Barraghcore House, Goresbridge, Co Kilkenny 

Barraghcore House, Goresbridge, Co Kilkenny 

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. 33. “(Fleming/LGI1904) A two storey Georgian house with a Wyatt window above a pedimented and fanlighted porch. Two bays on one side of the centre, triple windows on the other. Vast castellated mill with turrets and machiocoulis at corner of demesne.” 

https://www.buildingsofireland.ie/buildings-search/building/12402103/barraghcore-house-duninga-coresbridge-co-kilkenny

Barraghcore, County Kilkenny, courtesy National Inventory.

Detached four-bay two-storey Classical-style country house with dormer attic, c.1850, possibly over basement incorporating fabric of earlier house, c.1725, on site with three-bay single-storey flat-roofed projecting porch to ground floor, single-bay two-storey advanced end bay to right, single-bay two-storey side elevation having canted bay window to ground floor, four-bay two-storey range along rear (west) elevation having single-bay full-height gabled advanced bay, and three-bay two-storey return to south-west. Hipped slate roof on an L-shaped plan (pitched slate roof to parallel range continuing into return on an L-shaped plan; gabled to advance bay; gabled to dormer attic windows) with clay ridge tiles, rendered chimney stacks having moulded cornices, rooflights, and cast-iron rainwater goods on moulded rendered eaves. Painted rendered, ruled and lined walls on tooled cut-granite plinth with rock-faced dressed limestone walls to porch having cut-granite dressings including block-and-start quoins to corners incorporating bull-nose detailing, frieze on stringcourse, carved cornice, blocking course to parapet, and painted roughcast walls to rear (west) elevation having rendered strips to corners. Square-headed window openings (some in tripartite arrangement) with cut-granite sills (on cut-granite panelled risers to ground floor), moulded rendered surrounds (on consoles to canted bay window), and one-over-one timber sash windows having six-over-six timber sash windows to rear (west) elevation (some two-over-two timber sash windows throughout having eight-over-eight timber sash window to advanced bay). Round-headed door opening to porch on two cut-granite steps with cut-granite panelled pilaster doorcase having moulded necking, paired consoles supporting open-bed pediment, bull-nose reveals to door opening, timber panelled double doors having overlight, square-headed flanking window openings on cut-granite panelled risers having block-and-start surrounds, chamfered reveals, and one-over-one timber sash windows. Interior with timber panelled shutters to window openings. Set back from road in own grounds with tarmacadam forecourt, and landscaped grounds to site. 

Appraisal 

An elegantly-appointed substantial country house redeveloped for the Fleming family in the mid nineteenth century incorporating a substantial early eighteenth-century range in the grounds, thereby maintaining a long-standing presence on site. Stylistically reminiscent of the contemporary (c.1850) View Mount (House) (12402107/KK-21-07) nearby suggesting the possibility of a shared architect or builder the architectural design value of the composition is identified by characteristics including the balanced arrangement of the pleasantly-proportioned openings, the arrangement of some openings in a Wyatt-inspired tripartite manner, and so on, all centred on an enriched porch displaying high quality stone masonry in the construction in a combination of granite and limestone. Having been very well maintained the house presents an early aspect with the original fabric surviving substantially intact both to the exterior and to the interior, thereby maintaining the character of a composition forming the centrepiece of a large-scale rural landholding (with 12402112 – 4/KK-21-12 – 4). 

Barraghcore, County Kilkenny, courtesy National Inventory.
Barraghcore, County Kilkenny, courtesy National Inventory.
Barraghcore, County Kilkenny, courtesy National Inventory.
Barraghcore, County Kilkenny, courtesy National Inventory.

https://www.buildingsofireland.ie/buildings-search/building/12402112/barraghcore-house-duninga-co-kilkenny

Barraghcore, County Kilkenny, courtesy National Inventory.

