Coollattin (also known as Malton), Shillelagh, Co Wicklow

Coollattin (also known as Malton), Shillelagh, Co Wicklow

Coollattin, County Wicklow, photograph courtesy of Irish Georgian Society.

Bence-Jones, Mark. A Guide to Irish Country Houses (originally published as Burke’s Guide to Country Houses volume 1 Ireland by Burke’s Peerage Ltd. 1978); Revised edition 1988 Constable and Company Ltd, London. 

p. 91. “Fitzwilliam, E/PB) A two storey house built 1801-4 for 4th Earl Fitzwilliam, who became Lord-Lieutenant of Ireland 1795 but was recalled after three months on account of his sympathy for Catholic Emancipation – replacing a house which he built 1796, and which was burnt 1798. It was designed by the veteran English architect, John Carr of York, with whom Lord Fitzwilliam, as a great Yorks magnate, would have had contacts; and as would thus be expected, its design is conservative; the entrance front is of five bays, wiht a three bay breakfront and a wide pediment; the side elevations each with a central curved bow. The entrance door is under a simple pillared porch. In the absence of the octogenarian Carr, the work of building was supervised by Thomas Hobson, a mason from Yorks. Later in C19, the house was enlarged, the new addition being at the back and having a lower ground floor, since the ground falls away steeply on this side. The later additions include a monumental hall and a dining room. The rooms in the earlier part of the house, which include a bow ended rom with apses, were altered and redecorated late C19. Good stable yard with wide pediment on centre block. Sold 1977 to Mr Brendan Cadogan and Mr Patrick Tattan.” 

Coollattin, County Wicklow, photograph courtesy of Coollattin House website.
Lady Charlotte Fitzwilliam (1746-1833) daughter of 1st Earl Fitzwilliam, dated 1754 by engraver James Mcardell, after Joshua Reynolds, courtesy of National Gallery of Ireland.
William Wentworth-Fitzwilliam, 4th Earl FitzWilliam (1748-1833), later Lord Lieutenant of Ireland by Engraver Joseph Grozer, British, fl.1784-1797 After Joshua Reynolds, English, 1723-1792, courtesy of National Gallery of Ireland.

https://www.coollattinhouse.ie

The house and associated yard buildings formed the centre of the Fitzwilliam family estate which once extended to 90,000 acres.

 

The current main block of Coollattin House was rebuilt after the 1798 Rebellion to the design of architect John Carr of York.  It comprises a pedimented south facing entrance front with centrally positioned bow windows to the east and west sides. Its internal plan is designed around a central stone staircase with dome at roof level.

During the 19th Century the original house was extended with wings to the east and west. The east wing provided a new pillared entrance porch, leading to a vaulted entrance hall and Italianate staircase linking with the original house. The west wing was designed to provide service accommodation including a high ceilinged kitchen.

To the west of the main house two linked  yard buildings were designed to contain additional guest and staff accommodation, stables, coach houses and a laundry and drying room.

The particular interest of Coollattin lies in its evocation of the life and working of an Irish country house in the 19th. Century.  Features include the library with built in mahogany bookcases, a functioning dumb waiter lift, original kitchen fixtures including cast iron cooking range, a vaulted passageway to link the basement with the laundry, and stone floored stables with oak doors to the stalls.

20 acres of the original grounds remain with the house. These contain a collection of specimen trees and a variety of hybrid Rhododendrons with peak flowering in the April-May period .

Since 2021 the house and grounds have been in the ownership of the Coollattin House Limited Partnership which is advancing an ongoing restoration programme to reflect and enhance their historic character.  

Since 2023, the Irish Government have officially recognised that Coollattin House and grounds ‘is intrinsically of significant architectural, aesthetic and historical interest’.

https://www.buildingsofireland.ie/buildings-search/building/16404304/coolattin-park-coolattin-park-coolattin-co-wicklow

Detached five-bay two-storey over basement former mansion, built 1804, now in occasional use as a clubhouse for the golf course. It is to designs by architect John Carr of York. The house is finished with lined render with ashlar granite dressings. To the south front elevation there is a pedimented three-bay breakfront with a carved heraldic shield to the tympanum. To the west and rear there is a later service wing and a range of out buildings. The part-glazed front door has a radial fanlight and is set within a flat-headed opening. It is framed with two freestanding Tuscan order columns, which support a wide pediment. Window openings are flat-headed with six over six-timber sash frames; louvred external shutters were added c.1970. The hipped roof is finished with natural slate and cast-iron rainwater goods. The chimneystacks are rendered with corbelled caps and clay pots. The house is set within a large well-wooded demesne, part of which is now in use as a golf course. 

Appraisal 

This early 19th century country house is well preserved and although somewhat conservative in design it nevertheless compliments its setting well. 

https://theirishaesthete.com/2021/08/09/coolattin/

A Massive Undertaking I 

Aug9by theirishaesthete 

A large stone building with a large lawn

Description automatically generated 
A building with a lawn and bushes

Description automatically generated 
Many people will be familiar with the travails in recent years of Wentworth Woodhouse in Yorkshire, said to be the largest private house in England (and with the longest facade of any house in Europe). However, they are unlikely to know about Coollattin, County Wicklow which, at 65,000 square feet is thought to be the largest private house in Ireland. It is no coincidence that both properties – which suffered such long periods of neglect that their respective futures looked imperilled – were originally built for the same family, the Earls Fitzwilliam. In England and Ireland alike, the Fitzwilliams were very substantial landowners – here they came to have some 90,000 acres – which allowed them to build on a more palatial scale than most other peers. And the rich seams of coal on their Yorkshire property further enhanced their wealth, as was described in Catherine Bailey’s 2007 book Black Diamonds: The Rise and Fall of an English Dynasty. However, their direct link with Ireland only began in 1782 when the fourth earl inherited the estates of his childless maternal uncle, the second Marquess of Rockingham: the latter was a descendant of Thomas Wentworth, Earl of Strafford who had been Charles I’s Irish Lord Deputy in the 1630s and while here embarked on what was then intended to be the country’s largest private house, at Jigginstown, County Kildare (his recall in 1640 left the building unfinished). …

Coollattin, County Wicklow, photograph by Robert O’Byrne.
Coollattin, County Wicklow, photograph by Robert O’Byrne.
Coollattin, County Wicklow, photograph by Robert O’Byrne.

https://theirishaesthete.com/2021/08/11/coolattin-2/

A Massive Undertaking II

by theirishaesthete

Coollattin, County Wicklow, photograph by Robert O’Byrne.
Coollattin, County Wicklow, photograph by Robert O’Byrne.



Last Monday’s post featured a very brief synopsis of the history of Coollattin, County Wicklow, believed to be the largest house in Ireland. The core of the building, and that first seen by visitors today, was designed in the 1790s for the fourth Earl Fitzwilliam by John Carr of York. In the mid-1870s the sixth earl decided to expand the property by creating a new entrance front as well as adding a new south range along with servants’ wing, stables and carriage houses, hence the place’s considerable size today. He gave this job to another Yorkshire resident, his clerk of works at Wentworth Woodhouse, William Dickie. Whereas the original house is finished with lined render, the extensions are fronted in local granite, so for the most part, at least on the exterior, it is possible to see which parts are by Carr and which by Dickie. 

Coollattin, County Wicklow, photograph by Robert O’Byrne.
Coollattin, County Wicklow, photograph by Robert O’Byrne.



The most striking addition made by Dickie and his client to the building is a new entrance at what had been the rear of Coollattin. The ground slopes behind the house, so this entrance is at a lower level than its predecessor to the south, and features a great portico with paired Doric columns and a flight of granite steps leading up to the door. Inside is a fine hall with coved ceiling and flagged limestone floor. A smaller inner hall contains a large chimneypiece but to the immediate right is a flight of steps which in due course turns 90 degrees to introduce the main staircase climbing to the ground floor of the original house. Beneath a coffered ceiling and lit by a line of tall arched windows – these matched by a balustraded gallery with similar openings on the facing side of the steps – this staircase has terrific drama, reminiscent of that found in Piedmontese or Sicilian Baroque palaces. It is quite unlike anything else in the entire building, much of the rest of Dickie’s work here being competent but lacking excitement. When eventually restored, this great staircase will provide a most marvelous ceremonial access to this important Irish country house. 

Coollattin, County Wicklow, photograph by Robert O’Byrne.
Coollattin, County Wicklow, photograph by Robert O’Byrne.

See Robert O’Byrne, The Irish Country House, A New Vision. With photographs by Luke White. Rizzoli, New York, Paris, London, Milan, 2024.

p. 33. “Soon enough, during the second quarter of the nineteenth century, the first Earl Fitzwilliam [Charles William Wentworth Fitzwilliam (1786-1857)] employing another Yorkshire architect named James Pritchett, replaced the old kitchen wing with a substantial three-storey block faced in granite ashlar and replicating the bracketed cornice detailing of the main Carr house. To the west of the new wing, a substantial stable and coach yard was created, also in granite ashlar with a stone cornice, its upper level linked to the west wing and containing extensive bachelor accommodation.

