1799 – Gate Lodge, Northland House, Dungannon, Co. Tyrone
The gate lodge of Northland House is all that survives today of the ancestral home of the Earls of Ranfurly in Dungannon.
The gate lodge of Northland House is all that survives today of the ancestral home of the Earls of Ranfurly in Dungannon.
Also known as Blayney Castle after the plantation castle nearby (from which the town gets its name),
In 1799 Sir John Soane designed a bank headquarters for Bank of Ireland on a site bounded by College Street,
A 14th century tower house to which a 17th century fortified house has been built on to creating a larger h-plan house.
The origins of the Old Cross are unclear. It’s not even certain if it were even a cross –
According to Maurice Craig, it was a fine example of the skill and craftsmanship of Irish stonemasons and plaster workers in the early 1600s.
The Liberty of Thomas Court and Donore (also known as the Earl of Meath’s Liberty) was one of several manors,
Turvey House was demolished in 1987. Originally built in the 16th Century by Sir Patrick Barnewall using the stones from the ruins of Grace Dieu Nunnery.
Fine house, sympathetically extended around 1900, with ornate central doorway and large window openings.
Constructed around 1800 turning the corner at Burgh Quay and D’Olier Street..