Farmyard complex, c.1850, about a courtyard incorporating fabric of earlier complex, pre-1840, on site including: (i) Detached three-bay two-storey outbuilding with camber-headed carriageway to right ground floor. Hipped gabled slate roof with clay ridge tiles, rendered shallow gabled bellcote (with camber-headed aperture, and rendered stringcourse supporting gabled coping), and iron rainwater goods on rendered eaves. Painted rendered walls over random rubble limestone construction with cast-iron tie plates to first floor. Square-headed window openings with cut-limestone shallow sills, and timber casement windows. Square-headed door opening with timber panelled door. Camber-headed carriageway to right ground floor with timber fitting having overlight. Set back from road in grounds shared with Barraghcore House about a courtyard having random rubble limestone boundary wall incorporating elliptical-headed carriageway in dressed limestone screen with cut-limestone voussoirs, iron double gates, and cut-limestone coping to parapet. (ii) Detached single-bay two-storey outbuilding. Pitched slate roof with clay ridge tiles, and no rainwater goods on dressed rubble limestone eaves. Random squared rubble limestone walls with remains of unpainted roughcast over, and slit-style apertures to first floor. Square-headed window opening with cut-stone shallow sill, and timber casement window. (iii) Detached six-bay two-storey stable outbuilding with camber-headed carriageway to ground floor. Hipped gabled slate roof with clay ridge tiles, and no rainwater goods on dressed rubble limestone eaves. Random squared rubble limestone walls. Square-headed window openings with cut-limestone sills (no sills to ground floor), red brick voussoirs, and timber casement windows. Square-headed door openings with cut-granite surrounds, red brick voussoirs forming camber relieving arches over, and timber panelled doors. Camber-headed carriageway to ground floor with cut-granite surround rising into red brick voussoirs, and no fittings. (iv) Detached five-bay two-storey coach house with series of three elliptical-headed carriageways to ground floor. Pitched slate roof with clay ridge tiles, and no rainwater goods on dressed limestone eaves. Random squared rubble limestone walls. Square-headed window openings in camber-headed recesses with cut-limestone sills, red brick block-and-start surrounds, and timber casement windows. Square-headed door openings with red brick voussoirs, and timber boarded doors. Series of three elliptical-headed carriageways to ground floor with red brick voussoirs, and no fittings. (v) Attached three-bay double-height outbuilding. Hipped gabled slate roof with clay ridge tiles, and no rainwater goods. Random coursed rubble limestone walls with cast-iron tie plates. Square-headed window openings with cut-limestone shallow sills, red brick dressings, and fittings not visible. (vi) Attached four-bay double-height outbuilding with series of four elliptical-headed carriageways to ground floor. Pitched slate roof with clay ridge tiles, and no rainwater goods on squared rubble limestone eaves. Random coursed squared limestone walls. Series of four elliptical-headed carriageways to ground floor with red brick dressings, and fittings not visible. 

Appraisal 

An attractive collection of modest-scale and middle-size agricultural outbuildings arranged about a shared courtyard with the resulting cluster contributing significantly to the group and setting values of the Barraghcore House estate while indicating the various ancillary services historically necessary in the maintenance of a large-scale landholding. Each range having been well maintained with most of the original attributes surviving intact the complex makes a positive impression on the character of the site. View of outbuildings (ii and iii).

Barraghcore, County Kilkenny, courtesy National Inventory.

https://www.buildingsofireland.ie/buildings-search/building/12402113/barraghcore-house-duninga-co-kilkenny

Detached two-bay single-storey gate lodge, c.1825, on an T-shaped plan with single-bay single-storey projecting end bay to left, and single-bay single-storey return to east. Now disused. Hipped slate roof on a T-shaped plan with clay ridge tiles, rendered chimney stack on a profiled octagonal plan, and no rainwater goods surviving on cut-granite eaves having paired consoles. Unpainted fine roughcast walls over irregular coursed dressed limestone construction. Square-headed window openings (some in tripartite arrangement) with cut-granite sills, cut-granite surrounds having consoles supporting entablatures, and six-over-six timber sash windows. Square-headed door opening with cut-granite surround having consoles supporting entablature, and tongue-and-groove timber panelled door. Set back from line of road in grounds shared with Barraghcore House. 

Appraisal 

A picturesque small-scale gate lodge displaying robust detailing in the Classical manner with granite dressings exhibiting high quality craftsmanship enriching the architectural design value of the composition. Although having fallen into disrepair as a consequence of a prolonged period of disuse the elementary attributes survive in place, thereby making a pleasing visual statement with the attendant gateway (12402114/KK-21-14) at the entrance to the grounds of Barraghcore House. 

