Derreen Gardens, Lauragh, Tuosist, Kenmare, Co. Kerry

https://www.derreengarden.com/

Open: all year, 10am-6pm

Fee: adult/OAP/student €9, child €4, family ticket (2 adults and all children under 18 and 2 maps) €25.

2024 Diary of Irish Historic Houses (section 482 properties)

To purchase an A5 size 2024 Diary of Historic Houses (opening times and days are not listed so the calendar is for use for recording appointments and not as a reference for opening times) send your postal address to jennifer.baggot@gmail.com along with €20 via this payment button. The calendar of 84 pages includes space for writing your appointments as well as photographs of the historic houses. The price includes postage within Ireland. Postage to U.S. is a further €10 for the A5 size calendar, so I would appreciate a donation toward the postage – you can click on the donation link.

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Derreen House, March 2023. It was designed by James Franklin Fuller, burnt in the early 1920s but rebuilt in the same style. It is not open to the public. Photograph © Jennifer Winder-Baggot, www.irishhistorichouses.com

We visited County Kerry at the end of March 2023, when few other Revenue Section 482 properties are open. I didn’t stop to think, however, that it might not be the best time to see the gardens of Kerry in their best state! However, some trees were in bloom, while others had dropped their blossoms.

Derreen Gardens, 29th March 2023. Photograph © Jennifer Winder-Baggot, www.irishhistorichouses.com

Derreen is famous for its collection of rhododendrons and some of the Arboretum rhododendrons planted in the 1870s by the 5th Marquess of Lansdowne have grown to a size rarely seen elsewhere.

The house at Derreen is not on the Section 482 scheme, just the surrounding gardens. Derreen takes its name from the woods around it, as it means “little oak wood” in Gaelic. The gardens cover an area of 60 acres and include nearly eight miles of paths, which wind through mature and varied woodland, a garden laid out 150 years ago with subtropical plants from around the world and views of the sea and mountains.

Derreen Gardens is number 14 on this map of the Beara Peninsula.
Derreen Gardens, March 2023. Photograph © Jennifer Winder-Baggot, www.irishhistorichouses.com
Derreen Gardens, 29th March 2023. Photograph © Jennifer Winder-Baggot, www.irishhistorichouses.com

In 1657 the area was granted to William Petty (1623-1687), physician of Oliver Cromwell. In 1664, Petty undertook the survey of Ireland and by 1666 he had completed the measurement of 2,008,000 acres of forfeited land, for which, by contract, he was to receive one penny per acre. He also acquired an estate of £6,000 a year. [1] He received the baronies of Iveragh, Glanarought and Dunkerron in County Kerry as well as land in Counties Meath, Cork, Limerick and Offaly. These Kerry lands contained resources such as pearls in the river, silver in the mountains, and forest. He experimented, unsuccessfully, with iron making. There was already an iron-work in nearby Kenmare.

William Petty (1623-1687) by Isaac Fuller circa 1651, National Portrait Gallery of London ref. 2924.
Down Survey of Ireland information board in Ardgillan Castle, Dublin.
Down Survey of Ireland information board in Ardgillan Castle, Dublin.

He married Elizabeth Waller (1636-1708), who had been previously married to Michael Fenton of Mitchellstown in County Cork.

The Dictionary of Irish Biography tells us that from 1659 Petty divided his time between London and Dublin and that, despite some London properties, Ireland supplied the bulk of his wealth.

In 1684 the Dublin Philosophical Society was founded and Petty was elected as its first president.

William Petty died of gangrene in his foot in 1687. He had refused a peerage, but after he died, Elizabeth née Waller was created Baroness Shelburne in her own right by King James II, in 1688. On the same day her eldest son by William Petty, Charles Petty (1672-1696), became Baron Shelburne.

Derreen Gardens, March 2023. Photograph © Jennifer Winder-Baggot, www.irishhistorichouses.com

Charles Baron Shelburne married Mary Williams (d.1710) but they had no children. After he died, she married Lt.-Gen. Henry Conyngham (d. 1705/6) of Mountcharles County Donegal and of Slane Castle in County Meath (another Section 482 property and the first one we visited when I undertook this project! See my entry).

William Petty and Elizabeth née Waller’s second son, Henry (1675-1751) was created Viscount Dunkerrin and Earl of Shelburne in the Irish Peerage. He married Arabella Boyle (d. 1740) daughter of Charles Boyle, 2nd Baron Clifford of Lanesborough, County York in England and 3rd Viscount Dungarvan, County Waterford. They had no sons but a daughter, Anne Fitzmaurice Petty. She married Francis Bernard (1698-1793) of Castle Bernard, County Cork (now an impressive ruin).

Castle Bernard ruins in County Cork, photograph courtesy of National Inventory of Architectural Heritage.

Since Henry Petty 1st Earl of Shelburne had a daughter but no sons his estates passed to his nephew John Fitzmaurice who changed his surname to Petty. The earldom of Shelburne was revived for John in 1753.

A sketch of Henry Petty (1675-1751) Earl of Shelburne by George Townshend, 4th Viscount and 1st Marquess Townshend National Portrait Gallery of London ref. 4855(15)

William Petty and Elizabeth née Waller’s daughter Anne (1671-1737) married Thomas Fitzmaurice (1668-1741), 21st Baron of Kerry, who became 1st Earl of Kerry. He was MP for County Kerry and a Privy Counsellor in Ireland. At the same time as being created Earl of Kerry in January 1722/23, he was created 1st Viscount Clanmaurice.

His grandson, the Marquess of Lansdowne, wrote of him, “my grandfather did not want the manners of the country nor the habits of his family to make him a tyrant. He was so by nature. He was the most severe character which can be imagined, obstinate and inflexible; he had not much understanding, but strong nerves and great perseverance, and no education, except what he had in the army, where he served in his youth, with a good degree of reputation for personal bravery and activity. He was a handsome man and, luckily for me and mine, married a very ugly woman, who brought into his family whatever degree of sense may have appeared in it, or whatever wealth is likely to remain in it, the daughter of Sir William Petty… With all this he had high principles of honour and a strict love of justice, which made him govern the country better than he did his own family… His children did not love him, but dreaded him; his servants the same.” [2]

By Derreen House, March 2023. Photograph © Jennifer Winder-Baggot, www.irishhistorichouses.com

The Landed Estates Database tells us the 1st Earl of Kerry had two younger brothers, William of Gallane, County Kerry, ancestor of the Fitzmaurices of Springfield Castle, County Limerick and John who had an only child Anne who married her cousin of Springfield Castle (you can rent the castle, see my Places to Visit and Stay in County Limerick entry. [3]

The property passed through the family of the Marquesses of Lansdowne. Timothy William Ferres tells us that the Marquesses of Lansdowne owned the greatest amount of land in Kerry, more than any other landowners in Kerry, with 94,983 acres. [see 1]

Derreen Gardens, March 2023. Photograph © Jennifer Winder-Baggot, www.irishhistorichouses.com

The 1st Earl’s daughter Elizabeth Anne (d. 1757) married Maurice Crosbie, 1st Baron Branden (circa 1689-1762). His daughter Arabella married Colonel Arthur Denny (d. 1742), MP and High Sheriff of County Kerry. Another daughter, Charlotte (d. 1774), married John Conway Colthurst (1722-1775) 1st Bt. of Ardrum, County Cork.

