Kilboy  House, Nenagh, County Tipperary

Kilboy  House, Nenagh, County Tipperary

The newly constructed Kilboy, County Tipperary, photograph courtesy of Country Life.
Kilboy, County Tipperary, courtesy of Archiseek.
The newly constructed Kilboy, County Tipperary, photograph courtesy of Country Life.

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

p. 164. “(Prittie, Dunally, B/PB) A middle to late 18th century house built for Henry Prittie MP, afterwards 1st Lord Dunalley, to the design of William Leeson.

Henry Prittie, 1st Baron Dunalley (1743-1801), Irish school, courtesy of Christie’s.

It had three storeys over a basement; a five-bay entrance front with a central feature of a pediment and four giant engaged Doric columns; Doric entablature running the full length of the front, supported at the sides by giant Doric pilasters; top storey was treated as an attic above the cornice. Ground floor windows with rusticated surrounds and alternat triangular and segmental pediments; rusticated basement; broad flight of steps up to entrance door. Side elevation almost plain, with no entablature or cornice, of five-bays with central Venetian window; keystones over windows and some simple blocking in the window surrounds. Large square hall, with heavy frieze of rather unusual plasterwork, combining putti and foliage with husk ornament and neo-Classical motifs; niche with entablature on console brackets; marble chimneypiece with swags of drapery, plasterwork panel over. Bifurcating staircase in back hall. 

Henry Prittie, 3rd Baron Dunalley (1807-1885) by Stephen Catterson Smith courtesy of Christie’s 2013.

House was burnt 1922 and afterwards rebuilt without the top storey.  The principal rooms, as rebuilt, had oak panelling in early C18 style; the bifurcating staircase was replaced by a simple oak stairs. Ca 1955 the house was demolished and a single storey house in a vaguely Georgian style was built on the original basement.”

The newly constructed Kilboy, County Tipperary, photograph courtesy of Country Life.
The newly constructed Kilboy, County Tipperary, photograph courtesy of Country Life.
The newly constructed Kilboy, County Tipperary, photograph courtesy of Country Life.

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. 134. “The most important house designed by William Leeson c. 1780 for Henry Prittie M.P. 1st Lord Dunally. Superb entrance front with engaged Doric portico. Very fine interior with good plasterwork and imperial main staircase. The house was burnt in 1922 and well restored but without the attic storey. In the mid 1950s it was demolished and a single storey house was built on top of the basement storey; reached by the original steps.”

The newly constructed Kilboy, County Tipperary, photograph courtesy of Country Life.
The newly constructed Kilboy, County Tipperary, photograph courtesy of Country Life.

https://www.buildingsofireland.ie/buildings-search/building/22402605/kilboy-house-kilboy-kilmore-pr-n-r-tipperary-north

Detached five-bay single-storey house over basement, built c. 1775, destroyed in 1922 and rebuilt c. 1955 with portico to entrance. Three-bay two-storey side elevations, with large two-storey extension to south-west. Hipped slate roofs with recent cut limestone chimneystacks. Rendered walls with decorative render pilasters. Replacement windows to front. Mainly timber sash elsewhere, with raised cut limestone surrounds with keystones and sills. Segmental- and round-headed openings to extension, with one-over-one pane timber sash windows to south elevation, and doorway with spoked fanlight. Timber panelled double doors under portico, flanked by windows. Two flights of limestone steps to front elevation. Sandstone walls to site boundary with thatched gate lodge and ornate gateway to main, south, entrance and gate lodge with ornate gateway to north-east. 

Appraisal 

The original house to this site was designed by William Leeson, but only the steps and base of the original building remain. The grounds, demesne walls, entrances and gate lodges are perhaps more interesting than the house, forming an interesting group of demesne structures. The imposing triple-arched entrances set in high demesne walls with their ashlar dressings and gate lodges on both the south and east boundaries create a sense of heightened anticipation before seeing the house. 

