Newtown Park, Blackrock, Dublin

Newtown Park, Blackrock, Dublin

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

p. 226. “Close/LGI1937 supp; Mainwaring-Burton/IFR; Maguire, sub Corballis/IFR) A late C-18 bow-ended house of two storeys over basement. Entrance front of three bays, centre bay breaking forward with later single-storey portico of coupled Corinthian columns. Five bay garden front, centre by breaking forward with Wyatt windows. Very sophisticated plan; circular entrance hall, oval central room with Adamesque ceiling incorporating painted oval. Possibly designed under influence of James Gandon; Ralph Ward, Surveyor-General of Ordnance, who lived here before his death 1788, having been the patron of Gandon’s friend, William Ashford, 1st President of the royal Hibernian Academy. It could equally well, however, be an early work of Richard Morrison, having a likeness to several of his villas. In 1792, Alexander Crookshank, the Judge, was living here; in 1805 it was the house of John Armit, a wealthy Army agent and bankder who was Sec of the Ordnance Board, Sold 1839 to H.S. Close; passed by inheritance from the Closes to the Burton family. Bought 1946 by Senator Edward McGuire, who had a notable collection of C17 and C18 European paintings here; and who sold it 1976.” 

Mount Merrion, Co Dublin

Mount Merrion, Co Dublin – mostly destroyed 

Mount Merrion, County Dublin, courtesy of Mark Bence-Jones.

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

p. 215. “(Fitzwilliam, V/DEP; Herbert, Pembroke, E/PB) An early C18 house which appears to have consisted of three rather similar blocks of more or less equal size arranged to form an open-fronted court. Only one block now survives; it is square, rather low, of two storeys with a dormered attic. Five bay front, three bay pedimented breakfront. Very high pediment with fanlighted lunette window; central round-headed window below, longer than the window either side of it. Four bay side-elevation, round headed windows in upper storey; two lunette windows and two rectangular sash windows below. The seat of the Viscounts Fitz-William, from whom it passed by inheritance early C19 to the Earls of Pembroke, together with the Fitzwilliam Dublin estate; which includes Merrion Square and Fitzwilliam Square.” 

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

p. 64. …Demolished c. 1986.

Mount Anville (also known as Dargan Villa), Dundrum, Co Dublin – school 

Mount Anville (also known as Dargan Villa), Dundrum, Co Dublin – school 

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

p. 212. “An early Victorian-Italianate villa, with an eaved roof on a bracket cornice; dominated by an unusually tall and massive campanile tower. The home of the railway contractor, William Dargan, the leading spirit of the Dublin Exhibition 1853. Queen Victoria paid Dargan the exceptional honour of visiting here when she came over to Dublin for the Exhibtion; and she climbed to the top of the tower to see the “24 distinct views” which it afforded. Later in C19, the house became a well-known girls’ convent school.” 

Not in national inventory 

Milverton Hall, Co Dublin – ‘lost’ 

Milverton Hall, Co Dublin – ‘lost’ 

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

“(Woods, sub Wentges/LGI1958) “a 19th century house in the Italianate-French Château style, of two storeys over a basement and with a dormer attic in the mansard roof. The entrance front had three centre bays recessed between one-bay projections; a deep, single-storey, balustraded Doric portico; five-bay side elevation. Demolished in 1960s” 

Not in national inventory 

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

http://lordbelmontinnorthernireland.blogspot.com/2014/09/milverton-hall.html

Marlborough House, Co Dublin – gone 

Marlborough House, Co Dublin – gone 

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

p. 203. “A two storey five bay Georgian house. Pedimented breakfront centre, with Venetian window above pedimented and fanlighted tripartite doorway.” 