The 1st Earl’s eldest son, William Fitzmaurice (1694-1747) held the offices of Lord-Lieutenant of County Kerry and Custos Rotulorum of County Kerry, Governor for the county and Privy Counsellor. He married Elizabeth Moss but they had no children and she died and he subsequently married Gertrude Lambart in 1738, daughter of Richard Lambart (d. 1741) 4th Earl of County Cavan and 4th Viscount Kilcoursie, in the King’s County.

Their daughter Anna Maria FitzMaurice (d. 1808) married Maurice Fitzgerald (d. 1780) 16th Knight of Kerry.

William and Gertrude’s son Francis Thomas FitzMaurice became 3rd Earl of Kerry after his father died in 1747. Horace Walpole described him as “a simple young Irish Peer, who had married an elderly Irishwoman that had been divorced on his account, and had wasted a vast estate in the idlest ostentation.” [see 2] This elderly Irishwoman was Anastasia Daly (d. 1799 and buried in Westminster Abbey!), she was daughter of Peter Daly and had been married to Charles Daly of County Galway and she obtained a divorce from him in 1768 by an Act of Parliament.

Derreen Gardens, March 2023. Photograph © Jennifer Winder-Baggot, www.irishhistorichouses.com

The Marquess of Lansdowne wrote that “the present Lord Kerry, after being educated under the direction of the Chancellor of Ireland, and being left a good deal to himself, fell in love with a married lady twenty years older than himself, the daughter of an eminent Roman Catholic lawyer, and, obtaining a divorce, married her—an extraordinary vain woman. Having their way to fight up to get into good company, and having no posterity, they sold every acre of land which had been in our family since Henry the Second’s time.” [see 1]

The Landed Estates Database tells us:

Francis, the 3rd Earl of Kerry was mostly an absentee landlord, his estates being administered by agents including Christopher Julian. Dickson writes that he sold much of his Kerry estates to Richard Hare in the 1780s. With his death in 1818 the connection between the Earls of Kerry and Lixnaw came to an end. The title was inherited by the Marquis of Lansdowne of Derreen, county Kerry who owned 1,526 acres in county Limerick in the 1870s.”

The 3rd Earl of Kerry and his wife had no son. The 1st Earl of Kerry and his wife Anne née Petty had a second son, John (1706-1761). It was this son who is mentioned above, who became the heir of his uncle Henry Petty 1st Earl of Shelburne, and he changed his surname to Petty in 1751. That year, he was created 1st Baron Dunkeron and 1st Viscount FitzMaurice. He held the office of Sheriff of County Kerry in 1732 and was a Whig MP for County Kerry from 1743-1751. He was created 1st Earl of Shelburne, County Wexford in 1753. He was Governor of County Kerry and a Privy Counsellor. Between 1754 and 1760 he was MP in England for Chipping Wycombe, County Buckinghamshire and in 1760 he was created was created 1st Lord Wycombe, Baron of Chipping Wycombe [Great Britain].

Derreen Gardens, March 2023. Photograph © Jennifer Winder-Baggot, www.irishhistorichouses.com
Derreen Gardens, 29th March 2023. Photograph © Jennifer Winder-Baggot, www.irishhistorichouses.com

In 1734 he married his first cousin Mary Fitzmaurice, granddaughter of William Fitzmaurice, 18th Baron of Kerry and Lixnaw, daughter of William of Gullane, a brother of the 1st Earl of Kerry.

John Petty and his wife Mary née Fitzmaurice had two sons. The eldest, William (1737-1805), was born under his father’s original surname of Fitzmaurice but changed his name to Petty when his father changed his name. He rose to the position of Prime Minister of England.

William Petty (1737-1805) 1st Marquess of Lansdowne, Lord Shelburne, Prime Minister, after Sir Joshua Reynolds based on a work of 1766, National Portrait Gallery of London ref. 43.

William was called Viscount FitzMaurice between 1753 and 1761. He served in the British army and then had an illustrious political career. He held the office of First Lord of Trade April-December 1763 and like his forebears, served as a Privy Counsellor. He held the office of “Secretary of State for the South” between July 1766 and October 1768, and was Foreign Secretary March-July 1782 and was made Knight, Order of the Garter.

He held the office of Prime Minister and First Lord of the Treasury between 13 July 1782 and 5 April 1783. He was nominated Prime Minister in 1782 after the death of the Marquess of Rockingham, under whom he had been Secretary of State for Foreign Affairs. He was created 1st Marquess of Lansdowne, County Somerset [Great Britain] on 6 December 1784.

The Shelbourne hotel in Dubiln is named after him.

First William Petty married Sophia Carteret, daughter of John Carteret, 2nd Earl Granville of England. Their son John Henry Petty (1765-1809), succeeded as 2nd Marquess of Lansdowne. He married but had no children.

John Henry Petty (1765-1809) 2nd Marquess of Lansdowne National Portrait Gallery of London ref. D37171.

After his wife Sophia died in 1771, William married Louisa Fitzpatrick (1755-1789) in 1779, daughter of John Fitzpatrick, 1st Earl of Upper Ossory. Their son Henry (1778-1863) succeeded his brother as 3rd Marquess of Lansdowne in 1809.

Henry Petty-Fitzmaurice (1780-1863) 3rd Marquess of Lansdowne, Trustee of the National Portrait Gallery, by Henry Walton circa 1805 courtesy of National Portrait Gallery of London, NPG 178

In 1808 Henry (afterwards 3rd Marquess Lansdowne) married Louisa Emma Fox-Strangways (1785-1851), daughter of Henry Thomas Fox-Strangways, 2nd Earl of Ilchester. She held the office of Lady of the Bedchamber for Queen Victoria between August 1837 and September 1838.