While considerable, these additions came to be deemed insufficient, because in 1875 the sixth earl [William Thomas Spencer Wentworth-Fitzwilliam 6th Earl (1815-1902)] asked his own Yorkshire-based architect, William Dickie, to further enlarge Coollattin. Cickie boldly reoriented the houses’s entrance to the north with a granite-faced east wing entered from a pillaraed porch at the basement level of the original house. This led to a vaulted entrance hall from which extended an immense Italian stone staircase with an arched balustraded gallery, the latter integrating with the floor level of the original Carr building and containing a master bedroom with boudoir over the entrance hall.”

p. 33 [after being sold by the widow Wardrop] For the next quarter-century the building stood unoccupied and, although some maintenance work was undertaken, inevitably it suffered teh effects of being empty and unused. Finally, in 2021 the house with just twenty acres was offered for sale and bought by a small group of concerned individuals who created a new charitable organisation, the Collattin House Partnership, with the objective of restoring the house as a residence, together with securing fresh uses for the various outbuildings and restoring the grounds and garden areas under its control. Work on this audacious project has begun and is likely to be ongoing for a long time to come….

p. 40. As part of the alterations undertaken in the house during the nineteenth century, a wall was removed between the original entrance hall and a morning room in order to create a large drawing room, the former division marked by a screen of fluted Ionic columns.

p. 40. The present owners have been collecting items associated with the Fitzwilliams, such as a dinner service bearing the earl’s coronet.

https://lordbelmontinnorthernireland.blogspot.com/2013/07/coollattin-park.html

THE EARLS FITZWILLIAM WERE THE GREATEST LANDOWNERS IN COUNTY WICKLOW, WITH 89,981 ACRES

In 1565, HUGH FITZWILLIAM (c1534-c1576), of Emley, Sprotbrough, and Haddlesey, Yorkshire, collected the records of his family, and from these records the following particulars are partly deduced: SIR WILLIAM FITZ GODRIC, cousin to EDWARD THE CONFESSOR, left a son and heir, SIR WILLIAM FITZWILLIAM, who, being ambassador at the court of WILLIAM, Duke of Normandy, attended that prince in his victorious expedition against England, as marshal of the army, in 1066; and for his valour at the battle of Hastings, THE CONQUEROR presented him with a scarf from his own arm.
This Sir William was father of

SIR WILLIAM FITZWILLIAM, Knight, who wedded Eleanor, daughter and heiress of Sir John Emley, of Emley and Sprotbrough, by which marriage the Fitzwilliams obtained the lordships of Emley and Sprotbrough, which continued with them until the reign of HENRY VIII, when those lordships were carried, by co-heirs, into the families of Suthill and Copley.

Sir William was succeeded by his son,

SIR WILLIAM FITZWILLIAM,

Lord of Emley and Sprotbrough, living in 1117, as appears from a grant made by him of a piece of the wood in Emley to the monks of Byland. To this grant, in a round seal, is represented a man on horseback, completely armed and circumscribed S. Willmi Filij Willmi Dni de Emmalaia; and on the reverse, the arms of FITZWILLIAM, viz. Lozenge. This Sir William, or one of his descendants, caused a cross to be set up in the high street of Sprotbrough; which cross was pulled down in 1520.

From Sir William we pass to his descendant,

SIR JOHN FITZWILLIAM, who founded, in 1372, the Chantry of St Edward in the church of Sprotbrough; and having married Elizabeth, daughter of William de Clinton, 1st Earl of Huntingdon, had three sons, the eldest of whom,

SIR WILLIAM FITZWILLIAM, married Maud, daughter of Ralph, 3rd Lord Cromwell, of Tattershall, and co-heir of the Lord Treasurer Cromwell, by whom he had one son and two daughters.

He was succeeded by his son,

SIR JOHN FITZWILLIAM, who wedded Eleanor, daughter of Sir Henry Green, of Drayton, and had six sons.

The youngest son,

JOHN FITZWILLIAM, of Milton Hall and Greens Norton, in Northamptonshire, espoused Eleanor, daughter of William Villiers, of Brooksby, Leicestershire, by whom he had three sons and two daughters, and was succeeded by his eldest son,

THE RT HON SIR WILLIAM FITZWILLIAM (c1460-1534), Knight, of Milton and Gaynes Park, Essex, and also of the city of London, of which he was sheriff in 1506.

Sir William married firstly, Anne, daughter of Sir John Hawes, Knight, of the city of London, and had,

WILLIAM, his heir;
Richard;
Elizabeth; Anne.

He wedded secondly, Mildred, daughter of Richard Sackville, of Withyham, Sussex, and had three sons and two daughters,

Christopher;
Francis;
Thomas;
Eleanor; Mary.

Sir William was succeeded by his eldest son,

SIR WILLIAM FITZWILLIAM, Knight, who espoused Anne, daughter of Sir Richard Sapcote, of Elton, Huntingdonshire; and was succeeded by his son and heir,

SIR WILLIAM FITZWILLIAM (1526-99), Lord Deputy of Ireland and Lord Justice, who wedded Anne, daughter of Sir William Sydney, and aunt of the 1st Earl of Leicester, and had issue,

WILLIAM, his heir;
John;
Mary; Philippa; Margaret.

Sir William was succeeded by his son,

SIR WILLIAM FITZWILLIAM, Knight, of Milton and Gaynes Park Hall, who was elevated to the peerage, in 1620, in the dignity of Baron Fitzwilliam, of Lifford, County Donegal.

His lordship wedded Catherine, daughter of William Hyde, of Denchworth, Berkshire; and dying in 1644, was succeeded by his elder son,

WILLIAM, 2nd Baron (c1609-58), who espoused, in 1638, Jane, daughter and co-heir of Alderman Hugh Perry, of London, and had issue,

WILLIAM, his heir;
Charles;
Jane, m Sir Christopher Wren, the celebrated architect.

His lordship was succeeded by his eldest surviving son,

WILLIAM, 3rd Baron (1643-1719), who was advanced, in 1716, to the dignities of Viscount Milton, County Westmeath, and EARL FITZWILLIAM, of County Tyrone.

His lordship married Anne, daughter and sole heir of Edmund Cremor, of West Winch, Norfolk, by whom he had four sons and six daughters.

He was succeeded by his third, but eldest surviving son,

JOHN, 2nd Earl (1681-1728), who wedded Anne, daughter and sole heir of John Stringer, of Sutton-cum-Lound, Nottinghamshire, and left, with three daughters, a son and successor,

WILLIAM, 3rd Earl (1719-56), then a minor, who was, in 1742, enrolled amongst the peers of Great Britain, by GEORGE II, by the style and title of Lord Fitzwilliam, Baron Milton, in Northamptonshire.

His lordship was advanced, in 1746, to the dignities of Viscount Milton and EARL FITZWILLIAM, in the same county.

He espoused, in 1744, the Lady Anne Watson-Wentworth, eldest daughter of Thomas, Marquess of Rockingham, and sister and co-heir of Charles, 2nd Marquess of Rockingham, by whom he had issue,

WILLIAM, his successor;
Charlotte; Frances Henrietta.

His lordship was succeeded by his eldest son,

William Wentworth-Fitzwilliam, 4th Earl FitzWilliam (1748-1833), later Lord Lieutenant of Ireland by Engraver Joseph Grozer, British, fl.1784-1797 After Joshua Reynolds, English, 1723-1792courtesy of National Gallery of Ireland.


WILLIAM, 4th Earl (1748-1833), Lord Lieutenant of Ireland for a very short period, in 1795, who married firstly, in 1770, the Lady Charlotte Ponsonby, second daughter of William, 2nd Earl of Bessborough, by whom he had an only child, CHARLES WILLIAM WENTWORTH, his heir.

Charles William, 5th Earl (1786-1857);
William Charles, Viscount Milton (1812-35);
William Thomas Spencer, 6th Earl (1815-1902);
William, Viscount Milton (1839-77);
William Charles de Meuron, 7th Earl (1872-1943);
(William Henry Lawrence) Peter, 8th Earl (1910-48);
Eric Spencer, 9th Earl (1883-1952);
William Thomas George, 10th Earl (1904-79). 

The titles expired following the decease of the 10th and last Earl.

COOLLATTIN PARK, is near Shillelagh in County Wicklow.

The history of the Wentworth/Fitzwilliam families has been well documented, but what is less well known is the influence they had on the history of the kingdom of Ireland.

As well as the family seat of Wentworth Woodhouse in Yorkshire (where they owned 22,000 acres in 1870), the Earls Fitzwilliam also resided at Malton House (later Coollattin House) in County Wicklow, from where they managed their vast estate. 

Coollattin is now a golf club.

The 4th Earl built Coollattin House (it was originally called Malton, one of his grandfather’s titles as Earl of Malton).

The house was designed by the leading architect John Carr, who was also responsible for the grandiose “stable block” at Wentworth Woodhouse as well as the Keppel’s Column and Mausoleum monuments near Wentworth.

The building was started around 1794 but before completion it was burned down in a rebellion in 1798 (along with 160 other houses in the nearby village of Carnew and several Catholic churches).

Work resumed again in 1800 and the house was completed in 1807.

As well as rebuilding their house and the village, the Fitzwilliams contributed to the repairs of the Catholic churches and gave land for other churches (whilst other landlords would not even allow a Catholic church on their estate).

Throughout the family’s time in Ireland they did not take sides in the various Irish struggles through the centuries, and perhaps as a consequence their house was left untouched in the last dash for independence.

As well as undertaking building and agricultural projects, the 4th Earl was also the Lord Lieutenant of Ireland for a short time in 1795.

In 2003, The Times newspaper wrote: 

When the 10th and last Earl died in 1979 the remnants of the huge Coollattin estate, for centuries the Irish seat of the Earls Fitzwilliam, was sold by the last Earl’s widow, Lady Juliet De Chairoff, and in the following years, it was broken up and sold on bit by bit.
In 1983, the sprawling Coollattin House, with its vast lands attached, was resold for €128,000.

When the farm land value was removed, this amounted to just £8,000 for the house itself — which, with its 120-plus rooms, is still among the largest private houses in the country.

In the same year the average price of a standard new home in Dublin was more than four times that, at £35,000.
In living memory, the once-grand Coollattin estate had spanned 88,000 acres, had 20,000 tenants and comprised one quarter of Co Wicklow.

There has long been a rumour that the estate harboured a vast tunnel used by inhabitants of the house to escape to the lodge.
The estate began falling apart in 1948 when the last earl, Peter Fitzwilliam, was killed in a plane crash with JFK’s sister, Kathleen (Kick) Kennedy, with whom, it was speculated, he had been having an affair.
His estate tenants genuinely grieved.

The Fitzwilliams had a history of being among the most liberal landlords in Ireland.

They had paid tenants more, invested in their education and had worked hard to ensure that the built environment in their towns was above average.
When the Great Famine came, the Fitzwilliam family were at least decent enough to ship their excess tenants to America rather than simply turn them off the land as many landlords did.

Thousands were sent abroad to start new lives in this manner.
Perhaps this was the reason Coollattin House survived the great burning sprees that erupted through and after the war of independence, when working classes took their revenge on the less benevolent owners of big house.

Former seats ~ Coollattin Park, County Wicklow; Wentworth Woodhouse, Yorkshire; Milton Hall, Cambridgeshire.

Former town residence ~ 4 Grosvenor Square, London. 

