Oakley Park, Kells, Co Meath 

Oakley Park, Kells, Co Meath 

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

“(Bomford/IFR) Originally a square C18 house, with a three bay front and a long hall with an apse at its inner end where a doorway led to the inner hall, containing a partly curving staircase. Bought by the Bomfords during the minority of George Bomford, and enlarged; stylistically, and from an unsigned and undated plan in existence, it would appear that the work was done soon after George Bomford came of age 1832.  The house was almost doubled in size by adding a new block to its front’ of the same length as the original block, and nearly as deep. The new front, of stucco and stone facings, is of two storeys and three bays, with a tripartite window above a single-storey portico of fluted Doric columns. Inside the addition provided a new entrance hall behind which was an impressive staircase hall at right angles to it, with a bifurcating staircase behind a screen of columns. At the top of the stairs was an upper hall lit by glass dome and surrounded by fluted columns and pilasters. To the left of thehall and staircase was a large drawing room en suite, wih the somewhat smaller drawing room of the original block. The original dining room, entered from the staircase hall, continued to serve as such’ but the original entrance hall, deprived of its light, became a back lobby and the original stairs the back stairs. A small two storey addition was made later at the back of the original block. Sold 1955 by Lt-Col George Bomford to Mr Laurence McGuinness, who has reduced the size of the house by demolishing the original block and the 2nd addition, leaving only the main C19 addition, which he has remodelled internally, to provide more rooms.” 

Not in national inventory 

Record of Protected Structures: 

Oakley Park, townland: Oakley Park or Lawrencetown; town: Kells.  

The original house demolished leaving 19thC additions which consist of a white rendered 3 bay, 2-storey hip roofed house. The central bay is brought slightly forward and is accentuated by a Doric porch. Gate lodge in different Ownership. 

€1,500,000  

Oakley Park House,Kells,County Meath,A82PY88 

For Sale 11/7/22 

Oakley Park, County Meath for sale 2022.