In 1818 Henry changed his surname from Petty to Petty-Fitzmaurice, when he succeeded as 4th Earl of Kerry, after the death of Francis Thomas Fitzmaurice, 3rd Earl of Kerry (the one who had married “elderly” Anastasia). Henry followed in the footsteps of his forebears as MP and Privy Counsellor, and he also served as a Cabinet Minister and was appointed Knight, Order of the Garter in 1836.

Henry and Louisa had several children. Their daughter Louisa (d. 1906) married James Kenneth Howard, son of the 16th Earl of Suffolk. Henry 3rd Marquess’s oldest son, William Thomas Petty-FitzMaurice, who was called Earl of Kerry from 1818, predeceased him. William Thomas had married Augusta Lavinia Priscilla Ponsonby, daughter of John William Ponsonby, 4th Earl of Bessborough, and they had a daughter Mary Caroline Louisa Thomas Petty-FitzMaurice who married the son of the 2nd Earl of Powis. After the young Earl of Kerry died in 1836 at the age of just 25, his widow remarried, this time to Charles Alexander Gore (1811-1897).

It was therefore the next son of Henry and Louisa, Henry (1816-1866) who became the 4th Marquess of Lansdowne. The youngest son, Bentinck Yelverton Petty-FitzMaurice, died in 1892.

Henry Thomas Petty-Fitzmaurice (1816-1866) 4th Marquess of Lansdowne, Politician and railway company chairman, photograph by by John & Charles Watkins circa early 1860s, courtesy of National Portrait Gallery of London NPG Ax16422.
There’s a bridge across to a little island. Photograph © Jennifer Winder-Baggot, www.irishhistorichouses.com
Derreen Gardens, 29th March 2023. Photograph © Jennifer Winder-Baggot, www.irishhistorichouses.com

Henry (1816-1866) was styled as Earl of Shelburne from August 1836 until January 1863 when his father died. He was a Liberal MP for Calne in England between 1837 and 1856, and held the office of Under-Secretary for Foreign Affairs between 1856 and 1858. He was appointed Knight, Order of the Garter in 1864.

Derreen Gardens, 29th March 2023. Photograph © Jennifer Winder-Baggot, www.irishhistorichouses.com

The Landed Estates database tells us that before the Petty-Fitzmaurices built the house, at the time of Griffith’s Valuation the property was leased from the Lansdowne estate by Peter McSweeney. Griffith’s Valuation was the first full-scale valuation of property in Ireland and details of property with valuations were published between 1847 and 1864.

Derreen Gardens, 29th March 2023. Photograph © Jennifer Winder-Baggot, www.irishhistorichouses.com

The Landed Estates database adds that Derreen House was originally built by a branch of the O’Sullivans, from whom the lease passed to Peter McSweeney, who was married to a member of the O’Sullivan family.

Mark Bence-Jones tells us in his A Guide to Irish Country Houses (1988) that Henry Thomas Petty-Fitzmaurice 4th Marquess enlarged the house at Derreen between 1863 and 1866. [4] The National Inventory tells us that the version of the house built c. 1865 was designed by James Franklin Fuller. [5]

The house at Derreen Gardens. Only the gardens are Section 482 so the house is not open to the public. Photograph © Jennifer Winder-Baggot, www.irishhistorichouses.com

Henry the 4th Marquess married Georgina Herbert (1817-1841), daughter of General George Augustus Herbert, 11th Earl of Pembroke in 1840, but she died the following year. He then married the grandly named Emily Jane Mercer-Elphinstone-de Flahault (1819-1895), daughter of French army genearl Auguste Charles Joseph de Flahault, Comte de Flahault de la Billardrie and of Margaret Mercer Elphinstone, 2nd Baroness Keith and 7th Lady Nairne (a Scottish barony). They married in 1843 at the British Embassy in Vienna. Emily Jane succeeded her mother as 8th Lady Nairne in 1874.

The view from Derreen Gardens, March 2023. Photograph © Jennifer Winder-Baggot, www.irishhistorichouses.com
Derreen Gardens, 29th March 2023. Photograph © Jennifer Winder-Baggot, www.irishhistorichouses.com

Henry and Emily Jane had several children. Their daughter Emily Louisa Anne married Everard Charles Digby (1852-1915), son of 9th Baron Digby of Dorset.

Henry’s son Henry Charles Keith Petty-Fitzmaurice (1845-1927) succeeded as the 5th Marquess when his father died in 1866. A younger son, Edmond George Petty Petty-FitzMaurice, was created 1st (and last) Baron FitzMaurice of Leigh, Co. Wiltshire, England in 1906 and also played a role in Foreign Affairs of state.

Henry Charles Keith Petty-Fitzmaurice (1845-1927) married Maud Evelyn Hamilton (1850-1932), daughter of James Hamilton (1811-1885), 1st Duke of Abercorn and Louisa Jane née Russell. Henry Charles Keither was styled as Earl Clanmaurice between 1845 and 1863 and Earl of Kerry between 1863 and 1866, and in 1866 he succeeded to the many other titles passed down through his family.

Henry Charles Keith Petty-Fitzmaurice.

The 5th Marquess held the office of Lord of the Treasury between 1868 and 1872 and Under-Secretary for War between 1872 and 1874. He was Under-Secretary for India between April and July 1880, Governor-General of Canada between 1883 and 1888, and Viceroy of India between 1888 and 1893. He held the office of Secretary of State for War between 1895 and 1900. He succeeded as the 9th Lord Nairne in 1895 when his mother died. He held the office of Lord-Lieutenant of Wiltshire between 1896 and 1920, and Secretary of State for Foreign Affairs between 1900 and 1905.

The 5th Marquess’s wife held the office of Lady of the Bedchamber to Queen Alexandria between 1905 and 1909 and “Extra” Lady of the Bedchamber between 1910 and 1925.

Derreen Gardens, March 2023. Photograph © Jennifer Winder-Baggot, www.irishhistorichouses.com

The Marquesses of Lansdowne made Derreen their summer residence. The garden was originally planted by the 5th Marquess. The website tells us that in 1870 Lord Lansdowne began an ambitious project to transform the countryside around the house from bare rock and scrub oak into a luxurious woodland garden. He planted 400 acres of woodland to shelter a collection of shrubs and specimen trees which were then being brought back from plant hunting expeditions in the Himalayas and elsewhere.