Barraghcore, County Kilkenny, courtesy National Inventory.

Ballymack House, Cuffesgrange, Co Kilkenny 

Ballymack House, Cuffesgrange, Co Kilkenny 

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. 24. “(Barton/IFR) A small Georgian house with a regular front and a fanlighted doorway; projection in centre of rear elevation. Acquired ca 1851 by the Townsend family.” 

Not in national inventory 

Ballyline House (formerly White House), Callan, Co Kilkenny 

Ballyline House (formerly White House), Callan, Co Kilkenny 

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. 23. “(Barton/IFR) An early Georgian house with a return added 1798. Occupied 1729 by William Chandler.” 

Not in national inventory

Ballyconra House, Ballyragget, County Kilkenny 

Ballyconra House, Ballyragget, Co. Kilkenny 

Ballyconra House, County Kilkenny, courtesy National Inventory.

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

p. 20. “[Butler, Mountgarrett; Cahill] An early C18 gable-ended house with a high, parapeted roof; the seat of the Butlers, Viscount Mountgarret, after they abandoned their earlier seat of Ballyragget Castle. 2 storey, with an attic lit by windows in the gable ends; 7 bay front, doorway with pilasters and entablature, above which is a stone panel with a coat of arms, brought from another old Butler castle in the neighbourhood. Low ceilinged rooms. Large hall, with a ceiling of somewhat bucolic rococo plasterwork; doorcases of good C18 joinery. Wooden staircase going up round inner hall, with additional flight to attic. Drawing room to left of hall had plasterwork ceiling which fell earlier this century and was replaced with a plain ceiling; more plasterwork in a small study to the right of hall. Dining room behind study, divided in the middle by a thick arch pierced through the main wall of the house, the other half of the room being an addition. This room is said to be haunted by the ghost of Edmund, 12th Viscount Mountgarret and 1st and last Earl of Kilkenny, who died 1846 and was the last Mountgarret to live here; a benign spectre in a high collar and stove pipe hat who has been seen going up the stairs. After the death of the Earl of Kilkenny, the house was occupied by Michael Cahill, agent to the subsequent Viscount Mountgarret, by whose descendents it was afterwards acquired.” 

Edmond Butler (1745-1793), 11th Viscount Mountgarret in the style of Hugh Douglas Hamilton, Adams auction 19 Oct 2021.
Henrietta Butler née Hamilton Butler, Viscountess Mountgarret (1750-1785) in the style of Hugh Douglas Hamilton, Adams auction 19 Oct 2021. She was the daughter of Somerset Hamilton Butler , 1st Earl of Carrick, 6th Viscount of Ikerrin.
Juliana Butler (1727/8-1804) Countess of Carrick, with her younger daughters Lady Henrietta Butler (1750-1785), later Viscountess Mountgarret, and Lady Margaret Butler/Lowry-Corry (1748-1775), by Richard Cosway, courtesy of National Trust, Castle Coole, County Fermanagh.
Mildred Butler née Fowler (c. 1770-1830) Countess of Kilkenny, wife of Edmond 12th Viscount Mountgarret and 1st Earl of Kilkenny and daughter of Robert, Archbishop of Dublin (1724-1801) by Thomas Hickey, courtesy of Sheppards auction Nov 26 2013.
Ballyconra House, County Kilkenny, courtesy National Inventory.

https://www.buildingsofireland.ie/buildings-search/building/12400402/ballyconra-house-ballyconra-co-kilkenny

