A Guide to Irish Country Houses by Mark Bence-Jones contents and pictures, houses beginning with A

Note that the majority of these are private houses, not open to the public. I discovered “my bible” of big houses by Mark Bence-Jones only after I began this project of visiting historic houses that have days that they are open to the public (Section 482 properties).

This is a project I have been working on for a while, collecting pictures of houses. Enjoy! Feel free to contact me to send me better photographs if you have them! I’ll be adding letters as I go…

[1] 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.

Abbeville, Malahide, Co Dublin https://aguidetoirishcountryhouses.com/2024/11/10/abbeville-malahide-co-dublin/

Abbeville, Malahide, County Dublin, courtesy of Sherry Fitzgerald and TheJournal.ie

A house built for Rt Hon John Beresford, Taster of the Wines in the Port of Dublin, brother of the 1st Marquess of Waterford and one of the most powerful men in Ireland at the end of C18; its name commemorating the fact that Bereford’s first wife came from Abbeville in Northern France. Of two storeys over a basement; front of 7 bays between two wide curved bows prolonged by singe-storey 1 bay wings, each with a fanlighted triple window and an urn on a die. Pilastered entrance doorway. Good drawing room with alcove, ceiling of Adamesque plasterwork and husk decoration on walls, incorporating circular painted medallions.” [1]

Abbeylands, Whiteabbey, Co Antrim – burnt 1914 https://aguidetoirishcountryhouses.com/2024/09/30/abbeylands-whiteabbey-co-antrim-burnt-1914/

Abbeylands, Whiteabbey, Co Antrim courtesy Lord Belmont.

A two storey Victorian house, vaguely Italianate, but with mullioned windows in the centre of its symmetrical front. Shallow curved bows on either side of front, single storey Ionic porch; narrow pedimented attic storey, with three narrow windows, in centre. Burnt 1914 by Suffragettes.” (!) [1]

Abbeyleix House, County Laois https://aguidetoirishcountryhouses.com/2024/11/09/abbeyleix-house-county-laois/

Abbeyleix House, County Laois, photograph courtesy of Colliers.

P. 1. Abbey Leix, Co Leix: “[Vesey, De Vesci, V/PB] A three storey late C18 block, built from 1773 onwards by Thomas Vesey, 2nd Lord Knapton and afterwards 1st Viscount de Vesci, with some interiors being designed by James Wyatt. Seven bay entrance front, with three bay pedimented breakfront; frontispiece of coupled Doric columns and entablature around entrance door. Five bay garden front with three bay breakfront. In C19 the elevations were made more ornate with a balustraded roof parapet, entablatures over the windows, balconies and other features. A large conservatory was also added at one side of the house, which was blown away by the “great wind” of 1902 and replaced by a wing containing a new dining room. The principal rooms in the main block have ceilings and, in the old dining room, walls decorated with Wyatt plasterwork. The hall has a screen of fluted Ionic columns; the drawing room is hung with a C19 blue wallpaper. The demesne contains some magnificent trees, including oaks which are part of a primeval forest. A formal garden with terraces and ironwork balustrades was laid out by Lady Emma Herbert, who married 3rd Viscount 1839; inspired by the garden of her Russian grandfather, Count Simon Woronzow, at Alupka, near Yalta, in the Crimea. Towards the end of C19, in the time of 4th Viscount, whose wife was Lady Evelyn Charteris, daughter of 10th Earl of Wemyss, Abbey Leix was the Irish outpost of the “Souls.” ” [1]

Abbeyville, Ballymote, Co Sligo – lost https://aguidetoirishcountryhouses.com/2024/11/20/abbeyville-ballymote-co-sligo-lost/

p. 1. “(Phibbs/LGI1912) A 2 storey house built between 2 fortified towers 1716 by William Phibbs. Sold 1810 to Richard Fleming, who modernised it and altered the house 1816. Sold by the Flemings ca 1990; eventually fell into ruins.” [1]

Abbotstown House (formerly also known as Sheephill), Castleknock, Co Dublin – sports centre 

https://aguidetoirishcountryhouses.com/2024/11/10/abbotstown-house-formerly-also-known-as-sheephill-castleknock-co-dublin-now-a-sports-centre/

Abbotstown House (formerly Sheepshill) County Dublin, courtesy of Lord Belmont.

“(Hamilton, Holm Patrick, B/PB) A 2 storey house, added to at various times, but of predominantly early to mid-C19 aspect, 5 bay entrance front, the centre bay breaking forward with a triple window above a projecting pilastered porch. Similar side elevation, with a single-storey pillared bow instead of porch; prolonged by curved bow of full height. Parapeted roof; entablatures on console brackets over triple windows and other embellishments.” [1]

Aberdelghy, Lambeg, Co Antrim https://aguidetoirishcountryhouses.com/2024/09/30/aberdelghy-lambeg-co-antrim/

p. 1. “Richardson/LGI1912). An irregular two storey house of mid-C19 aspect; shallow gables with bargeboards; hood mouldings over windows. A seat of Alexander Airth Richardson, son of Jonathan Richardson, MP, of Lambeg, and his wife, Margaret Airth.” [1]

Aclare House,  Drumconrath, Co Meath https://aguidetoirishcountryhouses.com/2024/11/20/aclare-house-drumconrath-co-meath/

p. 1. “(Singleton/LG1912; Lindsay, sub Crawford, E/PB). An almost Italianate house built 1840 for H.C. Singleton; 2 storey and faced with ashlar. Three bay entrance front, projecting central bay with pedminent and Wyatt windown about Grecian Doric portico; three bay side with slightly projecting end by. Office wing set back, fronted by graceful conservatory with curving ends and roof. Inner hall ceiling supported on carved wood brackets; upstairs landing screened from central top-lit space by arcade supported on Tuscan columns. Opened as a hotel ca. 1950 by its then owner, Mr D.E.T. Lindsay; it has since been sold, but is still run as a hotel.” [1]

Adare Manor, County Limerick – hotel https://aguidetoirishcountryhouses.com/2024/10/16/adare-manor-county-limerick-hotel/

Adare Manor, County Limerick, from the hotel website.

Mark Bence-Jones writes (1988):

Originally a two storey 7 bay early C18 house with a 3 bay pedimented breakfront and a high-pitched roof on a bracket cornice; probably built ca 1720-1730 by Valentine Quin [1691-1744], grandfather of the first Earl of Dunraven [Valentine Richard Quin (1752-1824)].” [1]

Adelphi, Corofin, Co Clare https://aguidetoirishcountryhouses.com/2024/11/09/adelphi-corofin-co-clare/

Adelphi, Corofin, Co Clare courtesy National Inventory.

p. 2. “(Fitzgerald/ LG1863; Blood/IFR) early 19C house of one storey to the front and two storeys to the back. Five bay front with Wyatt windows; end bow; wide eaved roof. Behind the house is an old ruined tower.” [1]

Affane, Co Waterford – ruinous https://aguidetoirishcountryhouses.com/2025/12/15/affane-county-waterford/

Affane House, County Waterford, courtesy National Inventory.

p. 289. “(Browning/IFR; Poer/LG1863) A three storey three bay house of C17 or C18 appearance…The last of the great battles between the Earls of Ormonde and Desmond was fought near here 1564. Affane was later famous for producing the best cherries in Ireland, which were said to have been first planted by Sir Walter Raleigh. Since Affane is one of the houses associated with the legendary old Countess of Desmond, it is possible that the cherry tree from which she fell to her death was here. In C17 Affane was the seat of Valentine Greatrakes, known as “the Stroker” from his ability to cure the King’s Evil and all manner of diseases by stroking.  Affane was inherited by his only daughter who married Major Edmund Browning; it passed by inheritance C18 to a branch of the Poers or Powers, who were here until 1954. The house is now ruinous.” [1]

Aggard, Craughwell, County Galway https://aguidetoirishcountryhouses.com/2024/11/21/aggard-craughwell-county-galway/

Aggard, Craughwell, County Galway courtesy National Inventory.

p. 2. “(Lambert/IFR) A house of mid to late C18 appearance of two storeys over a high basement. Front of two bay on either side of a central three sided bow incorporating a fanlighted doorcased with rustications, pylons and a keystone surmounted by a pedestal.” [1]

Aghaboe, Ballybrophy, County Laois https://aguidetoirishcountryhouses.com/2024/11/21/aghaboe-or-aghabhoe-county-laois-mbj/

Aghaboe, County Laois. Photograph © Jennifer Winder-Baggot, www.irishhistorichouses.com.

p. 2. “A 2 storey 7 bay house with a pedimented and fanlighted doorcase, probably dating from 1st half of C18; formerly linked to two flanking wings, one of which has disappeared; the surviving wing being in fact a small late C17 house with plaster panelling in its interior.” [1]

Aghada House, Aghada, Co Cork – gone https://aguidetoirishcountryhouses.com/2024/11/09/aghada-house-aghada-co-cork-gone/

p. 2. A late Georgian house by the elder Abraham Hargrave, built for John Roche between 1791 and ca. 1808. [1]

Aghade Lodge, Tullow, Co Carlow https://aguidetoirishcountryhouses.com/2024/11/07/aghade-lodge-tullow-co-carlow-2/

Aghade Lodge, Tullow, County Carlow courtesy of myhome.ie

p. 2. “(Roche/Bt/PB; Browne/ifr) A two storey gabled Victorian house on the River Slaney, with an overhanging roof and bargeboards.” [1]

Aghadoe House, Killarney, County Kerry https://aguidetoirishcountryhouses.com/2024/11/22/aghadoe-house-killarney-county-kerry/

Aghadoe House, Killarney, County Kerry, between ca. 1865-1914, photograph courtesy of National Library of Ireland, photograph by Robert French, Lawrence Collection.

p. 2. (Winn, Headley, B/PB) A Victorian house of red sandstone ashlar with limestone facings, consisting of an irregular two storey main block that goes in and out a great deal, and a three storey office wing. Vast round-headed plate glass windows on ground floor of main block, either single or grouped in threes, separated by slender mullions. Much narrower mullioned windows with round-headed lights above, and in the wing; mostly two-light, and in one case, five-light. Limestone porch with three arches and balustrade. Burnt 1922 and subsequently rebuilt, when the eaves of the roof were made to overhang much more than they did previously.” [1]

Aghadoe, Killeagh, Co Cork (supplement) – gone

https://aguidetoirishcountryhouses.com/2024/11/09/aghadoe-killeagh-co-cork/

p. 289. “(De Capell Brooke, Bt/PB1967) A plain early C19 house in the villa style, standing above a romantic wooden glen on an estate which was granted to Philip de Capell 1172, and continued to be owned by his descendents until the present century; it was known by the local inhabitants as “the Maidan estate” to distinguish it from the other large properties in the neighbourhood, all of which had, at some period in their history, been forfeited. By C16, the family name had been corrupted to Supple; 1797 Richard Brooke Supple of Aghadoe changed his name to de Capell Brooke on inheriting the estate of the Brookes in Northamptonshire. There is a design of ca 1700, probably by a French architect, for an elaborate Palladian mansion at Aghadoe, which was never carried out.” [1]

Aghamarta Castle, Carrigaline, Co Cork – house with ruined castle https://aguidetoirishcountryhouses.com/2024/11/09/aghamarta-castle-carrigaline-co-cork-house-with-ruined-castle/

Aghamarta Castle, Carrigaline, Co Cork – house with ruined castle courtesy National Inventory.

