, the 4th son of Sir Valentine Blake of Menlo in Galway. The Blakes of Towerhill were relatives of prominent families in the locatity such as the Blakes of Ballinafad House and the Moore Family of Moore Hall. The writer, George Moore once said ”Moore Hall had always seemed to me to be a mansion house inferior to Clogher and Tower Hill‘.  

An old stone building

Description automatically generated, Picture 
The Entrance Gates to Towerhill near 
Carnacon, Co. Mayo Picture ( above)  Copyright ICHC  

The mansion near Carnacon in Mayo was said to have been built for Isidore Blake, who died in December 1818, so the only thing known is that the house was built prior to this date. However Isidore married in 1767 which could give us a better indication of when the house was built. Isidore’s son, Maurice Blake, born in 1771, married Maria O’Connor, the daughter of Valentine O’Connor in August 1803. The marriage produced a son and heir to Towerhill, Valentine O’Connor Blake who was born in 1808. Valentine O’Connor Blake married the Honourable Margaret Mary ffrench the daughter of Charles Austin ffrench, 3rd Baron ffrench of Castle ffrench in Galway. Lord ffrench died in September 1860, aged 74 years, and strangely he is buried in the Blake family vault outside the church in Carnacon rather than in the ffrench family vault. Valentine O’Connor Blake was the High Sheriff in Mayo in 1839 and was said to have been one of the first Catholics since the Reformation to hold that position. Valentine O’Connor Blake died in 1879, aged 71 at St. Kevin’s, Bray in Co. Wicklow where it is said he had been staying for a number of months. His remains were conveyed by rail to Claremorris Station where they were met by horse drawn hearse and brought to Towerhill. Here they lay until his burial in nearby Carnacon in the Blake family vault where his hearse was followed by a procession of  250 of the tenants of the estate.  

A castle surrounded by a body of water

Description automatically generated, Picture 
 
Bunowen Castle near Ballyconnely,Galway, 
 The summer residence of the Blake Family  
from Towerhill Picture ( above)  Copyright ICHC  

Another property owned by the Blakes of Towerhill was Bunowen Castle in Co. Galway which they used as a summer residence due to its maritime location. In 1853, Valentine O’Connor Blake bought Bunowen Castle and the estate in the parish of Ballindoon, Co Galway, from John Augustus O’Neill. Valentine improved the castle and made it habitable. In the 1870’s, Valentine O’Connor Blake of Towerhill and BunowenCastle owned 4,198 acres in county Mayo and 7,690 acres in county Galway. The demesne around the house of Towerhill alone extended to over 300 acres. After the death of Valentine O’Connor Blake, Towerhill passed to his eldest son, Maurice and Bunowen passed to his second son, Charles, who made further improvements to the castle and left it ‘ as imposing as any of the other Galway mansions’. However Charles choose not to live there as he had purchased in 1880, Heath House at Maryborough and therefore a younger brother Thomas went to live at Bunowen. The Galwayproperty was sold to the Congested Districts Board in 1909 and half the Mayo property in February 1914. Bunowen Castle is a ruin today, however it seems to have faired slightly better than Towerhill. 

A picture containing text, map

Description automatically generated, Picture 
A site map showing the extent of the Towerhill Demense Picture ( above)  Copyright OSI 

In 1894, Towerhill is recorded as being the fine home of Colonel Maurice Blake, he had married Jeanette in 1863, the only daughter of a surgeon named Pierce O’Reilly from Dublin. Colonel Blake was the High Sheriff of Mayo, a Colonel in the Mayo Militia and was the Foreman of the Grand Jury. At the time of the 1901 census, Maurice Blake and his wife, Jeannette are living in Towerhill with their son Valentine aged 34 and his three sisters Olivia aged 35, Georgina aged 22 and Margaret aged 25. Maurice’s brother, Thomas, who is a barrister aged 51 and  listed as being born at Towerhill is also present in the house. Staff in the house on the night of the census extended to five female servants and a groom.  In the same year, a serious fire occurred in the stables of Towerhill which threatened all the buildings in the yard near the rear of the house. Colonel Blake dispatched his three daughters on bicycles, to cycle through the village and gather as many people as possible to help put out the fire. Horses, carriages and carts were rescued from the stables before the roof collapsed. A section of the roof near the adjoining buildings was pulled down in case the fire might spread. By 1904, plans were afoot by the local tenants for the estate to be broken up and the land sold to them, if the sale price was agreeable to all parties involved. At the time of the 1911 census, Maurice Blake is still in residence in Towerhill, he is now aged 73, is a retired Colonel, a Roman Catholic and his birthplace is listed as being Dublin. He shares the mansion with his wife, Jeannette aged 69, their daughters Olivia, aged 45, Georgina, aged 42 and Margaret aged 36 all of whom were born in Dublin and are unmarried. Maurice’s son Valentine also lives in Towerhill, he is a retired Captain aged 44 and is also unmarried. Staff in Towerhill included five female servants and Michael Hayden aged 28 from Tipperary who is the Butler. The house is recorded as having 31 rooms and 30 outbuildings. 