Detached seven-bay two-storey over basement house with dormer attic, dated 1724, on an L-shaped plan possibly originally mill owner’s house with two-bay two-storey side elevations, and single-bay two-storey double-pile return to north-west. Mostly refenestrated, c.1900, with canted bay window added to return. Part refenestrated, c.1925. Part refenestrated. Now in use as offices. Pitched slate roof behind parapet (pitched double-pile (M-profile) slate roof to return) with clay ridge tiles, yellow brick Running bond chimney stacks having profiled cornices, rooflights, and cast-iron rainwater goods on rendered stepped eaves. Unpainted roughcast walls (unpainted rendered walls to basement) with cut-limestone stringcourse supporting parapet having cut-limestone coping. Square-headed window openings (including to canted bay window on painted rendered tapered jetty) with cut-limestone sills, remains of carved cut-limestone hood mouldings over to front (south-east) elevation, and replacement one-over-one timber sash windows, c.1900, retaining some six-over-six timber sash windows to rear (north-west) elevation (one in tripartite arrangement having two-over-two sidelights) having some replacement four-over-four timber sash windows, c.1925, with some replacement timber casement windows throughout. Round-headed door opening with two cut-limestone steps over basement, cut-limestone doorcase having engaged pilasters on panelled pedestals supporting cornice, glazed timber panelled double doors, decorative overlight, and heraldic panel over (dated 1724) having cut-limestone surround. Square-headed door opening to return with four cut-limestone steps, cut-limestone surround having keystone, replacement timber panelled door having overlight, and heraldic panel over (dated 1880). Interior with entrance hall having carved timber architraves to door openings (one carved timber shouldered architrave with dentilated moulded cornice) with timber panelled reveals leading to timber panelled doors, moulded plasterwork cornice leading to decorative plasterwork ceiling having foliate motif, stairhall with carved timber staircase, and timber panelled shutters to window openings. Set back from road in own grounds on a slightly elevated site. 

Appraisal 

A well-appointed substantial house representing an important element of the early eighteenth-century architectural heritage of County Kilkenny possibly originally having associations with the nearby Ballyconra Mills indicated on archival editions of the Ordnance Survey but of primary significance for the connections with the Butler Family, Viscounts Mountgarret late of Ballyragget Castle (1495) together with the Cahill family. Elegantly composed with Classically-proportioned openings centred on a doorcase displaying high quality stone masonry the house has historically been well maintained to present an early aspect: of particular importance are the internal details exhibiting expert craftsmanship including plasterwork accents of artistic design significance together with ornamental timber joinery. Positioned on a slightly elevated site the house makes an important impression in a landscape dominated by late twentieth-century industrial ranges. 

Ballyconra House, County Kilkenny, courtesy National Inventory.
Ballyconra House, County Kilkenny, courtesy National Inventory.
Ballyconra House, County Kilkenny, courtesy National Inventory.
Ballyconra House, County Kilkenny, courtesy National Inventory.
Ballyconra House, County Kilkenny, courtesy National Inventory.
Ballyconra House, County Kilkenny, courtesy National Inventory.
Ballyconra House, County Kilkenny, courtesy National Inventory.
Ballyconra House, County Kilkenny, courtesy National Inventory.
Ballyconra House, County Kilkenny, courtesy National Inventory.

http://lordbelmontinnorthernireland.blogspot.com/2014/03/ballyconra-house.html

THE VISCOUNTS MOUNTGARRET WERE MAJOR LANDOWNERS IN COUNTY KILKENNY, WITH 14,073 ACRES 

This is a branch of the noble house of BUTLER, Earls and Marquesses of Ormonde, springing from 

THE HON RICHARD BUTLER (1500-71), second son of Piers, 8th Earl of Ormonde, who was elevated to the peerage, in 1550, in the dignity of VISCOUNT MOUNTGARRET, County Wexford. 

His lordship married firstly, Eleanor, daughter of Theobald Butler, of Nechum, County Kilkenny, and had one son, Edmund; and secondly, Catherine, daughter and heir of Peter Barnewall, of Stackallan, County Meath, and had issue, Barnewall, who died unmarried, Pierce, and other issue. 

 
He espoused thirdly, in 1541, Anne, daughter of John, Lord Killeen, from whom he was divorced in the first year of his marriage. 

[The Landed Gentry and Aristocracy of Kilkenny by Art Kavanagh, p. 61: 

“In 1541 Richard Butler was given leases of lands in Wexford and Kilkenny, noteably in Inistioge, Thomastown and Shankill. Two years later, in 1543 he got a grant of all the Augustinian lands in and near New Ross. He was created Viscount Mountgarret and Baron of Kells in 1550 in direct response to his plea to be given a title that would outshine that of the McMurrough.  

