1870 – Craigavon House, Sydenham, Belfast, Co. Antrim
Small country house on what was then outside of Belfast for James Craig, father of the future Lord Craigavon.
Small country house on what was then outside of Belfast for James Craig, father of the future Lord Craigavon.
Still standing and largely intact today, the gates to the Milltown Cemetery were completed shortly after it opened.
“The building recently erected in Londonderry for the Bank of Ireland, was opened for business on Monday,
Italianate railway terminus for the Great Northern Railway Company by Turner & Williamson. This was one of two stations in Derry,
Recently renovated, the hall is now the main accommodation for Masonic Lodges in the City of Belfast.
Part of a series of Presbyterian manses built across county Cavan in the 1870s.
Erected in the early 1870s, it was one of the largest Presbyterian churches in all of Ulster.
Fine set of piers and gates flanked by matching gatehouses in an Italianate style. Up until recently the northern gatehouse was in poor repair while the southern house (the right in the postcards) has been restored.
Constructed as a townhall, with museum and public library, this is a fine building in a French Gothic style with a tall four-storey clock tower.
Now part of the Merchant Hotel along with the former Ulster Bank headquarters next to it.
Map is being rolled out, not all buildings are mapped yet - shows location of buildings on this page.