“(O’Grady.LGI1912; Clarke/IFR) An irregular two storey house faced in cement, with an enclosed porch fronted by Doric columns and some dormer-gables. The house stands in a fine position overlooking the Owenboy estuary. There is a ruined castle in the grounds.” [1]

Aghern, Conna, Co Cork – stud farm https://aguidetoirishcountryhouses.com/2024/11/09/aghern-conna-co-cork-stud-farm/

Aghern, Conna, County Cork courtesy Michael O’Brien Auctioneers.

p. 3. “(Bowles/LGI1912/ Kinahan/IFR; Hare, sub Listowel, E/PB) A simple two storey late Georgian house built alongside an old Desmond castle on the northern bank of the River Bride. The principal north front has a central semi-circular bow with a single bay on either side of it; the long adjoining front facing the river has irregular fenestration and a shallow bow window which is a later addition…” [1]

Ahanesk or Ahanisk, Midleton, Co Cork https://aguidetoirishcountryhouses.com/2024/11/11/ahanesk-or-ahanisk-midleton-co-cork/

Ahanesk or Ahanisk, Midleton, Co Cork courtesy of National Inventory.

p. 3. “(Jackson/LGI1894; Sadlier-Jackson, sub Trench/IFR; Lomer, sub Stafford-King-Harman, Bt/PB) A plain rambling predominantly C19 house, with a rectangular oriel on one wing; overlooking a backwater of Cork Harbour. Large, characteristically Edwardian hall, with a low, heavily embossed ceiling and a straight enclosed staircase rising from one side of it down which, in the late-Victorian and Edwardian period, the dashing Mrs Sadlier-Jackson (the first lady in Cork to ride astride) is said to have been in the habit of sliding on a tray, wearing pink tights, to entertain her guests. Other reception rooms with higher ceilings.…” [1]

Aharney, County Laois

Aharney House, County Laois, courtesy Mark Bence-Jones.

Aherlow Castle, Bansha, County Tipperary  – ruin restored, runs courses https://aguidetoirishcountryhouses.com/2024/10/19/aherlow-castle-county-tipperary/

Aherlow Castle, County Tipperary 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.
Aherlow Castle, County Tipperary, photograph by Robert French, Lawrence Photograph Collection, National Library of Ireland.

p. 3. “(Moore/IFR) A small late C19 “pasteboard” castle in the Glen of Aherlow, built by the Moore family, of Mooresfort. Polygonal tower, with dummy loops; square tower. Recently demolished.” [1]

Allenton, Tallaght, Co Dublin – Demolished in 1984 https://aguidetoirishcountryhouses.com/2024/11/22/allenton-tallaght-co-dublin-demolished-in-1984/

Allenton, County Dublin entrance front, Vanishing Country Houses of Ireland by The Knight of Glin, David J. Griffin and Nicholas K. Robinson, published by The Irish Architectural Archive and The Irish Georgian Society, 1988.

p. 3. “An attractive little two storey five bay early C18 house with a pedimented three bay breakfront and a fanlighted, pedimented and rusticated doorcase. Lunette window in pediment. Originally weather-slated. Given its present name after it was built by Sir Timothy Allen, who acquired it in ca mid-C18. ..” [1]

Altamira, Liscarroll, Co Cork https://aguidetoirishcountryhouses.com/2024/11/11/altamira-liscarroll-co-cork/

Altamira, Liscarroll, Co Cork courtesy National Inventory.

p. 3. “(Purcell/LGI1912) A plain three storey Georgian block, 3 bay entrance front, 4 bay front adjoining; entrance doorway of rather urban style with a large fanlight extending over the door and two sidelights.” [1]

Altamont, Kilbride, Co Carlow – gardens open to public https://aguidetoirishcountryhouses.com/2024/10/11/altamont-originally-rose-hill-kilbride-co-carlow-gardens-are-office-of-public-works/

Altamont House and Gardens, County Carlow, Courtesy Tourism Ireland.

p. 3. “(St. George/IFR; Borrer, sub Orlebar/LG1952; Watson/IFR) Main block of ca 1760, incorporating earlier house, with three sided bow in centre and two bays on either side, high-pitched roof and odd Gothic cresting; gabled C19 Gothic wings added 1870.” [1]

Altavilla, Rathkeale, Co Limerick https://aguidetoirishcountryhouses.com/2024/11/22/altavilla-rathkeale-co-limerick/

Altavilla, County Limerick, courtesy National Inventory.

p. 3. “(Bateman/LGI1912; Greenall, Daresbury, B/PB) A house built ca 1745-46 by John Bateman undoubtedly to the design of Francis Bindon; consisting of a centre block of three storeys over basement joined by screen walls to two storey flanking wings enclosing courts. Centre block with six bay entrance front, two bay breakfront, tripartite pedimented and rusticated doorcase; wings with two modified Venetian windows, having niches in their centre section, in th upper storey; straight screen walls with rusticated doors flanked by niches. Garden front of centre block with two bays on either side of a nice and oculus; quadrant walls on this side joining centre blocks to wings, showing the influence of Vanbrugh. Its pedimented interior doors and fielded panelling were burnt. The hosue became a ruin but has now been restored by second and present Lord Daresbury, though without a top story.” [1]

Altidore Castle, Kilpeddar, Greystones, Co Wicklow – section 482 https://aguidetoirishcountryhouses.com/2020/06/25/altidore-castle-kilpeddar-greystones-county-wicklow/

Altidore, County Wicklow. Photograph © Jennifer Winder-Baggot, www.irishhistorichouses.com.

A charming late-Georgian “toy fort,” with four octagonal corner turrets; of two storeys on the entrance side and three on the other sides, where the ground falls away. Despite the battlements on the turrets, the house is more Classical than Gothic; it is symmetrical and has a central Venetian window over a pillared porch.” [a Venetian window is one having a centre light wider than the flanking lights and with an arched head. In elaborate examples the lights are separated by columns. Craig, Maurice and Knight of Glin, Ireland Observed, A Handbook to the Buildings and Antiquities. Mercier Press, Dublin and Cork, 1970.] 

The interior makes even fewer concessions to medievalism: there are fine C18 marble chimneypieces, medallions with Classical figures on the walls of the dining room and a staircase similar to those in numerous Irish C18 houses, of stout but elegant joinery with a scrolled end to its balusters. Altidore originally belonged to a family named Blachford. It was acquired by the Hepenstals early in C19; subsequent owners included Percy Burton, who may have been attracted to it by its superficial resemblance to the Jacobean Lulworth Castle in Dorset, where he had been land agent. Since 1945 it has been the home of the Emmet family, who are descended from Thomas Addis Emmet, a leader of the United Irishmen and brother of Robert Emmet, “the Patriot.” [1]

Ampertain House, Upperlands, County Derry https://aguidetoirishcountryhouses.com/2024/11/22/ampertain-house-upperlands-county-derry-mbj/

Ampertain House, County Derry, photograph courtesy Belfast Live UK.

p. 4. “(Clark/IFR) The most important of several country houses in the neighbourhood built by members of the Clark family, whose linen mills, which gave rise to the nearby “linen village” of Upperlands, are still basically situated in the yard of one of these country houses, driven by water power. A plain late-Georgian type house built post 1821 by Alexander Clark. Two storeys over high basement, five bay front; shallow projecting porch, with fanlighted doorway set in arched recess. Eaved roof on bracket cornice. The front prolonged by a two storey three bay wing of similar style, set back; added 1915. At the other end, a Victorian conservatory on a high plinth.” [1]

Anaverna, Dundalk, Co Louth https://aguidetoirishcountryhouses.com/2024/10/17/anaverna-dundalk-co-louth/

Anaverna, Dundalk, Co Louth courtesy National Inventory.

p. 4. “(Lenox-Conyngham/IFR) A plain late-Georgian house built ca. 1807 for Baron McClelland to the design of an architect named Gallier, who afterwards designed many buildings in New Orleans, USA. Five bays, 3 bay breakfront centre, fanlighted doorway; windows of upper storey set under relieving arches. Owned by the Thompson family 1831-1915; bought by E.F. Lenox-Conyngham 1916.” [1]

Anketill Grove (or Ancketill’s Grove or Anketell Grove), Emyvale,  County Monaghan – gate lodge accommodation https://aguidetoirishcountryhouses.com/2024/11/22/anketill-grove-or-ancketills-grove-or-anketell-grove-emyvale-county-monaghan-gate-lodge-accommodation-mbj/

Anketell Grove, County Monaghan courtesy National Inventory.

p. 4. “Captain Oliver Ancketill built first Ancketill’s Grove ca. 1640, on low ground. His grandson Oliver rebuilt the house on higher ground at the head of the copper beech avenue. This house was demolished in 1781, and a third dwelling was erected on another site: A two-storey, five-bay, gable-ended main block with a small pediment, joined by curved sweeps to single-storey, two-bay wings. There are Georgian-Gothic windows in the wings; a door with a good keystone between two round-headed windows in each of the sweeps. 

The house was extensively remodelled ca 1840; its most freakish feature, an Italianate campanile sprouting from the centre of the main block, would appear to date from this time; though there may always have been a central attic-tower, following the precedent at Gola, in the same county. The additions of 1840 included a porch and a new staircase; while at the same time the principal rooms were given ceilings of carved woodwork. Sold 1920.” [1]

Anna Liffey House, Lucan, Co Dublin https://aguidetoirishcountryhouses.com/2024/11/23/anna-liffey-house-lucan-co-dublin-mbj/

Anna Liffey House, County Dublin, courtesy of National Inventory.

p. 4. “(Shackleton, B/PB) A Georgian mill-house by the side of the River Liffey, with a noted garden. The home of the Shackleton family, cousins of Sir Ernest Shackleton, the explorer.” [1]

Annagh, Riverstown, Co Tipperary – ruin https://aguidetoirishcountryhouses.com/2024/11/23/annagh-riverstown-co-tipperary-mbj/

Annagh Castle, County Tipperary courtesy Brian T. McElherron, Irish Antiquities.

p. 4. “(Minchin/IFR) An attractive late-Georgian villa which became the seat of the Annagh branch of the Minchin family when they left Annagh Castle.” [1]

Annagh, Riverstown, Co Tipperary – ruin https://aguidetoirishcountryhouses.com/2025/09/12/annagh-riverstown-co-tipperary-ruin

Annagh, County Tipperary, courtesy National Inventory.

Annaghdown House, Carrandulla, Co Galway https://aguidetoirishcountryhouses.com/2024/11/21/annaghdown-house-carrandulla-co-galway/

Annaghdown House, Carrandulla, Co Galway courtesy National Inventory.

p. 289. “(Blake/LG1886) A house in Georgian style on the eastern shore of Lough Corrib; built ca 1868 by Richard Blake, of the Cregg Castle family.” [1]

Annaghlee, Cootehill, Co Cavan – gone https://aguidetoirishcountryhouses.com/2024/11/09/annaghlee-cootehill-co-cavan-gone/

Annaghlee, County Cavan, entrance front c. 1955. Photograph: Maurice Craig. Vanishing Country Houses of Ireland by The Knight of Glin, David J. Griffin and Nicholas K. Robinson, published by The Irish Architectural Archive and The Irish Georgian Society, 1988.

