Summer Island House, County Armagh 

Summer Island House, County Armagh http://lordbelmontinnorthernireland.blogspot.com/search/label/County%20Armagh%20Landowners

SAMUEL COWDY, of Taughlumny, near Banbridge, County Down, was a sergeant in Cromwell’s army, from whom he received a farm of 273 acres at Taughlumny. 
 
He married and had issue, his youngest son, 
 
JOHN COWDY (c1770-1857), who married M Rollins, and was father of 
 
ANTHONY COWDY (1809-92), who wedded Elizabeth, daughter of Mr Mahaffy, and had issue, an only son, 
 
ANTHONY COWDY (1843-1908), who married Sarah Frances, daughter of Mr Jones, and was father of 
 
EDWARD COWDY JP DL (1873-1934), of Summer Island, County Armagh, High Sheriff of County Armagh, 1920, who wedded, in 1903, Mary Jane, daughter of Robert McKean JP, of Rockwood, Benburb, County Tyrone. 
 

A person in a military uniform

Description automatically generated with low confidence 
Edward Cowdy (1873-1934) 

 
His eldest son, 
 
ROBERT McKEAN COWDY JP DL, of Summer Island, High Sheriff of County Armagh, 1947, married, in 1939, Diana Vera Gordon, elder daughter of John Ralph Cope, of Drumilly, County Armagh, and had issue, 
 
MAJOR RALPH EDWARD COPE COWDY DL (1940-2013), High Sheriff of County Armagh, 2007. 
 

 
SUMMER ISLAND, near Loughgall, County Armagh, was purchased from the Verner family by Edward Cowdy in 1908. 
 
It is a Georgian villa of two storeys and five bays; fine fanlight above the main door, with columns and pilasters. 
 
The roof is hipped with dentils at the eaves. 
 
The main entrance to Summer Island boasts one of the most delightful pairs of gate lodges in the Province, which were built ca 1820. 
 
They are backed by mature lime trees which stand out in the landscape of this slightly raised strip of land in an otherwise flat area. 
 
Shelter belts protect the southern half of the parkland, at the centre of which is the late 18th century classical house. 
 
There is a modern ornamental garden at the house but the walled garden is not cultivated.  
 
First published in September, 2013.

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

SUMMER ISLAND, County Armagh (AP ARMAGH, BANBRIDGE and CRAIGAVON 03) A/043 
REGISTERED GRADE A 
Late Georgian parkland on gently undulating land (87acres/35ha) with a later Regency house 
(Listed HB 15/01/001) at Annasamry (summer height), 2 miles (3.3km) south-east of Moy and 5.7 
miles (9km) north of Armagh City. Well known for its charming pair of vernacular gothick lodges, 
c.1790, which give access at Hall’s Hill from the south. The park in its present form evidently 
largely dates to the late 1780s and must have been made for Thomas Clarke (d.1791), whose 
family had held lands here from at least 1664. The park is depicted with its south avenue and 
most of its plantations/clumps in place on a map of Annasamry dated 1794 by William Kigan for 
Thomas Clarke’s son William (d. circa 1804). Summer Island (a name that first appears in the 
1760s) then passed through William’s sister to the O’Donnell family and sold in 1822 to Col. 
William Verner, who was responsible for re-building the present dwelling around 1825. Verner 
commissioned the cartographer William Armstrong to produce a map of the demesne in 1822 and 
this shows the carriage drive meandering axially though the park from the entrance, the shelter 
belts, woodland blocks and clumps and also a high number of isolated parkland trees dotted 
about. Many mature deciduous trees survive in today’s landscape, both in the open parkscape 
and woodland. These are mainly oak and beech but also chestnut, lime and ash. The woodland 
west of the house (‘The Jungle’) has a mixture of mature deciduous trees (oak mainly) and at the 
gate lodges end there are screens with very impressive mature lime trees (the woodland here is 
called Hunter’s Grove). As with the shelter belts and screens, the number of isolated mature 
parkland trees that survives at Summer Island is unusually impressive. The walled garden, not 
present in 1794, is first shown on Armstrong’s 1822 map and there pre-dates Verner’s time. No 
longer cultivated, it occupies a square area (1.24 acres/0.5ha) with north-south sloping ground 
and enclosing walls of stone and brick elsewhere using English Garden Bond; there are hot wall 
flues to be seen in places. The west corner is curved and in the apposite corner there is a small 
brick ‘necessary house’ or privy with gothick entrance. The top section of the long south-west 
side of the garden has a low wall surmounted by a good Victorian railing, a feature designed to 
allow views of the parkland from the walled garden (similar screens are also present at a number 
of other walled garden and usually date to the 1860s). Elsewhere on this south-west wall and also 
along the north-east wall of the garden, there is a narrow slip on the outside allowing woody 
plants to be planted to hide the wall from view. To the rere of the house is a large 
stable/farmyard and a collection of outbuildings most of which are shown on the 1822 map; the 
main exception being 20th century open sheds with Belfast Rood Trusses. After Col. Verner’s 
death in 1871, the property was leased by his son, William Verner, to Joseph Atkinson, Jnr., who 
remained there until 1908 when it was acquired by Edward Cowdy. As mentioned above, there 
are two matching lodges at the entrance (neither are in use),; these were described by JAK Dean 
as ‘The prettiest pair of surviving Georgian Gothick porters’ lodges in the Province’. Both the gate 
lodges and gates are listed (Listed HB 15/01/001). Private.