1777 – Drumcar House, Co. Louth
Built in 1777, it stayed with the McClintock family until the 1940s.
Built in 1777, it stayed with the McClintock family until the 1940s.
The building originally consisted of 36 Cells and the Governor’s Private Dwelling.
The Royal Schools were ‘free schools’
Designed by local architect John Roberts,
The site of City Hall on Cork Hill was originally the site of Sainte Marie del Dame which came into the possession of Richard Boyle 1st Earl of Cork who built his home on the site Cork House around 1600.
A three-storey Georgian house, of 1779, built for George Young. Probably replaced an earlier house in the area as Robert Young first arrived in 1640 as rector of Culdaff Parish.
The Dunmurry congregation was established in 1676 and a meetinghouse was built on this site of which no traces remain.
Built for Christopher St George, ‘reputedly to the design of John Roberts,
Originally a modest farmhouse which was transformed into a mansion around 1780 by Dublin architect George Ensor,
Design for a terrace of houses on Sackville Street,