OAKLEY PARK HOUSE IS A FINE PERIOD HOME ON APPROX. 19.34 HECTARES (47.8 ACRES) WITHIN THE HEART OF THE ROYAL COUNTY OF MEATH AND A SHORT DISTANCE FROM THE HISTORICAL TOWN OF KELLS ALL ON APPROX. 19.36 HECTARES (47.80 ACRES) OF FANTASTIC GARDEN AND GRAZING LANDS. LOCATION Oakley Park Manor is located near the historical town of Kells in the Royal County of Meath. Close to the M3 motorway, Dublin City and Dublin airport are easily accessible. Meath is the 14th largest county in Ireland and the 9th in terms of population and was formed from the eastern part of the former Kingdom of Mide, but now forms part of the province of Leinster. The seat of the High King of Ireland was located at Tara Hill, which is only some 10 km / 6 miles from Navan. The archaeological complex of Bruna Boinne is around 5,000 years old and includes the burial sites of Newgrange, Knowth and Dowth, in the north-east of the county and are designated a World Heritage Site. Kells is best known as the site of Kells Abbey, from which the Book of Kells takes its name. The book of Kells is exhibited in Trinity College Dublin where it attracts tourists from around the world. It is one of Ireland’s greatest cultural treasures and the world’s most famous medieval manuscript. The monastery at Kells is thought to have been founded around 804 A.D. by monks from St Colmcille’s monastery in Iona who were fleeing Viking invasions. HISTORY What is Oakley Park House now seemed to have stemmed from around 1649 for a ruin of a castle and may have been where the Oakley family resided. The house around the 1700 was renamed by its previous name of Laurencetown. It is understood that around 1710 Mr. Joseph Williams was in residents and he is to have supposed to have built the new house in 1715. The Crawford family who lived in the house from 1730 to 1829 brought back the name Oakley Park and since then the house kept this name. They made many improvements to the house and with the main road from Kells to Moynalty being repositioned it gave more space around the house and as a result the parkland and yard was built around 1815. Around 1837 Oakley Park House was supposedly bought for £15,000 by George Bomford who extended the house doubling it in size. At this point the walled garden to the west was built and is approx. 2.5 acres in size. The current owners bought Oakley Park House in 1955 and in 1979 they began running a successful thoroughbred breeding and training establishment for over 40 years. Some notable horses bred at Oakley Park House include Justified and Big Matt who both triumphed in many graded races in Ireland and the UK. OAKLEY PARK HOUSE When approaching the main residence there is a beautiful sweeping driveway that brings you the front of the house with the manicured virginia creeper softening the exterior. When going through the 4 pillar front porch there is a very welcoming entrance hall with tiled flooring and feature staircase leading to the first floor. The drawing room to the left is a very impressive room for formal events and entertaining with its feature marble fireplace, solid wooden flooring, and stunning views of the surrounding countryside. To the right there is a fantastic family room for everyday use and is complete with wooden flooring and feature marble fireplace. To the rear is a country kitchen with tiled flooring Aga, island unit and Belfast sink. The ground floor is complete with utility room, bathroom and small study area to the rear of this. The first floor has 5 bedrooms of good size and all have wonderful views over the gardens and grounds and indeed surrounding countryside. There is also an ensuite in the master bedroom, jack and jill bathroom and w/c in the guest bedroom. GARDENS AND GROUNDS To the rear of the residence is the charming cut stone courtyard. This is a working yard and includes approx. 12 loose boxes, 5 horse walker, hay barn, lunging ring, cattle shed with slatted sheds. There is also a 5-furlong Wexford sand gallop. The lands are in good condition and well maintained with mature boundaries throughout and good access to paddocks. SPECIAL FEATURES – Charming period residence in a mature and private setting. – Located just outside the historic village of Kells in the heart of County Meath – Two-story above basement family home with superb views over the surrounding countryside – Superb gardens and grounds including walled garden – Beautiful old buildings and outhouses in a private courtyard – Productive lands suitable for several uses such as grazing or tillage. 

Oakley Park, County Meath for sale 2022.
Oakley Park, County Meath for sale 2022.
Oakley Park, County Meath for sale 2022.
Oakley Park, County Meath for sale 2022.
Oakley Park, County Meath for sale 2022.
Oakley Park, County Meath for sale 2022.
Oakley Park, County Meath for sale 2022.
Oakley Park, County Meath for sale 2022.
Oakley Park, County Meath for sale 2022.
Oakley Park, County Meath for sale 2022.
Oakley Park, County Meath for sale 2022.
Oakley Park, County Meath for sale 2022.
Oakley Park, County Meath for sale 2022.
Oakley Park, County Meath for sale 2022.
Oakley Park, County Meath for sale 2022.
Oakley Park, County Meath for sale 2022.
Oakley Park, County Meath for sale 2022.
Oakley Park, County Meath for sale 2022.
Oakley Park, County Meath for sale 2022.

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

Oakley Park is located as Oakley Park or Lawrencetown, Dulane, Kells. Peter Bamford has extensive details about the Bomford family and their houses on his website and most of this article is based on his research. 

Originally a square eighteenth century house with a three bay front and a long hall which led to an inner hall. The house was bought by George Bomford in 1837 and enlarged. The work was completed by 1839. The house was almost doubled in size by adding a new block to its front. Oakley Park was sold in 1955 by Lt. Col. George Bomford to Laurence McGuinness who reduced the size of the house by demolishing the original block and the second nineteenth century addition leaving only the main nineteenth century addition. 

The Betagh family held the property until the middle of the seventeenth century. In 1640 Thomas Betagh was the landowner at Laurencetown in which there was a ruined castle.  A timber beam was uncovered during the demolition of the 1950s which bore the inscription “P. Kiernan 1649.” The townland was renamed Oakley Park after the Oakley family who held the property in the late seventeenth century. 

