Palmerstown House, Naas, County Kildare – private rental

Palmerstown House, Naas, County Kildare

Palmerstown House, photograph courtesy of website.
Palmerstown House, photograph courtesy of website.

https://www.palmerstownhouse.ie/manor-house-kildare.html

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. 230. “(Bourke, Mayo, E/PB) A house rebuilt in late “Queen Anne” style by public subscription as a tribute to the memory of 6th Earl of Mayo, who was Chief Secretary for Ireland and then Viceroy of India, where he was assassinated by an escaped convict in the Andaman Islands 1872. One front with recessed centre and three bay projections joined by colonnade of coupled Ionic columns; other front with pediment raised on a three bay attic, between two three sided bows. Mansard roof with pedimented dormers. Burnt 1923, afterwards rebuilt with a flat roof and balustraded parapet. Subsequently owned by Mr W.J. Kelly and then by Mrs Anne Biddle. The well-known caterer Mrs B. Lawlor, owner of the popular hotel in Naas, began her career as cook to the 7th Earl and Countess of Mayo at Palmerstown.” 

Palmerstown House, photograph courtesy of website.
Palmerstown House, photograph courtesy of website.
Palmerstown House, photograph courtesy of website.
Palmerstown House, photograph courtesy of website.
Palmerstown House, photograph courtesy of website.
Palmerstown House, photograph courtesy of website.
Palmerstown House, photograph courtesy of website.
John Bourke, 1st Baron Naas, (1705-1790), later 1st Earl of Mayo, Engraver William Dickinson, English, 1746-1823 After Robert Hunter, Irish, 1715/1720-c.1803, photograph courtesy of National Gallery of Ireland.

https://lordbelmontinnorthernireland.blogspot.com/2013/07/palmerstown-house.html

THE EARLS OF MAYO OWNED 4,915 ACRES OF LAND IN COUNTY KILDARE

This family, MacWILLIAM BOURKE, and that of CLANRICARDE, derive from a common ancestor, viz. WILLIAM FITZADELM DE BURGO, who succeeded STRONGBOW as chief governor of Ireland, 1176. Sir Theobald Bourke, of Ardnaree, the last MacWilliam Bourke in Ireland, escaped to Spain, and was created by PHILIP III Marquis of Mayo.

DAVID BOURKE, of Moneycrower (Bunacrower), during the reign of HENRY VIII, had three sons,

Edmond;

JOHN, of whom we treat;

Miles.

The second son,

JOHN BOURKE, of Moneycrower (Bunacrower), was a captain of horse under the Marquess of Ormonde during the troubles in Ireland, in 1641; at the termination of which he took up his abode at Kill, County Kildare, and marrying Catherine, daughter of Meyler Fay, and niece of Sir Paul Davys, had (with three daughters),

Miles, dsp;
Walter, dsp;
Theobald, dsp;
RICKARD, of whom presently

The youngest son,
RICKARD BOURKE LL.D, of Dublin, married Catherine, daughter of Charles Minchin, of Ballinakill, County Tipperary, and was father of

THE RT HON JOHN BOURKE (c1700-90), MP for Naas, 1727-60, 1768-76, Old Leighlin, 1761-8, who wedded, in 1725, Mary, third daughter and co-heir of the Rt Hon Joseph Deane, Chief Baron of the Irish Exchequer, and had issue,

JOHN, his heir;
JOSEPH DEANE (Most Rev), Lord Archbishop of Tuam, 3rd Earl;
Richard;
Thomas;
Catherine; Elizabeth; Margaret; Eleanor.

Mr Bourke having been sworn previously of the Irish privy council, was elevated to the peerage, in 1776, in the dignity of Baron Naas, of Naas, County Kildare; and advanced to a viscountcy, 1781, as Viscount Mayo, of Moneycrower (Bunacrower), County Mayo.

His lordship was further advanced to the dignity of an earldom, in 1785, as EARL OF MAYO.

The 1st Earl was succeeded by his eldest son,

JOHN, 2nd Earl (1729-92), MP for Naas, 1763-90, who espoused, in 1764, the Lady Mary Leeson, daughter of Joseph, Earl of Milltown, but died without issue, when the honours devolved upon his brother,

JOSEPH DEANE (Most Rev), Lord Archbishop of Tuam, as 3rd Earl (c1740-94), who married, in 1760, Elizabeth, only daughter of Sir Richard Meade Bt, and sister of John, 1st Earl of Clanwilliam, by whom he had issue,

JOHN, 4th Earl;
Richard (Rt Rev), Lord Bishop of Waterford;
Joseph (Very Rev), Dean of Ossory;
George Theobald (Rev);
and eight daughters.

His lordship was succeeded by his eldest son,

John, 4th Earl (1766–1849);
Robert, 5th Earl (1797–1867);
Richard Southwell, 6th Earl (1822-72);
Dermot Robert Wyndham, 7th Earl (1851–1927);
Walter Longley, 8th Earl (1859–1939);
Ulick Henry, 9th Earl (1890–1962);
Terence Patrick, 10th Earl (1929–2006);
Charles Diarmuidh John, 11th Earl (b 1953).

The heir apparent is the present holder’s eldest son, Richard Thomas Bourke, styled Lord Naas (1985).

PALMERSTOWN HOUSE, near Johnstown, County Kildare, is a mansion-house rebuilt in late-Victorian “Queen Anne” style.

The mansion was built by public subscription as a tribute to the memory of the 6th Earl of Mayo, Chief Secretary for Ireland and later Viceroy of India.

The 6th Earl was assassinated by an escaped convict in the Andaman Islands in 1872.

One front has a recessed centre and three-bay projections, joined by a colonnade of coupled columns. Another front has a pediment elevated on a three-bay attic, between two three-sided bows.

The house has a Mansard roof with pedimented dormers.The mansion was burnt in 1923, though afterwards rebuilt with a flat roof and balustraded parapet.

Palmerstown has had a succession of owners, including Mrs B Lawlor, who began her career as cook to the 7th Earl and Countess.

Palmerstown House now functions as a de luxe golf golf resort and functions including christenings, communions, confirmations, family celebrations, retirement parties, anniversaries, corporate events, team-building exercises etc.

Mayo arms courtesy of European Heraldry.

https://theirishaesthete.com/2018/11/14/built-by-his-friends-and-countrymen/

The garden front of Palmerstown, County Kildare. The estate here was acquired in the middle of the 17th century by a branch of the Bourke family, later Earls of Mayo, who built a residence later described as ‘an old fashioned house, added to from time to time in an irregular manner, the rooms low and small but enriched with some good pictures, particularly a set of Sir Joshuas.’ In 1872 Richard Southwell Bourke, the sixth earl, was assassinated while serving as Viceroy of India. Subsequently a new house was erected for the family, the costs defrayed by public subscription: a plaque over the entrance notes that it was built ‘by his friends and countrymen.’ Designed by Thomas Henry Wyatt in what is generously described as a Queen-Anne style, the second Palmerstown only lasted half a century, being burnt during the Civil War in January 1923: the elderly seventh earl was a Free State Senator and therefore vulnerable to attack from Anti-Treaty forces. The building was subsequently reconstructed under the supervision of architect Richard Orpen but without its original third-storey Mansard roof. Having changed hands several times in the last century, it is now a wedding venue.

Moore Abbey,  Monasterevin, County Kildare 

Moore Abbey,  Monasterevin, County Kildare 

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. 210. “Loftus, V/DEP andsub Ely, M/PB; Moore, Drogheda, E/OB) One of the only two surviving examples of mid-C18 Gothic in major Irish country houses which are not old castles remodelled, the other being the Gothic front of Castleward, Co Down. A 1767 Gothic rebuilding, by Field Marshal Sir Charles Moore, 6th Earl and 1st Marquess of Drogheda, of a C17 house built on the site of a medieval abbey acquired in the reign of Elizabeth by the Loftuses, whose heiress married into the Moores 1699; and of which some fragments of carved stonework are built into a wall of the present house. Principal front consisting of a seven bay centre block of three storeys over basement; all the windows in the centre and wings – including those in teh basement – being uniform, with pointed heads and Gothic astragals; those in the principal storeys having Gothic hood mouldings. The roof parapets of the centre and wings are battlemented. Small C19 projecting porch, with tracery windows; C19 Gothic balustrade on the braod flight of steps leading up to the porch, and along the area. Large single-storey hall, said to be basically C17 and where Adam, Viscount Loftus, Lord Chancellor of Ireland, held his Chancery Court 1641; but now wholly C19 Tudor-Gothic in character; with an elaborately fretted plasterwork ceiling, oak wainscot with trefoil-headed panels, a carved stone chimney piece and a screen of pointed arches. Drawing room and dining room with a frieze of delicate C18 Gothic plasterwork, and similar Gothic ornament on the entablatures of the very handsome doorcases. Staircase with balustrade of simple uprights, lit by Perpendicular style window. Gothic stable court behind house with battlemented tower. Impressive castellated entrance gateway to demesne. In latter C19, Moore Abbey had the name for being a very cold house…During 1920s the house was let to Count John McCormack, the singer…At the end of Count MaCormack’s tenancy, 10th Earl of Drogheda sold Moore Abbey to a religious order. It is now a hospital run by the Sisters of Charity of Jesus and Mary.” 

Charles Moore (1730-1882), 1st Marquess of Drogheda Date: 1865 Engraver Robert Bowyer Parkes, British, 1830 – 1891 After Joshua Reynolds, English, 1723-1792 Publisher/ H. Graves & Co., London, courtesy of National Gallery of Ireland.

Not in national inventory 

entry in MacDonnell, Randal. The Lost Houses of Ireland. A chronicle of great houses and the families who lived in them. Weidenfeld and Nicolson. London, 2002 

p. 163. “A early C17 house which was the first to be gothicized in Ireland. Once the home of the Earls and Marquesses of Drogheda, Moore Abbey is now owned by a religious order.” 

p. 165. “the original house at Monasterevan was built on the site of a monastery, which, in various foundations, had stood there since at least the 10th century. The place was called after Saint Evin, a Munster man, who founded a monastery that was originally called Ros-Glaise (The Green Wood). … In 1563, Owen O’Dempsey “Chief Captain of his Nation,” submitted to Elisabeth and surrendered his lands to the crown. These were largely re-granted but were forfeited in 1641 and not restored by Charles II. In 1631, the O’Dempsey chief accepted the title of Viscount Clanmalier, the second and last of whom died in 1690. 

At the Dissolution of the Monasteries, the property passed to the Crown, and between 1556 and 1558 was converted to secular use. In 1596 Moore was described as having ‘a fair hall, a stable, kitchens and other rooms.’ In this year it was demised to the Earl of Essex who agreed to ‘keep up and maintain the house of Evon with slate, thatching and mud walls, and other necessary repairs.’ [p. 166] He also agreed to let the Lord Deputy use the house and its stable, reserving only his own lodging for himself. The actual resident was probably Captain Warham St Leger, who received the Lord Deputy Russell there in the same year. As for Essex, he did not have much time to enjoy his new property since he was beheaded for treason in 1601. Lord Mountjoy, the Lord Deputy, stayed there in 1600-1 during his winter campaign against the rebellious Irish. 

…Adam Loftus, who had arrived in Ireland as chaplain to the Earl of Sussex, became Archbishop of Dublin in 1567; by 1578 he was Lord Chancellor of Ireland. His daughter, Dorothy, married Sir John Moore, the scion of another family of English adventurers and soldiers of fortune, who arrived in Ireland during the reign of Eliz 1. The fortunes of the Loftus and Moore families would intersect during the next hundred years, eventually leading to the lands of Monasterevan passing to the Moores. 

The first Adam Loftus died in 1605. He was followed by his nephew, another Adam, who was created Viscount Loftus of Ely in 1622 and served as Lord Chancellor of Ireland between 1619 and 1638. [p. 167] He received the abbey and lands of Monasterevin from the Crown in 1613, but may have leased the property before that date since there is a stone with the date 1607 in one of the walls. There is also a series of strange carvings inserted into the walls of the present house that combine native Irish designs and early 16C Italian engravings. Lord Loftus built the house on the abbey site where he lived until Lord Wentworth’s legislation forced him to pay a large sum of money in settlement of a very dubious claim. Wentworth is said to have held court in the present Great Hall. Loftus fell foul of Strafford and was imprisoned in Dublin Castle. On his release he left Ireland and died in Yorkshire. His daughter married Charles Moore, later the 1st Earl of Drogheda. 

“Charles’s great grandfather, Sir Edward Moore, had come over from Kent with his brother, Sir Thomas. Sir Edward received a grant of Mellifont Abbey in County Louth in 1566 from Queen Elizabeth as part of the ongoing redistribution of the Monastic lands in Ireland. His son Gerald was knighted by the Earl of Essex in 1599 for his part in smashing the attempt of Aodh O Neill – the Earl of Tyrone – to achieve an independent Gaelic Ireland. In 1616 Gerald was created Baron Moore of Mellifont by James I and in 1621-2 was raised a step in the peerage to become Viscount Moore of Drogheda. 

A cannon shot in 1643 killed his son, the 2nd Viscount, who fought for the Parliament in the Civil War. In 1634, Lord Wentworth wrote about the Viscount’s wife, a daughter of Lord Loftus of Ely, ‘that unclean mouthed daughter of his busieth herself up and down the Court.’ She conspired to betray Drogheda and Dundalk to the Parliamentary forces and was imprisoned in Dublin Castle in 1645. She died in 1649 ‘of a gangreene’ as a result of breaking her leg in a fall from a horse. The 3rd Viscount was made Earl of Drogheda in 1661. He decided to develop the land that he owned in Dublin and named the new streets after himself and his countess. These names are mostly still with us. He was Henry Moore, Earl of Drogheda, and his wife was called Mary; thus we have Henry Street, Moore street, North and South Earl Streets as well as Mary Street. 

The 3rd Earl was attainted by James II and fought at the Boyne on the side of William of Orange. Obviously fond of the bottle, the Earl is described, in 1791 during [p. 168] the proclamation of Queen Anne, by Ulster King of Arms, as being so bad with the gout that he was unable to get out of his coach. His grandson Henry Moore, the 4th Earl, inherited the property at Monasterevin and changed its name to Moore Abbey. The estate came to him because his mother, Jane, was the heiress of the 3rd, and last, Viscount Loftus of Ely. Profligate, the 4th Earl managed to amass £180,000 in debts before his death at the age of 27. 

The heir to the title was his brother, who was married to Lady Sarah Ponsonby, daughter of the 1st Earl of Bessborough. In 1758, the earl and his son Edward were drowned on their way back from England. … 

Lord Drogheda’s heir was his second son, Charles. This nobleman was a founder Knight of the Most Illustrious Order of Saint Patrick. He was created Marquess of Drogheda in 1791 and even became a field marshall in 1821. He gothicized Moore Abbey in 1767.  

“The Anthologia Hibernica magazine reported that “Charles, the 6th Earl of Drogheda, in 1767, beautifully repaired the ancient abbey by enlarging the windows, placing a new roof and repartitioning the whole; preserving, however, the external walls and original form, except somewhat lengthening the eastern front. The great hall and the ancient door of the southern front still retain their primitive state, and the whole has the venerable appearance of the Gothic structures. His Lordship also pulled down the old church, which stood near the monastery on the right side of the east front, and rebuilt it in a neat Gothic style at the other end of the town. He walled in the demesne with a high wall, except on the side near the river. The demesne contains about 1000 acres, nearly in the centre of which rises a large conical hill of 200 acres, well planted and commanding an extensive and beautiful view of the country. Near the deer park, on the north side of the hill, are some remains of an ancient wood last occupied by one James O’Dempsey, commonly called Shamus na-Coppuil (James of the Horses), the highwayman.” 

p. 170. The second Marquess was insane for the last 45 years of his life. He died in 1837 and, on the death of his undistinguished nephew in 1892, the marquessate became extinct. The earldom, however, passed to a cousin who, as the 9th Earl, was a Representative Peer for Ireland between 1899 and his death in 1909. 

….Lord Drogheda sold the house to an order of Belgian nuns, who still own and maintain the house. 

https://archiseek.com/2011/1767-moore-abbey-monasterevin-co-kildare

1767 – Moore Abbey, Monasterevin, Co. Kildare

Architect: Christopher Myers

Gothic rebuilding, carried for 6th Earl of Drogheda by Christopher Myers, who ‘in 1767, beautifully repaired the ancient abbey by enlarging the windows, placing a new roof, and recompartitioning the whole; preserving however the external walls and original form, except somewhat lenghtening the eastern front’. Formerly a convent, now a home for people with intellectual disabilities.

Featured in Irish Country Houses, Portraits and Painters. David Hicks. The Collins Press, Cork, 2014. 

p. 63. Count John McCormack was an extravagant man; he collected the best of everything, from art and antiques to racehorses, and Moore Abbey was another expensive bauble. He appreciated art and spent vast sums of money collecting old masters while also commissioning many portraits from a number of the established artists of the day. Moore Abbey, his former home, endures today and as one walks through its rooms there are still remnants of its former occupants. In a corner of the Grand Hall sits the piano where once Count John McCormack would have entertained friends and family. In the adjoining library, accessed through a secret door from the hall, hang the paintings of the ninth Earl and Countess Drogheda, while on a sideboard sits a photograph of their son, the tenth Earl. Today Moore Abbey serves a different purpose, as an institution that provides support to people with intellectual disabilities and their families. However, 100 years ago it was the centre of the active social life of the Earl of Drogheda who held grand gatherings that were attended by the upper echelons of society of the time. 

Moore Abbey’s monastic name originates form the 12th century Cistercian abbey which once stood on the site. This abbey was built on the ruins of a medieval predecessor, the monastery of St Evin, after which the town of Monasterevin is named. Following the appropriation of Church lands by the Crown in the /p. 64. 16th century, the abbey was granted to George, Lord Audley. It became a royal stronghold and was reserved for used by the Lord Deputy who could station a garrison there. In 1613 the property was granted to Sir Adam Loftus who became Viscount Loftus of Ely in 1622 and during the time the abbey changed use but little is known about the conversion of the abbey for secular purposes. Adam Loftus held the Court of Chancery in the great hall of the monastery during the rebellion of 1641. …Moore Abbey was Gothicised in 1767; it incorporates the fabric of a medieval abbey from around 1150 and a later house from 1650. Also at this time the demesne, which comprised over 1000 acres, was walled in…. 

[p. 65] Further improvements were made to the Abbey in 1823 which resulted in the house becoming known as one of the coldest houses in Ireland. Once, when a guest came to stay, the servants were carrying his extremely heavy trunk up the staircase. Due to its excessive weight, the trunk was dropped and burst open whereupon it was found to contain coal. In 1837, Moore Abbey was described as “a spacious mansion, erected on the site of the ancient conventual buildings, of which the only remains are some sculpted ornaments inserted into the gable end of the domestic chapel.” 

In 1845 the architect John Howard Louch designed additions for Henry Francis Seymour, Marquis of Drogheda, with the foundations beign laid in June 1845. It was around this time that the gateway and stables were constructed, with formal gardens and terraces also being created. The steps and entrance porch were also added to the main building. Charles, the sixth Earl of Drogheda, was created Marquis of Drogheda in 1791 and in June 1801 became Baron Moore, a peer of the UK. As a result in each subsequent generation the eldest male inherited two titles.  

p. 64. AFter a fire in 1947, the west wing was rebuilt and the previously hipped roof was replaced with a flat roof. To preserve the symmetry, the roof of the east wing was also replaced with a flat roof.  

The porch and steps were part of the improvements made to Moore Abbey by the third Marquis of Drogheda, to celebrate his coming of age. The family crest is over the front door. 

p. 65. Moore Abbey is situated on teh banks of the River Barrow near the town of Monasterevin, which is known as the Venice of Ireland, owing to the large number of bridges there. Note the large brutalist water tank to the rear of Moore Abbey, a legacy from when the Abbey was renovated and adapted to suit its current institutional purpose. 

p. 66. The 9th Earl of Drogheda, Ponsonby William Moore, was a patron of music and fine arts. He supported Hugh Lane’s exhibition of modern art and was involved in the establishment of the Municipal Art Gallery in Harcourt STreet, Dublin.  