Robert O’Byrne quotes from Extracts from Glanerought and the Petty-FitzMaurices by the sixth Marquis of Lansdowne (1937):

The year 1903 was made memorable at Derreen by a visit from King Edward VII and Queen Alexandra. Their Majesties made in that summer a tour of Ireland, partly in the Royal Yacht and partly overland. The original intention had been that they should come to Derreen by water from County Clare, but weather conditions made this inadvisable, and the journey was eventually made by motor-car. They arrived on the afternoon of July 31. A Union Jack had been floated on the top of Knockatee and a triumphal arch was erected outside the Derryconnery Gate, where an address of welcome was presented by the assembled tenantry. On the lawn in front of the house the children of Lauragh school had been marshalled and they presented a bouquet to the Queen. Then there was a walk around the gardens where two commemorative bamboos were duly planted in the glade now called “the King’s Oozy”. After tea in the new dining room, which had been added to the house that year, the party went down to the pier, where Queen Alexandra was initiated into the mysteries of prawn fishing. The ground had been lavishly baited in advance and the fishing was such a success, that in spite of the obvious impatience of His Majesty, she could scarcely be persuaded to relinquish her net when the hour came for departure.’

Robert O’Byrne tells us that during the 5th Marquess’s absence in India (1888-1893), Derreen was let to the Duke of Leeds. [6]

The house at Derreen was burnt and plundered in 1922 and rebuilt by 5th Marquess in a similar style 1924; it underwent further reconstruction, having been attacked by dry-rot, 1925-26.

The view from Derreen Gardens. Photograph © Jennifer Winder-Baggot, www.irishhistorichouses.com
Derreen Gardens, 29th March 2023. Photograph © Jennifer Winder-Baggot, www.irishhistorichouses.com

The 5th Marquess and his wife Maud Evelyn had several children. Their daughter Evelyn Emily Mary Petty-FitzMaurice (1870-1960) married Victor Christian William Cavendish (1868-1938) 9th Duke of Devonshire.

Their younger daughter Beatrix Frances Petty-FitzMaurice (1877-1953) married first Henry de la Poer Beresford (1875-1911) 6th Marquess of Waterford of Curraghmore (see my entry about Curraghmore). He died at the young age of 36, and after having six children with her first husband, Beatrix married Osbourne de Vere Beauclerk, 12th Duke of Saint Albans.

Beatrix Frances Duchess of St Albans [(1877-1953), Daughter of 5th Marquess of Lansdowne; former wife of 6th Marquess of Waterford, and later wife of 12th Duke of St Albans], Maud Evelyn Petty-Fitzmaurice, Marchioness of Lansdowne [mother of Beatrix, née Hamilton], Theresa Susey Helen Vane-Tempest-Stewart, Marchioness of Londonderry and Evelyn Emily Mary Cavendish, Duchess of Devonshire [(1870-1960), sister of Beatrix] by Frederick & Richard Speaight, National Portrait Gallery of London ref. x76669

Their younger son, Charles George Francis (1874-1914) added Mercer Nairne to his surname in 1914 to become the mouthful “Mercer Nairne Petty-FitzMaurice.” His wife’s surname was equally impressive, as he married Violet Mary Elliot-Murray-Kynynmound, daughter of the Earl of Minto, County Roxborough in England.

The elder son, Henry William Edmund Petty-Fitzmaurice (1872-1936), became 6th Marquess of Lansdowne. He married Elizabeth Caroline Hope, whose mother was Constance Christina Leslie, daughter of John Leslie, 1st Baronet of Glaslough, County Monaghan, of Castle Leslie, another Section 482 property (see my entry).

Mark Bence-Jones describes the property in his A Guide to Irish Country Houses (1988):

Derreen is famous for its garden, which extends over the greater part of the peninsula on which the house is built. It was originally planted by 5th Marquess; but the collection of trees and shrubs has been constantly added to by his successors. In the moist and mild climate, tender and exotic species flourish; while the older trees have grown to an incredible height and girth. The garden is particularly noted for its rhododendrons and tree ferns. As a foil to the luxuriant plantings, there are great natural outcrops of rock. After WWII, Derreen passed to Lady Nairne, now Viscountess Mersey, sister of 7th Marquess, who was killed in action 1944. It is now the property of her son, Honourable David Bigham; the garden is open to the public.” [see 4]

The 6th Marquess’s sons all died young, tragically, so the estate passed to their sister, Katherine Evelyn Constance Petty-FitzMaurice (1912-1995), who succeeded as the 12th Lady Nairne in 1944. She married Edward Clive Bigham, later 3rd Viscount Mersey, in 1933. They have several children.

There is a chapter about the family in Jane O’Hea O’Keeffe’s Voices from the Great Houses: Cork and Kerry (Mercier Press, Cork, 2013).

Derreen Gardens, 29th March 2023. Photograph © Jennifer Winder-Baggot, www.irishhistorichouses.com

[1] http://lordbelmontinnorthernireland.blogspot.com/2013/07/derreen-house.html

[2] G.E. Cokayne; with Vicary Gibbs, H.A. Doubleday, Geoffrey H. White, Duncan Warrand and Lord Howard de Walden, editors, The Complete Peerage of England, Scotland, Ireland, Great Britain and the United Kingdom, Extant, Extinct or Dormant, new ed., 13 volumes in 14 (1910-1959; reprint in 6 volumes, Gloucester, U.K.: Alan Sutton Publishing, 2000), volume VII, page 213.

[3] https://www.springfieldcastle.com 

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

[4] 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.

[5] https://www.buildingsofireland.ie/buildings-search/building/21310805/derreen-house-derreen-wood-derreen-ma-by-co-kerry

[6] https://theirishaesthete.com/2018/06/25/luxuriance-of-growth/

Text © Jennifer Winder-Baggot, www.irishhistorichouses.com

Hamwood House, Dunboyne, Co. Meath

www.hamwood.ie

Open dates in 2024: March 4-8, 11-15, Apr 8-12, 15-19, May 24-31, June 21-28, July 24-31, August 17-25, Sept 2-6, 9-10, 11am-1pm, 3pm-5pm 
Fee: adult/OAP/student €10, child under 12 free

2024 Diary of Irish Historic Houses (section 482 properties)

To purchase an A5 size 2024 Diary of Historic Houses (opening times and days are not listed so the calendar is for use for recording appointments and not as a reference for opening times) send your postal address to jennifer.baggot@gmail.com along with €20 via this payment button. The calendar of 84 pages includes space for writing your appointments as well as photographs of the historic houses. The price includes postage within Ireland. Postage to U.S. is a further €10 for the A5 size calendar, so I would appreciate a donation toward the postage – you can click on the donation link.

€20.00

donation

Help me to pay the entrance fee to one of the houses on this website. This site is created purely out of love for the subject and I receive no payment so any donation is appreciated!

