Coolhull Castle, Co Wexford
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. 90. “An old castle with a tower at one end and a lower building at the other. Irish battlements.”
http://irishantiquities.bravehost.com/wexford/coolhull/coolhull.html
Map Reference: S895098 (2895, 1098)
There are no historical references to this castle although it is recorded that John Devereaux owned land at Coolhull in 1640. It is a two-storey building with attic, aligned approximately E-W. At the west end is a tall slim four-storey tower of similar date. Both sections have very good crenellations. The lower portion has some fine single- and double-light round-headed windows and there is a bartizan at the NE corner. There is a good fireplace in the north wall at first floor level and traces of another fireplace in the east wall.
The tower has a north doorway protected by a machicolation at roof level. Just inside, on the left, is the doorway to the hall, now partly blocked. A fine broad spiral stairway rises within the tower but it is not accessible beyond first floor level. Here there is a garderobe and the latrine chute exits at the south base of the tower. There is also a fine slopstone.
Coolhull Castle, County Wexford, in August 1987.
Those were the wonderful days when the only thing that barred access to our Irish National Monuments was a flattened old wooden palette, regardless of the state of the building. Some intrepid explorers featured here.
A classic example of a medieval hall house, a modification of the traditional tower house style, which included many of old features of crenellations, bartizans, yetts and much more.