…The forays of his father Piers into the territories of the Fitzpatricks of Upper [p. 62] Ossory trained him in the exercise and knowledge of those military operations, which he afterwards turned to good account in defending the King’s lands against the “Irish enemy,” especially in Wexford, against the Kavanaghs. It was in recompense for such services to his Sovereign that King Edward VI gave directions to have him created a Viscount. He had already been installed in Mountgarret Manor and caslte, on the outskirts of New Ross, and it was from this that the name Mountgarret derived. The Manor was formerly Church lands and the Castle was the home of the famous Bishop Barret in the late 14th and early 15th centuries, after he had removed from Ferns, the traditional residence. 

In addition to the Augustinian lands of New Ross, Mountgarret bought the lands of Kayer (Davidstown to Glynn) from Foulks Denn in 1556. They Kayer lands were later demised to Piers Butler his son. The Butler family of Kayer was subsequently dispossessed by the Cromwellians. 

p. 63. During the reigns of Edward and Queen Mary, prioer to being created Viscount Mountgarret, Richard was made keeper of the Castle of Ferns. He was also in two commissions for the preservation of the peace, in the Counties of Tipperary , Kilkenny and Wexford. He was present in the Parliament of 1560 which met in Dublin and which ended in passing the Statute of Uniformity, which made Queen Elizabeth head of the church, in Ireland, and re-established the reformed worship, as it had existed under Edward VI. Richard was buried in St. Canice’s cathedral, Kilkenny, in 1571. 

By his first wife, Eleanor, daughter of Theobald Butler of Neigham, he had a daughter Margaret, and a son, Edmund, who became 2nd Viscount.] 

 
His lordship was succeeded by his eldest son, 

 
EDMUND, 2nd Viscount (c1562-1602), who married Grizzel, daughter of Barnaby, 1st Baron Upper Ossory,  

[Kavanagh, p. 63. He followed in his father’s footsteps of persecuting and hunting down the “mere Irishry.” He was ever ready to spill blood, in quarrels and in defence. He renewed the old animosities with the Fitzpatricks, the Princes of Upper Ossory. Edmond later married Grainne, the daughter of Lord Ossory, Sir Barnaby Fitzpatrick. Marriage alliances in those days were often used in an attempt to patch up old enmities. 

The second Viscount was a significant political player in his time, siding ith the Earl of Ormond and Lord Justice Pelham against the Earl fo Desmond. He played a prominent role in the Plantation of Munster. He accompanied the Lord Deputy in his Munster Expedition in 1579 against the Spaniards and James Fitzmaurice, who was leader of the Desmond insurgents. He sat in Perrott’s Parliament in Dublin (1585-6) which attainted the late Earl of Desmond. …p. 64. Piers and James, two brothers of Edmund the future Mountgarret also sided with the Desmond faction, then led by James Fitzmaurice the son of Sir Morish Fitzgibbon, the White Knight. 

The rebel Butlers all took an active part in the battle of Kilkenny in 1568. The Butler participation in the rebellions of the period stemmed from two grievances – the loss of land suffered by the Butlers of Cloghgrennan, County Carlow, and the pressure being put on them to renounce Catholicism. 

The battle of Kilkenny was a serious affair involving the Butlers allied to the Gaelic clans of the region, the Kavanaghs, O’Byrnes and O’Nolans. The rebel Butlers and their allies took over the city and defended it against the Crown forces led by Peter Carew and probably the Mountgarret forces. Carew defeated them with great slaughter, killign over 400. 

Following this defeat the Butlers were arrested but were released on the orders of Black Tom, 10th Earl…They wre in rebellion again the next year, 1569 and together with their old allies sacked the town of Enniscorthy. After this the rebellion seems to have fizzled out and the Butlers were again arrested but once more due to the influence of their brother (who claimed they were mad) they were released. Edmund 2nd Viscount Mountgarret died in 1602.] 

and was father of 

 
RICHARD, 3rd Viscount (1578-1651), who wedded firstly, Margaret, eldest daughter of Hugh O’Neill, Earl of Tyrone, by whom alone he had issue, and was succeeded by his eldest son, 

[Kavanagh, p. 65: Richard 3rd Viscount along with his father sided with the O’Neills of Tyrone in the Nine Years War…In a bewildering change of allegiance the Butlers, father and son, sided with the Earl of Essex, who arrived in 1599 to put down the rebellion. This was probably done because of the urgings of the Earl of Ormond. When the Nine Years War was finally brought to a conclusion by the defeat at Kinsale the Mountgarret Butlers had their lands intact. 

