Beltrim Castle, Gortin, County Tyrone

Beltrim Castle, Gortin, County Tyrone

Can visit garden https://www.parksandgardens.org/places/beltrim-castle

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. 39. “(Cole-Hamilton, sub Enniskillen, E/PB; Blakiston-Houston/IFR) A plain square Georgian house with a long wing.” 

see https://lordbelmontinnorthernireland.blogspot.com/2017/07/beltrim-castle.html 

THE COLE-HAMILTONS WERE MAJOR LANDOWNERS IN COUNTY TYRONE, WITH 16,811 ACRES 

 
 
THE HON SIR CLAUD HAMILTON (c1545-1629), of Bodoney, County Tyrone, Gentleman of the King’s Privy Chamber, second son of Claud, 1st Lord Paisley, and brother ofJames, 1st Earl of Abercorn, was appointed, 1618, Constable of the castle of Toome, County Antrim. 
 
He married Janet, daughter and heir of Sir Robert Hamilton, Knight, of Leckprevick and Easter Greenlees, and had issue, 
 

Claud, dsp
James, dsp
George, dsp
WILLIAM, of whom hereafter
Alexander; 
Robert; 
Margaret; Grizel; Janet. 

The fourth son, 
 
SIR WILLIAM HAMILTON, Knight (c1604-64), of Manor Eliston, County Tyrone, High Sheriff of County Tyrone, 1638, married firstly, Elizabeth, daughter of Sir James Johnston, and had issue, 

James; 
William; 
Sarah; Margaret. 

He wedded secondly, Beatrix, daughter of Archibald Campbell, and had further issue, 

CLAUD, his successor
Archibald; 
Elizabeth. 

Sir William, who was buried in Bodoney parish church, Killeter, Castlederg, County Tyrone, was succeeded by his third son, 
 
CLAUD HAMILTON (c1648-c1695), of Monterloney, County Tyrone, High Sheriff of County Tyrone, 1671 and 1683, who espoused Isabella Wingfield, and had issue (with five daughters, viz. Beatrix, Mary, Agnes, Margaret, and Rebecca), two sons, 

WILLIAM, his successor
Claud, of Strabane, ancestor of the HAMILTON BARONETS OF WOODBROOK

Mr Hamilton was succeeded by his elder son, 
 
WILLIAM HAMILTON (-1747), of Beltrim, County Tyrone, who left, by Mary his wife, two sons and three daughters. 
 
His last surviving son, 
 
CLAUD HAMILTON, of Beltrim, married his cousin Letitia, daughter of Claud Hamilton, of Strabane, and had issue, 

LETITIA, of whom hereafter
Isabella; Beatrix. 

Mr Hamilton died in 1782, and was succeeded by his elder daughter, 
 
LETITIA HAMILTON, of Beltrim, who espoused, in 1780, the Hon Arthur Cole MP, afterwards COLE-HAMILTON, of Skea, County Fermanagh. 
 
Mr Cole-Hamilton, High Sheriff of County Tyrone, 1792, was the second son of John, 1st Baron Mountflorence, and brother of William, 1st Earl of Enniskillen. 
 
Mr Cole-Hamilton left issue, 

CLAUD WILLIAM, his heir
Letitia; Elizabeth Ann; Isabella. 

He was succeeded by his eldest son, 
 
CLAUD WILLIAM COLE-HAMILTON (1781-1822), High Sheriff of County Tyrone, 1811, who married, in 1805, Nichola Sophia, daughter of Richard Chaloner, of Kingsfort, County Meath, by whom he left at his decease, two sons, 

ARTHUR WILLOUGHBY, his heir
Richard Chaloner. 

Mr Cole-Hamilton was succeeded by his elder son, 
  C
ARTHUR WILLOUGHBY COLE-HAMILTON JP DL (1806-91), of Beltrim Castle, High Sheriff of County Tyrone, 1830, Major, Royal Tyrone Fusiliers, who married, in 1831, Emilia Katherine, daughter of Rev Charles Cobbe Beresford, and granddaughter of the Hon John Beresford, second son of Marcus, 1st Earl of Tyrone, and brother of George, 1st Marquess of Waterford, and had issue, 

WILLIAM CLAUD, his heir
Claud Chaloner; 
Charles Richard, Commander RN; 
Arthur Henry (Rev); great-great-grandfather ofAlex Cole-Hamiltom MSP; 
John Isaac (father of Air Vice-Marshal John Cole-Hamilton); 
Letitia Grace; Emily Harriet; Selina. 

