1867 – St. Joseph’s Church, Carrickmacross, Co. Monaghan
An excellent example of the Gothic revival by J.J. McCarthy, known as the “Irish Pugin”,
An excellent example of the Gothic revival by J.J. McCarthy, known as the “Irish Pugin”,
Formerly a branch of the Belfast Banking Company and thereafter the Northern Bank, the Tourist Information Office was designed by Sir Charles Lanyon in 1867.
The ecclesiastical district of Ballyeglish began in 1866, on land donated by the Salters Company.
Designed by Richard Herbert Carpenter and William Slater of London who afterward also produced plans to extend St.
Originally a relatively conventional Georgian residence, Bessmount was redesigned by William Barre (architect of the Dawson Monument in the centre of nearby Monaghan town) for William Henderson around 1869.
Fine entrance to the City Cemetery in Derry on Lone Moor Road. “In connection with the new Cemetery at Londonderry there have been lately completed a Mortuary Chapel and Superintendent’s Dwelling-house,
Constructed for William Jury, proprietor of Jury’s and Shelbourne hotels, Dublin, and Imperial Hotel, Cork.
Previously known as Rockfield until rebuilt in 1860 by Colonel J.G. Irvine, who reputedly brought craftsmen from Italy to do the interior decoration.
Selected design after an architectural competition to design a school for the advancement of Methodism. Originally it provided for a new school for 200 pupils with additional collegiate department providing accommodation for students attending Queen’s College (now Queen’s University,
The Convent of Mercy opened June 9th 1868 with a later extension by Harte &
Map is being rolled out, not all buildings are mapped yet - shows location of buildings on this page.