The Graham family of Plattin also had an interest in the property. Joseph William held the property in 1709 and it is probably he who erected the house about 1715. It was a square one storey house with a basement. The Crawford family acquired the lease in 1730 and remained there until 1829. The Crawford family originated in County Fermanagh. Robert Crawford of Oakley Park died in 1784 leaving sons, Robert and John who succeeded him. John’s son, Jason, succeeded to Oakley Park.  In 1797 Rev. Jason Crawford married Henrietta Rowley from Maperath and their eldest son, John Maxwell Crawford, succeeded to the estate on the death of his father in 1829.  The Crawfords re-routed the Kells-Moynalty road away from the house and constructed a yard about 1815. Two gate lodges were erected. The house was leased to Thomas Rowley for a period. In the mid-1830s the house was occupied by Captain William Graham. 

In 1837 George Bomford acquired Oakley Park. George Bomford was the oldest son of George Bomford of Drumlargan, Summerhill. Born in 1811, he married his first cousin, Arabella Winter of Agher in 1832. They had been brought up together at Agher.  He was a Justice of the Peace and served as High Sheriff of the county in 1860.  In 1876 George Bomford of Oakley Park held 2,436 acres in County Meath and 443 acres in Westmeath. 

His second son, John Francis succeeded him at Oakley Park.  John Francis Bomford married Elinor Jane Bolton in 1866. In the 1911 census John Francis and his family were living at Oakley Park. John Francis died later that year and is buried at Kells. Their eldest son was George Lyndon Bomford J.P. At the age of eighteen George was sent to America where he spent a period as a pony express rider in Texas. George joined the Land Commission in 1895 on his return from the United States. In 1911 there was a very bad thunder storm when eighteen cows were killed by lightening whilst sheltering in the wood to the east of the house. George served during the First World War as a captain. His sister, Elinor May, married Hugh Constable, grandson of the landscape painter, John Constable. George died in 1951 and is buried at Kells. His eldest son was Lt.-Col. George Warren Bomford. From 1917 to 1947 George Warren served with the Indian Army. George Warren served in the First and Second World Wars. He arrived back at Oakley Park as a Colonel in 1948. After he sold Oakley Park he lived in Malta and Italy. 

Drumlargan, Co Meath 

Drumlargan, Co Meath 

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

p. 113. “(Bomford/IFR) A two storey double gable-ended house, probably early C18 but with C19 windows and a C19 two storey gabled projecting porch. Owned by the Bomford family until ca 1850. 

Not in National Inventory 

Drumlargan House was previously known as Bloom Field House and is located outside Summerhill, just off the Kilcock Road.  

Drumlargan is a two storey double gable-ended house, probably early eighteenth century according to Bence-Jones but with nineteenth century widows and a nineteenth century projecting porch. One of the reception rooms is octagonal. The original house at Drumlargan was called Bloom Field and consisted of a central block with wings each side. In the early 1700s the wings were removed and the central block enlarged to form the present house. This reconstruction took place about 1724 as there is a plaque bearing this date over the front door. Drumlargan is the site of the battle of Dungan’s Hill which was fought in 1647. 

The Bomfords were settled at Rahinstown. Stephen Bomford’s eldest son, Robert George, succeeded him at Rahinstown. His second son, George, married Arabella Winter of Agher in 1809. George Bomford leased Drumlargan parish from Dixie Coddington in 1787, purchasing the property in 1795. As in all articles relating to Bomford houses much of the information on this house is obtained from Peter Bamford’s excellent website. 

Lynch’s Wood in Drumlargan was obtained by Lynch from Baron Hussey of Galtrim by a trick. Lynch asked Hussey to rent it to him for the rotation of three crops. Hussey thought these would be oats or wheat but Lynch chose oak, beech and elm. It is said that the lease has not run out yet and that the Forestry Department has only just set the third crop. George Bomford probably set the second crop. 

George’s son also George succeeded to his father’s estates at Oakley Park. George married Arabella Pratt Winter of Agher in 1832. Their eldest son, George Winter Bomford, succeeded to Oakley Park. 