A distinguished mid C-18 red-brick house attributed to Richard Castle…. In 1814, the residence of Michael Murphy. Now almost completely destroyed.” [1]

Annaghmore, Tullamore, Offaly  

https://aguidetoirishcountryhouses.com/2024/11/23/annaghmore-tullamore-offaly-mbj/

Annaghmore, County Offaly, courtesy of National Inventory.

p. 4. “(Fox/LGI1912) A house with fine neo-Classical bifurcating staircase. Much altered externally.” [1]

Annaghmore, Collooney, Sligo  – accommodation, airbnb https://aguidetoirishcountryhouses.com/2024/10/19/annaghmore-colloony-county-sligo/

Annaghmore, County Sligo. Photograph © Jennifer Winder-Baggot, www.irishhistorichouses.com.

p. 4. “[O’Hara] A house of ca. 1820, consisting of a 2 storey 3 bay centre with single-storey Ionic portico and single-storey 2 bay wings, greatly enlarged ca. 1860-70 by C. W. O’Hara to the design of James Franklin Fuller; the additions being in the same late-Georgian style as the original house. The wings were raised a storey and extended back so that the house had a side elevation as high as the front and as long, or longer, consisting of 1 bay, curved bow, 3 further bays and a three-sided bow. At the same time, the fenestration of the original centre was altered, paired windows being inserted into the two outer bays instead of the original single window above a Wyatt window. All the ground floor windows except for those in the three sided bow have plain entablatures over them. Parapeted roof. Short area balustrade on either side of centre. Curved staircase behind entrance hall. Doorcases with reeded architraves and rosettes.” [1]

Annaghs Castle, Glenmore, Co Kilkenny https://aguidetoirishcountryhouses.com/2024/11/24/annaghs-castle-glenmore-co-kilkenny-mbj/

Annaghs Castle, County Kilkenny, courtesy National Inventory.

p. 4. “A square two storey house of 1797, five bay front, fanlighted tripartite doorway with Composite columns; four bay side. Balustraded roof. Very delicate plasterwork in the style of Patrick Osborne in the hall. Later plasterwork in other rooms. In later C19, a residence of the Sweetman family.” [1]

Annamakerrig (or Annaghmakerrig, Tyrone Guthrie Centre), Newbliss, Co Monaghan – artist residence https://aguidetoirishcountryhouses.com/2025/07/17/annamakerrig-or-annaghmakerrig-tyrone-guthrie-centre-newbliss-co-monaghan-artist-accommodation/

Annaghmakerrig House (Tyrone Guthrie Centre), Mullaghmore, County Monaghan.

p. 289. “(Power/LGI1912) A house of Victorian appearance, in watered-down Tudor-Jacobean. Entrance front with central porch-gable; adjoining front with two curvilinear gables, single-storey three sided bows, windows with blocked surrounds. Finials on gables. The seat of the Moorhead family; inherited by Martha (nee Moorhead), wife of Sir William James Tyrone Power – whose father was the early C19 Irish actor, Tyrone Power, ancestor of the film actor of the name – and in recent years the home of her grandson, Sir William Tyrone Guthrie, the producer, who bequested it to the Irish nation as a centre for artists and writers.” [1]

Annemount, Glounthaune, Co Cork – Fire in 1948, destroyed https://aguidetoirishcountryhouses.com/2024/11/11/annemount-glounthaune-co-cork-fire-in-1948-destroyed/

Annmount was built by Riggs Falkiner in 1775 but was heavily modified in the 19th century. It burned down accidentally in 1948. The grounds are now filled with a housing estate.

p. 5. “Falkiner/BT,PB; Cummins/IFR; Beamish/IRF; Gillman/IFR; Murphy/IFR; Bence-Jones/IFR) A two storey house in a magnificent situation overlooking Lough Mahon and the upper reaches of Cork Harbour; built in late C18 by Sir Riggs Falkiner, 1st Bt, who named it in honour of his second wife; enlarged and remodelled ca 1883 to the design of George Ashlin for John Murphy, Master of the United Hunt, who first discovered the house when the fox when he was hunting led him there. As remodelled, the big house was faced in cement, with entablatures over the windows; a projecting two storey porch, with a pediment and pilasters in the upper storey, was added  in the centre in its upper storey, was added in the centre of the front, with a single-storey three-sided pilastered bow on either side of it. The front was extended at one end by the addition of a two-storey wing of the same height and in the same style, with a third singel-storey bow and an Italianate campanile tower. Impressive two storey hall, with staircase and gallery of oak and pitch-pine; ceiling of coloured C19 plasterwork. Coloured C19 plasterwork also in drawing room and dining room, and richly ornamented pilaters; flat of drawing room ceiling covered with embossed gilt paper; moulded entablatures over doors; fine late-Georgian chimneypiece of white marble in drawing room, with Classical head and medallion, flowers, foliage and trophies. Brought 1945 by Col Philip Bence-Jones; destroyed by fire 1948, when a mild sensation was caused by the fact that a statue of the Madonna in the small oratory upstairs was untouched by the flames. The ruin was subsequently demolished.” [1]

Anner Castle (formerly Ballinahy), Clonmel, Co Tipperary  https://aguidetoirishcountryhouses.com/2024/11/23/anner-castle-formerly-ballinahy-clonmel-co-tipperary-mbj/

Anner Castle, County Tipperary courtesy of National Inventory.
Anner Castle, County Tipperary, photograph by Robert French, Lawrence Photographic Collection, National Library of Ireland.

p. 5. “[Mandeville/IFR] An impressive C19 castle of random ashlar, built in 1860s by Rev. N.H. Mandeville to the design of a Cork architect, William Atkins; incorporating an old square castle of the Mandeville family which had up to then been known as Ballinahy, but which was renamed Anner Castle after being enlarged and transformed. Impressive entrance front with two octagonal battlemented and machicolated towers. Burnt 1926 and only front part rebuilt.” [1]

Annerville, Clonmel, Co Tipperary  https://aguidetoirishcountryhouses.com/2024/11/23/annerville-clonmel-co-tipperary-mbj/

Annerville, Clonmel, Co Tipperary courtesy Landed Estates website.
Annerville, County Tipperary, photograph by Robert French, Lawrence Photographic Collection, National Library of Ireland.

p. 5. “(Riall/LGI1958) A two storey Victorian house with a roof carried on a bracket cornice; entrance front with a two storey porch between two single storey three sided balustraded bows; and in the upper storey, two Venetian windows.” [1]

Annes Grove (formerly Ballyhemock or Ballyhimmock), Castletownroche, Co Cork – gardens open to public; gate lodge accommodation

https://aguidetoirishcountryhouses.com/2024/10/06/annesgrove-county-cork-an-opw-property/ 

Annesgrove (formerly Ballyhimmock), County Cork courtesy National Inventory.

p. 5. (Grove Annesley/IFR and sub Annesley, E/PB). An early 19C house of two storeys over basement, built by Lt-Gen Hon Arthur Grove Annesley, who inherited the estate from his aunt by marriage, the heiress of the Grove family, who owned it previously. Seven bay entrance front; wooden porch with engaged Doric columns and entablature and sidelights with curved astragals; eaved roof. Irregular garden front facing the River Awbeg, in which, owing to the ground falling away, the basement forms an extra storey. Flaning the garden are two stable courts. Walled garden with C18 “mount”; Famous river garden of great extent, laid out and planted by R.A. Grove Annesley between ca. 1900 and his death in 1966, and continued by his son, the late E.P. Grove Annesley. Castellated entrance gateway at one end of the demesne.” [1]

Annesbrook, Duleek, Co Meath https://aguidetoirishcountryhouses.com/2024/11/23/annesbrook-duleek-co-meath/

Annesbrook, County Meath photograph courtesy Irish Times Feb 20, 2016.

p. 5. “(Smith/LGI1912) A two storey three bay Georgian house with ground floor windows set under relieving arches and a large rusticated and fanlighted doorway; to which an impressive pedimented portico of four fluted Ionic columns and a single-storey wing containing a charming Georgian-Gothic “banqueting room” were added early in C19 by Henry Smith. According to the story, he made these additions in 1821, for when George IV came over to dine with him while staying with Lady Conyngham at Slane Castle; the monarch, however, never saw the banqueting room, preferring to dine out of doors.” [1]

Annestown House, County Waterford – B&B 

https://aguidetoirishcountryhouses.com/2024/10/19/annestown-house-county-waterford-bb/

Annestown House, County Waterford, courtesy of Savills Residential & Country Agency and myhome.ie.

p. 5. “(Palliser, sub Galloway/IFR) Rambling three storey house at right angles to the village street of Annestown, which is in fact two houses joined together. The main front of the house faces the sea; but it has a gable end actually on the street. Low-ceilinged but spacious rooms; long drawing room divided by an arch with simple Victorian plasterwork; large library approached by a passage. Owned at beginning of 19C by Henry St. George Cole, bought ca. 1830 by the Palliser family, from whom it was inherited by the Galloways.” [1]

Anngrove (formerly Ballinsperrig), Carrigtwohill, Co Cork – demolished by ca. 1965 https://aguidetoirishcountryhouses.com/2024/11/11/anngrove-formerly-ballinsperrig-carrigtwohill-co-cork-demolished-by-ca-1965/

p. 6. “(Cotter, Bt/PB; Barry/IFR; Gubbins/LG1937 supp) A remarkable late C17 house built by Sir James Cotter, MP, a staunch adherent of Charles II who, in 1664, went to Switzerland with two companions and shot the fugitive Regicide, John Lisle. ..One of the rooms originally contained a velvet bed with hangings and gold brocade which was said to have belonged to Charles I and to have been given to Sir James Cotter by Queen Henrietta Maria “as a mark of her royal favour and thanks” for having led the successful action against Lisle. James II is traditionally supposed to have stayed a night in the house and to have slept in this bed. The lands on which the house was built were leased from the Barrys, Earls of Barrymore; some time post 1720, the widow of sir James Cotter’s son sold the reversion of the lease to the 4th Earl and the Cotter family seat was henceforth Rockforest. The 5th Earl of Barrymore, as Viscount Buttevant, lived for a period in Anngrove; but it was afterwards let. Charles I’s bed, which the Cotters left behind, was removed to Castle Lyons, the principal Barrymore seat, where it was burnt in the fire of 1771. Towards the end of the C18, or in early C19, Anngrove passed to the Wise family, from whom it was inherited, later in C19, by the Gubbins family. The house was still standing in 1950s but was demolished by ca. 1965.” [1]

Antrim Castle, County Antrim – open to the public https://aguidetoirishcountryhouses.com/2024/11/05/antrim-castle-county-antrim/

Antrim Castle from the river, by R. Welch (Photographer) Date c.1888 PRONI Ref D1403_1_017_A

(Skeffington, Massereene and Ferrard, V/PB) A castle by the side of the Sixmilewater, just above where it flows into Lough Neagh, built originally 1613 by the important English settler, Sir Hugh Clotworthy, and enlarged 1662 by his son, 1st Viscount Massereene [John Clotworthy (1614-1665)]. The castle was rebuilt 1813 as a solid three storey Georgian-Gothic castellated mansion, designed by John Bowden, of Dublin, faced in Roman cement of a pleasant orange colour; the original Carolean doorway of the castle, a tremendous affair of Ionic pilasters, heraldry, festoons and a head of Charles I, being re-erected as the central feature of the entrance front, below a battlemented pediment. Apart from this, and tower-like projections at the corners, with slender round angle turrets and shallow pyramidal roofs, the elevations were plain; the entrance front being of four bays between the projections, and the long adjoining front of 11 bays. Mullioned oriels and a tall octagonal turret of ashlar were added to the long front in 1887, when the castle was further enlarged. Remarkable C17 formal garden, unique in Ulster, its only surviving counterpart being at Killruddery, Co Wicklow. Long canal, bordered with tall hedges, and other canal at right angles to it, making a “T” shape; old trees, dark masses of yew and walls of rose-coloured brick. Mount, with spiral path, originally the motte of a Norman castle. Imposing Jacobean revival outbuildings of course rubble basalt with sandstone dressings; built ca. 1840. Entrance gateway to the demesne with octagonal turrets. Antrim Castle was burnt 1922.” [1]

Aras an Uachturain, (formerly Vicegreal Lodge and before that, Phoenix Lodge), Phoenix Park,  Dublin  

https://aguidetoirishcountryhouses.com/2023/10/17/office-of-public-works-dublin-aras-an-uachtarain-phoenix-park/

Aras an Uachtarain, Phoenix Park, Dublin. Photograph © Jennifer Winder-Baggot, www.irishhistorichouses.com.

Arbutus Lodge, Montenotte, Co. Cork  – apartments  https://aguidetoirishcountryhouses.com/2024/11/23/arbutus-lodge-montenotte-co-cork-apartments-mbj/


p. 7. “A 2 storey mid-C19 Italianate house with Romaneque overtones. Modillion cornice; porch at end of house with Romanesque columns. Ballroom with Corinthian columns at one side.

