1776 – New Park House, Moville, Co. Donegal
The 60 acre New-Park Estate was purchased by Samuel Montgomery in 1750. The Montgomerys of New Park were the ancestors of Field-Marshal Bernard Law Montgomery (1887-1976).
The 60 acre New-Park Estate was purchased by Samuel Montgomery in 1750. The Montgomerys of New Park were the ancestors of Field-Marshal Bernard Law Montgomery (1887-1976).
Originally built in the 1780s by the McClintock family and called Newtown House. In 1852 it was sold to a Drogheda merchant and shipbuilder called Ralph Smyth who extended it around 1870.
Adjoining an hotel by the Dundalk, Newry & Greenore Railway in the 1870s as Greenore was becoming an important transit point with the completion of the railway and the growth of its harbour.
Holiday accommodation constructed at Greenore golf course as part of the London and North West Railway Company development of the village.
Proposal for Dublin of the Future – a design based on a more monumental Beaux-Arts inspired entrance into O’Connell Street.
Large 3-storey over basement Italianate house with campanile, designed by W.H. Lynn, and built of Ardbraccan limestone.
A large five-bay, four-story house built in or around 1750 by William Waller. The final owner was Vice-Admiral Arthur William Craig who assumed the surname Craig-Waller when he inherited the property in 1920 from a distant relative.In the late 1930s the property was sold to the Irish Land Commission,
Unbuilt proposal for a new mineral baths spa building at Lisdoonvarna, Co. Clare.
At the lower end of Winetavern Street, demolished to make way for the Franciscan Friary at the junction with the quays.
A small Gothic fantasy chapel designed by Charles Geoghegan for the Boland family. Wonderful how the transepts merge into the chevet with a tapering tower and spire for a very dynamic Gothic building.
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