Richard sat in the Parliament of 1615 in his capacity of Viscount. He continued as a solid citizen and loyal to the Crown and was again in Parliament in 1634 when Wentworth was Lord Deputy. However in 1641-2 he resurrected his ancient armour, mounted his old war steed, and joined the Confederacy in support of the Catholic cause. At the time he was the owner of a huge amount of land in Kilkenny, Wexford and Carlow, said to have been in excess of 20,000 acres. 

This move by Mountgarret was a staggering blow to the government side and his second cousin James 12th Earl of Ormond. The old man now in his early 60s [p. 66] commanded such huge respect that all of the Catholic gentlemen of the county with their cohorts flocked to his standard. He swept into Kilkenny city and seized it for the Confederacy. One of his first acts was to extend his protection to all the Protestant citizens and their property. Of course the wife of the 12th Earl was Protestant and she made every effort to help her co-religionists by giving them sanctuary in the castle. … 

p. 67. It is not clear what subsequent role Lord Mountgarret played in the Confederacy or in the campaign against Cromwell, but he died a natural death in 1652. [fn: After the Cromwellian campaign he fled to Galway where he took refuge and died there. His castle at Ballyragget was taken over by Major Abel Warren. Warren’s father, Rev. Edward Warren, the rector of the parish was ousted from his living by MOuntgarret’s soldiers in 1641. Reve Edward had three sons, two of whom were officers in Cromwell’s army.] Edward one of Mountgarret’s younger sons who had been living in Urlingford Castle was arrested in 1652 and taken to Dublin. He was tried or the murder of people in the Freshford area ten years earlier. He was believed to be innocent but on the testimony of Major Warren he was found guilty and executed.] 

[p/ 68. Edmund 4th Viscount was a key player in the Confederate Army and saw action in Kilrush and Ballinvegga and in C. Wexford, where he was for a time Governor of Enniscorthy and then of the entire county of Wexford. He was also Governor of Kilkenny in 1646. He was taken prisoner when Wexford was captured by the Cromwellian army. …In the subsequent land grab his lands were declared forfeit, but the arrangement was declared null and void in 1660 when Charles II was restored.  the Duke of Ormond was Charles II’s most trusted advisor and probably the most powerful man in Ireland. One of his first acts was to restore their lands, almost in total to his relatives. In this way Edmund Butler 4th Viscount Mountgarret was reinstated in most of his Kilkenny lands. In addition he received further lands in 1667 in an Act of Settlement grant. Those lands were in the barony of Knocktopher.  

Sir Edmund was married twice and by his first wife, Dorothy Touchet, he had two sons and two daughters. 

p. 69. The 5th Viscount was lucky in that his relation, the 2nd Duke of Ormonde, was a committed Williamite, who entertained that monarch in his castle of Kilkenny after the defeat of King James at the Battle of the Boyne. In the Jacobite confiscations that followed, the Mountgarret Butlers emerged unscathed. They still remained Catholic and produced children too numerous to mention… 

p. 70. The 6th Viscount was educated at the Jesuit colleges of Flamstead, St. Omer and La Fleche. He was a Lt Col of Horse in the Army of King James II at the Siege of Derry but was captured and outlawed. The outlawry was reversed in 1721 but while he took the oath of allegiance he would not take the oath of supremacy and withdrew from the House of Parliament. 

…The 11th Viscount took the expedient step of becoming a Protestant. He was MP for County of Kilkenny from 1776-1779.  

p. 71. 12th Viscount had no children and was succeeded by his nephew, Henry Edmund as 13th Viscount. The Earldom became extict on the death of the 12th Viscount who according to Lord Dunboyne was insane for most of his adult life. 