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Hamwood, November 2022. Photograph © Jennifer Winder-Baggot, www.irishhistorichouses.com

Hamwood is a small Palladian style house built in around 1770. We visited in November 2022 and the owner Charles Hamilton, a descendant of the original owner, gave us a tour of the house. It is two storey over basement with single storey octagonal “pepperpot” wings joined to the central block by curved hallways.

In a chapter in Great Irish Houses (Forewards by Desmond FitzGerald and Desmond Guinness) published by IMAGE Publications in 2008, we are told that it was built by Joseph O’Brien from Dublin. An original Joseph O’Brien drawing of Hamwood, dated 1789, exists. [1]

We passed a lovely gate lodge on the way in to the property, which has the date 1783 on its side, which is the year it must have been built.

Hamwood, November 2022. Photograph © Jennifer Winder-Baggot, www.irishhistorichouses.com

We drove in to the farmyard area as directed by signs and we had to wander around a little to find the house. The gardens are also open to the public and we walked through the walled garden.

The house was built for Charles Hamilton (1738-1818) and his wife Elizabeth Chetwood (or Chetwode), and the name “Hamwood” is formed by joining their two names.

Charles Hamilton (1738-1818) who built Hamwood, photograph courtesy of Hamwood House website.

Charles was the son of Alexander Hamilton (1690-1768), MP for Killyleagh in County Down (now in Northern Ireland), who settled in Knock, a townland in Balbriggan, County Dublin. The family of Alexander, despite being MP for Killyleagh, seem to be a different family of Hamiltons from those of Killyleagh Castle, as the Hamwood website will tell us. Hamiltons still live in Killyleagh Castle, parts of which date back to 1180. It came into the Hamilton family in the time of James Hamilton (1559-1643), 1st Viscount Claneboy, County Down. Alexander’s ancestor Hugh Hamilton (1572-1655) came to Ireland from Scotland. The 1st Viscount Claneboy also moved to Ireland from Scotland. Alexander’s brother George built a house at Tyrella in County Down.

Alexander Hamilton 1690-1768, MP for Killyleagh in County Down, who settled in Knock, a townland in Balbriggan, County Dublin. Photograph courtesy of Hamwood house website.
Killyleagh Castle, County Down, photograph courtesy of Hamwood house website.

Alexander was a wealthy landowner, owning town lands worth £50,000. He married Isabella Maxwell of Finnebrogue, County Down. The Hamwood website tells us that his son Hugh (1729-1805) became Dean of Armagh and Bishop of Ossory and a professor of Mathematics at Trinity College Dublin.

Hugh Hamilton (1729-1805), Protestant Bishop of Ossory, by engraver William Evans, after artist Gilbert Stewart, courtesy of National Gallery of Ireland, NGI.10622.

Another son, George (1738-1793), was MP for Belfast in 1769-1776 and settled at Hampton Hall, Balbriggan (which burned down in 1901 but has been rebuilt). George developed the fishing village into a flourishing town with cotton mills and a trading port with a lighthouse. I came across a newspaper article about a book published in 2004 about the Hamiltons of Balbriggan, written by Stephanie Bourke in conjunction with the Balbriggan and District Historical Society, The Hamilton Family and the making of Balbriggan.

A daughter, Anne, married Colonel Henry Caldwell, who fought in Canada under General James Wolfe (1727-1759) in the battle between France and England for control of Quebec. Wolfe died of his wounds, and as Wolfe’s Aide De Campe, Caldwell was sent to England to announce news of the victory over the French. Anne and Colonel Caldwell subsequently settled near Quebec. Later Hamiltons also travelled to live in Canada, which we will see in the house. Henry Caldwell was the son of John, 3rd Baronet Caldwell, of Wellsburrow, Co. Fermanagh.

Alexander’s son Charles, the website tells us, started working life as apprentice to a wine merchant in Portstewart in County Derry. He subsequently started his own business and moved to Mount Venus in Rathfarnham, County Dublin. He married Elizabeth Chetwood. The Chetwoods were from Woodbrook House in County Laois, a fine house which sold recently. Another brother of Charles, Robert, married her sister Hester. 

Woodbrook, County Laois, the house where Elizabeth Chetwood grew up, recently for sale, photograph from myhome.ie.

Charles was left a townland in the North of Ireland which he sold for £7,000 and bought land which had been part of the estate of Ballymacoll, County Meath (now an Equestrian stud farm) from James Hamilton. The website tells us that these Hamiltons are not related. James Hamilton was from a family who lived in Sheephill Park in County Dublin, which later became Abbotstown and housed part of the veterinary school of Dublin (and was the reason I lived in Blanchardstown when I was born), and is now a sports centre. This Hamilton family also traces back to Killyleagh, to a younger brother of James Hamilton 1st Viscount Claneboy.

Hamwood House, County Meath, photograph from Hamwood house website. This is better than my photographs since it was November when we visited and the light was fading.

Charles became the land agent for the Archbishop of Dublin and for Lord Lansdowne (William Petty-Fitzmaurice, 1st Marquess of Lansdowne). I’m not sure what dates he worked for the Archbishop of Dublin so don’t know which one it was but it could have been Charles Cobbe who was Archbishop of Dublin from 1743 to 1765, who built Newbridge House in Donabate, not too far from Balbriggan, between 1747 and 1752. The next Archbishop of Dublin (I am assuming it was a Church of Ireland archbishop since Catholic ones would not have a land agent) was only in place for the year of 1765 as he died in office, William Carmichael. The next Archbishop was Arthur Smyth who served for five years until 1771. The next archbishops were John Cradock (served 1772-1778) then Robert Fowler (1779-1801).

Art Kavanagh tells us in his The Landed Gentry and Aristocracy, Meath (published 2005) that Land agents were not paid a salary but were paid between four and five percent of the amount of rentals they collected. On some estates with large rentals this could amount to quite a substantial sum. In addition many agents became middlemen themselves and so made even more profits.

At the time Charles and his family mainly used Hamwood as a summer retreat as he lived in the city of Dublin in 40 Dominick Street. Art Kavanagh tells us that Charles had business interests in Dublin and was the owner of land in Ringsend. He was also involved with Arthur Pomeroy, Viscount Harberton (later of Carberry, Co Kildare), who appeared to be his partner in some land dealings in the Fitzwilliam Square area of Dublin. [2]

The Hamwood website tells us that in 1798 some rebels captured Charles along with the agent to William Robert Fitzgerald (1749-1804), 2nd Duke of Leinster. The Duke’s agent was killed but a local man named O’Reilly, whose family still practice as blacksmiths in the area, recognised Charles Hamilton and asked that Mr Hamilton be spared as “he was more useful (to them) alive than dead.” It was said that this was probably in recognition of his moral, learned and industrious character. As well as being a Land Agent, he farmed his own land.