Kilboy House, County Tipperary, photograph courtesy of National Inventory.
Kilboy House, County Tipperary, photograph courtesy of National Inventory.
Kilboy House, County Tipperary, photograph courtesy of National Inventory.

https://www.buildingsofireland.ie/buildings-search/building/22402606/kilboy-house-kilboy-kilmore-pr-n-r-tipperary-north

Detached L-plan four-bay single-storey gate lodge with dormer storey, built c. 1850. Hipped reed thatched roof with blocked ridges and recent rendered chimneystack. Sandstone rubble walls. Square-headed double one-over-one pane timber sash windows with sandstone voussoirs to ground floor, segmental-headed spoked lunette windows to roof, and segmental-headed door openings with sandstone voussoirs, having glazed timber doors and sidelights. 

Gate Lodge, Kilboy House, County Tipperary, photograph courtesy of National Inventory.

Appraisal 

Apparently informed by the cottage ornée type of demesne building, this gate lodge has a number of appealing features such as its lunette dormer windows set in thick curved thatched roofs, its timber sash windows, and its L-plan which allows for a number of complementary views. It is one of a group of demesne structures including the elaborate entrance gates, high demesne walls and single-arch bridge under the avenue nearby. 

https://www.buildingsofireland.ie/buildings-search/building/22402609/kilboy-house-kilboy-kilmore-pr-n-r-tipperary-north

Kilboy House, County Tipperary, photograph courtesy of National Inventory.

Entrance gateway, built c.1775, comprising advanced central round-arched carriage opening with portico, flanked by round-arched pedestrian entrances, in turn flanked by pilasters and roughly-coursed rubble limestone boundary walls. Snecked rubble limestone walling, with cut limestone portico with scrolls, archivolts and imposts and dressed quoins and surrounds to pedestrian openings. 

Appraisal 

This finely-built stone gateway is of apparent architectural design and executed by skilled craftsmen. It presents an impressive entrance to the rebuilt Kilboy House and is a conspicuous landmark on the Dolla to Silvermines road. 

https://www.buildingsofireland.ie/buildings-search/building/22402610/kilboy-house-kilboy-kilmore-pr-n-r-tipperary-north

Entrance gateway, built c.1775, comprising central round-arched carriage opening, flanked by similar round-arched pedestrian entrances, separated by wrought-iron railings and in turn flanked low rubble limestone walls. Ashlar sandstone masonry with imposts, carved modillions to central archway and with wrought-iron railings to and separating openings. 

Appraisal 

A finely-executed ashlar composition of apparent architectural design and quality, forming subsidiary entrance to rebuilt Kilboy House. 

Kilboy House, County Tipperary, photograph courtesy of National Inventory.

The Tipperary Gentry. Volume 1. By William Hayes and Art Kavanagh. Published by Irish Family Names, c/o Eneclann, Unit 1, The Trinity Enterprise Centre, Pearse St, Dublin 2, 11 Emerald Cottages, Grand Canal St, Dublin 4 and Market Square, Bunclody, Co Wexford, Ireland. 2003. 

Prittie of Kilboy 

p. 195. The Prittie dynasty in Kilboy began with Colonel Henry Prittie, one of Cromwell’s more trusted commanders. He was a Captin in Cromwell’s New Regiment of Horse. Druing the war in Ireland he was made Sheriff of Carlow (1650) and later Governor of Carlow. After the successful campaign Prittie was given about 1000 acres in the area in lieu of pay. Like many of his brother officers he immediately began buying up lands that had been awarded to his fellow soldiers who had no wish to remain in Ireland. This, combined with his descendants fortuitious marriages to heiresses, meant that the estate grew over the next 200 years, so that by the middle of 19C the Pritties owned about 16,000 acres of land in Co Tipperary most of which was centred around Kilboy.  

p. 196. Henry was marrid to Honor Foley of Stourbridge and he had one son, also called Henry. 

Henry was besieged for 21 days in his castle of Dunally by the Jacobites after the Battle of the Boyne. They eventually gained entrance and seized Henry and threw him from the battlements. Henry, quite extraordinarily, survived the fall unhurt and managed to escape. Henry was married to an Allcock and they had two sons and five daughters. The second son, Richard, married an heiress, Barbara Bourchier from Wexford in 1714. One of the daughters married Captain John Bayley of Ballynaclogh, another Cromwellian grantee. 