Not in national inventory   

Marlay Grange, Co Dublin – fire in 1910, ruin

Marlay Grange, Co Dublin – fire in 1910, ruin

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

p. 203. “(Rowley, sub Langford, B/PB) A high roofed Victorian-Gothic house, with gables and dormer gables, and a tower with a truncated pyramidal roof. Post WWII, the home of Mr and Mrs Louis Edge.” 

http://lordbelmontinnorthernireland.blogspot.com/2012/05/marlay-grange.html

THE ROWLEYS WERE MAJOR LANDOWNERS IN COUNTY DUBLIN, WITH 3,659 ACRES

The noble family of ROWLEY is of Saxon origin, and was seated at Kermincham, Cheshire, in the reign of EDWARD II,in the person of RANDOLFE DE ROWLEY. This branch of the family settled in Ireland in the reign of JAMES I.

THE HON HERCULES LANGFORD BOYLE ROWLEY JP DL (1828-1904), of Marley Grange, County Dublin, younger son of Hercules, 2nd Baron Langford, High Sheriff of County Meath, 1859, Honorary Colonel, 5th Battalion, Prince of Wales’s Own Leinster Regiment, married, in 1857, Louisa Jane, sister of 1st Baron Blythswood, and had issue,

HERCULES DOUGLAS EDWARD, his heir;
Arthur Sholto, 8th BARON LANGFORD;
Armine Charlotte; Gladys Helen Louisa; Evelyn Augusta.

Colonel Rowley was succeeded by his eldest son,

HERCULES DOUGLAS EDWARD ROWLEY JP DL (1859-1945), of Marley Grange, Lieutenant, 5th Battalion, Leinster Regiment, who wedded, in 1884, Agnes Mary, only daughter of A Allen, of Devizes, Wiltshire, and had issue,

Ivy Mabel Armine Douglas, b 1889;
Monica Evelyn Douglas, b 1893.

MARLEY GRANGE, near Rathfarnham, County Dublin, is an important cut-stone two storey high-roofed Victorian house built in the Gothic style ca 1850 in a woodland setting.

The house has gables, dormer gables, plus a tower with a truncated pyramidal roof.

There is a two-storey gate lodge located at the entrance. 

Marley Grange is approached through an impressive entrance, via a long tree lined avenue, that leads to a large gravelled forecourt to the front of the house.

The extensive are interspersed with specimen trees, two ornamental ponds, trellis covered sunken pathway enclosing a semi-circular formal garden on the south gable of the house.

There is also a paddock and extensive woodland.

The property is bounded to the east by Three Rock Rovers hockey grounds; to the west by Grange Golf Club; and is beside Marley Park.

The house and estate were sold by the former owners, the McGrane family, in 2000, to the British Embassy in Dublin for £6.4 million.

It was intended to replace the ambassador’s residence at Glencairn House.

The house suffered a disastrous fire in 2010.

The estate agents Colliers apparently then agreed sale terms on the ten-bedroom house, which is acknowledged to be one of the few examples of late Victorian Gothic revival architecture in Ireland.

Colliers are understood to have settled for a price close to €2.5 million for the listed building and its 12.4 acres of woodland next to Marley Park, which are owned by the property developer and charity founder Niall Mellon.

The house was unoccupied and uninsured when it was set ablaze in July, 2010.

All that remain of the imposing cut-stone, two-storey, high-roofed structure dating from the 1870s are the walls.

However, because of its architectural and historical significance, the planners are anxious to have it restored to its former glory – a challenging project, which one expert says could cost anything from €1.5 million to €2 million.

Mellon bought Marley Grange from the British Embassy in 2008 after it dropped plans to use it as its ambassadorial residence.

The embassy had previously sold its long term residence Glencairn and its 34-acre grounds in Sandyford in 1999 for security reasons.

The entire property was acquired by Michael Cotter of Park Developments for €35.6 million.

The Foreign Office in London then wished to buy back Glencairn, without its substantial grounds.

Former town residence ~ 8 Cambridge Place, Kensington, London.

First published in May, 2012.

Maretimo, Blackrock, Co Dublin – demolished 

Maretimo, Blackrock, Co Dublin – demolished 

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

p. 201. “(Lawless, Clonbcurry, B/BP1920) A plain late-Georgian house, with good interior plastework, standing in a demesne by the shore of Dublin bay containing various follies. Now demolished.” 