 
EDMUND, 4th Viscount (1595-1679),  

  • Richard Butler, 7th Viscount (1685–1736); 
  • James Butler, 8th Viscount (1686–1749); 
  • Edmund Butler, 9th Viscount (1687–1751); 
  • Edmund Butler, 10th Viscount (d 1779); 

Earls of Kilkenny (1793) 

Viscounts Mountgarret (continued) 

  • Henry Edmund Butler, 13th Viscount (1816–1900) 
  • Edmund Somerset Butler, 15th Viscount (1875–1918) 
  • Piers Henry Augustine Butler, 16th Viscount (1903–66) 
  • Piers James Richard Butler, 18th Viscount (b 1961) 

The current heir presumptive is the present holder’s brother, Edmund Henry Richard Butler (b 1962).  

Piers James Richard [Butler], 18th and present Viscount,  is de jure 27th Earl of Ormonde and 21st Earl of Upper Ossory following the death of the 7th Marquess of Ormonde in 1997. Shape 

BALLYCONRA HOUSE is a seven-bay, two-storey over basement house with dormer attic, dated 1724, on an L-shaped plan, possibly originally a mill owner’s house with two-bay two-storey side elevations, and single-bay two-storey double-pile return to north-west. Now in use as offices. 

This is a well-appointed substantial house representing an important element of the early 18th century architectural heritage of County Kilkenny. 

It may originally have had associations with the nearby Ballyconra Mills, though its primary significance was for the connections with the Butler Family, Viscounts Mountgarret, late of Ballyragget Castle (1495) together with the Cahill family. 

 
Ballyconra is located on a slightly elevated site. 

 
This house makes an important impression in a landscape dominated by late 20th-century industrial ranges.   

The house is said to be haunted by the ghost of Edmund, 12th Viscount Mountgarret and first and last Earl of Kilkenny, who died in 1846 and was the last Mountgarret to live there.  

Following Lord Kilkenny’s death, the house was occupied by Michael Cahill, agent to the 13th Viscount, by whose descendants it was afterwards acquired. 

The Mountgarrets’ other seat was Nidd Hall, near Ripley, Yorkshire; sold in 1968. 

Williamstown, Carbury, Co Kildare

Williamstown, Carbury, Co Kildare 

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. 285. “A two storey C18 house flanked by wings and yards in the Palladian manner; related by the Knight of Glin to Colganstown and other houses attributed to the amateur architect Nathaniel Clements. Three bay front, Venetian window above tripartite doorway; wall carried up to form parapet, urns at corners. The seat of the Williams family.” 

Yeomanstown Lodge, Naas, Co Kildare

Yeomanstown Lodge, Naas, Co Kildare

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. 288. “(Mansfield/IFR; Ussher/IFR) A Georgian farmhouse with a fanlighted doorway, enlarged early in C19 by the addition of a higher block at the back of it’ so that it now has a four bay garden front, containing a spacious drawing room and dining room en suite, with cornices of simple plasterwork. The staircase, in its own hall to the left of the entrance hall, has elaborate but unsophisticated plasterwork in its soffits. Formerly owned by the Mansfield family, of Morristown Lattin and Yeomanstown. Now the home of Mr and Mrs Patrick Ussher.” 

Yeomanstown, Naas, Co Kildare 

Yeomanstown, Naas, Co Kildare 

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. 288. “(Mansfield/IFR; Moore, sub McCalmont/IFR) An early C18 double gable-ended house of exceptional quality, originally belonging to a branch of the Eustace family. Of two storeys, with an attic in the high-pitched roof lit by windows in the gable-ends. Five bay entrance fron with large floating pediment containing an oculus; the windows being grouped closely together leaving wide solid corners. Heads of windows in upper storey have undulating arrises. Round-headed dorrway with blocking; deep wooden bracket cornice under roof; partly curvilinear endgables. Plain and asymmetrical garden front. the house is built of brick, but has been rendered. Both the entrance and garden fronts face along straight avenues of trees. Inherited by John Mansfield later C18. Subsequently sold to the Gill family, now the home of Mr A.L. Moore and Mrs Moore (nee Gill).  