William Robert Fitzgerald, 2nd Duke of Leinster, (1749-1804) Date 1775 by Engraver John Dixon, Irish, After Joshua Reynolds, courtesy of National Gallery of Ireland.

Charles Hamilton suggested to the Duke of Leinster that he fill the now vacant position as his land agent. The Duke owned and lived in Leinster House in Dublin (now the government buildings) and had Carton in County Kildare as his country residence (now a hotel – see my entry Places to visit and stay in County Kildare). This role passed through later generations of Hamiltons until as late as the current owner’s father. The Duke of Leinster donated the granite steps at Hamwood, as well as several trees. The website explains that the site is exposed to strong winds and the wooded surroundings helped to create shelter.

Charles became a member of the notorious “Hellfire Club” which met in the Wicklow hills for drinking, gambling and carousing. He became “toastmaster” of the club and the family still have the gavel which he used to bring the members to order.

Henry Clements (1698-1745), Col Henry Ponsonby (1685-1745), Richard St George (d. 1775), Simon Luttrell, Henry Barry 3rd Baron Santry (1680-1735), members of the Hellfire Club, painted by another member, and co-founder, James Worsdale, photograph of portrait in the National Gallery of Ireland.

Charles and his wife had fifteen children but not all survived to adulthood.

Charles’s son, also named Charles (II, 1772-1857) added the wings to the house and moved the entrance door to the unusual position in one of the pepperpot additions. His wife persuaded him to do this to keep draughts from the house. At some stage, the back of the house became the front, Charles told us.

Charles [II] Hamilton (1772-1857), photograph courtesy of Hamwood house website.
Charles’s son added the wings to the house in 1783 and moved the entrance door to the unusual position in one of the pepperpot additions. The further wing is known as “the schoolroom.” Photograph © Jennifer Winder-Baggot, www.irishhistorichouses.com
The entrance door, in one of the wings. The wings are topped with pineapple decorations, which are a sign of welcome, and of the wealth one would have needed to own hothouses to grow pineapples. Photograph © Jennifer Winder-Baggot, www.irishhistorichouses.com
The door has drapery decoration above. Photograph © Jennifer Winder-Baggot, www.irishhistorichouses.com
I liked the arched window breaking the roof parapet. Photograph © Jennifer Winder-Baggot, www.irishhistorichouses.com

Charles II was a classics scholar and completed his education at Trinity College Dublin before being called to the Bar in 1792. He spent some years in London while practicing as a lawyer before returning to Ireland. In 1801 he married Marianne Caroline Tighe (1777-1861) of Rosanna, Co Wicklow, daughter of William, MP for Athboy and Sarah Fownes, who inherited Woodstock in County Kilkenny. She was the cousin of the poet Mary Tighe, whom we came across when we visited Altidore in County Wicklow.

Another son of Charles I and Elizabeth Chetwood was George (d. 7 January 1839), who emigrated to Canada and was founder of Hawkesbury Lumber Mills. The moose heads in the front hall in the pepperpot entrance come from Canada.

Another son, William Henry, moved to Quebec in Canada also. Sons Robert and John became merchants in Liverpool.

The wood in the front hall in the pepperpot entrance comes from Russia. The moose heads are from visits to relatives in Canada. A picture shows the funeral cortege of the Duke of Wellington – Charles told us that the wheels fell off his hearse! Photograph © Jennifer Winder-Baggot, www.irishhistorichouses.com
Ceiling of the pepperpot addition which contains the front door. Photograph © Jennifer Winder-Baggot, www.irishhistorichouses.com
The curved corridor between the entrance hall and the rest of the house. Photograph © Jennifer Winder-Baggot, www.irishhistorichouses.com
Hamwood, November 2022. Photograph © Jennifer Winder-Baggot, www.irishhistorichouses.com

The website tells us that Charles II and Marianne Caroline, who went by Caroline, set about making major improvements to Hamwood, extending the existing house and adding the wings, and also the interior adding ornate furniture wall coverings etc. Much of the furniture was procured for the house, some of it specially designed and fitted. 

Caroline Hamilton (1777-1861), photograph courtesy of Hamwood house website.

Charles II was responsible for laying the foundations of the Gardens, and from her diaries, we know his wife Caroline was also very involved. The website tells us about the walled garden, which was not at its best when we visited since it was November:

The walled garden began in 1777 when Charles Hamilton I built its walls. Part of the wall existed as stone, but this was later added to in brick. To make it look like a seamless brick wall, the stone walls were rendered and the brickwork painted on. At the time, the walled garden was mainly used to grow fruit, vegetables and flowers for the household. Charles II created the rock garden and with his wife Caroline, they designed the triangular shaped Knot garden. Charles III, otherwise known as Charles William, was an amateur artist as was his wife Letitia Armstrong and created to the front and rear of the house a parterre – an intricate design of flowers in beds which would resemble a cluster of fine jewels at a distance.

The walled garden was not looking its best as it was November when we visited. Photograph © Jennifer Winder-Baggot, www.irishhistorichouses.com

Caroline was an artist who became especially well-known for her satirical sketches. The website tells us about her:

Caroline spent much of her younger years in London and took lessons in art from the notable printmaker and portrait painter John Spilsbury (1737-1812) who had taught at Harrow where her brother was at school, and later Maria Spilsbury  (1776-1820), his daughter. She became a skilled artist, especially in creating pen and ink drawings of Irish society of the day, using a satirist angle on  such subjects as religion, education and the ruling classes.  

A sketch attributed to Caroline Hamilton, belonging to the National Gallery of Ireland.

The website continues: “After rearing and educating her six children, Caroline dedicated her time to the improvement and development of Hamwood House and its gardens, her art and, in particular, her writing. Her Memoirs are one of the most significant records of Irish life of the time, and in addition, she became heir to the diaries of the Ladies of Llangollen, which are now in the collection of the Hamwood papers held in the National Library, Dublin. Caroline’s cousin, Mary Tighe (1772-1810), was an accomplished poet best known for her poem, Psyche. Her artistic talent and to some extent, that of her husband, Charles III, passed down to her great-grandchildren, Eva and Letitia.

The Ladies of Llangollen, Sarah Ponsonby and Charlotte Eleanor Butler, by Richard James Lane, printed by Jérémie Graf, after Lady Mary Leighton (née Parker) courtesy of National Portrait Gallery NPG D32504.