In the 1830s Bloomfield was described as a tolerably good house but becoming ruinous. In the early 1830s it was occupied by a Mr. Purdon and later in the decade by a herd. About 1860 the house was improved by George Bomford for his younger son, John Francis. John was the only Bomford to live at Drumlargan House as it was then called. The porch was added at this time. John married Eleanor Bolton and they had ten children. John Stephen served with the Indian Police and died in Burma in 1891 aged 21. Samuel Richard Bomford fought in the Boer War gaining the rank of Captain in the service of the Cape Mounted Rifles. Trevor Broughton Bomford gained the rank of officer in the service of the Surma Valley Light Horse Mounted Infantry Regiment, Indian Army and emigrated to Canada in 1908. Their youngest son, William Harold, became a surgeon and served as District Medical Officer in the Fiji Colonial Service. In 1900 John Francis and his family moved to Oakley Park. Drumlargan was sold to George Wilson of Tara for a little over £3000. John Francis died in 1911 aged 73. In 1901 and 1911 William R. Orme, a retired army Captain, and his sister lived at Drumlargan. In 1876 William R. Orme held 1521 acres in County Mayo. 

In the 1920s the Bomford lands at Drumlargan was acquired by the Land Commission. 

Rahanna, Ardee, Co Louth 

Rahanna, Ardee, Co Louth 

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. 237. “(Ruxton, sub Fitzherbert/IFR) A square two storey house of ca 1820, with a wide-eaved roof and a recessed central bay.” 

https://www.buildingsofireland.ie/buildings-search/building/13901409/rahanna-house-rahanna-co-louth

Rahanna, County Louth, courtesy National Inventory.

Detached three-bay two-storey over basement house, built 1823. Single and two-storey return to west, stone porch to east. Hipped slate roof, clay ridge and hip tiles, yellow brick corbelled chimneystacks with stone caps and clay pots; projecting eaves on painted timber sprockets; profiled cast-iron gutter, circular cast-iron downpipes. Smooth rendered ruled-and-lined walling, roughcast-render to basement and west elevation, chamfered tooled limestone plinth, slight recess to central-bay above entrance porch. Square-headed window openings, tooled limestone sills, smooth rendered reveals, painted timber one-over-one sliding sash windows, six-over-six timber sliding sash windows, cast-iron window guards to basement and west elevation, painted timber tripartite sliding sash windows over entrance porch, multiple-pane stained glass stairwell window to west elevation. Square-headed door opening to east elevation set in tooled limestone porch comprising paired Doric columns on pedestals, simple frieze, cornice and balustrade parapet, painted timber double doors with six raised-and-fielded panels, plain-glazed overlight, stone steps. House situated in extensive grounds, stone outbuildings, walled garden and associated gardener’s house to west. Boundary wall of vertically-laid flat stones to north-west accessed through wrought-iron gates with cast-iron gate piers. 

Appraisal 

Rahanna House is a handsome house which retains many original features, such as timber sliding sash windows and classical porch, which enliven its symmetrical composition. The varied and well-maintained attendant grounds, stable complex, walled garden and gardener’s house enhance this building further, making it one of exceptional architectural quality. 

Rahanna, County Louth, courtesy National Inventory.
Rahanna, County Louth, courtesy National Inventory.
Rahanna, County Louth, courtesy National Inventory.

https://www.buildingsofireland.ie/buildings-search/building/13901408/rahanna-house-rahanna-co-louth