Arch Hall, Co Meath  – lost https://aguidetoirishcountryhouses.com/2024/11/23/arch-hall-wilkinstown-co-meath-a-ruin-mbj/

Arch Hall, County Meath, courtesy Colin Colleran photographer facebook page.

p. 7. “(Garnett/LGI1912) A three storey early C18 house attributed, as is the arch in the garden, to Sir Edward Lovett Pearce. Curved bow in centre of front, doorway with pediment and blocking; curved ends, with round-headed windows. Top storey treated as an attic. In the C19, the house was given a high-pitched roof on a bracket cornice, the curved ends being given conical roofs, so that they looked like the round towers of a French chateau. Also in C19, the windows in the attic storey were replaced by rather strange Romanesque windows in pairs. Now a ruin.” [1]

Archbishop’s Palace, Armagh, photograph by Eric Jones, Creative Commons Attribution Share-alike license 2.0.

p. 12. “The Palace of the (C. of I.) Archbishops of Armagh and Primates. A plain and dignified late C18 block, nine bays long and four bays deep, originally of two storeys over a high rusticated basement. Built 1770, to the design of Thomas Cooley, by Primate Richard Robinson, who added a third storey 1786, his architect then being Francis Johnston. Later, a large enclosed porch was added, with pairs of Ionic columns set at an angle to the front. Flanking the entrance front of the Palace is the Primate’s Chapel, a detached building in the form of an Ionic temple. The exterior, of 1781, is by Cooley; but the interior was carried out after Cooley’s death in 1784 by Francis Johnston, who succeeded him as architect to Primate Robinson. Johnston’s interior, a modification of Cooley’s design, is one of the most beautiful surviving C18 ecclesiastical interiors in Ireland; with a coffered barrel-vaulted ceiling, a delicate frieze, Corinthian pilasters, a gallery with a curved rear wall, and splendid panelling and pews. The Palace is surrounded by a well-wooded demesne, in which there is an obelisk, also by Johnston. The Church of Ireland is at present building a modern residence for the Primate on Cathedral Hill, so that the future of the Palace is uncertain.” [1]

Archerstown, Thurles, Co Tipperary  – ruin https://aguidetoirishcountryhouses.com/2025/09/12/archerstown-thurles-co-tipperary-ruin/

Archerstown, Thurles, Co Tipperary courtesy National Inventory.

p. 7. “(Langley/IFR) A plain two storey three bay high-roofed Georgian house. Wing with Wyatt windows.”

and supplement: 

The house incorporates parts of the medieval castle of the Archer family. A section of the castle bawn wall is incorporated in the wall of a small deer park, which still contains deer believed to be descended from the deer that were here in the Archer’s time.” [1]

Ardagh House, County Longford https://aguidetoirishcountryhouses.com/2024/11/24/ardagh-house-ardagh-co-longford-sisters-of-mercy-convent/

Ardagh House, County Longford, photograph courtesy of National Inventory.

p. 7. “[Fetherston, Bt/PB1923] An irregular 2 storey house of predominantly early to mid C19 appearance. Eaved roof on bracket cornice; porch and corridor with pilasters. Now a domestic science college.” [1]

Ardamine, Gorey, Co Wexford – Destroyed by IRA in 1921 https://aguidetoirishcountryhouses.com/2024/11/24/ardamine-gorey-co-wexford-destroyed-by-ira-in-1921-mbj/ 

Ardamine, Gorey, County Wexford, photograph by Robert French, Lawrence Photographic Collection, National Library of Ireland.

p. 7. “Richards/LGI1912) An early to mid-C19 house of two storeys over basement, consisting of two contiguous blocks one slightly higher than the other. Eaved roofs on bracket cornices; wide projecting porch, partly open, with Doric columns, party enclosed, with pilasters. Single storey curved bow. Giant corner pilasters on both blocks. Balustraded area.” [1]

Ardavilling, Cloyne, Co Cork  – burned 2017, being rebuilt  https://aguidetoirishcountryhouses.com/2024/11/24/ardavilling-cloyne-co-cork-burned-2017-being-rebuilt/

Ardavilling, County Cork, courtesy of National Inventory.

“Litton/LGI1912; Beckford, sub Nutting, Bt/PB) A mildly Tudor-Revival C19 house, gabled and with a mullioned bow. The seat of the Litton family; in the present century, of the Stacpoole famly. Owned for some years after WWII by Lt-Col and Mrs F.J. Beckford.” [1]

Ardbraccan House, Navan, Co  Meath https://aguidetoirishcountryhouses.com/2024/11/10/ardbraccan-county-meath/

Ardbraccan House, Ardbraccan, Navan, County Meath, for sale March 2025 courtesy Sherry Fitzgerald

p. 7. “The Palace of the (C of I) Bishops of Meath, on the site of the old castle where the Bishops lived from C14. Bishop Evans left money for the building of a new house here early in C18; his successor, Bishop Henry Downes, came here with Dean Swift to lay out the ground; but it was not until the time of the next Bishop again, Arthur Price, that the house was begun ca 1734, to the design of Richard Castle. When the two 2 storey 5 bay wings of what was to be a Palladian mansion had been completed, Price was elevated to the Archdiocese of Cashel. For the next 30 years, the subsequent Bishops did nothing about building the central block, but lived in one of the wings, using the other for guests. It was not until early 1770s that Bishop Henry Maxwell, a younger son of 1st Lord Farnham, decided to complete the house; he is said to have boasted that he would build a palace so grand that no scholar or tutor would dare to live in it. He obtained designs from Thomas Cooley and also from one of his own clergy, Rv. Daniel Beaufort, Rector of Navan, who was a talented amateur architect. Both of them were, to a certain extent, under the influence of James Wyatt, who produced a sketch of the garden front. The centre block, which was eventually begun 1776 and took several years to build, is a simple and dignified grey stone house of 2 storeys and 7 bays, with an Ionic doorcase; it harmonises well with Castle’s wings, to which it is joined by curved sweeps with niches. The garden front, also of 7 bays, has a 3 bay central breakfront in which the ground floor windows are set in a blind arcade. The restrained neo-Classical interior plasterwork is said to have been designed by Wyatt, though Beaufort was asked by Bishop Maxwell to design a ceiling for the entrance vestibule 1780. This is a narrow room with a barrel-vaulted ceiling of shallow hexagonal coffering; a door under a large and elegant internal fanlight at its inner end opens into the main hall or saloon in the middle of the garden front, which has a cornice of mutules and elliptical panels above the doors. The principal and secondary stairs lie on either side of this saloon, which also communicates with the drawing room and dining room in the entrance front, on either side of the vestibule. Despite Bishop Maxwell’s hope that the grandeurs of Ardbraccan would discourage scholars and tutors from aspiring to the diocese, his successor was Thomas O’Beirne who had started life as a humble schoolmaster; but who none the less carried out improvements to the outbuildings, advised by Beaufort. The more aristocratic Bishop Nathaniel Alexander carried out grander improvements to the outbuildings in 1820s and 30s. The handsome farm and stable yards are joined by a tunnel under the garden terrace.” [1]

Ardbrack House, Kinsale, Co Cork  https://aguidetoirishcountryhouses.com/2024/11/24/ardbrack-house-kinsale-co-cork-mbj/

Ardbrack House, Kinsale, Co Cork courtesy National Inventory.

p. 8. “(Lucas/IFR) An attractive two storey five bay weather-slated late-Georgian house. Camberheaded windows; pedimented and fanlighted doorcase.” [1]

Ardcandrisk House, County Wexford https://aguidetoirishcountryhouses.com/2024/11/24/ardcandrisk-house-county-wexford/

Ardcandrisk, photographer Robert French, Lawrence Collection NLI L-IMP_1336.

p. 8. “(Grogan-Morgan/LG1863; Deane, Muskerry, B/PB) A two storey Regency villa composed of three polygons of different sizes. Eaved roofs; Wyatt windows at one end. Tail blind panels on narrow faces of polygons.” [1]

Ardee House, Co Louth – hospital https://aguidetoirishcountryhouses.com/2025/04/02/ardee-house-co-louth-hospital/

Ardee House, County Louth, courtesy National Inventory.

p. 8. “(Ruxton/LGI1912 and sub Fitzherbert/IFR) A three storey seven bay C18 house of red brick. Small porch with pilasters, pediment and fanlights. Now a hospital.” [1]

Ardfert Abbey, County Kerry   – Destroyed by IRA by fire in 1922. https://aguidetoirishcountryhouses.com/2024/11/24/ardfert-abbey-county-kerry-destroyed-by-ira-by-fire-in-1922-mbj/

Ardfert Abbey entrance front, photograph: c. 1870, collection: Col. Talbot Crosbie, 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. 8. “Crosbie/IFR) A house originally built towards the end of C17 by Sir Thomas Crosbie, MP; “modernized” 1720 by Maurice Crosbie, 1st Lord Brandon, and again altered ca 1830, though keeping its original character. Two-storey main block with seven-bay front, the two outer bays on either side breaking forwards and framed by quoins; a pedimented centre, in which a single triple window was substituted at some period – presumably during the alterations of ca 1830 – for the three first floor bays. Plain rectangular doorcase; and a high eaved roof on a modillion cornice. 
 
The front was elongated by lower two-storey wings which protruded forwards at right angles to it, thus forming an open forecourt, then turned outwrds and extended for a considerable way on either side. Irregular wing at back of house. 
 
Inside the house, the panelled hall was decorated with figures painted in monochrome on panels. There was an early 18th century staircase and gallery; Corinthian newels, and more panelling on the landing with Corinthian pilasters; modillion cornice. A large drawing-room boasted compartmented plasterwork on the ceiling. Here there was a full-length Reynolds portrait of Lady Glandore. Caryatid chimneypiece in one room.  
 
The gardens had an early formal layout: sunken parterre; yew alleys; trees cut into an arcade; avenues of beech, lime and elm. A ruined Franciscan friary was in the grounds. 
 
The mansion was burnt to the ground by the IRA ca 1922, and all that remains are some relics of the formal garden

Ardfert eventually passed to Rev John Talbot (see Mount Talbot), son of 2nd Earl of Glandore’s sister, who assumed the additional surname of Crosbie. It was sold in the present century by J.B. Talbot-Crosbie. Nothing now remains of the house, but there are still some relics of the formal garden.” [1]

Ardfinnan Castle, Ardfinnan, Co. Tipperary https://aguidetoirishcountryhouses.com/2024/11/24/ardfinnan-castle-ardfinnan-co-tipperary-mbj/

Ardfinnan Castle, County Tipperary, August 2023. Photograph © Jennifer Winder-Baggot, www.irishhistorichouses.com.

p. 9. “(Prendergast/LGI1937 supp) An old tower house above the River Suir, with a three storey gable-ended Georgian wing and also a three storey battlemented tower added in C19, when the gable of the Georgian wing was stepped and the old tower was given impressive Irish battlements.” [1]

Ardfry, County Galway  – ruins https://aguidetoirishcountryhouses.com/2024/11/21/ardfry-abbey-or-house-oranmore-co-galway-ruin/

Ardfry House, County Galway.

p. 9. “(Blake/IFR) A long, two storey house probably of ca. 1770 on a peninsula jutting out into Galway Bay where previously there had been a castle which, during the Civil War, Sir Richard Blake garrisoned in the service of Charles I. Principal front of nine bays with a central pediment and a higher, pyramidal-roofed pavilion at either end. On the front face of each pavilion is a two storey curved bow roof with a shallow half-dome. Hall with alcoves supported by pairs of columns edmbeeded in the wall. Dorothea Herbert and a cousin called here in 1784 during the celebrations for the wedding of Joseph Blake, afterwards the Lord Wallscourt, to a daughter of the Earl of Louth; when an unfortunate incident was caused by the cousin’s dog (to which he was in the habit of feeding “ripe peaches and apricots”) “dirtying the room and Lord Louth’s blindly stepping into it.” At the time of 3rd Lord Wallscourt’s marriage to the beautiful Bessie Lock 1822, the house had been empty for some years and was very dilapidated; at first they thought it was beyond repair, but then they decided to restore it; the work was completed by 1826. It was probably then that the house was given its few mild Gothic touches: a pointed entrance doorway with pinnacles beneath a quatrefoil window; battlements on the end pavilions; and a Gothic conservatory with stone piers. The rather strange four storey block at teh back of teh house which has hood mouldings over its small windows may either have been built, or re-faced, at this time. The 3rd Lord Wallscourt, a man of exceptional strength and often very violent, liked walking about the house naked; his wife persuaded him to carry a cowbell when he was in this state so as to warn the maidservant of his approach. In the early years of the present century, the 2nd wife of 4th Lord Wallscourt sold the lead off the roof to pay her gambling debts; so that the house gradually fell into ruin. It was recently re-roofed and re-windowed so as to be used for the film Macintosh Man; now, wiht the film-property roof a skeleton and the windows falling out, the house seems like the ghost of what it was in an earlier stage of its decay.” [1]