The Prince of Wales, later Edward VII, visited Moore Abbey and planted a tree in the grounds, to commemorate the event. This was the period when the Prince, who was in the nearby Curragh Camp, became involved with Nellie Clifden, an Irish actress. Teh affair caused great upset to his parents and Queen Victoria always blamed the scandal as one of the reasons for the early death of her husband, Prince Albert, later that year. 

p. 67. The 10thEarl married Olive May Meatyard in 1922, an actress and one of the famous Gaiety Girls. He had previously been married to Kathleen Pelham Burn but they were divorced in 1921….the house was ‘entailed’ so he could not get rid of it. The Earl had never really wanted to live at Moore Abbey and after the expenses associated with his divorce it became difficult to maintain. In 1921 he offered the contents for sale at an auction to be held in late October that year. Possibly because of the entail, Moore Abbey was instead leased to John McCormack under a 15 year agreement which brought to an end the Moores’ centuries-old residency in Monasterevin. 

p. 68. The ceiling of the Great Hall was damaged in 1947 by water used to extinguish the fire in the west wing. 

p. 69. A crest on the fireplace in the Great Hall appears to represent the Union of the Crowns when James VI inherited the English and Irish thrones in 1603 with the addition of the Royal Coat of Arms of Ireland to represent the Kingdom of Ireland. 

p. 75. After the auction and the departure of the McCormacks, Moore Abbey was sold in early 1940 to an order of nuns, the Sisters of Charity, who postponed moving in until 1948, after the SEcond World War. The purchase price was said to be little more than £8000; however, as the 10th Earl did not have to maintain it any more, it meant a saving of £500 a year for him. The sale included 300 acres; numerous repairs had to be carried out on the house as it had been neglected during WWII. In 1947 a fire broke out in the Abbey…isolated to the west wing of the building. Damage was also caused to the central section and teh east wing suffered water and smoke damage but it was not extensive. Teh first and second floor of the west wing were destroyed and the roof collapsed….” 

https://lordbelmontinnorthernireland.blogspot.com/2013/08/moore-abbey.html

THE MARQUESSES OF DROGHEDA WERE THE SECOND LARGEST LANDOWNERS IN COUNTY KILDARE, WITH 16,609 ACRES

This noble family came from France very early after the Conquest, and having acquired a good estate in Kent, resided at the manor of Moore Place, as early as the reign of HENRY II.

THOMAS MOORE, living in the reign of EDWARD II, was ancestor, after ten generations, of

JOHN MOORE, of Benenden Place, Kent, living, in 1519, married Margaret, daughter of John Brent, and had, among other issue,

Owen;

EDWARD (Sir), father of 1st Viscount Moore;

George;
THOMAS (Sir), ancestor of the Earls of Charleville;

Nicholas.

Sir Edward and Sir Thomas went over to Ireland, as soldiers of fortune, in the reign of ELIZABETH I. 
SIR EDWARD MOORE, the elder brother, obtained for his services, from Her Majesty, a lease of the dissolved abbey of Mellifont, with its appurtenances, in County Louth, which he made the principal place of his abode; and it so continued that of his descendants until their removal to Moore Abbey, County Kildare, the seat of the Viscounts Loftus, of Ely, which devolved upon the Earl of Drogheda.

He married Mildred, daughter and co-heir of Nicholas Clifford, of Great Chart, in Kent, and was succeeded at his decease by his eldest son,

SIR GARRET MOORE (1564-1627), Knight, of Mellifont, MP for Dungannon, 1613-15, who rendered distinguished assistance to the government of ELIZABETH I, in quelling the Irish rebellion, and received at Mellifont the submission of Hugh O’Neill, Earl of Tyrone.

Sir Garret was elevated to the peerage in 1616, in the dignity of Baron Moore; and advanced to a viscountcy, in 1621, as Viscount Moore, of Drogheda.

His lordship wedded Mary, daughter of Sir Henry Colley, Knight, of Castle Carbery, County Kildare.

He was succeeded by his eldest surviving son,

CHARLES, 2nd Viscount (1603-43), who was killed at Portlester, County Meath, in the service of CHARLES I; in which he had previously distinguished himself as a gallant and enterprising officer.

His lordship espoused Alice, younger daughter of Adam, 1st Viscount Loftus, and was succeeded by his eldest son,

HENRY, 3rd Viscount, who was created, in 1661, EARL OF DROGHEDA.

His lordship married Alice, fifth daughter of William, 2nd Baron Spencer, of Wormleighton, by Lady Penelope Wriothesley, daughter of Henry, Earl of Sunderland.

He died in 1676, was succeeded by his eldest son,

CHARLES, 2nd Earl, who wedded, in 1669, the Lady Letitia Isabella Robartes, daughter of John, Earl of Radnor, Lord Lieutenant of Ireland; but dying in 1679 without surviving issue, the honours devolved upon his brother,

HENRY, 3rd Earl, who had assumed the surname of HAMILTON upon inheriting the estates of his brother-in-law, Henry, Earl of Clanbrassil.

His lordship espoused, in 1675, Mary, daughter of Sir John Cole Bt, of Newland, near Dublin, and sister of Arthur, Baron Ranelagh, and had issue,

CHARLES, father of 3rd & 4th Earls;
Arthur, dsp;
Henry, in holy orders;
John, in holy orders;
William;
Robert;
Capel;
Elizabeth.

The 3rd Earl died in 1714, and was succeeded by his grandson,

HENRY, 4th Earl (1700-27); who inherited the Loftus estates upon the decease of his maternal grandfather in 1725; but dying without an heir in 1727 (he had married Charlotte, daughter of Hugh, 1st Viscount Falmouth), those and the family honours and estates devolved upon his brother,

EDWARD, 5th Earl (1701-58), who wedded firstly, in 1727, the Lady Sarah Ponsonby, daughter of Brabazon, 1st Earl of Bessborough, and had issue,

CHARLES, his successor;
Ponsonby;
Edward, in holy orders.

His lordship married secondly, in 1747, Bridget, daughter of William Southwell, niece of Thomas, Lord Southwell, by whom he had two other sons,

William;
Robert.

The 5th Earl and his son, the Hon and Rev Edward Moore, were lost in their passage to Dublin in 1758.

He was succeeded by his eldest son,

CHARLES, 6th Earl (1730-1822), KP PC, who was created, in 1791, MARQUESS OF DROGHEDA.

His lordship wedded, in 1766, Lady Anne Seymour, daughter of Francis, 1st Marquess of Hertford, by whom he had issue,

CHARLES;
Henry Seymour;
Elizabeth Emily; Mary;
Gertrude; Frances.

His lordship was succeeded by his eldest son,

CHARLES, 2nd Marquess.

Earls of Drogheda (1661; Reverted)

The heir apparent is the present holder’s son Benjamin Garrett Henderson Moore, styledViscount Moore.

The 1st and 3rd Marquesses were Knights of St Patrick (KP).

The 11th Earl was a Knight of the Garter (KG).

The 10th Earl was the last Lord-Lieutenant of County Kildare, from 1918 until 1922.

MOORE ABBEY, near Monasterevin, County Kildare, was the large and luscious demesne of the Marquesses of Drogheda.

It was erected on the site of a medieval abbey.

The mansion was greatly repaired and improved about 1767; and is an extensive and commodious edifice, somewhat in the conventual style, yet quite destitute of all strongly marked architectural character.

The great hall is lined with Irish oak and is remarkable as the apartment in which the Court of Chancery was held by Adam, 1st Viscount Loftus, at the beginning of the 1641 rebellion.

The the site of the mansion is low, watery and without prospect, yet the surrounding demesne is very large and possesses some fine varieties of scenery; and the adjoining countryside ascends from the flat and boggy region on the north-east into a gentle and undulating mixture of low, pleasant and well-wooded hills.

The main front consists of a seven-bay central block of three storeys over a basement, with four-bay projecting wings of two storeys.

The windows all have pointed heads and Gothic astragals.

The roof parapets are battlemented.

There is an elaborate castellated entrance gateway to the demesne.

Following the dissolution of the monasteries, Moore Abbey passed to George, Lord Audley, who assigned it to Adam, Viscount Loftus.

The site was eventually acquired by the Moore family, Earls of Drogheda.

They were responsible for building the town of Monasterevin and much of Dublin.

In 1767, the 6th Earl pulled down the old abbey and used the stones to build a parish church, which has now been replaced by St John’s parish church.

He replaced the abbey with a Neo-Gothic style mansion, now Moore Abbey.

Preparations for a sunken garden, in 1846, exposed a mass of skeletons on what was presumably the site of the abbey cemetery.

In 1924, John McCormack, the world famous operatic tenor, leased the house from Lord Drogheda.

In 1938 the Sisters of Charity of Jesus bought Moore Abbey where they now have a training school for nurses of the mentally disabled. 

Former town residence ~  Sackville Street, Dublin (now called O’Connell Street). 

First published in August, 2011. Drogheda arms courtesy of European Heraldry.

https://theirishaesthete.com/2014/04/26/down-memory-lane/

An early 20th century house party photographed on the steps of Moore Abbey, County Kildare. On the site of a mediaeval abbey and from c.1699 home to successive generations of the Moore family, Earls (and for a period Marquesses) of Drogheda, the building is significant for being one of the earliest examples of the gothick style in Ireland: at the request of the sixth earl, in 1767 Christopher Myers ‘beautifully repaired the ancient abbey by enlarging the windows, placing a new roof, and recompartitioning the whole; preserving however the external walls and original form, except somewhat lengthening the eastern front.’ (Anthologia Hibernica III, February 1794) It underwent further alterations in the 19th century before being sold by the Moores in 1945 to the Sisters of Charity and subjected to much redevelopment. In this group photograph taken with the garden front as backdrop, the moustachioed gentleman sitting on the steps and holding a dog is the dealer and art collector Sir Hugh Lane. Next Tuesday, April 29th at 10.30 am I shall be giving a talk on Lane at the National Gallery of Ireland, focussing on his too-brief tenure as Director of that institution. Admission is free.

https://curiousireland.ie/moore-abbey-monasterevin-co-kildare-1760/

This was originally the site of the 7th century monastery of St Evin. In the 12th century it became a rich and powerful Cistercian Monastery and after the suppression of the monasteries it was granted to Lord Audley, then to Lord Viscount Ely and then to the Marquis of Drogheda’s family. The beautiful building you see today was built by the 6th Earl of Drogheda in 1760 and designed by the English engineer Christopher Myers in the Gothic style. The 10th Earl of Drogheda abandoned the house after the First World War and it was leased to John Count McCormack, a famous tenor of the time, from 1925 to 1937. The 10th Earl then put the abbey up for sale shortly after Count McCormack moved out and in 1938 it became the Irish headquarters of the Sisters of Charity of Jesus and Mary, now known as the Muiriosa Foundation. This former convent is now a home for people with intellectual disabilities.

http://www.turtlebunbury.com/history/history_family/hist_family_mooredrogheda.html

Moore of Moore Abbey – Earls of Drogheda

p. 170. Readers of magazines such as Architectural Digest, Harpers & Queens and Nest may be familiar with the work of the prolific interiors photographer Derry Moore. These same readers might be surprised to learn that Derry Moore is also the 12th Earl of Drogheda, head of a prominent Kildare family who resided in Monasterevin for exactly 200 years between 1725 and 1925. Although the Moores left Ireland early in the 20th century, their ancestral home, Moore Abbey, built in the mid 18th century, continues to stand today, being the Irish headquarters of the Sisters of Charity of Jesus and Mary.

FAMILY ORIGINS

As with the Moores of Tullamore and Charleville, the Moores of Monasterevin are said to descend from a Saxon family active in Kent during the Middle Ages. Thomas de la More held the Manor of More Place in Ivy Church in the days of Henry II. They later moved to Moore Court at Benenden, a property that still exists, albeit in considerably altered form. The first mention of a family member in Ireland is Sir Edward Moore, a senior figure in Queen Elizabeth’s army, who married Elizabeth Clifford, widow of Sir William Brabazon, former Vice-Treasurer of Ireland. As a reward for his services to the Crown, Sir Edward received a phenomenal estate exceeding 50,000 acres in Counties Louth and Meath. This included the lease on the dissolved abbey of Mellifont in County Louth, which became the Moore’s family home until 1725. Mellifont Abbey had formerly been the principal Irish base of the Cistercians, a zealous Catholic order who traced their origins back to the days of the enigmatic Knights Templar.

THE 1ST VICSOUNT

p. 171. Contemporary records indicate Sir Edward, who died in 1601, had a “strong link of amity” with both Hugh O’Neill, the “Great Earl” of Tyrone, and Hugh O’Donnell, Earl of Tyrconnell. The friendship survived when the two Earls went into rebellion against the English in 1594. His son and heir, Sir Garret Moore, was also close to both. On March 25th 1603, Lord Deputy Mountjoy, who was staying with Sir Garrett at Mellifont, offered O’Neill one last chance to surrender. Sir Garrett personally delivered the offer, which came with a guarantee of safe-conduct. Nobody in Ireland yet knew Queen Elizabeth had died the previous day; King James VI of Scotland was already en route to London to claim the throne. O’Neill duly arrived at Mellifont, went down on his knees before the Lord Deputy and “made submission in all penitence”. The Nine Years War was over at last.

In 1607, shortly before he and the other surviving rebel leaders fled to the Continent, O’Neill again visited Sir Garrett in Mellifont. The story runs that O’Neill left in tears, unable to tell his friend he was abandoning Ireland forever. Another guest, Sir Arthur Chichester, later recalled “the manner of his departure, carrying his little son who was brought up in Sir Garret’s house, made me suspect he had some mischief in his head…’ At the time, Sir Garrett was involved in an increasingly public feud with Lord Howth whom he accused of being “an idle-headed lord, a speaker of untruths, one that would crack and brag much, yea, that would draw a man into the field, but when he came there would not and durst not fight him”. Lord Howth’s response was to make a formal charge of treason against Sir Garrett for aiding and abetting in the so-called “Flight of the Earls”. Sir Garrett was subsequently acquitted of the charge and rose through the ranks of the new elite in Ireland to become President of Munster in 1616. The same year he was raised to the peerage of Ireland as Baron Moore of Mellifont and, in 1621, as Viscount Moore of Drogheda. He married Mary, a daughter of Sir Henry Colley of Castle Carbery in Co. Kildare.[1]

THE 2nd VISCOUNT

p. 172. The 1st Viscount died in the winter of 1627, two years after the ill-fated Charles I ascended the throne. His 24-year-old son Charles succeeded as 2nd Viscount. Charles initially distinguished himself as a strong supporter of the Stuart monarch during the ensuing English Civil War. He withstood a 16-week siege by some 14,000 rebels at Drogheda in 1642. On 7th August 1643, he led a cavalry unit to engage with Owen Roe O’Neill’s troops on the banks of the Boyne near Portlester Mill, Co. Meath. O’Neill secured a remarkable fluke victory over the Parliamentary forces when, during a demonstration to his officers as to how one might best use a perspective glass to train a canon’s trajectory, he fired a ball that blew the 2nd Viscount’s head clean off. The leaderless Parliamentarians were then defeated so badly it took nearly three years for Cromwell to reassert his dominance in Ireland.

Charles was married to Alice Loftus, a reputedly unpleasant woman who, in April 1645,was imprisoned for her attempts to betray the garrisons of Dundalk and Drogheda to Cromwell’s army. Her father, Adam Loftus, Viscount Ely (1568 – 1643), was one of the first “New English” career men to settle in Ireland during the late Elizabethan age. He was originally brought over in the 1590s by his uncle and namesake, Adam Loftus, Archbishop of Dublin, through whose patronage he was granted an arch-deanery, a knighthood and, of most significance to the Moores, the church lands at Monasterevin in the west of Kildare.[2] Like Mellifont, the abbey at Monasterevin previously belonged to the Cistercians. Its substantial estate was seized during the 1540s by the English authorities in Dublin who regarded it as of indispensable strategic value to the on-going conquest of Ireland. The abbey itself, sited on the banks of the river Barrow, was converted into a vice-regal residence in 1558. In 1619 Adam Loftus received a plantation grant in Wexford and was appointed Lord Chancellor, a position he allegedly purchased from King James’s homosexual lover, the Duke of Buckingham. As to his daughter Alice, she fell from her horse in January 1649, broke a leg and died of gangrene some days later.

THE 1st EARL

The fate of the family now lay with Charles and Alice’s only surviving son, Henry, 3rd Viscount Moore, who was appointed Governor of Counties Meath and Louth in 1643 and of Dundalk in 1645. On 8th August 1647 he commanded a troop of cavalry in action against Irish rebels at Dungan’s Hill near Trim, a vicious battle that left more than 6000 Irish dead. To secure his continued support during Cromwell’s Interregnum, he was awarded £6953 by the Parliamentarian government in 1653 which amounted to nearly twice his estate’s net rental. 

p. 173. Upon the Restoration of Charles II in 1660, he was appointed a Privy Councilor and Governor of Drogheda. The latter appointment paved the way for his elevation, on 14th June 1661, to the Earldom of Drogheda. The 1st Earl’s influence was undoubtedly increased by his marriage to Alice Spencer, a younger sister of the dashing Earl of Sunderland killed during the battle of Newbury in 1643. Indeed, the kinship would prove of increasing significance during the next generation when the Spencer’s cousin, the famous Duke of Marlborough, became one of the most powerful figures in Europe.

THE 2nd EARL

The 1st Earl died in January 1675 and was succeeded by his eldest son Charles. The 2nd Earl married Lady Letitia Robartes, daughter of Lord Radnor, an English tin magnate who stood as Viceroy of Ireland immediately before the Duke of Ormonde’s return in 1660. The 2nd Earl left no surviving issue and died at his Dublin house on North Earl Street in June 1679.[3] He was succeeded by his younger brother Henry, 3rd Earl of Drogheda.[4] The 3rd Earl resided at Drogheda House (later the Hibernian Bible Society) in Dublin and used his wealth to develop property on the cities north side. He evidently had a fine sense of self-importance for he named the streets after himself – Henry Street, Moore Street, Earl Street and Drogheda Street.[5] There was even an “Of Lane” for a while although when this became a notorious red light area frequented by sailors, the Corporation re-designated it as ‘Henry Place’. The 3rd Earl died in 1714, the year George I became King, and was succeeded by his 14-year-old grandson Henry.

Horse racing became all the rage during the early years of George I’s reign and the young 4th Earl was not immune from its charms. Unlike his grandson, the 6th Earl, the 4th Earl does not appear to have had a great knack for choosing winners and the archives are replete with tales of other horses defeating his gallant steeds at Newmarket. His financial woes obliged him to sell some 5000 acres of his Louth estates (including the village of Collon) to the Foster and Fortescue families.[6] 

p. 174. In 1725 the 4th Earl married Charlotte, a daughter of Hugh, 1st Viscount Falmouth.[7] In 1725 his luck changed when he succeeded to the Kildare estates of his mother Jane Loftus, only child of the last Viscount Ely, making him one of the largest landowners in Ireland during the Georgian age.[8] The Loftus’s 1100 acre estate of Monasterevin would soon become the Moore family’s principal base in Ireland.

EDWARD, THE 5th EARL

The 4th Earl died in May 1727 without issue at the age of 27 and was succeeded by his brother Edward who, earlier that year, married Lady Sarah Ponsonby. This marriage was of immense significance to the Moore fortunes. Lady Sarah’s father, Brabazon Ponsonby, became Commissioner of the Revenue in Ireland during the Lord Lieutenancy of the Duke of Devonshire (1737 – 45) and was later created 1st Earl of Bessborough. Her eldest brother William, later the 2nd Earl, was a lover of George III’s daughter Princess Amelia while another brother, John, succeeded their father at the Revenue Board and became Speaker of the Irish House of Commons. Lady Sarah died in January 1737, shortly after the birth of her third son, Edward. The 5th Earl was remarried the following October to Bridget Southwell, a niece of the 1st Lord Southwell of Castle Mattress, Co. Limerick.

On 28th October 1758, the 5th Earl and his son Edward, now chaplain to the House of Commons, were sailing across the Irish Sea when their ship capsized killing all on board. 

CHARLES, THE 6th EARL

The 5th Earl’s eldest son Charles, a prominent officer in the British Army, duly succeeded as 6th Earl. The following year, the 6th Earl raised a cavalry regiment known as “Lord Drogheda’s Light Horse” to assist England in its Seven Years War against France.[9] He would go on to command the Light Horse for an astonishing 62 years, rising to the rank of Field Marshal and Master-General of the Ordinance. The regiments’ first task was to oust an army of 1500 Frenchmen, commanded by Admiral Thurot, who had captured the town of Carrickfergus in February 1759. The French withdrew and were later captured after a naval action in Belfast Lough.[10]

p. 175. In 1766 the 6th Earl married Lady Anne Seymour, a daughter of the Marquess of Hertford, a popular Lord Lieutenant of Ireland in the 1760s. A year after his marriage, he commissioned the little known English engineer Christopher Myers to assist in the construction of a new house in the Strawberry Hill Gothic style on the banks of the River Barrow in Monasterevin. The new house, sited on Saint Evin’s 7th century abbey, was to be called Moore Abbey.[11] The old Protestant Church inside the gates of Moore Abbey was simultaneously demolished and St. John’s Church built in its place. Monasterevin continued to grow around the abbey, particularly with the arrival of the Grand Canal in 1786. Indeed, the number of bridges erected in the town inspired some to call it the “Venice of Ireland”.

p. 176. On 11th March 1783 the 6th Earl became one of the first fifteen men to be appointed a Knight of St. Patrick.[12] However, for all his connections, the 6th Earl sees to have been a quiet character on the political scene, earning a reputation as one who “seldom speaks”. On 5th July 1791 he was created Marquess of Drogheda. Having taken an active role in the suppression of local rebels during the 1798 Rising, he supported the 1801 Union and was duly rewarded with £15,000, a place in the Representative Peerage and a title in the English peerage – Baron Moore of Moore Place.[13] The latter effectively entitled him and his heirs to a permanent seat in the House of Lords.