Eliza (1765-1795), daughter and heiress of Walter Woulfe of Rathgormack, Co. Waterford, married John Mansfield (1753-1817) Esq., of Yeomanstown in Co. Kildare, and of Ballinamuntina in Co. Waterford, by John Comerford. Courtesy Fonsie Mealy July 2018
Walter Woulfe of Rathgormac in the County Waterford, the father of Eliza Woulfe, who married John Mansfield of Yeomanstown, Kildare, subsequently housed at Morristown Lattin, by John Comerford, courtesy Fonsie Mealy Aug 2023.

Straffan Lodge, Straffan, Co Kildare 

Straffan Lodge, Straffan, Co Kildare 

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. 266. “(Guinness/IFR) A Georgian house of two storeys over a basement and five bays, described (1837) as “the neat residence of Mrs Whitelaw.” Later single-storey wing with mullioned bow. Dining room decorated in Tudor style with oak panelling late C19 or early C20. Recently the home of Mr and Mrs Robert Guinness, who built a garden temple flanking the house. Bought 1989 by Hon Marcus Beresford (Decies, B/PB).” 

not in National Inventory  

Stacumny House, Celbridge, Co Kildare

Stacumny House, Celbridge, Co Kildare 

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. 264. “(Bradstreet, Bt/PB1924; Nugent, sub Westmeath, E/PB) A plain three storey Georgian house to which a wing in the Classical style, containing a ballroom, was added ca 1910. The wing has since been demolished. Originally the seat of the Bradstreet family; bought ca 1890 by Hon R.A. Nugent; sold ca 1963 by his daughter Mrs Michael Popoff. Now the home of Mr and Mrs Vincent Poklewski-Koziell.” 

just gate house in inventory: 

https://www.buildingsofireland.ie/buildings-search/building/11901103/stacumny-house-stacumny-co-kildare

Detached two-bay single-storey former gate lodge, c.1820, on a T-shaped plan with single-bay single-storey gabled advanced bay to left having single-bay single-storey canted bay window, gablet over entrance bay to right and single-bay single-storey polygonal bay to east. Refenestrated, c.1990. Now in private residential use. Gable-fronted and gable-ended roofs with slate (gablets to entrance bay and to west; half-octagonal roofs to canted bay window and to polygonal bay). Clay ridge tiles with finials. Blue brick corbelled chimney stack. Timber eaves and bargeboards. Cast-iron rainwater goods. Roughcast walls. Unpainted. Blue brick to bay window with dentilated cornice and quoined faces to polygonal projecting bay. Square-headed window openings. Cut-stone continuous sill course. Blue brick block-and-start surrounds to some openings. Replacement uPVC casement windows, c.1990. Original timber casement windows to west. Round-headed door opening. Cut-stone Baroque-style doorcase with scrolled pediment. Timber panelled door. Set within own landscaped grounds with iron railings to boundary. 

Appraisal 

This gate lodge is an unusual model in that the compact plan is treated with a highly ornate elevation of considerable artistry. The juxtaposition of roughcast walls with unusually blue-hued brick is a fine example of polychromy, while the ornate cut-stone doorcase is of artistic importance. Most of the original features and materials are still in situ, while the re-instatement of timber fenestration, using the original example to west as a guide, would restore an impression of the original aspect. The gate lodge is an integral component of the Stacumny House estate and is of social and historic significance, representing an element of the extent of an early nineteenth-century planned estate. The iron boundary railings are of a simple, unfussy nature that ought to be maintained in favour over an alternative wall. 

Gate lodge at Stacumny, County Kildare, courtesy National Inventory.

Sherlockstown, Sallins, Co Kildare 

Sherlockstown, Sallins, Co Kildare 

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. 259. “(Smith, sub Granard, E/PB) A long, irregular slightly castellated house. Towerlike centre, with a battlemented gable, flanked by square projecting turrets joined by a battlemented cloister of two segmental pointed arches; above which is a tall, round-headed window. Wings of the same height as the centre, and more or less equal in length; but one of three storeys and the other of two storeys; both irregularly fenestrated. At each end of the façade, a rather thin corbelled bartizan. the seat of the Sherlock family. Subsequently owned by Mr and Mrs A. Edward Smith; now by Mrs S. O’Flaherty.” 

not in national inventory. 

Family tree, see William Sherlock b. 1745.