First published in July, 2011. 

https://www.igs.ie/conservation/project/coollattin-house-co-wicklow

Detached five-bay two-storey over basement former mansion, built 1804, now in occasional use as a clubhouse for the golf course. It is to designs by architect John Carr of York. The house is finished with lined render with ashlar granite dressings. To the south front elevation there is a pedimented three-bay breakfront with a carved heraldic shield to the tympanum. To the west and rear there is a later service wing and a range of out buildings. The part-glazed front door has a radial fanlight and is set within a flat-headed opening. It is framed with two free-standing Tuscan order columns, which support a wide pediment. Window openings are flat-headed with six-over-six-timber sash frames; louvred external shutters were added c.1970. The hipped roof is finished with natural slate and cast-iron rainwater goods. The chimney stacks are rendered with corbelled caps and clay pots. The house is set within a large well-wooded demesne, part of which is now in use as a golf course.

Brief description of project: The Society pledged €5,000 for repairs to part slate roof and lead lined paraet gutter over the main access stairwell.

http://carnewhistory.blogspot.com/p/coolattin-estate.html

Coolattin Estate comprised of 80,000 acres and covered much of southwest Wicklow.·The Fitzwilliam family owned Coolattin Estate for 200 years before they sold it in the 1970s.·Before this, the area was under the control of the O’Byrnes.·The first personto own the Coolattin Estate was actually ‘Black Tom’ Wentworth. He was considered unfair.·The estate was originally called Fairwood and later became known as Malton when Thomas Watson-Wentworth (the Earl of Malton) inherited the estate in 1728.·Rents in Coolattin Estate were considered very low, sometimes as little as half of what tenants in Wexford.·In 1750, Charles Watson-Wentworth inherited the estate. He was a great supporter of Catholics and put a lot of work into improving the estate.·When Charles died, he had no sons thus the estate went to his nephew, William, the 4th Earl Fitzwilliam.Fitzwilliam was required to change his name to William Wentworth-Fitzwilliam. He renamed the estate as Coolattin.·Although a Protestant himself, William Fitzwilliam was also a supporter of Catholics and, for this reason, he was not well liked by the Irish and English Parliaments. Even some of his Protestant tenants disliked him for this reason.·When William died in 1833, his son Charles became the 5th Earl and took over the estate. Charles had been an MP and when he took over the estate his son, William Thomas Spencer Fitzwilliam became an MP. He was firstly MP for Malton in Yorkshire and later (1847-1856) MP for Wicklow.·Charles was also liberal and empathised with Catholics like his father.·While we might think that Coolattin Estate was very large, it was actually quite small compared to the Fitzwilliams’ holdings in England.·For this reason, they rarely visited Wicklow and hired an agent to manage the estate. This position was held by Robert Challoner for many years.·Land in Coolattin was divided into farms and parklands, mountains and bogs. The ‘big house’ was at Coolattin Park near Shillelagh.·Farm size could be anything from a couple of acres to up to 800 acres.·Some people sub-let their farms. These people were called head tenant and were mostly Protestants and Catholics living in Coolattin rented land from them.·Others had no land but rented a cabin and small garden.·People held leases from Fitzwilliam for either 21 years or a life –whichever was longer. Usually, you named one of your children as the life so the longer the child lived the longer you would hold the land.·Fitzwilliam charged low rents but the head tenants often charged much higher rents to the subtenants.·A landless labourer could be expected to pay £1 a year for his house, for an extra £1 he could have a garden and for £10 a year extra he would be given an acreor so of land on which he could grow potatoes.·Often, they worked to pay the rent ratherthan giving over money.·People paid their rent twice a year: Lady Day (25 March) and Michaelmas (29 September) but they had a space of a few months to pay this.Fitzwilliam rarely evicted people who could not pay their rent in full. 

Despite this, many still had to borrow a lot of money to pay their rent.·If improvements were need on the estate, e.g. if your land needed to be drained, Fitzwilliam would pay for this then add a small charge to your rent to cover it.·A lot of labourers on the estate could notget work but Fitzwilliam often employed more workers than he needed.·Labourers were usually paid 10d per day in summer and 8d per day in winter as darker days meantthat the working day was shorter (remember they had no electric lights!). Employers sometimes provided food and the cost of this was taken out of your wages.·If you were employed directly by Fitzwilliam you received the highest wages.·The agent, Challoner, received £1,000 per year but he noted himself that this was excessively high.·In 1836, workers in Coolattin Park applied for an increase in wages claiming that they were ‘strangers to every food except potatoes’. Fitzwilliam did not increase wages but gave a 6d loaf every Saturday to any labourer who had worked the full week.·Both Fitzwilliamand Challoner were very interested in the welfare of the tenants on the Estate. They set up farming societies to help tenants better farm their land. They also agreed to a scholarship for the best student on the estate to go to Dublin University (Trinity).·Despite Fitzwilliam’s improvements, the poorer tenants on the estate still lived on a diet consisting mainly of potatoes, buttermilk and sometimes and salted herrings.Source used: Rees, J. (2000) Surplus People –The Fitzwilliam Clearances 1847-1856. Cork: The Collins Press. 

Castle Caldwell, Belleek, County Fermanagh 

Castle Caldwell, Belleek, County Fermanagh 

Castle Caldwell, County Donegal or Fermanagh, photograph by Robert French, (between ca. 1865-1914), Lawrence Photograph Collection, National Library of Ireland

Bence-Jones, Mark. A Guide to Irish Country Houses (originally published as Burke’s Guide to Country Houses volume 1 Ireland by Burke’s Peerage Ltd. 1978); Revised edition 1988 Constable and Company Ltd, London. 

p. 64. “(Caldwell, Bt/PB1858; Bloomfield/LGI1912) A C18 house of two storeys over a basement, on the shores of Lough Erne, with a delightful Georgian “pasteboard Gothic” façade. Pointed and quatrefoil windows, two little projecting turrets, and a battlemented pediment-gable at either end, surmounted by a pointed arch, like a belfy; the main block being linked by diminutive battlemented curved sweeps to a pair of tower pavilions. An octagon temple in the grounds near the water. Passed to the Bloomfields through the marriage of Brances, daughter and co-heiress of Sir John Caldwell, 6th Bt, of Castle Caldwell, to John Bloomfield, 1817. The house was ruinous by the end of C19.”

http://lordbelmontinnorthernireland.blogspot.com/2014/04/castle-caldwell.html

CASTLE CALDWELL COMPRISED 4,865 ACRES IN THE 19TH CENTURY 

The founder of the Caldwells in Ulster, 

JOHN CALDWELL (c1590-1639), a prosperous merchant at Enniskillen, County Fermanagh, was born at Preston, Ayrshire. 

The second son by his second wife, Mary (née Swettenham), 

 
JAMES CALDWELL (c1630-c1717), who settled at Rossbeg, afterwards called Castle Caldwell, County Fermanagh. 
 
Mr Caldwell, High Sheriff of County Fermanagh, 1677, married firstly, ca 1657, Catherine, daughter of Charles Campbell, of Ayrshire, and had issue, 

Charles; 
HENRY, his heir
Hugh; 
John. 

He wedded secondly, ca 1690, Mrs Susanna Becke, of London. 
 
Mr Caldwell was created a baronet in 1683, designated of Wellsborough, County Fermanagh. 
 
In 1671, Sir James purchased the estate of Wellsborough, close to the present village of Belleek, County Fermanagh. 
 
 
He was Captain of Horse and High Sheriff of County Fermanagh, 1677. 
 
In 1689, Sir James, Colonel of Foot, was attainted by the Irish Parliament of JAMES II. 
 
He was succeeded by his eldest surviving son, 

 
SIR HENRY CALDWELL, 2nd Baronet (d 1726), High Sheriff of County Fermanagh, 1693, who espoused Catherine, daughter of Sir John Hume, 2nd Baronet, and had issue, an only child, 
 
SIR JOHN CALDWELL, 3rd Baronet, High Sheriff of County Fermanagh, 1730, who married, in 1719, Anne, daughter of the Very Rev John French, Dean of Raphoe, and had issue, 

JOHN, his successor
Hume; 
Henry, father of the 6th Baronet
Catherine. 

Colonel Hume Caldwell was a very distinguished officer in the Austrian service. He was killed in a sally from the fortress of Schweidnitz in 1762. 
 
Sir John died in 1744, and was succeeded by his eldest son, 

 
THE RT HON SIR JAMES CALDWELL, 4th Baronet (c1722-84),  High Sheriff of County Fermanagh, 1756, who being in the service of the Empress Maria Theresa, was created by that princess COUNT OF MILAN, in the Holy Roman Empire. 
 
In 1766, Sir James, in passing through Vienna, having had an audience of leave of the Empress Queen, Her Imperial Majesty, in a very gracious manner, charged him with a magnificent gold box, to present to the Dowager Lady Caldwell, mother of Colonel Caldwell, as a testimony of Her Majesty’s gratitude for the signal services performed by that gallant officer. 
 
Sir James raised, in 1759, at his own expense, a body of light horse comprising 250 men, which he commanded for some years. 
 
He married, in 1753, Elizabeth, daughter of the Most Rev Josiah Hort, Lord Archbishop of Tuam, by whom he had, with four daughters, three sons, 

JOHN, his successor
Fitzmaurice; 
Josiah John. 

He was succeeded by his son, 

 
SIR JOHN CALDWELL, 5th Baronet (1756-1830), of Castle Caldwell, Count of Milan, who wedded, in 1789, Harriet, daughter of Hugh Meynell, and had two daughters, of whom the elder, Louisa Georgiana, espoused firstly, in 1823, Sir Josiah William Hort Bt, of Hortland; and secondly, Major John Colpoys Bloomfield, of Redwood, County Tipperary. 
 
Sir John was Governor of County Fermanagh, 1793; lieutenant-colonel in the Fermanagh Militia; Sheriff of County Fermanagh, 1798; Captain in the Belleek Infantry, 1802. 
 
On his death, his countship of the Holy Roman Empire expired, and the baronetcy reverted to his cousin, 
 
SIR JOHN CALDWELL, 6th Baronet (1775–1842), born at Quebec, who married, in 1800, Jane, daughter of James Davidson, an army surgeon, and had issue, 

HENRY JOHN, his successor; 
Anne. 

Sir John was buried at St Matthews, Quebec; called to the Canadian Bar, 1798; member of the Legislative Assembly of Lower Canada, 1810-23 Receiver-General, 1823. 
 
He was succeeded by his only son, 
 
SIR HENRY JOHN CALDWELL, 7th Baronet (1801-58), was a Seigneur and political figure in Quebec. 
 