THE 3rd MARQUESS

The 1st Marquess died shortly before Christmas in 1821 and was succeeded by his eldest son Edward, who was declared insane nearly thirty years beforehand. The 2nd Marquess died unmarried in 1837 whereupon the title and estates devolved upon his nephew, Henry Francis Seymour Moore.[14]

p. 177. The bushy bearded 3rd Marquess (and 8th Earl) enjoyed a prominent career in Victorian England, serving as Lord Lieutenant and custos rotolorum of Co. Kildare, vice-Admiral of Leinster and Ranger of the Curragh. In 1852, the 26-year-old Marquess established his first contact with the Turf Club by registering his colours. In 1863 he was elected a member of the club, becoming Steward three years later and dominating the Club until his death. In 1866, he combined forces with Lord Howth and the Earl of Charlemont to inaugurate the running of the first Irish Derby in 1866. He was instrumental in the development of Punchestown and of promoting both steeplechase and flat racing throughout Ireland. At one key juncture in the mid-1880s, his dual membership of both the Turf Club and Newmarket’s Jockey Club enabled him to successfully negotiate with the latter when they attempted to disqualify Irish horses from competing in British races. He had a seat on the Privy Council and was an honorary Colonel of the Royal Dublin Fusiliers. His wife Lady Mary, a colourful figure in London society, was a sister of the railway magnate, the 1st Earl of Wharncliffe. During the 8th Earl’s day, Moore Abbey was regarded as one of the oldest houses in Ireland. The 4th Earl of Clonmell, a popular figure, once came to stay bearing an unusually heavy suitcase. As the footmen were heaving it up the stairwell, the portmanteau broke open and large chunks of coal came a-tumbling down the steps.

For all their efforts, the Drogheda’s must have felt the pressure of public discontent as the Land Wars erupted across Ireland from 1879; a notice was nailed to the gate of Moore Abbey offering £1,000 [sterling] for his lordship’s head and £100 for that of his agent. The 8th Earl died unexpectedly, without issue, on the eve of Derby Day, June 1892. The Drogheda Memorial Fund and Drogheda Memorial Hospital were founded in tribute to his memory. The Marquessate became extinct and the Earldom devolved upon his distant cousin, Ponsonby William Moore. The 9th Earl was a great-great grandson of the 5th Earl and Lady Sarah Ponsonby. He was 46-years old when he succeeded, having served as Deputy Lieutenant for the Queen’s County and JP for Kildare. His Scottish wife, Lady Ann, was a daughter of George Moir, Sheriff of Stirlingshire. In 1905, he made his presence felt in Monasterevin when he commissioned the building of a Market House (now the Bank of Ireland). He passed away in October 1908 and was succeeded by his only son Henry, 10th Earl.

HENRY MOORE, 10th EARL & THE SALE OF MOORE ABBEY

p. 178. Henry Charles Ponsonby Moore was 24-years-old when he succeeded his father as 10th Earl of Drogheda. As a young man he served as a Clerk in the British Foreign Office, holding the rank of lieutenant in the newly created Irish Guards. On 1st March 1909 he married Kathleen Pelham Burn, an enigmatic cigarette-smoking 20th century lady famous for dabbling in the occult. The séances she hosted at her London townhouse were attended by such social celebrities as Mrs Keppel, Baroness d’Erlanger, Lady Ponsonby, Jacob Epstein, Sir Ernest Cassel, Augustus John and Wyndham Lewis. Rumours as to the latter’s relationship with Lady Drogheda whispered on the London breeze; the two certainly shared a passion for technology, aviation, speed and sensation.[15]

The Drogheda’s were divorced in 1921, leaving one son, Garret, later the 11th Earl. [15b] Kathleen subsequently married (and divorced) Mexican playboy Billy de Landa y Escandon, the son of a former Governor of Mexican City. (15c)

In 1922, the 10th Earl married Miss May Meatyard, one of the celebrated Gaiety Girls.[16] Her greatest moment probably came in March 1911 when, as she sang “The Lass With a Lasso”, a popular performance in which “Miss. May” roped a sextet of uniformed chorus boys on stage one by one whilst singing how she was from way “out west … where a horse’s hooves, the beating of a heart and the swish of a lasso are the only sounds heard on the prairie”. The 10th Earl was appointed a Representative Peer of Ireland in 1913 and was one of those scheduled to sit in the cabinet should Irish Home Rule have become a reality in the wake of the Great War. However, between the complications of his personal life and the on-going violence in Ireland, he abandoned Moore Abbey after the First World War and settled in London where he became a barrister.

In 1925, the family home at Moore Abbey was leased to the popular Irish tenor, Count John McCormack, who remained there until 1937. Born in Athlone in 1884, McCormack made his operatic debut at Covent Garden, London, in 1907, before going on to perform in the New York Opera House, Carnegie Hall and a, perhaps most famously, at the Eucharistic Conference held in Dublin’s Phoenix Park in 1932. The Count marked his tenure in Monasterevin by hosting a special performance, alongside the Spanish soprano Lucrezia Bori, in the town’s St. Peter & Paul’s Church. The McCormack family lived in great style at Moore Abbey, throwing lavish dinner parties during which the Count would sing and play on the grand piano. In 1930 Moore Abbey became the location of “Song of my Heart”, the first “talkie” movie made in Ireland, during which McCormack sang “A Fairy Story by the Fire” to a crowd of local children.

p. 179. The 10th Earl put Moore Abbey and 300 acres up for sale shortly after the McCormack’s departure in 1937. By 1946, the property had been purchased by the Congregation of the Sisters of Charity of Jesus and Mary, a religious institute founded in Belgium in 1803. The following March, a fire broke out and gutted the entire west wing of the building. The house was gradually repaired – complete with kitchen, dining hall, laundry room, dormitory and community room – and the hospital officially opened for business in September 1948. New buildings were added in the 1970s. Moore Abbey remains the principal Irish headquarters of the Sisters of Charity.

As to the Drogheda’s, the 10th Earl enjoyed an influential role in later life. A close friend of Churchill, he served as Minister of Economic Warfare in Britain’s wartime cabinet from 1942 to 1945. In 1946 he was elected Deputy Speaker of the House of Lords and Chairman of Committees.[17] He also served as Chairman of the Cinematograph Film Council from 1944 to 1954 during which time the Ealing comedies were made. Among his many medals were the Grand Officer Order of Orange-Nassau of the Netherlands, the Knight Commander of the Order of St Michael and St George. On 30th January 1954, he was created a peer of the United Kingdom as Baron Moore of Cobham, Co. Surrey.

GARRET MOORE, 11th EARL

The 10th Earl died on 22nd November 1957 and was succeeded by his 47-year-old son Garrett, 11th Earl. Educated at Eton and Trinity College Cambridge, the 11th Earl served as a captain with the Royal Artillery in 1940 and on the Staff of the Ministry of Production from 1942 to 1945. After the war, he became greatly involved with the British press, serving as managing director of the Financial Timesfrom 1945-70 and as its chairman from 1971-75. Together with the editor Sir Gordon Newton, he transformed the newspaper from a modest eight pages selling 50,000 copies a day to one averaging 40 pages with a circulation of 200,000. He was also Director of The Economist and Chairman of the Royal Opera House in Covent Garden.[18] As to his character, The Spectator’s Clement Crisp regarded him as “a brilliant and great man”, Norman Lebrecht as an “insufferable snob” and Richard Witts as “one of the dimmest men ever to dither with the arts”. 

p. 180. In 1946 he was awarded the OBE. In May 1935 he married Joan Eleanor Carr. They lived principally at Parkside House, Englefield Green in Surrey. In the summer of 1956 they let the house to Marilyn Monroe and her husband Arthur Miller while she filmed the comedy “The Prince And The Showgirl”. The 11th Earl was created a Knight of the Garter in 1972. He died in 1990.

DERRY MOORE

The present head of the family is (Henry Dermot Ponsonby) Derry Moore, 12th Earl of Drogheda. Born in January 1937 and educated at Eton and Cambridge, Derry Moore left the Life Guards to pursue a career in cinema and the fine arts. He found work assisting a Harpers & Queens photographer in a shoot of the renovated interiors of Versailles’ Petit Trianon. The photographer had already left on holiday when word came through to Derry that the magazine needed more photographs of the palace. Derry took a gamble and went off with his own camera; his photographs were published. Now regarded as one of the world’s foremost interiors photographers, the sharp dressing 12th Earl is also well know for his portraits. His sitters include Alan Bennett, Baron Rothschild, Rudolf Nureyev, John Bayley, Iris Murdoch and Quinlan Terry. His books include “Evening Ragas: A Photographer in India”, “The Stately Homes of Britain” and “Inside the House of Lords”, in which he describes “a wistful last walk through the majestic master work of Charles Barry and AWN Pugin, reflecting on the noble Arthurian mythologies coded into the buildings décor and the perilous path of politics which delivered the hereditary peers to their powerless end”.[19] He has made his mark in the House by his continuing calls for more financial support of the British film industry. He is married to Alexandra, Countess of Drogheda, only child of Sir Nicholas Henderson, the former British Ambassador to Washington, and his wife, Lady Mary, the popular fashion writer. Alexandra has worked as executive producer of “Panorama”, editor of “Great Britons” and deputy head of the BBC’s political programs. In April 2004, she became head of the new events and special programming division of Talent TV. She is mother to the 12th Earl’s children.

With thanks to Barry Kennerk.

FOOTNOTES

[1] By his daughter Eleanor, Sir Garrett was grandfather to the poet John Denham.

[2] Adam Loftus, Archbishop of Armagh and Dublin, was one of the founding fathers of Trinity College Dublin.

[3] His widow then married William Wycherley, a well-known Restoration dramatist and poet, to whom she later bequeathed the family estate in North Dublin. However, her will was disputed and the law-suit ruined the playwright to such an extent he was confined in the Fleet Prison for seven years.

[4] The 3rd Earl also succeeded to substantial estates in County Down which belonged to his childless brother-in-law, Henry Hamilton, Earl of Clanbrassil

[5] Drogheda Street became Sackville Street in 1809 and is now O’Connell Street.

[6] The likelihood is that well over half the Foster estate in Louth and Meath, which totaled 6,500 acres in 1778, came from the Moore family as a whole.

[7] Her brother was the British naval hero, Admiral Edward Boscawen, the man responsible for capturing Louisburg in 1758 and annihilating the French fleet at Lagos Bay in 1759.

[8] By 1767 Lord Drogheda’s rental from the former Loftus estates amounted to £5425 a year.

[9] Some trees planted at Moore Abbey to commemorate the founding of the Light Dragoons still stand today.

[10] The regiment was renamed the 18th Hussars in 1807 and given Prussian style uniforms. However, disgrace followed when charges of looting were leveled against them in the wake of the battle of Vittoria (during which they lost an entire squadron). The regiment was disbanded in 1821, the 6th Earl of Drogheda having held the colonelcy for 62 years, the longest in the British Army.

[11] Myers also worked on Glanarm Castle and Ballycastle Harbour in Co. Antrim, as well as many locks on the River Shannon.

[12] The Order of St. Patrick was instituted by George III in 1783,for the purpose of establishing in Ireland a fraternity of knights as a counterpart to the Order of the Garter in England and the Order of the Thistle in Scotland.

[13] The Duke of Portland, in a private and confidential letter to the Viceroy, dated June 27, 1800, declares that Lord Drogheda’s claims to be a member of the representative peerage were “irresistible.” [Castlereagh Correspondence, vol. iii., p. 345.]

[14] In 1846, he had a portico and great steps built at Moore Abbey.

[15] Oscar Wilde’s Last Stand, Philip Hoare (Arcade, 1998)

[15a] See The Times law report from November 23, 1921 (p. 4). I made a hasty transcription of the report here below:

PROBATE, DIVORCE AND ADMIRALTY DIVISION. LADY DROGHEDA’S PETITION. DROGHEDA (COUNTESS OF) v. DROGHEDA (EARL OF).

Probate, Divorce, And Admiralty Division. (Before the RT HON. SIB HENRY DUFE, President.) The Countess of Drogheda, of Wilton- cresoent, W., whose maiden name was Kathleen Pelham Burn, prayed in this un- defended suit for the dissolution of her marriage with the Right Hon. Henry Charles Ponsonby, 10th Earl of Drogheda, on the grounds of his adultery and failure to comply with a decree for restitution of conjugal rights. The respondent had appeared in the suit, but he had had no answer. The petitioner and the respondent were married on March 3, 1000, at St. Giles”s Church, Edinburgh. There were two children. Mr. Bayford, K.C., and Lord Erleigh ap- peared for the petitioner; Sir Harold Smith held a watching brief for the respondent

Mr. BAYFORD said that his Lordship might at lst glance suppose that, as the respondent’s was an Irish title, a question of domicile might arise. As a fact. from the time of the marriage in 1909 the petitioner and the respondent had had their permanent home in England. The respondent’s connexion with Ireland was that he was tenant of Moore Park, which was entailed, so that he could not get rid of it. He (counsel) could not say that the parties had never been there, for they had visited Moore Park occasionally, but they never stayed longer than a fortnight.

The President .-Where has their home been?

Mr. BAYFOnD.- At Wilton-crescent, London.

Lady Droghcda, examined by Mr. BAYFORD, said that the house in Wilton-crescent was taken before her marriage, and it had been their home ever since the marriage. Her husband and she lived happily. In 1920 they and the children were staying at North Berwick with her mother. The respondent left North Berwick a few days before she did, and when she came to London she found that he had left Wilton-crescent and had left no Address. She had an interview with him about a week afterwards, and she did everything in her power to persuade him, but she could not get him to come back. She then took proceedings for restitution of conjugal rights, and a decree was pronounced on May 25 last. (See The Times of May’ 26.)

MR. BAYFORD (handing a document).-Is your husband’s signature on this document ? -It is.

Counsel.-That, my Lord, is an acknowledgment signed by the respondent that he has been served with the restitution decree.

The PRESIDENT.-I take this opportunity of saying that some observations which I made recently on proof, of the service of decrees for restitution of conjugal rights appear to have been misunderstood. This is one of the class of cases in which the question arises, and as disobedience to the restitution decree is the basis of the relief claimed, and at a hearing in open Court evidence on affidavit is not received except in special circumstances, I said that it was not sufficient to produce evidence on affidavit of service of the restitution decree. It seems to have been understood that in all cases the Court would insist on oral proof by the, person who served the decree. That is not the case. The fact of service can be proved in the same way as any other fact, and the course here taken of relying on admission of service signed by the respondent is quite a proper course.

The petitioner, continuing her evidence,; said that she had received the following letter from the respondent:-

June 9. 1921.- Savile House, Berkeley-street. W.l.

I have duly received the order of the Court to return to vou. Nothing will induce me to comply with the order, and if at any time you desire to divorce me I think you will discover all the evidence you require at the Great Central Hotel.-D.

She consulted her solicitor and after inquiries she presented her petition.

Mr. BAYFORD.-You did not stay with your husband at the Great Central Hotel on the night of January 4 last ?-

No; I have never been there.

The witness said that an entry, “Mr. and Mrs. C. Moore,” in the register of the Great- Central Hotel was in the respondent’s hand- writing. Evidence was given that the respondent and a woman, who was not the petitioner, had stayed at the Great Central Hotel on June 4 last and occupied the same bedroom.

The PRESIDENT pronounced a decree nisi, with costs, and gave the petitioner the custody of the children. Solicitors: Messrs. Lewis and Lewis Messrs. Charles Russell and Co..

[15c] COUNTESS MARRIED. Quiet Wedding of Lady Drogheda. The marriage took place yesterday at St. George’s Register Office, Prince’s-row, Buckingham Palace-road. London, of Kathleen Countess of Drogheda, of 40, Wilton-crescent, S.W., youngest daughter of Mr. Charles Pelham-Burn, of Prestonfield, Midlothian, and Mr. Guillermo de Landa, ofEscandon, at present staying atClaridge’?s Hotel. The register office is in a quiet side street, and the arrival of the bride and bridegroom and friends was witnessed by only a few people. The bridegroom was stated to betwenty-nine years of age, a bachelor ofindependent means, son of Guillermo de Landa of Escandon. The bride’??s name was given as Kathleen Moore, thirty-three, formerly Pelham-Burn, formerly wife of Henry Charles Ponsonby Moore, ninth earl Drogheda, from who she obtained a divorce. She was described as Countess of Drogheda, daughter of Charles Maitland Pelham-Burn. The register was Harry T. Page and Ellen Lamport. About 25 photographers were waiting outside the register’??s office to obtain photographs. The newly-married couple, however, rushed into a taxicab, whichwas waiting at the side entrance, and laughingly drove off, leaving the brides car standing at the front. (Leeds Mercury – Friday 01 September 1922) 

The elder de Landa y Escandon was a close friend of General Diaz, as per a report by Mrs Alec Tweedie in the Pall Mall Gazette – Monday 16 June 1902, and served as Governor of Mexico City. His sister Madame de Mier, a close friend of the Dutch royal family, was married (1) in 1921 to William Arbuthnot-Leslie of Warthill and (2) to Captain Ronald Harlow, Gordon Highlanders, in 1944. 

Decree For Former Lady Drogheda. Mrs Kathleen de Landa. formerly the Countess of Drogheda. was the petitioner in a suit which came before the President (Lord Merrivale) in the Divorce Court yesterday- She sought a dissolution of her marriage onthe ground of the misconduct of her husband, Mr Guillermo de Landa. The suit was not defended and the President granted a “Decree nisi” with costs. Western Daily Press – Wednesday 17 April 1929

‘Madame De Landa, who returned to London from America last week, is at present in Edinburgh, where her son, Viscount Moore, is suffering from the effects of a motor accident.’ Dundee Evening Telegraph – Tuesday 24 September 1929

‘MR G. DE LANDA DIES IN MEXICO CITY THE death is reported from Mexico City of Mr Guillermo (Billy) de Landa, brother of Mrs Ronald Warlow, of Lickleyhead Castle, Aberdeenshire. He will be remembered in the North-east of Scotland—where he was a frequent visitor to Lickleyhead Castle before the war—as an enthusiastic soortsman and a lover of the Scottish countryside. He was also an outstanding polo player. Mr de Landa, who was educated in this country and went to Cambridge, was a son of a former governor of Mexico City under Gerteral Diaz. Requiem Mass will be celebrated at the Church of the Immaculate Conception, Farm Street, London, on Friday.’ (Aberdeen Press and Journal – Wednesday 14 April 1948)

[16] She divorced Lord Victor Paget, MC, in 1921

[17] In 1954 he was Chairman of the Home Office Advisory Council on the Treatment of Offenders.

[18] His association with the Royal Opera House is recalled in the name of the “Drogheda Circle”, an exclusive group of 15 – 20 souls who support a production by contributing £1000 a head every four years. In return they are given a post performance supper with the cast and senior members of the company. 

[19] Inside the House of Lords, Derry Moore, Clive Aslet (Harper Collins, 1998). 

The Reeks, Beaufort, County Kerry

The Reeks, Beaufort, County Kerry

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. 241. “(McGillycuddy of the Reeks/IFR) A two storey five bay late Georgian house with an eaved roof and a pilastered porch, doubled in length with an addition of the same height and in the same style, so as to form a continuous front of ten bays, in which the original porch, now no longer central, remains as the entrance. The end two bays of the addition project slightly.” 

https://www.buildingsofireland.ie/buildings-search/building/21305704/the-reeks-whitefield-co-kerry

Detached L-plan five-bay two-storey house, built c. 1825, possibly incorporating fabric of earlier house, built c. 1720. Single-bay single-storey flat-roofed projecting porch to centre and five-bay two-storey lower return to rear to north-west. Renovated and extended to south-west, post-1921, on an L-shaped plan comprising three-bay two-storey lateral wing with two-bay two-storey projecting end bay to south-west having three-bay side elevation and nine-bay single-storey return to rear to north-west. Pitched and hipped roof slate roofs with rendered chimneystacks having cornices, overhanging eaves with plastered soffit and cast-iron gutters and downpipes. Ruled-and-lined rendered walls with limestone plinth. Timber six-over-six pane sliding sash windows with limestone sills. Paired render pilasters and entablature to timber double-leaf glazed door with carvings. Round-headed paired two pane windows to sides of porch. Walled garden, built c. 1820, to south-west with red brick walls. 

http://landedestates.nuigalway.ie/LandedEstates/jsp/property-list.jsp?letter=R 

Rev. William de Moleyns was leasing this property from Lord Ventry’s estate at the time of Griffith’s Valuation, when it was valued at £4 15s, on a holding of 140 acres. It appears on the 1893 edition of the Ordnance Survey map as Reeks View. It is still extant.   