Major Cole-Hamilton was succeeded by his eldest son, 
 
WILLIAM CLAUD COLE-HAMILTON (1833-82), of Ballitore House, County Kildare, Captain, 88th Regiment, Connaught Rangers, who wedded, in 1858, Caroline Elizabeth Josephine, daughter of Hon Andrew Godfrey Stewart, and granddaughter of Andrew Thomas, 1st Earl Castle Stewart; and dvp in 1882, having had, with other issue, 

ARTHUR RICHARD, his heir
William Andrew Thomas; 
Claud George; 
Isabel Mary. 

Captain Cole-Hamilton was succeeded by his eldest son, 
 
ARTHUR RICHARD COLE-HAMILTON JP DL (1859-1915), of Beltrim Castle. 

Captain,7th Hussars; fought in the Egyptian Campaign, 1882; Captain, Royal Scots Fusiliers; Sudan Campaign, 1885-86; Lieutenant-Colonel, 6th Service Battalion, East Lancashire Regiment; lived at Caddagh, Wilkinstown, County Meath, and Beltrim, Gortin, Newtownstewart, County Tyrone; Lieutenant-Colonel and Honorary Colonel, 6th Battalion, Royal Irish Rifles; 1st World War service, where he was mentioned in despatches; fought in the Gallipoli Campaign. 

Colonel Cole-Hamilton married firstly, in 1882, Jeannette, eldest daughter of Samuel Moore, of Moorlands, Lancashire, and had issue, an only child, 

WILLIAM MOORE, his heir

He wedded secondly, in 1884, Florence Alice, daughter of James Duke Hughes, of Brentwood, Surrey. 
 
Colonel Cole-Hamilton was killed in action, in 1915, at The Dardenelles, Turkey. 
 
His only son, 
 
WILLIAM MOORE COLE-HAMILTON (1883-1948), of Beltrim Castle, Major, Royal Army Service Corps, married, in 1903, Ada Beatrice, daughter of William Peter Huddle, and had an only son, 
 
WILLIAM ARTHUR RICHARD COLE-HAMILTON (1906-36), who married, in 1932, Barbara, daughter of Edward J Deane, and had two daughters, 

 
A memorial screen at Kilwinning Old Parish Church, Ayrshire, was erected from a generous gift made by John Cole-Hamilton and was dedicated on 10th June, 1990. 

It was erected in memory of Mr Cole-Hamilton’s father, Colonel Arthur Richard Cole-Hamilton, who died at Gallipoli in 1915; his mother Sarah who died on 18th September, 1942; and his wife Gladys who died on 4th October, 1989. Mr Cole-Hamilton died on 10th November,1991. The Screen incorporates the Cole-Hamilton shield and the seal of the Abbot of Kilwinning. 

Alex Cole-Hamilton, MSP, is the great-great-grandson of the Rev Arthur Henry Cole-Hamilton, Rector of Castle Ashby, Northamptonshire.  

BELTRIM CASTLE, Gortin, County Tyrone, was erected by Sir William Hamilton. 

In 1622 the Castle consisted of a bawn (fortified enclosure) of lime and stone, 42 feet square and 7 feet high, with the foundations of a castle, the walls of which had reached 5 feet in height. 

Portions of this structure are still standing beside the present building, a five-bay, two-storey rendered house of ca 1780-1820. 

It is L-shaped, facing west, with a multi-bay, two-storey return. 
 
The formal appearance of the west front to Beltrim Castle owes its existence to early 19th century improvements, which also saw the remains of the 17th century bawn incorporated into a long rear return. 

The 19th century house retains most of the original features. 
 
In is said to be not only of local importance, but also of national significance. 
 