He represented Dorchester in the Legislative Assembly of Lower Canada from 1830-34. 
 
Sir Henry was born in Quebec City, the son of John Caldwell, who was the son of Henry Caldwell, and Jane Davidson. 
 
He inherited the seigneury of Lauzon after the death of his grandfather. 
 
Sir Henry was a Justice of the Peace in 1816. 
 
He married Sophia Louisa Paynter, though the marriage was without issue. 
 
In 1826, the seigneury of Lauzon was sold to clear his father’s debts, even though it had not been part of his father’s property; Caldwell’s appeal was unsuccessful. 
 
He later operated a sawmill in the seigneury of Île-Verte. 

 
The title became extinct on the 7th Baronet’s death in 1858. 

CASTLE CALDWELL, near Belleek, County Fermanagh, is now an 18th century ruin comprising two storeys over a basement. 
 
The original castle was built by Francis Blennerhassett, son of Sir Edward Blennerhassett, who obtained it in 1610. 
 
The property was purchased about 1662 by by James Caldwell. 
 
It overlooks the shore of Lough Erne. 
 
The facade is in the pasteboard Gothic style, with quatrefoil pointed windows, two small projecting turrets, and a battlemented pediment-gable at either end, surmounted by a pointed arch rather akin to a belfry. 

The main block is linked by battlemented curved sweeps to a pair a tower-pavilions. 
 
There is an octagon temple in the grounds near the lough. 
 
Castle Caldwell passed to the Bloomfield family through the marriage of Frances, daughter and co-heiress of Sir John Calwell, 6th Baronet, to John Bloomfield, in 1817. 
 
The house became ruinous by the end of the 19th century. 
 

*****  

 
THOUGH Castle Caldwell today is largely covered with forest planting, having been developed for this purpose since 1913, it remains an outstanding site, both for its peninsular position on the shores of lower Lough Erne and for the remnants of the dwelling and garden. 
 
The demesne was established in the early 17th century by the Blennerhassetts, and the original gardens were in a formal layout, with straight avenues and canals aligned upon the house, known as Castle Hassett. 
 
Extensive changes were undertaken in the grounds in the 18th century, which was by then heavily wooded, though there were views of the lough from the house. 
 
Portions of these features still can be found in the undergrowth. 
 
The decline of the ornamental and productive gardens preceded the acquisition of the grounds early in the 20th century for forestry.  
 
The forest planting itself has become historic: There is a noted large Sitka spruce in the car park planted in 1921. 
 
The gate lodge, known as Railway Gate, was built ca 1866 into the newly-constructed railway embankment. 
 
Trains rumbled overhead and carriages entered the demesne underneath and arch beside the castellated porter’s house. 
 
Within the demesne there is a 17th century ruined church and graveyard. 
 
Bloomfield ordered a geological survey of his land and was informed that the clay contained all of the necessary raw materials to make pottery (feldspar, kaolin, flint, clay and shale). 
 
He took on two partners (Robert Williams Armstrong and David McBirney), talked the government into building a rail spur to near-by Belleek (4 miles to the west) and built a pottery factory, Mrs Bloomfield laying the first foundation stone in 1853. 
 
Thus were the beginnings of a very successful business and a line of pottery now known the world over as Belleek Pottery. 
 
Unusual in its lustre and beauty, it has been a prized possession of royalty and many others for many years. 
 
Blanche Caldwell Grierson (nee Bloomfield) was the only daughter of John Caldwell Bloomfield DL, of Castle Caldwell, a former High Sheriff of County Fermanagh. 
 
She was also related to the Brookes of Colebrooke. 
 
During the First World War, Mrs Grierson was an active enthusiastic worker on behalf of the UVF Hospital, where many beds were endowed through her efforts. 
 
She died in 1920. 
 
The Griersons had a daughter, Ula, who married Henry Kinahan and died on 24 February, 1949. 
 
First published in September, 2010. 

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

CASTLE CALDWELL, County Fermanagh (AP FERMANAGH AND OMAGH 07) F/005 
REGISTERED GRADE A 
Loughside demesne (575.7 acres/233.1ha) occupying two peninsulas on the west side of Lower 
Lough Erne, lying 5.2 miles (8.3km) east of Belleek and 7. 1 miles (11.4km) south-west of Pettigoe. 
Though this demesne is largely covered with forest planting, having been developed for this 
purpose since 1913, it remains an important site, both for its peninsular position on the shores of 
Lower Lough Erne and for the remnants of the dwelling and garden. The demesne has its origin in 
an 1610 Plantation grant to Sir Edward Blennerhasset, of ‘the middle proportion of Banaghmore’, 
where, by 1619, Edward’s son Francis was occupying a three-storey stone house within a bawn 
which became known as ‘Castle Hasset’. Much of the structure of this early house and bawn, 
built between 1613 and 1619, can still be traced in the later adoptions and rebuilding of the 18th- 
century Gothick mansion ruin (scheduled SMR7/FERM 171:003). This includes the flankers 
originally belonging to the bawn described in 1619 as ‘a strong bawn of lime & stone with 2 
flankers & within it a strong [three-storey] house…67ft long & 25ft broad’. The house was 
probably attacked in 1641, but judging from the fact that the flankers were re-used, it may not 
have been destroyed. In 1671 (some sources say 1662) the Blennerhasset estate was sold to 
James Caldwell I (c.1630-1716), an Enniskillen merchant who was created a baronet in 1683. In 
the same year a reference to a house named ‘Castle Caldwell’ is recorded. Sir James was 
succeeded by his second son Sir Henry Caldwell (d.c.1726), followed by his only son, Sir John 
Caldwell I (d.1744). We do not have much information about the associated demesne and garden 
landscape for the house at this time; we can assume that the 17th and early 18th-century house 
was enclosed within formal (geometric) gardens and other walled courts. The straight road 
leading through the Rossbeg Peninsula (0.32 miles/0.52km) with north-east south-west axis 
belongs to this period and would have served as a tree-lined avenue approach so typical of this 
era. It is flanked on the north side by a plantation church of 1630 on a mound (FERM 171:019), 
later rebuilt by the Caldwells in the 18th-century as a chapel, now a roofless ruin; the graveyard 
has Caldwell and Johnston family vaults. In 1744 the demesne and estate was inherited by Sir 
John Caldwell’s son, Sir James Caldwell II (c.1722-84), who married Elizabeth Hort, daughter of 
the Archbishop of Tuam and with her dowry of £10,000 he began to make changes to the 
demesne. By 1778 he noted that he had ‘layd out above sixteen thousand pounds upon a most 
comfortable house and a very large court of excellent offices….two very large walled gardens with 
fish ponds and a most beautiful temple, glazed with painted glass and a vast expenditure on a 
demesne of 700 acres, making it worth three times worth as much as it was.’ The natural 
advantages of the site enhanced by Sir James’s work made it one of the attractions of the county 
and some idea of its appearance at this time can be deduced from Arthur Young’s description of 
1776 and a line-engraving entitled ‘Caldwell Castle the beautiful seat of Sir James Caldwell in 
Ireland’ published by F. Newbery of London in 1780. James Caldwell II’s work was carried on by 
his son Sir John Caldwell II (1756-1830) who ‘extended and regularised’ the house along gothick 
lines, writing in 1791 that ‘part of the old house was so shattered and its walls in so ruinous a 
state that I was obliged to pull it down entirely and a new and commodious building is now rising 
from the ruins.’ While Sir John Caldwell II in 1791-92, rebuilt and enlarged the house 
considerably, examination of the present ruins (in need of conservation) suggests that a 
surprising amount of the original fabric of the 17th century building may still be in place; 
following its transformation into a Gothick on the lines of Strawberry Hill, it must have appeared 
quite a fantasy castle, the more so as at that time as the lough levels were much higher and the 
water came close to its walls. The later 18th century improvements would have seen the 
removal of the walled enclosures that would have formerly enclosed the house and allowed the 
house to be opened up and visible across the newly appreciated ‘naturalised’ landscape, where 

Register of Parks, Gardens and Demesnes of Special Historic Interest (NI) – November 2020 
the Caldwell’s had been planting extensively. The walled garden (1.71 acres/0.69ha) was located 
a short distance south-west of the house and is depicted on the 1830s OS map with a south wall 
composed of semi-circular alcoves for stone-fruit – an unusual but not unique feature in Ireland; it 
is depicted on the 1780 Newbery line-engraving of the demesne, so was clearly present by then. 
Inside the walled garden there was a fish pond, while the house yards and offices, with a quay, 
flanked the east side of the garden. There was another walled garden with its own quay built at 
the south-east end of the Rossergole Peninsula, close to a ‘Bathing house’ marked on the 1830s 
OS map; this garden has a trapezoidal shape (1.59 acres/0.64) and may well have been originally 
ornamental in the 18th century, though by the 1830s is shown as orchard. The ‘Bathing House’ at 
the tip of the peninsula is the octagonal ‘beautiful temple’ mentioned by Young; ; it was a 
belvedere approached by a three-arched stone bridge, built by Sir James Caldwell II in the mid 
18th century and foundations are still in place. Castle Caldwell was inherited by Sir John’s 
daughter, Frances Arabella Caldwell (1792-1872) who married John Bloomfield in 1817. It passed 
to their son John Caldwell Bloomfield (d.1897) in 1849. Little appears to have been added to the 
main house after the 1790s, although the 1835 OS Memoirs mention ‘alterations in its 
arrangement have been made of late by Major Bloomfield which have partly robbed it of its 
ancient style…’. Although an enterprising individual, who was a co-founder of the Belleek Pottery 
in 1853, J.C. Bloomfield’s time as owner coincided with a decline in the fortunes of the house and 
demesne. The last hurrah perhaps was the building of the gate lodge, the Railway Gate, around 
1865-66 into the newly constructed railway embankment for the Irish North Western Railway 
Company’s branch line from Bundoran Junction (Irvinestown) to Ballyshannon. It is likely the 
INWRC built and paid for the gate and lodge for then owner J.C. Bloomfield, with the Company 
engineer, Thomas Brassey, likely responsible for the design. Trains rumbled overhead and 
carriages entered the demesne underneath and arch beside the castellated porters house. Set 
against the lodge is a large (rough 1.5m) stone fiddle, which is inscribed ‘To the memory of Denis 
McCabe fiddler, who fell out of the St. Patrick barge belonging to Sir James Caldwell….& was 
drowned off this Point August Ye 13 1770…’. Much of the demesne was sold off to the Wigan 
Mining Company and the Scottish Insurance Company in the 1870s with the house and demesne 
lands put up for auction in 1877. Although the castle does not appear to have been sold, it was 
not reoccupied by the Bloomfield family on a permanent basis, and was noted by the valuers in 
1884 as ‘dilapidated…[and] going to ruin’. It was reduced to a shell after a fire in the early 1900s 
and ‘in ruins’ by 1912. In 1913 the demesne was bought by the Forestry Commission, an early 
acquisition, so much so, that the forest planting itself has become historic. There is a noted large 
Sitka spruce in the car park planted in 1921. Also a champion Field Maple (Acer campestre) 3.75 
@ 13.2m. It is now run by the Forest Service, and as well as forestry, it is used for public 
recreation and as a nature reserve, with the ruins of the castle (now fenced off for security 
purposes) is a Scheduled Monument. SMR: FERM 171:00 Plantation castle, 171:16 round cairn, 
171:17 platform rath, 171:18 rath, 171:19 17th century ruined church and graveyard and 171:35? 
Crannog. Public access. FER 152:8 – AP site, circular enclosure. 
 