In O’Hea O’Keeffe, Jane. Voices from the Great Houses: Cork and Kerry. Mercier Press, Cork, 2013. 

p. 261. The McGillycuddy of the Reeks represents a cadet branch of the great O’Sullivan clan descended from Milesian royalty (the mythical ancestors of the Irish race). The first recorded usage of MacGiolla Mochuda (McGillycuddy) as a patronymic can be traced to Ailinn O’Sullivan, Bishop of Lismore, in the mid thirteenth century. Like other such families, the McGillycuddys’ fortunes ebbed and flowed during a thousand years of conflict over Irish soil. Yet unlike most other Gaelic chieftains, the McGillycuddys managed to survive the destruction of teh old Gaelic order during the Cromwellian and Williamite periods, eventually conforming to the established church as did other Kerry families such as the MacCarthy Mor, the FitzGeralds and the FitzMaurices. The family was thus able to retain its lands and indeed obtain additional lands in Kerry which, before the Land Acts of the late nineteenth century, extended to over 15,500 acres. 

p. 269. The beautiful old house in Beaufort is now home of members of the o’Sullivan clan…Solicitor PHilip O’Sullivan with his wife June and their children Aisling and Philip. 

http://lordbelmontinnorthernireland.blogspot.com/2015/03/the-reeks.html

THE McGILLYCUDDY OF THE REEKS WERE MAJOR LANDOWNERS IN COUNTY KERRY, WITH 15,518 ACRES 

CORNELIUS or CONNOR McGILLYCUDDY was born ca 1580; died by shipwreck, 1630, having married firstly, Joan, daughter of the Rt Rev John Crosbie, Lord Bishop of Ardfert; and secondly, Sheelagh, daughter of Richard Oge McCarty, of Dunguile, by whom he had a son, Niell, and a daughter. 

By his first wife he had, with other issue, 

DONOUGH McGILLYCUDDY (1623-c1695), of Carnbeg Castle, County Kerry, Sheriff of County Kerry, 1686. 

This Donough obtained a grant of arms from Sir Richard Carney, UlsterKing of Arms, in 1688. 

He wedded, in 1641, Marie, youngest daughter of Daniel O’Sullivan, of Dunkerron, County Kerry, and had issue, 

CORNELIUS, the heir

Daniel, Colonel, Captain Monck’s Regiment; father of DENNIS. 

Mr McGillycuddy was succeeded by his elder son, 

CORNELIUS McGILLYCUDDY, who married Elizabeth McCarty and dsp 1712, being succeeded by his cousin, 

DENNIS McGILLYCUDDY, who married, in 1717, Anne, daughter of John Blennerhassett, by whom he had issue, with four daughters, 

DENNIS, his heir

CORNELIUS, succeeded his brother

John, dsp

Philip, dsp

He died in 1730, and was succeeded by his eldest son, 

DENNIS McGILLYCUDDY (1718-35), who died unmarried, and was succeeded by his brother, 

CORNELIUS McGILLYCUDDY, born ca 1720, who wedded, in 1745, Catherine, daughter of Richard Chute, of Tullygaron, and had issue, 

Denis, b 1747; d unm
RICHARD, succeeded his father
FRANCIS, succeeded his brother
Daniel; 
Eusebius; 
Cornelius; 
Charity; Mary Anne; Margaret; Ruth; Avis; Agnes. 

The eldest son, 

RICHARD McGILLYCUDDY (1750-1826), of The Reeks, High Sheriff of County Kerry, 1793, espoused, in 1780, Arabella Mullins, daughter of Thomas, 1st Baron Ventry. 

He dsp 1826, and was succeeded by his brother, 

 
FRANCIS McGILLYCUDDY (1751-1827), of The Reeks, who wedded Catherine, widow of Darby McGill, and daughter of Denis Mahony, of Dromore, County Kerry, and had issue, 

RICHARD, his heir
Denis; 
Daniel; 
Frances; Mary Catherine; Elizabeth. 

Mr McGillycuddy was succeeded by his son, 

 
RICHARD McGILLYCUDDY (1790-1866), of The Reeks, who married firstly, in 1814, Margaret (d 1827), only daughter of Dr John Bennett, and had issue, a daughter, Dorothea. 

He wedded secondly, in 1849, Anna, daughter of Captain John Johnstone, of Mamstone Court, Herefordshire, and had further issue, 

RICHARD PATRICK, his heir
DENIS DONOUGH CHARLES, of The Reeks
John; 
Charles; 
Niell; 
Agnes; Anna Catherine; Mary Ruth; Sylvia Emily. 

Mr McGillycuddy was succeeded by his eldest son, 

RICHARD PATRICK McGILLYCUDDY (1850-71), of The Reeks, who died unmarried, and was succeeded by his brother, 

DENIS DONOUGH CHARLES McGILLYCUDDY OF THE REEKS (1852-1921), DSO, Lieutenant RN, who married, in 1881, Gertrude Laura, second daughter of Edmond Miller, of Ringwood, Massachusetts, USA, and had issue, 

ROSS KINLOCH; his heir

Richard Hugh (1883-1918). 

The elder son,  

ROSS KINLOCH McGILLYCUDDY OF THE REEKS (1852-1950), DSO, Lieutenant, 4th Royal Irish Dragoon Guards, wedded Victoria, daughter of Edward Courage, of Shenfield Place, Essex, and had issue, 

JOHN PATRICK, his heir
DERMOT; 
Denis Michael Edmond (1917-44); 
Phyllida Anne. 

Mr McGillycuddy was succeeded by his eldest son, 

 
JOHN PATRICK McGILLYCUDDY OF THE REEKS (1909-59), who wedded, in 1945, Elizabeth Margaret, daughter of Major John Ellison Otto, and had issue, 

RICHARD DENIS WYER; 
Sarah Elizabeth. 

Mr McGillycuddy was succeeded by his only son, 

 
RICHARD DENIS WYER McGILLYCUDDY OF THE REEKS (1948-2004), who married, in 1984, Virginia Lucy, daughter of Lieutenant-Colonel the Hon Hugh Waldorf Astor, and had issue, 

Tara Virginia, b 1985; 
Sorcha Alexander, b 1990. 

Richard McGillycuddy was succeeded in the title by his first cousin, 

(DERMOT PATRICK) DONOUGH McGILLYCUDDY OF THE REEKS (1939-), who married, in 1964, Wendy O’Connor, daughter of George Spencer, and has issue, 

PIERS EDWARD DONOUGH, b 1965; 
Michael Dermot, b 1968; 
Jocelyn Patrick Spencer, b 1970; 
Lavinia O’Connor, b 1966. 

THE REEKS, near Beaufort, County Kerry, is a two-storey, five-bay, late Georgian house. 

It has an eaved roof and pilastered porch, doubled in length with an extension of the same height and style. 

Effectively this forms a continuous front of ten bays, the original porch, no longer central, remaining the entrance. 

The two end bays of the extension protrude slightly.  

AT THE end of the 19th century, before the Land Purchase Acts, Richard McGillycuddy’s grandfather, whose mother had injected American money into the family, distinguished himself in the 1st World War, winning the DSO and the Légion d’Honneur. 

From 1928 to 1936, he sat in the Senate of the Irish Free State as a supporter of the moderate WT Cosgrave and an opponent of the republican Eamon de Valera. 

In the 2nd World War, he returned to the colours and became a regular informant on what was happening in neutral Ireland. 

His grandson, Richard Denis Wyer McGillycuddy, was born in 1948. Richard’s father, the senator’s son, who had succeeded in 1950, himself died in 1959 as a result of wounds sustained during the 2nd World War in the Northampton Yeomanry. 

At the time Richard was only 10 and still at his preparatory school before going on to Eton. 

His English mother, although never feeling at home in Ireland, carried on dutifully at Beaufort to preserve the family inheritance for her son. 

Every August, she organised a rather gentrified cricket match played on the lawn of the house – but it was abandoned around 1970 after young Richard, who had little interest in cricket and was not watching, was knocked unconscious by a mighty drive by a visitor who had played for the Cambridge Crusaders. 

The young McGillycuddy’s passion was cars, and he went into the motor trade in London after a brief sojourn at the University of Aix-en-Provence. 

He was unreceptive to the efforts of his uncle Dermot, a Dublin solicitor much beloved of McGillycuddys of every class and creed, to interest him in Ireland. 

Tall and dashing, the rugged and auburn-haired young McGillycuddy of the Reeks was much in demand in London among the Sloane Rangers. 

Eventually, in 1983, at the age of 35, he married Virginia Astor, the granddaughter of the 1st Lord Astor of Hever. 

Feeling that he had little in common with the local people in Kerry, McGillycuddy decided to sell The Reeks, and moved to France, where he acted as a property consultant to prospective British purchasers of chateaux and lesser French properties. 

After the birth of his second daughter in 1990, the family returned to live in Ireland – not, however, in their ancestral territory, but nearer Dublin, where they rented a succession of houses, the last of them in Westmeath. 

He continued to dabble in property, and latterly sold insurance; but it was a handicap that his upper-class English demeanour disappointed expectations raised by his Irish-sounding name. 

Although he could be charming in the appropriate company, he did not relate well to Irish people outside his own class. 

Meanwhile, despite poor health, his wife carved out a niche for herself doing valuable work as a prison visitor. 

McGillycuddy was active in the council of Irish chieftains who had been recognised by the Irish Genealogical Office. 

Richard McGillycuddy was survived by his wife and two daughters. 

He was succeeded by his first cousin, Donogh, who lives in South Africa. 

Woodlawn House, Kilconnell, County Galway

Woodlawn House, Kilconnell, County Galway

Woodlawn House, Ballinasloe, County Galway courtesy Sherry Fitzgerald Country Homes, Farms and Estates, June 2024.
Woodlawn House, Ballinasloe, County Galway courtesy Sherry Fitzgerald Country Homes, Farms and Estates, June 2024.

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. 286. “(Trench, Ashtown, B/PB) A three storey house refaced and much embellished in an Italianate style and enlarged by the addition of single-storey wings ca 1860 for 2nd Lord Ashtown, probably to the design of James F. Kempster, of Ballinasloe. The main block has a recessed centre and projecting outer bays with triple windows, joined by a single-storey balustraded Ionic portico; the roof parapet is also balustraded, with tall finials; there is a modillion cornice and much channelling, the downstairs windows are surmounted by segmental peidments. The wings each consist of three bays and a projecting pedimented end pavilion with a triple window. Georgian Gothic arch at one of the entrances to the demesne. Sold ca 1947 by 4th Lord Ashtown to the late Derek Le Poer Trench; who resold it ca 1973.”

Frederick Trench (1755-1840) 1st Baron Ashtown from Loughton sale Sept 2016 by Shepphards.
Michael Frederick Trench (1746-1836) by Hugh Douglas Hamilton, picture courtesy of National Gallery of Ireland, NGI.7773
Elizabeth Oliver-Gascoigne (1812-1893), she married Frederick Mason Trench, 2nd Baron Ashtown. Photograph courtesy Thepeerage.com
Woodlawn House, Ballinasloe, County Galway courtesy Sherry Fitzgerald Country Homes, Farms and Estates, June 2024.

http://lordbelmontinnorthernireland.blogspot.com/2014/01/woodlawn-house.html

THE BARONS ASHTOWN WERE MAJOR LANDOWNERS IN COUNTY LIMERICK, WITH 11,273 ACRES.  

The family of TRENCH is descended from a French protestant family, said to have emigrated from the town of La Tranche, in the province of Poitou, to avoid the religious persecutions instituted by LOUIS XIV against those who dissented from the established church. 

This family and that of TRENCH, Earls of Clancarty, derive from a common ancestor, namely,  

FRÉDÉRIC DE LA TRANCHE, or TRENCH, who fled from France after the massacre of St Bartholomew, and took up his abode in Northumberland about 1575. 

He married, in 1576, Margaret, daughter of Thomas Sutton, and had issue, 

THOMAS, his heir
James (Rev), Rector of Clongill, m Margaret, daughter of Hugh, Viscount Montgomery of the Ards; 
Adam Thomas. 

Mr Trench thereafter crossed into Scotland, where he died in 1580. 

The eldest son, 

THOMAS TRENCH, of Garbally, married, in 1610, Catherine, daughter of Richard Brooke, of Pontefract, Yorkshire, and had issue, 

FREDERIC, founded the house of CLANCARTY
John, of whom we treat

The second son, 

 
THE VERY REV DR JOHN TRENCH, of Moate, County Galway, Dean of Raphoe, wedded Anne, daughter of Richard Warburton, of Garryhinch, and had issue, 

FREDERIC, his heir
Alexander; 
Richard; 
Anne; Judith. 

The Dean died in 1725, and was succeeded by his eldest son, 

 
FREDERIC TRENCH (1686-1758), of Moate, County Galway, who married, in 1718, Mary, daughter and heiress of Richard Geering, Clerk of the Court of Chancery, and had issue, 

FREDERIC, his heir
Anne; Mary; Elizabeth. 

Mr Trench died in 1758, and was succeeded by his only surviving son, 

FREDERIC TRENCH (1724-97), of Moate and Woodlawn, County Galway, who wedded, in 1754, Mary, eldest daughter and co-heir of Francis Sadleir, of Sopwell Hall, County Tipperary, and had issue, 

FREDERIC, his heir
Francis, of Sopwell Hall, father of FREDERICK; 
Thomas (Very Rev), Dean of Kildare; 
William, of Cangort Castle; 
Charles; 
Richard; 
John; 
Catharine; Mary; Elizabeth; Frances; Anne; Sophia; Mary; Catherine. 

Mr Trench died in 1797, and was succeeded by his eldest son, 

 
FREDERIC TRENCH (1755-1840), of Moate, MP for Maryborough, 1785-90, MP for Portarlington, 1798-1800, who espoused, in 1785, Elizabeth, only daughter and heiress of Dr Robert Robinson, and niece of the Hon Mr Justice Robinson, one of the judges of the Court of King’s Bench, but had no issue. 

 
Mr Trench was elevated to the peerage, in 1800, by the title of BARON ASHTOWN, of Moate, County Galway. 

  • Robert Power Trench, 4th Baron (1897–1966) 
  • Dudley Oliver Trench, 5th Baron (1901–79) 
  • Christopher Oliver Trench, 6th Baron (1931–90) 

The present 8th and present Baron lives in East Sussex. 

***** 

THE TRENCHES of Woodlawn were one of a number of Trench families who came to prominence in County Galway in the 17th century. 

They were all descended from Frederick Trench who came to Ireland early in the 1600s. 

Strategic marriages into the Warburton and Power families led to the acquisition of more lands in East Galway. 

 
Much of the Woodlawn estate was originally Martin and Barnewall lands which were purchased by the Trenches in the early 18th century. 

Lord Ashtown was recorded as a non-resident proprietor in 1824. 

In County Roscommon he held over a 1,000 acres; and in County Tipperary he held at least 21 townlands in the parishes of Ballingarry and Uskane, barony of Lower Ormond, inherited from the Sadleir family of Sopwell Hall. 

In the 1870s, Lord Ashtown’s main estate in County Galway amounted to over 8,000 acres and he also held land in seven other counties including County Waterford where he had purchased lands from the Earl of Stradbroke in the 1870s.  

These townlands remained in Trench ownership until purchased by the Irish Land Commission in the 1930s. 

In 1852 Lord Ashtown married as his second wife Elizabeth Oliver Gascoigne, an heiress with large estates in County Limerick and Yorkshire. 

In the 1870s Lord Ashtown is recorded as the owner of 11,273 acres in County Limerick and 4,526 acres in County Tipperary. 

 
WOODLAWN HOUSE, near Kilconnell, County Galway, is a Palladian-style country house comprising a three-bay, three-storey central block built ca 1760, having slightly advanced end bays and projecting tetra-style Ionic portico to entrance bay. 

 
There is an interesting video clip of the mansion house and ruinous outbuildings here

The House consists of 30,000 square feet standing on 115 acres of land. 

It boasts 26 bedrooms, a walled garden, courtyard, gatehouse, gardener’s house and a lake. 

Woodlawn was remodelled ca 1860 and flanked by four-bay two-storey wings having projecting pedimented end bay to each wing. 

 
The central block has tripartite openings to end bays, ground floor of each end bay having segmental pediment and engaged Doric columns to slightly advanced middle light, and flanked by Doric pilasters. 

The wings have tripartite windows to pedimented bays, ground floor having Venetian-style windows, middle light slightly advanced and having engaged square-plan Doric columns, flanked by Doric pilasters and having with moulded capitals and cornices. 

The mansion is set in its own demesne, with outbuildings to west, and entrance gates and lodge to east. 

 
This large house is an elaborate exercise in classical orders, the use of carved and cut limestone extending throughout the front elevation and evidence of both the skill of 19th century stonemasons and the wealth of the Trench family whose seat it was. 

An unusual composition, the quoins to the central block give a vertical emphasis that is extended by the pinnacles. 

Although the motifs are classical, the extensive use of dark limestone, the variety of textures and treatments, and the use of pinnacles give it a somewhat Gothic appearance typical of the late 19th century. 

Extended and remodelled by the 2nd Baron Ashtown in the 1860s to designs drawn up by James F Kempster, the county surveyor for the East Riding of County Galway, it shows little evidence of the Georgian house behind the façade. 

During the 1920s, the 3rd Baron was declared bankrupt and, as a result, the house was closed up and its contents sold at auction; at one point, the IRA occupied one of the wings. 

The 4th Baron eventually returned to Woodlawn, but in 1947 he sold the estate to his cousin, Derek Le Poer Trench who, in turn, disposed of it in 1973. 

Since then, Woodlawn has had two further owners but neither of these have lived in the house. 

Michael Lally, a local publican, bought the property ca 1989. 

Before that date, in 1982, a fire burnt out the east wing and caused extensive damage to the central block, partly because of the water used to put out the flames. 

Much of the original decoration of the house has also been lost, not least the fireplaces in the principal reception rooms. 

While all the walls still stand and the pitched slate roof remains, Woodlawn today is a mere shadow of the house it had been 100 years ago. 

Other former seat ~ Chessel House, Southampton, Hampshire. 

For sale June 2024 

Woodlawn House, Woodlawn, Ballinasloe  

€975,000 

H53PX44 22 beds2787 m2 

Woodlawn House, Ballinasloe, County Galway courtesy Sherry Fitzgerald Country Homes, Farms and Estates, June 2024.

Courtesy Sherry Fitzgerald Country Homes, farms and estates 

WOODLAWN HOUSE, A HISTORIC ESTATE WITH EXPANSIVE GROUNDS ENCOMPASSING APPROXIMATELY 45.75 HECTARES (113.05 ACRES), BOASTING ARCHITECTURAL MAGNIFICENCE AND A CENTURIES-OLD HERITAGE, THE PROPERTY EAGERLY AWAITS COMPREHENSIVE RESTORATION TO RECAPTURE ITS FORMER MAGNIFICENCE. SPECIAL FEATURES • Historical estate extending to approx. 45.75 hectares (113.05 acres) of woodland and parkland • Palladian style mansion extending to approx. 30,000 sq.ft in need of full restoration • Complemented by a red brick walled garden, multiple courtyards, gate lodge, stewards lodge and glasshouses also in need of full restoration • Located approx. 2.7km from Woodlawn train station (600m walk via the woods) • Located approx. 49km from Galway city • Located approx. 17km from the M6 Dublin to Galway motorway  

Woodlawn House, Ballinasloe, County Galway courtesy Sherry Fitzgerald Country Homes, Farms and Estates, June 2024.

HISTORY The history of Woodlawn Estate pre-dates recorded history and has its roots in Irish folklore and mythology through the Diarmuid and Grainne mound which is recorded on the Archaeological maps of the estate. “Mota Ghrainne Oige” is the gaelic name for Woodlawn and this translates as the moat or resting place of young Grace. Legend has it that Grace and her lover, Diarmuid O Duibne, were trying to escape from the powerful Fionn MacCumhall, who had earmarked Grainne as a bride for himself. The pursuit of the young lovers extended over most of Ireland and Woodlawn is thought to be one of their places of refuge. Woodlawn House & Estate was built in the mid-18th century by Frederick Trench, the First Baron Ashtown. Frederick Trench was the grandson of John Trench, who was rewarded for his services during the Williamite War by being appointed Dean of Raphoe. John Trench is an ancestor of the Barons Ashtown. Originally part of the Martin and Barnewall lands, the estate was acquired by the Trench family in the early 18th century. Frederick Trench initiated an extensive building program, which included the construction of the house and its surrounding structures, such as a church, gamekeepers’ lodge, family mausoleum, and artisan cottages. In the 1850s, the second Lord Ashtown transformed Woodlawn House into a fashionable Victorian Palladian villa. This extensive expansion and remodelling, designed by J. F. Kempster of Ballinasloe, included a new facade, the addition of a second storey to the wings, and interior redecoration. Further developments in the late 1800s included gardening projects, a mill building, outbuildings, and an underfloor-heated glasshouse. Additionally, a railway line was diverted to ensure the estate had its own station, which remains part of the Dublin to Galway railway line today. The house was vacated and its furnishings sold when the third Lord Ashtown became bankrupt in the 1920s. Eventually, the fourth Lord Ashtown sold it to his cousin, Derek Le Poer Trench, in 1947, who then sold it in 1973.  