p. 197. It was through marriages to heiresses that estates were extended. The outstanding example of this at the outset of the century is the marriage in 1702 of Henry Prittie (the Colonel’s grandson) to Elizabeth daughter and heiress to James Harrison of Cloghjordan. This alliance added to the sizeable Prittie estate of 3,600 acres a further 900 acres centring on Cloghjordan which had the advantage of being in the same region as the home estate. 

p. 197. IN the next two generations each of the heirs to the Prittie estate married heiresses: Deborah Bayley in 1736 and Catherine Sadleir in 1766, thereby further consolidating the family’s interest, landed and political.  

p. 197. On the death of Colonel Harrison the estates of Cloughjordan came into the possession of the Pritties of Kilboy. Henry and Elizabeth had one son, Henry… 

p. 198. The son, Henry (b. 1708) was active politically and was an MP for Tipperary from 1761-8. A magistrate, he was firmly in the forefront of promoting law and order. He was married to an heiress, the daughter of Venerable Benjamin Neale of Leighlin and widow of John Bayly of Debsborough. This Henry was the man who successfully launched the family into mainstream politics. 

…He also made attempts to use the natural resources on his lands. In the 1720s and 30s the Pritties revived interest in mining in the Silvermines. Lead was the mineral being mined at the time. After 1730 the mining was left in abeyance until 1802 when the Dunally Mining Company was formed with the intention of exploiting the ore there and also at a number of other locations. 

p. 199. 1st Baron Dunally [as MP] was not in favour of granting any relief to Catholics and like his father he was ardent supporter of the rule of law. 

p. 200. In contrast with his public stand, Prittie got on well with his Catholic neighbours and a great friendship existed between the Catholic Carrol family of Lissenhall in North Tipperary and the Pritties. 

p. 201. There was a general electin held in 1806. Due to clerical manipulation the Catholic vote secured the election of Montague Mathew and Francis A. Prittie, the brother of 1stLord Dunally, who had moved into the House of Lords. From this period on the Pritties, allied with the Mathew interest continued to be pro Catholic and more liberal in outlook. 

p. 202. The Pritties’ liberal views may have been influenced by a tutor who was engaged to teach Francis Aldborough Prittie at Kilboy. He was Rev Henry Fulton, the C of I curate to their parish, who was transported as a convicted United Irishman in 1798. 

2nd Lord Dunally was very active in politics and worked with O’Connell to achieve Catholic emancipation. 

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

In 1786, Kilboy was described by Wilson as the fine seat of Henry Prittie. Lord Dunalley is recording as resident at Dunally Castle, Nenagh, in 1814. In 1837 Lewis writes that Kilboy, the seat of Lord Dunalley, “was erected about 60 years since”. In the mid 19th century it was valued at £76+ and held in fee. This house, which the National Inventory of Architectural Heritage describes as a “detached five-bay single-storey house over basement, built c. 1775” and designed by William Leeson, was destroyed in 1922. A similar house was erected on the site but was demolished in 1955. A smaller house is now located on the site.   

https://www.archiseek.com/1770-kilboy-house-nenagh-co-tipperary/

see https://lordbelmontinnorthernireland.blogspot.com/2014/02/kilboy-house.html

THE BARONS DUNALLEY WERE MAJOR LANDOWNERS IN COUNTY TIPPERARY, WITH 21,081 ACRES 

The founder of this noble family in Ireland was 

COLONEL HENRY PRITTIE who, for his loyalty and eminent services to the crown during the civil wars, had a grant or confirmation, from CHARLES II, of Dunalley Castle and other estates in County Tipperary, by patent, in 1678. 

The grandson of this gentleman, 

HENRY PRITTIE, sustained a siege of twenty-one days, in his castle of Dunalley, against the disbanded soldiers of of the royal army ofJAMES II after the battle of the Boyne. 

The besiegers, however, at length entering, Mr Prittie was flung headlong from the top of the castle, though miraculously escaped unhurt. 

He married Elizabeth, sister of Charles Alcock, and had issue, 

HENRY, his successor
Richard; 
Priscilla; Elizabeth; Honora; Catherine; Judith. 

The elder son, 

 
HENRY PRITTIE, of Dunalley Castle, MP for County Tipperary, wedded, in 1736, Deborah, daughter of the Ven Benjamin O’Neale, Archdeacon of Leighlin, and had issue, 

HENRY, his successor
Deborah; Elizabeth; Catherine; Martha; Margaret; Hannah. 