The “ladies of Llangollen” were Eleanor Butler (1739–1829) and Sarah Ponsonby (1755–1831) – Sarah grew up in Woodstock in County Kilkenny, with her cousins, which was the house inherited by Caroline’s mother – it is now a ruin but has wonderful gardens, see my entry for Places to visit and stay in County Kilkenny. The two friends ran away together and set up house in Llangollen, Wales, and became famous for their audacity, and were visited by many people including Percy Bysshe Shelley, William Wordsworth and the Duke of Wellington.

Mary Tighe née Blachford (1747-1791), courtesy of National Gallery of Ireland.

Caroline wrote a history of her family, detailing the lives of Theodosia and Mary Blachford and Sarah Ponsonby. Her memoir was published in 2010 as the edited volume Reminiscences of Marianne-Caroline Hamilton (1777–1861).

Caroline wrote and drew in a satirical style, providing a critical depiction of the Anglo-Irish ascendancy from that period. Her best known works include Domestic happiness as acted in the city: a tragic comic farceThe Kingston to Holyhead packet, and Society.

Charles II continued as Agent for the Earls of Leinster. The 2nd Earl died in 1804. The next, 3rd Duke, was Augustus Frederick FitzGerald (1791-1874).

Augustus Frederick FitzGerald, 3rd Duke of Leinster, (1791-1874) Engraver George Sanders, After Stephen Catterson Smith, photograph courtesy of National Gallery of Ireland.

Moving the front door to one of the wings created a double drawing room that runs along the entire length of the facade. [3] The double drawing room is separated into two by an arch, an alteration possibly made by Caroline Hamilton in the 19th century. [see 1] It is a large comfortable room, not overly formal.

Hamwood, November 2022.

David Skinner of Skinner and Sons, specialists in wallpaper design and conservation, advised on the decoration of the dining room where a rustic red wallpaper has replaced a cream colour. [see 1]

One of the rooms of Hamwood. Moving the front door to one of the wings created a double drawing room that runs along the entire length of the facade. Photograph © Jennifer Winder-Baggot, www.irishhistorichouses.com
Hamwood, November 2022. Photograph © Jennifer Winder-Baggot, www.irishhistorichouses.com

Charles and Caroline’s daughter Sarah married Reverend Francis Howard, son of the 3rd Earl of Wicklow. Sarah was his second wife, as he had been previously married to Frances Beresford, who died in 1833. Sarah’s sons became the 5th and 6th Earls of Wicklow, who would have inherited the marvellous Shelton Abbey, which was gothicized by Richard Morrison.

Shelton Abbey, courtesy of National Library of Ireland, now an open prison.

Their daughter Caroline married twice but had no children and another daughter, Mary, remained unmarried.

Of their sons, Charles William (1802-1880) inherited the property when his father died in 1857. He continued his father’s position as the land agent for the 3rd Duke of Leinster. He married Letitia Charlotte Armstrong of Mount Heaton, County Offaly (now known as Mount St. Joseph’s) in 1841. The website tells us of Charles III:

He had a keen interest in Agriculture and was deeply involved in the Royal Dublin Society. He was particularly concerned about the state of Agriculture in the country prior to the Famine of 1845 and he urged the Repeal MP William Smith O’Brien to set up agricultural societies and colleges throughout Ireland to instruct farmers in modern methods. He corresponded frequently with Prime Minister William Gladstone about the terrible conditions caused by the potato blight and deplored the lack of assistance given. Although the effects were not nearly so bad in Leinster, soup kitchens were available to those who needed it, one being at Hamwood. 

One of Charles William’s passions was painting and he toured extensively, visiting Scotland and France, where he was arrested by the French whilst painting a warship in Antibes harbour. Presumably he convinced them he was simply an artist and no spy and was released! 

At Hamwood he planted the Pine Walk ca 1860, at a time when trees were becoming available from across the globe particularly from North America and the Himalayas. A Monterey Pine still stands among various Cedars, Sequoia and large Pines lining this Walk.

Charles [III] William Hamilton (1802-1880), photograph courtesy of Hamwood house website.

The 3rd Duke of Leinster died in 1874 and then Charles William continued as Agent for Charles William FitzGerald (1819-1887) 4th Duke of Leinster. and then for Gerald FitzGerald (1851-1893) the 5th Duke. Charles told us that the wife of this Duke, Hermione, daughter of William Ernest Duncombe, 1st Earl Feversham of Ryedale, County York in England, was rather wild!

The lives of the Hamiltons of Hamwood were closely tied to the Fitzgeralds of Carton. Charles told us of the next generation of Fitzgeralds: the first son was mentally unstable and unable to manage the property, the second son died in the first world war, so the third son, Edward FitzGerald (1892-1976), 7th Duke of Leinster, inherited when his brother died in 1916. The oldest son, the unstable 6th Earl, died in 1922.

Charles and Letitia had several children and the artistic bent passed to their grandchildren. Their heir was another Charles, Charles Robert (1846-1913). He married Louisa Caroline Elizabeth Brooke, daughter of Francis Richard Brooke and Henrietta Monck. The Hamwood website tells us Charles:

“… married Louise Brooke in 1874 who had 10 children, of whom 2 boys died in infancy, one being the first born and heir. The two chestnut trees in the Lawn field seen from the Trail were planted in their memory. There were 6 daughters among whom were the exceptional artists Letitia and Eva, and of the boys, Gerald Charles the future heir, and Freddie.

Charles Robert IV 1846-1913, photograph courtesy of Hamwood house website. He is probably seated with his wife Louisa Caroline Elizabeth née Brooke.

The website tells us of Charles Robert’s development of the garden:

Charles Robert was educated at home by a governess and at the age of 17 he went to Trinity to study law. He was a member of the Kildare Street Club and was passionate about the garden at Hamwood, where he transformed the Walled Garden, and in order to create an impact he employed a head gardener from Kew Gardens in London. He gained a great deal of help from his large family, particularly Connie (Constance) [b. 1883 and did not marry], who took up landscaping professionally.

Charles Robert travelled with his wife to the continent frequently and at times further afield to visit relations in Canada near Montreal. He corresponded with Kew Gardens in London and in particular with Sir Frederick Moore at The Royal Botanical Gardens Glasnevin. Sir Frederick was a Keeper of Glasnevin from 1879-1922. Charles IV and F.W. Moore became well known to each other and traded extensively in exotic and rare plants and trees discovered by the ‘Plant hunters’ of the day.