Woodlawn House, Ballinasloe, County Galway courtesy Sherry Fitzgerald Country Homes, Farms and Estates, June 2024.
Woodlawn House, Ballinasloe, County Galway courtesy Sherry Fitzgerald Country Homes, Farms and Estates, June 2024.
Woodlawn House, Ballinasloe, County Galway courtesy Sherry Fitzgerald Country Homes, Farms and Estates, June 2024.
Woodlawn House, Ballinasloe, County Galway courtesy Sherry Fitzgerald Country Homes, Farms and Estates, June 2024.
Woodlawn House, Ballinasloe, County Galway courtesy Sherry Fitzgerald Country Homes, Farms and Estates, June 2024.
Woodlawn House, Ballinasloe, County Galway courtesy Sherry Fitzgerald Country Homes, Farms and Estates, June 2024.
Woodlawn House, Ballinasloe, County Galway courtesy Sherry Fitzgerald Country Homes, Farms and Estates, June 2024.
Woodlawn House, Ballinasloe, County Galway courtesy Sherry Fitzgerald Country Homes, Farms and Estates, June 2024.
Woodlawn House, Ballinasloe, County Galway courtesy Sherry Fitzgerald Country Homes, Farms and Estates, June 2024.
Woodlawn House, Ballinasloe, County Galway courtesy Sherry Fitzgerald Country Homes, Farms and Estates, June 2024.
Woodlawn House, Ballinasloe, County Galway courtesy Sherry Fitzgerald Country Homes, Farms and Estates, June 2024.

WOODLAWN HOUSE Woodlawn House is a distinguished example of Italianate architecture, notable for its grandeur and bold design, which stood out from the typical constructions of its era. This three-story Palladian mansion covers over 30,000 square feet and includes 26 bedrooms, showcasing the opulence and scale typical of aristocratic homes of the 18th and 19th centuries. The estate features a variety of ancillary structures and amenities, such as a red brick walled garden, multiple courtyards, a gate lodge, stewards lodge and an ornamental lake, all of which contribute to its historical and architectural significance. Currently, Woodlawn House and its surrounding estate are in need of comprehensive restoration to revive it to its former glory. The estate spans approximately 45.75 hectares (113.05 acres) of woodland and parkland, providing a serene and expansive backdrop that complements the mansion’s grandeur. LOCATION Woodlawn Woods, a beautifully preserved natural area that once formed part of the extensive Woodlawn Estate. Now owned and managed by Coillte, is directly on the doorstep of Woodlawn House offering a serene retreat for nature lovers. The woods feature a variety of trails, including the Woodlawn Woods Loop, which is approx. 10.1km. Woodlawn House is located approximately 7.3 km from the village of Kilconnell in County Galway. Kilconnell is a small village that offers a variety of amenities to its residents and visitors. These include a local school, a convenience shop for daily needs, a church, a pub, a GAA club, and a community hall hosting various events and activities. For more extensive amenities and services, the nearby town of Ballinasloe is approx. 20 km from Woodlawn House. Ballinasloe is a bustling market town that offers a broader range of shopping options, dining establishments, healthcare services, and recreational facilities. Transportation links to and from Woodlawn House are excellent, with the M6 Dublin to Galway motorway situated approximately 17 km away. This motorway provides a vital connection to Ireland’s extensive road network, facilitating convenient travel to Dublin and other major cities. The presence of the motorway enhances the accessibility of Woodlawn House, making it an ideal location for those who need to commute or travel frequently. Furthermore, the thriving cultural city of Galway is less than an hour’s drive from Woodlawn House. Galway is renowned for its vibrant arts scene, historic sites, lively festivals, and bustling nightlife. The city offers a rich array of cultural attractions, including theatres, galleries, museums, and music venues. Galway’s diverse culinary scene, featuring everything from traditional Irish pubs to contemporary restaurants, adds to its appeal as a nearby urban centre. Galway city also offers the vibrant suburb of Salthill, renowned for its beautiful beaches and bustling promenade that stretches about 2 km along Galway Bay. This iconic walkway offers stunning views of the Atlantic Ocean, the Aran Islands, and the hills of Clare, making it a popular spot for both locals and visitors. Beyond Galway City lies Connemara, renowned for its rugged coastlines, expansive boglands, and diverse landscapes that captivate visitors with their wild beauty. Stretching from the Atlantic Ocean to the Twelve Bens mountain range, Connemara offers a dramatic and untamed environment characterized by windswept beaches, towering cliffs, and rolling hills. The region’s coastline is dotted with picturesque coves, rocky headlands, and pristine sandy beaches, providing endless opportunities for exploration and adventure. Connemara holds a special place along the Wild Atlantic Way, a scenic coastal route that stretches from County Kerry in the south to County Donegal in the north, tracing the rugged and majestic coastline of western Ireland. Woodlawn House is also situated within the area known as Bord Failte’s Hidden Heartlands. The Hidden Heartlands covers the central region of Ireland, extending through parts of counties like Galway, Roscommon, Longford, and Westmeath. It emphasises outdoor activities such as walking, cycling, and boating, along with a focus on heritage sites and local experiences. Woodlawn House, with its historical significance and picturesque setting, fits well within this geographical area. 7.3 km to Kilconnell 20 km to Ballinasloe 20 km to Loughrea 48 km to Galway city 105 km to Shannon Airport 179 km to Dublin International Airport All distances are approximate 

Woodlawn House, Ballinasloe, County Galway courtesy Sherry Fitzgerald Country Homes, Farms and Estates, June 2024.
Woodlawn House, Ballinasloe, County Galway courtesy Sherry Fitzgerald Country Homes, Farms and Estates, June 2024.
Woodlawn House, Ballinasloe, County Galway courtesy Sherry Fitzgerald Country Homes, Farms and Estates, June 2024.
Woodlawn House, Ballinasloe, County Galway courtesy Sherry Fitzgerald Country Homes, Farms and Estates, June 2024.
Woodlawn House, Ballinasloe, County Galway courtesy Sherry Fitzgerald Country Homes, Farms and Estates, June 2024.
Woodlawn House, Ballinasloe, County Galway courtesy Sherry Fitzgerald Country Homes, Farms and Estates, June 2024.
Woodlawn House, Ballinasloe, County Galway courtesy Sherry Fitzgerald Country Homes, Farms and Estates, June 2024.
Woodlawn House, Ballinasloe, County Galway courtesy Sherry Fitzgerald Country Homes, Farms and Estates, June 2024.
Woodlawn House, Ballinasloe, County Galway courtesy Sherry Fitzgerald Country Homes, Farms and Estates, June 2024.
Woodlawn House, Ballinasloe, County Galway courtesy Sherry Fitzgerald Country Homes, Farms and Estates, June 2024.
Woodlawn House, Ballinasloe, County Galway courtesy Sherry Fitzgerald Country Homes, Farms and Estates, June 2024.
Woodlawn House, Ballinasloe, County Galway courtesy Sherry Fitzgerald Country Homes, Farms and Estates, June 2024.

Accommodation  

BER Details  

Exempt 

Negotiator  

Emily Bleahen 

http://www.turtlebunbury.com/family/bunburyfamily_related/bunbury_family_related_clancarty.html

Introduction 

On 15th April 1805, two years after the death of his first wife, Jane Bunbury, John ‘Old Turnip’ McClintock of Drumcar, Co. Louth, married Lady Elizabeth Le Poer Trench, sister of the 2nd Earl of Clancarty, an influential British diplomat. Her father, the 1st Earl of Clancarty died 12 days after the wedding.  

A Frenchman in Ballinasloe 

The Trenches descend from Frederick de la Trenche (b. c. 1545), a French Huguenot who emigrated to England in the wake of the St. Bartholomew’s Day Massacre and married Margaret Sutton. In 1631, his grandson Frederic Trench I, relocated to Ireland and, after the Cromwellian Wars, purchased a large amount of land in east Galway and the Cavan lakelands. The family were duly headquartered at Garbally House, near Ballinasloe, at the confluence of the slim River Suck and the broad majestic River Shannon. At this time Ballinasloe (or “Béal Átha na Slua” meaning “Mouth of the Ford of the Hostings”) was a small settlement with two ancient castles guarding the fords. It’s location on the main Dublin – Galway road gave the castles an important role in the celebrated “Gathering of the Hostings“, a meeting of the clans of Ireland dating back more than 2000 years to the High Kings of Tara. The surrounding land was seized from the O’Kellys during the Elizabethan plantations and regranted to the Brabazons. After the collapse of the Catholic Confederacy in 1649, the lands (including Garbally) were granted to a Cromwellian officer from Cork, William Spencer, who in turn sold the lands to Frederic Trench I. 

Frederic Trench II & the Battle of Aughrim 

Frederic I died in 1669 and both he and his wife Elizabeth Warburton are buried in the family vault in Ballinasloe. During the Wars of 1689 – 1691, the Trenches served alongside King William’s army, fighting at the conclusive battle of Aughrim, believed to have been the bloodiest battle ever fought on Irish soil, with upwards of 7,000 dead. The Jacobites had the upper hand until King James’ commanding officer, General St. Ruth, was suddenly and rather shockingly struck on the head by a canon ball. Mortally wounded, he died in a ring-fort just behind Garbally while his leaderless army were anihilated by the enemy. After the battle, many of the wounded officers were taken to Garbally House to have their various wounds treated. The house was then owned by Frederick’s son, Frederick Trench II.  

The Dean of Raphoe & the Barons Ashtown 

Frederic I’s brother  John Trench (1635-1725), Dean of Raphoe, married Anna Warburton (b. 1680), who was presumably a sister of his brother’s wife. At the Chichester House Sales of 1702, the dean purchased the lands of Moate and Woodlawn in County Galway. These had been confiscated by the crown from Peter Martin five years earlier and granted by letters patent to William III’s favourite, Joost van Keppel, Earl of Albermarle.  

Dean Trench’s grandson Frederic Trench (1724-1797) of Woodlawn married Mary Sadlier, by which he aquired Sopwell Hall, County Tipperary. Mary descended from Sir Ralph Sadleir, who featured in “Wolf Hall”, and who had held important posts under Henry VIII, Edward VI and Elizabeth I and for a while had to “look after’ Mary Queen of Scots. Frederic and Mary were parents to seven sons, namely: 
1) Frederick Trench, who was made 1st Baron Ashtown, of Woodlawn, County Galway in 1800;  
2) Rev Thomas Trench (1761-1834), Dean of Kildare, father of  Fanny (who married Hon.  George Francis Pomeroy (1797-1879), a Commander in the Royal Navy (who later adopted the name of Colley, and is an ancestor of mine) and the controversial William Steuart Trench (1816-1872), author of the thought-provoking ‘Realities of Irish Life.’ 
3) William Trench (1769-1849) whose son Henry was father to Benjamin Bloomfield Trench. 
﷟HYPERLINK “http://www.turtlebunbury.com/family/bunburyfamily_related/bunbury_family_related_colley.html”4) Francis Trench (1767-1829) who married Mary Mason, parents of Frederick, 2nd Baron Ashtown. In 1852, the 2nd Baron was married (as his second wife) Elizabeth, daughter of Richard and Mary Oliver Gascoigne; they had no children. Elizabeth’s sister Mary Isabella Gascoigne was married in 1850 to the Honourable Frederic Charles Trench, a first cousin of the 2nd Baron Ashtown. The daughters had succeeded to the Oliver and Gascoigne estates in 1843, and somehow they tie in with the Olivers of Castle Oliver, from whom Lola Montez also descends. (Thanks to Sarah Redpath). The 2nd Baron’s son Cosby Godolphin Trench moved to Sopwell in about 1880 (following the death of his father ) and it remained with the family until 1985 when (following the death of Pat Trench in 1983), it was bought by Michael Ramsden, an antiques dealer. 
5) Charles Trench (1772-1840) 
6) Richard Trench (1774-1860), barrister, who was married in 1803 (as her second husband) to Melesina Chenevix, father of Francis Chenevix Trench, the English divine and author, and Richard Chenevix Trench, Archbishop of Dublin). Melesina was an adventurous and talented woman who made the best of being a wealthy widow before remarrying.  
7) John Trench (1776-1858) married Jean Curie whose son Francis Arthur Trench (1816-1868) was father to Arthur Trench and eight other children, seven of whom were born at Newlands.  

Horse Fairs & Heiresses 

When Frederick Trench III succeeded to the Galbally estates on the death of his father in 1704, there probably wasn’t much going on. A small-time horse fair had been running for a few years but, in 1722, Frederick III secured a great coup in the form of an official charter from England’s brand new non-English speaking monarch, King George I. This charter permitted the running of a weekly livestock fair on the village green during the month of October. And thus Ballinasloe’s Great October Horse Fair was born. Frederick III died in 1752 and was succeeded by his eldest son who was not called Frederick but Richard. This fellow scored magnificently in 1732 when he wed Frances Le Poer (or Power), the only surviving child of David Power of Coorheen and an heiress twice over. Through her father, she stood to inherit the Power family estate at Coorheen, County Galway, while she was also due a large estate in County Laois (Queen’s County) from her mother, Elizabeth Keating. Some members of the Power family died in a drowning accident on the lake in 1728, so it appears that Frances or Fanny was the sole inheritor of her family’s wealth. Officially, David Power was Sheriff of Galway, but he also had a reputation as a priest hunter in the early years of the Penal Laws. In the wake of the wedding, the estates of both families were united and the family name was changed to Le Poer Trench. It is thought the Irish musician Turlough O’Carolan commemorated the wedding in his melody “Fanny Power”. 

1st Earl of Clancarty 

The eldest son of this union was William Power Keating Trench, an energetic Whig (ie: 18th century Liberal) who represented the locality as MP for Ballinasloe in the Irish House of Commons. His son Richard also sat in the Irish Parliament. Following the rebellion of 1798, both father and son voted against Pitt’s Act of Union in 1799 and the act was defeated. William was raised to the Irish House of Lords as Baron Kilconnell of Garbally. In 1800, his support for the rejigged Act of Union earned him advancement to Viscount Dunlo of Dunlo & Ballinasloe in 1800. In 1802, this loyal and ambitious Whig was further elevated to the peerage as 1st Earl of Clancarty as a member of the English rather than the Irish peerage. This title had previously been bestowed upon a Munster clan but they lost it along the way, I can’t remember why. The 1st Earl was born in 1741. On 30th October 1762, he married Anne Gardiner, daughter of the Right Hon Charles Gardiner (1720–1769) and Florinda Norman. Anne’s brother Luke was elevated to the peerage as Viscount Mountjoy but was killed negotiating a peace with the Irish rebels at New Ross in the summer of 1798.  

The 1st Earl of Clancarty was clearly determined to keep his new blue blood flowing for his good, broad-hipped wife bore him no less than 10 sons and 9 daughters. He died on 27 April 1805; Lady Anne survived him until her death on 8 July 1829 at the age of 83. 

The 1st Earl’s Children (and he had 19!) 

The eldest son Richard (1767 – 1837) succeeded as 2nd Earl. The second son Power (1770 – 1839) went on to become Archbishop of Tuam. The third son William (4 Jul 1771 – 14 Aug 1846) became a Rear Admiral in the Royal Navy. He may well have provided the interest for the young William McClintock Bunbury to set sail at the age of 12 in 1812. The fourth son was the Venerable Charles le Poer Trench (Dec 1772 – 1839). The sixth son, Sir Robert le Poer Trench was born in 1782. On 21 November 1805 – six months after the McClintock wedding – he married Letitia Susanna Dillon, daughter of Robert Dillon, 1st Baron Clonbrock. He died aged 41 on 14th March 1823. Letitia died at Nice, France, on 25 March 1865, leaving four daughters – Fanny (d. 28 Dec 1888), Elizabeth (d. 9 Dec 1867), Emily (d. 13 Sept 1899) and Augusta (d. 10 Dec 1914). 
 
As noted earlier, the Earls’s daughter, Lady Elizabeth, married the widower John McClintock and thus provides a vital link to Lisnavagh.  

Her sister, Lady Florinda married William Handcock, 1st Viscount Castlemaine on 20 March 1782. She died on 9th February 1851. William was killed during the Night of the Big Wind on 7th January 1839 at the age of 77. There were no children and so the Castlemaine title passed to William’s brother Richard Handcock (May 1767 – 18 April 1840). 

Another sister, Lady Frances married Henry Stanley Monck, 2nd Viscount Monck of Charleville on 28 July 1806. She died on 22nd Nov 1843. The 2nd Viscount died on 20 September 1848 at age 63 leaving four daughters – Lady Elizabeth (d. 16 June 1892), Lady Frances Isabella (d. 9 June 1871), Lady Georgiana Ellen (d. 20 march 1887).  

Another sister Lady Harriette La Touche (d. 17 Nov 1855) was married in January 1805 to Sir Daniel Toler Osborne, 12th Bart (1783-1853), with whom she had three sons and three daughters. Their oldest son William (1805-1875) succeeded as 13th Bart but left no children by his marriage to Maria Thompson of Clonfin, Co. Longford. His next brother down, Major Thomas Frederic Osborne, Madras Army, had succumbed to Asiatic cholera on 18 Feb 1846, on the same day as his wife Anne Letitia, his cousin and the only daughter of the Hon. Ven. Charles Le Poer Trench, Archdeacon of Ardagh. As such the baronetcy passed to Sir David and Lady Harriette’s third son, Sir Charles Stanley Osborne, 13th Bart, of Beechwood Park, Co. Tipperary. The heir apparent to the baronetcy at time of writing (May 2017) is George Osborne, Chancellor of the Exchequer in David Cameron’s cabinet. 

A fourth daughter Lady Emily predeceased her parents and died on 22 Nov 1837.  

  

Above: John McClintock’s brother-in-law, Richard, Earl  
of Clancarty, was one of the principle negotiators for  
Britain in the Congress of Vienna which marked the  
end of the Napoleonic Wars. He is pictured here,  
the short and stocky chap standing five from the right. 

The Diplomatic 2nd Earl 

Lady Elizabeth McClintock’s eldest brother Richard succeeded as 2nd Earl of Clancarty. Born on 19th May 1767, Richard was an outstanding diplomat who performed an instrumental role at the Congress of Vienna which ended the Napoleonic Wars, invented Belgium and the Netherlands, awarded Capetown to the English and substantially changed the frontiers of Europe. In 1807 he was appointed to the Privy Council, a group entrusted with Britain’s foreign and domestic policies. With him in the council were men such as Arthur Wellesley (later Duke of Wellington), the 4th Duke of Richmond, Spenser Perceval and Lord Palmerston). From 1812 – 1814, Richard occupied the post of Master of the Mint, the highest officer in the royal mint and a position that entitled him to sit in on cabinet meetings. From September 29th 1812 – January 24th 1818 he was President of the Board of Trade, another cabinet level position, that put him in charge of devoping Britain’s international trade. This coincided with a European recession that followed the end of the Napoleonic Wars.  

Bishop John Kirby added in 2018: “He was a friend of the Duke of Wellington and was due to welcome George IV to Garbally, but the visit never took place, George having done a “Boris Yeltsin” on the boat at Kingstown! However, the massive Thomas Lawrence portrait of George IV still hangs in Garbally, having been moved there some time in the 1820’s. This is a copy of an original in Windsor Castle. I have seen another copy in the Vatican.’ There is also a copy in Slane Castle, where Lady Elizabeth Conyngham once resided. 

His eldest daughter Lady Louisa Le Poer Trench married her cousin the Rev William Le Poer Trench and died in Dublin on 7 February 1881, aged 84. Her daughter Harriet Meredyth erected a tablet to her memory in Saint Peter’s Church, Ennisnag, County Kilkenny, which is the church where many of my Butler relatives are buried, including my grandparents and my late uncle James.  

Another of the 2nd Earl’s daughters was Lady Harriet Kavanagh, an extraordinary woman, who married Thomas Kavanagh of Borris House, County Carlow, and was mother to the Incredible Arthur Kavanagh. 

Benevolent Dictators? 

The Trenches are regularly hailed as “a rare example of enlightened landlords … held in high esteem to this day” . The family certainly helped the local community to avoid the worst excesses of the Great Famine, as well as funding the erection of public buildings (including their elegant grey limestone townhouse, now the Bank of Ireland), the paving of the streets and, later on, the introduction of gas lighting. In Ireland, the 2nd Earl eared some brownie points as Fair Landlord, refusing to allow his tenants to sub-let (cutting out the dreaded middlemen famous for extorting high rents on behalf of absentee landlords) and employing vast numbers of people throughout the region. Many were involved in remodelling Galbally House in 1819. There were no cottiertenants on the Clancarty estates. (These were tenants who offered free labour instead of rent, and were thus treated like slaves). 

