Rathescar, Dunleer, Co Louth 

Rathescar, Dunleer, 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. 239. “(Foster-Vesey-Fitzgerald/IFR) A house originally built soon after mid-C18 by the Fosters, and greatly enlarged and altered early C19 by J.L. Foster, MP, afterwards Judge of Common Pleas. The C18 house forms the centre of the principal front: a three storey three bay gable-ended block with the top storey treated as an attic above the cornice. On either side of it are two storey one bay overlapping wings. In the lower storey of the wings there are Wyatt windows, set in arched recesses going down to the ground; there are similar arched recessed in the three lower storeys; presumably these date from an early C19 refacing. The centre block has a deep open Doric porch, a Wyatt window on either side of it and a central die on the roof parapet; all of which would also be early C19. The left-hand wing extends back to form a two storey adjoining front of eight bays with a two bay central breakfront and a trellised porch. From the centre of the house sprouts an odd round tower, rather like the top of a lighthouse; with rectangular windows all round it, a frill of pierced battlements and a conical roof. This might be thought to be a Victorian eccentricity, but in fact it dates from early C19, and could derive from the C18 central attic-towers of Ancketill’s Grove and Gola in the neighbouring county of Monaghan. Sold 1850s to the Henry family.” 

https://www.buildingsofireland.ie/buildings-search/building/13901826/rathescar-co-louth

Rathescar, County Louth, courtesy National Inventory.

Detached three-bay three-storey house, built c. 1760. Single-bay two-storey wings to north and south c. 1830, round rendered tower to rear (west) with pierced battlements and conical copper roof c. 1830, entrance portico to east, domed glass house to south-west; decorative covered veranda to south elevation. Pitched slate roof, hipped to north and south wings, red brick chimneystacks with dressed limestone corbelled courses and caps, gutter hidden by parapet, cast-iron hoppers, circular cast-iron downpipes. Smooth rendered ruled-and-lined walling, frieze with patera separating first and second floors, surmounted by moulded sill course to second floor windows, stone parapet; segmental-headed recessed blind arches, moulded rendered surround, running from ground to first floor on main house and ground floor to wings, block-and-start quoins to wings. Square-headed window openings, tooled limestone sills, painted timber tripartite windows to ground floor, six-over-six sliding sash windows to first floor, three-over-three to second floor. Doric portico to east, painted timber columns and pilasters to plain frieze and cornice, square-headed door opening, painted timber double doors with eight flat panels, two limestone steps to entrance, limestone entrance platform to portico. House opens onto oval grassed area, stableyard to north, approached by long avenue, through fields to east. 

Appraisal 

Rathescar is a fascinating example of a country house which has been enlarged and enhanced at various stages through the centuries. Originally a hunting lodge, the addition of two wings increased its importance and the delightfully eccentric observation tower which resembles a land-locked lighthouse adds to its architectural significance, in addition, the delightful curved glass house adds to its technical significance. 

Rathescar, County Louth, courtesy National Inventory.
Rathescar, County Louth, courtesy National Inventory.
Rathescar, County Louth, courtesy National Inventory.
Rathescar, County Louth, courtesy National Inventory.
Rathescar, County Louth, courtesy National Inventory.

Monasterboice House, Co Louth 

Monasterboice House, 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. 208. “(Dunlop. Sub Delap/LGI1912) A hybrid house, partly medieval, with a three light Perpendicular window, and partly Georgian Gothic; with a Regency bow front on the gardy side, and Victorian ironwork and other Victorian features. Now semi-derelict. Folly tower and folly arch spanning public road.” 

https://www.buildingsofireland.ie/buildings-search/building/13902102/monasterboice-house-cordoogan-co-louth

Detached five-bay two-storey house, built c. 1820, comprising two-bay castellated Gothicised block and two-bay standard Georgian block, flanking tripartite arcaded and glazed projecting porch. Regency bow front to garden elevation. Hipped slate roof with rendered chimneystack. Rendered walls. Pointed arch openings to Gothicised block and square-headed openings to Georgian block, having timber sliding sash windows. Incorporating medieval tower house. 

Appraisal 

This unusual house retains fabric which is medieval, Georgian Gothic, standard Georgian and Regency. It also exhibits later Victorian alterations and additions. This complex combination makes for a house of great character and charm. 

https://www.buildingsofireland.ie/buildings-search/building/13902101/monasterboice-house-coolfore-co-louth

Freestanding monumental limestone entrance gateway, built 1869. Triumphal arch form with round-headed carriage opening set within square-headed surround crowned by limestone parapet. Limestone rubble masonry with tooled limestone ashlar voussoirs, string course and rebate. Carved limestone plaque with hood moulding bearing inscription and date 1869, to west elevation. Formerly served as entrance to Monasterboice House, now narrow public road, fronting on to wider road to west, very overgrown, vegetation possibly masking boundary wall to north and south. 

Appraisal 

This fine monumental gateway with its imposing triumphal arch form is an important component of the architectural heritage of the Monasterboice House Demesne. Fine detailing and skilful construction add to its architectural value and it is a landmark feature within the landscape. 

