1771 – Public Library, Armagh, Co. Armagh
Fabulous Library building on an awkward sloping corner site by Thomas Cooley, the architect of Dublin’s City Hall which was started just two years earlier.
Fabulous Library building on an awkward sloping corner site by Thomas Cooley, the architect of Dublin’s City Hall which was started just two years earlier.
The house was built by Colonel Mervyn Archdale in 1773 on the shores of Lower Lough Erne, to replace a Plantation castle of 1615.
Built in 1774 by Belfast Charitable Society, the building was used until the late 1880’s as Belfast’s Poor House.
Built as the city hospital in 1774, and now an outreach campus for Queens University Belfast.
A late 18th century thatched house in a gentrified style, Derrymore House is owned by the National Trust and open to the public.
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).
Described in The Dublin Penny Journal, Views in Belfast (1833) as “This church is situated in Donegal-street.
Frederick Hervey commissioned work at Downhill Demesne near the village of Castlerock in the early 1770s,
The Royal Schools were ‘free schools’ created by James I in 1608 to provide an education to the sons of local merchants and farmers during the plantation of Ulster.
The Dunmurry congregation was established in 1676 and a meetinghouse was built on this site of which no traces remain.
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