Mr Prittie was succeeded by his son, 

HENRY PRITTIE, of Dunalley, who espoused, in 1766, Catherine, second daughter and co-heir of Francis Sadleir, of Sopwell Hall, County Tipperary, widow of John Bury, and mother, by him, of Charles William, Earl of Charleville, and had issue, 

HENRY, his successor
Francis Aldborough, MP
Catherine; Deborah; Mary; Martha; Elizabeth. 

Mr Prittie was returned to parliament for County Tipperary in 1768; and elevated to the peerage, in 1800, by the title of  BARON DUNALLEY, of Kilboy, County Tipperary. 

The heir apparent is the present holder’s son, the Hon Joel Henry Prittie. 

The 4th Baron was the last Lord-Lieutenant of County Tipperary, from 1905 until 1922. 

Henry Francis Cornelius Prittie, 7th and present Lord Dunalley, lives in Oxfordshire.  

A note in the Dunalley Papers records the sale of the Kerry estate of this family to the Crosbies in 1742 for £1,500. 

KILBOY HOUSE, near Nenagh, County Tipperary, was a middle to late 18th century house built for Henry Prittie MP, afterwards 1st Lord Dunalley, to the design of William Leeson. 

It had three storeys over a basement; a five-bay entrance front with a central pediment; and four large, engaged Doric columns. 

The top storey was treated as an attic above the cornice. 

There was a five-bay side elevation. 

The mansion was burnt in 1922 and afterwards rebuilt minus the top storey.  

About 1955, the house was demolished and a single-storey house in the Georgian style was built over the original basement. 

More recently permission was granted for the reconstruction of a new Kilboy House, by the prominent businessman and philanthropist, Tony Ryan. 

The project followed a fire that destroyed a large part of the property in 2005. 

The local council granted planning permission for the partial demolition of the existing fire-damaged, listed, single-storey dwelling. 

The former three-storey period residence over basement, based on the Georgian mansion house, has been built.

The application, in the name of Tony Ryan’s son, Shane, and his wife, stated that the aim was to rebuild the house as it was originally constructed in 1780. 

Before reconstruction began, the Ryans paid €60,964 to the council as a contribution to providing public infrastructure such as roads and water. 

Johnstown (formerly Peterfield), Puckaun, Co Tipperary

Johnstown (formerly Peterfield), Puckaun, Co Tipperary

Johnstown (formerly Peterfield), County Tipperary photograph: Lord Rossmore c. 1969 Vanishing Country Houses of Ireland by The Knight of Glin, David J. Griffin and Nicholas K. Robinson, published by The Irish Architectural Archive and The Irish Georgian Society, 1988.

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

p. 161. “(Holmes/LGI1912) A three storey late C18 block with a similar elevation to the nearby Prior Park, of five bays… probably designed by William Leeson. Pedimented and fanlighted doorcase with two engaged Tuscan columns. Built by Peter Holmes, MP; in 1837, the residence of P.S. Prendergast. Now a ruin.”

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. 

https://www.buildingsofireland.ie/buildings-search/building/22401404/johnstown-tipperary-north

JOHNSTOWN, Tipperary North 

Ashlar limestone gateway, erected c. 1780, formerly leading to Johnstown House, now demolished. Comprises central vehicular arch flanked by pedestrian entrances, all with pilasters, archivolts with keystones and with paterae to spandrels of central arch. Cast-iron gates and low rubble flanking walls. Detached three-bay single-storey former gate lodge to north, built c. 1780 and now in use as shop. Hipped slate roof with rendered chimneystacks, rendered walls with moulded eaves course, and having rounded corners to east gable with wheelguard. Double one-over-one pane timber casement windows with stone sills and with timber matchboard half-door. 

Appraisal 

This finely-crafted and well-designed gateway and its lodge once served Johnstown House which lay to the north-west and is a reminder of the quality of the now-demolished country house. It forms a group of interesting structures and is a notable feature at the junction of three roads. 