In the 1830s, William Drummond Delap of Monasterboice House, County Louth was paid £1,933 by the British government. The reason: he was being compensated for the abolition of slavery in the Caribbean colonies. Mr Delap, it transpires, had owned 96 slaves on two plantations in Jamaica. Slavery there, and on the other islands in the area, had been abolished in 1833, but such was the level of complaint about loss of revenue from former owners, not least those like Mr Delap who lived on the opposite side of the Atlantic, that four years later parliament passed the Slave Compensation Act, resulting in some £20 million being paid out. 
Little work has been done in Ireland on the benefits enjoyed during the 17th and 18th centuries by some country house estate owners who were involved in plantations, although twelve years ago History Ireland published a highly informative article by Nini Rodgers on the subject of Irish links to the slave trade (see: https://www.historyireland.com/18th-19th-century-history/the-irish-and-the-atlantic-slave-trade). In England, and indeed in France too, much more research has been undertaken on the matter, not least at University College London’s Centre for the Study of the Legacies of British Slave-ownership, where archival examination has discovered who were the beneficiaries: it has, for example, documented which country houses owe their existence, in part or whole, to money that came through slavery in the Caribbean. In 2013, the centre created a database of the individuals who were paid compensation when slavery was finally abolished, and it includes some 170 names of people in Ireland, not least William Dunlop Delap. His brother Colonel James Bogle Delap, a friend of George IV, received £4,960. Among the others, some are well-known, such as two members of the banking La Touche family (£6,865 between them) and Howe Peter Browne, second Marquess of Sligo (£5,425). However, by far the largest beneficiary was one Charles McGarel of Larne, County Antrim whose claim for 2,777 slaves on twelve different plantations led to his receiving no less than £135,076. (To explore the documentation relating to Ireland, see: https://www.ucl.ac.uk/lbs/search). 

William Drummond Delap was a descendant of Hugh Dunlop who around 1600 moved from Ayrshire in Scotland to Sligo where he was involved in the wine trade. His son Robert moved to County Donegal, which is where successive generations of the family lived, their surname becoming corrupted to Delap. Robert Delap, born in 1754, graduated from Trinity College Dublin and was admitted to the Middle Temple before being called to the Irish bar in 1778. Two years before he had married Mary Ann Bogle, daughter of James Bogle of Castlefin, County Donegal. It was Mary Ann’s family, likewise of Scottish origin, which had plantation interests in Jamaica: the UCL Legacies of British Slave-ownership site lists 21 persons of that name. Evidently she acquired a substantial stake in these properties following her marriage: Robert Delap died at sea while returning from the Caribbean in 1782, leaving a widow with several young children including William Drummond who was then barely two years old. In 1805 he married Catherine, eldest daughter of William Foster, Bishop of Clogher and brother of John Foster, last Speaker of the Irish House of Commons. In 1811 John Foster described his niece’s husband as ‘a good man of business resident in London where he acted as a merchant and has a West India property of his own to look after.’ Around 1830 he decided to move to Co Louth, where many of his wife’s family owned land, and there he bought various parcels to create an estate of more than 1,200 acres on which he either built, or more likely enlarged, Monasterboice House. He also laid out elaborate terraced gardens and planted many specimen trees. On a rise south-west of the house he erected a folly, called Drummond Tower after his maternal grandmother who had helped to raise him after his father’s early death. In 1861 he resumed by licence the family’s original surname of Dunlop. 

Not much appears to be known about the history of Monasterboice House, now a ruinous building. At its core looks to be a typical late-mediaeval tower house, which as was so often the case has been subject to various structural alterations but is still clearly distinct rising on the northern section of the site. To the south is what appears to be a late 18th/early 19th century residence, of two storeys over basement, three bays with the centre one in the form of a substantial bow. The ground floor of this has glazed doors that once opened onto the terraced gardens and is flanked by Wyatt windows typical of the period. The house’s principal entrance lies on the west side, and was formerly approached by a long avenue. Perhaps to harmonise with the old tower house, this section was gothicised in the Tudoresque manner with arched windows and a large porte-cochere in front of a castellated porch. The back of the house opens to two large yards beyond which was the walled garden. It looks as though the building was developed in three sections, first the tower house, then the villa and finally a Tudor-Gothic expansion. In Samuel Lewis’s Topographical Dictionary of Ireland, he writes of Monasterboice House that ‘a spacious mansion is now being erected by the proprietor.’ Lewis’ work came out in 1837, just as compensation was being paid to former plantation owners, such as William Drummond Delap/Dunlop. A suspicion forms that the money he then received was used to improve his country residence. Future generations did not enjoy it for long: his son and heir Robert Foster Dunlop married a cousin, the Hon Anna Skeffington but the couple had no son and their daughters do not seem to have occupied the place. At the start of the last century, the estate built up by William Drummond Delap was divided up and while the Louth Archaeological and History Society Journal reported in 1945 that the house was ‘in a fair state of preservation’ that is certainly no longer the case.