Ardgillan Castle, Balbriggan, County Dublin  – open to public

https://aguidetoirishcountryhouses.com/2022/10/15/places-to-visit-in-dublin-ardgillan-castle-balbriggan-county-dublin/ 

Ardgillan, County Dublin. Photograph © Jennifer Winder-Baggot, www.irishhistorichouses.com.

p. 9. [Taylour, sub. Headfort, M/PB]. A C18 house consisting of a 2 storey bow-fronted centre with single-storey overlapping wings, mildly castellated either towards the end of C18 or early C19. The central bow has been made into a round tower by raising it a storey and giving it a skyline of Irish battlements; the main roof parapet has been crenellated and the windows given hood mouldings. Over each of the windows was thrown, literally speaking, a Gothic cloak of battlements and pointed arches; below which the original facade, with its quoins and rectangular sash windows, shows in all its Classical nakedness. Battlemented ranges and an octagon tower were added on the other side of the house.” [1]

Ardglass Castle (also known as The Newark), County Down https://aguidetoirishcountryhouses.com/2024/11/10/ardglass-castle-also-known-as-the-newark-ardglass-county-down/

Ardglass Castle, County Down.

p. 10. “(FitzGerald, sub Leinster, D/PB; Beauclerk, sub St. Albands, D/PB) Originally a row of C15 warehouses by the harbour, protected by three towers standing alongside it. Made into a castellated house at the end of C18 by Lord Charles FitzGerald, 1st and last Lord LeCale; also lived in by his mother, Emily, Duchess of Leinster, and her second husband William Ogilvie, a Scot who had been tutor to her more famous son, Lord Edward FitzGerald, and who subsequently developed Ardglass as a fashionable seaside resort. The old warehouses were given battlements, regularly-disposed windows with Georgian Gothic astragals, and a fanlighted doorway; the interior was decorated with plasterwork of the period, one room having a frieze with olive sprays and a repeated bust, which might perhaps be of Lord Edward. Ardglass Castle was eventually inherited by William Ogilvie’s daughter by a former marriage, who was the wife of Charles Beauclerk, a great-grandson of the 1st Duke of St. Albans. In the later C19, some of the Georgian astragals were replaced by heavy window frames, and a porch, rather like a miniature truncated version of the canopy of the Albert Memorial, was added to one front. The castle became a golf club in 1911.” [1]

Ardglass Castle, County Down, photograph by Robert French, [between ca. 1865-1914], Lawrence Photograph Collection, National Library of Ireland.

Ardigon, Killyleagh, County Down https://aguidetoirishcountryhouses.com/2024/11/10/ardigon-killyleagh-co-down/

p. 10. “(Heron/IFR) A solid Georgian block.” [1]

Ardkeen, Waterford, Co Waterford – hospital https://aguidetoirishcountryhouses.com/2025/12/15/ardkeen-waterford-co-waterford/

p. 10. “A two storey early to mid C19 house with five bay front and single-storey Doric portico. Built by a member of the Quaker family of Malcolmson, who founded the great cotton mills of Portlaw in early C19. Afterwards owned by the Bromhead family. Now a hospital.” [1]

Ardmore, Passage West, Co Cork https://aguidetoirishcountryhouses.com/2024/11/02/ardmore-house-ardmore-passage-west-co-cork-t12ny27/

Ardmore House, Ardmore, Passage West, Co. Cork, courtesy Cohalan Downing Estate Agents Nov 2024.

Ardmore Place, Bray, Co Wicklow – film studio https://aguidetoirishcountryhouses.com/2026/03/09/ardmore-place-bray-co-wicklow-film-studio/ 

Ardmore House, County Wicklow, photograph courtesy of screenireland.ie

p. 10. “(Paget/LG1972; Carleton-Paget, sub Carleton/IFR) A plain 2 storey C19 house, with an eaved roof and three sides bows on adjoining fronts.” [1]

Ardmulchan, Beauparc, Co. Meath https://aguidetoirishcountryhouses.com/2025/05/07/ardmulchan-beauparc-co-meath/

Ardmulchan, Beauparc, County Meath.

p. 10. [Taaffe; Galvin, sub. Law] “Originally a house of the Taaffe family; bought 1904 by Mrs. F.G. Fletcher (later Mrs R.W. McGrath), who replaced it by an Edwardian mansion to the design of Sidney, Mitchell & Wilson, of Edinburgh; mostly in the plan, gabled and mullioned Tudor manor house style, but with a large Baronial tower, and an English Renaissance doorway: an elaborate confection of coupled Doric columns, a Doric frieze, scroll pediments and heraldic beasts...” [1]

Ardnalee, Carrigrohane, Co Cork https://aguidetoirishcountryhouses.com/2024/12/18/ardnalee-carrigrohane-co-cork/

Ardnalee, Carrigrohane, Co Cork courtesy National Inventory.

p. 10. “Collins/LGI1912; Aldworth/IFR; Daly, sub Villiers-Stuart/IFR) A two storey house built by a member of the Morgan family 1832. Five bay principal front, overlooking the River Lee; fanlighted entrance porch beneath single-storey semi-circular Doric portico in side elevation, not centrally placed. Eaved roof. Small room panelled with the wooden blocks used for printing wallpapers.…” [1]

Ardnargle, Limavady, County Derry http://aguidetoirishcountryhouses.com/2025/01/06/ardnargle-limavady-county-derry/

Ardnargle House, County Derry, photograph courtesy Northern Ireland Community Archive.

p. 10. (Ogilby/LG1937supp) A plain two storey 5 bay house of ca 1780, built by John Ogilby; given a porch, a three sided bow, window surround with console brackets and a modillion cornice ca 1854 by R.L. Ogilby. Victorian Classical plasterwork in hall and main reception rooms.” [1]

Ardo (also known as Ardogena), Ardmore, Co Waterford https://aguidetoirishcountryhouses.com/2025/02/17/ardo-also-known-as-ardogena-ardmore-co-waterford/

p. 10. “(McKenna/LGI1912) A gingerbread Carcassonne on a bare clifftop overlooking the Atlantic, consisting of a plain two storey house to which a tall battlemented square tower and numerous round turrets, with pointed windows, hood mouldings and quatrefoil openings, were added in the late-Georgain period; the turrets continuing far beyond the house itself, joined by straight and curving castellated walls, to form a line of brittle fortifications….In the latter part of C18 and early C19, the home of Jeremiah Coghlan, a gentleman of slender means whose wife, known as “Madam”, maintained a recklessly grandiose and extravagant way of life here which she supported by helping the smugglers who frequented the coast. Two fo her four children were idiots, but she also had two beautiful daughters, one of whom she married off to “Cripplegate,” 8th and last Earl of Barrymore and the other to 9th Duc de Castries. The Coghlans, like the Barrymores – ended with a financial crash, but the Duc de Castries was rich and Ardo, though leased, remained in his family. It eventually passed to his grandson by his first marriage, the great Mashall Macmahon, victor ofMagenta and President of France in the early years of the Third Republic, who sold it 1874 to Sir Joseph McKenna of the National Bank, uncle of the politician Reginald McKenna. Ardo was abandoned ca 1918, it eventually became roofless and is now a crazy ruin.” [1]

Ardowen House, Co Sligo https://aguidetoirishcountryhouses.com/2025/09/10/ardowen-house-co-sligo/

Ardowen House, County Sligo, photograph by Robert French, Lawrence Photographic Collection, National Library of Ireland.

p. 10. “a plain Georgian house of two storeys over a basement; 4 bay front, with single storey 3 sided bow at one side. Return.” [1]

Ardoyne House, Edenderry, County Antrim https://aguidetoirishcountryhouses.com/2024/09/30/ardoyne-house-edenderry-county-antrim/

p. 10. “ (Andrews/IFR) A house said to be basically late C17 but enlarged and remodelled in the late-Georgian period. Two storey; three bay front, with deep end bow and simple Doric porch.” [1]

Ardress House, Charlemont, County Armagh (National Trust), open to public https://aguidetoirishcountryhouses.com/2024/10/07/ardress-house-county-armagh/

Ardress House, County Armagh, photograph courtesy of Ardress house website.

p. 11. “(Ensor/LG1894) A two storey five bay gable-ended house of ca. 1664 with two slight projections at the back; enlarged and modernized ca. 1770 by the Dublin architect, George Ensor – brother of better-known architect, John Ensor – for his own use. Ensor added a wing at one end of the front, and to balance it he built a screen wall with dummy windows at the other end. These additions were designed to give the effect of a centre block two bays longer than what the front was originally, with two storey one bay wings having Wyatt windows in both storeys. To complete the effect, he raised the façade to conceal the old high-pitched roof; decorating the parapet with curved upstands and a central urn; the parapet of the wings curving downwards on either side to frame other urns. Ensor also added a pedimented Tuscan porch and he altered the garden front, flanking it with curved sweeps. Much of the interior of the hosue was allowed to keep its simple, intimate scale; the oak staircase dates from before Ensor’s time. But he enlarged the drawing room, and decorated the walls and ceiling with Adamesque plasterwork and plaques of such elegance and quality that the work is generally assumed to have been carried out by the leading Irish artist in this style of work, Michael Stapleton. Ardress now belongs to the Northern Ireland National Trust and is open to the public.” [1]

Ardrum, Inniscarra, Co Cork – demolished  https://aguidetoirishcountryhouses.com/2024/12/18/ardrum-inniscarra-co-cork-demolished/

p. 11. “(Colthurst, Bt/Pb) A Georgian house with a long elevation. The original seat of the Colthurst family, who gave up living in the house in mid-C19, when they built the new Blarney Castle; it is now demolished.” [1]

Ardrumman House, Ramelton, Co Donegal (supplement) https://aguidetoirishcountryhouses.com/2024/11/10/ardrumman-house-ramelton-co-donegal/

p. 289. “A house of ca. 1830 in mild Tudor-Revival overlooking Lough Swilly. 3 bay entrance front, central projecting gable with pointed entrance doorway; adjoining front with 3 pointed entrance doorway; adjoining front with three bay recessed centre and a two bay gabled projection at each end, one having a single Wyatt window in its lower storey surmounted by a label, as are the other windows which have simple mullions. Eaved roof with bargeboards.”  [1]

Ards, Sheephaven, Donegal - demolished ca 1965  https://aguidetoirishcountryhouses.com/2024/11/10/ards-sheephaven-donegal-demolished-ca-1965/

Ards, County Donegal, photograph by Robert French, Lawrence Photographic Collection, National Library of Ireland.

p. 11. “(Wray/LG1863; Stewart/ LGI1912). The former seat of the Wray family. ..When Alexander Stewart rebuilt the house in 1830 it was to the design of John Hargrave of Cork. [1]

Ardsallagh, Navan, Co Meath https://aguidetoirishcountryhouses.com/2025/05/08/ardsallagh-navan-co-meath/

Ardsallagh House, Navan, Co. Meath, June 1955, by Alexander Campbell Morgan, Morgan Aerial Photographic Collection, National Library of Ireland.

p. 11. [French/LGI1912] Tudor revival house of 1844; with steeply pointed gables and dormer-gables, oriels, mullions and tall chimneys.” [1]

Ardsallagh, Fethard, Co Tipperary https://aguidetoirishcountryhouses.com/2025/09/12/ardsallagh-fethard-co-tipperary/