Turvey, Donabate, County Dublin – demolished 

Turvey, Donabate, County Dublin – demolished 

Turvey, County Dublin courtesy of Georgian Mansions in Ireland by Sadleir and Dickinson.
Turvey, County Dublin c. 1950. 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.

Bence-Jones, Mark. A Guide to Irish Country Houses (originally published as Burke’s Guide to Country Houses volume 1 Ireland by Burke’s Peerage Ltd. 1978); Revised edition 1988 Constable and Company Ltd, London.

p. 278. “(Barnewall, Kingsland, V/DEP; and Trimlestown, B/PB) A late C17 house of two storeys…The seat of that branch of the Barnewall family who held the now dormant or extinct Viscountancy of Kingsland. Towards the end of C18, when there was a false rumour of the death of the bachelor 5th Viscount Kingsland, who lived abroad, a Dublin tavern waiter named Matthew Barnewall, believing himself to be the heir, took possession of Turvey with a party of his friends and dispensed “rude hospitality: there to the local populace, cutting down trees and lighting bonfires. After a short while he was evicted and committed to prison for contempt; but in 1814, thanks to the researches of a friendly lawyer, he was actually recognized as 6th Viscount. He did not, however, succeed in claiming Turvey or any of the other estates which formerly went with the title, since they had been bequeathed by 5th Viscount, who died 1800, to his kinsman, 13th Lord Trimlestown.” 

Turvey, County Dublin, from Bence-Jones A Guide to Country Houses.

supplement 

The house, which incorporated an earlier tower house in the late C17 building, was demolished 1987” 

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. 67. “A very important house of many periods. Basically a 17C house incorporating an earlier castle or tower house. The entrance front seems to have been on the east side. In the early 18C a wing was added at right angles to this and the entrance was changed to the south. This front had a superb doorcase (similar to that at 33 Molesworth Street, now removed) wiht Ionic columns supporting a segmental pediment with urns and a coat of arms. The top floor then consisted of three gables with a Diocletian window in each. The house was again altered in the late 18C when the space between the gables was filled in and the house was re-roofed. Very interesting interior with rooms of all periods. Late 18C hall and staircase, with mid18C library. One ground floor room had a ceiling with rococo decoration in papier mache. Seat of the Barnewall family. Demolished 1987.

Turvey, County Dublin courtesy of Georgian Mansions in Ireland by Sadleir and Dickinson.
Turvey, County Dublin courtesy of Georgian Mansions in Ireland by Sadleir and Dickinson.
Turvey, County Dublin courtesy of Georgian Mansions in Ireland by Sadleir and Dickinson.

featured in Georgian Mansions in Ireland with some account of the evolution of Georgian Architecture and Decoration by Thomas U. Sadleir and Page L. Dickinson. Dublin University Press, 1915. 

p. 87. According to tradition, a subterranean passage ran from the cellars to the sea; but, except for a section of some thirty feet, this is now closed. This portion is lined wiht shells of various sorts, arranged in geometric patterns, bu tno record exists as to when this work was done, or by whom.  

The lands of Turvey belonged at an early period to the Butler family, and in the third year of Queen Mary the seneschalship of this Manor was granted by Thomas, Earl of Ormond, to Christopher Barnewall, a distinguished lawyer, who served as High Sheriff of County Dublin in 1560. He built the shell of the present mansion at Turvey, and died here. His son and grandson inherited successively. His son and grandson inherited successively. The latter was Sir Nicholas Barnewall, who, in reward for his serviced and those of his eldest son Patrick, Colonel of a troop of horse during the Civil War in England, was created by Charles I, 29th June 1646, Viscount Barnewall of Kingsland, and Baron of Turvey. In June 1654, he was imprisoned for alleged complicity in a plot against the Protector, but his estates, which were forfeited, were subsequently restored to him by Charles II. Lord Kingsland, as he is usually called, died at Turvey on 20th Aug 1663 at the age of 91… 

p. 87. Nicholas [3rd Viscount who] acquired considerable landed estate by his marriage with Frances, daugther of Sir George Hamilton, step-daughter of Richard, Duke of Tyrconnell, whose mother was the only sister of Sarah, Duchess of Marlborough. 

p. 88. He served in Lord Limerick’s Dragoons in the Jacobite army, and was in consequence attained and declared an outlaw, but being comprehended within the terms of the Treaty of Limerick this attainder was reverted. 

p. 88. Henry, 4th Viscount Kingsland, inherited Turvey on his father’s death, 14th June 1725. According to the then existing law he was debarred by his religion from taking his seat in the House of Lords. He was Grand Master of the Freemasons in Ireland, 1733-35. On May 1735 he married Honora, eldest daughter of Peter Daly of Queensbury, Co Galway. 

…Dying without issue on 11th March 1774, Lord Kingsland was succeeded by his nephew George Barnewall, who, having conformed to the Established Church, was allowed his place in the House of Peers as Fifth Viscount on 18th January 1787. 

It does not seem clear whether this nobleman ever lived at Turvey, which, at the time he succeeded to the title and for several years subsequently, was occupied by Robert Birch, described as “a sort of Merchant banker,” [see The Irish Parliament in 1775] who sat in the Irish Parliament as MP for Belturbet. …About 1785 Birch became bankrupt and disappears. We may assume that he was only a tenant here, for on his lordship’s death, 5th April 1800, Turvey and other lands passed to his cousin Nicholas, 14th Baron Trimleston (eldest son of the Hon Richard Barnewall, by Frances, daughter of Nicholas, 3rd Viscount Kingsland). He accordingly went to reside at Turvey, where he died on 16th april 1813. Since his death the house has not been occupied by owners, though the estae has continued to devolved with the title of Trimleston.” 

Paddy Rossmore. Photographs. Edited by Robert O’Byrne. The Lilliput Press, Dublin 7, 2019. 

“The demolition of Turvey in 1987 took place under such questionable circumstances that just over a decade later it was discussed at the Flood (later Mahon) Tribunal established to investigate corruption in planning decisions and land rezoning. …built by Sir Patrick Barnewall, seemingly using stone from a former convent in the area. The building subsequently underwent modification and expansion in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries while the Barnewalls were created Viscounts Barnewall of Kingsland. Following the death in a French lunatic asylum of the childless fifth viscount in 1800, the title was claimed by Matthew Barnewall, a Dublin barrow boy who, rather like the fictional Tess Durbyfield, believed himself to come from noble stock. With a group of supporters he occupied Turvey and embarked on a legal battle to retain his supposed inheritance: opposing him waas Nicholas Barnewall, fourteenth Baron Trimleston. In 1814 the House of Lords finally confirmed Matthew Barnewall’s right to the viscountcy but this did not come with any property, and he would die penniless in London twenty years later. Turvey passed to the Trimlestons and remained with them until 1918 when financially obliged to sell the place: its next owners likewise suffered from penury and had to dispose of the property half a century later. 

Paddy’s photograph captures the house shortly before this event, and shows it still in good condition. Over the next twenty years Turvey was allowed to fall into ruin. Even so, it is astonishing that prior to the building’s demolition, the local authority’s senior architect could declare the place to have “no great architectural merit apart from its antiquity.” A great loss.” 

featured in Georgian Mansions in Ireland with some account of the evolution af Georgian Architecture and Decoration by Thomas U. Sadleir and Page L. Dickinson. Dublin University Press, 1915. 

[p. 87] The lands of Turvey belonged at an early period to the Butler family, and in the third year of Queen Mary, the seneschalship of this Manor was granted by Thomas, Earl of Ormond, to Sir Christopher Barnewall, a distinguished lawyer, who served as High Sheriff  of county Dublin in 1560. He built the shell of the present mansion of Turvey, and died there of a hot, burning ague in 1575. His son and grandson inherited successively. The latter was Sir Nicholas Barnewall, who, in reward for his services and those of his eldest son Patrick, Col of a troop of Horse during the civil War in England, was created by Charles I 1646, Viscount Barnewall of Kingsland, and Baron of Turvey. In June 1654, he was imprisoned for alleged complicity in a plot against the Protector, but his estates, which were then forfeited, were subsequently restored to him by Charles II. Lord Kingsland died at Turvey on 20 Aug 1663, at the age of 91, 

His third but eldest surviving son Henry, second Viscount, succeeded to the estates, and in 1685 had a grant under the Commission of Grace of the Lordship of Turvey, alias Much Turvey, Little Turvey and Staffordstown, with Butler’s Meadows and the Mill, 439 acres, together with other lands in County Dublin, and estensive estates in Meath, Longford and Roscommon. 

“On his deat 1688, the title devolved on his eldest son, Nicholas, who acquired considerable landed estate by his marriage with Frances, daughter of Sir George Hamilton, step-daughter of Richard, Duke of Tyrconnell, whose mother was the only sister of Sarah, Duchess of Marlborough. He served in Lord Limerick’s Dragoons in the Jacobite Army, and was in consequence attainted and declared an outlaw; but being comprehended within the terms of the Treaty of Limerick, his attainder was reversed. 

p. 88. “Henry, fourth Viscount Kingsland, inherited Turvey on his father’s death, 1725. According to the then existing law he was debarred by his religion from taking his seat in the House of Lords. He was Grand Master of the Freemasons in Ireland 1733-35. IN 1735 he married Honora, eldest daughter of Peter Daly of Quansbury, Co Galway. 