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

p. 64. “… built for Nicholas Lawless. Exterior much altered in 19C…”

Mantua, Swords, Co Dublin – demolished 

Mantua, Swords, Co Dublin – demolished 

Mantua, County Dublin, courtesy of 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.

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

p. 200. “A mid-C18 house of three storeys over basement… IN 1814, the residence of Dr. Daly; in 1837, of Mrs Daly. Now demolished.” 

Not in national inventory 

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

p. 60. “…In 1783 the seat of Mr. Keane…”

Ludford Park, Dundrum, Co Dublin

Ludford Park, Dundrum, Co Dublin

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

p. 195. “(Dillon/IFR) An irregular two storey house, with a three bay Georgian façade at one end.” 

Not in National inventory 

Lucan House, Lucan, Co Dublin 

Lucan House, Lucan, Co Dublin 

Lucan House, photograph courtesy of South Dublin City Council. Primrose Hill is part of its original demesne.

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

p. 195. “(Sarsfield, Lucan, E/DEP; Colthurst-Vesey/LGI1912; Colthurst, Bt/PB; O’Conor Don/IFR; Teeling (formerly Burke), LGI1958) A Palladian villa built 1770s by Agmondisham Vesey, MP, replacing an earlier house which itself replaced the old castle which had belonged to Patrick Sarsfield, Earl of Lucan, hero of the Seige of Limerick. The estate came to Agmondisham Vesey’s father through his first marriage to the Sarsfield heiress; but instead of leaving it to his daughter by her, who was the ancestress of the Binghams, Earls of Lucan, he left it to Agmondisham, who was his son by his second marriage. Agmondisham Vesey acted as his own architect, while consulting with Sir William Chambers, and also James Wyatt and Michael Stapleton, with regard to the interior. Of two storeys over basement, seven bay entrance front with a central feature of a pediment raised on a three bay attic, and carried on four engaged Ionic columns, the gound floor beneath them being treated as a basement, and rusticated. The central feature of Charleville, Co Wicklow, is similar. Five bay side elevation; garden front with central curved bow containing oval room; the plan resembling that of Mount Kennedy, Co Wicklow. The house is entirely free-standing, the officed being detached and connected to it by an underground passage. The interior has very fine neo-classical decoration on the walls and ceilings, some if not all of it by Stapleton. The hall has a screen of columns marbled to resemble yellow Siena. The Wedgwood Room, the ceiling of which curves downwards at the corners giving the effect of a shallow dome, has roundels painted by Peter de Gree. The small but attractive demesne by the River Liffey contains a Coade stone urn on a pedestal designed by James Wyatt and erected as a monument to the great Sarsfield, and a Gothic hermitage. Inherited from the Colthurst-Vesey family by Capt Richard Colthurst (afterwards 8th Bt), who sold it 1932 to H.E. Charles O’Conor, President of Irish Association of the Order of Malta. Re-sold post WW(II by Charles O’Conor’s son in law, William Teeling, MP, to the Italian gov’t, for use as their embassy.”

https://www.buildingsofireland.ie/buildings-search/building/11201148/lucan-house-lucan-house-demesne-lucan-south-dublin-county 

Detached seven-bay two-storey over basement Palladian country house, c.1775, with three-bay pedimented breakfront and three-bay rere bow, each having attic storey. Five bays to south side. Roughcast rendered walls with granite platband, string courses, sill course and quoins. Ashlar granite walls to breakfront, with rusticated ground floor and four half-engaged giant Ionic columns above. Small pane sash windows with stone sills throughout. Timber panelled door with elaborate fanlight. Hipped slate roof behind parapet with stone cornice and rendered chimney stacks. Retains many fine interior features, including late eighteenth-century plasterwork. Single-storey service building to north, with roughcast rendered walls, round-headed windows, segmental-headed archwayand single-pitched roof. Set within mature demesne parkland with various outbuildings (separately recorded). 