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

Petersfield, otherwise known as Johnstown Park, was built by a branch of the Holmes family in the late eighteenth century. It is unclear whether these Holmeses were related to others of the same name in County Antrim who were of Irish descent (their surname being an Anglicized version of Mac Thomais). They were certainly settled in this part of the country by the early eighteenth century since in 1728 Peter Holmes of Cullen, Co Offaly, paid £4437 for 540 acres of what would become the Petersfield estate. It was his grandson, another Peter, who served as MP in the Irish parliament for Banagher, Co Offaly, and who built the house and named it after himself. The architect is believed to have been the amateur William Leeson, best-remembered for laying out the town of Westport, Co Mayo, for John Browne, 1st Earl of Altamont. Perhaps related to the family of the same surname who became Earls of Milltown and lived at Russborough, County Wicklow, William Leeson, lived in north County Tipperary and seems to have designed a number of houses in the area including Prior Park and Petersfield. The latter was a tall block of three storeys over raised basement and five bays, the three centre ones being closely bunched together. Only a pedimented doorcase with engaged Tuscan columns broke the otherwise-plain facade. The interior seemingly contained good neo-classical plasterwork but no known photographs of it survive. Peter Holmes and his wife Elizabeth Prittie (a sister of the first Lord Dunally) had no surviving children so the estate passed to a cousin, likewise called Peter Holmes. The family remained in ownership until 1865 when Petersfield and almost one thousand acres were sold to William Headech who seemingly moved to Ireland in the 1840s to act as secretary to the Imperial Slate Quarry at Portroe, County Tipperary. He subsequently bought the business and did so well that he was able to pay more than £13,000 for the former Holmes estate. 

His descendant remained there until the 1930s when the Land Commission divided up the property, and the house was unroofed. When Paddy photographed Petersfield it was still standing, albeit in poor condition, but has since been demolished.” 

Derrylahan Park, Riverstown, Co Tipperary – burnt 1921 

Derrylahan Park, Riverstown, Co Tipperary – burnt 1921 

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

p. 102. “(Head/LGI1958) A High Victorian house with steep gables and roofs, plate glass windows and decorative iron cresting on the ridges. Built 1862 at a cost of £15,000, to the design of Sir Thomas Newenham Deane. Burnt 1921.

 The main house, built in 1862, burnt in 1921 and no longer standing, was designed by Sir T. N. Deane, who is likely to have also been responsible for the associated buildings.

Only gate lodge remains:

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. 134. A high Victorian house designed by Sir Thomas Newenham Deane in 1862 for William H. Head. Burnt in 1921.

https://www.buildingsofireland.ie/buildings-search/building/22400509/derrylahan-park-walshpark-tipperary-north

Derrylahan Park, WALSHPARK, Tipperary North 

Detached two-bay single-storey gate lodge with attic, built c. 1860, with rectangular bay window to north gable and recent single-storey lean-to extension to rear. Pitched slate roof with cast-iron crestings, eaves brackets and gabled dormer to front. Cut stone coping stones to gables and cut stone chimneystack. Ashlar limestone walls with string course to bay window. Replacement timber windows and doors having chamfered cut stone surrounds and sills. Limestone gateway consists of carved stone gate piers having bowtell mouldings to corners and stepped caps, flanked by carved pedestrian entrances with chamfered surrounds and shouldered lintels with cut stone copings. Snecked limestone boundary walls with cut stone coping. 

Appraisal 

The gate lodge and main gateway to Derrylahan Park. The main house, built in 1862, burnt in 1921 and no longer standing, was designed by Sir T. N. Deane, who is likely to have also been responsible for the associated buildings. Built of very high quality materials and craftsmanship, the lodge and gateway have survived intact and give an indication of the quality of the house to which they belonged. The farmyard buildings of the demesne are located to the south of this entrance. 

Castle Otway, Templederry, Co Tipperary – ruin

Castle Otway, Templederry, Co Tipperary

Castle Otway, County Tipperary view of entrance and garden fronts, Vanishing Country Houses of Ireland by The Knight of Glin, David J. Griffin and Nicholas K. Robinson, published by The Irish Architectural Archive and The Irish Georgian Society, 1988.

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

p. 74. “(Otway-ruthven; IFR; Verney-Cave, Braye, B/PB) A handsome two storey mid-C18 house with a vast and largely C19 towerhouse at its back. The towerhouse incorporated part of the original Clohonan or Cloghanane Castle,  which was granted to John Otway 1665 and later renamed Castle Otway. The C18 house which Dr Craig considers to have been designed by the same architect or builder as Lissenhall, Co Tipperary, another house of the Otways, had a seven bay front…. Burnt 1922.