Beltrim’s associated outbuildings, former bawn, and gardens contribute significantly to the architectural and historic interest of the property. 
 
The only part of the original castle which remains standing is a gable wall which is no part of the present building. 

Beltrim is now part of the Blakiston-Houston estates. 
 
Richard Patrick Blakiston-Houston OBE JP DL was born in 1948; educated at Eton; registered as a Professional Associate, Royal Institution of Chartered Surveyors, 1972; High Sheriff of County Down, 1989. His wife, 
 
Dr Lucinda Mary Lavinia Blakiston-Houston DL (b 1956), daughter of Lt.-Cdr. Theodore Bernard Peregrine Hubbard and the Lady Miriam Fitzalan-Howard; graduated from Leeds University with a Bachelor of Science (B.Sc.); Liverpool University, Master of Science (M.Sc.); Queen’s University, Belfast, Doctor of Philosophy (Ph.D.). 
 
Other residence: The Roddens, Ballywalter, County Down. 
 
Interestingly, the Blakiston-Houston family appear to be related to General Sam Houston, after which Houston, Texas, USA, was named.  

ORANGEFIELD PARK in east Belfast was the family home of the Houston family in the 18th century.The head of the family, John Holmes Houston, was a partner in the Belfast Banking Company and lived at Orangefield House with his family.  
 
Orangefield was situated at the end of what is now Houston Park and the estate itself extended to almost 300 acres. John and Eliza’s daughter, Mary Isabella, was born in 1793 and later married Richard Bayly Blakiston. 
 
The two families joined names, leaving J Blakiston-Houston in charge of the Orangefield estate from 1857.   
 
 
In 1934, the Blakiston-Houstons offered Belfast Corporation (now the council) part of the Orangefield estate to develop as a public park. The corporation, although keen to buy the land, felt that the price was too high.  
 
After lengthy negotiations, they bought part of the site in 1938 for £20,000 (£1.1 million in today’s values). Development work was put on hold due to World War II and plans for the park were only drawn up in 1947.  

First published in December, 2009.  

www.nihgt.org/resources/pdf/Register_of_Parks_Gardens_Demesnes-NOV20.pdf 

BELTRIM CASTLE, County Tyrone (AP FERMANAGH AND OMAGH 07) T/005 
REGISTERED GRADE A 
The demesne (313 acres/127ha) lying on the western side of the village of Gortin, has its origin in 
the early 17th century, when a bawn ‘of lyme & stone, 42ft square, 7ft high with no flankers’ was 
built here by William Hamilton by 1622. The appearance of the house in the 18th century remains 
conjectural, but a long narrow pond north-west of the site could be the relic of a canal associated 
with formal gardens of the early house. The present house, a modest sprawling two-storey manor 
was built around 1820 (Listed HB 11/16/013) and the landscape park in undulating land 
complements the house. The site was referred to as … ‘romantic … in the valley through which 
flows the Owenkillew river …’ by Young in 1909. There are mature shelter and woodland trees, 
the parkland trees are being reinforced with new planting. In the 19th century there were walks 
and rides through the woods. There is an ornamental garden at the house on the site of a once 
more complex Victorian formal garden. The large rectangular kitchen garden, partly walled, lies 
east of the house and yards; it was originally enclosed with hedges and covered 3 acres (1.2ha), 
but was reduced in size to 2.6 acres (1ha) in the later 19th century with the building of a north 
wall. The area today is partly cultivated on the west side and otherwise covered with farm 
buildings, yards and grass paddocks. One of three demesne gate lodges survives. SMR: TYR 18:47 
17th bawn. Private. 

King’s Fort or Kingsfort, Moynalty, Co Meath

King’s Fort or Kingsfort, Moynalty, 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.

“(Chaloner/LGI1912; and sub Enniskillen, E/PB) A brick-built house of ca 1740, two storeys over basement, in which the ground floor rooms are vaulted over and formerly had good mid C18 stucco decoration on the vaults. One room had plaster panelling. The house is now in ruins, through fragments of the stucco work remain.”

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.

…the seat of Richard Chalener in 1814.