However, Richard seriously blotted his copybook when it came to his antipathy towards the Roman Catholic Church. By this stage the whole Trench family were staunch Protestants. Elizabeth and Richard’s brother, the Most Rev. Power Trench (1770 – 16 March 1839) was Archbishop of Tuam. The family actively supported the local Bible Society and were apparently known to use brute force to assist the proselytising elements within and around Ballinasloe. The town’s website - www.ballinasloe.com - cites the 2nd Earl’s vocal opposition to any form of rights for Catholics, including his vote against the Catholic Emancipation bill. The website also suggests Richard’s initial opposition to the Act of Union was softened to a Yes vote when he was offered the lucrative office of the Postmaster General. This was shortly before John McClintock married his sister. When he died, his legacy included not just the impressive house at Garbally and a vast wealth, but also the right to us the name and arms of Le Poer as had been the wish of his great grandfather, Frederick III. 

The 3rd Earl, the Big Wind & the Great Famine 

Following the death of the 2nd Earl on 24th November 1837, his eldest son – Elizabeth McClintock’s nephew - William Thomas Le Poer became the 3rd Earl of Clancarty. Less than two years later, the Trench family must have been greatly affected by the events of the first week of January 1839. The Earl of Norbury died at midday on Thursday January 3rd having been shot in the lung and arm with eight slugs of a gun while strolling down one of the avenues of his home at Durrow Castle two days earlier. And then, on January 6th, came the Night of the Big Wind. Over 15,000 trees were apparently uprooted from the Clancarty estate. A further 20,000 were lost on the estate of their cousins, the Charlevilles. And at Moydrum Castle in County Westmeath, the 3rd Earl’s 78-year-old uncle William Handcock, 1st Viscount Castlemaine [husband of Lady Florinda Trench (daughter of William Power Keating Trench, 1st Earl of Clancarty and Anne Gardiner, Countess of Clancarty] was killed when the storm blew his bedroom window open with such force that he was flung onto his back and ‘expired instantly’. Perhaps this was the moment when the Clancarty family began to harden in their religious beliefs. Certainly many who witnessed the carnage of that dreadful night were inclined to think the Day of Judgment was close at hand. 

During his time, the 3rd Earl extensively remodelled the house at Garbally and had the gardens completely renovated. He duly proved as complex a man as his father, continuing his father’s policies such as the prohibition on sub-letting and the payment of a fair rate to labourers. He was also actively and rather aggressively involved in a campaign to convert his tenants to the Protestant cause, building Free Schools on his estate and in Ballinasloe and ordering his tenants to send their children to Bible studies at these schools or face eviction. On the other hand, the 3rd Earl inherited his father’s peculiar and rather feudal values as a landlord and, during the Famine, Ballinasloe suffered far less than it might have done under another man. The absence of any middlemen and the 3rd Earl’ refusal to mass evict his tenants earned the Trench family a respect that endures to this day. Among the Good Things he did was to establish the Ballinasloe Farming Society which had a model farm set up in the Deerpark to instruct farmers in modern farming techniques. “It was also by his efforts that the main streets of Ballinasloe were paved at this time. These things and the fact that he was a sponsor of the workhouse, show that he tried to some extent to alleviate some of the worst extremes of suffering at that tragic time” . 

The rough and ready fair landlord / evangelical nightmare traits of the Trench family continued on to the 3rd Earls’ son and heir, Richard, 4th Earl of Clancarty. [He built Coorheen House on his marriage in 1861. When he became the 4th Earl in 1872 and moved to Garbally, Coorheen House became the Dower House for the family.] 

Colonel William Thomas Le Poer Trench, the 3rd son of the 3rd Earl of Clancarty, grew up at Garbally House from 1835 to 1850. He later made the claim that the Golden Retriever breed of dog originated from Russia, to which empire he made several visits in the late 19th century. The purpose of his trips was to find new breeding stock but all his visits were unsuccessful. His theory was debunked in 1954 when the original stud book that had been kept by Dudley Coutts Marjoribanks, the first Lord Tweedmouth, from 1840 to 1890 was given to the Kennel Club by Lady Pentland. (WIth thanks to Malcolm Morecroft) 

Belle Bilton – The Dancing Girl 

William Le Poer Trench, later to become the 5th Earl of Clancarty, promoted tremendous gossip when he hooked up with a dancing gal named Belle Biltonand, while still a minor, married her totally against his father’s wishes. A scandalous court case ensued in which the 4th Earl tried to have the marriage declared void on account of William’s minority but the court went with the young lovers and the 4th Earl was shafted with the costs. Seeing nowt but trouble ahead, the 4th Earl began selling off his assets rapidly but died suddenly, mysteriously even?, in 1891. He was buried alongside his ancestors in the vault at Garbally House. The couple are the subject of  

The new Earl and his wife took up residence at Garbally Court while his mother, still miffed about Belle, moved to Coorheen House where she lived for a period. When she moved to Loughrea, her son sold the house to Bishop Thomas O’Dea as a residence for the bishops of Clonfert; the bishops of Clonfert have lived there since then. 

Nonetheless, the 5th Earl’s estate was considerably reduced in size to that in which he had grown up as a youngster. He didn’t have much interest in religion, thank God, but still maintained the family sense of fairness when it came to being a landlord. When Wyndham’s Land Reform Act was passed in 1903, he settled by mutual agreement the sale of much of his land. This sale and the reduction of family fortunes prompted the Earl to sell Galbally Court in 1907, during which year he was declared bankrupt and moved to Merry England. In May 1920, Lord Clancarty was summoned by the Director of Public Prosecutions to appear at the Bow-street Police Court yesterday, before Mr. Chester Jones, charged with ‘a number of offences under the Bankruptcy Act, 1914, and with obtaining money and goods by false pretences.’ (The Times, May 13, 1920, p. 13)  

In 1923 Garbally Court, the main family home of the Earls of Clancarty at Ballinasloe, was also sold to the diocese of Clonfert. In 1924 with the name changed to St Joseph’s College, Garbally Park, it became the diocesan college for Clonfert. Today Ballinasloe is a busy manufacturing centre, backed up by a local healthcare centre, three 2nd level schools, numerous tourist attractions, sports clubs and a burgeoning arts community. 

‘The Earl of Clancarty died on Saturday from pneumonia following influenza. William Frederick Poer Trench was the head of the Trench family in Ireland, and enjoyed no fewer than five Peerages, being Earl of Clancarty, Viscount Dunlo, and Baron Kilconnel in the Peerage of Ireland, and Viscount Clancarty and Baron Trench in the Peerage the United Kingdom. He was, moreover,  Marquis of Heusden in the Netherlands, an honour conferred by the King of the Netherlands on his ancestor, the second Earl of Clancarty, when he was Ambassador at The Hague. Born on December 29, 1868, the son of the fourth Earl and Lady Adeliza Georgiana Hervey, daughter of the second Marquis of Bristol, the late Peer was educated at Eton, and succeeded his father in 1891. His first wife was “Belle Bilton” (Isabel Maude Penrice Bilton), a popular music-hall artist, and the daughter a sergeant in the Royal Engineers. She died in 1906, and in 1908 he married Mary Gwatkins, daughter of the late Mr. W. F. Rosslewin Ellis, Barrister-at- Law. The successor to the title is the eldest son by the first wife, Richard Frederick John Donough Le Poer Trench. Lord Kilconnel, who was born in 1891, and was for a time in the Royal Naval Air Service. Lord Kilconnel obtained a divorce from his first wife in 1918, and in the following year he married Cora Maria Edith, elder daughter the late Mr. H. H. Spooner, of Thornton Hall, Surrey.’ Londonderry Sentinel – Tuesday 19 February 1929 

The Sixth Earl 

The 5th Earl was succeeded in 1929 by his son Richard Frederick, the 6th Earl. Prior to his succession, he was known as Lord Kilconnel. Born in 1891, he served for a time in the Royal Naval Air Service.  

A SURPRISE VISIT – EARL’S SON TRAPS WIFE AND HER LOVER. In the Divorce Court yesterday Lord Kilconnel, eldest son and heir of the Earl of Clancarty, was granted a decree nisi on the ground of the misconduct his wife, Edith, with the co-respondent, Percy Shuttleworth. The suit was undefended. Counsel said the marriage took place in 1915. Lord Kilconnel was in the Air Service, and that necessitated his being away good deal. While at Hendon he received a communication, in consequence of which he went last February to a flat in Mayfair, tenanted by the co-respondent. He found his wife partly dressed, and it appeared she had passed the night there. She made some excuse, but inquiries disclosed that she had been in the habit of going to the flat at night and remaining there with Shuttleworth. Lord Kilconnel stated that his wife said the flat had been lent to her for the night the co-respondent. Witness found certain letters. One, beginning “Percy, dear,” contained the following sentences. “Do you think I should be a bad investment?Certainly, I am extravagant, and very helpless. It’s all very well to speak of the pleasures of full responsibility; but I will be rather a burden, and not altogether satisfactory.” Another letter, beginning “Darling boy,” was signed “Kitten,” respondent’s pet name.  
Nottingham Journal – Friday 10 May 1918 

Lord Kilconnel obtained a divorce from his Edith later that year. In 1919, he married Cora Maria Edith, elder daughter the late Mr. H. H. Spooner, of Thornton Hall, Surrey. 

LORD KILCONNELS DEBTS. Mr. Registrar Fracke in the Bankruptcy Court yesterday made an order approving a composition of 5s in the £and annulling the bankruptcy of Lord Kilconnel who failed in July 1919. Lord Kilconnel’s debts were estimated at £3,371 and the bankruptcy was attributed to pressure by the holders of bills of exchange drawn by his father, the Earl of Clancarty, and accepted by him. and promissory notes given by them jointly for the purpose of raising money.  
Birmingham Daily Gazette – Saturday 18 June 1921 

Lord Kilconnel, who succeeds his father, Lord Clancarty who has just died, following an attack of influenza, had many exciting adventures during the war in the Royal Air Force, and was a very popular officer. The news of Lord Clancarty’s death came as a great shock and surprise at Little Weir House, Marlow. Bucks, where Lord and Lady Kilconnel are in residence, and the whole district has shown its sympathy with the household. Lady Kilconnel spends most of her time at Marlow and society life in London has no attraction for her. She was presented at Court in 1923, five years after her marriage, but her circles in town see her on very few and far between occasions. Before her marriage she was Miss Cora Spooner of Bourne Court, Bourne End. It is unlikely that her new title will mean a change in her rather retiring mode of life, but, although the London society whirl does not appeal to her, at Marlow she is personally known to people for miles around.  
Belfast Telegraph - Monday 18 February 1929 

Mary Lady Clancarty is now in London, but is going off to Gleneagles early next month, and afterwards will stay with friends. She is busy with her children, Lady Alma and the Hon. Brinsley Le Poer Trench. The boy is a cricket fan, and has been to the Oval most days. Lady Alma, who is pretty and has long, fair hair, is becoming quite a bridge enthusiast.  
Daily Mirror – Friday 23 August 1929 

The 6th Earl’s brother, The Hon Greville Le Poer Trench, later became the 7th Earl. He had no family so the title passed to his step brother, Brinsley. 

The 8th Earl & his UFOs 

The local community must have still been wondering about the state of the Clancarty’s head in recent years. One of the most amusing anecdotes to have emerged from recent research into debates in the House of Lords was a discussion initiated on Thursday January 18th 1979 by the 8th Earl of Clancarty, a son of Frederick’s 2nd wife, Mary Gwatkin Ellis. He was editor of the Flying Saucer Review and author of seven books on the subject. At this time Britain was at the height of an economic and industrial melt down, later dubbed the Winter of Discontent, and there was a very real danger of mass deployment of troops to calm the escalating anarchy and rioting across the once mighty kingdom. The Earl stood up to address his fellow peers and did so with the following words: “It is with much pleasure that I introduce this debate about unidentified flying objects – known more briefly as UFOs and sometimes as flying saucers.” In fairness to the Earl, there had recently been a highly peculiar situation a few weeks earlier when three ducks, a goose, a swan and two baby wallabies were found dead at Newquay Zoo in Cornwall; on January 3 it had been reported that their bodies revealed significant traces of radiation. This was being linked to sightings of UFOs in the area. 

I’ll leave the rest of the tale to Tim Coates who wrote a wee tale essay on the subject. 

Clancarty, who died in 1995, was 67 when he initiated his debate, calling for an inter-governmental study of UFOs. He was a heavyweight in the field, an editor of the Flying Saucer Review and author of seven books on the subject. Clancarty believed that the human race derived from aliens from several galaxies (this accounted for our various skin colours); they had landed here 65,000 years ago and some of them still inhabited the centre of the earth. Asked what had happened to all these aliens, he once replied: “Well, you do see a lot of strange people around, don’t you?” In the Lords debate, Clancarty was careful to stick to what he took to be well-documented sightings, including one over Iran in September 1976. In this incident a large glowing object was seen over the capital, Tehran, and a Phantom jet was scrambled to investigate; when the pilot tried to fire an air-to-air missile at the object, said Clancarty, he found that “the weapons control panel was not working and all electronic systems were out of action“.  

The time had come, Clancarty told their lordships, for the British Minister of Defence to make a public broadcast about UFOs: “That would go a long way to discredit the view held by a lot of people in this country that there is a cover-up here, and that in some way we are playing along with the United States over this.”  

All this was a little too much for Lord Trefgarne, a qualified pilot, who had never seen a UFO in 2,500 flying hours. He said: “Since time immemorial, man has ascribed those phenomena that he could not explain to some supernatural or extraterrestrial agents. Today, no one takes witchcraft seriously, and there are no fairies at the bottom of my garden.”  

Clancarty himself never saw a UFO, although he once spotted what he called an “eerie white light” crossing the night sky over his flat in South Kensington. To the end of his life, however, he stuck to his beliefs; and you feel that his fellow peers, however scornful, were grateful to Clancarty for raising matters which, in Lord Gladwyn‘s words, “take one’s mind off the absolutely frightful everyday events” of the Winter of Discontent. At the height of his fame as UFO expert, he was interviewed by Terry Wogan on BBC TV.  

Nicholas, 9th Earl of Clancarty, is a son of Power Le Poer Trench and a nephew of Brinsley. He was a member of the House of Lords until Tony Blair’s legislation, but, as of 2011, he was back in the House of Lords, having been elected a hereditary crossbencher in June 2010. His sister Caroline Hill lives in High Wycombe, England.  

The Ballinasloe Horse Fair 

THE BALLINASLOE FAIR is one of Europe’s oldest Horse Fairs. It is held in East Galway’s principal town on the first week of October each year. In the beginning, the Fair was more versatile, supplying both livestock and labourers to local landowners, but the power of the horse rapidly came to the fore. Indeed there is a remarkable account of how agents from the Great Powers of Europe, especially Russia and France, would come to Ballinasloe to seek out cavalry horses, draught horses and ponies for the baggage trains of these great armies. Some say that anything up to 6000 horses would change hands in a single day, which sounds like exceptional business but I guess a lot of horses must have copped it during battles such as Fontenroy and Waterloo. Local legend has it that Napoleon’s horse Marengo was purchased at Ballinasloe.But you will hear that very same legend at many a fair across the west of Europe! Alas, the emergence of the motor car, the tractor and the tank gradually whittled away the influence of the horse and the four legged beast was soon transferred to the kinder pursuits of leisure – namely hunting and racing. Incidentally, there’s a cracking good racecourse at Ballinasloe if that takes you’re fancy … or you could try a day out with the East Galway Hunt. The October Fair continues to this day, although in a much more modest format, providing a livestock market for farmers throughout the region. 

NB: Thomas Maunsell, Sir, CB (1875), KCB (1897), of Ballywilliam and Burghclere, Newbury, Berks, Major–Gen, sometime 13th Somerset LI, 32nd LI, and 28th (Gloucs) Regt, served in Punjab Campaign 1848–49 (wounded twice), in Crimean War 1854–55 (severely wounded), and in Indian Mutiny 1858–60, had Order of the Medjidie, b 10 Sept 1822, educ Trin Coll Dublin, m Feb 1865, Amy Louisa Elizabeth (d 1919), dau of Col Robert Edward Burrowes, KH, JP, of Bourton Court, Somerset, by his wife Fanny Catherine, eldest dau of Col Sir Robert Le Poer Trench, KCB, KTS (see BURKE’S Peerage, CLANCARTY, E), and d 4 July 1908, leaving issue etc.  

Share3 

  

With thanks to Roderick Ashtown Trench, Rod Smith and John Kirby, Bishop of Clonfert. The latter kindly wrote to me in July 2018, updating some of this information. John is a past student of St Joseph College, Garbally Park, (formerly Garbally Court) Ballinasloe (1951 – 1956). Following his ordination to the priesthood, he began a teaching career in the same school. He later became school principal and lived in Clancarty House, Garbally for another 25 years, 1963 – 1988. In 1988 he was appointed Bishop of Clonfert and he currently lives in Coorheen House, Curheen, Loughrea. 

Spiddle House (or Spiddal),  Spiddal, County Galway

Spiddle House (or Spiddal),  Spiddal, County Galway

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. 262. “(Morris, Killanin, B/PB) Originally a small Georgian house, which was replaced by a large house of two and three storeys with irregular elevations built in 1910 by 2nd Lord Killanin, to the design of William A. Scott. Plain rectangular plate-glass windows and features in a Romanesque style; at one end a square tower surmounted by an open belvedere with Romanesque columns and a dome; alongside the tower, a two storey veranda with Romanesque columns and arches. At the other end, a Romanesque loggia joined to the house by a short colonnade surmounted by an iron balcony; sculptures by Michael Shorthall, of Loughrea, above the capitals of the columns. In the centre of the principal front, a single-storey projection with an iron balcony and a Regency-style veranda above it. The house was rebuit 1931 after a fire 1923, the architect of the rebuildings being M. Byrne. The principal front of the house, as rebuilt, is basically similar to what it was previously, and the Romanesque loggia and two storey Romaneque veranda remain as they were; but the tower is no longer surmounted by a belvedere, the single-storey projection in the middle of the front has been removed and the windows now have astragals. Sold ca 1960 by 3rd and present Lord Killanan.” 

see http://lordbelmontinnorthernireland.blogspot.com/2015/07/1st-baron-killanin.html

THE BARONS KILLANIN OWNED 1,274 ACRES OF LAND IN COUNTY GALWAY 

The family of MORRIS is one of the “Tribes of Galway”, an expression first used by Cromwell’s soldiers in 1652. 

So far back as 1486 Richard Morris was Bailiff of Galway under a charter granted in 1485 by RICHARD III to the inhabitants of Galway, empowering them to elect a mayor and two bailiffs. 

From him were lineally descended John Morris, Bailiff of Galway, 1501; William Morris, Mayor of Galway, 1527; Andrew Morris, Mayor of Galway, 1588; George Morris, Bailiff of Galway, 1588; John Morris, of Galway; Andrew Morris, of Galway; and James Morris, of Galway. 

GEORGE MORRIS, of Spiddal, County Galway (son of JAMES MORRIS), served in JAMES II’s army. 

He married, in 1684, Catherine, daughter of John Fitzpatrick, of Loughmore, in the south island of Arran, whose nephew Richard Fitzpatrick represented Galway in the Irish parliament, 1749-61. 

By this marriage the property of Spiddal was acquired. 

His only son, 

ANDREW MORRIS, of Spiddal and Galway, wedded Monica Browne, of the family of Gloves, near Athenry, and had two sons, 

George; 
JAMES, of whom we treat

The second son, 

JAMES MORRIS (1732-1813), of Spiddal and Galway, espoused, in 1762, Deborah, daughter of Nicholas Lynch, of Galway, and had issue, 

Ambrose; 
Michael; 
MARTIN, of whom hereafter; 
Monica; Mary. 

His third son, 

MARTIN MORRIS JP (1784-1862), of Spiddal and Galway, High Sheriff of Galway, 1841, married, in 1822, Julia, daughter of Dr Charles Blake, of Galway, and had two sons and two daughters, 

MICHAEL, of whom presently
George (Sir), KCB DL MP etc; 
Jane Caroline; Lizzie. 

Mr Morris’s elder son, 

THE RT HON SIR MICHAEL MORRIS QC (1826-1901), of Spiddal and Galway, wedded, in 1860, Anna, daughter of Henry George Hughes, Baron of the Court of Exchequer in Ireland. and had issue, 

MARTIN HENRY FITZPATRICK, his heir
George Henry, father of the 3rd Baron
Michael Redmond; 
Charles Ambrose; 
Lily; Rose Julia; Maud Anna; Mary Kathleen; 
Frances Anne; Eileen Elizabeth. 

Sir Michael rose to become one of the most distinguished judges of his time, as LORD CHIEF JUSTICE OF THE KING’S BENCH FOR IRELAND, 1887-89. 

He was created a baronet, in 1885, denomianted of Spiddal, County Galway. 

Following his appointment as a law lord, in 1889, Sir Michael was elevated to the peerage, as BARON KILLANIN, of Galway, County Galway. 