…Dying without issue in 1774, Lord Kingsland was succeeded by his nephew George Barnewall, who, having conformed to the established church, was allowed his place in the House of Peers as 5th Viscount in 1787. It does not seem clear whether this nobleman ever lived at Turvey, which, at the time he succeeded and several years subsequently, was occupied by Robert Birch, described as a sort of Merchant Banker who sat in the Irish Parliament as MP for Belturbet…about 1785 Birch became a bankrupt and disappears. We may assume that he was only a tenant here, for on his lordship’s death, 1800, turvey and other lands passed to his cousin Nicholas, 14th Baron Triimleston (eldest son of the Hon. Richard Barnewall, by Frances, daughter of Nicholas, third Viscount Kingsland). He accordingly went to reside at Turvey, where he died 1813. Since his death the house has not been occupied by its owners…” 

THE BARONS TRIMLESTOWN OWNED 3,025 ACRES OF LAND IN COUNTY MEATH 

 
This family, whose surname was anciently written De Barneval and Barnewall, deduces its lineage from remote antiquity, and claims, among its earliest progenitors, personages of the most eminent renown. 
 
It is the parent stock whence the noble houses of BARNEWALLand TRIMLESTOWN branched. 
 
The name of its patriarch is to be found, with the other companions in arms of WILLIAM THE CONQUEROR, in the roll of Battle Abbey. 
 
In Ireland, the Barnewalls came under the denomination of “Strongbowians“, having established themselves there in 1172, under the banner of Richard de Clare, 2nd Earl of Pembroke, commonly known as Strongbow
 
SIR MICHAEL DE BERNEVAL, Knight, the first settler, joined the English expedition, with three armed ships, and effected a descent upon Berehaven, County Cork, previous to the landing of his chief, the Earl of Pembroke, in the province of Leinster. 
 
Sir Michael is mentioned in the records at the Tower of London as one of the leading captains in the enterprise; and in the reigns of HENRY II and RICHARD I, he was lord, by tenure, of Berehaven and Bantry. 
 
From this gallant and successful soldier we pass to 
 
SIR ULPHRAM DE BERNEVAL, Knight, the tenth in descent, first possessor of Crickstown Castle and estate, and the founder of what was termed the “Crickstown Branch” of the family. 
 
The great-grandson of this Sir Ulphram, 
 
NICHOLAS DE BERNEVALL (fourth of the same Christian name), married a daughter of the Lord Furnivall, and left three sons, 

Christopher (Sir), father of 1st Baron Trimlestown
John, ancestor of the Barons Kingsland
Barnaby (Sir), an eminent lawyer. 

The eldest son, 
 
SIR CHRISTOPHER BERNEVALL (1370-1446), as the name began to be spelt, succeeded to the patrimonial estate of Crickstown; and was, in 1445 and 1446, Vice-Treasurer of Ireland and Lord Chief Justice of Ireland. 
 
He married Matilda, daughter of Sir _____ Drake, of Drakerath, and had two sons, of whom the younger, 
 
SIR ROBERT BARNEWALL, Knight, was elevated to the peerage by EDWARD IV, in 1461, as BARON TRIMLESTOWN, of Trimlestown, County Meath. 
 
The next patent of creation that occurs” said the historian, William Lynch, in his work on Feudal Dignities, “is one of considerable importance, as being the first grant (in Ireland) of any description of peerage conveying, by express words, the dignity of a baron of parliament.” 

The patent was dated in the second year of EDWARD IV’s reign, and thereby the King ordained and constituted Sir Robert Barnewall, Knight, for his good services to His Majesty’s father when in Ireland, as essendum unum baronum parliamenti nostri infra terram nostram prædictam, to hold to him and the heirs male of his body lawfully begotten, and to be called by the name of Domini et Baronis de Trymleteston, etc; 

And also that the said Sir Robert should be one of his, the King’s, Council within the said land during his life, with the fee of £10 yearly, payable out of the fee-farm of Salmon Leap and Chapelizod etc. 
 
His lordship wedded firstly, Elizabeth Broune, by whom he acquired a considerable estate, and had two sons, 

CHRISTOPHER (Sir), his heir

Thomas. 

He espoused secondly, Anne, daughter of Sir Thomas Plunkett, but had no other issue. 
 
His lordship was succeeded at his decease in 1470 by his elder son, 
 
CHRISTOPHER, 2nd Baron; who obtained a pardon for his participation in the treason of Lambert Simnel. 
 
His lordship married Elizabeth, daughter of Sir Thomas Plunkett, of Rathmore, and had issue, 

JOHN, his heir

Robert; 

Ismay; 

a daughter; 

Alison. 

His lordship died ca 1513, and was succeeded by his eldest son, 
 
JOHN, 3rd Baron, an eminent judge and politician, who wedded no less than four times, and was succeeded at his decease, in 1538, by the only son of his first wife, Janet, daughter of John Bellew, of Bellewstown, 
 
PATRICK, 4th Baron, who espoused Catherine, daughter of Richard Taylor, of Swords, County Dublin, and widow of Richard Delahyde, Recorder of Drogheda. 
 
His lordship died in 1562, and was succeeded by his eldest son, 
 
ROBERT, 5th Baron, who married Anne, only daughter of Alderman Richard Fyan, Mayor of Dublin; but dying issueless, in 1573, the barony devolved upon his brother, 
 
PETER, 6th Baron. This nobleman dying in 1598, was succeeded by his only son, by Catherine, daughter of the Hon Sir Christopher Nugent, and granddaughter of Richard, 11th Baron Delvin, 
 
ROBERT, 7th Baron (c1574-1639), who wedded Genet, daughter of Thomas Talbot, of Dardistown, County Meath, by whom he had issue, 

Christopher, father of MATTHIAS, 8th Baron
John; 
Patrick; 
Richard; 
Matthew; 
Mary; Catherine; Ismay. 

His lordship had a memorable dispute with the Lord Dunsany regarding precedency, which was decided in favour of Lord Trimlestown by the Privy Council in 1634. 
 
He was succeeded by his grandson, 
 
MATTHIAS, 8th Baron (1614-67), eldest son of the Hon Christopher Barnewall, by Elizabeth, daughter of Sir Edward FitzGerald, Knight. 
 
This nobleman serving against the usurper CROMWELL was excepted from pardon for life, and had his estates sequestered; but surviving the season of rebellion and rapacity, he regained a considerable portion of his lands. 
 
His lordship espoused, in 1641, Jane, daughter of Nicholas, 1st Viscount Netterville, and was succeeded by his only surviving son, 
 
ROBERT, 9th Baron, who married Margaret, daughter of Sir John Dungan Bt, and niece of William, Earl of Limerick, by whom he had two sons and five daughters, 

MATTHIAS, 10th Baron
JOHN, 11th Baron
Jane; Bridget; Dymna; Catharine; Mary. 

His lordship sat in JAMES II’s parliament in 1689, and dying in June that year, was succeeded by his eldest son, 
 
MATTHIAS, 10th Baron, who had a commission in the 1st Troop of King James’s guards under the Duke of Berwick, and fell in action against the Germans in 1692, when the barony devolved upon his brother, 
 
JOHN, 11th Baron (1672-1746). The 10th Baron having been attainted by WILLIAM III, that monarch granted the family estates to Henry Sydney, 1st Earl of Romney; but those estates were subsequently recovered at law, and were enjoyed by the house of Trimlestown. 
 
His lordship wedded Mary, only daughter of Sir John Barnewall, Knight, second son of Sir Patrick Barnewall Bt, of Crickstown, by whom he six sons and four daughters, 

ROBERT, his heir
John; 
Richard; 
Thomas; 
James; 
Anthony; 
Thomasine; Margaret; Bridget; Catharine. 

His lordship was succeeded by his eldest son, 
 
ROBERT, 12th Baron (c1704-79); who lived for many years in France, and pursued the study of medicine with great success. 
 
After his return to Ireland he resided at Trimlestown, and gratuitously and freely communicated his advice to all who applied for it. 
 
His lordship was succeeded at his decease by his eldest surviving son, 
 
THOMAS, 13th Baron, a Knight of Malta, who conformed to the established church, and had a confirmation of the dignity (which, although adopted, was unacknowledged from the time of CROMWELL), in 1795. 
 
His lordship dying unmarried, the title reverted to his cousin, 
 
NICHOLAS, 14th Baron (1726-1813), who espoused firstly, in 1768, Martha Henrietta, only daughter of Monsieur Joseph D’Aquin, president of the parliament of Toulouse, by whom he had issue, 

JOHN THOMAS, his heir
Rosalia. 

He married secondly, in 1797, Alicia, second daughter of Major-General Charles Eustace. 
 
His lordship was succeeded by his son, 
 
JOHN THOMAS, 15th Baron (1773-1839), who wedded, in 1794, Maria Theresa, daughter of Richard Kirwan, of Gregg, County Galway, and had issue, 

THOMAS; 
Martha Henrietta. 

His lordship was succeeded by his son, 
 
THOMAS, 16th Baron (1796-1879), who espoused, in 1836, Margaret Randalina, eldest daughter of Philip Roche, of Donore, County Kildare, and had issue, 

THOMAS, died in infancy
Anna Maria Louisa. 

His lordship died without surviving male issue, when the barony became dormant. 
 
In 1891, however, the peerage was was claimed by 
 
CHRISTOPHER PATRICK MARY, de jure 17th Baron (1846-91), a descendant of the Hon Patrick Barnewall, second son of the 7th Baron. 
 
The 17th Baron died before he had fully established his claim; but in 1893, his younger brother, 
 
CHARLES ALOYSIUS, 18th Baron (1861-1937), was confirmed in the title by the Committee for Privileges of the House of Lords. 
 
His lordship married, in 1889, Margaret Theresa, daughter of Richard John Stephens, of Brisbane, Australia, and had issue, 

Reginald Nicholas Francis (1897-1918), killed in action
CHARLES ALOYSIUS, of whom presently
Ivy Esmay; Marcella Hilda Charlotte; Letitia Anne Margaret; Geraldine Christia Marjory. 