Ardsallagh House, County Tipperary, courtesy of myhome.ie

p. 11. “(Farquhar, Bt, PB) A gable-ended double bow-fronted C18 house of two storeys over a basement; the bows being three sided and having between them a Venetian window over a pedimented and fanlighted tripartite doorway. Broad flight of steps with railings up to hall door. Hall open to spacious staircase; drawing room and dining room with modern plasterwork friezes in late C18 style. Originally the seat of the Frend family; bought after WWII by Mrs Reginald Farquhar who has made a noteable garden her with a series of walled enclosures, one of which is laid out as an Italian garden with a pool, also a wild garden planted with many rare trees and shrubs.” [1]

Ardtully, Co Kerry  – burnt in 1921, ruin https://aguidetoirishcountryhouses.com/2024/11/22/ardtully-co-kerry-burnt-1921-a-ruin/

Ardtully, County Kerry, courtesy Archiseek.

p. 12. “A Victorian Baronial house.. built by Sir Richard Orpen on the site of an earlier house which in turn had replaced an old MacCarthy stronghold. Burnt 1921.” [1]

The Argory, Charlemont, County Armagh (National Trust) – open to the public https://aguidetoirishcountryhouses.com/2024/10/11/the-argory-county-armagh-national-trust/

The Argory, County Armagh, photograph courtesy the Argory website.
The Argory, County Armagh, photograph by Robert French, Lawrence Photographic Collection, National Library of Ireland.

p. 12. “(MacGeough Bond/IFR) Built ca. 1820 by Walter MacGeough (who subsequently assumed the surname of Bond), to the design of two architects, named A. and J. Williamson, one or both of whom worked in the office of Francis Johnston. A house with imposing and restrained Classical elevations, very much in the Johnston manner, of two storeys, and faced with ashlar. Main block has seven bay front, the centre bay breaking forward under a shallow pediment with acroteria; Wyatt window in centre above porch with Doric columns at corners. Unusual fenestration: the middle window in both storeys either side of the centre being taller than those to the left and right of it. Front prolonged by wing of same height as main block, but set back from it; of three bays, ending with a wide three-sided bow which has a chimneystack in its centre. Three bay end to main block; other front of main block also of seven bays, with a porch; prolonged by service wing flush with main block. Dining room has plain cornice with mutules; unusual elliptical overdoors with shells and fruit in plasterwork. Very extensive office ranges and courtyards at one corner of house; building with a pediment on each side and a clock tower with cupola; range with polygonal end pavilions; imposing archway. The interior is noted for a remarkable organ and for the modern art collection of the late owner. Now maintained by the National Trust.” [1]

Archbishop’s Palace, Armagh, photograph by Eric Jones, Creative Commons Attribution Share-alike license 2.0.

Artramon House, Castlebridge, Co Wexford – B&B https://aguidetoirishcountryhouses.com/2024/10/20/artramon-house-castlebridge-co-wexford-bb/

Artramon, County Wexford, photograph courtesy of Artramon’s website.
Artramon House, County Wexford, photograph from National Inventory of Architectural Heritage

p. 12. “(Le Hunte/LGI 1912; Neave, Bt/Pb) A late C18 house, remodelled after being burnt 1923. 2 storey; entrance front with pediment of which the peak is level with the coping of the parapet, and the base is well below the level of the main cornice. In the breakfront central feature below the pediment are two windows and a tripartite Venetian doorway; two bays on either side of the central feature.” [1]

Ash Hill Towers, Kilmallock, Co Limerick  – hidden Ireland accommodation, 482 https://aguidetoirishcountryhouses.com/2023/04/06/ash-hill-kilmallock-co-limerick/

Ash Hill house, County Limerick. Photograph © Jennifer Winder-Baggot, www.irishhistorichouses.com.

“(Evans/Carbery/ Johnson/ Harrington) A C18 pedimented house [the National Inventory tells us it was built in 1781], the back of which was rebuilt in Gothic 1833, probably to the design of James and George Richard Pain [the National Inventory corrects this – it was designs by Charles Frederick Anderson], with two slender round battlemented and machiolated towers. Rectangular windows with wooden tracery. Good plasterwork in upstairs drawing room in the manner of Wyatt and by the same hand as the hall at Glin Castle; saloon with domed ceiling. The towers have, in recent years, been removed. Originally a seat of the Evans family; passed in the later C19 to John Henry Weldon. Now the home of Major Stephen Johnson.” [1]

Ash Park, Feeny, County Derry (glamping) http://aguidetoirishcountryhouses.com/2025/01/06/ash-park-feeny-county-derry/

p. 13. “(Stevenson/IFR) A two storey five bay house built ca. 1796 by James Stevenson, of Knockan, Co Derry, as a residence for his elder son, William. High pitched roof, partly gable-ended, partly hipped.” [1]

Ashbourne House, Co Cork  – no longer a hotel https://aguidetoirishcountryhouses.com/2024/12/18/ashbourne-house-co-cork-hotel/

Ashbourne House was the residence of Richard Beamish in the second half of the 19th century. Beamish created the fine gardens with plants and trees from all over the world on the triangular grounds between the Old Cork Road (up the hill) and the New Cork Road running along the waterfront.  It was later bought by the Hallinan family, who ran the Avoncore Mills in Midleton.  They maintained the gardens into the 20th century, until it was put up for sale. After a few years of lying empty the house was finally bought by the Garde family who turned it into a hotel and proceeded to restore the gardens for the enjoyment of their guests. It is thanks to the Gardens that these gardens were listed for protection.

p. 12. “(Beamish/IFR; Hallinan/ IFR) A plain 2 storey 5 bay late-Georgian house with additions in the late Victorian or Edwardian half-timbered style. Interiors of the period: fancy timber studding in the walls, oak panelling, beams and fretted ceilings. Garden with noted collection of trees and shurbs. Home of Richard Pigott Beamish, whose part in the Pike court case is recounted by Mark Bence-Jones in Twilight of the Ascendancy…” [1] 

Ashbrook, County Derry – whole house rental accommodation  http://aguidetoirishcountryhouses.com/2025/01/06/ashbrook-county-derry-open-to-public/

Ashbrook House, County Derry, photograph courtesy of Ashbook House facebook page.

p. 12. “(Beresford-Ash/IFR) A two storey bow-fronted gable-ended C18 house, reputed to incorporate a house built by John Ash 1686. Unusual fenestration: two windows on either side of the central curved bow in the upper storey, but only one on each side below. All the windows in the front and the entrance doorway have rusticated surrounds. Both sides of the house are gabled and irregular.” [1]

Ashburn, Limerick, County Limerick https://aguidetoirishcountryhouses.com/2025/02/17/ashburn-limerick-county-limerick/

p. 12. “A 2 storey house of 1829 built onto a three storey C18 house. Three bay front with central breakfront and semi-circular Ionic porch; roof parapet and corner pilasters. Bought 1870 by the Dunphy family; sold 1949, demolished ca. 1960.” [1]

Ashfield, Rathfarnham, Co Dublin http://aguidetoirishcountryhouses.com/2025/01/13/ashfield-rathfarnham-co-dublin/

Ashfield House, Rathfarnham, County Dublin, courtesy National Inventory.

p. 12. “(Cusack-Smith, Bt/Pb; Denis-Tottenham, sub Tottenham/IFR) A Georgian house of two storeys over high basement. Three bay front; solid roof parapet with urns; C19 porch. Blind lunette windows in side elevation. The seat of Sir William Cusack-Smith, 2nd Bt Baron of the Court of Exchequer in Ireland 1801-36.” [1]

Ashfield Lodge, Cootehill, Co Cavan – gone  https://aguidetoirishcountryhouses.com/2024/11/09/ashfield-lodge-cootehill-co-cavan-gone/

p. 12. “(Clements/IFR) a two storey late-Georgian house… sold after the death of Lt-Col M.L.S. Clements 1952; subsequently demolished.” [1]

Ashford Castle, Cong, County Galway/ County Mayo  – hotel https://aguidetoirishcountryhouses.com/2024/10/17/ashford-castle-county-mayo-galway-hotel/

Ashford Castle, Cong, Co. Mayo courtesy Archiseek.

p. 12. “(Browne, Oranmore and Browne, B/PB; Guinness, Bt/PB) A vast and imposing Victorian-Baronial castle of rather harsh rough-hewn grey stone in a superb postion and the head of Lough Corrib. close to County Mayo village of Cong; built onto an earlier house consisting of a 2 storey 5 bay Georgian shooting-box enlarged and remodelled in French chateau style. The shooting-box and estate originally belonged to the Oranmore and Browne family; they were sold by the Encumbered Estates Court in 1855 and bought by Benjamin Lee Guinness, afterwards 1st Bt., head of Guinness’s brewery, who transformed the shooting-box into the French chateau. From the 1870s onwards, his son, Arthur, 1st and Last Lord Ardilaun, added the castle, which was designed by James Franklin Fuller and George Ashlin. He also built the tremendous castellated 6 arch bridge across the river, with outworks and an embattled gateway surmounted by a gigantic A and a Baron’s coronet, which is the main approach; from the far side of this bridge the castle looks most impressive. Its interior, however, is a disappointment, like the interiors of so many late-Victorian houses. The rooms are not particularly large, and some of them are rather low; everything is light oak, with timbered ceilings and panelling. The main hall was formed out of 2 or more rooms in the earlier house, and has a somewhat makeshift air; it is surrounded by an oak gallery with thin uprights and a staircase rises straight from one side of it. Another room has an immense carved oak mantel with caryatids and the Guinness motto. Magnificent gardens and grounds; large fountain, vista up the hillside with steps; castellated terrace by the lake. Sold ca 1930, now a hotel.” [1]

Ashgrove, Co Cavan https://aguidetoirishcountryhouses.com/2024/11/09/ashgrove-co-cavan/

Ashgrove, Co Cavan courtesy National Inventory.

p. 13. “Two storey three bay C18 house with rusticated Venetian doorway below Venetian window.” [1]

Ashgrove, Cobh, Co Cork – demolished  

https://aguidetoirishcountryhouses.com/2024/12/19/ashgrove-cobh-co-cork-demolished/

p. 13. “(Beamish/IFR) A plain three storey late Georgian house built for Councillor Franklin by Abraham Hargrave, overlooking the water between Great Island and the mainland… now a ruin. Old keep by entrance gate.” [1]

Ashley Park, Nenagh, Co Tipperary  – accommodation https://aguidetoirishcountryhouses.com/2024/10/19/ashley-park-nenagh-co-tipperary-accommodation/

Ashley Park, County Tipperary, December 2016. Photograph © Jennifer Winder-Baggot, www.irishhistorichouses.com.

p. 13. “(Head/LGI 1958, Atkinson/IFR) A two storey house of early C19 appearance, said to incorporate older building. Polygonal ends; external shutters; verandah.” [1]

Ashline, Ennis, Co Clare https://aguidetoirishcountryhouses.com/2024/11/09/ashline-ennis-co-clare/

Ashlin House, Ennis, County Clare, photograph by Robert French, Lawrence Photographic Collection, National Library of Ireland.

p. 13. “(Mahon/LGI1912) A two storey Georgian house with a curved bow in the centre of its front, incorporating the entrance doorway; and with one bay on either side. Windows grouped away from the corners, leaving wide expanses of blank wall at either side of the façade. Extension set back and lower wing.” [1]

Ashton House, Castleknock, Co Dublin http://aguidetoirishcountryhouses.com/2025/01/13/ashton-house-castleknock-co-dublin/

Ashton House, County Dublin.

p. 13. “An imposing Victorian Italianate house consisting of three storey main block with single-storey wings. Both the main block and the wings have balustraded roof parapets; the main block has a central projection, with small segmental pediment, and a pilastered and balustraded enclosed porch. Small triangular pediment on each wing.” [1]

Ashurst, Killiney, Co Dublin http://aguidetoirishcountryhouses.com/2025/01/13/ashurst-killiney-co-dublin/

Ashurst House, County Dublin photos from Irish Times Thu May 05 2022.