His lordship was succeeded by his eldest son, 

MARTIN HENRY FITZPATRICK, 2nd Baron, PC JP (1867-1927), of Spiddal, High Sheriff of Galway, 1897. 

His lordship was the last Lord-Lieutenant of County Galway, from 1918 until 1922. 

He died unmarried, and was succeeded by his nephew (the son of Lieutenant-Colonel the Hon George Henry Morris, Irish Guards), 

MICHAEL, 3rd Baron (1914-99), MBE TD, of Spiddal, who espoused, in 1945, (Mary) Sheila Cathcart Dunlop MBE, daughter of the Rev Canon Douglas Lyall Cathcart Dunlop, and had issue, 

GEORGE REDMOND FITZPATRICK, his successor
Michael Francis Leo“Mouse”
John Martin; 
Monica Deborah. 

His lordship, a journalist, author, and sport official, was renowned for his presidency of the International Olympic Committee. 

He was appointed MBE (Military Division), 1945. 

The 3rd Baron was succeeded by his eldest son, 

GEORGE REDMOND FITZPATRICK, 4th and present Baron, born in 1947, a film producer, who wedded firstly, in 1972, Pauline, daughter of Geoffrey Horton, and had issue, 

LUKE MICHAEL GEOFFREY, born in 1975; 
Olivia Rose Elizabeth, born in 1974. 

He married secondly, in 2000, Sheila Elizabeth, daughter of Patrick Lynch. 

The present Baron lives in Dublin. 

SPIDDAL HOUSE, Spiddal, County Galway, replaced a considerable smaller Georgian house. 

The present mansion consists of two and three storeys, in different places. 

It was built in 1910 for Martin, 2nd Lord Killanin. 

The windows are rectangular, plain, Romanesque-style. 

One end of the house features a tower (a belvedere prior to the 1923 fire) with Romanesque columns. 

Beside this tower there is a two-storey veranda with further Romanesque columns and arches. 

The opposite end has a loggia, joined to the house by a colonnade with an iron balcony. 

Spiddal House suffered a fire in 1923 and was subsequently rebuilt in 1931. 

The 3rd Baron sold Spittal about 1960. 

Mount Bellew House, Co Galway – demolished

Mount Bellew House, Co Galway – ‘lost’

Mount Bellew, County Galway entrance front c. 1885, collection: Mrs Grattan-Bellew, 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.

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. 212. “(Grattan-Bellew, Bt/PB) A house of predominantly late-Georgian appearance, remodelled ante 1820 by Sir Richard Morrison for C.D. Bellew. …Sold ca 1938, afterwards demolished.” 

Mount Bellew, County Galway, collection Mrs Grattan-Bellew, Dining room 1885. 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.
Mount Bellew, County Galway, collection Mrs Grattan-Bellew, 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.

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.

 http://lordbelmontinnorthernireland.blogspot.com/2016/03/mount-bellew-house.html

THE GRATTAN-BELLEW BARONETS OWNED 10,516 ACRES OF LAND IN COUNTY GALWAY 

 
This family springs from a common ancestor with the BARONS BELLEW, of Barmeath Castle. 
 
Michael Bellew was a descendant of Christopher Bellew, brother of the first Baronet, Sir Patrick Bellew. 
 
MICHAEL BELLEW, of Mount Bellew, County Galway, married Jane, daughter of Henry Dillon, and had issue, 
 

CHRISTOPHER DILLON, his heir
Mary Catherine.  

Mr Bellew died in 1797, and was succeeded by his son, 
 
CHRISTOPHER DILLON BELLEW (1763-1826), of Mount Bellew, who wedded, in 1794, Olivia Emily, only daughter of Anthony, 4th Baron Nugent of Riverston, and had issue, 
 
MICHAEL DILLON BELLEW (1796-1855), of Mount Bellew, who espoused, in 1816, Helena Maria, daughter of Thomas Dillon, of Dublin, and had numerous issue, of whom 
 

CHRISTOPHER, his heir
Thomas Arthur, father of 3rd Baronet. 

Mr Bellew was created a baronet in 1838, denominated of Mount Bellew, County Galway. 
 
He was succeeded by his eldest son, 
 
THE REV SIR CHRISTOPHER BELLEW, 2nd Baronet (1818-67), a Catholic priest, whose brother, 
 
THOMAS ARTHUR BELLEW (1820-63), married, in 1858, Pauline, daughter of the Rt Hon James Grattan MP, and had issue, 
 

HENRY CHRISTOPHER, his heir
Mary Helena. 

Mr Bellew added the name and arms of GRATTAN in 1859. 
 
He was succeeded by his son, 
 
HENRY CHRISTOPHER GRATTAN-BELLEW (1860-1942), of Mount Bellew, who, succeeding his uncle as 3rd Baronet, wedded, in 1885, the Lady Sophia Maria Elizabeth Forbes, daughter of George, 7th Earl of Granard, and had issue, 
 

Herbert Michael, 1886-1906; 
CHARLES CHRISTOPHER; 
William Arthur; 
Thomas Henry; 
Arthur John (Sir), Knight, CMG; 
Helena Barbara; Moira Jane; Angela Mary. 

Sir Henry was succeeded by his eldest surviving son, 
 
SIR CHARLES CHRISTOPHER GRATTAN-BELLEW, 4th Baronet (1887-1948), MC, who wedded, in 1923, Maureen Peyton, daughter of Sir Thomas George Segrave, and had issue, 
 

HENRY CHARLES, his successor
Deirdre Maureen. 

Sir Charles, Lieutenant-Colonel, King’s Royal Rifle Corps, was succeeded by his son, 
 
SIR HENRY CHARLES GRATTAN-BELLEW, 5th and present Baronet, born in 1933, who married firstly, in 1956, Naomi, daughter of Dr Charles Cyril Morgan; secondly, in 1967, Gillian Hulley; and thirdly, in 1978, Elzabe Amy, daughter of Henry Gilbert Body. 
 
By his second wife he had issue, 
 

PATRICK CHARLES, b 1971; 
Deirdre Sophia, b 1967. 

MOUNT BELLEW HOUSE, Mount Bellew Bridge, County Galway, was a house of mainly late-Georgian style. 
 
It was remodelled ca 1820 by Christopher Dillon Bellew. 
 
Mount Bellew comprised a three-storey centre block, with a single-bay entrance front. 
 
The central block had a Venetian window at the top storey of the centre block. 
 
It boasted a notable library which was said to have held one of the finest collections of books during its era. 
 
Mount Bellew was sold about 1938 and subsequently demolished. 
 
First published in March, 2016. 

Menlough (or Menlo) Castle, Co Galway – ruin

Menlough (or Menlo) Castle, Co Galway – ‘lost’

Menlough Castle, County Galway, 1896, 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.
Menlo Castle, County Galway, photograph courtesy Daniel Finnerty instagram @greatirishhouses

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. 205. “(Blake, Bt of Menlough/PB) A gabled C17 tower house with tall chimneystacks in the gables, on the bank of the Corrib River two miles above Galway; altered and enlarged at various periods…. Menlough Castle was the scene of much high-living in C18 and early C19; Sir John Blake, 12th Bt, is said to have been made an MP to give him immunity from his creditors; according to the story, when he had been duly elected, his constituents came as a body to Menlough and called him ashore from the boat in which he was sitting in order to avoid two process-servers who were waiting for him on the riverbank. In Victorian and Edwardian days, there were less extravagant festivities; regattas and parties on the lawns by the river. Then, on 26 July 1910, there was a disasterous fire at the castle, in which Eleanor Blake, the daughter of 14th Bt, perished. The entire building was gutted, and has remained a ruin ever since.” 

Menlough Castle, County Galway, photograph by Robert French, (between ca. 1865-1914), Lawrence Photograph Collection, National Library of Ireland.

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.

Menlough Castle, County Galway, photograph by Robert French, (between ca. 1865-1914), Lawrence Photograph Collection, National Library of Ireland.
Menlough Castle, County Galway, photograph by Robert French, (between ca. 1865-1914), Lawrence Photograph Collection, National Library of Ireland.

see http://lordbelmontinnorthernireland.blogspot.com/2018/09/menlough-castle.html

Clonbrock, Ahascragh, Co Galway – ‘lost’

Clonbrock, Ahascragh, Co Galway  – ‘lost’

Clonbrock, County Galway, photograph courtesy of National Library of Ireland.

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. 86. “(Dillon, Clonbrock, B/PB1926; Dillon-Mahon, sub Mahon, Bt/PB) A house of three storeys over basement built between 1780 and 1788 by Robert Dillon, afterwards 1st Lord Clonbrock, to the design of William Leeson, replacing the old castle of this branch of the Dillons which remained intact until 1807 when it was burnt owing to a bonfire lit to celebrate the birth of 2nd Baron’s son and heir. Seven bay entrance front with three bay pedimented breakfront; doorway with blocked engaged Tuscan columns and entablature. A single storey Doric portico by John Hampton was added ca 1824, while in 1855 3rd Baron added a single-storey two bay bow-ended wing to the right of the entrance front, which is balanced by a single-storey wing on the left hand side, though the two do not match. Good interior plasterwork of the 1780s, in the manner of Michael Stapleton. Classical medallions and husk ornament on the walls of the hall, at the inner end of which stood a splendid organ in a mahogany case surmounted by a baron’s coronet. Medallions and husk ornaments also on the walls of the staircase hall, which has an oval ceiling of particularly graceful plasterwork on fan pendentives; coloured salmon pink, brown, pale grey and white. Stone staircase wiht balustrade of brass uprights. Large drawing room with coved ceiling and modillion cornice in 1855 wing opening with double doors into a smaller drawing room in the main block, to form what is in effect one long room which, a few years ago, still had a delightful early Victorian character; with a grey watered silk wallpaper and curtains of cream and faded pink as background to the glitter of two crystal chandeliers and of the many gilt frames of the pictures and of the mirror over the fine statuary marble chimneypiece. When the room was being fitted up, 3rd Baron’s son, who at the time was a young diplomat in Vienna, wrote home to give instructions as to how the floor was to be laid, so that it might be suitable for dancing the latest waltzes. After the death of 5th and last Baron 1926, Clonbrock passed to his sister, Hon Ethel Dillon; it was subsequently made over to her nephew, Mr Luke Dillon-Mahon, who sold it 1976.” 

Clonbrock, County Galway, 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.
Clonbrock main staircase plasterwork, County Galway, photograph: William Garner c. 1975. 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.

https://www.buildingsofireland.ie/buildings-search/building/30406012/clonbrock-house-clonbrock-demesne-co-galway

Clonbrock, County Galway, courtesy of National Inventory of Architectural Heritage.

Detached eight-bay three-storey over basement country house, built c.1790, now ruined, having square plan with three-bay pedimented breakfront, Doric entrance porch added c.1824, three-storey over basement single-bay extension with parapet roof and brick cornice to north-west, single-storey bow-ended wing to south-east added c.1855, and two-storey wing to north-west. Ruled and lined lime rendered façade. Porch, accessed by four stone steps, has carved stone entablature with triglyph and metope detail and moulded cornice with dentils above, supported on four fluted Doric columns. Remains of two pairs of rendered chimneystacks to centre of plan, brick chimneystack to north-west wing, moulded cornice at eaves, cast-iron rainwater goods. Square-headed window openings with tooled limestone sills and moulded shouldered limestone surrounds, remains of six-over-six pane timber sliding sash windows to rear. Double-leaf timber entrance door with lancet-patterned fanlight above, fluted entablature and column and block limestone surround with patera motif. Set in own extensive grounds with two-storey rendered outbuildings forming a courtyard to rear, one of which in use as private dwelling. 

Appraisal 

Clonbrock House was designed by William Leeson for Robert Dillon, the 3rd Baron Clonbrock, and constructed from 1780-1788 to replace the old castle which stood on the site. Unusually, it remained in the possession of the Dillon family for almost 200 years. Sold in 1976 when the last member of the Clonbrock family, Miss Ethel Dillon, moved out, the contents of the house were auctioned off. The National Library of Ireland acquired the estate papers in the auction, a valuable insight into the management of a large Irish country house. A fire blazed through the house in 1984, destroying the intricately detailed interior. Though now ruined, this imposing country house retains its sense of grandeur and the high level of design and craftsmanship is evident in the remaining fabric, such as the ornate entrance porch and the finely tooled stone window surrounds. It is an important part of the social and architectural heritage of the area. 

Clonbrock, County Galway, courtesy of National Inventory of Architectural Heritage.
Clonbrock, County Galway, courtesy of National Inventory of Architectural Heritage.

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.

p. 69. …Destroyed by fire in 1984. Now a ruin.

http://lordbelmontinnorthernireland.blogspot.com/2016/02/clonbrock-house.html

THE BARONS CLONBROCK WERE MAJOR LANDOWNERS IN COUNTY GALWAY, WITH 28,246 ACRES OF LAND 

This family deduces its descent from a common progenitor with the Dillons, Earls of Roscommon, and the Dillons, Viscounts Dillon. 

Sir James Dillon, brother of Sir Maurice, who was ancestor of the Viscount Dillon, was father of Sir Robert, who had two sons, Sir Richard, of Riverston, ancestor of the Earls of Roscommon; and Gerald, ancestor of the Barons Clonbrock. 

This Gerald married Elizabeth, daughter of John, Baron Barry, and was ancestor of Thomas Dillon, of Clonbrock, County Galway, Chief Justice of Connaught, 1603; from whom was descended 
 
ROBERT DILLON (c1704-46), MP for Dungarvan, 1728-46, who wedded Margaret, daughter of Morgan Magan, of Togherston House, County Westmeath, and was father of 
 
LUKE DILLON, of Clonbrock, who wedded Bridget, daughter of John Kelly, of Castle Kelly, County Galway, and the Lady Honoria Burke, daughter of John, 9th Earl of Clanricarde, and had issue, 

ROBERT, his heir
Luke; 
John; 
Honoria; Susanna. 

The eldest son, 
 
ROBERT DILLON (1754-95), MP for Lanesborough, 1776-90, was elevated to the peerage, in 1793, in the dignity of BARON CLONBROCK, of Clonbrock, County Galway. 

His lordship married, in 1776, Letitia, only daughter and heir of John Greene, of Old Abbey, County Limerick, and niece, maternally, of John, Earl of Norbury, and had issue, 

LUKE, his successor
Catherine Bridget; Letitia Susannah. 

His lordship was succeeded by his son, 

LUKE, 2nd Baron (1780-1826), who wedded, in 1803, Anastasia, only daughter and heir of Joseph Henry, 1st Baron Wallscourt, by the Lady Louisa Catherine Bermingham, his wife, third daughter and co-heir of Thomas, Earl of Louth, and had issue, 

ROBERT, his successor
Louisa Harriet; Letitia. 

The only son, 

ROBERT, 3rd Baron (1807-93), espoused, in 1830, Caroline Elizabeth, daughter of Francis, 1st Baron Churchill, and had issue, 

Luke Almeric, died in infancy
LUKE GERALD, his successor
Fanny Letitia; Caroline Anastasia. 

His lordship was succeeded by his surviving son, 

LUKE GERALD, 4th Baron (1834-1917), KP PC, who married, in 1866, Augusta Caroline, daughter of Edward, 2nd Baron Crofton, and had issue, 

ROBERT EDWARD, his successor
Georgiana Caroline; Edith Augusta; Ethel Louisa. 

His lordship was succeeded by his only son, 

ROBERT EDWARD, 5th Baron (1869-1926), who died unmarried, when the title expired. CLONBROCK HOUSE, Ahascragh, County Galway, was built between 1780-88 by Robert Dillon, later 1st Baron Clonbrock. It comprised three storeys over a basement, and replaced a an older castle which was burnt in 1807 owing to a bonfire lit to celebrate the birth of his lordship’s son and heir, the 2nd Baron. Clonbrock had a seven-bay entrance front with a three-bay, pedimented breakfront. 
 
A single-storey Doric portico was added about 1824. In 1855, the 3rd Baron added a single-storey, two-bay bow-ended wing to the right of the entrance front. 
 
Following the death of the bachelor 5th Baron in 1926, Clonbrock passed to his sister, the Hon Ethel Louisa Dillon. 
 
It was subsequently bequeathed to her nephew, Mr Luke Dillon-Mahon, who sold it in 1976. Clonbrock suffered a catastrophic fire in 1984 and is now ruinous. 
 
First published in March, 2014.  Clonbrock arms courtesy of European Heraldry. 

http://davidhicksbook.blogspot.com/search?updated-max=2014-07-13T01:28:00-07:00&max-results=7&start=39&by-date=false

One of my favorite houses featured in my first book is Clonbrock in Galway. While the house exists today in ruins, every so often a piece of furniture comes up for sale that evokes the grandeur of this house.  The location of these items today is surprising, sometimes London and in this instance New York. In March 2014, a set of ten George III, Painted Dining Chairs came on the market having been supplied by Gillows of Lancaster in June, 1801 to Luke, 2nd Baron Clonbrock for his home, Clonbrock. These chairs together with the remaining contents of the house were sold in 1976. Clonbrock stood empty for a number of years until it burnt down in the 1980’s. 

In 1976, the decision was taken to sell the contents of the house by Luke Dillon Mahon. Agents from Christies and Linseys were dispatched to evaluate every last item in the house and an extensive catalogue was produced which described the 1500 lots in great detail. The fateful day eventually came when two blue and white striped tents were erected on the lawn in front of the house and the drive and adjoining fields were alive with the hum of cars and lorries. Over 500 people attended the auction and packed the auctioneers tent, just to view the proceedings of the end of an era or to bid on some memento of the big house. All the lots were displayed throughout the house, the dining room table heaved with china and porcelain and the lengthily sideboard displayed large dinner plates and chargers. Some of the locals seen the sale as necessary and others a tragedy. Most people at the time seen no future for a house of this nature unless some foolish person was looking for a home with a lot of cold rooms and acres of leaky roof. The beginning of the auction was marked by a storm which was a metaphor for perilous state that a house like this had been reduced to in the 1970s. Luke Dillon Mahon said his abiding memories of Clonbrock would be the family members that lived there and the view from the drawing room window. The final decision to sell was determined by the harsh economic realities of the time together with the problem of the interior being too large for one person to manage and the exterior that would exhaust the abilities of numerous men. Luke Dillon in a 1976 interview described the house, as a problem and daily life living in it, as a struggle. 

Clonbrock For sale by Helen Cassidy, Premier Propertie Ireland

Clonbrock House ( in ruins) is offered for sale with approx 20 acres of grounds with two-storey rendered outbuildings forming a courtyard to rear,

one of which in use as private dwelling, and a series of working stables with fenced riding arena.

SOLD


Clonbrock House was designed by William Leeson for Robert Dillon, the 3rd Baron Clonbrock, and constructed from 1780-1788 to replace the old castle which stood on the site.

It remained in the possession of the Dillon family for almost 200 years until it was sold in 1976.

A fire blazed through the house in 1984, destroying the intricately detailed interior.

Though now ruined, this impressive historic Irish Mansion stands proud, overlooking extensive verdant countryside.

The high level of design and craftsmanship is evident in the remaining fabric, such as the ornate entrance porch and the finely tooled stone window surrounds.

It is an important part of the social and architectural heritage of the area.

Clonbrock House ( in ruins) presents as a detached eight-bay three-storey over basement country house, built c.1790, with a square plan with three-bay pedimented breakfront, Doric entrance porch which was added c.1824, and a three-storey over basement single-bay extension with parapet roof and brick cornice to north-west, a single-storey bow-ended wing to south-east added c.1855, and two-storey wing to north-west.

Ruled and lined lime rendered façade. The Porch, accessed by four stone steps, has carved stone entablature with triglyph and metope detail and moulded cornice with dentils above, supported on four fluted Doric columns.

There are the remains of two pairs of rendered chimney stacks to centre of plan, brick chimney stack to north-west wing, moulded cornice at eaves and cast-iron rainwater goods.

Square-headed window openings with tooled limestone sills and moulded shouldered limestone surrounds, remains of six-over-six pane timber sliding sash windows to rear.

Double-leaf timber entrance door with lancet-patterned fanlight above, fluted entablature and column and block limestone surround with patera motif.

The property is offered for sale with approx 25 acres of grounds with two-storey rendered outbuildings forming a courtyard to rear, one of which in use as private dwelling, and a series ofworking stables with fenced riding arena.

*******************

For Sale:

Clonbrock Castle, Gardener’s Villa, Cottages and Turret,

on approx 7 acres, at Ahascragh, County Galway.

Sold

The entire property available consists of; 

Clonbrock Castle,

The largely restored 15th century O Kelly castle ,

The 18th century Gardener’s Villa: 

(4 Bedrooms, Conservatory, Kitchen, Study, Drawing room, Utility/Boot room,  2 Bathrooms);

Two 1 bed Victorian cottagesWest Cottage and East Cottage, and

And a unique Mediaeval Turret (all fully restored), 

kitchen garden, castle bawn,  2 walled gardens ( restored and replanted),

assorted outbuildings including new greenhouse, garden sheds, etc.