A view of a forest

Description automatically generated, Picture 
A surviving fragment of the window that once 
over looked the landing of the staircase Picture ( above)  Copyright ICHC 

Some of Maurice Blake’s children predeceased him, his daughter Cecelia Mary died in 1888 and Frances Mary died in 1897. In 1913, Maurice’s second son Charles died at Towerhill of pneumonia which developed after a day out shooting on the estate.  In April 1915, Colonel Maurice Charles Joseph Blake died aged 77 years and left an estate valued at £5,938.00. His wife Jeannette died just over a year later in Dublin when visiting friends in December 1916, followed by the death of her daughter Margaret Mary in October 1938. Towerhill passed to the eldest son Valentine  while his sisters Georgina and Olivia Blake continued to live in the mansion with him. This is evident from the number of advertisements they placed in the 1940’s looking for suitable parlour maids. However it was the death of Valentine that heralded the end for Towerhill as the home of the Blake family. Valentine Joseph Blake died, unmarried, aged 81, in July 1947 at Towerhill and left an estate in his will valued at £8,705. His two sisters remained living in the house for roughly another year after which they auctioned the contents in 1948. The auction took place over a number of days after which, the sisters moved to Loftus Hall, a convent, in Co. Wexford. Allen and Townsend Auctioneers were tasked with the sale that included furniture, live stock, farm implements and household effects to take place on the 18th and 19th May 1948. Items sold included a full sized billiard table, full sized concert grand piano and the contents of nine bedrooms. It was recorded prior to the sale that the house contained  ‘many fine apartments, antique furniture and portraits in oils of various members of the family adorn the walls’ howeverthere is no mention made of any of the family portraits being sold. 

A large stone building

Description automatically generated, Picture 
The memorial over the Blake Family vault in Carnacon Church which is 
located near Towerhill Picture ( above)  Copyright ICHC  

With the departure of the sisters to Wexford, in June 1949, a demolition sale was announced for Towerhill, where ‘first class’ materials were available for purchase. The walls of Towerhill were to be stripped bare as the advertisement speaks of a ‘Highly Important Demolition Auction’ where items for sale include  ‘ Timber, Joists, Rafters, Mahogany Doors, Slates, Slate Slabs, Mouldings, Panels, Mantelpieces, Fire grates etc. etc.‘ The house has remained as a ruin but this sadly cannot not be appreciated today. As can be seen from the photographs, the house is barley visible, surround by tress and covered with ivy. Here and there, little glimpses of former grandeur can be seen. Fragments remain of the curved headed window that once stood on the half landing of the stairs that overlooked a very wide hall. Today even if you stood within 10 feet of the house, its ruin is invisible as the forest has become so thick that surrounds it. The Blake sisters spent the rest of their lives in St. Mary’s Convent, Loftus Hall, Wexford where Georgina Blake died in January 1959 at and Olivia died in 1966,  both were returned for burial in the family vault in Carnacon. 
 

A vintage photo of an old building

Description automatically generated, Picture 
The ruin of Towerhill prior to it being surrounded by trees  
and its walls covered in ivy. Picture ( above)  Copyright The Architectural Archive 
A bridge over a body of water

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The elegant bridge which once provided access to  the entrance front of Towerhill Picture ( above)  Copyright ICHC  

While the main gates of Towerhill are in relatively good condition, a decorative bridge found near the house has become badly damaged over the years. This is also obscured by trees and other vegetation with sections of the decorative balustrade having fallen into the stream below. This structure with its elegant arch spans a river that was realigned for Valentine O’Connor Blake in the 1850’s as a famine relief drainage project. Today the only visible trace of the Blakes of Towerhill in the locality of Carnacon is a monument found over the Blake family vault in the grounds of the nearby church yard. While I understand that Towerhill is a ruin and the home to some rare bats surely something can be done to protect and consolidate these ruins and the nearby bridge. Yet again, I am astounded as I travel the country looking at buildings of this nature, that the word ‘protected structure’ is bandied about. Therefore I ask, looking at the photographs here, how is the ruin of Towerhill or its surround structures protected by Mayo County Council. While this house will never be anything more than a ruin, it could be maintained in a fashion so that it could be appreciated as a piece of the architectural and cultural heritage of Mayo. 

An old barn in a forest

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The entrance hall of Towerhill is barely distinguishable  from the foliage that is slowly encroaching on the ruin. Picture ( above)  Copyright ICHC  
A close up of a lush green forest

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The entrance front of Towerhill is shrouded in ivy, only the  faint outline of the window opes and pediment give any indication of what lies beneath. Picture ( above)  Copyright ICHC  

State-Sponsored Neglect 

Sep13 by theirishaesthete  

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Above are the front and rear elevations of Towerhill, County Mayo, a house believed to date from the close of the 18th century when built for Isidore Blake, whose descendants continued to own the property until 1948 when the building’s contents were auctioned and the place itself subsequently stripped of everything that might be removed, slates from the roof, floorboards and doorcases, chimneypieces and so forth. Of six bays and two storeys over basement, Towerhill is unusual in that all four sides of the house are pedimented, and finished to the same high standard; the architect responsible for this work is unknown. The property is now owned by the state’s forestry body, Coillte, which accounts for its neglected condition.