He wedded secondly, in 1907, Mabel Florence, daughter of William Robert Shuff, of Torquay, Devon; and thirdly, in 1930, Josephine Francesca, fourth but second surviving daughter of the Rt Hon Sir Christopher John Nixon Bt, of Roebuck Grove, Milltown, County Dublin. 

 
His lordship was succeeded by his second son, 

 
CHARLES ALOYSIUS, 19th Baron (1899-1990), who espoused, in 1926, Muriel, only child of Edward Oskar Schneider, of Mansfield Lodge, Manchester, and had issue, 

ANTHONY EDWARD, 20th Baron
RAYMOND CHARLES, 21st Baron
Diane. 

He married secondly, in 1952, Freda Kathleen, daughter of Alfred Allen Atkins, of Ross-on-Wye, Herefordshire. 

 
His lordship was succeeded by his eldest son, 

 
ANTHONY EDWARD, 20th Baron (1928-97), who wedded firstly, in 1963, Lorna Margaret Marion, daughter of Charles Douglas Ramsay; and secondly, in 1977, Mary Wonderly, eldest daughter of Judge Thomas Francis McAllister, of Grand Rapids, Michigan, USA. 

 
His lordship died without issue, when the honours devolved upon his brother, 

 
RAYMOND CHARLES, 21st Baron, born in 1930, of Chiddingfold, Surrey. 

 
There is no obvious heir presumptive to the Barony of Trimlestown. 

 
An heir presumptive may be found amongst the descendants, if any, of Thomas Barnewall, of Bloomsbury, London, a cousin of the 17th and 18th Barons Trimlestown. 

TURVEY HOUSE, Donabate, County Dublin, was a late 17th century mansion comprising two storeys below a gabled attic storey. 

 
The upper storey has three distinctive lunette windows added between 1725-50. 

 
The house has nine bays and lofty, narrow windows grouped in threes. 

 
This was once the seat of the extinct Viscounts Barnewall (of Kingsland); though subsequently it passed to a kinsman, the 13th Baron Trimlestown. 

***** 

TRIMLESTOWN CASTLE, Kildalkey, County Meath, is a medieval tower-house with an 18th century house attached. 

 
In the 19th century, the castle was adorned with ornamental towers, an embattled parapet, and other marks of the style which prevailed in the latter part of the 16th century. 

Shortly afterwards, however, the family abandoned the castle and it became ruinous.

Terenure House, Dublin – school 

Terenure House, Dublin – school 

Bryan De Grineau (1883-1957) The famous Irish public school which celebrated its centenary this year St. Columba’s College, a view from the east, showing (left) the chapel, and (right) the dining-hall.

Bence-Jones, Mark. A Guide to Irish Country Houses (originally published as Burke’s Guide to Country Houses volume 1 Ireland by Burke’s Peerage Ltd. 1978); Revised edition 1988 Constable and Company Ltd, London. 

p. 271. “(Deane/LGI1912; Shaw, Bt/PB) See Lord Belmont entry.

Not in national inventory 

http://lordbelmontinnorthernireland.blogspot.com/2018/08/terenure-house.html

THE SHAW BARONETS OWNED 996 ACRES OF LAND IN COUNTY DUBLIN 

CAPTAIN WILLIAM SHAW (c1651-1734), of Hampshire, son of Captain William Shaw, fought at the battle of the Boyne, 1690, an officer in Colonel Michelburn’s foot regiment, was father of 

RICHARD SHAW (1673-1729), of Ballinderry, County Tipperary, who married, in 1696, Judith, daughter of Edward Briscoe, and was father of 

ROBERT SHAW (1698-1758), of Sandpits, County Kilkenny, who wedded, in 1736, Mary, daughter of Bernard Markham, and had issue, 

William; 
Thomas; 
ROBERT, of whom presently
Rebecca. 

The youngest son, 

ROBERT SHAW (1749-96), of Terenure, County Dublin, a merchant in Dublin, Accountant-General of the Post Office, espoused firstly, Mary, daughter of ______ Higgins, of Higginsbrook, County Meath, and had issue, 

ROBERT, his heir
Bernard; 
Ponsonby; 
Thomas; 
John; 
Mary; Charlotte. 

Mr Shaw married secondly, Priscilla Cecilia, daughter of Colonel Robert Armitage, and had further issue, 

George; 
Lees; 
Caroline; Sylvia. 

The eldest son, 

ROBERT SHAW (1774-1849), of Bushy Park, County Dublin, High Sheriff of County Dublin, 1806, MP for Dublin City, 1804-26, Colonel, Royal Dublin Militia, wedded firstly, in 1796, Maria, daughter of Abraham Wilkinson, of Dublin, and had issue, 

ROBERT, his successor
FREDERICK, 3rd Baronet
Beresford William; 
George Augustus (Rev); 
Charles; 
Charlotte; another daughter. 

He espoused secondly, in 1834, Amelia, daughter of Dr Benjamin Spencer, of Bristol. 

Mr Shaw was created a baronet in 1821, denominated of Bushy Park, County Dublin. 

He was succeeded by his eldest son, 

SIR ROBERT SHAW, 2nd Baronet (1796-1869), DL, who died unmarried, and was succeeded by his next brother, 

THE RT HON SIR FREDERICK SHAW, 3rd Baronet (1799-1876), Privy Counsellor, MP for Dublin, 1830-32, Dublin University, 1832-48, Recorder of Dublin, who espoused, in 1819, Thomasine Emily, daughter of the Hon George Jocelyn, and had issue, 

ROBERT, his successor
George, Major-General; 
Frederic; 
Edward Wingfield; 
Wilkinson Jocelyn; 
Thomasine Harriot; two other daughters. 

Sir Frederick was succeeded by his eldest son, 

SIR ROBERT SHAW, 4th Baronet (1821-95), DL, High Sheriff of County Dublin, 1848, Lieutenant-Colonel, Dublin Militia, who married, in 1852, Catherine Grace, daughter of William Barton, and had issue, a son and successor, 

SIR FREDERICK WILLIAM SHAW, 5th Baronet (1858-1927), DSO JP DL, of Bushy Park, Terenure, County Dublin, Lieutenant-Colonel, Royal Irish Regiment, who wedded, in 1885, Eleanor Hester, daughter of Major Francis Horatio de Vere, and had issue, 

ROBERT DE VERE, his successor
Frederick Charleton; 
Annie Kate; Mary Margaret; Grace Eleanor; Eily de Vere. 

Sir Frederick was succeeded by his eldest son, 

SIR ROBERT DE VERE SHAW, 6th Baronet (1890-1969), MC, who espoused, in 1923, Dorothy Joan, daughter of Thomas Cross, and had issue. 

TERENURE HOUSE, County Dublin, is a noble 18th century house, comprising a five-bay front between two curved bows. 

There are urns on the pediment. 

There is a three-bay pedimented breakfront and a pillared porch. 

In 1671, Major Joseph Deane, an officer in Cromwell’s army, purchased Terenure from Talbot for £4,000. 

Major Deane, grandfather of the Rt Hon Joseph Deane MP, converted the castle into a mansion and his family held the property until 1789, when most of the land was sold to Abraham Wilkinson, of Bushy Park, County Dublin. 

In 1785, Terenure House was leased to Robert Shaw, Accountant-General of the Post Office and a great-great uncle of George Bernard Shaw. 

His son, Sir Robert Shaw, 1st Baronet, MP and Lord Mayor of Dublin, acquired the property, which was purchased for him by his father-in-law, Abraham Wilkinson, of Bushy Park, County Dublin. 

Mr Wilkinson had already acquired much of the Terenure Estate in 1791. 

He added almost 100 acres to the demesne and presented it, along with £10,000, to his only child Maria on her marriage to Robert Shaw, Junior. 

Following the death of his father, Shaw came into possession of Terenure House and he sold it, about 1806, to Frederick Bourne, the proprietor of a stage coach business. 

The Bournes occupied Terenure House until 1857, and during this period the estate was renowned for its magnificent landscaping, the planting in the grounds, and the extent and content of the glasshouses. 

In 1860, the property was purchased by the Carmelite Order, which opened as a secondary school for boys. 

From time to time extensions have been added and a fine Church was built in 1958. 

Sutton House, Sutton, Co Dublin – now apartments 

Sutton House, Sutton, Co Dublin – now apartments 

Bence-Jones, Mark. A Guide to Irish Country Houses (originally published as Burke’s Guide to Country Houses volume 1 Ireland by Burke’s Peerage Ltd. 1978); Revised edition 1988 Constable and Company Ltd, London. 

p. 268. “Jameson/IFR) A Victorian Tudor pile, with gables, mullions, and immense chimneys; one end being in the nature of a gabled tower. Four storeys high. Home of Rt Hon Andrew Jameson, owned post WWII by Mrs Ven der Elst, the campaigner for the abolition of capital punishment.” 

Not in national inventory 

Stillorgan House, Stillorgan, Co Dublin

Stillorgan House, Stillorgan, Co Dublin – demolished 1860, new house built 1887

Bence-Jones, Mark. A Guide to Irish Country Houses (originally published as Burke’s Guide to Country Houses volume 1 Ireland by Burke’s Peerage Ltd. 1978); Revised edition 1988 Constable and Company Ltd, London. 

p. 265. “(Allen, V/DEP) A house begun in 1695 by John Allen MP, afterwards 1st Viscount Allen. 
 
It comprised a two-storey, seven-bay centre block, and single storey, seven-bay wings. 
 
The house had dormered attics and high-pitched roofs. 
 
The centre block had lofty, slender chimneys, two at each end. 
 
The demesne had formal gardens, an obelisk, and a grotto by Sir Edward Lovett Pearce. 
 
The mansion was demolished in 1860 and only the grotto and obelisk remain.”

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. 67. “…Sir Edward Lovett Pearce prepared plans for alterations and additions which were not carried out….”

http://lordbelmontinnorthernireland.blogspot.com/2018/08/1st-viscount-allen.html

JOHN ALLEN, the founder of this family in Ireland, settled there some time towards the close of ELIZABETH I’s reign. 
 
He came from Holland to Dublin as factor for the Dutch merchants (the family had emigrated from England to Holland in 1580), and beside amassing a very large fortune, distinguished himself by a refined taste in architecture. 
 
Mr Allen was greatly esteemed, and consulted by the most eminent of the nobility and gentry in their buildings; particularly by the Earl of Strafford, Lord Lieutenant of Ireland, in his large, intended edifice near Naas, County Kildare. 
 