Castle Otway, County Tipperary, entrance front 1979, photograph: William Garner, Vanishing Country Houses of Ireland by The Knight of Glin, David J. Griffin and Nicholas K. Robinson, published by The Irish Architectural Archive and The Irish Georgian Society, 1988.

Listed in Vanishing Country Houses of Ireland by The Knight of Glin, David J. Griffin and Nicholas K. Robinson, published by The Irish Architectural Archive and The Irish Georgian Society, 1988. 

p. 133. A fine mid Georgian two storey pedimented house. Good Doric pedimented doorcase. A tower house much altered is incorporated in the rere of the house. Built for the Otways. Burnt in 1922. Now a ruin.

https://www.buildingsofireland.ie/buildings-search/building/22402716/castle-otway-cloghonan-tipperary-north

Detached seven-bay two-storey over half-basement country house with three-bay pedimented breakfront, built c. 1750, and having four- and- five-storey medieval towerhouse rebuilt in nineteenth-century with three-storey elevations, with turret, to rear. Now in ruins. Roofless, with rendered brick chimneystacks to house and multiple offset limestone stack to towerhouse. Castellations, machicolations and corbel tables to towerhouse. Roughly-dressed limestone walls, slate hung to rear and south-west gable, with brick eaves course and ashlar quoins and plinth. Square-headed openings with limestone voussoirs and sills. Pointed-arch openings, some blocked, with ashlar limestone voussoirs and keystones and limestone sills to tower. Square-headed opening to entrance with carved limestone engaged Doric columns, entablature and pediment. Remains of limestone steps leading to entrance. Castellated walls with alternating round and rectangular openings having integral carriage-arch and with castellated mock gatehouse to south-west. Multiple-bay single-storey outbuildings to south-east. 

