Paradise Hill, Co Clare – ‘lost’ 

Paradise Hill, Co Clare – ‘lost’ 

Bence-Jones, Mark. 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. 230. (Henn/IFR) a two-storey slightly Gothic Georgian house, with two curved bows and a Gothicized Venetian window in the Batty Langley manner as its doorway. 
 
High-pitched roofs and pointed dormer gables were added in the Victorian era; and iron balconies. Paradise Hill was burnt in 1970.” http://lordbelmontinnorthernireland.blogspot.com/2016/03/paradise-hill.html

THE HENNS WERE MAJOR LANDOWNERS IN COUNTY CLARE, WITH 7,664 ACRES 

 
The family of HENN, one of English origin, was settled in County Clare for upwards of two centuries. 
 
RICHARD HENN obtained a grant of “Paradise Hill”, and various estates in that county, 1685, from the Earl of Thomond. 
 
WILLIAM HENN (c1720-96), second son of Thomas Henn (younger brother and devisee of Richard Henn, the grantee of Paradise Hill), was called to the Irish Bar and appointed a Judge of the King’s Bench, 1768. 
 
He married Miss Elizabeth Parry, and had (with three daughters) an only son, 
 
WILLIAM HENN, Master of the Irish Court of Chancery, 1793, who wedded, in 1782, Susanna, sister of Sir Jonathan Lovett Bt, of Liscombe Park, Buckinghamshire, and had issue, 
 

WILLIAM, of whom presently
Jonathan, QC; 
Richard, Commander RN; 
Eleanor; Susanna; Eliza; Jane; Frances. 

The eldest son, 
 
WILLIAM HENN (c1782-1857), who, like his father, became a Master in Chancery in Ireland, 1822, espoused, in 1809, Mary Rice, eldest daughter of George Fosbery, of Clorane, County Limerick, by Christiana his wife, daughter of Thomas Rice, of Mount Trenchard, in the same county, and had issue, 
 

William, died unmarried
THOMAS RICE, of whom hereafter
Jonathan Lovett, died unmarried
George; 
Richard; 
Christiana; Susanna; Mary; Ellen; Jane. 

The second son, 
 
THOMAS RICE HENN KC JP DL (1814-1901), of Paradise Hill, County Clare, Barrister, County Court Judge, Chairman of Quarter Sessions for County Carlow, 1859, and for County Galway, 1868, Recorder of Galway, 1878, married, in 1845, Jane Isabella, second daughter of the Rt Hon Francis Blackburne, LORD CHANCELLOR OF IRELAND, and had issue, 
 

William, Lieutenant RN; dsp
FRANCIS BLACKBURNE, of whom we treat
Thomas Rice; 
Edward Lovett; 
Richard Arthur Milton, of Castle Troy House
Henry (Rt Rev), Bishop of Burnley; 
Adela Jane; Mary Rice. 

The second son, 
 
FRANCIS BLACKBURNE HENN JP (1848-1915), of Paradise Hill, Barrister, wedded, in 1880, Helen Letitia Elizabeth, daughter of Francis Gore, of Woodlands, County Clare, and had issue, 
 

WILLIAM FRANCIS; 
Thomas Rice, b 1901; 
Muriel Helen Isabella Rice; Lilian Adela Gore; Maud Susan Beatrice. 

The eldest son, 
 
WILLIAM FRANCIS HENN CBE MVO (1892-1964), of Paradise Hill, wedded, in 1915, Geraldine Frances Jane, daughter of Thomas George Stacpoole-Mahon, and had issue, 
 

WILLIAM BRYAN, AFC, b 1917; 
Francis Robert, CBE, b 1920; 
Margaret Geraldine, b 1922. 

PARADISE HILL, Ennis, County Clare, was a two-storey Georgian house, with two curved bows and a Gothicized Venetian window as its doorway. 
 
High-pitched roofs and pointed dormer gables were added in the Victorian era; and iron balconies. 
 

 
Paradise Hill was burnt in 1970. 
 
Francis Robert Henn, CBE, has compiled The Henn Family of Paradise, including early lineage and reminiscences. 
 
First published in March, 2016. 

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.

Two storey, bow fronted, gable-ended house, much altered in the late 19C when the bows were given circular high-pitched conical roofs. Former seat of the Henn family. Destroyed by fire 1970.”