An impressive, imposing and substantially intact country house and demesne, with a richly decorated interior. Partly designed by William Chambers, with interior plasterwork by Michael Stapleton, Historically and socially important as the principal land holding in Lucan village with which the demesne is intimately associated. 

https://www.buildingsofireland.ie/buildings-search/building/11201137/lucan-house-demesne-lucan-south-dublin-county

Detached multiple-bay single-storey with attic former stable building, c.1790, now in use as house and storage building, and partly unoccupied. Built on a C-shaped half-octagonal plan. Roughcast rendered walls to convex side. Rendered, ruled and lined walls to concave side, with five three-bay sections alternately having superimposed arcade or ashlar pedimented breakfront. Pedimented breakfront to single-bay end bays. Granite platband at arch springing level. Timber sash windows with stone sills. uPVC casement windows to southern domestic section. Timber tongue and groove doors with overlights. Hipped slate roof with red brick dentil eaves course. Single-storey red brick lean-to shed to north. 

A particularly handsome and well-executed stable building, retaining many original features. Set just inside one of the main demesne gates, it presents a most striking façade on entry. Also a dominant presence on the Leixlip Road and in the vista west from Lucan village. An integral element of this intact demesne. 

https://archiseek.com/2013/1766-lucan-house-lucan-co-dublin

1772 – Lucan House, Lucan, Co. Dublin 

Architect: William Chambers, Michael Stapleton 

Lucan House, often described as a pure Palladian villa, was constructed by Agmondisham Vesey, who cleared the previous residence and began construction in 1772. Vesey, although not an architect, designed the house in conjunction with William Chambers, with Michael Stapleton responsible for the plasterwork.  

However this image by John James Barralet, and in the Paul Mellon Collection at the Yale Center for British Art is inscribed: “Lucan House, Co Dublin, built 1776 by the Rt. Hon. Agmondisham Vesey from his own designs with the help of the Dublin builder Michael Stapleton”. 

The estate passed through the Sarsfield, Vesey and Colthurst families through marriage – the descent of the house was through the female line, as no member of the family produced a male heir. 

In 1925, the entire contents of the house were sold at auction. In 1954, it was purchased by the Italian Government for use as the residence of the Italian Ambassador to Ireland. At the time, they purchased the house, it was an empty shell. 

https://theirishaesthete.com/2024/05/27/lucan-house/

Addio del Passato 

Last Monday, the Presidents of Ireland and Italy jointly inaugurated a new public park in Lucan, County Dublin, the space henceforth to be known as Parco Italia. The reason for this somewhat unusual name? Since 1942 Lucan House, which stands at the centre of the 30-acre park, has been the official residence of successive Italian ambassadors to this country. The building here has, like so often, a long and complex history but in its present form was commissioned in the early 1770s by the estate’s then-owner Agmondisham Vesey who, although he consulted several eminent architects, played an active role in the eventual design. Vesey’s house replaced an earlier one, probably dating back to the Middle Ages but much altered over the centuries. A painting by Thomas Roberts produced shortly before its demolition shows what appears to be a late-mediaeval tower house with a fortified manor house with castellated roofline to one side. Vesey’s wife Elizabeth, a noted bluestocking (and close friend of Elizabeth Montague) lamented the destruction of the older building, ‘with its niches and thousand other Gothic beauties,’ but her husband was determined to start afresh. To do this, he not only had to overcome his spouse’s opposition but also the original house’s associations with noted Irish patriot Patrick Sarsfield, first Earl of Lucan. His forebear, Sir William Sarsfield, had acquired the Lucan estate in 1566 and although temporarily dispossessed during the Confederate Wars, several generations of the family lived there until the marriage in 1696 of heiress Catherine Sarsfield (a niece of Patrick Sarsfield) to Agmondisham Vesey, father of the man responsible for building Lucan House.  

