Mount Pleasant, Co Carlow

Mount Pleasant, Co Carlow – ruin 

Not in Bence-Jones 

Detached five-bay three-storey house, c. 1740, on a U-shaped plan with lugged stone doorcase, lunette window openings, pediment to rear and hipped roof. Interior retains original joinery including open-well staircase. Partly derelict with roof removed. 

A castle like building with a grassy field

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A stone castle next to a brick building

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Fruit Hill, Co Wexford recently featured here (see https://theirishaesthete.com/2020/03/07/a-labour-of-love), a sensitively restored house believed to date from the second quarter of the 18th century and notable for being U-shaped with two wings projecting behind the one-room-deep residence with only a narrow passage between them. A similar house stands, just about, in neighbouring County Carlow and is called Mount Pleasant. Mark Bence-Jones’ Guide to Irish Country Houses includes four properties of the same name, but this is none of them. Indeed, little documentation exists about the Carlow house and some of it is erroneous. 

 
Mount Pleasant was built and occupied by the Garrett family. The first of them, James Garrett was the son of a Captain John Garrett, one of five brothers who came to Ireland in the 17th century around the time of the Cromwellian Wars and, like many others, was rewarded for his efforts with a grant of land in County Laois. James Garrett on the other hand settled in Carlow around 1700 when in his mid-20s. He may have been responsible for building a house called Janeville, or it could have been his son whose tomb in the local church refers to ‘the charitable Thomas Garrett of Janeville deceased, Aug.31st, 1759, aged 48 years.’ The same church also contains a monument to another Garrett, the inscription of which runs as follows: ‘Here lie deposited in humble hope of a joyful resurrection the mortal remains of James Garrett, late of Mountpleasant, Esq. – Vain would prove an attempt at panegyric; since no eulogy could do justice to his merits. Reader, wouldst thou be had in everlasting remembrance? Endeavour to emulate his virtues. He departed this life July the 17th, 1818. Aged 72 years.’ Because James Garrett might have been the son of Thomas Garrett, it has often been assumed that the latter’s house, Janeville, was renamed Mount Pleasant by the former, and that they lived in the same property. In fact, this is not the case as Janeville and Mount Pleasant – which is seen in today’s pictures – are different houses, albeit in the same part of the county. 

A stone bench sitting in front of a building

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A pile of snow next to a fireplace

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A dirty old room

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Some four miles apart, Janeville and Mount Pleasant were both once Garrett houses and dated from the early years of the 18th century, but while the first of these is still intact, the second, as can be seen, has fallen into ruin. Stylistically they share similarities, both having five bay facades centred on a granite doorcase with sidelights. Both are also of three storeys, although only two are visible from the front of Janeville which as a delightful Venetian window on the first floor above the entrance. The attic windows can be seen on the double-gabled side elevations. Mount Pleasant, on the other hand, features attic windows on its façade, with a tiny Diocletian window in the centre. And the rear of the building is like that of Fruit Hill, County Wexford, with wings creating a U-shaped house. At Mount Pleasant, the centre of the back evidently had a Gothic arched window, now blocked and the entire west wing was, at some unknown date, allowed to fall into dereliction, the owners only occupying the eastern side of the building. It was sold a couple of years ago, but no work has been done on the property and so the decline continues. However, as Fruit Hill shows, no house is ever beyond redemption; perhaps this one may yet find a saviour. 

http://www.igp-web.com/Carlow/Mount_Pleasant_House.htm 

Built around 1740 – 1760 

Record of Protected Structures: 

Mount Pleasant House, Fennagh. Townland: Mount Pleasant. 

A five-bay, three-storey house of circa 1740 with a rare, U-shaped plan having wings at the rear. The façade has lime-rendered walls with a lugged, square-headed, architraved, granite doorcase with a cornice and sidelights and there is a minimal cornice under the eaves. The windows have sashes with six panes each with the exception of the second floor which has low windows with only three panes each. In the centre is a tiny lunette. The roof is hipped with small slates.The rere is deeply recessed in the centre and has a high-pitched gable with a lunette. The tall, round-headed window for the staircase has been blocked up. The interior contains the original open-well staircase and original joinery. Over one third of the house is derelict.