He laid out the plan of his own house at Mullynahack, near Dublin, leaving it to be executed by his son. 
 
Mr Allen died ca 1641, and was father of 
 

SIR JOSHUA ALLEN, an eminent and opulent merchant of Dublin, who served the office of Lord Mayor of Dublin in 1673, and received the honour of knighthood. 
 
Sir Joshua completed the house at Mullynahack begun by his father, called “Allen’s Court.” 
 
He married Mary, daughter of John Wybrow, of Cheshire, and had issue, 
 

JOHN, his heir
Eleanor; Elizabeth; Mary. 

Sir Joshua died in 1691, and was succeeded by his son, 
 
THE RT HON JOHN ALLEN (1660-1726), Privy Counsellor, High Sheriff of County Dublin, 1691, MP for County Dublin, 1692-3, County Carlow, 1695-9, County Dublin, 1703-13, County Wicklow, 1713-14, County Dublin, 1715-17. 
 
Mr Allen wedded, in 1684, Mary, daughter of the Rt Hon Robert FitzGerald, and sister of Robert, 19th Earl of Kildare, and had issue, 
 

JOSHUA, his successor
Robert; 
Richard, father of the 4th and 5th Viscounts

He was elevated to the peerage, in 1717, as Baron Allen, of Stillorgan, County Dublin, and VISCOUNT ALLEN, County Kildare. 
 
His lordship was succeeded by his eldest son, 
 
JOSHUA, 2nd Viscount (1685-1742), MP for County Kildare, 1709-26, who espoused, in 1707, Margaret, daughter of Samuel du Pass, of Epsom, Surrey, and had issue, 
 

JOHN, his successor
Frances; Elizabeth. 

His lordship was succeeded by his son and heir, 
 
JOHN, 3rd Viscount (1713-45), MP for Carysfort, 1733-42. 
 
This nobleman being insulted in the public streets by some disorderly dragoons, in 1742, received a wound in the hand, which occasioned a fever and caused his death soon afterwards. 
 
As he died unmarried, his sisters became his heirs, and the title devolved upon his first cousin (refer to the children of the Hon Richard Allen, youngest son of the 1st Viscount), 
 
JOHN, 4th Viscount, MP for County Wicklow, 1742-5, at whose decease unmarried, in 1753, the honours passed to his next brother, 
 
JOSHUA, 5th Viscount (1728-1816), MP for Eye, 1762-70, who married, in 1781, Frances, daughter of Gaynor Barry, and had issue, 
 

JOSHUA WILLIAM, his successor
Letitia Dorothea; Frances Elizabeth. 

His lordship was succeeded by his son and heir, 
 
JOSHUA WILLIAM, 6th Viscount (c1782-1845), a military officer, who served under the Duke of Wellington in the Peninsular Wars. 
 
His lordship died unmarried, when the title expired. 

STILLORGAN HOUSE, Stillorgan, County Dublin, was begun in 1695 by John Allen MP, afterwards 1st Viscount Allen. 
 
It comprised a two-storey, seven-bay centre block, and single storey, seven-bay wings. 
 
The house had dormered attics and high-pitched roofs. 
 
The centre block had lofty, slender chimneys, two at each end. 
 
The demesne had formal gardens, an obelisk, and a grotto by Sir Edward Lovett Pearce. 
 
The mansion was demolished in 1860 and only the grotto and obelisk remain. 
 
Allen arms courtesy of European Heraldry.

Santry Court, Dublin

Santry Court, Dublin, Gilman Collection, 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. 254. “(Barry/IFR; Domville/IFR; Poe-Domville, sub Poe/IFR)…[see Lord Belmont] A very important early C18 house of red brick with stone facings, built 1703 by 3rd Lord Barry of Santry, commonly called Lord Santry. …Curved sweeps and wings added later, probably ca 1740-50 by the notorious 4th and last Lord Barry of Santry, commonly called Lord Santry, a leading member of the Hell Fire Club who was tried and convicted before his peers for the murder of a porter at an inn at Palmerstown 1739, but saved from the death penalty on a recommendation for mercy; his estates were restored to him but his peerage was forfeited for life. …Santry was inherited by the Domvilles after the death of the last Lord Barry of Santry 1751….On the death of Sir Compton Domville, 4th and last Bt, 1935, it passed to his nephew, Sir  Hugo Poe, 2nd and last Bt, who assumed the additional name of Domvile. The house was gutted by fire in the 1940s…The doorcase from the entrance front is to be re-erected in Dublin Castle.”

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. 67. “…The fine entrance doorcase is held in store by the OPW.”

Milverton Hall, Co Dublin – ‘lost’ 

Milverton Hall, Co Dublin – ‘lost’ 

Bence-Jones, Mark. A Guide to Irish Country Houses (originally published as Burke’s Guide to Country Houses volume 1 Ireland by Burke’s Peerage Ltd. 1978); Revised edition 1988 Constable and Company Ltd, London.

“(Woods, sub Wentges/LGI1958) “a 19th century house in the Italianate-French Château style, of two storeys over a basement and with a dormer attic in the mansard roof. The entrance front had three centre bays recessed between one-bay projections; a deep, single-storey, balustraded Doric portico; five-bay side elevation. Demolished in 1960s” 

Not in national inventory 

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/2014/09/milverton-hall.html

Marlay Grange, Co Dublin – fire in 1910, ruin

Marlay Grange, Co Dublin – fire in 1910, ruin

Bence-Jones, Mark. A Guide to Irish Country Houses (originally published as Burke’s Guide to Country Houses volume 1 Ireland by Burke’s Peerage Ltd. 1978); Revised edition 1988 Constable and Company Ltd, London.  

p. 203. “(Rowley, sub Langford, B/PB) A high roofed Victorian-Gothic house, with gables and dormer gables, and a tower with a truncated pyramidal roof. Post WWII, the home of Mr and Mrs Louis Edge.” 

http://lordbelmontinnorthernireland.blogspot.com/2012/05/marlay-grange.html

THE ROWLEYS WERE MAJOR LANDOWNERS IN COUNTY DUBLIN, WITH 3,659 ACRES

The noble family of ROWLEY is of Saxon origin, and was seated at Kermincham, Cheshire, in the reign of EDWARD II,in the person of RANDOLFE DE ROWLEY. This branch of the family settled in Ireland in the reign of JAMES I.

THE HON HERCULES LANGFORD BOYLE ROWLEY JP DL (1828-1904), of Marley Grange, County Dublin, younger son of Hercules, 2nd Baron Langford, High Sheriff of County Meath, 1859, Honorary Colonel, 5th Battalion, Prince of Wales’s Own Leinster Regiment, married, in 1857, Louisa Jane, sister of 1st Baron Blythswood, and had issue,

HERCULES DOUGLAS EDWARD, his heir;
Arthur Sholto, 8th BARON LANGFORD;
Armine Charlotte; Gladys Helen Louisa; Evelyn Augusta.

Colonel Rowley was succeeded by his eldest son,

HERCULES DOUGLAS EDWARD ROWLEY JP DL (1859-1945), of Marley Grange, Lieutenant, 5th Battalion, Leinster Regiment, who wedded, in 1884, Agnes Mary, only daughter of A Allen, of Devizes, Wiltshire, and had issue,

Ivy Mabel Armine Douglas, b 1889;
Monica Evelyn Douglas, b 1893.

MARLEY GRANGE, near Rathfarnham, County Dublin, is an important cut-stone two storey high-roofed Victorian house built in the Gothic style ca 1850 in a woodland setting.

The house has gables, dormer gables, plus a tower with a truncated pyramidal roof.

There is a two-storey gate lodge located at the entrance. 

Marley Grange is approached through an impressive entrance, via a long tree lined avenue, that leads to a large gravelled forecourt to the front of the house.

The extensive are interspersed with specimen trees, two ornamental ponds, trellis covered sunken pathway enclosing a semi-circular formal garden on the south gable of the house.

There is also a paddock and extensive woodland.

The property is bounded to the east by Three Rock Rovers hockey grounds; to the west by Grange Golf Club; and is beside Marley Park.

The house and estate were sold by the former owners, the McGrane family, in 2000, to the British Embassy in Dublin for £6.4 million.

It was intended to replace the ambassador’s residence at Glencairn House.

The house suffered a disastrous fire in 2010.

The estate agents Colliers apparently then agreed sale terms on the ten-bedroom house, which is acknowledged to be one of the few examples of late Victorian Gothic revival architecture in Ireland.

Colliers are understood to have settled for a price close to €2.5 million for the listed building and its 12.4 acres of woodland next to Marley Park, which are owned by the property developer and charity founder Niall Mellon.

The house was unoccupied and uninsured when it was set ablaze in July, 2010.

All that remain of the imposing cut-stone, two-storey, high-roofed structure dating from the 1870s are the walls.

However, because of its architectural and historical significance, the planners are anxious to have it restored to its former glory – a challenging project, which one expert says could cost anything from €1.5 million to €2 million.

Mellon bought Marley Grange from the British Embassy in 2008 after it dropped plans to use it as its ambassadorial residence.

The embassy had previously sold its long term residence Glencairn and its 34-acre grounds in Sandyford in 1999 for security reasons.

The entire property was acquired by Michael Cotter of Park Developments for €35.6 million.

The Foreign Office in London then wished to buy back Glencairn, without its substantial grounds.

Former town residence ~ 8 Cambridge Place, Kensington, London.

First published in May, 2012.

Killakee House, Co Dublin – demolished

Killakee House, Co Dublin – demolished

Killakee, Rathfarnham, Dublin by Robert French, Lawrence Collection, NLI, 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.

Bence-Jones, Mark. A Guide to Irish Country Houses (originally published as Burke’s Guide to Country Houses volume 1 Ireland by Burke’s Peerage Ltd. 1978); Revised edition 1988 Constable and Company Ltd, London. 

p. 169. (Massy, B/PB) A two storey stucco-faced Victoirain Italianate house of symmetrical aspect…now demolished.” 

In Blake, Tarquin. Abandoned Mansions of Ireland II: More Portraits of Forgotten Stately Homes. Collins Press, Cork, 2012.   

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.

“A large two storey early 19C house with single storey granite portico. Attractive interior included one room with Chinese wallpaper. Former seat of the Massys. Demolished.”

http://lordbelmontinnorthernireland.blogspot.com/2013/05/killakee-house.html