Askeaton Castle, Limerick  https://aguidetoirishcountryhouses.com/2024/11/19/askeaton-castle-county-limerick-office-of-public-works/

Askeaton Castle, County Limerick, courtesy Office of Public Works website.

Assolas, Kanturk, Co Cork  https://aguidetoirishcountryhouses.com/2024/12/19/assolas-kanturk-co-cork/

Assolas, Kanturk, Co Cork courtesy myhome.ie

Athavallie, Castlebar, County Mayo https://aguidetoirishcountryhouses.com/2025/04/23/athavallie-castlebar-county-mayo/

Athavillie, County Mayo, courtesy National Inventory.

Athcarne Castle, Duleek, Co Meath https://aguidetoirishcountryhouses.com/2025/02/17/athcarne-castle-duleek-co-meath/

Athcarne Castle, County Meath 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.

Athclare Castle, Co Louth https://aguidetoirishcountryhouses.com/2025/04/02/athclare-castle-co-louth/

Athclare Castle, County Louth, courtesy National Inventory.

Athgoe Park, Hazelhatch, Co Dublin http://aguidetoirishcountryhouses.com/2025/01/13/athgoe-park-hazelhatch-co-dublin/

Athgoe Castle, County Dublin, photograph courtesy National Inventory.

Attyflin, Patrickswell, Co Limerick  https://aguidetoirishcountryhouses.com/2025/03/20/attyflin-patrickswell-co-limerick/

Attyflin, County Limerick, courtesy Archiseek.

Auburn, Athlone, Co Westmeath https://aguidetoirishcountryhouses.com/2026/01/24/auburn-athlone-co-westmeath/

Aughentaine Castle, Fivemiletown, County Tyrone, demolished and new house built 1954. https://aguidetoirishcountryhouses.com/2025/12/08/aughentaine-castle-fivemiletown-county-tyrone-demolished-and-new-house-built-1954/

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

Aughnagaddy House,  Ramelton, Co Donegal  (supplement) https://aguidetoirishcountryhouses.com/2024/11/10/aughnagaddy-house-ramelton-co-donegal/

Aughrane Castle, also known as Castle Kelly, Ballygar, Co Galway  – demolished 1951 https://aguidetoirishcountryhouses.com/2024/11/21/aughrane-castle-also-known-as-castle-kelly-ballygar-co-galway-demolished-1951/

Castle Kelly, or Aughrane Castle, County Galway, photograph courtesy of Melvin and de Burca.

Avondale House, County Wicklow – open to public https://aguidetoirishcountryhouses.com/2024/10/20/avondale-house-county-wicklow-open-to-public/

Avondale, County Wicklow. Photograph © Jennifer Winder-Baggot, www.irishhistorichouses.com.

Avonmore, Annamoe, Co Wicklow https://aguidetoirishcountryhouses.com/2026/03/09/avonmore-annamoe-co-wicklow/

Avonmore House, County Wicklow, built around 1830, photograph courtesy of National Inventory of Architectural Heritage.

Ayesha Castle, Victoria Road, Killiney, Dublin http://aguidetoirishcountryhouses.com/2025/01/13/ayesha-castle-victoria-road-killiney-dublin/

Ayesha Castle, Dublin entrance gate, photograph by Robert French, Lawrence Photograph Collection, National Library of Ireland

Anngrove (formerly Ballinsperrig), Carrigtwohill, Co Cork – demolished by ca. 1965

Anngrove (formerly Ballinsperrig), Carrigtwohill, Co Cork – demolished by ca. 1965 

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. 6. “(Cotter, Bt/PB; Barry/IFR; Gubbins/LG1937 supp) A remarkable late C17 house built by Sir James Cotter, MP, a staunch adherent of Charles II who, in 1664, went to Switzerland with two companions and shot the fugitive Regicide, John Lisle. ..One of the rooms originally contained a velvet bed with hangings and gold brocade which was said to have belonged to Charles I and to have been given to Sir James Cotter by Queen Henrietta Maria “as a mark of her royal favour and thanks” for having led the successful action against Lisle. James II is traditionally supposed to have stayed a night in the house and to have slept in this bed. The lands on which the house was built were leased from the Barrys, Earls of Barrymore; some time post 1720, the widow of sir James Cotter’s son sold the reversion of the lease to the 4th Earl and the Cotter family seat was henceforth Rockforest. The 5th Earl of Barrymore, as Viscount Buttevant, lived for a period in Anngrove; but it was afterwards let. Charles I’s bed, which the Cotters left behind, was removed to Castle Lyons, the principal Barrymore seat, where it was burnt in the fire of 1771. Towards the end of the C18, or in early C19, Anngrove passed to the Wise family, from whom it was inherited, later in C19, by the Gubbins family. The house was still standing in 1950s but was demolished by ca. 1965.” 

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

A very important late 17C and early 18C two storey house for James Cotter MP. Five bay with projecting square corner towers which had high-pitched pyramidal roofs. Demolished.”

https://landedfamilies.blogspot.com/search/label/Ireland

Barry of Castle Lyons and Anngrove, Earls of Barrymore 

The Barrys are one of the most ancient landed families in the British Isles, and can be traced back to Odo de Barri, a knight who assisted with the Norman conquest of Pembrokeshire at the end of the 11th century and was granted large estates including Manorbier Castle and Barry Island, from which the family took its name. His grandsons included the historian, Giraldus Cambrensis [Gerald of Wales] (c.1146-1223), and also Gerald’s elder brothers, Robert and Philip, who accompanied their half-uncle Richard FitzStephen to Ireland on his expedition of 1169 to help Dermot, King of Leinster, recover his throne. Robert was killed in Ireland in about 1185, but Philip de Barry (d. c.1200) was granted the cantreds of Olethan, Muskerry and Killyde in County Cork, parts of which large estate remained the property of his descendants until the end of the 18th century. Although Manorbier Castle in Pembrokeshire remained a principal seat of the family until the 15th century, their focus was increasingly on Ireland. Philip’s grandson, Sir David Barry (d. 1261) was the first to attract the soubriquet ‘Barry More’ [i.e., Barry the Great], and his son, David Oge Barry (d. 1278), who was Lord Justiciar of Ireland in 1267 and founded Buttevant Abbey, was probably the first of the family to be summoned to the Irish parliament as a baron, although (as the Complete Peerage expresses it), ‘any date given for the origin of early prescriptive Irish titles such as this must be in the nature of guesswork’. It is not even clear whether David Oge Barry and his descendants were properly styled Lord Barry, Lord Barrymore, or Lord Buttevant, since in later centuries the titles were used interchangeably. 
 
William Barry, the 11th Lord Barry, was one of the fifteen peers summoned to Greenwich (Kent) by King Henry VII in 1489, when he ranked as the premier baron of Ireland, and was styled ‘Lord Barry of Buttevant’. He was presumably aligned with the Yorkist faction in the Wars of the Roses, since he supported Perkin Warbeck’s claim to the throne in the 1490s, but although he seems to have made his peace with King Henry VII, he was murdered by his brother, the Archdeacon of Cork and Cloyne, in 1500. The archdeacon was himself killed and burned in reprisal, and another brother, Edmund, had his eyes put out by William’s widow. This was evidently all part of a bitter blood-feud by which the family was riven in the late 15th and 16th centuries. William’s son, John Barry, the 12th Lord Barry, was killed by the Earl of Desmond in 1530, whereupon the title and estates passed to William’s surviving brother John Barry (d. 1534), who seems to have been the only one of his generation to die in his bed, unmaimed. 
 
John’s eldest son, John Barry (c.1517-53), 14th Baron Barry, sat in the Irish parliament of 1541 as a Viscount, and although there is no record of the creation of a peerage of this degree, which may simply have been assumed, the peerage was henceforward regarded as a viscountcy by the Crown (again variously called Viscount Barry, Viscount Barrymore and Viscount Buttevant). John Barry sat in the 1541 Parliament, indeed, as the premier viscount, implying a precedence of creation over the Gormanston viscountcy (of 1478). This led earlier writers to try and characterise the family’s peerage as a viscountcy in earlier centuries, but there is no evidence for this, and it may simply be that Barry’s peers were not willing or able to resist the claims of the belligerent Barrys when forcefully asserted. John was succeeded in turn in the viscountcy and estates by his brothers Edmond (d. 1556) and James (d. 1558), both of whom made settlements of their property in default of male heirs on their kinsman, James Barry (d. 1581) and his descendants. These settlements seem to have been made under coercion, and on the death of James Barry, the 3rd Viscount, in 1558 the viscountcy should have become extinct and the barony and estates should have passed to Edmond More Barry of Rathcoban, but this did not happen, for the estates were seized by James Barry (d. 1581), who also assumed both the barony and the viscountcy. James was clearly a man of exceptional violence (he had already murdered the four sons of his half-uncle, David Downe Barry (who had himself murdered his uncle and James’ half-brother), and it would seem no one – not even the Lord Deputy or Queen Elizabeth – was willing to stand up him. In 1558 he was pardoned for the four murders; in 1560 he was summoned to parliament as a viscount; and in 1561 he secured an assignment of the family estates from the rightful heir, Edmond More Barry, no doubt by his usual unscrupulous methods, and had livery of them from the Crown. In a few short years, by sheer thuggery, James had not only secured the family estates and titles but secured recognition of his right to them from the Crown. 
 
James, 4th Viscount Buttevant, is the blackest character in this family, although others were far from estimable. His eldest son, Richard Barry (d. 1622), was born deaf and dumb, and was on that account (though not mentally impaired) passed over in the succession to the peerages and a major part of the estates, which descended to David Barry (1550-1617), 5th Viscount Buttevant. He joined the Earl of Desmond’s revolt against the Crown in 1593 but abandoned the rebel cause in 1599 and secured a pardon in 1602 on payment of a fine of £500. He thereafter remained loyal to the Crown and was indeed trusted and encouraged by King James I. His eldest son died in 1604/5, and it was therefore a posthumous grandson, David Barry (1605-42), who inherited the title and estates in 1617. The Crown granted his wardship to Richard Boyle, 1st Earl of Cork, and he was brought up a Protestant in a civilised household. The relationship with Lord Cork went well beyond guardianship, however, for Cork took mortgages on the Barry estates in order to pay off the inherited debts, and in 1621, arranged David’s marriage to his eldest but barely teenage daughter, Alice (1607-66). Finally, in 1628, he paid £3,000 for the young man, who had recently come of age, to be raised to the next rank of the peerage, as Earl of Barrymore, and a few years later built him a comfortable if still fortified new house, Castle Lyons, on the Barry estate.  
 
The new-minted Earl had all the loyalty to the Crown which his grandfather had exhibited in his later years, and as the country moved towards Civil War he was strongly royalist. He raised men at his own expense to fight in the First Bishops’ War in Scotland in 1639-40 and then worked in harness with Lord Inchiquin to fight the Confederacy in Ireland in 1641-42, but he was mortally wounded at the Battle of Liscarroll in July 1642 and died a few weeks later. Once again, the heir was a minor: his son, Richard Barry (1630-94), 2nd Earl of Barrymore, who was sent to London (where he studied under John Milton for at least a year) and then to France, where he married a Catholic, against his mother’s wishes. He stayed in France until his first wife’s death but then returned to London, where he married the daughter of the president of Cromwell’s council. These connections made him acceptable to both the Royalist and Parliamentarian factions, and at the Restoration he was able to become a colonel in the army and join the Irish privy council. 
 
The 2nd Earl had fifteen children by his three wives and was succeeded first by his eldest son, Laurence Barry (c.1657-99), 3rd Earl of Barrymore, who died without issue, and then by Laurence’s half-brother, Lt-Gen. James Barry (1667-1748), 4th Earl of Barrymore, who was a career soldier until relieved of his command at the time of the Jacobite uprising in 1715 on the grounds that his loyalty to the Hanoverians was doubtful.  

A picture containing outdoor, grass, grazing, building

Description automatically generated 
 
Rocksavage Hall: the Tudor house inherited by the 4th Earl passed to his 
daughter and thence to the Cholmondeley family, under whom it fell into ruins. 