Plus  three  additional ruined turrets, one very restorable.  Assorted woodland walks. Frontage on the trout stream the river Bunowen.

Quiet, beautiful setting, by a river and gardens on the historic estate.

On about 7 acres of atmospheric private woodland, gardens and riverbank.

Lovely  woodland walks. Fallow deer, red squirrels, pine martens, foxes – even very occasionally otters, – as well as ravens, herons and many other birds – may be seen.

The property has continually been offered on airbnb for exclusive holiday rentals and continues to be in constant demand.

Castlegar, Ahascragh, Co Galway

Castlegar, Ahascragh, Co Galway

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. 68. “(Mahon, Bt/PB) The grandest of Sir Richard Morrison’s villas, built from 1803 onwards for Ross Mahon, afterwards 1st Bt; replacing an earlier house. Square, compact plan; front of two storeys, back of three; but with a two storey side elevation. Shallow curved bow at centre of front, with die and pedimented Ionic porch; one bay on either side, with pedimented triple windows in lower storey. Four bay side elevation, the duality being resolved by a central pediment on two broad superimposed pilasters or framing bands. Rich interior, characteristic of Morrison, wiht good spatial effects. Elliptical staircase hall or saloon leading into central toplit staircase hall leading into domed back hall with Doric columns and entablature. The elliptical hall or saloon has pairs of recessed fluted Tower of the Winds columns and a domed ceiling with swags of foliage. The staircase hall, though not particularly large, has an air of great height. The staircase, which has a simple metal balustrade, rises to a magnificent domed landing, with yellow Siena scagliola columns of the Composite order at either end. The dome is carried on fan pendentives; the tympana and soffits below the dome are decorated with swags and other plasterwork. The 5th Bt, who succeeded 1893, added a service wing and built a new porch at the back of the house; so that the Doric back hall became the entrance hall. In 1898 he commissioned Arrowsmith of London to transform the dining room into a classic interior of its period; with a fretted ceiling, a massive carved oak chimneypiece and a wallpaper of scarlet and pink stripes below a frieze of female figures and yellow and green foliage by Sibthorpe. In 1904 the drawing room was done up, also by Arrowsmith; the Morrison plasterwork in the ceiling was retained; but the room was given a frieze, chimneypiece, overmantel and doorcases in the Adam-Revival style, and a pink striped “Adam” wallpaper now faded to a beautiful colour.” 

http://lordbelmontinnorthernireland.blogspot.com/2019/10/castlegar-house.html

THE MAHON BARONETS WERE MAJOR LANDOWNERS IN COUNTY GALWAY, WITH 8,619 ACRES 

 
 
BRYAN MAHON, son of Bryan Mahon, land steward to the Earls of Clanricarde, Lieutenant in Lord Clanricarde’s Infantry Regiment, in JAMES II’s army, fought at the battle of the Boyne, 1690. 
 
He wedded, in 1693, Ellinor, daughter of Ross Gaynor, and had issue, 
 

James; 
Peter; 
ROSS, of whom hereafter
Mary; Elizabeth; Hester; Alice; Ellinor. 

Captain Mahon died in 1719. 
 
His youngest son, 
 
ROSS MAHON (c1696-1767), of Ahascragh and Castlegar, County Galway, married, in 1721, Jane, daughter of Christopher Ussher, and had issue, 
 

ROSS, his heir
John; 
Alice. 

Mr Mahon, who inherited most of his brothers’ fortune, was succeeded by his eldest son, 
 
ROSS MAHON (1725-88), of Castlegar, County Galway, who espoused, in 1762, the Lady Anne Browne, only daughter of John, 1st Earl of Altamont, and had issue, 
 

ROSS, his heir
John; 
Henry (Rev); 
James (Very Rev), Dean of Dromore; 
George; 
Anne; Harriette; Jane; Amelia. 

Mr Mahon was succeeded by his eldest son, 
 
ROSS MAHON (1763-1835), JP, MP for Granard, 1798-1800, Ennis, 1820, who wedded firstly, in 1786, the Lady Elizabeth Browne, second daughter of Peter, 2nd Earl of Altamont, and had issue, three daughters, 
 

Charlottle; Elizabeth Louisa; Anne Charlotte. 

He espoused secondly, in 1805, Diana, daughter of Edward Baber, of Park Street, Grosvenor Square, and had further issue, a daughter, 
 

Letitia Anne. 

Mr Mahon married thirdly, in 1809, Mary Geraldine, daughter of the Rt Hon James FitzGerald, of Inchicronan, County Clare, by Catherine, Baroness FitzGerald and Vesey his wife, and had further issue, 
 

ROSS, 2nd Baronet
JAMES FITZGERALD, 3rd Baronet
WILLIAM VESEY ROSS, 4th Baronet
John Ross, joint founder of Guinness Mahon, 1836; 
Henrietta Louisa; Georgina; Catherine Geraldine; Jane Alicia; Caroline. 

Mr Mahon was created a baronet, in 1819, designated of Castlegar, County Galway. 
 
Sir Ross was succeeded by his eldest son, 
 
SIR ROSS MAHON, 2nd Baronet (1811-42), ADC to the 2nd Earl de Grey, Lord Lieutenant of Ireland, who died unmarried, and was succeeded by his brother, 
 
SIR JAMES FITZGERALD ROSS MAHON, 3rd Baronet (1812-52), JP DL, Barrister, who died unmarried, when the title devolved upon his brother, 
 
THE REV SIR WILLIAM VESEY ROSS MAHON, 4th Baronet (1813-93), Rector of Rawmarsh, Yorkshire, 1844-93, who wedded Jane, daughter of the Rev Henry King, and had issue, 
 

Ross, died in infancy, 1854; 
Ross (1856-76); 
WILLIAM HENRY, his successor
John; 
James Vesey (Rev); 
Edward; 
Gilbert; 
Mary; Alice. 

Sir William was succeeded by his eldest surviving son, 
 
SIR WILLIAM HENRY MAHON, 5th Baronet (1856-1926), DSO JP DL, High Sheriff of County Galway, 1898, Major, West Yorkshire Regiment, who espoused, in 1905, Edith Augusta, daughter of Luke, 4th Baron Clonbrock, and had issue, 
 

William Gerald Ross (1909-10); 
GEORGE EDWARD JOHN, his successor; 
Luke Bryan Arthur; 
Ursula Augusta Jane; Mary Edith Georgiana. 

Sir William was succeeded by his eldest surviving son, 
 
SIR GEORGE EDWARD JOHN MAHON, 6th Baronet (1911-87), who married firstly, in 1938, Audrey Evelyn, daughter of Walter Jagger, and had issue, 
 

WILLIAM WALTER, his successor; 
Timothy Gilbert; 
Jane Evelyn. 

He wedded secondly, in 1958, Suzanne, daughter of Thomas Donnellan, and had further issue, 
 

Sarah Caroline. 

Sir George was succeeded by his eldest son, 
 
SIR WILLIAM WALTER MAHON, 7th Baronet (1940-), LVO, Colonel, Irish Guards, Member of the Honourable Corps of Gentlemen-at-Arms, who married, in 1968, Rosemary Jane, daughter of Lieutenant-Colonel Michael Ernest Melvill, and has issue, 
 

JAMES WILLIAM (b 1976); 
Annabel Jane; Lucy Caroline. 

CASTLEGAR HOUSE, Ahascragh, County Galway, dates from ca 1803. 
 
It replaced two other houses in the property. 
 
The present mansion, built for Ross Mahon, afterwards the 1st Baronet, is a square block comprising two storeys, with three at the rear, and a two-storey side elevation.

There is a curved bow in the centre of the front, with a pedimented Ionic porch.

The opulent interior is characteristic of its designer, Sir Richard Morrison. 
 
The 5th Baronet added a service wing and back porch following his succession in 1893; thus the Doric rear hall became the new entrance hall. 
 
The Irish Times wrote the following article about Castlegar in 1999:- 
 
IT HAS STOOD there since 1803, exalting testimony to the taste and distinction of late Georgian architecture. 
 
Castlegar is hidden away among 50 acres of gardens, parkland, woods and pasture outside the village of Ahascragh, in east Galway. 
 
It is for sale by private treaty through Charles Smith, of Gunne’s country homes division, who is quoting a guideline price of £1.5 million. 
 
Originally, the estate was the home of the Mahons, gentry stock whose descendants linked with the Guinness family to form a land agency that eventually evolved into the Guinness Mahon merchant bank. 
 
Sir Ross Mahon commissioned architect Richard Morrison to plan alterations to a rambling old house that existed there previously. 

Rather than remodelling it, Morrison designed an entirely new building which took several years to complete. 
 
Since 1992, Castlegar has been owned by a Frenchman with a passion for restoring old houses to their original splendour and who has spent hundreds of thousands on refurbishing it. 

He is now selling it as he is unable to spend enough time there because of commitments in Paris, the US and Canada. 
 
He is leaving one of the finest Georgian country homes in Ireland, restored with consummate care to the pristine state of its early days. 

The marvel of the restoration work lies in the fact that while it has uncovered the innate beauty of the house as it was first conceived, it also has added all the appurtenances of modern living. 
 
 
Castlegar has been described as the grandest of Morrison’s “villas”, the word villa being used in its original meaning of a country residence. 
 
The house combines resplendent reception rooms with exceptionally comfortable family accommodation in an ambience of relaxed old-fashioned elegance. 
 
In addition to the staff accommodation, there are six bedrooms, each with a fireplace and its own bathroom, and all providing views across the rolling plains of east Galway. 
 
Oddly, the house has two entrances, one on the north side, the other on the south. 

The south entrance, no longer used as such, opens into an oval hall with a magnificent ceiling adorned with classic floral friezes, a white marble mantelpiece, and columns flanking recessed doors that lead to the drawing-room on one side and a morning-room on the other. 
 
Two other doors open on to the top-lit central stair hall, an elegant space where the Portland stone staircase has a simple, wrought iron balustrade and ascends to an imposing domed landing. 
 
The oval hall, the huge drawing-room and the dining-room were radically decorated at the turn of the century with commendable taste and the present owner has attentively preserved and enhanced the adornments. 

The drawing-room, which has a polished, pitch pine floor, is graced by a striking period mantelpiece with an Adam-style grate. 
 
Classic Victorian-style predominates in the dining-room where there’s a high fretted ceiling, a carved oak mantelpiece and heavy oak shutters. 

A spacious billiards-room-cum-library, with a large, hand-crafted oak mantelpiece, and a beautifully appointed study are other impressive features of Castlegar. 
 
In addition to the six bedrooms on the first floor, there is another spacious drawing-room looking across a fountain and lawns to the south. 

The staff quarters are located on the second floor. 

There are a further two bedrooms here as well as a kitchen, sitting-room and bathroom. 

Walled gardens, a stable complex and a hard surface tennis court are spread out over several acres close to the house. 
 
The outbuildings include a beautiful lofted cut-stone coach-house, along with four garages and three stables, plus a stable-yard that has seven loose boxes, a tack room and a further spread of farm buildings. 
 
Beneath the house is a vaulted basement, dry and airy, with six rooms, a boiler space and a wine cellar. 

I’m seeking current images of Castlegar House. 

https://theirishaesthete.com/2020/10/14/come-rain-or-come-shine/

The Waterfoot, County Fermanagh

The Waterfoot, County Fermanagh

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. 282. “(Barton/IFR; Loane/IFR) Two plain two storey late-Georgian ranges with eaved roofs, at right angles to each other. Built by Lt-Gen Charles Barton, completed by his son, H.W. Barton. Passed to Mr r.B. Loane, whose mother was a daughter of Capt C R. Barton, of the Waterfoot.” 

http://lordbelmontinnorthernireland.blogspot.com/2019/10/barton-of-waterfoot.html

THE BARTONS OF THE WATERFOOT OWNED 1,591 ACRES OF LAND IN COUNTY FERMANAGH 

This family was established in Ulster by 
 
THOMAS BARTON, of Norwich, Norfolk, who is said to have accompanied the Earl of Essex’s army into Ireland. 
 
Mr Barton was one of the first burgesses of Enniskillen, County Fermanagh. 
 
In 1610 he obtained a grant of land comprising a district called Druminshin and Necarne, County Fermanagh. 
 

Thomas Barton was an applicant for a “small proportion” of 1,000 acres, and obtained a grant of Druminshin, which included the island of Inishclare, also in Lurg, in 1610; and he parted with Lettermore in 1613 to Mr Christopher Irvine, Rossfad to Mr Lancelot Carleton in the same year.  

The Manor of Bannaghmore (Bannagh Mor) , extending from the river Bannagh to beyond the Waterfoot was purchased and controlled by the Barton family. 

Some of these lands were exchanged by him for others in the neighbourhood still in the possession of the elder branch of the family. 
 
He married Margaret Lloyd, and had a son, 
 
ANTHONY BARTON, father of 
 
WILLIAM BARTON (c1630-93), of Boa Island and Curraghmore, who wedded Jane Hannah Forster, and had issue, 
 

Edward, his heir; ancestor of BARTON of Greenfort
WILLIAM, of whom we treat

The younger son, 
 
WILLIAM BARTON, of Curraghmore, County Fermanagh, espoused Elizabeth, daughter of John Dickson, of Ballyshannon, and had issue, 
 

THOMAS, his heir
George, died unmarried; 
James; 
Elizabeth; Everina. 

Mr Barton died in 1695, and was succeeded by his eldest son, 
 
THOMAS BARTON (1694-1780), of Curraghmore, who established the house of business at Bordeaux, France, 1725, and acquired a considerable fortune. 
 
He purchased the estate of Grove, County Tipperary, in 1752. 
 
Mr Barton married, in 1722, his cousin Margaret, youngest daughter of Robert Delap, of Ballyshannon, County Donegal, and had issue, an only child, 
 
WILLIAM BARTON (1723-92), of The Grove, County Tipperary, who wedded, in 1754, Grace, eldest daughter of the Very Rev Charles Massy, Dean of Limerick, and sister of Sir Hugh Dillon Massy, 1st Baronet, of Donass, County Clare, and had issue, 
 

Thomas, his heir
William, of Clonelly, County Fermanagh; 
CHARLES, of whom hereafter; 
Hugh, of Straffan; 
Robert (Sir), KCH, Lieutenant-General in the Army; 
Dunbar, of Rochestown; 
Grace; Elizabeth; Margaret. 

The third son, 
 
LIEUTENANT-GENERAL CHARLES BARTON (1760-1821), espoused, in 1800, Susannah, daughter of Nathaniel Weld Johnston, of Bordeaux, France, and had issue, 
 

HUGH WILLIAM, his heir
Nathaniel Dunbar, Lt-Col Bengal Cavalry; 
Thomas Charles, of Bonn, Germany; 
Robert, of Sydney, Australia; 
Albert Evelyn; 
Susannah; Anna Eleanor. 

His eldest son, 
 
HUGH WILLIAM BARTON JP DL (1800-70), of The Waterfoot, County Fermanagh, High Sheriff of County Fermanagh, 1837, Lieutenant-Colonel, 2nd Life Guards, married, in 1832, Mary Caroline, eldest daughter of Robert Johnston, of Kinlough House, County Leitrim, and had issue, 
 

CHARLES ROBERT, his heir
James, Captain, Royal Artillery; 
Folliott; 
Hugh St George, Captain, 60th Rifles; 
Robert, Royal Navy; 
Thomas Lloyd; 
Nathaniel Albert Delap, Major, 88th Regiment; 
Florence Anna; Mary Everina. 

The eldest son, 
 
CHARLES ROBERT BARTON JP DL (1832-1918), of The Waterfoot, High Sheriff of County Fermanagh, 1863, Captain, Fermanagh Militia, wedded, in 1872, Henrietta Martha Mervyn, daughter of Henry Mervyn Richardson DL, of Rossfad, County Fermanagh, and had issue, 
 

WILLIAM HUGH, his heir; 
Henry Charles Johnston; 
Charles Nathaniel; 
Bertram James Richardson; 
Mary Jane Florence; Everina Margaret; Caroline Angel Charlotte; Henrietta Emily Violet; 
MILDRED PENELOPE MATILDA, of whom hereafter
Susanna Cecil Grace. 

Captain Barton was succeeded by his eldest son, 
 
WILLIAM HUGH BARTON DSO JP DL (1874-1945), of The Waterfoot, High Sheriff of County Fermanagh, 1924, Lieutenant-Colonel, Royal Army Service Corps, who married, in 1917, Ardyn Marion, daughter of Lieutenant-Colonel Henry Tyrwhitt Stanniforth Patteson, and had issue, 

JOHN CHARLES; 
Ruth Ardyn (1921-51). 

The only son, 
 
CAPTAIN JOHN CHARLES BARTON (1918-43), Royal Artillery, died in 1943, aged 25, at north Africa, from wounds received in action, unmarried
 
Captain Barton’s cousin, 
 
MISS MILDRED PENELOPE MATILDA BARTON (1885-1971), married, in 1918, Simon Christopher, son of Robert Loane, of Kesh, County Fermanagh, and had issue, four sons. 

THE WATERFOOT, Letter, near Pettigo, County Fermanagh, is a late Georgian house with two simple, two-storey ranges with eaved roofs at right angles to each other.

It was built by Lieutenant-General Charles Barton and completed by his son, Hugh William Barton.

The demesne was established in the 17th century, bounded by the river Waterfoot and Lower Lough Erne.

The house dated from the late 18th century with mature parkland, shelter trees, pleasure ground and a walled garden with an orchard.

The Waterfoot subsequently passed to Mr R B Loane, whose mother, Mildred Penelope Matilda Loane, née Barton, was a daughter of Captain Charles Robert Barton, of The Waterfoot.

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

THE WATERFOOT, County Fermanagh (AP FERMANAGH AND OMAGH 07) F/011 
REGISTERED GRADE B 
Established in the early Victorian era on the north shore of Lower Lough Erne, this demesne, 
which boasts fine mature trees and parkland, takes its name from the confluence of two rivers, 
the Waterfoot and the Termon. It lies directly on the Donegal border bordering the Letter Road 
(B136) and Termon River, 1.3 miles (2.1km) south-west of Pettigo. The well-known 17th century 
tower house, Termon McGrath, stands a few hundred metres north-east. The present house, 
which faces south towards the north shore of Boa Island, is an irregular two-storey manor with 
hipped roof, (Listed HB 12/07/046). According to the Ordnance Survey Memoirs it was built in 
1830-2, but was substantially remodelled/enlarged in the 1850s by Col. Hugh William Barton 
(1800-1870) of the Lifeguards, grandson of Thomas, founder (1725) of the well-known wine- 
business in Bordeaux; his descendants have retained ownership to the present day. The architect 
John B. Keane is known to have designed a kitchen and block at the west end in 1831. Contrary to 
some speculation, there is no evidence for an earlier house here and it is likely this spot (townland 
of Gubnaguinie) was chosen for its scenic location. By 1835 some of the plantations had been put 
down, notably those in the immediate area of the house; by 1860 the park layout, which covers 
94 acres (38ha), was much as it remain today. This included plantations north of the house and 
along the north boundary with the River Termon; there are apparently references in a letter to 
sacks of acorns and beech trees being imported from Germany for the parkland trees. A small 
area of open parkland or lawn (2.5 acres/1ha) was made south and south-west of the house 
permitting views over the lough; this area is edged with some exotic trees, some coniferous, with 
carr woodland along the loughshore, while the woods here have some particularly fine beech, 
horse chestnut and oak trees, and also yews, Scots pines and several other firs. The house is 
approached down a long carriage drive that begins at Letter Bridge; there is a single-story 
Italianate style gate lodge c.1870 (roofless and not listed) on rising ground to the south of the 
main drive, just east of a bridge; the latter formerly carried the line belonging to the Enniskillen, 
Bundoran and Sligo Railway (which operated between 1866 and 1957); it has been suggested the 
lodge was designed by architect Robert Williams Armstrong—a founding partner in the Belleek 
Pottery. Immediately north the house is the stable range accessed from the east through a tall, 
semicircular-headed arch dressed in cut-stone. North-west lie the farm yard offices, c.1850, now 
dominated by large, late 20th century barns, with another barn just north of the yard to the rear of 
the house. Just east of the farm yard is the walled garden (1.1 acres/0.4ha) delimited by a stone 
wall built c.1840-50 in a low sheltered position and no longer used. It has an irregular plan to 
accommodate the contours with round-ended north side; there is a cart entrance in the south- 
west wall and a trabulated pedestrian entrance in south-east section. In the early 1990s its paths 
were edged with Lonicera nitida and there was a small, rectangular free-standing glass house near 
the wall at the north-west; some apple trees remain in this garden. South-east of the walled 
garden and immediately north-east of the house is the former pleasure garden, originally (in the 
1830s) the kitchen garden which had an early ‘greenhouse’, possibly erected in the 1830s. This 
area now contains laurel and rhododendron with winding paths edged with stones, one leading to 
a pump house. A path lined with clipped hedge on the west leads from east of the house down to 
the shore, where are two boat houses south-east of the house. Private.