As mentioned above, Agmondisham Vesey, displayed a keen interest in architecture despite his involvement in many other activities: a Member of the Irish Parliament, he was also a Privy Councillor and Accountant and Controller General of Ireland. Like his wife Elizabeth he liked to keep abreast of cultural developments: in 1773, during the period that work was underway on the new house, he was elected to the ‘Club’, the informal dining and conversational group established by Samuel Johnson and Joshua Reynolds 10 years earlier. Johnson and James Boswell granted him the notional title of ‘Professor of Architecture,’ and the latter wrote that Vesey had ‘left a good specimen of his knowledge and taste in that art by an elegant house built on a plan of his own at Lucan.’ Boswell exaggerated his friend’s role in the matter because while Vesey undoubtedly had a hand in Lucan House’s appearance, so did a number of architects, not least Sir William Chambers who in 1773 sent him now-lost ‘Designs for a Villa.’ It is thought that the facade of the building was based on this work, not least because in March 1774, Vesey wrote to Chambers, ‘I am much more intent in finishing the South front of your Plan at Lucan this summer.’ The aforementioned facade is of seven bays and two storeys over basement except for the breakfront three centre bays which feature an additional attic storey beneath a pediment (despite Vesey reminding Chambers ‘You have taught us to think pediments but common architecture). This central section is faced in granite ashlar with four half-engaged giant Ionic columns above a rusticated ground floor. Originally at that level the two bays on either side were given rusticated render, as can be seen in an engraving of the house produced by Thomas Milton in 1783, but this was removed at some later date. Lucan House’s design looks to have been the inspiration for Charleville, County Wicklow, designed by Whitmore Davis in 1797, although the facade of that building is entirely faced in ashlar and runs to nine bays. Meanwhile, at Lucan, the house forms a rectangular block, other than a three-bay bow to the rear that, as with the facade, rises three storeys over basement.  

If Sir William Chambers was involved in designing the exterior of Lucan House, James Wyatt, together with his Irish representative Thomas Penrose, can claim much credit for the building’s interiors, with Michael Stapleton responsible for much of the plasterwork found on many of the walls and ceilings in the ground floor, as well as the main staircase and first-floor lobby. Lucan House has some of the finest examples of neo-classical decoration in Ireland, beginning with the entrance hall, to the rear of which a screen of columns and pilasters painted to imitate Siena marble, provide access to the principal reception rooms. That to the immediate left here, now called the Wedgewood Room but originally the breakfast room, is a perfect square, its walls rising to a gently domed ceiling at the centre of which is a medallion depicting a warrior kneeling before Minerva accompanied by her maidens. Around the room, floral drops surround panels containing what appear to be grisaille paintings: in fact, these are in fact prints overpainted at some date when age had caused them to fade. To the rear is the drawing room, although this was intended to be the dining room. Its walls were left undecorated (and today covered in paper) but again the ceiling has been covered in plasterwork centred on another medallion, this one, somewhat unusually, featuring the Christ child and infant John the Baptist together with a lamb. The rear of the house is taken up by what is now the dining room but was originally intended to be the drawing room. The ceiling decoration here is simpler than that in the previous rooms, but the walls are decorated with plaster girandoles, their design found among those created by Michael Stapleton. Oval in shape, the bow in the window is echoed by a similarly curved wall centred on a door leading back into the entrance hall. This arrangement of the two rooms  – hall with screen of columns to the rear and central door opening into an oval room – is found in Castle Coole, County Fermanagh designed in the early 1790s by James Wyatt.  
Agmondisham Vesey died in 1785 and having no children, left the estate to his nephew Colonel George Vesey. The latter’s only child, Elizabeth Vesey, married Sir Nicholas Colthurst and their descendants lived at Lucan House until the property and its contents were sold in September 1925 by Captain Richard Colthurst (later eighth baronet), after which it was occupied by Charles Hugh O’Conor and then his son-in-law William Teeling. In 1942 the building and surrounding gardens were rented by the Italian government and then bought 12 years later, to serve as a residence for its ambassador. It continued to serve the same purpose until this month, at the end of which the present ambassador leaves his position and the property passes into the hands of a new owner, the local authority, South Dublin County Council. What happens to both house and grounds in the future remains to be seen.  

For anyone wondering, the bronze buffaloes seen in the grounds and fibreglass horse in the entrance hall, all by contemporary Italian artist Davide Rivalta and placed in their present positions last year, are due to remain on site.