 
By his second marriage, the 4th Earl acquired estates in Cheshire, Lancashire and Yorkshire centered on Rocksavage Hall (Ches.) that brought with them political control of the parliamentary borough of Wigan. As an Irish peer he was eligible to sit in the British House of Commons, and he did so, first as MP for Stockbridge, 1710-13 and 1714-15, and then for Wigan, which he represented 1715-27 and 1734-47. As an old man, his sympathy for the Jacobite cause strengthened, and from 1740 onwards he was actively involved in planning for a second Jacobite rebellion, with the assistance of one of his younger sons, who was a naval officer. He was arrested on suspicion of treason in 1744, and had his papers seized, but after the rebellion failed the Government decided not to prosecute him, perhaps partly because of his age; he died at the beginning of 1748. His Cheshire estate had been settled on his daughter by his second wife at the time of her marriage to Maj-Gen. James Cholmondeley in 1730, and when he divorced her for adultery in 1736 passed permanently into the hands of that family. His other English property was bequeathed to the same daughter, who later sold it in 1760. His extensive property in Ireland, augmented by his purchase of Anngrove, passed to his eldest son, James Barry (1717-51), 5th Earl of Barrymore, who probably had substantial debts since he was living in Boulogne from 1748 until his death three years later. The 5th Earl’s son, Richard Barrymore (1745-73), 6th Earl of Barrymore, was just six years old when he inherited and was brought up by his mother. On reaching maturity, he joined the army, but he is chiefly remembered for his fondness for gambling and practical jokes. The jokes were sometimes very practical: for example, on one occasion he invited two friends to dine in a private room at an inn and, apparently on a whim, suggested a wager on how many playing cards it would take to entirely cover the floor of the room; what they did not know was that he had dined in the same room a few days previously and that after eating he had piled up all the furniture in the corridor outside and had conducted an experiment to determine the answer. 
 
The 6th Earl married in 1767 and over the next six years had three sons and one daughter. He had leased Anngrove out, and in 1771 Castle Lyons was destroyed by fire, but he lived chiefly in London, where he had a house in Portman Square. In 1773 he died suddenly, probably of a fever (although dark tales circulated later to the effect that he had killed himself after losing heavily at cards), and once again the earldom passed to a minor, in this case Richard Barry (1769-93), 7th Earl of Barrymore. As adolescents lodged with a tutor at Wargrave (Berks), he and his brothers were known for their practical joking (on moonlit nights, they would occupy themselves with switching around the hanging innsigns of local Berkshire inns, so that puzzled landlords might go to bed in the Five Bells and wake up in the Rose & Crown). He had the misfortune to lose his mother in 1780, and the only restraining influence on his crucial formative years was his grandmother, who seems to have been indulgent to a fault.  

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Satirical print of the 7th Earl and his brothers by 
James Gillray, 1791. 

She sent him up to Eton with £1,000 in pocket money, which can only have encouraged profligacy and enabled him to explore all the vices which London had to offer at a tender age. He was intelligent, good-looking, charming, rash, and given to sudden enthusiasms on which a great deal of money might be spent before he tired of the occupation and moved on to something else, such as hunting (he bought his own pack of hounds) and boxing. His hedonistic lifetime brought him to the attention of George, Prince of Wales, to whose circle the 7th Earl and his siblings became known as the four Gates: the rash young earl was Hellgate; his next brother, who had a club foot, was Cripplegate; the youngest brother, always in scrapes, was Newgate; and the sister, known for her colourful language, was Billingsgate, which was witty, if not kind.  
 

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Barrymore, Wargave: the house rented by the 7th Earl but much altered since his time. Image: Historic England. 
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Barrymore, Wargrave: the interior of the private theatre built by the 7th Earl c.1789 and demolished in 1792. 

 
The Earl’s only constant passion was for the theatre and amateur theatricals and when he rented a house at Wargrave (Berks) he built a theatre in the garden (reputedly at a cost of £60,000), in which full-scale performances were given to invited audiences by the Earl, his friends, and some professional actors. He also maintained a smaller theatre in London. Alongside unrestrained gambling and womanising, it begins to be credible that in less than five years he ran through a fortune of £300,000 (perhaps £20m today), leaving the Irish estates mortgaged to the hilt and having to be sold. As early as 1791 he had to come to an arrangement with his creditors whereby his income was reduced to an allowance of £2,500, while the remaining income from the estate was applied to reducing his debts, and it comes as something of a surprise to find that he managed to keep out of the bankruptcy courts and was even nominally solvent when he died in 1793. His death, like his life, was dramatic. He had become an officer in the militia and was being driven in a curricle as escort to a detachment of French prisoners of war being taken from Rye to Dover Castle. He was holding his musket between his knees when a particularly violent jolt caused it to be discharged and the ball went through his head: he died shortly afterwards. Although this sounds remarkably like a disguised suicide, the possibility does not seem to have been suggested at the time, and it may have been, as reported, a tragic accident. 
 
The 7th Earl had married shortly before his death a great beauty who happened to be the daughter of a sedan chairman in London. Although the girl, who was a minor, married with her father’s blessing, he had the romantic fantasy of eloping with her to Gretna Green for the marriage with all the speed he could command. She later married an army officer and survived, as plain Mrs Williams, until 1866.  

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“Lady Barrymore”, the boxing baroness, was actually Mary Ann Pierce, 
the former mistress of the 7th Earl of Barrymore. 

The name ‘Lady Barrymore’ remained prominent in the London press throughout the early 19th century, however, because one of the 7th Earl’s cast-off mistresses, Mary Ann Pierce (d. 1832) took to calling herself by that name. She became ‘the lowest form of prostitute’ and took to drink. When she was in liquor she became violent, and if a publican refused to serve her she thought nothing of breaking up his premises. She was a more than capable boxer (she had learned alongside the 7th Earl and the press dubbed her ‘The Boxing Baroness’), and would beat up watchmen who came to arrest her. She appeared at Bow St. magistrates court more than 150 times charged with affray and similar offences, and is said to have spent seven of her last ten years in gaol, but once there, and dried out, she became a different person and was so useful in keeping order among the female prisoners that she was routinely employed by the prison authorities for that purpose. 
 
The 7th Earl’s club-footed younger brother, Henry Barry (1770-1823), succeeded him as 8th Earl of Barrymore, and completed the process of selling the family’s Irish estates. He lived in London, and was also part of the Prince of Wales’ set, but although he once fought a duel (something his elder brother is not recorded to have done), he had neither the income nor the personality to be a rake on the same scale. He married a daughter of Joseph Coghlan of the magical Ardo in Co. Waterford, but had no children, and on his death the earldom of Barrymore became extinct (it was the subject of a new creation for a descendant of the 4th Earl in 1902). The 8th Earl was also the 13th Viscount Buttevant and 26th Baron Barry, and a claim was made in the 1820s to these lesser titles, but could not be proved, and they too are now regarded as extinct. 
 

Castle Lyons, Co. Cork 

 
An early 17th century fortified mansion, built on the foundations of the castle of the O’Lehans, from whom the place took its name. It became the principal seat of the Barry family from the 1620s, when it superseded Barryscourt Castle. The house was apparently remodelled from 1636 onwards at the cost of the Earl of Cork for his son-in-law, David Barry (1605-42), 1st Earl of Barrymore. The new house was laid out around a central courtyard, with, on one side, the great hall, hung with weapons, on another the kitchen, and on a third side a two-storey gallery ninety feet long, which was, however, called unfinished in 1750 (work probably stopped with the start of war in 1640 and never resumed). One front of the house overlooked gardens with a large canal, supplied with water from the river by an aqueduct which also supplied the kitchens, which a visitor in 1797 said was contrived by a local miller ‘after the exertions of a celebrated artist from England had failed in bringing the water by another course’; one wonders who the ‘celebrated artist’ was? The demesne included a deer park. 
 

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Castle Lyons: the ruins of the house today. 

By the 18th century, the Earls of Barrymore were probably spending as much time in London and Dublin as in County Cork, but the 4th Earl (1667-1748) acquired Anngrove as a new seat, and Castle Lyons evidently fell into disrepair. The 6th Earl (1745-73), who lived chiefly in Dublin and London, let Anngrove, but in 1771 he was carrying out repairs at Castle Lyons when the carelessness of a tinker employed to make repairs to the lead roof caused the house to be burned down. It was never rebuilt, for the 6th Earl died two years after the fire and was succeeded by the infant 7th Earl (1769-93), who grew up to be a notorious rake, one of the boon companions of George, Prince of Wales, who gambled away the family fortune. He sold Castle Lyons and his other estates in Co. Cork and the ruins of the house, with numerous tall chimneys, remain a prominent object in the landscape.. 
 
Descent: James Barry (d. 1581), 4th Viscount Buttevant; to son, David Barry (1550-1617), 5th Viscount Buttevant; to grandson, David Barry (1605-42), 6th Viscount Buttevant and 1st Earl of Barrymore; to son, Richard Barry (1630-94), 2nd Earl of Barrymore; to son, Lawrence Barry (c.1657-99), 3rd Earl of Barrymore; to half-brother, James Barry (1667-1748), 4th Earl of Barrymore; to son, James Barry (1717-51), 5th Earl of Barrymore; to son, Richard Barry (1745-73), 6th Earl of Barrymore; to son, Richard Barry (1769-93), 7th Earl of Barrymore; to brother, Henry Barry (1770-1823), 8th Earl of Barrymore, who sold 1799 to John Anderson. 
 

Anngrove alias Ballinsperrig, Carrigtwohill, Co. Cork 

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Anngrove: the entrance front 

Anngrove was a remarkable and important late 17th century house, built about 1685 for Sir James Cotter MP, a staunch Royalist who in 1664 went to Switzerland with two companions and shot the fugitive regicide, John Lisle, for which he was rewarded with a large pension and the Governorship of the Leeward Islands. Anngrove was built on his return from this posting, and consisted of a two storey five bay centre with a high hipped roof, and boldly projecting corner towers, capped with pyramidal roofs that were slightly lower than the high pitched roof of the central block. A moulded cornice and a prominent string course ran around the house and towers, uniting them into a single composition. Inside, one room originally contained a ‘velvet bed with hangings and gold brocade’ which was said to have belonged to Charles I and to have been a gift from Queen Henrietta Maria as a thank-you present to Cotter for his despatch of John Lisle. James II is supposed to have stayed a night in the house and to have slept in this bed, during his operations in Ireland in 1689-91. 
 
The lands on which Anngrove was built were leased by Sir James Cotter from the Earls of Barrymore, and sometime after 1720 the 4th Earl bought back the lease. After the death of the 5th Earl, Anngrove was let again. Charles I’s bed was taken to Castle Lyons, where it was destroyed in the fire of 1771. The Barrys then used the house again for a few years, but towards the end of the 18th century, Anngrove was sold by the profligate 7th Earl to the Wise family, from whom it was inherited in the 19th century by the Gubbins family. The estate was sold to the Land Commission in 1909, and by the 1950s the house was attached to a small farm. It began to suffer from subsidence and was progressively abandoned as it became dangerous. In the early 1960s a new bungalow was built behind the old house to replace it, and some fittings from the old house were relocated there before the shell of the building was blown up with the help of an explosives expert from a nearby quarry; demolition had taken place by 1965. 
 
Descent: built for Sir James Cotter (c.1630-1705); to son, James Cotter (1689-1720); to widow Margaret, who sold to James Barry (1667-1748), 4th Earl of Barrymore; to son, James Barry (1717-51), 5th Earl of Barrymore; to son, Richard Barry (1745-73), 6th Earl of Barrymore; to son, Richard Barry (1769-93), 7th Earl of Barrymore; who sold to Francis Wise (1766-1842); to nephew, Francis Wise (1797-1881); to nephew?, Thomas Wise Gubbins (d. 1904); estate sold to Irish Land Commission, 1909… Joe Fenton (fl. 1950-2000), who demolished the house c.1965.