Appraisal 

The form of this impressive country house, despite its ruinous condition, is of apparent architectural design and execution. The house was built for the Otway family, and the medieval towerhouse, rebuilt in the nineteenth century, incorporates part of the original Cloghanane castle granted to John Otway in 1665. The house retains many original and interesting features such as the limestone sills, voussoirs and ashlar quoins. The doorway surround is particularly ornate and is obviously the work of skilled craftsmen. The towerhouse contrasts with the Georgian façade of the main house, thereby providing further interest to the site. The Tipperary Gentry. Volume 1. By William Hayes and Art Kavanagh. Published by Irish Family Names, c/o Eneclann, Unit 1, The Trinity Enterprise Centre, Pearse St, Dublin 2, 11 Emerald Cottages, Grand Canal St, Dublin 4 and Market Square, Bunclody, Co Wexford, Ireland. 2003. 
Otway of Templederry 
p. 169. John Otway, a lieutenant in Cromwell’s army, and formerly of Ingham Hall in Westmoreland, found himself at least in a geographically prominent position around 1655 when he took possession of the old Morris stronghold in Latteragh…By 1654 only the bare walls were left of the main structure, and the only usable part was the barbican or outer tower, which was still intanct. 
Latteragh Castle, in the barony of Upper Ormond, had been the chief seat of the Morrises, descendants of Geoffrey de Marisco, the Norman knight who acquired it around 1200. Sir John Morris, recorded as the proprietor in 1641, had died in 1647 before the Cromwellian confiscations took place. It was his widow, Dame Catherine, who had been dispossessed by the Cromwellian settlement, and who was the recipient of a transplanters’ certificate for land set out to her in Connaught.  
p. 170. John Otway added to his original grant by purchasing debentures for land from Cromwellian soldiers who had got small grants of land in Upper Ormond….But he was among the cromwellian grantees in an unsure position after the restoration of Charles II in 1660. James Butler the Duke of Ormonde, and then Lord Lieutenant, one of the king’s most loyal supporters, was at once put into pssession of his confiscated estate. Not only did the agile duke increase his share of Tipperary land, but ensured that his relatives and allies would also be restored to their lands. Among his distant relatives was Dame Katherine Morris, who was enabled to return and obtain recovery of Lattteragh for her son, another Sir John, who was married to a daughter of Purcell, the baron of Loughmoe. 
John Otway, however, played his cards well. Knowing he had to give up his lands in Latteragh, he had, as early as January 1661, secured a certificate from the Court of Claims for a new grant of lands as yet undisposed of in Templederry parish…In 1684, to make doubly sure of his title, he used the good services of the earl of Mountrath, a former Cromwellian leader who still wielded much influence, to obtain the king’s patent under the Commisson of Grace for his new estate, comprising the old lands of the O’Kennedys of Cloghonan… 
p. 171. John Otway also had the advantage that the Cloghonan Castle, a former O’Kennedy stronghold, was in fairly good shape, having been partly repaired… prior to 1654. He accordingly had a well defended residence at his disposal, which was later to be renamed Castle Otway. ..As early as 1650 John had married Phoebe Loftus, a daughter of Nicholas Loftus of Fethard, County Wexford, who was a son of Sir Dudley Loftus of Rathfarnham Castle. Accordingly he was already linked with the ascendancy, and was soon playing a prominent role among the new elite of Tipperary, by getting elected High Sheriff of the county for 1680. 
John’s eldest son, also named John, died in 1722 without a male heir, and it was Henry, the eldest son of his thrid son, Thomas, who inherited Castle Otway. Thomas had established himself at Lissenhall, near Nenagh… He probably  built a small residence there are first, when around the mid-18C an elegant middle-sized Georgian house was built where some members of the Otways lived for four generations. Through his wife Christian, daughter and co-heir of Richard Lock, Tullagory, MP, and his daughters, Thomas established early marriage and political alliances with other newly emerging ascendancy families in North Tipperary and elsewhere. 
…Henry, who inherited Castle Otway, married Mary, daughter of Phanuel Cooke of Clonamiklon, near Uringlford. His eldest son and successor, Thomas, married Martha Prittie, a sister of Henry Prittie of Kilboy, 1st Lord Dunally. Cooke Otway, Henry’s younger brother, who became a captain of the Life Guards, was called after his mother’s maiden name. He married Elizabeth, daughter of Samuel Waller of Lisbrien. Both Henry and Thomas were educated at Trinity College, and in their time Otway House was built, incorporating the 16th/17th century O’Kennedy tower house, wiht its slit windows and gun loops. It wasa a fine two-storey mid-Georgian house, wiht a Doric pedimented doorcase, and had all the elegance of Lissenhall. Indeed there was such a striking similarity btween the two houses that it is though that the same architect was engaged for both. [Vanishing Houses of Ireland by Knight of Glin, David J. Cuffe, Nicholas K. Robinson]  
p. 173. Cooke Otway, who had succeeded to Castle Otway by the time of the disturbed 1790s, when the hill country around was seethign with rumours of rebellion, showed himself more than competent to seal with any incipient insurgency. 
[p. 174.] In the 1780s the Otways, like other landlords in the region, set up a volunteer corps, with Thomas Otway, nominated a Colonel, in command. … 
Thomas Otway has been portrayed as a “harsh and stern landlord.”…[p. 175] Thomas Otway also seemed to have an intolerance towards the native language. In 1772 Silo Magher was fined for speaking Irish in his presence. 