The Hamwood website has great entries about the daughters Eva and Letitia:

Eva Henrietta Hamilton (1876-1960) was born and reared at Hamwood, as was her sister, Letitia. One of five sisters and two brothers, only one sister, Lily, got married, with Eva and Letitia becoming established artists. Both fought for recognition in a society where art was considered as a male preserve and women artists were not treated as equals. Eva was an exceptional portrait artist having studied under Sir William Orpen ( 1878-1931) at the Dublin Metropolitan School of Art (DMSA) which she entered in 1907 at the age of 31 and later, under Henry Tonks, at the Slade in London. Many of her portraits were commissioned by members of her extended family and their social circle. Normally painted against a simple background, Eva’s skill was in reading the character of her sitters and transferring that on to her canvas. With the coming of independence in Ireland in 1922, the market for these type of portraits was much reduced and Eva switched her attention to landscapes which, although not particularly innovative in their production, were attractive and well observed.

Self Portrait, c.1906 by Eva Henrietta Hamilton (1876-1960), courtesy of Whyte’s auction Sept 2009.
Portrait of Rose Dorothy Brooke, Cousin of the Artist 1913 by Eva Henrietta Hamilton, photograph courtesy of National Gallery of Ireland.

The website continues:

Eva was the first of the sisters to exhibit her work, showing a portrait and a figure subject in 1898 at the annual exhibition of the Water Colour Society of Ireland (WCSI). Watercolours were then seen as an acceptable medium for women artists. Her works were shown in London, Paris and Brussels as well as the Irish International Exhibition in Dublin in 1907. She first exhibited at the Royal Hibernian Academy (RHA) in Dublin in 1904 where she continued to exhibit until 1945.

With the death of their mother in 1922, Eva assumed much of the housekeeping role and had less time to devote to her painting. The sisters lived together for most of their lives, in their later years in a series of large rented houses. Among these was Fonthill in Palmerstown, now the offices of the Ballymore construction company. In 1946, they made their final move to Woodville in Lucan, an eighteenth century house designed by the architect, Richard Castle (1690-1751). Fondly known as ‘the Aunts’ nest’ they continued to give memorable parties in their rather eccentric lifestyles. A tree with many sweeping branches stood in the garden from where old umbrellas hung, and in a rather artistic way resembled a tree with huge drooping fruit!

I found a painting of the house online from a sales catalogue of DeVeres auctioneers, by Letitia.

The Hamilton Family at Woodville House, Lucan County Dublin by Letitia Hamilton.

The website also has an entry about Letitia:

Letitia Marion Hamilton (1878-1964) was a talented and prolific landscape artist who, like her sister, studied under Orpen in the DMSA. Compared to Eva, she remained less influenced by him and more by the works of European artists that she saw during her time abroad. An inveterate traveller, she made trips to France, Belgium and Holland before the war in Europe curtailed these visits... With the cessation of hostilities, Letitia’s travels recommenced with trips abroad, often accompanied by Eva. During the 1920s, she travelled widely in France, Italy and Yugoslavia. She visited Venice for the first time in the autumn of 1923 and during the 1930s made regular visits to the city and northern Italian lakes.

“…they both blazed a trail for women artists in Ireland at a time when it was dominated by their male counterparts such as Sean Keating, Paul Henry and Jack Yeats. Eva and Letitia’s images of pre-war Europe and scenes from Irish towns and villages preserve a way of life that has now vanished for ever.

Bantry Bay with a Sailing Boat Seen Through Woodland c. 1940s by Letitia Marion Hamilton (1878-1964), photograph courtesy of National Gallery of Ireland.

Letitia won an Olympic medal in the 1948 Olympics, the only Irish medal winner that year, for Art featuring sport! Unfortunately that’s no longer an Olympic “sport.”

Their brother Francis Charles (1877-1961) was heir to Hamwood. He studied agriculture in England and acted as Land Agent for some estates in England before returning to Hamwood after the death of his father in 1913. There he continued in the position of Land Agent to the Duke of Leinster: from 1916 he would have been Agent for Edward FitzGerald (1892-1976), 7th Duke of Leinster. Mark Bence-Jones tells us that

“[The] 7th Duke was unable to live here having, as a young man, signed away his expectations to the “50 Shilling Tailor” Sir Henry Mallaby-Deeley, in return for ready money and an annuity. As a result of this unhappy transaction, Carton had eventually to be sold. It was bought 1949 by 2nd Lord Brocket…” [4]

Francis Charles [V] Hamilton (1877-1961), photograph courtesy of Hamwood house website.

A distant cousin from the family who moved to Hawkesbury in Canada, Violet Travers Hamilton, travelled to England to “do the season,” and Francis Charles was instructed to escort her. He fell in love and they married.

The Hamwood website tells us that:

Violet died prematurely in 1947. A few years later Francis Charles married Rosamund Bauer who built up Hamwood’s dairy herd and helped see the estate through some difficult times during post war depression... Francis Charles died in 1961 and left the estate to his son Charles.

Charles (1918-2005) was called “The Major” due to his time in the Indian army, and he served in World War II. Like his father, he also acted as Land Agent to some properties in England before returning to Hamwood. He returned to Ireland and lived in Galway where he was agent for Clonbrock, before returning to Hamwood in 1963, following the death of his father. He also acted as Land Agent for the Conynghams of Slane for a period. Although Carton was sold by the 7th Earl he continued to work as Agent. He may have met my grandfather, as my Grandfather John Baggot of Aghaboe and Abbeyleix in County Laois kept cattle there at some point!

Charles [VI] Hamilton (1918-2005) was called “The Major,” photograph courtesy of Hamwood house website.

In 1958 Charles married Anne Spicer from Carnew Castle, County Wicklow, where her family moved from England after the second world war. Her family had ties to Ireland, where they holidayed when she was a child, and William Wellesley-Pole (1763-1845) 3rd Earl of Mornington, of Dangan Castle in County Meath (now a ruin), the older brother of the Duke of Wellington, was an ancestor.

Charles took an interest in the garden and added to the plant collection and he ran the farm and bred cattle. Charles, who now lives in the house and showed us around, is their son. He continues the upkeep of the house, gardens and farm. He has created a woodland trail for visitors, and runs a seasonal courtyard café, Café des artistes. The family host events and have opened allotments. One can buy membership to have regular access to the gardens and café.

Map courtesy of Hamwood house website.
Hamwood, November 2022. Photograph © Jennifer Winder-Baggot, www.irishhistorichouses.com

[1] Great Irish Houses (Forewards by Desmond FitzGerald and Desmond Guinness) published by IMAGE Publications in 2008

[2] p. 117, Kavanagh, Art. The Landed Gentry and Aristocracy, Meath, 2005, published by Irish Family Names, Dublin 4.

[3] http://www.ihh.ie/index.cfm/houses/house/name/Hamwood

[4] 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.

Text © Jennifer Winder-Baggot, www.irishhistorichouses.com