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

Kingsfort House was located near Moynalty in north Meath. Nearby Cherrymount was the first home of the Chaloner family before their new home of Kingsfort was constructed. Kingsfort was completed in 1736 by John Chaloner. The house takes its name from the townland in which it is situated Rathinree, which is the Irish for the fort of the king. There are five ringforts nearby. 

Described as a big regular house set in pleasantly rolling countryside Kingsfort was a brick built house of two storeys over basement. A number of rooms had plasterwork and even though the house is ruined fragments of the plasterwork are still visible. 

Rev. John Chaloner was born in Shropshire in 1658, studied at Trinity College and became a clergyman in Errigal, Co. Donegal. He became a navy chaplain on board ‘The Royal Sovereign’ a ship despatched to the West Indies to combat piracy. Tradition is that Chaloner managed to acquire a considerable sum of money during this period and in 1704 having returned to Ireland purchased the estate of Captain Stopford near Moynalty. 

John Chaloner succeeded his father in 1732 and completed the new house at King’s Fort in 1736. In 1778 John Chaloner was succeeded by Richard who was responsible for major landscaping at Kingsfort. 

Richard laid out the Glen, a valley between the two Chaloner houses. He constructed a waterfall, a small lake with an island, a dog’s graveyard and a small two roomed lodge. He was known to his friends as ‘Dicky of the Glen’. Richard Chaloner showed his party allegiance to the Whig party by planting oaks on his estate at Kingsfort. In 1784 Richard Chaloner was appointed High Sheriff of Meath for the year. 

Richard Chaloner kept a diary of domestic events from 1810 to 1817, the title page bears the inscription – ‘To record domestic happenings, in which I took a considerable part. It will be a pleasure at some time to bring them back to mind.’ Portions of the diary were reproduced in “Not so much to one side” by Valentine Farrell and there is a copy in the local studies section of the County Library, Navan. Richard made changes to the interior of the house around 1815 and he also rebuilt the staircase. 

Richard Chaloner died in 1832 leaving Kingsfort to his eldest daughter’s second son, Richard Cole-Hamilton, who took the name Chaloner. 

In 1835 Kingsfort House was described as “a superb building, with suitable offices and a garden attached. It is situated in the centre of the townland and is the seat of Richard Chaloner. The estate is elegantly adorned with plantations, lakes and ornamental grounds.” 

In the 1860s the family possessed a mighty bull which they named Sovereign in honour of the Navy ship of Rev. John Chaloner. The bull won many prizes at the RDS and at shows up and down the country. The bull survived an attack of foot and mouth and when it died was buried in one of the ring forts at Kingsfort, renamed in his honour, ‘Sovereign’s Fort.’ A poem was even written in honour of the bull. 

In 1876 Richard Chaloner of Kingscourt, Moynalty held 2,100 acres in County Meath. Richard Chaloner was a noted breeder of Shorthorn cattle. In 1879 Richard Chaloner’s shorthorn bullock won first prizes in all the major shows in Britain and Ireland. Richard Chaloner died in 1879, leaving Kingsfort to his nephew Claud Cole –Hamilton who assumed the name of Chaloner in the terms of his great-grandfather’s will. Claud died on 21st June 1917. He was succeeded by his son, Claud Willoughby Chaloner who was a Major serving with the Royal Enniskillen Fusiliers. He and his wife settled at Cherrymount and leased Kingfort for a period before selling it in 1937. The Chaloner family married into the Bomford family and Peter Bamford’s website on the Bomford family  is a brilliant source of information on the Chaloner family and their relatives, the Bomfords. 

The last of the Chaloners, Desmond, attended Trinity College and served in the British Army from 1943 to 1947 during the Second World War. His grandfather had died at Kingsfort in 1917 and his grandmother had lived on there until 1927.  His father had lived at Cherrymount and it was here that Desmond was born. Desmond Chaloner died in England in 2010. 

Kingsfort was sold to Mr. Forest and then to  Mr. Anthony McCann, who stripped the house. The slates and roof were removed in the 1950s. The estate had been broken up by the Land Commission in 1936.