Attached three-bay single-storey with attic former head gardener’s house, built c. 1880, now in private domestic use. Rectangular-plan, extension to east c.1980, attached to walled garden to south-east, built 1823. Pitched slate roof, crested clay ridge tiles, ball finials to east and west gables, painted timber bargeboards to gables, yellow brick corbelled chimneystacks, moulded cast-iron gutters on yellow brick brackets at, circular cast-iron downpipes. Red brick walling laid in Flemish bond to yellow brick string course at eaves. Square-headed brick- arched window openings, decorative terracotta keystone, granite sills, painted timber casement windows to north elevation with diamond leaded lights; canted bay to west elevation, painted timber colonettes separating painted timber casement windows with fixed diamond pane leaded lights. Square-headed door opening under lean-to roof supported by painted timber brackets, painted timber vertically-sheeted door, surmounted by plain glazed overlight with decorative terracotta keystone. Walled gardens to south-east, red brick walling to north, east and west interior walls, random rubble stone wall to south. Greenhouse with red brick plinth wall, stone coping surmounted by timber and glazed panels and pitched glazed roof. Former gardener’s house and walled garden contained within grounds of Rahanna House. 

Appraisal 

This attractive complex of walled garden and former gardener’s house, situated within the demesne of Rahanna House is an important piece of Louth’s architectural and social history. The walled garden remains intact; plum, apple and pear trees continue to fruit, the vegetable patch and greenhouse continue to be used and it is a reminder of a bygone era. The former gardener’s house, though extended, is picturesque in its design. The leaded lights compliment the red and yellow brick walling and the beautiful detailing on the keystones of two birds entwined elevates this structure from being a purely functional piece of architecture. 

Rahanna, County Louth, courtesy National Inventory.
Rahanna, County Louth, courtesy National Inventory.
Rahanna, County Louth, courtesy National Inventory.

https://www.buildingsofireland.ie/buildings-search/building/13901410/rahanna-house-rahanna-co-louth

Four ranges of multiple-bay single- and two-storey stone stables, built 1823, attached to farm buildings to west. Stableyard with two-storey range to south and west, single-storey range to north and east, farmyard to west with freestanding iron hayshed and single-storey west range, walled garden to south, gardener’s house. Hipped slate roofs, clay ridge tiles, red brick corbelled chimneystacks, circular metal roof vents, moulded cast-iron gutters, circular cast-iron downpipes, ashlar limestone bellcote to west gable of north range, pitched corrugated-iron roof, painted timber canopy supported on cast-iron columns to south-east. Random rubble uncoursed walling, roughly dressed limestone quoins. Square-headed window openings, lugged-and-kneed limestone surrounds, limestone sills, painted timber three-over-three sliding sash windows, segmental-headed opening to eastern range, red brick infill, square-headed brick arched window opening, painted timber three-over-six south window. Square-headed door openings, lugged, shouldered and kneed limestone door surrounds, painted timber vertically-sheeted doors, segmental-headed carriage arches to west range. Random rubble stone steps to south. Well to north-east. Cobblestones to yard area. Farm complex to west with hay barn, random rubble stone outbuildings, accessed through wrought-iron gates within square-profile random rubble stone gate piers. Situated to west of Rahanna House and to north of walled garden. 

Appraisal 

This stable complex and farm buildings create an attractive group of structures associated with Rahanna House. The context of the grouping remains virtually intact, and the cobblestone yard, well and steps for mounting horses, all remain in-situ. The buildings themselves retain all the original features from sash windows, timber doors, to the bell in the bellcote, and create both an architecturally significant group of structures as well as a social interest, for these buildings are reminder of a period in Ireland’s history where the big house dominated the Irish landscape and local community. 

Rahanna, County Louth, courtesy National Inventory.
Rahanna, County Louth, courtesy National Inventory.
Rahanna, County Louth, courtesy National Inventory.

Casey, Christine and Alistair Rowan. The Buildings of Ireland: North Leinster. Penguin Books, London, 1993.  

p. 204 

https://www.independent.ie/business/irish/75m-estate-is-richest-irish-sale-despite-crisis-26703667.html

Rahanna, Ardee, Co Louth: €1.6m (asking price) 

One of the finest houses in Co Louth, this late Georgian seven-bedroom house has period features and is approached by a sweeping tree-lined avenue. Outside, there are outbuildings, a three-acre walled garden and 29 further acres of parkland.