Thomas Otway recieved recognition as an “improving landlord” from the Dublin Society, which presented him with a silver medal in 1767…He died in 1786, and as he was childless, he was succeeded by his brother Cooke Otway [b. 1733]. 
p. 175. [around 1775] The secret societies, such as the Whiteboys, had grown in strength, and by the mid-1790s were given the umbrella name of the Defenders. The Orange Society had recently emerged as well, with the aim of maintaining the Protestant ascendancy, and was spreading throughout the land. 
Another more significant society to be founded in that decade, the United Irishmen, sought a union of Catholics, Protestants and Dissenters under a truly democratic government of all the people of the country. It was getting strong support from the Presbyterians, or Dissenters, in the North. When the government, nervous of any form of radicalism, especially in the wake of the recent French Revolution, suppresed teh United Irish Society, it went underground to become a secret, revolutionary organisation bent on establishign a republic with military support from France. The movement became meshed with the Defenders in many parts. Military loyalism and revolutionary republicanism were heading towards a confrontation. 
p. 176. Nenagh had become one of the most important United Irish centres in tipperary, its chief secret organiser being Hervey or Harvey Montmorency Morres, of the family which formerly owned Latteragh fortress and lands, who was a close friend of Lord Edward Fitzgerald. Cooke Otway reorganised the Castle Otway volunteers as the Castle Otway Yeomen Cavalry, composed now mainly of his Protestant tenantry. The corp captured a local United Irish organiser named Daniel Darcy, who was transferred to Clonmel gaol to await trial. If convicted of administering the United oath he faced execution. 
…Dublin Castle declared martial law on the whole county in April 1798. ..panic set among many of the gentry in the county who quitted their residences and went into the towns. The High Sheriff then ordered every gentleman, under “such penalties as he should be empowered to inflict and the circumstances of the time justify” to return and remain at his country seat, to help restore law and order. 
Cooke Otway was not the sort of “timid” landlord the High Sheriff railed against. He proved himself a ruthless rebel hunter…[he flogged a man to force a confession. Some then came forward and confessed and gave in their pikes and made oaths of allegiance and were pardoned.][some captured who were determined to have administered teh United oath were transported to Australia]. 
p. 178. Cooke was succeeded by his second surviving son [the first, Loftus William, rose to the rank of Lieutenant General in the British Army and then became Knight Commander of Charles III of Spain], Henry 1768-1815, who married Sarah, daughter of thomas Cave of Stanford Hall, Leicester. She became heir to the family property, and she and Henry resided at Standford Hall and in Grosvenor Square, London. This marked the beginning of the absentee landlord phase of the Templederry Otways. The Otway estate then consisted of 6,667 statute acres. 
p. 179. Henry’s younger brother, Admiral Robert Waller Otway, 1770-1851, became a distinguished naval officer, and on the occasion of the coronation of William IV in 1831 was created a baronet for his services. …The baronetcy descended through this Robert Waller branch of the family, first to his eldest son, George Graham Otway and then to his brother, who lived in Brighton. 
p. 180. To return to Henry, who assumed the additional name of Cave, and lived in Stanford Hall, it was through him that the Castle Otway branch of teh family continued. He was succeeded by his second son, Robert Otway Cave, who became heir to Castle Otway. Robert was a man of much more liberal bent of mind than his grandfather Cooke, or his granduncle Thomas. He embarked on a political career as a young man, serving as MP for Leicester in 1826-30, and supporting Catholic emancipation. 
In 1835 he ran as a liberal candidate in the Tipperary election of 1835. As it happened there was no poll in that election and he was joined as one of the two Tipperary MPs by the well-known Richard Lalor Sheil. Despite his ascendancy background, one of Otway’s policies was opposition to the tithe system, the major and most controversial issue of the time. He was also on the side of O’Connell’s repeal of the Union campaign. He resided when convenient in Lissenhall and held his Tipperary seat until 1844… [he had no children] 
Sophia Otway [his widow], although an absentee landlord, continued to take a keen interest in her Castle Otway estate and its people. She headed the Borrisoleigh Poor Relief Fund with her £30 donation in 1846, and financially helped some families emigrate to America. 
…When Sophia died in 1849, Castle Otway was inherited by Vice Admiral Joselyn Otway, MP, second son of her husband’s brother, Rev Samuel Jocelyn Otway. [p. 181] In 1836, Robert Jocelyn married Anne Digby, daughter of Sir Hugh Crofton, of Mohill House, County Leitrim, and his only offspring, Frances Margaret, married William Clifford Bermingham Ruthven of Queensboro, County Galway. Through that marriage the surname became Otway-Ruthven. The eldest son and heir of William and Frances, Captain Robert Mervyn Bermingham, married Margaret, daughter of Julius Casement, of Cronroe, County Wicklow, in 1900. They had seven chidren, all of whom were given Bermingham as the last of their Christian names aparty from their eldest son, Robert Jocelyn Oliver, born 1901. He was the last Otway owner of Castle Otway. At least as far as the 19th century is concerned, the Otways were looked upon as good landlords. 
Castle Otway was burnt down in the time of the Civil War, 1922. The remnant of the estate was divided following the 1926 Land Act…The other former Otway residence, Lissenhall, is also a sad ruin.”